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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Flemish Legends, by Charles de Coster
+
+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: Flemish Legends
+
+Author: Charles de Coster
+
+Illustrator: Albert Delstanche
+
+Translator: Harold Taylor
+
+Release Date: October 8, 2011 [EBook #37668]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLEMISH LEGENDS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
+Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
+made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FLEMISH LEGENDS
+ By CHARLES DE COSTER
+
+ With eight woodcuts by
+ Albert Delstanche
+
+ Translated from the French
+ By Harold Taylor
+
+
+ London: Chatto & Windus
+ MCMXX
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Page
+ I. The Brotherhood of the Cheerful Countenance 1
+ II. The Three Sisters 31
+ III. Sir Halewyn 43
+ IV. Smetse Smee 101
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ The Church of Haeckendover Frontispiece
+ The Little Stone Boy Facing page 6
+ The Man in White 52
+ Sir Halewyn in the Wood 64
+ The Song of the Head 92
+ Smetse caught by the Two Branches 108
+ In Smetse's Garden 126
+ The Devil-King and the Sack 150
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATOR'S NOTE
+
+
+There never was a book which needed less of an introduction than this
+one, unless it is that it should have an apology from the translator
+for his handling of so beautiful an original. But since so little is
+generally known of these Legends and their author a word of information
+may be demanded.
+
+Charles de Coster flourished in the middle part of the last century. He
+was brought up in the court of a great dignitary of the Roman Church,
+and intended for the aristocratic University of Louvain, but showed
+early his independent and democratic turn of mind by preferring
+the more popular University of Brussels, to which he made his own
+way. Here he fell in with a group of fellow-students and artistic
+enthusiasts which included Félicien Rops, with whom he was associated
+in a society called Les Joyeux, and afterwards in a short-lived Review,
+to which they gave the name of that traditional Belgian figure of
+joyousness and high spirits, Uylenspiegel. It was in this that these
+Legends first appeared, written in the years 1856 and 1857, and soon
+afterwards published in book form.
+
+Belgian literature was not at that time in a very flourishing
+condition, and little general appreciation was shown of de Coster's
+work, but it was hailed with enthusiasm by a few of the more
+discerning critics, and won him a place on a Royal Commission which
+was investigating mediæval state papers. After publishing another book,
+Contes brabançons, likewise based on the folk-lore of his country, he
+seems to have withdrawn into himself and led the life of a dreamer,
+wandering about among the peasants and burying himself in the wide
+countryside of Flanders, until he had completed his epic of the
+Spanish tyranny, Ulenspiegel, which has already been translated into
+English. None of these publications brought him any material recompense
+for his work, and he remained a poor man to the end of his life, in
+constant revolt against what he called the horrible power of money. [1]
+
+The primitive stuff of these Legends is to be found scattered up and
+down, a piece here and a piece there, in the folk-lore of Brabant
+and Flanders. De Coster, who had an intense love of this folk-lore
+and at the same time, as he said, "that particular kind of madness
+which is needed for such writing," set himself to give it a literary
+form. He has chosen to make that form so elaborate, and has worked
+his material to so fine a composition, that he must be considered
+to have produced an entirely original book. But he has not been
+unfaithful to his masters the people. Sir Halewyn, for instance,
+follows an old song. And the Faust-story of Smetse Smee, the jovial
+and ingenious smith, who gets the better of his bargain with the
+devil in so wholly satisfactory a fashion, crops up in one form or
+another again and again.
+
+The Legends were written in the idiom of the sixteenth century, the
+period to which the latest and longest of them roughly belongs. I
+believe that no more perfect example of pastiche exists in the
+language. But that is not of much interest to English readers, and
+I have made no attempt to reproduce the achievement. De Coster found
+modern French, with its rigidity of form, unsuitable to his subject
+and inapt to his genius. He seems to have had a mind so perfectly in
+tune with the Middle Ages that one may well believe that he found it
+actually more natural to write in the still fluid language of Rabelais
+than in that of his own day. The prose of the original is of arresting
+beauty, especially in Sir Halewyn; which, with its peculiarly Flemish
+tale of faery and enchantment, still beauty and glowing hearths,
+and the sombreness of northern forests brooding over them, I feel
+to be the high-water mark of his achievement. At times it becomes so
+rhythmic that one can hardly decide whether it is prose or poetry. It
+is not difficult to believe Potvin's report that de Coster spent an
+immense amount of pains on his work, sometimes doing a page twenty
+times over before he was content to let it go.
+
+De Coster has been spoken of as a mouthpiece of
+Protestantism. Protestant, of course, is the last word in the world to
+describe him. No one can have regretted much more than he the passing
+of that warm-hearted time before the Reformation. One has but to read
+the story of the building of the church at Haeckendover in The Three
+Sisters, or the prayer of the girl Wantje to the Virgin in the tale
+of the hilarious Brotherhood to see how far this is true. It is only
+in Smetse Smee, when he comes to the time of the Inquisition, that he
+bursts out with that stream of invective and monstrous mockery which
+made the Polish refugee Karski say of him, "Well roared, Fleming!" And
+even then it is Spain rather than Catholicism which is the centre of
+his attack, and Philip II who is his aiming-point.
+
+Above all and before all de Coster loved the simple peasant-people
+of his own land, with their frank interest in good things to eat
+and good beer to drink, their aptitude for quarrelling and their
+great hearts. All his chief portraits are painted from them. The
+old homely nobility of Flanders, such as were the people of Heurne
+in the tale of Halewyn, he liked well enough, but he could not bear
+a rich man or a distant-mannered master of the Spanish type. A tale
+is told of him and his painter friend Dillens which may well stand
+as the key to his work. One day at Carnival-time they were in Ghent,
+and when the evening came Dillens asked what they should do. "Voir
+le peuple!" cried de Coster, "le peuple surtout! La bourgeoisie est
+la même partout! Va voir le peuple!"
+
+
+H. T.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE CHEERFUL COUNTENANCE
+
+
+I. Of the sorrowful voice which Pieter Gans heard in his garden,
+and of the flame running over the grass.
+
+In the days when the Good Duke ruled over Brabant, there was to be
+found at Uccle, with its headquarters in the tavern of The Horn, a
+certain Brotherhood of the Cheerful Countenance, aptly enough so named,
+for every one of the Brothers had a wonderfully jolly face, finished
+off, as a sign of good living, with two chins at the least. That was
+the young ones; but the older ones had more.
+
+You shall hear, first of all, how this Brotherhood was founded:
+
+Pieter Gans, host of this same Horn, putting off his clothes one
+night to get into bed, heard in his garden a sorrowful voice, wailing:
+"My tongue is scorching me. Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst."
+
+Thinking at first that it was some drunkard below, he continued to
+get into bed quietly, notwithstanding the voice, which kept crying
+out in the garden: "Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst." But this
+persisted so long and in so melancholy a manner that at last Pieter
+Gans must needs get up and go to the window to see who it might be
+making so much noise. Thence he saw a long flame, of great brightness
+and strange upstanding shape, running over the grass; and, thinking
+that it must be some poor soul from purgatory in need of prayers,
+he set about repeating litanies, and went through above a hundred,
+but all in vain, for the voice never ceased crying out as before:
+"Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst."
+
+After cock-crow he heard no more, and looking out again he saw with
+great satisfaction that the flame had disappeared.
+
+When morning came he went straightway to the church. There he told the
+story of these strange happenings to the priest, and caused a fair mass
+to be said for the repose of the poor soul; gave a golden peter to the
+clerk so that others might be said later, and returned home reassured.
+
+But on the following night the voice began its wailing anew, as
+lamentably as if it were that of a dying man hindered from dying. And
+so it went on night after night.
+
+Whence it came about that Pieter Gans grew moody and morose.
+
+Those who had known him in former days, rubicund, carrying a good
+paunch and a joyous face, wont to tell his matins with bottles and
+his vespers with flagons, would certainly never have recognized him.
+
+For he grew so wizened, dried up, thin, and of such piteous appearance
+that dogs used to start barking at the sight of him, as they do at
+beggars with their bundles.
+
+
+
+
+II. How Jan Blaeskaek gave good counsel to Pieter Gans, and wherein
+covetousness is sadly punished.
+
+It so happened that while he was moping after this fashion, passing
+his days in misery and without any joy of them, alone in a corner
+like a leper, there came to the inn a certain Master Jan Blaeskaek,
+brewer of good beer, a hearty fellow, and of a jovial turn of mind.
+
+This visitor, seeing Pieter Gans looking at him nervously and
+shamefacedly, wagging his head like an old man, went up to him and
+shook him: "Come," said he, "wake up, my friend, it gives me no
+pleasure to see thee sitting there like a corpse!"
+
+"Alas," answered Pieter Gans, "I am not worth much more now,
+my master."
+
+"And whence," said Blaeskaek, "hast thou gotten all this black
+melancholy?"
+
+To which Pieter Gans made answer: "Come away to some place where none
+will hear us. There I will tell thee the whole tale."
+
+This he did. When Blaeskaek had heard to the end he said: "'Tis no
+Christian soul that cries in this manner, but the voice of a devil. It
+must be appeased. Therefore go thou and fetch from thy cellar a good
+cask of ale, and roll it out into the garden, to the place where thou
+didst see the flame shining."
+
+"That I will," said Pieter Gans. But at vespers, thinking to himself
+that ale was precious stuff to set before devils, he put instead in
+that place a great bowl of clear water.
+
+Towards midnight he heard a voice more sorrowful than ever, calling
+out: "Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst."
+
+And he saw the bright flame dancing furiously over the bowl, which
+was suddenly broken with a loud report, and this in so violent a
+manner that the pieces flew up against the windows of the house.
+
+Then he began to sweat with terror and weep aloud, saying: "Now
+'tis all over, dear God, all over with me. Oh, that I had followed
+the advice of the wise Blaeskaek, for he is a man of good counsel,
+of excellent counsel! Master Devil, who are so thirsty, do not kill
+me to-night; to-morrow you shall drink good ale, Master Devil. Ah,
+'tis ale of fair repute throughout the land, this ale, fit for kings
+or for good devils like yourself!"
+
+Nevertheless the voice continued to wail: "Drink! Drink!"
+
+"There, there! Have a little patience, Master Devil; to-morrow you
+shall drink my best ale. It cost me many a golden peter, my master,
+and I will give you a whole barrelful. Do you not see that you must not
+strangle me to-night, but rather to-morrow if I do not keep my word."
+
+And after this fashion he wept and cried out until cock-crow. Then,
+finding that he was not dead, he said his matins with a better heart.
+
+At sun-up he went down himself to fetch the cask of ale from his
+cellar, and placed it in the middle of the grass, saying: "Here is
+the freshest and the best drink I have; I am no niggard. So have pity
+on me, Master Devil."
+
+
+
+
+III. Of the songs, voices, mewlings, and sounds of kisses which Pieter
+Gans and Blaeskaek heard in the garden, and of the brave mien wherewith
+Master Merry-face sat on the cask of stone.
+
+At the third hour Blaeskaek came down and asked for news. Pieter Gans
+told his tale, and as he was about to go away again drew him aside
+and said: "I have kept this secret from my servants, lest they should
+go and blab about it to the priests, and so I am as good as alone in
+the house. Do not therefore leave me, for it may happen that some
+evil will come of the business, and 'twould be well to have a good
+stomach in case of such event. Alone I should certainly have none,
+but together we shall have enough for both. It would be as well, then,
+to fortify ourselves against this assault on our courage. Instead of
+sleeping we will eat and drink heartily."
+
+"For that," said Blaeskaek, "I am as ready as thou."
+
+Towards midnight the two comrades, tippling in a low room, fortified
+with good eating, but not without some apprehension nevertheless, heard
+the same voice outside, no longer sorrowful, but joyous, singing songs
+in a strange tongue; and there followed divers sweet chants, such as
+angels might sing (speaking with proper respect to them all), who in
+Paradise had drunken too much ambrosia, voices of women celestially
+soft, mewlings of tigers, sighs, noise of embraces and lovers' kisses.
+
+"Ho, ho!" cried Pieter Gans, "what is this, dear Jesus? They are devils
+for a certainty. They will empty my cask altogether. And when they find
+my ale so good they will want more of it, and come crying every night
+and shouting louder than ever: 'Drink! Drink!' And I shall be ruined,
+alas, alas! Come, friend Blaeskaek"--and so saying he pulled out his
+kuyf, which is, as you may know, a strong knife well sharpened--"Come,
+we must drive them off by force! But alone I have not the courage."
+
+"I will come with you," said Blaeskaek, "but not until a little later,
+at cock-crow. They say that after that hour devils cannot bite."
+
+Before the sun rose the cock crew.
+
+And he had, that morning, so martial a tone that you would have
+thought it a trumpet sounding.
+
+And hearing this trumpet all the devils suddenly put a stop to their
+drinking and singing.
+
+Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek were overjoyed at that, and ran out into
+the garden in haste.
+
+Pieter Gans, hurrying to look for his cask of ale, found it changed
+into stone, and on top of it, sitting horseback fashion, what
+seemed to be a young boy, quite naked, a fair, sweet little boy,
+gaily crowned with vine-leaves, with a bunch of grapes hanging over
+one ear, and in his right hand a staff with a fir-cone at the tip,
+and grapes and vine-branches twined round it.
+
+And although this little boy was made of stone, he had all the
+appearance of being alive, so merry a countenance had he.
+
+Greatly alarmed were Gans and Blaeskaek at the sight of this personage.
+
+And fearing both the wrath of the devil and the punishment of the
+Church, and swearing together to say no word about it to any one,
+they put the figure (which was but a few thumbs high) in a dark cellar
+where there was no drink kept.
+
+
+
+
+IV. Wherein the two worthy men set out for Brussels, capital city
+of Brabant, and of the manners and condition of Josse Cartuyvels
+the Apothecary.
+
+Having done so much they set out together for Brussels, there to
+consult an old man, apothecary by trade, something of a glutton,
+but liked well enough by the common folk on account of a certain
+hotch-potch he made, well seasoned with rare herbs, for which he
+asked a not unreasonable price. He was reputed by the devout to have
+commerce with the devil, on account of the miraculous cures which he
+effected in both man and beast by means of his herbs. Furthermore,
+he sold beer, which he bought from Blaeskaek. And he was hideous to
+look at, gouty, wizened, yellow as a guinea, wrinkled as an old apple,
+and with carbuncles on his neck.
+
+He lived in a house of mean appearance, in that part where you may
+now see the brewery of Claes van Volxem. Gans and Blaeskaek, coming
+thither, found him in his kitchen, making up his stews.
+
+The apothecary, seeing Gans in such a piteous melancholy state,
+asked him if he had some ill whereof he wished to be cured.
+
+"He has nothing to be cured of," said Blaeskaek, "save an evil fear
+which has been tormenting him for a week past."
+
+Thereupon they told him the whole story of the chubby-faced image.
+
+"Dear God!" said Josse Cartuyvels, for such was the name of this
+doctor of stews, "I know this devil well enough, and will show you his
+likeness." And taking them up to the top of his house, into a small
+room which he had there, he showed them a gallant image of that same
+devil, making merry with pretty maids and gay goat-foot companions.
+
+"And what is the name," said Blaeskaek, "of this merry boy?"
+
+"I have no doubt it is Bacchus," said Josse Cartuyvels. "In olden
+times he was a god, but at the gracious coming of Our Lord Jesus
+Christ"--here all three crossed themselves--"he lost at once his
+power and his divinity. He was, in his time, good company, and more
+particularly notable as the inventor of wine, beer, and ale. It may be,
+on that account, that instead of hell he is only in purgatory, where
+no doubt he has become thirsty, and by God's permission was allowed to
+return to earth, once only, no more, and there sing this lamentable
+song which you heard in your garden. But I suppose that he was not
+allowed to cry his thirst in countries where wine is chiefly drunk,
+and that he came accordingly to Master Gans, knowing well enough that
+with him he would find the best ale in all Brabant."
+
+"True," said Gans, "true, friend Cartuyvels, the best in the duchy;
+and he drank up, if you please, a whole barrelful, without paying me
+so much as the smallest gold piece, nor silver, nor even copper. That
+is not the conduct of an honest devil."
+
+"Ah!" said Cartuyvels, "there you are in error, and do not perceive
+what is for your good and what for evil. But if you will take the
+advice I am about to give you, you may find a way whereby you can make
+clear profit from this Bacchus, for he is, you must know, the god of
+jolly drinkers and good innkeepers, and I am disposed to think that
+he will do you a good turn."
+
+"Well, then," asked Blaeskaek, "what must we do now?"
+
+"I have heard that this devil loves warmth and sunlight. So take him
+out, first of all, from this dark cellar. Then put him in some place
+whither the sun reaches, such as on top of the tall press which stands
+in the room where your customers sit and drink."
+
+"Sweet Jesus!" exclaimed Pieter Gans, "this is idolatry."
+
+"In no wise," said the apothecary. "I mean only this; that, put up
+where I tell you, sniffing the good smell of stoups and flagons, and
+hearing jolly talk, he will grow altogether frolicsome and happy. So
+may you bring Christian comfort to poor dead souls."
+
+"But if," said Pieter Gans, "the priests should get wind of this
+statue, so shamelessly set up for all to see?"
+
+"They cannot find you guilty of sin, for innocence keeps nothing
+secret. You will show this Bacchus openly to all your friends and
+relatives, and say that you found him buried under the earth in a
+corner of your garden. Thus you will make him seem an ancient relic, as
+indeed he is. Only take care to forget his name when you speak of him
+to any one, and, entitling him, as in jest, Master Merry-face, use this
+name for him always, and institute in his honour a jolly brotherhood."
+
+"So we will," answered Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek together, and they
+then departed, not without having given the apothecary two large
+coins for his trouble.
+
+He did his best, however, to keep them back, so that they might partake
+of some of his heavenly hotch-potch, but Pieter Gans turned him a deaf
+ear, saying to himself that it was devil's cooking, unwholesome for
+a good Christian stomach. So they left him and set out again for Uccle.
+
+
+
+
+V. Of the long conversation and great perplexity of Pieter Gans and
+Blaeskaek in the matter of the deviling; and how they returned to
+Uccle with a resolution taken.
+
+While they were on their way: "Well, comrade," said Gans to Blaeskaek,
+"what is thy opinion of this apothecary?"
+
+"A dog of a heretic!" said Blaeskaek, "a heathen, a despiser of all
+good and all virtue. For 'twas treasonable and wicked counsel he
+gave us."
+
+"True, my good friend, true. And is it not besides a great heresy
+to dare tell us that this deviling on his cask is he who invented
+beer, wine, and ale, when we have heard it preached every Sunday in
+our church that St. Noah, under the instruction of Our Lord Jesus
+Christ"--here both crossed themselves--"invented these things."
+
+"For my part," said Blaeskaek, "I know I have heard that preached
+above a hundred times."
+
+Here, seating themselves on the grass, they began to refresh themselves
+with a fine Ghent sausage, brought by Pieter Gans against such time
+as they should feel hungry.
+
+"There, there," said he, "let us not forget the Benedicite, my
+friend. So, perhaps, we may escape burning. For 'tis to God we owe
+this meat: may he deign to keep us always in his holy faith."
+
+"Amen," said Blaeskaek; "but, my master, between us we must certainly
+break up this wicked statue."
+
+"He who has no sheep fears no wolves. 'Tis easy enough for thee to
+talk comfortably of breaking up this deviling."
+
+"'Twould be a deed much to our credit."
+
+"But if he come back again to wail each night so piteously:
+'Drink! Drink!' And if he turn angry with me and cast spells on my
+beer and my wine, and make me as poor as Job! Nay, better follow the
+advice of the apothecary."
+
+"Aye, and if the priests learn of the statue, and call us both before
+the tribunal, and have us burnt as heretics and idolaters, what then?"
+
+"Ah," said Gans, "here are the good God on the one hand and the wicked
+devil on the other, fighting over our poor bodies, and we shall be
+pounded to nothing between them, alas, alas!"
+
+"Well," said Blaeskaek, "let us go to the good fathers openly, and
+tell them the whole affair."
+
+"Alas, alas! We shall be burnt, my good master, burnt without mercy."
+
+"I believe there must be some way whereby to escape this danger."
+
+"There is none, my friend, there is none, and we shall be burnt. I
+feel myself already half roast."
+
+"I have thought of a way," said Blaeskaek.
+
+"There is none, my friend, there is no way whatever, unless it be
+the clemency of the worthy fathers. Canst see no pilgrim or wandering
+friar on the road?"
+
+"None."
+
+"If we see such a one we must give him all our sausage--have we said
+our grace for it?--and all the bread in our wallet, and humbly invite
+him into our house, to eat a quarter of roast lamb, well washed down
+with old wine. I have not much of that kind, but I will gladly give
+him all there is of it. Canst not see such a one coming?"
+
+"No one," said Blaeskaek. "But open those rabbit's ears of thine
+and hark to me: I will give thee good counsel, for I wish thee well,
+blubberer. We must follow the apothecary's advice in half-and-half
+fashion, so much only, you understand. 'Twould be idolatry of the
+most shameless kind to put up this statue in the public hall."
+
+"Alas, alas, by all the devils! yes, you are right."
+
+"Very well, then we will put him in a cupboard, which shall be well
+fastened, but with an opening on the top to let in the air. Therein
+we will also put a small keg of good beer, and ask him not to use
+it up too fast. In this way he will be, in fact, within the hall of
+the inn, and he will keep himself well hid for certain, for in his
+cupboard he will be able to take what pleasure he may from the songs
+of the drinkers, rattling of mugs, and clinking of bottles."
+
+"No," said Gans to that, "no, we must follow wholly the apothecary's
+advice, for he knows more about devils than we. As for this deviling,
+we will do our best to satisfy him, according to our means. But in
+spite of it all, I fear we shall one day be burnt, alas, alas!"
+
+
+
+
+VI. Wherein it is seen that the devil is not a good one; and of the
+evil trick which he played on the good wives of the drinkers.
+
+As soon as they reached The Horn, the two worthies took out from the
+cellar the statue of the deviling and put it with great respect on
+top of a press which stood in the hall.
+
+On the morrow there came to this inn nearly all the men of Uccle,
+brought together in this wise because on that day had been sold
+publicly in their stables two horses well bred by the late sheriff,
+Jacob Naeltjens. His son was in no mind to keep them, saying that a
+man's best steeds were his slipper-shoes.
+
+The men of Uccle were surprised and delighted when they saw the statue
+of the youngster on the press, especially when Blaeskaek told them
+that his name was Master Merry-face, and that it was proposed, by
+way of jest, to establish forthwith in his honour a jolly brotherhood.
+
+They were all willing to do this, and thereupon decided between
+them that no one should be of their brotherhood until he had drunk,
+as his baptism, four-and-twenty monstrous great cups of wine, while
+another brother beat twelve strokes on the plumpest belly of the
+company there present.
+
+Each night thereafter they gathered together at The Horn, and drank
+deep enough, as you may well guess.
+
+The most wonderful thing about the business was that in spite of this
+they worked all day like stout fellows, some at their crafts, some at
+their trades, others in the fields, contented one and all. But their
+good wives were not by any means contented, for as soon as vespers
+sounded all their husbands and sweethearts went off to The Horn,
+without giving them so much as a single thought, and there stayed
+until curfew.
+
+And when these worthies went home they did not beat their wives,
+as some drinkers do, but lay down quietly beside them in bed, and
+immediately, without saying a word, fell fast asleep and began to sound
+such fanfares with their noses as Master Porker makes with his snout.
+
+Then the poor women might thump them, cuff them, call their names as
+they would, to get them to sing their bedfellows a different sort of
+song, but all quite in vain: as well beat water to get fire out of it.
+
+They awoke only with cock-crow, but their temper in the morning was
+so rough and stormy that none of their womenfolk (that is to say,
+of such as were not asleep from weariness) dared say a word, either
+then or at the dinner-hour. All this was brought about by the evil
+power and influence of the deviling.
+
+On that account there was much sadness among the women, who said,
+all of them, that if such a state of things went on for long the race
+of the people of Uccle must needs become extinct, which would be a
+great pity.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of the Great Parliament of the Women of Uccle.
+
+So it came about that the women decided between themselves to save the
+village from this fate, and to this end, while their menfolk were at
+drink with Pieter Gans, they met together at the house of a certain
+dame Syske, who was big, fat, loud-speaking, had hair upon her chin,
+and had buried five husbands, or else seven, I dare not particularize
+the number for fear of untruth.
+
+There, as a rebuke to their drunken husbands, they quenched their
+thirst with clear water.
+
+When all were present, the younger ones assembled on this side and
+the older on that, the ugly ones among the older, dame Syske opened
+the talk by saying that they must all go forthwith to The Horn, and
+there give these drinkers such a drubbing that they would be stiff
+and sore for a week because of it.
+
+The old and ugly ones applauded this proposal with their hands,
+their feet, their mouths, and their noses. There was a fine noise,
+you may well believe.
+
+But the young and pretty ones kept silent as fishes, all save one,
+very pretty, very fresh and very neat, bearing the name of Wantje,
+who said very modestly, and blushing somewhat, that it was of no use
+to belabour their worthy men in this fashion, but rather they must
+bring them back to good ways by gentleness and laughter.
+
+To this the dame Syske replied: "Little one, thou canst understand
+nothing of men, for thou art but a maid, or so I believe. For my part
+I know well enough how I managed my several husbands, and that was
+neither by gentleness nor by laughter, I promise thee. They are all
+dead, the worthy men (may God rest their souls!), but I remember them
+clearly, and know very well that at the least wrongdoing I made them
+dance the stick-dance on the field of obedience. None dared eat or
+drink, sneeze or yawn, unless I had first given him leave. Little Job
+Syske, my last, did my cooking for me in my own house. He made a good
+cook, poor little man. But I had to give him many good beatings to
+bring him to that, and so it was with the others as well. Therefore,
+little one, give up all these laughters and gentlenesses of thine,
+they are not worth much, I can tell thee. Let us rather go forthwith
+and cut ourselves good staves of greenwood, easy enough to find now
+that it is spring-time, and going off to The Horn let us make fall
+a good shower of blows on these unfaithful husbands."
+
+At this the old and ugly ones broke out afresh into monstrous howls
+and tumult, crying, "Out upon them! out on the drunkards! They want
+a good drubbing, they want a good hanging!"
+
+
+
+
+VIII. Of the great wit which every woman has, and of the modest
+conversation which the maid Wantje held with the worthies at the inn.
+
+On the morrow all these good women met together once again, and drank
+as before a great quantity of clear water; and afterwards went off,
+armed with sticks, to the place where they knew their men were to
+be found.
+
+Before the door of The Horn they stopped, and there a great council
+took place. The old ones wanted to go in with their sticks.
+
+"No," said Wantje, with the young and pretty ones, "we would rather
+be beaten ourselves."
+
+"Hark to these sillies!" cried the old ones, "these poor silly
+things. They have not an ounce of pride in their bodies, between
+the lot of them. Be guided by us, gentle ewekins: we will avenge the
+dignity of women for you upon these wretched drunkards."
+
+"That you shall not," said the young ones, "as long as we are there."
+
+"That we shall," howled the old ones.
+
+But here a certain young and merry wife burst out laughing.
+
+"See ye not," said she, "whence comes to these grannies so great a
+rage and such a thirst for vengeance? 'Tis simple bragging, to make
+us believe that their old croakers of husbands still care to sing
+them songs."
+
+At these words the old hags were thrown into such a state of fury
+that one or two died of rage there and then. Others, having quite
+lost their heads, wanted to kill the maids and young wives who were
+laughing at them (and 'twas pretty music, all those fresh and merry
+voices), but the dame Syske stopped them from that, saying that for
+the present they must take counsel together and not kill one another.
+
+Continuing their discussion, they quarrelled, argued, chattered,
+jabbered in this and like fashion until curfew-time, when they
+separated without having made up their minds to anything, by reason
+of not having had time enough to talk it over.
+
+And there were spoken in this assembly of women more than 877,849,002
+words, each one as full of good sense as a cellarful of old wine.
+
+Pieter Gans, who, as they said, had rabbit's ears, hearing in
+the street a certain hum of chattering voices, cried out: "Alas,
+alas! what is this now? Devils for a certainty, dear Jesus!"
+
+"I will go and see, little coward," answered Blaeskaek. But on
+opening the door he burst out laughing all at once, saying: "Brothers,
+'tis our wives."
+
+Thereupon all the drinkers rose and went to the door; some with bottles
+in their hands, others brandishing flagons, others again clinking
+their mugs together like church bells. Blaeskaek went out of the room,
+crossed the threshold of the outer door, and stepped into the street.
+
+"Well, wives," said he, "what brings you here with all this greenwood?"
+
+At these words the young ones let fall their sticks to the ground,
+for they were ashamed to be caught with such weapons.
+
+But one old woman, brandishing hers in the air, answered for the
+others: "We come, drunkards, to tell you the tale of the stick,
+and give you a good thrashing."
+
+"Woe, woe!" wept Pieter Gans, "that, I know, is my grandmother's
+voice."
+
+"So it is, scoundrel," said the old woman.
+
+Meanwhile the Brothers of the Cheerful Countenance, hearing all
+this, shook their sides merrily with laughing, and Blaeskaek said:
+"Then come in, come in, good wives, and let us see how you do your
+drubbing. Are those good greenwood staves you have brought?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"I am glad of that. For our part we have ready for you some good
+rods, well pickled in vinegar, which we use for whipping disobedient
+boys. 'Twill doubtless give you all sweet pleasure to feel their
+caresses, and so recall the days of your youth. Will you be pleased
+to try them? We will give you plenty."
+
+But at these scoffing words the old women took fright and ran off as
+fast as their legs would carry them, more particularly mother Syske,
+making such terrible threats and noises as they went that they sounded
+to those jolly Brothers like a flight of screeching crows passing
+down the deserted streets.
+
+The young ones stayed before the door of the inn, and 'twas affecting
+to see them so humbly standing, gentle and submissive, waiting for
+some kindly word from their husbands or sweethearts.
+
+"Well," said Blaeskaek, "do you please to come in?"
+
+"Yes," said they all.
+
+"Keep them out," said Pieter Gans into Blaeskaek's ear, "keep them
+out, or they will go chattering to the priests about the deviling,
+and we shall be burnt, my good friend."
+
+"I am deaf," said Blaeskaek; "come in, my dears."
+
+Thereupon entered all these good women, and took up their places,
+some by their husbands, others by their sweethearts, and the maids
+in a line on a bench modestly.
+
+"Women," said the drinkers, "you wish to join us?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And to drink also?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And have not come here to tell us temperance stories?"
+
+"Nay," said they, "we have come without any other wish than to join
+our good husbands and sweethearts, and laugh with them, if that may
+be, with God's good will."
+
+"Those are certainly fair words," said one old man, "but I suspect
+beneath them some woman's artifice or other."
+
+But no one paid him any heed, for by this time the women were seated
+all about the table, and you might hear this: "Drink this, pretty
+sweet, 'tis a draught from heaven." "Pour, neighbour, pour, pour out
+some more of this sweet drink." "Who is a better man than I? I am the
+Duke; I have good wine and good wife!" "Ho, there! broach a fresh cask
+of wine; we must have the best there is to-day to pleasure these good
+dames." "Courage! I have drunk too much; I am going to conquer the
+moon. But wait a little first. For the present I stay by this good
+wife of mine. Kiss me, sweet."
+
+"This is not the place, before all these people," the women would
+answer. And with many caresses and pretty ways each said to her man:
+"Come away home."
+
+They would indeed have been glad enough to go, all those good
+drinkers, but did not dare do it, being shamefaced in this matter in
+one another's presence.
+
+Guessing as much, the women talked of going back.
+
+"There, there!" said the old man, "is not that what I said. They want
+to have us outside."
+
+"Nay, my masters," said Wantje very sweetly, "but I pray you remember
+that we are not accustomed to such strong drinks, nor even to their
+smell. Therefore, master, if we feel the need to go out into the
+fresh air 'tis assuredly without wanting to anger or sadden you in
+any way whatsoever. May God keep you merry, brothers."
+
+And thereupon the good women went off, though the men tried to keep
+them back by force.
+
+
+
+
+IX. Wherein it is seen that the learned Thomas a Klapperibus knew
+what makes a drinker fidget on his stool.
+
+Left thus to their pots and tankards they turned to one another
+in wonder, saying: "Ah, look ye at these dames! Does it not always
+fall out in this wise; that they would have us do whatever they bid,
+and that with humility! Submissive they seem, tyrants they are. But
+look ye, is it to male or female that belongs properly the right of
+command in all matters? To the male. We are the males. Very well,
+then, let us drink! And we will at all times carry out our own wishes,
+which will presently be to sleep here in this inn, if we please."
+
+After this fashion they talked together for some time, feigning great
+anger, but being, in fact, eager enough to go and join their wives. By
+and by they fell silent, and so remained for a while, some yawning,
+others drumming tunes on the floor with their boots, others again, and
+these many, fidgeting on their seats, as if they were on sharp thorns.
+
+Suddenly a young townsman, but lately married, got up and left the
+hall, saying that by the advice of a leech he was forbidden to drink
+more than six-and-twenty mugs of ale, which number he had already
+taken.
+
+After he had gone they all began to excuse themselves, one with a pain
+in his stomach, another with a headache, others with a melancholy
+feeling or with the phlegm, and made off to their homes, excepting
+only one or two among the older men.
+
+And when they were once outside they hurried with all speed to join
+their wives. Thus was borne out what was written by the learned Thomas
+a Klapperibus in his great work De Amore, c. vi, wherein it is said,
+that woman has more power than the devil.
+
+
+
+
+X. Of the brigand called Irontooth.
+
+But this thing never happened but once; for on the morrow when the
+drinkers were carousing at The Horn the good women who came thither
+to entice them away a second time were driven off in a shameful manner.
+
+And as for the men, they continued to drink and to shout hilarious
+carols.
+
+Several times the night-watchman of the town came in to warn them
+against making so much noise after the sun was set. Ha, they listened
+to him with all respect, and seemed quite abashed and repentant at
+their fault; each one said his mea culpa; and in the meantime they gave
+the poor watchman so abundantly to drink that when he got outside he
+went off straight away to do his round leaning against some wall, and
+there snoring like a bass-viol. The others continued their drinking
+bouts and heavy slumbering, whereof the unhappy wives never ceased
+to complain. And so on, in this fashion, for a month and four days.
+
+Now by great misfortune the good Duke had lately been at war with
+my Lord of Flanders, and although peace had been made between them
+there remained afoot a band of lewd and ribald scoundrels, who went
+about ravishing all the countryside and robbing the townsfolk.
+
+This same band was commanded by a savage captain, to whom was given
+the name of Irontooth, because on the top of his casque he wore a
+single spike, sharp and cruel, like the tooth of some devil or of
+one of the unicorns of hell, cut out into fantastic shape. In battle
+he would sometimes put down his head and use this tooth as a wild
+boar uses his tusks. In this manner were slain many brave soldiers
+of the duchy of Brabant. On this same casque he carried also an evil
+bird whose wings beat against the steel, whereof it was said that it
+screeched in battle in a terrible fashion.
+
+It was Irontooth's custom to come at night to the villages on which he
+was minded to carry out his forays, butchering without mercy the poor
+townsfolk in their sleep, and carrying off jewels, plate, women, and
+maids, but of these last only the young ones. As for the old women,
+he left them their lives, saying that it was not worth the while of
+killing them, for they would certainly die of fright by themselves.
+
+
+
+
+XI. In which it is seen how bravely the good wives of Uccle did the
+duty of men.
+
+It came about that one night when only a few stars were showing,
+and the moon shining a little, there came to Uccle a certain Master
+André Bredael, running as hard as he could and quite out of breath.
+
+He brought this news: that being by chance behind a bush on the road
+to Paris, he had seen a troop of men go past, whom he thought to be
+the Irontooth's, for he had seen among them a spiked casque like that
+which the great brigand was wont to wear.
+
+While these men were halted by the roadside, and munching some food,
+he overheard them say that they were bound that night for Uccle,
+where they hoped to get good sport and fair plunder, but they said
+also that they must leave the high road and travel by small lanes,
+so that their passage should not be discovered. Master Bredael thought
+it most likely that they would debouch behind the church.
+
+Having learned so much he had hurried to Uccle by the Paris road,
+outdistancing the brigands by a good half-league, so that he might
+warn the townsmen to arms, and prepare a strong reception for these
+unwelcome travellers.
+
+And arriving there he hastened to the door of the prefecture and
+knocked loudly, so that the warning bell might be set ringing at once;
+but none came to open to him, for the good reason that the custodian,
+being one of the Brothers of the Cheerful Countenance, was fast asleep,
+like all the other drinkers. André Bredael then sought other means of
+alarum, and shouted out so loudly: "Fire! fire! Brand! brand!" that all
+the women and old men, and children who were too young to drink, leapt
+out of bed and ran to their windows to see what was going forward.
+
+André Bredael made himself known to them and begged them to come
+down into the square, which they did with all dispatch. When they
+were all gathered round him he told them of the coming of Irontooth,
+and bade them go and wake their husbands.
+
+At these words the older women began to shout as if mad: "Welcome to
+Irontooth, God's tooth in good deed, come to rip them all open! Ha,
+drinkers! now we shall see you, as a punishment from heaven, either
+hanged short or burnt alive or drowned without respite; and 'tis no
+more than your sins deserve!" Then, as if they had wings to their
+feet, they flew into their houses, and there Master Bredael, who
+stayed with the younger women in the square, heard the enraged old
+hags shouting, whining, weeping, vociferating, thumping on chests
+and frying-pans, in an attempt to awaken their good men. At the same
+time they cried in their ears: "Scoundrels, wake up! Sweet friends,
+come and protect us! Drunkards, do your duty for once in your accursed
+lives! Dear fellows, do you wish to find us dead by morning? Bear us
+no malice for our talk of thrashing you. We were foolish just then,
+and too hasty; ye were wise. But save us in this pass!" And so on,
+mixing together smooth and bitter words, like milk and vinegar.
+
+But none of the men stirred.
+
+"What is this?" said Master Bredael.
+
+"Alas, master," said the young women, "'tis as you see; they are as
+good as dead the night through, and so has it been a while past. If
+the angel of God himself were to come he would scarce be able to
+rouse them. Ah, must it be that after having left us lonely so long
+these wicked husbands will now leave us to die!"
+
+"Do not weep," said André Bredael, "this is no time for that. Do you
+love these husbands of yours?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And your sons?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And your little daughters, so sweet and winsome?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And you are ready to defend them as best you can?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"Well, then," said Bredael, "go and fetch your men's bows and come
+back here with them as quickly as you can. We will think of some way
+to defend ourselves."
+
+Soon enough the women were back again, armed with bows which they
+had taken from their husbands, brothers, or sweethearts. These bows
+of Uccle were of great renown throughout the land, for they were as
+strong as steel, and winged their arrows with very great speed.
+
+With them came certain boys of twelve years old, or not much more,
+and one or two brave old men, but the women sent them back again
+indoors, saying that they must stay behind and look to the village.
+
+The good womenfolk then collected in a bunch in the square, talking
+with great ardour and courage, but not too much bragging withal. Every
+one was clad in a white gown, jacket, or shift, as is the customary
+night apparel of women. But on this occasion it was by the special
+favour of God that they were so clad, as you shall see by and by.
+
+Wantje, who was one of their number, standing very bold and calm,
+said suddenly that they must pray. Thereupon they all knelt devoutly,
+and the maid spoke thus:
+
+"Madam Mary the Virgin, who art queen of heaven as Madam the Duchess
+is queen of this country, give an ear to these poor wives and maids,
+humbly kneeling before you, who by reason of the drunkenness of their
+husbands and brothers must needs take on themselves men's duty and
+arm themselves to fight. If you will but make a small prayer to My
+Lord Jesus to give us his aid we shall be sure enough of victory. And
+we will give you as thanksgiving a fair crown of gold, with rubies,
+turquoises and diamonds in its rim, a fair golden chain, a fair robe
+of brocade spangled over with silver, and the same to My Lord your
+son. Therefore pray for us, Madam Mary."
+
+And all the other good maids and wives said after Wantje: "Pray for
+us, Madam Mary."
+
+Suddenly, as they were rising from their knees, they saw a beautiful
+bright star shoot from heaven to earth, not far from where they
+were. This was, no doubt, an angel from the good God, who came down
+from Paradise in this guise, to stand beside them and help them the
+more surely.
+
+Seeing the sign the good women took heart of grace, and Wantje spoke
+further, saying:
+
+"Madam the Virgin hearkens to us, 'tis certain. Let us now proceed
+to the gate of the village, beside the church of Our Lord, who dwells
+therein"--here all crossed themselves--"to await with confidence the
+coming of the Irontooth and his men. And when we see them near at
+hand let every woman draw her bow, without speaking, nor moving in
+any way. Madam the Virgin will guide the arrows."
+
+"Well spoken, brave maid," said Master Bredael. "Come, I see in those
+eyes of thine, so bright in the darkness, the breath of God, which is a
+flame, alight in thy maid's heart. We must do as she says, good wives."
+
+"Yes, yes," said they.
+
+This woman's army took up its place in line in the alley behind
+the church.
+
+After a while of waiting, wherein was much perplexity and anxiety,
+they heard the sound of footfalls and voices, growing louder as they
+listened, as of men on the march.
+
+And Wantje said: "Madam Mary, they are coming; have pity on us!"
+
+Then a large body of men appeared before them, carrying lanterns. And
+they heard a monstrous, husky, devil's voice crying: "Out, friends,
+out upon them! Loot for the Irontooth!"
+
+But here suddenly all these good women let fly their arrows with
+great precision, for though they themselves remained in darkness they
+could see the brigands, all lit up by their lanterns, as clearly as
+in daylight. Two hundred of the men fell at the first volley, some
+with arrows in their skulls, others in their necks, and several with
+them in their bellies.
+
+The Irontooth himself was among the first that the good women heard
+fall with a great thud, from an arrow let fly by Wantje, which pierced
+him through the eyeball neatly.
+
+Some were not wounded at all, but, having troubled conscience, thought
+when they saw all these white figures that 'twas the souls of those
+whom they had made pass from life into death, come back by God's
+grace to avenge themselves upon them. So they fell on their faces in
+the dust, as if dead from fear, crying out in a most piteous manner:
+"Mercy, Lord God! send back to hell all these ghosts, we pray you."
+
+But when they saw the good wives bearing down on them fear put strength
+into their legs, and they made off as fast as they would carry them.
+
+
+
+
+XII. Wherein Pieter Gans is nearer the stake than the wine-barrel.
+
+When the enemy had been so far discomfited the women came back into
+the square and stood before the prefecture, not feeling any glory,
+but rather sadness at having had to shed Christian blood in this
+manner. Ah, they returned thanks with a full heart to Our Lady the
+Virgin and Our Lord Jesus, who had given them the victory.
+
+Nor did they forget in their thanksgiving the good angel who had come
+to their assistance in the form of a bright star. And they sang fair
+hymns and litanies very sweetly.
+
+Meanwhile all the cocks in the countryside awoke one by one and
+heralded with their clarions the new day about to dawn.
+
+And at that call, all the drinkers were roused from sleep, and ran
+to their doors to find out whence came this sweet music.
+
+And my lord the Sun laughed in the sky.
+
+And the worthy men came out into the square, and some of them, when
+they saw their wives in the assembly, were all for beating them
+because they had left their beds; but André Bredael interposed and
+told them the whole story. Thereupon they were all amazed, ashamed,
+and repentant, seeing how well these brave petticoats had striven on
+their behalf. Pieter Gans, Blaeskaek, and Father Claessens, Dean of
+Uccle, a most saintly man, also came out into the square.
+
+Thereupon, seeing all this crowd assembled, Master Bredael spoke thus:
+
+"Friends," said he, "you hear how that 'tis through the valour of
+your wives and daughters alone that you are not by this time sniffing
+the air of heaven. Therefore 'tis seemly that here and now you should
+promise, and take oath to it, not to drink any more except by their
+wish."
+
+"That is all very well, Master Bredael," said one of the townsmen,
+"but 'tis not plain drinking that puts us all into so deep a sleep. I
+speak of these things with knowledge, I who have drunk wine freely
+all my life, and hope still so to do with relish to the end of my
+days. There is something else to it, devilry and evil spells, or so I
+think. Come hither, Pieter Gans, come hither and talk to us somewhat,
+and if thou know anything, bring light to this dark matter."
+
+"Alas, alas!" said Pieter Gans, his head wagging and his teeth
+chattering (for he was afraid, poor fellow), "alas, alas! I know
+nothing, my good friends."
+
+"Nay," said the man, "but thou dost know something of it, for I see
+thy head shaking and thy teeth chattering."
+
+But at this point the Dean confronted Gans:
+
+"Wicked Christian," said he, "I can see well enough thou hast had
+commerce with the devil, to the great despite of all these good
+men. Confess thy sin with all humility, and we will accord thee such
+grace as may be, but if thou deny it, thou shalt be punished with
+hot oil."
+
+"Ah," said Pieter Gans in tears, "'tis as I said; I shall be burnt,
+dear God! Blaeskaek, where art thou, my good friend? Give me thy
+help. Alas, alas!"
+
+But Blaeskaek had gone off in a hurry from fear of the holy Fathers.
+
+"Ah," said Pieter Gans, "see how the traitor deserts me when danger
+threatens!"
+
+"Speak," said the very reverend Father.
+
+"Yes, Master Dean," said Pieter Gans, weeping and wailing, "I will tell
+you the whole story, without keeping back anything.... Master!" he
+cried when he had come to the end of his recital, "if you will not
+punish me too heavily, Master, I will give all my poor savings as a
+perpetual gift to the Church. I am a true Christian, that I vow, and
+no heretic. Moreover, I wish not to die until I have had sufficient
+time to do long and full penance. But have me not boiled in oil before
+I have had that time, I beg of you."
+
+"As to that," answered the Dean, "we shall see. Now take us to the
+place where this devil is to be seen."
+
+By that time they were close to the church, and the priest went in to
+get therefrom some holy water before they started. Then all the men,
+women, and children of the village took their way to The Horn.
+
+There the Dean demanded to see what had been the cause of those wicked
+spells which had been cast over so many worthy men, and Pieter Gans,
+with all humility, showed him the deviling, still smiling and holding
+his staff of vine-branches in his hand. And all the women, after
+looking at him for some time, said that he was very comely for a devil.
+
+The priest first crossed himself, then, dipping his fingers in the
+holy water, anointed therewith the brow, breast, and belly of the
+statue, which thereupon, by the grace of God, crumbled into dust,
+and a sorrowful voice was heard saying: "Oi moi, ô phôs, tethnêka!"
+
+And these words of the devil were explained by the priest to signify,
+in the Greek tongue: "Woe is me! Light! I die!"
+
+
+
+
+XIII. Of the great wonder and astonishment of My Lord the Duke when
+he heard of the valour of the women of Uccle.
+
+In the meantime the village sent to the Duke two trusty men, with a
+message to that high prince informing him in due order all that had
+occurred. These men met him already on his way to Uccle, for he had
+learnt by his runners the Irontooth's design, and knowing full well
+where he would find him was coming against him at all speed with a
+strong force of horsemen.
+
+As soon as the messengers saw who it was coming along the road they
+went down on their knees, but the good Duke would have none of this,
+and made them rise and walk at his stirrup.
+
+Before they had gone far they reached the scene of the brigands'
+discomfiture. At the sight of all those heaped-up bodies the Duke
+halted, greatly astonished and no less pleased. "And who," quoth he,
+"has slain all these scoundrels in this wise?"
+
+"Our womenfolk," said one of the messengers.
+
+"What is this thou'rt telling me?" said the Duke with a frown.
+
+"Before God, My Lord," said the man, "I will tell you the whole story."
+
+And so he did.
+
+"Well," said the Duke when he had done, "who would have thought it
+of these good wives? I will reward them well for it."
+
+So saying he caused the casque of the Irontooth to be taken up and
+carried away. This casque was to be seen for many years in the armoury
+of My Lord Charles, who had it guarded with the utmost care.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. In what manner was instituted the Order of the Women-Archers
+of Uccle and of the fine reward which My Lord gave to the brave
+maid Wantje.
+
+On entering Uccle the good Duke saw coming towards him a large body of
+people, and in their midst a man crying out in a most piteous voice:
+"Master! Master Priest! let me not be boiled!" To which the answer was:
+"We shall see."
+
+"Whence comes all this noise?" said the Duke.
+
+But as soon as Pieter Gans saw who it was he ran towards him and threw
+his arms round his horse's legs. "My Lord," he cried, "My Lord Duke,
+let me not be boiled!"
+
+"And why," said the Duke, "should they boil one of my good men
+of Uccle?"
+
+But the very reverend Father Claessens, stepping forward, told him
+the whole story with great indignation, while Pieter Gans continued to
+blubber alongside in a most melancholy fashion. And thereon followed
+such confusion, with the one weeping and groaning, the other denouncing
+and syllogizing, and each so vehemently, that the good Duke could
+not tell which to listen to.
+
+Suddenly Wantje came forward out of the press, and, like Pieter Gans,
+cried: "Mercy and pity!"
+
+"My Lord," said the maid, "this man has sinned greatly against God,
+but only from simpleness of mind and a natural cowardice. The devil
+frightened him; he submitted to the devil. Pardon him, My Lord,
+for our sakes."
+
+"Maid," said the Duke, "that was well spoken, and 'tis to thee I
+will hearken."
+
+But the very reverend Father: "My Lord," said he, "forgets to think
+of God."
+
+"Father," said the Duke, "I am not forgetful of that duty. Nevertheless
+I think he takes little pleasure in watching Christian fat smoke or
+a good man's flesh boil, but likes rather to see men gentle and kind,
+and not giving their fellows penance to do. And on this day when Our
+Lady the Virgin has deigned to perform a miracle for our sakes I will
+not sadden her mother's heart by the death of a Christian. Therefore
+none of the accused, neither this Pieter Gans nor any other there
+may be, shall this time go to the stake."
+
+On hearing this Pieter Gans burst out laughing like a madman, and
+began to dance and sing, crying out the while: "Praise to My Lord! I
+am not to be boiled. Brabant to the Good Duke!" And all the townsfolk
+called out after him: "Praise to My Lord!"
+
+Then the Duke bade them be silent, and smiling:
+
+"Well, dames," said he, "who have this night done man's work so
+valiantly, come hither that I may give you a man's reward. First
+of all, to the bravest one among you I give this great chain of
+gold. Which is she?"
+
+The good women pushed Wantje forward before the Duke.
+
+"Ah," said he, "'tis thee, sweet pleader. Wilt kiss me, though I
+be old?"
+
+"Yes, My Lord," said the maid. And so she did, notwithstanding that
+she was a little shamefaced over it.
+
+And the good Duke, having hung the chain round her neck, spoke further
+in this wise:
+
+"As for you all, good dames, who have this night so gallantly carried
+arms, I institute among you a most honourable Order, under the
+protection of Madam Mary the Virgin, and I direct that there shall be
+set up in this place a staff of a good length, and that each Sunday
+you shall come together here and draw the bow in archery, in memory of
+the time when with those bows you saved the lives of your husbands and
+children. And there shall be a fair crown of laurel and a fair purseful
+of golden peters, bright and new, to be awarded annually to the best
+archer of the year, and brought to her on a cushion by all the others
+together. And this purse will dower her if she be a maid, or, if she
+be a wife, will stand her in good stead against a time of famine."
+
+In this manner was instituted the Order of Women-Archers of Uccle,
+who still draw the bow like men every Sunday, under the protection
+of Our Lady the Virgin.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE SISTERS
+
+
+I. Of the three noble ladies and their great beauty.
+
+In the year of Our Lord Jesus Christ 690, lived three maidens,
+descended, by male issue, from the noble line of the great emperor
+Octavian.
+
+Their names were Blanche, Claire, and Candide.
+
+Though they had dedicated the flower of their maidenhead to God,
+it is not to be supposed that this was for lack of lovers.
+
+For, on every day that passed, a crowd of people used to collect
+for nothing else than to see them go by on their way to church,
+and onlookers would say of them: "See what gentle eyes, see what
+white hands!"
+
+More than one, besides, with his mouth watering to look at them,
+would say sorrowfully: "Must it be that such sweet maids as these
+should dedicate themselves to God, who has eleven thousand or more
+in his Paradise already."
+
+"But none so fair," answered an old wheezing merchant behind them,
+who was drinking in the fragrance of their dresses.
+
+And going off on his way, if the old man saw any young fellow loafing
+by the roadside, or lying on his belly in the grass to warm his back
+in the sun, he would give him a kick in the ribs, saying: "Well now,
+dost thou care nothing to see the finest flowers of beauty that were
+ever blowing?"
+
+
+
+
+II. How a prince of Araby was taken with love for the youngest sister,
+and what came of it.
+
+Not a few young men tried to win them in marriage, but failing in
+this endeavour, turned moody and pined visibly away.
+
+Among them was a certain prince of Araby, who had himself baptized with
+great ceremony. And this for the sake of the youngest sister solely.
+
+But, failing to attain his end, either by pleading or by force, set
+himself one morning before her door, and there let himself fall on
+his sword.
+
+The maid, hearing this fair lord cry out, came down in haste and had
+him carried in and laid on her own bed; whereat (for he was not quite
+dead) he found great solace.
+
+And when she bent over him to bathe and dress his wound, he roused
+what force he had left in him, kissed her on her red mouth, sighed
+like a man delivered from torment, and so gave up his soul happily.
+
+But the maid was not at all pleased at this kiss, for she considered
+it a dishonour to her divine husband Jesus. Nevertheless she wept
+for the fair lord, a little.
+
+
+
+
+III. Wherein it is seen how Satan persecutes those ladies who seek
+to escape from the world.
+
+There were oftentimes a great crowd of suitors before the dwelling
+of the three ladies, some of them sighing laments, others prancing
+up and down on fine horses, others without uttering a word, but only
+looking up at the windows all the day long.
+
+And oftentimes these men would fight together and kill one another,
+from jealousy. At this the ladies were saddened exceedingly.
+
+"Ah," said the two elder to their sister, "pray for us, white Blanche,
+white of soul and white of body, pray for us, little one. Jesus
+listens readily to the prayers of such maids as thou art."
+
+"My sisters," answered she, "I am less worthy than you, but I will
+pray, if you so wish it."
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+Then the three sisters knelt down, and the youngest prayed in this
+manner:
+
+"Kind Jesus, we have sinned against you assuredly, else you would not
+have let our beauty so touch these wicked men. Yes, we have indeed
+sinned, but, weaklings that we are, despite ourselves, Lord. Ah,
+grant us pardon for our great sorrow. You would have us for your own,
+and so indeed we have kept ourselves: our youth and beauty, mirth
+and sadness, vows and prayers, souls and bodies, thoughts and deeds,
+everything. In the morning, at noon, and at vesper-time, at all hours
+and all moments, do we not have you in our minds? When your bright
+sun rises, O beloved, and no less when your bright stars shine in
+your heaven, they can see us at prayer, and offering to you, not gold,
+frankincense, or myrrh, but our humble loves and our poor hearts. That
+is not enough, we know well. Dear one, teach us to do more."
+
+Pausing here they sighed sorrowfully, all three.
+
+"Kind Jesus," went on the youngest sister, "we know well enough
+the desire of these men. They think themselves brave and handsome,
+and hope on this account to capture our love, but they are neither
+handsome, nor brave, nor good, as you are, Jesus. And yours we are
+and shall be always, and theirs never. Will you please to love us
+also a little, for you alone are our comfort and joy in this sad
+world, Jesus? We will not be unfaithful to you in anything. Ah,
+let us rather die quickly, for we hunger and thirst for you. If you
+will, let these evil men continue to pursue us with their loves,
+'twill be but delight to suffer it for your sake. Nevertheless,
+the mortal husband leaves not his wife in danger, nor the betrothed
+his bride. Are you not better than they, and will you not keep us
+also from the snares of the enemy? If it be not pleasing to you, do
+nothing, but then it may be that one day some one will steal from us
+our virginity, which is yours only. Ah, dear beloved, rather let us
+pass our lives old, ugly, leprous, and then descend into purgatory,
+among devils, flame, and brimstone, there to wait until you deem us
+pure enough at length to take us into your Paradise, where we shall
+be allowed to see you and love you for ever. Have pity upon us. Amen."
+
+And having spoken thus, the poor child wept, and her sisters with her,
+saying: "Pity, Jesus, pity."
+
+
+
+
+IV. Of the voice of the divine bridegroom, and of the horseman in
+silvern armour.
+
+Suddenly they heard a low voice saying: "Take heart."
+
+"Hark," they said, "the husband deigns to speak to his brides."
+
+And presently the room was filled with a perfume more delicate than
+that of a censer burning finest frankincense.
+
+Then the voice spake further: "To-morrow," it said, "when dawn breaks,
+go out from the town. Mount your palfreys, and, riding without halt,
+follow the road without heeding whither it leads. I will guide you."
+
+"We will obey you," they said, "for you have made us the happiest of
+the daughters of men."
+
+And rising from their knees, they kissed one another joyfully.
+
+While the voice was speaking to them, there had come into the square a
+beautiful horseman in silvern armour, with a golden helm on his head,
+and, flying above that like a bird, a crest more brilliant than a
+flame. The horse whereon he rode was of pure white.
+
+None of those there had seen him coming, and he was as if risen from
+the ground among the crowd of lovers, who, seized with fear, dared
+not look him in the face.
+
+"Rascals," quoth he, "take these horses away out of the square. Do
+you not know that the noise of their hooves troubles these three
+ladies in their prayers?"
+
+And therewith he rode away towards the east.
+
+"Ah," said the lovers to one another, "saw you that silvern armour
+and that flaming crest? 'Twas an angel of God assuredly, come from
+Paradise for the sake of these three ladies." The more insistent among
+them muttered: "He did not forbid us to stand on foot before the door,
+and in that wise we may yet remain with impunity."
+
+
+
+
+V. How, by the command of God, the three ladies rode to adventure.
+
+On the morrow, therefore, before daylight, the suitors returned once
+again in great numbers, but first left their horses behind them in
+their stables. Soon after daybreak they saw the three ladies ride out
+from their courtyard, in obedience to the command which God had given
+them, each one mounted upon her palfrey. Supposing that they were but
+going out into the neighbouring meadows to take the clean air, they
+followed behind, one and all, singing merry carols in their honour.
+
+For so long as they were in the streets of the town the palfreys
+moved slowly, but once out in the open country they began galloping.
+
+The lovers tried still to follow them, but at last were forced to
+drop off, and fell one by one along the wayside.
+
+When they had covered some miles the palfreys stood still; and the
+three ladies, seeing that they had come free of their pursuers,
+resolved to give honour to God for his aid, and to this end to build
+him a fair church.
+
+Where? They did not know. But the thing was already decided in
+Paradise, as you shall see.
+
+For as soon as they were once again on their horses, the animals,
+guided by God's holy spirit, set off at a high trot.
+
+And leapt rivers, threaded forests, passed through towns, whereof the
+gates opened of themselves to let them by, and closed again after,
+bounded over walls and like obstacles.
+
+And startled every one they met, all amazed to see go by, quick as
+the wind, these three white horses and these three fair ladies.
+
+And travelled in this way for a thousand leagues, or rather more.
+
+
+
+
+VI. Of the diamond hammers, and foundations torn up from the ground.
+
+At Haeckendover, in the duchy of Brabant, the palfreys stood still
+once again, and neighed.
+
+And would not go one step forward, nor back.
+
+For this was where God had chosen to have his church.
+
+But the ladies, supposing that they had stopped there because they
+were tired, went on as far as Hoy-Bout on foot, and there determined
+to start building.
+
+Therefore they sent for the most skilful workers in stone, and
+master-builders also, in so great number that at the end of one day
+the foundations were two hands' breadth high in the lowest part.
+
+And seeing this good beginning the ladies rejoiced greatly, and
+supposed their work agreeable to God.
+
+But on the morrow, alas, found all the stones torn up out of the
+ground.
+
+Thinking that by chance some traitor heretic had been buried in
+that place, who at night shook down the stones of their church with
+the trembling of his accursed bones, they removed to Steenen-Berg
+with their workmen, and there started afresh in the same manner as
+at Hoy-Bout.
+
+But on the morrow morning found the walls once again out of the ground.
+
+For the Lord Jesus was minded to be worshipped more particularly
+at Haeckendover.
+
+And sent, therefore, his angels by night, with hammers of diamond
+from the workshops of Paradise.
+
+And bade them tear down the work of the three ladies.
+
+Therefore the sisters, greatly perplexed and wondering, went down on
+their knees, praying God that he would tell them where he wished to
+have his church.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of the youngest sister and the beautiful angel.
+
+And suddenly they saw a young man, of a beauty more than earthly,
+clad in a robe of the colour of the setting sun.
+
+Kindly he looked at them.
+
+Knowing him for God's angel, the three ladies fell on their faces
+before him.
+
+But the youngest, bolder than the others, as is the way with children,
+dared to steal a look at the fair ambassador, and, seeing him so
+comely, took heart and smiled.
+
+The angel took her by the hand, saying to her and to her sisters:
+"Come and follow me."
+
+This they did.
+
+And thence they came to the spot where the church now stands, and
+the angel said to them: "This is the place."
+
+"Thank you, My Lord," said the youngest joyously.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. How the three ladies saw a green island, with sweet flowers
+and birds thereon.
+
+At that time it was thirteen days past the feast of the Kings; snow
+had fallen heavily and set hard in frost after, by reason of a north
+wind which was blowing.
+
+And the three ladies saw before them, among the snow, as it were a
+green island.
+
+And this island was girt about with a cord of purple silk.
+
+And upon the island the air was fresh as in spring, and roses were
+blowing, with violets and jessamine, whose smell is like balm.
+
+But outside was naught but storm, north wind, and terrible cold.
+
+Towards the middle, where now stands the grand altar, was a holm-oak,
+covered with blossom as if it had been a Persian jessamine.
+
+In the branches, warblers, finches and nightingales sang to their
+hearts' content the sweetest songs of Paradise.
+
+For these were angels, who had put on feathered guise, carolling in
+this fashion in God's honour.
+
+One fair nightingale, the sweetest singer of them all, held in his
+right claw a roll of parchment, whereon was written in letters of gold:
+
+"This is the place chosen by God and shown by him to the three maidens
+for the building of a church to the glory of Our Lord and Saviour
+Jesus Christ."
+
+Great was the joy of the ladies at that sight, and the youngest said
+to the angel:
+
+"We see certainly that God loves us somewhat; what must we do now,
+My Lord Angel?"
+
+"Thou must build the church here, little one," answered the messenger,
+"and choose for this work twelve of the most skilled workmen, neither
+more nor less; God himself will be the thirteenth."
+
+And having said so much he returned to high heaven.
+
+
+
+
+IX. Of the church of Our Lord at Haeckendover, and of the strange
+mason who worked there.
+
+Then all three went off in haste to choose from among the others the
+twelve good workmen who should set up the foundations of the church
+where they had seen the cord of purple silk.
+
+The work went on so well that it was a pleasure to see the stones
+mounting up, straight and quickly.
+
+But the miracle was this, that during the hours of labour the masons
+were always thirteen in number, but at dinner and at paytime twelve
+only.
+
+For the Lord Jesus was pleased to work with the others, but neither
+ate nor drank with them; he who in Paradise had such fine broth and
+such sweet fruits, and wine from the fountain of Saphir, which is a
+fountain giving forth without intermission wine of a richer yellow
+than liquid gold itself.
+
+Nor did he suffer for want of money; for that is an evil reserved to
+us needy, piteous, and ill-faring mortals.
+
+The building advanced so well that soon the bell was hung in the
+tower as a sign that the church was finished.
+
+Then the three maids entered in together; and, falling on her knees,
+the youngest said:
+
+"By whom, divine husband and beloved Jesus, shall we dedicate this
+church built for your service?"
+
+To which the Lord Jesus replied: "It is I Myself who will consecrate
+and dedicate this church; let none come after me to consecrate
+it anew."
+
+
+
+
+X. Of the two bishops, and the withered hands.
+
+By and by two venerable bishops passed through Haeckendover, and
+seeing the new church were minded to give it their blessing.
+
+They knew nothing of the words of Jesus to the three ladies, or they
+would not have thought of such temerity.
+
+But they were punished terribly none the less.
+
+For as one of them was about to bless the water for this purpose he
+became suddenly blind.
+
+And the other, who was holding the holy water brush, when he lifted
+his arms for the blessing, found them suddenly withered and stiffened,
+so that he could no longer move them.
+
+And perceiving that they had sinned in some way the two bishops were
+filled with repentance and prayed to the Lord Jesus to pardon them.
+
+And they were straightway pardoned, seeing that they had sinned
+in ignorance.
+
+And thereafter they came oftentimes most devoutly to Haeckendover.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SIR HALEWYN
+
+
+I. Of the two castles.
+
+Sir Halewyn lifted up his voice in a song.
+
+And whatever maid heard that song must needs go to him straight away.
+
+And now to all good Flemings will I tell the tale of this Halewyn
+and his song, and of the brave maid Magtelt.
+
+There were two proud castles in the province of Flanders. In one
+dwelt Sir Roel de Heurne, with the lady Gonde, his good wife;
+Toon the Silent, his son; Magtelt, his fair daughter, and a host
+of pages, grooms, varlets, men-at-arms, and all the other members
+of the household, among whom an especial favourite was Anne-Mie,
+a girl of gentle blood, maid to the lady Magtelt.
+
+Of everything that was made by his peasants, Sir Roel took naught
+but what was the best.
+
+And the peasants said of him that it was a good master who took only
+as much as he needed, when he might have left them with nothing.
+
+In the other castle lived Sir Halewyn the Miserable, with his father,
+brother, mother, and sister, and a large following of rascals and
+brigands.
+
+And these were an ill-favoured crew, I can tell you, past masters of
+robbery, pillage, and murder, such as it is not good to meet at too
+close quarters.
+
+
+
+
+II. Of Dirk, called the Crow.
+
+This family were issue by direct line of Dirk, the first of the
+Halewyns, to whom was given the name of the Crow, because he was as
+greedy of booty as a crow is of carrion.
+
+And also because he was clad all in black, and his men with him.
+
+This Dirk, who lived in the time of the great wars, was like a
+thunderbolt in battle, where, with his only weapon, a heavy club,
+furnished with a beak at one side, he broke javelins, splintered
+lances, and tore away mail as if it had been cloth; and no one could
+well resist his onslaught. And in this manner he so frightened his
+enemies that when they saw Dirk and his black soldiers bearing down
+upon them, shouting, yelling, without fear of any one, and in great
+number, they gave themselves up for dead before ever battle was joined.
+
+When victory was won and the more important booty divided (whereof Dirk
+always secured the lion's share and never came off badly), the other
+barons and their knights would leave the rest of the field to him and
+his followers, and would go off, saying: "The pieces are for the crow."
+
+No other man-at-arms would dare to stay behind then, or he would have
+been quickly taken and slain without waiting. And thereafter Dirk's
+men would begin to play the crow in earnest; cutting off fingers to
+get the rings on them, even of those not yet dead, who cried out to
+them for succour; chopping off heads and arms so that they might pull
+away clothes the more easily. And they even fought amongst themselves,
+and sometimes killed one another, over the bodies of the dead, for
+the sake of neck-pieces, straps of hide, or more paltry stuff still.
+
+And stayed sometimes on the battlefield over this business three days
+and three nights.
+
+When all the dead were stark naked they piled up their gains into
+carts which they brought for this purpose.
+
+And with these they returned to Dirk's castle, there to hold high
+revel and have good cheer. On the way they fought the peasants,
+taking whatever women and girls were at all comely, and did with
+them what they pleased. In this way they passed their lives fighting,
+pillaging, robbing the helpless, and caring nothing at all for either
+God or devil.
+
+Dirk the Crow became exceedingly powerful and got very much worship,
+both by reason of his prowess in battle and from the fact that My
+Lord the Count gave him after his victories the demesne of Halewyn,
+with powers of seigneury, both of the higher and the lower order.
+
+And he had a fine escutcheon made for himself, wherein was a crow
+sable on a field or, with this device: The pieces are for the Crow.
+
+
+
+
+III. Of Sir Halewyn and how he carried himself in his youth.
+
+But to this strong Crow were born children of a quite other kind.
+
+For they were all, strangely enough, men of the quill and writing-desk,
+caring nothing for the fine arts of war, and despising all arms.
+
+These great clerks lost a good half of their heritage. For each year
+some stronger neighbour would rob them of a piece of it.
+
+And they begot puny and miserable children, with pale faces, who passed
+their time, as clerks are wont, lurking in corners, sitting huddled
+on stools, and whining chants and litanies in a melancholy fashion.
+
+Thus came to an end the good men of the line.
+
+Siewert Halewyn, who was the wretch of whom I am to tell you this
+tale, was as ugly, puny, woebegone, and sour-faced as the others,
+or even worse than they.
+
+And like them he was always lurking and hiding in corners, and
+shirking company, hated the sound of laughter, sweated ill-humour, and,
+moreover, was never seen to lift his head skywards like an honest man,
+but was all the while looking down at his boots, wept without reason,
+grumbled without cause, and never had any satisfaction in anything. For
+the rest he was a coward and cruel, delighting during his childhood
+in teasing, frightening and hurting puppies and kittens, sparrows,
+thrushes, finches, nightingales, and all small beasts.
+
+And even when he was older, he hardly dared to attack so large a thing
+as a wolf, though he were armed with his great sword. But as soon as
+the beast was brought down he would rain blows on it with high valour.
+
+So he went on until he was old enough to marry.
+
+
+
+
+IV. How Sir Halewyn wished to take himself a wife, and what the ladies
+and gentlewomen said to it.
+
+Then, since he was the oldest of the family, he was sent off to the
+court of the Count, there to find himself a wife. But every one laughed
+at him, on account of his marvellous ugliness, more particularly the
+ladies and gentlewomen, who made fun of him among themselves, saying:
+
+"Look at this fine knight! What is he doing here? He has come to marry
+us, I suppose.--Who would have him, for four castles, as many manors,
+ten thousand peasants and half the gold in the province? None.--And
+that is a pity, for between them they would get fine children, if
+they were to be like their father!--Ho, what fine hair he has, the
+devil must have limned it with an old nail; what a fine nose, 'tis
+like a withered plum, and what fair blue eyes, so marvellously ringed
+round with red.--See, he is going to cry! That will be pretty music."
+
+And Sir Halewyn, hearing the ladies talk after this fashion, could
+not find a word to answer them with, for between anger, shame, and
+sorrow his tongue was fast stuck to the roof of his mouth.
+
+Nevertheless he would take a lance at every tournament, and every
+time would be shamefully overcome, and the ladies, seeing him fall,
+would applaud loudly, crying out: "Worship to the ill-favoured one! The
+old crow has lost his beak." Thus they compared him, for his shame,
+with Dirk, the old stock of the Halewyns, who had been so mighty
+in his day. And, acclaimed in this fashion every time he jousted,
+Sir Halewyn would go back from the field in sorrow to his pavilion.
+
+
+
+
+V. How it came about that Sir Halewyn, after a certain tournament,
+called upon the devil for aid.
+
+At the third tournament wherein he was beaten there were on the field
+his father, mother, brother, and sister.
+
+And his father said:
+
+"Well, look at my fine son, Siewert the soft, Siewert the overthrown,
+Siewert the faint-heart, coming back from jousting with his tail
+between his legs, like a dog thrashed with a great stick."
+
+And his mother said:
+
+"I suppose for certain that My Lord the Count has put a gold chain
+round thy neck, and acclaimed thee publicly, for having so valiantly
+in this jousting jousted on thy back, as in the old days my lord of
+Beaufort was wont to make thee do. Holy God! that was a fine tumble."
+
+And his sister said:
+
+"Welcome, my fair brother, what news do you bring? Thou wert the
+victor for certain, as I see from thy triumphant mien. But where is
+the wreath of the ladies?"
+
+And his brother said:
+
+"Where is your lordly bearing, My Lord Siewert Halewyn the
+elder, descendant of the Crow with the great beak? For such a Crow
+vanquishes without much trouble eagles, goshawks, shrikes, gerfalcons,
+sparrow-hawks. Are you not thirsty, my brother, with the thirst of
+a baron, of a victor, I will not say of a villein? We have here some
+fine frog's wine, which will cool the fires of victory in your belly."
+
+"Ha," answered the Sire, grinding his teeth, "if God gave me strength,
+I would make thee sing a different song Sir Brother."
+
+And saying this, he pulled out his sword to do so, but the younger,
+parrying his thrust, cried out:
+
+"Bravo, uncrowlike Crow! Bravo, capon! Raise up our house, I beg of
+thee, Siewert the victorious!"
+
+"Ha," said the Sire, "and why does this chatterer not go and joust as
+well as I? But he would not dare, being that kind of coward who looks
+on at others, folding his arms and making fun of those who strive."
+
+Then he dismounted from his horse, went off and hid himself in his
+chamber, cried out to the four walls in a rage, prayed to the devil
+to give him strength and beauty, and promised him, on the oath of a
+knight, that he would give him his soul in exchange.
+
+So he called on him all through the night, crying out, weeping,
+bewailing his lot, minded at times even to kill himself. But the
+devil did not come, being busy elsewhere.
+
+
+
+
+VI. Of the rovings and wanderings of Sir Halewyn.
+
+Every day after this, whether it were fair or foul, light sky or dark,
+storm or gentle breeze, rain, snow, or hail, Sir Halewyn wandered
+alone through the fields and woods.
+
+And children, seeing him, ran away in fear.
+
+"Ah," said he, "I must be very ugly!" And he went on with his
+wandering.
+
+But if on his way he met some common man who had strength and beauty,
+he would bear down on him and oftentimes kill him with his sword.
+
+And every one grew to shun him, and to pray to God that he would soon
+remove their Lord from this world.
+
+And every night, Sir Halewyn called on the devil.
+
+But the devil would not come.
+
+"Ah," said the Sire sorrowfully, "if thou wilt only give me strength
+and beauty in this life, I will give thee my soul in the other. 'Tis
+a good bargain."
+
+But the devil never came.
+
+And he, restless, always in anguish and melancholy, was soon like an
+old man to look at, and was given the name throughout the country of
+the Ill-favoured Lord.
+
+And his heart was swollen with hatred and anger. And he cursed God.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of the Prince of the Stones and of the song.
+
+One day in the season of plum-picking, having roved over the whole
+countryside, and even as far as Lille, on the way back to his castle
+he passed through a wood. Ambling along he saw among the undergrowth,
+alongside an oak, a stone which was of great length and broad in
+proportion.
+
+And he said: "That will make me a good seat, comfortable enough to
+rest on for a little while." And sitting down on the stone he once
+again prayed to the devil to let him have health and beauty.
+
+By and by, although it was still daylight, and the small birds,
+warblers and finches, sang in the woods joyously, and there was a
+bright sun and a soft wind, Sir Halewyn went off to sleep, for he
+was very tired.
+
+Having slept until it was night, he was suddenly awakened by a strange
+sound. And he saw, by the light of the high moon and the clear stars,
+as it were a little animal, with a coat like a mossy stone, who was
+scratching up the earth beneath the rock, now and again thrusting
+his head into the hole he had made, as a dog does hunting moles.
+
+Sir Halewyn, thinking it was some wild thing, hit at it with his sword.
+
+But the sword was broken at its touch, and a little mannikin of stone
+leapt up on to his shoulders, and smote his cheeks sharply with his
+hard hands, and said, wheezing and laughing:
+
+"Seek, Siewert Halewyn; seek song and sickle, sickle and song; seek,
+seek, ill-favoured one!"
+
+And so saying he hopped about like a flea on the back of the Miserable,
+who bent forward as he was bid, and with a piece of his sword dug in
+the hole. And the stony cheek of the little mannikin was alongside
+his own, and his two eyes lit up the hole better than lanterns would
+have done.
+
+And biting Halewyn's flesh with his sharp teeth, striking him with
+his little fists, and with his nails pinching and pulling him, and
+laughing harshly, the little mannikin said: "I am the Prince of the
+Stones, I have fine treasures; seek, seek, Miserable!"
+
+And saying this, he pommelled him beyond endurance. "He wants," he
+screamed, mocking him, "Siewert Halewyn wants strength and beauty,
+beauty and strength; seek then, Miserable."
+
+And he pulled out his hair in handfuls, and tore his dress with his
+nails until he was all in rags, and kept saying, with great bursts
+of laughter: "Strength and beauty, beauty and strength; seek, seek,
+Miserable!" And he hung from his ears with his two hands, and kicked
+his stone feet in his face, notwithstanding that the Sire cried out
+with pain.
+
+And the little mannikin said: "To get strength and beauty, seek,
+Halewyn, a song and a sickle, seek, Sir Miserable!" And the Miserable
+went on scratching out the earth with his piece of sword.
+
+Suddenly the earth fell away under the stone, leaving a great
+hole open, and Halewyn, by the light of the mannikin's eyes, saw a
+sepulchre, and within the sepulchre a man lying, who was of marvellous
+beauty and had none of the appearance of death.
+
+This man was clad all in white, and in his hands held a sickle,
+whereof both handle and blade were of gold.
+
+"Take the sickle," quoth the little mannikin, thumping his head with
+his fists.
+
+Sir Halewyn did as he was bid, and straightway the man in the tomb
+became dust, and from the dust came a white flame, tall and spreading,
+and from the white flame a wonderfully sweet song.
+
+And suddenly all about the wood was spread a perfume of cinnamon,
+frankincense, and sweet marjoram.
+
+"Sing," said the mannikin, and the Miserable repeated the song. While
+he was singing his harsh voice was changed to a voice sweeter than
+an angel's, and he saw coming out of the depths of the wood a virgin
+of heavenly beauty and wholly naked; and she came and stood before him.
+
+"Ah," she said, weeping, "master of the golden sickle. I come, for I
+must obey; do not make me suffer too much in the taking of my heart,
+master of the golden sickle."
+
+Then the virgin went away into the depths of the wood; and the
+mannikin, bursting out into laughter, threw Sir Halewyn down on to
+the ground, and said:
+
+"Hast song and sickle; so shalt thou have strength and beauty; I am
+the Prince of the Stones; farewell, cousin."
+
+And Halewyn, picking himself up, saw no more of either the mannikin
+or the naked maid; and studying well the golden sickle, and pondering
+in his mind what could be the meaning of the man in the tomb and the
+naked virgin, and inquiring within himself in perplexity what use he
+could make of the sickle and the sweet song, he saw suddenly on the
+blade a fair inscription, written in letters of fire.
+
+But he could not read the writing, for he was ignorant of all the arts;
+and, weeping with rage, he threw himself into the bushes, crying out:
+"Help me, Prince of the Stones. Leave me not to die of despair."
+
+Thereupon the mannikin reappeared, leapt upon his shoulder, and,
+giving him a stout rap on the nose, read on one side of the blade of
+the sickle this inscription which follows:
+
+
+ Song calls,
+ Sickle reaps.
+ In the heart of a maid shalt thou find:
+ Strength, beauty, honour, riches,
+ From the hands of a dead virgin.
+
+
+And upon the other side of the blade the mannikin read further:
+
+
+ Whoso thou art shalt do this thing,
+ Writing read and song sing:
+ Seek well, hark and go;
+ No man shall lay thee low.
+ Song calls,
+ Sickle reaps.
+
+
+And having read this the mannikin went away once more.
+
+Suddenly the Miserable heard a sad voice saying:
+
+"Wilt thou seek strength and beauty in death, blood, and tears?"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Ambitious heart, heart of stone," answered the voice. Then he heard
+nothing more.
+
+And he gazed at the sickle with its flaming letters until such time
+as My Lord Chanticleer called his hens awake.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. What Halewyn did to the little girl cutting faggots.
+
+The Miserable was overjoyed at what had come about, and inquired
+within himself whether it would be in the heart of a virgin child or
+of a marriageable virgin that he would find what was promised him,
+and so satisfy his great desire for worship and power.
+
+Pondering this he went a little way through the wood and stationed
+himself near to some cottages where he knew there were maids of divers
+ages, and there waited until morning.
+
+Soon after the sun was up, a little girl came out, nine years old,
+or rather less, and began collecting and cutting up faggots.
+
+Going up to her, he sang the song and showed her the sickle.
+
+Whereupon she cried out in fear, and ran away as fast as she could.
+
+But Halewyn, having quickly overtaken her, dragged her off by force
+to his castle.
+
+Going in, he met on the bridge his lady mother, who said to him:
+"Where goest thou, Miserable, with this child?"
+
+He answered:
+
+"To bring honour to our house."
+
+And his lady mother let him pass, thinking him mad.
+
+He went into his room, opened the side of the girl beneath a breast
+just budding, cut out the heart with the sickle, and drank the blood.
+
+But he got no more strength from it than he had before.
+
+And weeping bitter tears, he cried: "The sickle has played me
+false." And he threw down into the moat both the heart and the body.
+
+And the lady Halewyn seeing this poor heart and body dropping into
+the water, ordered that they should be taken out and brought to her.
+
+Seeing the body rent open under the breast, and the heart taken out,
+she became afraid lest Siewert her first-born was following dark
+practices.
+
+And she put the girl's heart back in her breast, and gave her a very
+fine and Christian burial, and had a fair great cross made on her
+winding-sheet, and afterwards she was put in the ground and a fair
+mass said for the quiet of her soul.
+
+
+
+
+IX. Of the heart of a maid and of the great strength which came to
+Sir Halewyn.
+
+Sorely troubled, and falling on his knees, Halewyn said: "Alas, is the
+spell then impotent? I sang, and she would not come to my singing! What
+would you have me do now, Lord Prince of the Stones? If it is that
+I must wait until nightfall, that I will do. Then, without doubt,
+having no sun to hinder your powers, you will give me strength and
+beauty, and all prowess, and you will send me the virgin I need."
+
+And he went at night to wander in the woods round about the cottages,
+and there, singing his song, and looking out to see if any were coming.
+
+He saw by the light of the bright moon the daughter of Claes, a poor
+mad man, nicknamed the Dog-beater, because he used to thump and pommel
+grievously whomever he met, saying that these accursed dogs had robbed
+him of his coat, and must give it him back again.
+
+This girl took care of Claes very well, and would not marry, though
+she was a beautiful maid, saying: "Since he is simple, I cannot leave
+him to look to himself."
+
+And every one, seeing her so stout-hearted, gave her, one some of
+his cheese, another some beans, another some flour, and so they lived
+together without wanting for food.
+
+The Miserable stood still at the edge of the wood and sang. And
+the maid walked straight towards the singing and fell on her knees
+before him.
+
+He went home to his castle, and she followed him, and entered in with
+him, saying no word.
+
+On the stair he met his brother, just returned from boar-hunting,
+who said, in mocking wise:
+
+"Ah, is the Miserable about to get us a bastard?" And to the girl:
+"Well, mistress, thy heart must be fast set on my ugly brother that
+thou must needs follow him in this wise, without a word spoken."
+
+But Halewyn, in a rage, hit out at his brother's face with his sword.
+
+Then, passing him by, went up into his own room.
+
+And there, having shut fast the door, from fear of his brother,
+he stripped the girl quite naked, as he had seen the virgin in his
+vision. And the girl said that she was cold.
+
+Quickly he opened her breast with the golden blade, under the left pap.
+
+And as the maid gave the death-cry, the heart came out of itself on
+the blade.
+
+And the Miserable saw before his eyes the little mannikin coming out
+of the stones of the wall, who said to him, grinning:
+
+"Heart on heart gives strength and beauty. Halewyn shall hang the
+maid in the Gallows-field. And the body shall hang until the hour of
+God." Then he went back into the wall.
+
+Halewyn put the heart on his breast, and felt it beating firmly and
+taking root in his skin. And suddenly his bent back was straightened;
+and his arm found such strength that he broke easily in two a heavy
+oaken bench; and looking at himself in a mirror-glass he saw an image
+so beautiful that he could scarce tell it for his own.
+
+And he felt in his veins the fire of youth burning.
+
+Going down into the great hall he found there at supper his father,
+mother, brother, and sister.
+
+None of them would have known him but for his voice, which was
+unchanged.
+
+And his mother rose and peered into his face to see him better.
+
+And he said to her: "Woman, I am thine own son, Siewert Halewyn,
+the Invincible."
+
+But his brother, whom he had but lately smitten in the face, ran
+towards him hotly, saying: "Cursed be the Invincible!" and struck
+him with his knife. But the blade snapped off like glass against the
+body of the Miserable; whereupon the younger brother seized him in
+his arms, but the Miserable tore him off and threw him to one side
+as if he had been a caterpillar.
+
+Then he rushed at him with his head down, like a battering-ram, but
+as soon as his head touched the Miserable it was cut open, and the
+blood ran down over his face.
+
+And his father and mother, his sister and the wounded brother, threw
+themselves on their knees and asked his forgiveness, begging him,
+since he had become so powerful, to bring them riches and honour.
+
+"That I will," said he.
+
+
+
+
+X. How the Miserable robbed a Lombard goldsmith, and of the pleasant
+speech of the ladies and gentlewomen.
+
+On the morrow, armed only with the sickle, for he despised other arms
+on account of the strength which the spell gave him, Halewyn took the
+body of the maid to the Gallows-field and there hanged it on the tree.
+
+Then he rode off to the city of Ghent.
+
+And the ladies, gentlewomen and maidens of the town, seeing him pass by
+on his black horse, said among themselves: "Who is this fair horseman?"
+
+"'Tis," he cried right proudly, "Siewert Halewyn, who was called the
+Ill-favoured one."
+
+"Nay, nay," said the bolder among them, "you are making fun of us,
+My Lord, or else you have been changed by a fairy."
+
+"Yes," said he, "and, moreover, I had fleshly knowledge of her;
+and so shall have of you, if I please."
+
+At these words the ladies and gentlewomen were not at all put out.
+
+And he went to the shop of a Lombard goldsmith in that town, who
+had at one time and another lent him six-and-twenty florins. But the
+goldsmith did not know him for himself.
+
+He told him that he was Sir Halewyn.
+
+"Ah," said the goldsmith, "then I pray, My Lord, that you will repay
+me my six-and-twenty florins."
+
+But Halewyn, laughing: "Take me," he said, "to the room where thou
+keepest thy gold."
+
+"My Lord," said the goldsmith, "that I will not, for all that I hold
+you in high esteem."
+
+"Dog," said he, "if thou dost not obey me I will strike thee dead
+instantly."
+
+"Ha!" said the goldsmith, "do not come blustering here, My Lord, for
+I am neither serf nor peasant, but a free burgess of this town. And
+if you are so minded as to lay your hands on me, I shall know how to
+get redress, I promise you."
+
+Then Halewyn struck him, and the burgess called for help.
+
+Hearing this cry, apprentices to the number of six came down into
+the shop, and, seeing Halewyn, ran to seize him.
+
+But he beat them off likewise and bade them show him where the gold
+was kept.
+
+Which they did, saying one to another: "This is the Devil."
+
+And the goldsmith, weeping: "My Lord," said he, "do not take it all."
+
+"I shall take what I will," said Halewyn; and he filled his money-bag.
+
+And in this way he took from the goldsmith more than seven hundred
+golden bezants.
+
+Then, seeing the poor man lamenting his lot, he struck him two or
+three hard blows, telling him not to whine so loud, and that before
+the month was out he would take from him double the amount.
+
+
+
+
+XI. Of the arrogant arms of Sir Halewyn.
+
+And the Miserable became the richest, most powerful, and most feared
+baron in the whole province.
+
+And blasphemously he compared himself to God.
+
+And considering that the old arms of Dirk, and his device, were too
+mean for his new magnificence:
+
+He sent to Bruges for painters in heraldry to fashion them afresh.
+
+These painters put the old crow away in one quarter, and on a field
+argent and sable blazoned a heart gules and a sickle or, with this
+device: None can stand against me.
+
+Moreover, he had this same blazon fashioned into a great standard which
+was flown from his castle keep. And also had it cut in stone over the
+gate. And on his shield, which he caused to be made larger so that the
+arrogant device might be seen to better advantage. And on his arms,
+his clothes, and wherever it could be put, there he had it as well.
+
+
+
+
+XII. How Sir Halewyn jousted with a knight of England.
+
+It so happened that at about this time My Lord of Flanders let call
+a tournament.
+
+And sent out to all his lords and barons to come to Ghent for that
+purpose.
+
+Halewyn went thither and set up his shield among the others.
+
+But the barons and lords, seeing the arrogant device and the great
+size of the shield, were greatly put to offence thereat.
+
+And all of them jousted with him, but each was overthrown in turn.
+
+Among them was present an English knight of much prowess, who rode
+out to the middle of the tourney-field and stood straight and proud
+before Sir Halewyn.
+
+"Well," quoth he, "My Lord the Invincible, it displeases me to see thee
+planted there so arrogantly and unhorsing us all in this fashion. Wilt
+thou fight with me?"
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"If I overcome thee, thou shalt be my servant and I shall take thee
+with me into Cornwall."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"And cause thee to grease my horses' hooves, and empty the dung
+from the stable; and find out whether thou art invincible at such
+work also."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"And if thou art not invincible, the invincible stick shall thrash
+thee invincibly."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"But if thou overcome me, this shall be thy guerdon:
+
+"Five-and-twenty bezants which are in the house of thy Lord, the
+noble Count of Flanders; all the accoutrement of my horse, which is
+of fine mail; his fair saddle of pear-wood, covered with leather,
+and saddle-bows richly figured with ten horsemen lustily fighting and
+with Our Lord driving out the devil from one possessed; furthermore
+my helm of fine wrought steel, and on it a crest of silver, gilt
+over, with spread wings, which may very well, notwithstanding thy
+device, stand against thy bleeding heart, thy gaping sickle, and thy
+miserable crow. Well, My Lord the Invincible, dost think thou shalt
+win invincibly the five-and-twenty bezants, the helm of my head,
+and the trappings of my horse?"
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+Then, after My Lord himself had given the signal, they ran together
+with a great clatter.
+
+And the English knight was overthrown like the rest.
+
+Then all the ladies acclaimed and applauded the Miserable, crying out:
+"Worship to Siewert Halewyn the noble, Siewert Halewyn the Fleming,
+Siewert Halewyn the Invincible."
+
+And on his way back to the house of My Lord, there to feast with him,
+he was by these ladies kissed, fondled, and made much of without stint.
+
+And, putting on the gear of the English knight, he went off to the
+towns of Bruges, Lille, and Ghent, thieving and ravishing everywhere.
+
+And came back from each expedition with much booty.
+
+And felt the heart all the while pouring live strength into his breast
+and beating against his skin.
+
+Then he went back to his own castle with the five-and-twenty bezants
+and the arms of the knight of England.
+
+When he sounded the horn there came to him his mother, who, seeing him
+so gilt over, was overcome with joy, and cried: "He brings us riches,
+as he promised."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+And she fell at his feet and kissed them.
+
+As also did the younger brother, saying: "Sir Brother thou hast lifted
+us up from poverty, I will willingly serve thee."
+
+"So shouldst thou, indeed," said Halewyn. Then, going into the hall:
+"I would sup," he said, "thou, woman, fetch me meat, and thou,
+fellow, drink."
+
+And on the morrow, and every day thereafter, he made to serve him at
+table, as if they had been his private servants, his father, mother,
+brother, and sister, turn by turn.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. Of the heart dried up and of the dame Halewyn.
+
+But one morning while he was at meat in his castle, when his father
+and sister were gone to Bruges to buy corn-coloured cloth-of-scarlet
+for their clothes,
+
+And he was being served, with all humility, by his mother and brother,
+
+He became suddenly quite cold, for the heart had ceased to beat.
+
+Putting his hand to his breast, he touched dried-up skin.
+
+Then he felt his face go back as it was before, his shoulders shrink
+down, his back hump up, and all his body lessen in stature.
+
+Looking at his mother and brother in turn, he saw them laughing and
+saying to each other: "See, here is our master back in his old ugly
+skin, and with his old ugly face."
+
+"Ha, My Lord," said his brother, coming boldly up to him and speaking
+insolently, "will you not take some of this clauwaert to hearten
+yourself? You have no longer, it seems, your former strength."
+
+"Wilt try it?" said the Miserable, and struck him with his fist,
+but did him no more hurt than if he had been a fly.
+
+Seeing this the younger brother grew bolder, and seating himself
+close to Halewyn on the seat:
+
+"My lord," said he, "you have had pudding enough, I think, 'tis my
+turn to eat."
+
+And he took the pudding from off his platter.
+
+"My lord son," said his mother, "now you shall give to me, who am old,
+some of this old wine you have kept for yourself."
+
+And she took the cup out of his hand.
+
+"My lord brother," said the younger son, "methinks you have too
+much of this roast of lamb with sweet chestnuts; I will take it,
+if you please."
+
+And he put the roast of lamb before his own place.
+
+"My lord son," said his mother, "you do not much like, it seems,
+this fair cheese and barley tart, give it to me, I pray you."
+
+And the Miserable, dumbfounded, gave it to her.
+
+"My lord brother," said the younger son, "you have been sitting there
+long enough like an emperor, will you be pleased to stir your limbs
+now and serve us?"
+
+And the Miserable, getting up, served them as he was bidden.
+
+"My lord son," said his mother, "I see you now submissive to our
+orders, will you be pleased to ask my pardon for having so long kept
+me standing like a private servant, fetching you food and drink,
+though I am your mother?"
+
+And the Miserable fell at her feet.
+
+"My lord brother," said the younger son, "wilt thou be pleased to
+fall at my feet likewise, and kiss them, for that thou hast made me
+do the work of a serf?"
+
+"That I will not," said the Miserable.
+
+"Thou wilt not?"
+
+"I will not," said the Miserable, and stepped back a pace.
+
+"Come hither," said his brother.
+
+"I will not," said the Miserable.
+
+Then the younger ran at him, and, bearing him to the ground without
+difficulty, began thumping and pommelling him, and striking him in the
+face with his golden spurs, saying: "Avenge thyself, Siewert Halewyn
+the Invincible. None can stand against thee, save I. Thou hast long
+treated us as serfs in thy house, now I will treat thee as a cheese
+and crush thee underfoot. Why dost thou not now caper as a kid, or
+fly away as a bird, Siewert the enchanted?" and, going into a frenzy
+of rage, he drew his knife, saying: "I will cut thee off thy head
+unless thou cry mercy."
+
+"I will not," said the Miserable.
+
+But his mother, hearing these words, took quickly from the fire a
+handful of embers, and notwithstanding their heat, threw them into
+the eyes and mouth of the younger brother, saying: "Thou shalt not
+kill my first-born, wicked son."
+
+And while the younger brother was howling by reason of the pain from
+the embers, which blinded him, his mother took the knife from him,
+and while he was twisting this way and that, swinging up his arms to
+strike whomever he could, she threw him down, shut him up in the room,
+and went out dragging her first-born after her. Then, although she was
+feeble with age, she carried Halewyn up into the tower on her back,
+as a shepherd carries a lamb (for he had quite lost his senses),
+and there tended him and bathed his face and breast, which were torn
+and bleeding, and there at nightfall left him and went away.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. Of the great weakness of Sir Halewyn and of the days and nights
+which he spent in the forest.
+
+The Miserable, alone and somewhat comforted, rose to his feet, and
+was right glad to feel the sickle still at his belt; opened the door,
+listened to make sure that he could hear nothing, and that his brother
+was not there.
+
+And when the night was fully dark, went down the stair slowly,
+sitting-wise.
+
+For he was so weakened by the blows and wounds he had received that
+he could not hold himself upright by any means; and in this fashion
+he went on until he reached the bridge, and, finding that still down,
+crossed over it.
+
+And very wearily he made his way to the forest.
+
+But he could not, on account of his weakness, go so far as the
+cottages, which were a good two leagues distant to the northward.
+
+So, lying down among the leaves, he sang.
+
+But no maid came, for the song could not be heard from so far away.
+
+And so passed the first day.
+
+When night came again, cold rain began to fall, which sent him into
+a fever. But notwithstanding this he would not go back to his castle,
+for fear of his brother. Shivering, and with his teeth a-chatter, he
+dragged himself northward through the brake, and saw in a clearing
+a fair pretty maid, rosy-cheeked, fresh, slender, and neat, and he
+sang his song. But the girl did not come to him.
+
+And so passed the second day.
+
+That night the rain fell anew, and he could not move, so stiff was
+he from the cold, and he sang, but no maid came. At dawn the rain
+continued, and while he was lying there among the leaves a wolf came
+and sniffed at him, thinking him dead, but on seeing it draw near he
+cried out in a terrible fashion, and the wolf took fright and went
+off. Then he grew hungry, but could find himself nothing to eat. At
+vespers he sang anew, but no maid came.
+
+And so passed the third day.
+
+Towards midnight the sky cleared, and the wind grew warmer. But the
+Miserable, though he was suffering greatly from hunger, thirst, and
+weariness, dared not sleep. On the morning of the fourth day he saw
+a girl coming towards him who seemed to be a burgess's daughter. The
+girl would have run away on seeing him, but he cried out loudly:
+"Help me! I am worn out with hunger and sickness." Then she drew near
+to him and said: "I also am hungry." "Art thou," he said, "a maid? "
+"Ah," said she, "I have had to flee from Bruges, because the priests
+would have burnt me alive, on account of a brown mole which I have
+on my neck, of the size of a pea, coming, they say, from my having
+had fleshly commerce with the devil. But I have never seen the devil,
+and do not know what he is like."
+
+He, without listening to her, asked again if she were a virgin, and,
+as the girl said nothing, he sang his song.
+
+But she did not move from where she stood, only saying: "You have
+a very sweet and strong voice for one so wasted with sickness and
+hunger."
+
+Then he said to her: "I am the lord Siewert Halewyn. Go to my castle
+and ask to be taken to my lady mother, and without speaking to any
+one else, whosoever he be, tell her that her son is hard put to it
+in the forest with hunger, fever, and weariness, and will die before
+long if none bring him help."
+
+The girl went off as he bid her, but coming out of the wood she saw
+in the Gallows-field the body of the maid hanging, and ran away in a
+fright. Passing into the territory of Sir Roel de Heurne she craved
+food and drink at the cottage of one of his peasants. And there she
+told how she had found Sir Halewyn dying of hunger. But she was told
+in reply that the said lord was crueller and more wicked than the
+devil himself, and should be left to be eaten by the wolves and other
+beasts of the forest.
+
+And the Miserable waited, lying in the leaves in great anguish.
+
+And so passed the fourth day.
+
+And at dawn of the fifth, having seen no more of the girl, he supposed
+that she had been caught by the priests and taken back to Bruges to
+be burnt.
+
+Quite disheartened, and chilled with the cold, and saying that he
+would soon die, he cursed the Prince of the Stones.
+
+Nevertheless, at vespers he sang once more.
+
+And he was then by the side of a forest way.
+
+And he saw coming through the trees a fair maid, who fell on her
+knees before him.
+
+And he did to her as he had done to the others.
+
+Then rose full of fresh strength, vigour, and beauty, and with the
+heart resting against his own went off to the Gallows-field, carrying
+the body, and there hanged it by that of the first virgin.
+
+
+
+
+XV. How the Miserable, having hanged fifteen virgins in the
+Gallows-field, held wicked revels and cruel orgies.
+
+Sir Halewyn became most powerful and greatly feared, and killed up
+to fifteen virgins, whom he hanged in the Gallows-field.
+
+And he led a riotous life, eating, drinking, and carousing continually.
+
+All those ladies who had made fun of him in the days of his impotence
+and ugliness were brought to his castle.
+
+And having had his will of them he turned them out of doors like
+bitches, so wreaking upon them his evil vengeance.
+
+And from Lille, Ghent, and Bruges came the most beautiful courtesans,
+with their badge on their arms, and they ministered to his pleasure
+and to that of his friends, among whom the more evil were Diederich
+Pater-noster, so called because he was a great frequenter of churches;
+Nellin the Wolf, who in battle attacked only the fallen, as wolves
+do; and Baudouin Sans Ears, who in his court of justice always cried:
+"Death, death," without waiting to hear any defence whatever.
+
+In company with the fair courtesans these same lords held revels and
+orgies without end, and took from their poor peasants all they had,
+corn, cheese, jewels, cocks, oxen, calves, and swine.
+
+Then, having stuffed themselves as full as they could hold, threw to
+their dogs choice viands and rich cakes.
+
+Gave to be broken and pounded up for their hawks and falcons, the
+meat of fowls, cockerels, and doves; had the hooves of their horses
+bathed in wine.
+
+Oftentimes until midnight, or even until cock-crow, there would be
+beating of drums, trilling of pipes, squeaking of viols, skirling of
+bagpipes, and winding of horns, for their entertainment.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. How the burgesses of the good town of Ghent gave protection to
+the virgins of the domain of Halewyn.
+
+Meanwhile in the cottages of the peasant folk were tears, hunger,
+and great misery.
+
+And when the fifteenth maid had been taken in the domain of Halewyn,
+
+The mothers prayed to God that he would make them barren, or else
+that they might bear men-children only.
+
+And the fathers complained and said to one another sadly: "Is it not
+a pitiful thing to see these sweet and gentle flowers of youth so
+brought to death and dishonour!"
+
+And some among them said: "Let us go by night to the good town of
+Ghent, taking with us all our virgin daughters, and tell the whole
+tale to the burgesses, begging their blessed protection for them,
+and leaving them there in the town if we are so permitted. So they
+will escape death at the hands of our master."
+
+Every one who heard this plan thought it a good one; and all the
+peasants with daughters who were virgins took them off to Ghent,
+and there told the story to the commune, and the good men gave them
+protection.
+
+Then with lighter hearts the peasants returned to the domain of
+Halewyn.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. Of what Sir Halewyn did on the borders of his domain.
+
+Not long afterwards a hard winter set in, with bitter cold and
+furious storm.
+
+And the heart of the fifteenth virgin no longer beat strong against
+Sir Halewyn's breast.
+
+And he sang, but none came. Wherefore he was disappointed and angry.
+
+But calling to mind that there were, in the castle of Sir Roel de
+Heurne, two girls supposed by common report to be virgins,
+
+And that this castle was no more than the fifth part of a league from
+the borders of his land,
+
+And that therefore the two maids would be able to hear and come to
+the call of his song,
+
+He went each night and stationed himself on the farthest border of
+his demesne, and there sang towards the said castle, notwithstanding
+the bitter cold, and the snow beginning to fall abundantly.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. Of the damosels Magtelt and Anne-Mie, and of Schimmel the
+dapple-gray.
+
+While the Miserable was roaming the woods, Sir Roel de Heurne and the
+lady Gonde, his wife, richly clad, and wrapt round with deer-skins,
+which give particular warmth to the body, were sitting snugly on their
+coffers before their good fire of oaken logs, chatting together as
+old folk will.
+
+But it was the Lady Gonde who spoke most, being the woman.
+
+And she said:
+
+"My good man, do you hear the storm raging furiously in the forest?"
+
+"Yes," answered Sir Roel.
+
+And his lady said further:
+
+"God has been kind to give us, against this great cold, such a fine
+castle so strongly built, such good clothes, and such a bright fire."
+
+"Yes," answered the Sire.
+
+"But above all," said she, "he has shown us his divine grace by giving
+us such good and brave children."
+
+"True," answered the Sire.
+
+"For," said she, "nowhere could you find a young man more valiant,
+courteous, gentle, and fitter to uphold our name than Toon, our son."
+
+"Yes," said the Sire, "he has saved my life in battle."
+
+"But," said his lady, "he has this fault, that he is so scant of
+words that we scarce know the tone of his voice. He is well called
+the Silent."
+
+"There is better worth to a man," said the Sire, "in a good sword
+than in a long tongue."
+
+"Here I see you, my lord," said the lady, "pent up with your
+reflections, for sadness and gravity are the lot of old age, but I
+know well a certain maid who would smooth out your forehead and set
+you laughing."
+
+"'Tis possible," said the Sire.
+
+"Yes," said she, "it is certainly possible, for when Magtelt our
+daughter comes into this room, I shall see my lord and husband turn
+happy at once."
+
+At these words Sir Roel nodded his head and smiled a little.
+
+"Yes, yes," said his lady, "for when Magtelt laughs, then laughs my
+old Roel; when she sings, then my old Roel grows thoughtful and nods
+his head happily, and if she passes by, he follows with smiling eyes
+each step of his little daughter."
+
+"True, Gonde," said the Sire.
+
+"Yes, yes," said she, "for who is the well-being and joy of this
+house? 'Tis not I, who am old, and losing my teeth one by one; nor you
+either, my fellow in antiquity; nor the Silent either; nor Anne-Mie
+the private servant, who, though she is very sweet and healthy in her
+person, is something too quiet in her ways, and laughs only when she
+is set laughing. But she who makes our old age happy, she who is the
+nightingale in the house, she who is always coming and going, passing
+and repassing, flying hither and thither, singing and singing again,
+as happy as a peal of bells at Christmastide: 'tis our good daughter."
+
+"So it is," said the Sire.
+
+"Ah," said his lady further, "it is a happy thing for us to have
+such a child, since both of us have already cold in our feet at all
+seasons. For without her we should pass our time in sadness, and from
+our old feet the cold would creep up to our hearts, and so we should
+be taken to our graves more quickly."
+
+"Yes, wife," said the Sire.
+
+"Ah," said she, "another damosel would have wished for love-suitors,
+and to go to the court of My Lord to get a husband. But our little
+maid gives no thought to that, for hereabout she loves no one but
+ourselves, and her who goes everywhere with her, and is as a sister
+to her, Anne-Mie the private servant; but not without teasing her a
+little in order to make her laugh."
+
+"True," said the Sire.
+
+"Yes, yes," said his lady, "and every one loves her, admires her, and
+respects her, pages, grooms, varlets, men-at-arms, private servants,
+serfs, and peasants, so joyous and merry is she, so brave and gentle
+is her bearing. There is no one, even down to Schimmel, the great
+war-horse, who does not follow her like a dog. Ah! When he sees her
+coming he whinnies joyously; and she alone must bring him his oats and
+corn; from none other will he take a grain. She treats him like a man,
+and often gives him a great draught of clauwaert, which he drinks up
+with relish. She makes herself understood to him by words, but she must
+never be cross with him, or he makes as if to weep, and looks at her
+with so sad a manner that she cannot withstand it and then calls him
+to her, saying: 'Beautiful Schimmel, brave Schimmel,' and other soft
+words; hearing which the good dapple-gray gets up and comes close to
+her to have more compliments. He suffers no one on his back but she,
+and when he is carrying her he is as proud as My Lord of Flanders at
+the head of his good barons and knights. So she has her sovereignty
+over every one, by joyousness, goodness, and fair speaking."
+
+"Yes," said the Sire.
+
+"Ah," said his lady, "may the very good God watch over our little one,
+and may our old ears hear this fledgeling nightingale singing always."
+
+"Amen," said the Sire.
+
+
+
+
+XIX. How Magtelt sang to Sir Roel the lied of the Lion, and the song
+of the Four Witches.
+
+While Sir Roel and the lady Gonde were talking together,
+
+The snow had fallen in great quantity,
+
+And had quite covered Magtelt and Anne-Mie, who were coming back from
+having taken an eagle-stone to the wife of Josse, for her to bind to
+her left thigh and so get ease in her lying-in.
+
+And the girls came into the great hall, where Sir Roel was sitting
+with his good wife.
+
+Magtelt, drawing close to her father, knelt to him in salutation.
+
+And Sir Roel, having raised her up, kissed her on the brow.
+
+But Anne-Mie stayed quietly in a corner, as became a private servant.
+
+And it was a good sight to see these two maids wholly covered with
+snow.
+
+"Jesus-Maria," said the lady Gonde, "see these two sillies, what have
+they been doing to get themselves clothed in snow in this fashion? To
+the fire quickly, children; draw to the fire and dry yourselves."
+
+"Silence, wife," said Sir Roel, "you make youth faint-heart. In my
+young days I went through cold, snow, hail, thunder, and tempest
+without a thought. And so do I still, when there is need to, and
+I will have Magtelt do the same. Thanks be to God! 'tis not from a
+fire of logs that a daughter of ours must get warmth, but from the
+natural fire which burns in the bodies of the children of old Roel."
+
+But Magtelt, seeing him about to grow angry, went and knelt at
+his feet.
+
+"Lord father," said she, "we are not cold at all, for we have been
+leaping, dancing and frolicking so heartily, thumping and drubbing each
+other, that we turned winter into spring; furthermore we sang some fine
+songs, which I beg you will give me leave to sing over again to you."
+
+"So I will, little one," said Sir Roel. So Magtelt sang him the lied,
+of Roeland de Heurne the Lion, who came back from the Holy Land,
+and brought thence a great sword; and also the song of the Four
+Witches, wherein you may hear mewling of cats, bleating of goats,
+and the noise which they make with their tails in rainy weather.
+
+And Sir Roel forgot his anger.
+
+When Magtelt had done singing he caused supper to be served and the
+cross lit up, which threw over them a bright light from the four
+lamps burning at the end of each arm.
+
+And he made his daughter sit at his side.
+
+Anne-Mie came likewise to sit at table, beside the lady Gonde, who
+said: "Young company warms old folk."
+
+And there were served to them that evening fine white bread, beef
+salted and smoked in the chimney among the sweet smoke of fir-cones,
+Ghent sausage, which was invented, they say, by Boudwin the Glutton,
+bastard of Flanders, and old clauwaert.
+
+Supper finished, and a prayer spoken, Magtelt and Anne-Mie went off
+to bed, in the same room, for Magtelt loved Anne-Mie like a sister
+and would have her by her side at all times.
+
+
+
+
+XX. Of the sixteenth virgin hanged.
+
+Magtelt, with laughter, singing, and frolic, soon fell asleep.
+
+But Anne-Mie, being somewhat cold, could not close her eyes.
+
+And the Miserable came and stationed himself on the border of his
+land. Thence his voice rang out clear, soft, and melodious.
+
+And Anne-Mie heard it, and, forgetting that she was but lightly clad,
+rose up and went out of the castle by the postern.
+
+When she came into the open the snow smote harshly on her face,
+her breast, and her shoulders.
+
+And she tried to shield herself against this bitter cold and evil snow,
+but could not, for she had lain down to sleep nearly naked.
+
+Going towards the song she passed barefoot across the moat, whereof
+the water was hard frozen.
+
+And trying to mount the farther bank, which was high and slippery,
+she fell;
+
+And cut a great wound in her knee.
+
+Having picked herself up she entered the forest, wounding her bare
+feet on the stones, and her numbed body on the branches of trees.
+
+But she went her way without heeding.
+
+When she drew near to the Miserable she fell on her knees before
+him. And he did to her as he had done to the others.
+
+And Anne-Mie was the sixteenth virgin hanged in the Gallows-field.
+
+
+
+
+XXI. How Magtelt sought Anne-Mie.
+
+On the morrow Magtelt, being, as was customary, the first awake,
+said her prayers to My Lord Jesus and to Madam Saint Magtelt, her
+blessed patron.
+
+Having besought them earnestly for Sir Roel, the lady Gonde, the
+Silent, and all the household, most particularly for Anne-Mie,
+she looked at the maid's bed, and seeing its curtains half drawn
+she supposed that her companion was still asleep; and so, putting on
+her fine clothes, she kept saying as she moved up and down the room,
+or looked at herself in the mirror-glass:
+
+"Ho, Anne-Mie, wake up, wake up, Anne-Mie! Who sleeps late comes last
+to grass. The sparrows are awake and the hens also, and already their
+eggs are laid. Wake up, Anne-Mie, Schimmel is neighing in the stable,
+and the sun is shining bright on the snow; my lord father is scolding
+the servants, and my lady mother is interceding for them. Canst
+not smell the savoury odour of beans and good beef broiled with
+spices? I can smell it well enough, and it makes me hungry; wake up,
+Anne-Mie." But the girl could not possess herself in patience any
+longer, and threw the curtains wide open.
+
+Finding no Anne-Mie: "There!" she said, "the rogue, she has gone down
+without me; and without me, no doubt, is at this same moment eating
+those good beans and beef."
+
+And going down the stairs at a run Magtelt entered the great hall,
+where, seeing Sir Roel her father, she knelt to him and asked his
+blessing, and then likewise to the lady Gonde.
+
+But her mother said to her: "Where is Anne-Mie?"
+
+"I cannot tell," said Magtelt, "she is having some fun with us,
+I suppose, hidden in some corner."
+
+"That," said Sir Roel, "is not her way, for if any one here makes
+fun of others 'tis not she, but thou, little one."
+
+"My lord father," said Magtelt, "you make me anxious by talking so."
+
+"Well," said Sir Roel, "go and seek Anne-Mie; as for us, mother,
+let us eat; our old stomachs cannot wait for food as well as these
+young ones."
+
+"Ah," said the lady Gonde, "I have no mind to eat; go, Magtelt,
+and find me Anne-Mie."
+
+But Sir Roel helped himself to a great platterful of beans and good
+beef, and, falling to it, said that nothing was so easily put out,
+troubled, made anxious, as a woman, and this for nothing at all.
+
+Nevertheless he was himself a little uneasy, and from time to time
+looked up at the door, saying that the rascal of a girl would show
+herself suddenly from somewhere.
+
+But Magtelt, after searching the whole castle over, came back and said:
+"I can find Anne-Mie nowhere."
+
+
+
+
+XXII. How Magtelt wept bitterly, and of the fine dress which she had.
+
+And Magtelt had great sorrow in her heart, and wept, and made lament,
+crying: "Anne-Mie, where art thou? Would I could see thee again!" And
+falling on her knees before Sir Roel, she said: "My lord father, I pray
+you to send our men-at-arms in goodly number in search for Anne-Mie."
+
+"So I will," said he.
+
+The men-at-arms went out, but dared not pass on to the lands of
+Halewyn from fear of the spell.
+
+And on their return they said: "We can hear nothing of Anne-Mie."
+
+And Magtelt went up and stretched herself on her bed, and prayed to
+the good God to send her back her sweet comrade.
+
+On the second day she went and sat before the glazed window, and
+without intermission looked out all day at the countryside and the
+falling snow, and watched to see if Anne-Mie were coming.
+
+But Anne-Mie could not come.
+
+And on the third day the lids of her eyes bled for weeping. And on
+that day the snow ceased falling, the sky became clear, the sun shone
+therein, and the earth was hard frozen.
+
+And every day in the same place went and sat the sorrowing Magtelt,
+watching the countryside, thinking of Anne-Mie and saying nothing.
+
+Sir Roel, seeing her so low-hearted, sent to Bruges for some blue
+cloth-of-scarlet, for her to make herself a dress, and fine Cyprian
+gold for the border, and fine gold buttons of rich workmanship.
+
+Magtelt worked away at making this dress, but took no pleasure at
+all at the thought of all this fine apparel.
+
+And so passed away the week, and each day Magtelt worked at her dress,
+saying nothing and singing never, but weeping oftentimes.
+
+On the fifth day, when the dress was finished, well trimmed with the
+Cyprian gold and embellished with the rich buttons, the lady Gonde
+bade Magtelt don it, and then showed her her magnificence in a great
+mirror-glass; but Magtelt had no heart to be glad at seeing herself
+so beautiful, for she was thinking of Anne-Mie.
+
+And the lady Gonde, seeing how sad she was and silent, wept also,
+saying: "Since our Magtelt stopped singing I have felt more bitterly
+the chill of winter and old age."
+
+And Sir Roel made no murmur, but became sullen and pensive, and drank
+clauwaert all day.
+
+And at times, turning angry, he bade Magtelt sing and be cheerful.
+
+And the maid sang merry lieds to the old man, who then turned joyous
+again, and Gonde as well.
+
+And they spent all their time before the fire, nodding their heads. And
+they said: "The nightingale is come back again to the house, and her
+music makes the fires of spring sunshine stir in our bones."
+
+And Magtelt, having done singing, would go off to hide herself in a
+corner and weep for Anne-Mie.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII. Of Toon the Silent.
+
+On the eighth day, the Silent went wolf-hunting.
+
+Following a certain beast he rode into the domain of Halewyn.
+
+And at vespers the lady Gonde, leaving the great hall to go to the
+kitchen for the ordering of supper, on opening the door saw Toon before
+her. He seemed loth to come in, and hung his head as if with shame.
+
+The lady Gonde, going to him, said: "My son, why do you not come into
+the hall to bid good evening to the lord your father?"
+
+The Silent, without answering, went into the hall, and muttering
+short and sullen words by way of salutation, went to sit in the
+darkest corner.
+
+And the lady Gonde said to Sir Roel: "Our son is angry at something,
+I think, since he goes off into a dark corner far away from us,
+against his habit."
+
+Sir Roel said to the Silent: "Son, come hither to the light that we
+may see thy face."
+
+He obeyed, and Sir Roel, the lady Gonde, and the sorrowing Magtelt
+saw that he was bleeding from the head and from the neck, and cast
+down his eyes, not daring to look them in the face.
+
+The lady Gonde cried out with fright on seeing the blood, and Magtelt
+came to him, and Sir Roel said: "Who has given my son this shamed
+countenance, this downcast heart, and these wounds in his body?"
+
+The Silent answered: "Siewert Halewyn."
+
+"Why," said Sir Roel, "was my son so presumptuous as to attack the
+Invincible?"
+
+The Silent answered: "Anne-Mie hanged in the Gallows-field of Siewert
+Halewyn."
+
+"Woe!" cried Sir Roel, "our poor maid hanged! shame and sorrow
+upon us!"
+
+"Lord God," said Gonde, "you smite us hard indeed." And she wept.
+
+But Magtelt could neither weep nor speak from the bitterness of the
+grief which laid hold upon her.
+
+And she looked at her brother fixedly, and his sunken face blenched,
+and from the wounds against his eyes dropped tears of blood, and his
+body was shaken with spasms.
+
+And the Silent sank into a seat, weeping dully like a wounded lion.
+
+"Ha," quoth Sir Roel, hiding his face, "this is the first man of the
+house of Heurne that has found need to sit weeping. Shame upon us,
+and without redress, for there is a spell woven."
+
+And the Silent stuffed his fingers into the wound in his neck,
+pressing out the blood; but he felt nothing of the pain.
+
+"Toon," said the lady Gonde, "do not dirty your wound with your
+fingers in this wise; you will poison it, my son."
+
+But the Silent did not seem to hear.
+
+"Toon," said the lady Gonde, "do not do it; I, your mother, order
+you. Let me wash away this blood and dress with ointment these
+ugly sores."
+
+While she hurried to prepare the ointment and to warm the water in
+a washing-basin, Toon did not cease his groaning and weeping. And he
+tore out the hair from his beard in a rage.
+
+And Sir Roel, watching him, said: "When a man weeps 'tis blood and
+shame, shame without redress. Halewyn has a spell. Ah, presumptuous
+one, must thou then go to his castle to brave the Invincible?"
+
+"Woe, my lord," said the lady Gonde, "be not so bitter angry with the
+Silent, for he showed fine courage in wishing to avenge Anne-Mie on
+the Miserable."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Roel, "fine courage that brings shame to our house."
+
+"Tell," said she, "tell, Toon, the tale to thy father, to show him
+that thou art a worthy son to him none the less."
+
+"I wish it," said Sir Roel.
+
+"My lord father," said the Silent, groaning, and speaking in short
+breaths, "Anne-Mie hanging, Siewert Halewyn near to the gallows. He
+was laughing. I ran at him, cutting at his belly with my sword in the
+fashion of a cross to break the spell. Invincible! He laughed, saying:
+'I will take Magtelt.' I struck him with a knife; the blade turned. He
+laughed. He said: 'I do not care for punishment, be off.' I did not
+go. I struck him with sword and knife together; in vain. He laughed. He
+said again: 'Be off.' I could not. Then he struck me with the flat
+of his sword in the neck and breast, and with the hilt in the back,
+like a serf. He laughed. I lost sense from the blows. Beaten like a
+serf, my lord father, I could do naught against him."
+
+Sir Roel, having heard Toon speak, was less angered, understanding
+that he had not been presumptuous, thinking also of his great pain
+and of his bitter groaning and his grievous shame.
+
+With the ointment ready and the water warm, the lady Gonde set to
+work to dress the wounds of her son, particularly that on his neck,
+which was a deep one.
+
+But Magtelt wept never a tear, and soon went off to her bed, not
+without a blessing from Sir Roel her father, and her lady mother.
+
+The three stayed a long while together before the fire, father, mother,
+and son, without a word spoken, for the Silent, moaning all the while,
+could not bear his defeat, and the lady Gonde wept and prayed; and
+Sir Roel, sad and ashamed, hid his face.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV. How the damosel Magtelt made a good resolution.
+
+Magtelt, before she lay down on her bed, prayed, but not aloud. And
+her face was hard set with anger.
+
+And having undressed she lay down in her bed, tugging at her breast
+with her finger-nails from time to time, as if she were fighting
+for breath.
+
+And her breathing was as if she were in agony.
+
+For she was bitter sad and out of heart.
+
+But she did not weep.
+
+And she heard the high wind, forerunner of snow, lifting over the
+forest, and roaring like a stream in spate after heavy rain.
+
+And it tossed against the window glass dried leaves and branches,
+which beat on the pane like dead men's finger-nails.
+
+And it howled and whistled sadly in the chimney.
+
+And the sorrowing maid saw in her mind's eye Anne-Mie hanging in the
+Gallows-field and her poor body pecked by the crows, and she thought
+of the stain on her brave brother's honour, and of the fifteen poor
+virgins outraged by the Miserable.
+
+But she did not weep.
+
+For in her breast was a dumb pain, harsh anguish, and a bitter thirst
+for vengeance.
+
+And she asked very humbly of Our Lady if it were a good thing to
+let the Miserable any longer go killing the maidens of the land
+of Flanders.
+
+And at cock-crow she rose from her bed, and her eyes were bright,
+and proud was her countenance, and her head held high, and she said:
+"I will go to Halewyn."
+
+And throwing herself on her knees she prayed to the very strong God
+to give her courage and strength for the revenge of Anne-Mie, Toon
+the Silent, and the fifteen virgins.
+
+
+
+
+XXV. Of the sword of the Lion.
+
+At sun-up she went to Sir Roel, who was still in bed, on account of
+the cold.
+
+Seeing her come in and fall on her knees before him, he said: "What
+wilt thou, little one?"
+
+"My lord father," she said, "may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+At this he became afraid, and saw well enough that Magtelt, unable
+to rid her heart of the thought of Anne-Mie, was minded to avenge
+her. And he said with love and anger:
+
+"No, my daughter, no, not thou; who goes there will not come again!"
+
+But seeing her go out of the room he never supposed that she would
+fail in her obedience.
+
+And Magtelt went thence to the lady Gonde, who was praying in the
+chapel for the repose of Anne-Mie's soul; and she pulled at her
+mother's dress, to show that she was there.
+
+When the lady Gonde turned her head, Magtelt fell on her knees
+before her:
+
+"Mother," said she, "may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+But her lady mother: "Oh no, child, no, not thou; who goes there will
+not come again!"
+
+And so saying, she opened her arms and let fall the golden ball
+wherewith she warmed her hands, so that the embers spread this way
+and that on the floor. Then she fell to moaning, weeping, trembling,
+and chattering with her teeth, and embraced the girl tightly as if
+she would never let her go.
+
+But she never supposed that she could fail in her obedience.
+
+And Magtelt went thence to Toon, who, despite his wounds, was already
+out of bed, and seated on his coffer, warming himself before a
+new-lit fire.
+
+"Brother," she said, "may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+Saying this she held herself straight before him.
+
+The Silent lifted his head and looked at her severely, waiting for
+her to speak further.
+
+"Brother," she said, "Siewert Halewyn has killed this sweet maid whom
+I loved; and has done the same to fifteen other pitiful virgins,
+who are hanging in the Gallows-field shamefully; he is for this
+country a greater evil than war, death, and pestilence; brother,
+I would kill him."
+
+But Toon looked at Magtelt and answered nothing.
+
+"Brother," said she, "thou must not refuse me, for my heart bids
+me go. Canst thou not see how sad and downcast I am in this house,
+and how I shall die of sorrow if I do not that which I should. But
+having been to him I shall come back joyous and singing as before."
+
+But the Silent said not a word.
+
+"Ah," she said, "dost fear for me, seeing how many good knights have
+assailed him and been by him shamefully overthrown, even thyself, my
+brave brother, who carriest even now his marks? I am not ignorant that
+on his shield is written: 'None can stand against me.' But what others
+could not, one may do. He goes glorying in his strength, more terrible
+than an oliphant, prouder than a lion, thinking himself invincible,
+but when the beast goes with assurance the hunter follows the more
+easily. Brother, may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+When Magtelt had reached so far in her speech, suddenly there
+fell from the wall whereon it was fastened a fair sword well set
+and sharpened, and with the blade stout to the hilt. The handpiece
+was of cedar of Lebanon, set out with golden cresslets, and in the
+castle this sword was held to be of marvellous virtue and holiness,
+because it had been brought from the crusade by Roeland de Heurne,
+the Lion. And none dared use it.
+
+The sword, falling, lay at the feet of Magtelt.
+
+"Brother," said Magtelt, crossing herself, "the good sword of the
+Lion has fallen at my feet; 'tis the very strong God showing thus
+his will. He must be obeyed, brother; let me go to Halewyn."
+
+And Toon the Silent, crossing himself as Magtelt had done, answered:
+
+"'Tis all one to me where thou go, if thou cherish thine honour and
+carry thy crown straight."
+
+"Brother," she said, "I thank you." And the noble maid began to
+tremble mightily from head to foot; and she who had not shed a
+tear on hearing of Anne-Mie's death and her brother's dishonour,
+fell to weeping abundantly, whereby her bitter anger was melted,
+and bursting into tears by reason of her great joy she said again:
+"Brother, brother, 'tis the hour of God! I go to the reckoning!"
+
+And she took the good sword.
+
+The Silent, seeing her so brave, lifted himself straight before her
+and put his hand on her shoulder. "Go," said he.
+
+And she went out.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI. Of the noble apparel of the maid Magtelt.
+
+In her own room she dressed herself in her most beautiful clothes as
+quickly as she could.
+
+What did the fair maid put on her white body? A bodice finer than silk.
+
+And over the fine bodice?
+
+A robe of cloth-of-scarlet of Flemish blue, whereon were the arms
+of de Heurne marvellously worked, and the edges next to the feet and
+the neck embroidered with fine Cyprian gold.
+
+Wherewith did the fair maid bind in her slender waist?
+
+With a girdle of the hide of a lion, studded with gold.
+
+What had the fair maid on her beautiful shoulders?
+
+Her great keirle, which was of cramoisy stitched with Cyprian gold,
+and covered her from head to foot, for it was an ample cloak.
+
+What had the fair maid on her proud head?
+
+A fine crown of beaten gold, whence fell tresses of pale hair as long
+as herself.
+
+What held she in her little hand?
+
+The blessed sword brought from the crusade.
+
+So apparelled she went out to the stable, and harnessed Schimmel,
+the great war-horse, with his saddle of State, a fine leathern seat,
+painted in divers colours, and richly worked with gold.
+
+And they set out together, through the snow falling thickly.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII. How Sir Roel and the lady Gonde questioned Toon the Silent,
+and of what he answered.
+
+While Magtelt was on her way to Halewyn, and when the first hour of
+her journey had already gone by, the lady Gonde questioned Sir Roel:
+"Sir," she said, "do you know where our daughter may be?"
+
+Sir Roel said that he knew nothing of it; and speaking to the Silent:
+"Son," said he, "dost thou know where thy sister has gone?"
+
+The Silent answered quietly: "Magtelt is a brave maid; whom God leads
+he leads well."
+
+"Sir," said the lady Gonde, "do not put yourself to the trouble of
+questioning him further, for saying so much he has used up his words."
+
+But Sir Roel to Toon: "Son, dost thou not know where she is?"
+
+"Magtelt," answered he, "is a fair maid, and carries her crown
+straight."
+
+"Ah," exclaimed the lady Gonde, "I am growing anxious; where is
+she then?"
+
+And she went off to search the castle thoroughly.
+
+But coming back she said to Sir Roel: "She is nowhere in the house;
+she has defied our orders and gone to Halewyn."
+
+"Wife," said Roel, "that cannot be. Children, in this country, were
+always obedient to their parents."
+
+"Toon," said she, "where is she? Toon, do you not know?"
+
+"The Miserable," he answered, "fears the beautiful maid; whom God
+leads he leads well."
+
+"Roel," cried out the lady Gonde, "he knows where our Magtelt has
+gone!"
+
+"Son, answer," said Sir Roel.
+
+The Silent answered:
+
+"The sword of the crusade fell from the wall at the maid's feet. Whom
+God guides succeeds in everything."
+
+"Toon," cried the lady Gonde, "where is Magtelt?"
+
+"The virgin," he said, "rides without fear, she goes faster than the
+armed man: whom God leads he leads well."
+
+The lady Gonde groaned:
+
+"Ah," she said, "our Magtelt will be killed, even now she is stiff
+frozen, sweet Jesus! The sword of the crusade is of no avail against
+Siewert Halewyn."
+
+The Silent answered:
+
+"He glories in his strength, thinking himself invincible, but when
+the beast goes with assurance the hunter follows more easily."
+
+"Wicked son, how couldst thou think to send the little bird to the
+hawk, the virgin to the enemy of virgins?"
+
+The Silent answered:
+
+"She will come whither none looks to see her: whom God leads he
+leads well."
+
+"Sir," said the lady Gonde to Roel, "you hear what he says; she has
+gone to Halewyn, and 'tis this wicked son that gave her leave."
+
+Sir Roel going to Toon:
+
+"Son," said he, "we had here but one joy, that was our Magtelt. Thou
+hast abused thy privilege in giving her leave to go thither. If she
+comes not back to us by nightfall I will curse thee and banish thee
+from my house. May God hear me, and take from thee, in this world
+bread and salt, and in the other thy portion in Paradise."
+
+"God," said the Silent, "will guide the sword. Whosoever has done
+wrong, on him let fall the punishment."
+
+Gonde began crying out, weeping and making dole. Roel bade her be
+silent, and sent a goodly troop of men-at-arms in the direction she
+had taken.
+
+But they came back without having seen anything of Magtelt, for
+they had not dared to go into the territory of Halewyn by reason of
+the spell.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII. The riding of the maid Magtelt.
+
+Singing and winding her horn, rides the noble damosel.
+
+And she is beautiful with a beauty from heaven; fresh and rosy are
+her cheeks.
+
+And straight she carries her crown.
+
+And her little hand holds fast beneath her keirle the good sword of
+Roel the Lion.
+
+And wide open are her fearless eyes, searching the forest for Sir
+Halewyn.
+
+And she listens for the sound of his horse.
+
+But she hears nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.
+
+And she sees nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.
+
+What is it makes the flame glow in her clear brown eyes? It is her
+high courage.
+
+Why does she carry so straight her head and her crown? Because of
+the great strength in her heart.
+
+What is it so swells her breast? The cruel thought of Anne-Mie,
+and her brother's shame and the great crimes of Sir Halewyn.
+
+And ceaselessly she looks to see if he be not coming, and if she can
+hear nothing of the sound of his horse.
+
+But she sees nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.
+
+And she hears nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.
+
+And she sings.
+
+Then, speaking to Schimmel, she said: "Together, good Schimmel, we are
+going to a lion. Canst not see him in his cavern, awaiting passers-by,
+and devouring poor maids?"
+
+And Schimmel, hearing her, whinnied joyously.
+
+"Schimmel," said Magtelt, "thou art glad, I see, to be going to the
+revenge of Anne-Mie with the good sword."
+
+And Schimmel whinnied a second time.
+
+And Magtelt sought Sir Halewyn everywhere as she went through the
+forest. And she listened well for the sound of his horse, and looked
+to see if he were nowhere coming.
+
+And she saw nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.
+
+And she heard nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.
+
+And she wound her horn.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX. Of the crow and the sparrow, of the hound, the horse and the
+seven echoes.
+
+When she reached the middle part of the forest, she saw through the
+thick snowflakes Sir Halewyn coming towards her.
+
+The Miserable had that day on his body a fine dress of blue cloth,
+on which was broidered in two colours his ugly arms. Round his waist
+he had a fair belt studded with lumps of gold, and at his belt the
+golden sickle, and over his dress a fair opperst-kleed of corn-coloured
+cloth-of-scarlet.
+
+Riding on his roan horse he came up to Magtelt, and she saw that he
+was handsome.
+
+Before his horse, barking and making a great noise, ran a hound like
+a wolf, which, on seeing Schimmel, leapt at him and bit him. But
+Schimmel, with a great kick which he let fly, set him dancing a sorry
+dance, and singing a pitiful song over his broken paw.
+
+"Ah," thought the maid, "God grant, brave Schimmel, that I may do
+better for the master than thou hast done for the dog."
+
+And the Miserable came to her:
+
+"Salutation," he said, "fair maid with clear brown eyes."
+
+"Salutation," she said, "Siewert Halewyn the Invincible."
+
+But the Miserable: "What brings thee," he said, "into my lands?"
+
+"My heart," said Magtelt, "bade me come, I wished greatly to see thee,
+and am content now that I can look at thee face to face."
+
+"So," said he, "have done and shall do all virgins, even more beautiful
+than thou art."
+
+While they were talking together the wounded hound made a rush at the
+horse and hung on to Halewyn's opperst-kleed as if he would drag him
+down to the ground.
+
+Having done this, he went off and sat down in the snow beside the road,
+and there lifting up his muzzle howled most lamentably.
+
+"See," said he, "my hound crying out to death. Hast no fear, maid?"
+
+"I go," she said, "in God's keeping."
+
+Having moved forward a little way, talking and riding together, they
+saw in the air above their heads, a crow of great size, on whose neck
+was perched an angry little sparrow, pecking him, clutching him,
+pulling out his feathers and piping furiously. Wounded, torn open,
+flying this way and that, right, left, upward, downward, banging
+against the trees blindly, and croaking with pain, this crow at length
+fell dead, with his eyes pecked out, across Halewyn's saddle. Having
+looked at it a moment, he tossed it aside into the road; while the
+sparrow flew off to a bough, and there, shaking out his feathers
+merrily, fell a-piping at the top of his voice in celebration of
+his victory.
+
+"Ah," said Magtelt, laughing to the sparrow, "thou art of noble blood,
+little bird; come hither, I will find thee a fair cage and give thee
+thy fill of wheat, millet, hemp, and linseed."
+
+But Halewyn became mightily angry: "Common little insolent!" he cried,
+"would that I had thee in a snare! Shouldst not then sing for long
+thy victory over this noble crow."
+
+None the less the sparrow went on singing without a break, and in
+this wise seemed to mock at Halewyn, who said to Magtelt:
+
+"Dost dare to applaud and give heart to this little animal,
+knowing that my shield bears on it the crow of my glorious ancestor
+Dirk! Knowest thou not that like him thou hast but little longer
+to sing?"
+
+"I," she said, "shall sing as long as it pleases God, my master."
+
+"There is for thee," said he, "no other master than I, for here I
+rule alone." Suddenly he turned very cold, for the heart of Anne-Mie,
+though it still beat, was become like ice in his breast. So, thinking
+that this heart was about to dry up, he said to Magtelt: "Thou comest
+in good season, fair virgin."
+
+"Whom God leads," said she, "comes always in good season."
+
+"But," he said, "who art thou, riding in my land, singing and winding
+the horn, who bringest hither such insolent talk?"
+
+"I," said she, "am the Lady Magtelt, daughter of Roel le Preux,
+Lord of Heurne."
+
+"And," said he, "art thou not chilled, riding thus in the snow?"
+
+"None," she said, "feels the cold in the race of the Lords of Heurne."
+
+"And," said he, "hast thou no fear, here at my side and on my own land,
+where no one dares to set foot?"
+
+"None," she said, "knows of fear in the race of the Lords of Heurne."
+
+"Thou art," said he, "a brave maid."
+
+"I," she said, "am daughter of Roel le Preux, Lord of Heurne."
+
+He answered nothing to that, and they went on a while without speaking.
+
+Suddenly he said, lifting his head arrogantly: "Am I not truly the
+Invincible, the Beautiful, the Strong? Shall I not be so always? Yes,
+for all things come to my aid in the hour of victory. In former times
+I must needs sing, in cold, snow, wind, and darkness, to call virgins
+to me, but now the most proud, noble, and beautiful of maids comes
+hither in broad day without song to call her: sure sign of growing
+power. Who is my equal? None, save God. He has the heavens and I the
+earth, and over all living things triumph and mastery. Let come what
+may, armies, lightning, thunder, tempest; who can stand but I?"
+
+"I!" answered to his hideous blasphemy seven voices speaking together.
+
+Those voices were the echo of the Seven Giants, which sent back every
+sound seven times over with great force and volume.
+
+But the Miserable: "Hark!" said he, "my Lord Echo dares to mock
+the Invincible."
+
+And he burst out laughing.
+
+But the echo burst out laughing likewise, and laughed loud, long,
+and terribly.
+
+And Halewyn appeared well pleased at the noise, and went on laughing,
+with the seven echoes after him.
+
+And it seemed to Magtelt as it were a thousand men hidden in the
+forest.
+
+And meanwhile the hound had taken fright and howled so desperately
+that it seemed to Magtelt as it were a thousand hounds in the forest
+crying out to death.
+
+The Miserable's horse had taken fright also, and was so terrified
+at his master's laughter, the dog's howls, and his own neighing,
+all ringing out together, that he plunged, reared, stood up on
+his hind legs like a man, laid back his ears with fear, and would,
+without doubt, have thrown Halewyn from his back, if, driving him
+onward with his spurs, he had not made him pass by force the place
+of the seven echoes.
+
+But Schimmel had not moved at all, and this strangely enough, for he
+was a young horse, apt to be alarmed.
+
+When the noise was over they rode on their way, speaking few words
+together as they rode.
+
+And together they came to the Gallows-field.
+
+
+
+
+XXX. How Magtelt came to the Gallows-field.
+
+There Magtelt saw the sixteen virgins hanging, and amongst them
+Anne-Mie, and all were covered over with snow.
+
+Halewyn's horse began again to rear, plunge, and lay back his ears
+as a sign of fear; but Schimmel neighed, and pawed the ground proudly
+with his hoof.
+
+And Halewyn said to Magtelt: "Thou hast there an unfaithful friend,
+who can neigh happily at the hour of thy death."
+
+But Magtelt answered nothing, and looking steadfastly at those poor
+virgins prayed to the very strong God to help her in their revenge.
+
+Meanwhile the Miserable alighted from his horse, and taking the golden
+sickle in his hand came towards Magtelt.
+
+"It is," he said, "the hour of thy death. Get down, therefore, as I
+have done."
+
+And in his impatience he would have lifted her from Schimmel's back.
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Leave me," she said, "to get down by myself; if I must die 'twill
+be without weeping."
+
+"Thou art a fine girl," said he.
+
+And she, having dismounted from her horse, said: "My lord, before
+thou strikest, doff thine opperst-kleed of the colour of corn, for
+the blood of virgins gushes fiercely, and if mine should stain thee
+I should be grieved."
+
+But before the opperst-kleed was off his shoulders, his head fell to
+the ground at his feet.
+
+And Magtelt, looking at the body, said: "He strode confidently,
+thinking himself invincible; but when the beast goes with assurance
+the hunter follows more easily."
+
+And she crossed herself.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI. Of the sixteen deaths and of the Prince of the Stones.
+
+Suddenly the head spoke, saying: "Go thou to the end of the road,
+and sound my horn aloud, so that my friends may hear."
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"To the end of the road will I not go; thine horn will I not sound;
+murderer's counsel will I not follow."
+
+"Ah," said the head, "if thou art not the Virgin without pity, join
+me to my body, and with the heart that is in my breast anoint my
+red wound."
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"I am the Virgin without pity; to thy body will I not join thee, and
+with the heart that is in thy breast will I not anoint thy red wound."
+
+"Maid," said the head, weeping and speaking with great terror,
+"maid, quickly, quickly, make on my body the sign of the cross,
+and carry me into my castle, for he is coming."
+
+While the head was speaking, suddenly came out of the wood the Prince
+of the Stones, and he came and seated himself on the body of the
+Miserable, and taking in his hands the head: "Salutation," he said,
+"to the Ill-favoured one; art thou now content? What of thy triumphant
+bearing, my lord the Invincible? She whom thou calledst not came
+without a song: the virgin without fear, in whose hands is death. But
+thou must sing once again thy sweet song, the song to call virgins."
+
+"Ah," said the head, "make me not sing, Lord Prince of the Stones,
+for I know well enough that at the end there is great suffering."
+
+"Sing," said the Prince of the Stones, "sing, coward that hast never
+wept to do evil, and now weepest at the time of punishment: sing,
+Miserable."
+
+"Ah," said the head, "have pity, Lord."
+
+"Sing," said the Prince of the Stones, "sing, 'tis the hour of God."
+
+"My lord Prince," said the head, "be not so hard in my evil hour."
+
+"Sing, Miserable," said the Prince of the Stones, "sing, 'tis the
+hour of the reckoning."
+
+"Ah," said the head, weeping, "I will sing, since you are my master."
+
+And the head sang the faery song.
+
+And suddenly there spread abroad in the air a smell of cinnamon,
+frankincense, and sweet marjoram.
+
+And the sixteen virgins, hearing the song, came down from the gallows
+and drew near to the body of Halewyn.
+
+And Magtelt, crossing herself, watched them pass, but felt no fear.
+
+And the first virgin, who was the daughter of the poor simpleton, Claes
+the Dog-beater, took the golden sickle, and cutting into the breast
+of the Miserable below the left nipple drew out a great ruby, and put
+this on her wound, where it melted into rich red blood in her breast.
+
+And the head let a great pitiful cry of pain.
+
+"So," said the Prince of the Stones, "did the poor virgins cry out
+when thou madest them pass from life unto death; sixteen times hast
+thou brought death about, sixteen times shalt thou die, besides the
+death thou hast suffered already. The cry is the cry of the body
+when the soul leaves it; sixteen times hast thou drawn this cry from
+other bodies, sixteen times shall cry out thine own; sing, Miserable,
+to call the virgins to the reckoning."
+
+And the head sang again the faery song, while the first virgin walked
+away silently towards the wood like a living person.
+
+And the second virgin came to the body of the Miserable and did to
+it as the first had done.
+
+And she also walked away into the wood like a living person.
+
+So did each of the sixteen virgins, and for each of them a ruby was
+changed into good red blood.
+
+And sixteen times the head sang the faery song, and sixteen times
+gave the death-cry.
+
+And one by one all the virgins went away into the depth of the wood.
+
+And the last of all, who was Anne-Mie, came to Magtelt, and kissing
+her right hand wherein she had held the sword: "Blessed be thou,"
+she said, "who camest without fear, and, delivering us from the spell,
+leadest us into paradise."
+
+"Ah," said Magtelt, "must thou go so far away, Anne-Mie?"
+
+But Anne-Mie, without hearing her, passed like the others into the
+depth of the wood, walking silently over the snow like a living person.
+
+While the head was weeping and uttering bitter plaints, came out
+from the forest the child of nine years old, whom the Miserable had
+killed first of all. Still wearing her shroud she approached and fell
+at the feet of the mannikin Prince of the Stones.
+
+"Ah," she said, kissing the head tenderly, stroking it, caressing it,
+and wiping away its tears, "poor Miserable, I will pray for thee to
+the very good God, who readily hears the prayers of children."
+
+And the girl prayed in this wise:
+
+"Dear Lord, see how much he is suffering! Is it not payment enough that
+he should die sixteen times? Ah, Lord, sweet Lord, and you, Madam Mary,
+who are so kind, deign to hear me and grant him forgiveness."
+
+But the mannikin, starting up, pushed the child away and said
+harshly: "This head is mine, thy prayers avail nothing; be off,
+little ragamuffin, go back whence thou came."
+
+And the child went away like the other maids into the depth of
+the wood.
+
+Then he thrust his hand into the breast of the Miserable and pulled
+out a heart of stone: then, in his rasping voice, which hissed like
+a viper and scraped like a thousand pebbles under the iron sole of
+an armed man, he said: "Ambitious heart, heart of stone, thou wast in
+thy lifetime cruel and a coward; thou couldst not be content with such
+ample gifts as God in His bounty had given thee, thou hadst no desire
+towards goodness, courage, or just dealing, but towards gold, power,
+and vain honours; thou hadst no love for anything, neither father,
+mother, brother, nor sister; and so, to get more power and higher
+jurisdiction, thou killedst the people of the land of Flanders,
+without shame: and so also thou didst set thyself to hurt the weak,
+sucking thy life from their life, and thy blood from their blood. So
+have done and so shall always do this reptile order of ambitious ugly
+men. Blessed be God, who, by the hands of this frail and winsome maid,
+has cut off thine head from thy neck and taken thee from the world."
+
+As he spoke he had thrown the heart down into the snow, and trampling
+over it with great despite, kicking it with his toe like a vile thing,
+and laughing bitterly, he spoke again in his rasping voice:
+
+"Stone thou art, stone shalt thou be a thousand years, but a live
+stone, a suffering stone. And when men come and carve thee, cleave
+thee, grind thee to powder, thou shalt endure it all without being
+able to cry out. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and bleed,
+my cousin.
+
+"Thou hast starved poor folk, so shalt thou starve a thousand years;
+thou hast brought cold into their homes, thou shalt freeze in like
+manner. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and bleed, my cousin.
+
+"Thou shalt be a hearth-stone and burn with the heat; paving-stone,
+and let men walk over thee; stone of a church, and bear upon thee all
+the weight of the building; and thou shalt suffer every evil, pain,
+and anguish. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and endure,
+my cousin."
+
+Having said this the Prince of the Stones, driving before him with his
+foot the Miserable's heart, disappeared among the trees of the forest.
+
+Then Magtelt looked at the head, and saw that its eyes were open
+wide. She took it up and washed it with snow, then, carrying it with
+her, rode away on Schimmel, leaving near the body Halewyn's horse and
+hound, the one moaning softly, the other watching it with sorrowful
+wonderment.
+
+As she took up the head, the hound growled, but did not dare touch her.
+
+And while she rode away, horse and hound stayed by the body, downcast
+and sad, and covered with the snow which fell without ceasing.
+
+And they seemed to be guarding their master.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII. How father, mother, and sister sought everywhere their son
+and brother, and could not find him.
+
+Singing and winding her horn rides the noble maid Magtelt.
+
+And in her heart is joy, at the thought that Anne-Mie, the fifteen
+virgins, and Toon the Silent are avenged.
+
+And her hand holds fast beneath her keirle the good sword and the
+head of Halewyn.
+
+And Schimmel trots quickly, eager to be back in his stable.
+
+While she was riding she saw, through the thick snow falling, an old
+man coming towards her on a black horse.
+
+And the old man said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my son Halewyn?"
+
+And Magtelt:
+
+"I left thy son Halewyn well placed, taking his diversion in the snow
+with sixteen maidens."
+
+And the old man rode on.
+
+When she had gone farther she saw, through the thick snow falling,
+a young and rosy-cheeked damosel coming towards her on a white palfrey.
+
+And the damosel said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my brother Halewyn?"
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Go farther, to the Gallows-field, where thou shalt see thy brother
+in like guise to the sixteen maidens."
+
+And the damosel rode on.
+
+Farther still on her way, Magtelt saw, through the thick snow falling,
+a young man of haughty and stiff-necked countenance coming towards
+her on a roan charger.
+
+And the young man said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my brother Halewyn?"
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Thy brother is a fair lord, so fair that round him sixteen maidens
+stand sentinel, unwilling to let him go."
+
+And the young man rode on.
+
+After travelling on her way still farther, she saw, through the thick
+snow falling, an old woman, high-coloured and of robust seeming,
+despite her great age, coming towards her.
+
+And the old woman said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my son Halewyn?"
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Thy son Siewert Halewyn is dead; see, here is his head beneath my
+keirle, and his blood running thick on my dress."
+
+And the old woman cried out:
+
+"If thou had spoken these words earlier thou shouldst not have ridden
+so far."
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Thou art fortunate, old woman, in that I have left thee thine own
+body and not slain thee as I have thy son."
+
+And the old dame took fright and made off.
+
+And night fell.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII. Of the feast in the castle of Heurne, and of the head upon
+the table.
+
+Schimmel trotted quickly, and soon Magtelt reached her father's castle
+and there sounded the horn.
+
+Josse van Ryhove, who was gate-keeper that night, was filled with
+amazement at the sight of her. Then he cried out: "Thanks be to God,
+'tis our damosel come home again."
+
+And all the household ran to the gate crying out likewise with great
+noise and much shouting: "Our damosel is come home."
+
+Magtelt, going into the great hall, went to Sir Roel and knelt
+before him:
+
+"My lord father," she said, "here is the head of Siewert Halewyn."
+
+Sir Roel, taking the head in his hands and looking at it well, was
+so overcome with joy that he wept for the first time since the eyes
+were in his head.
+
+And the Silent, rising up, came to Magtelt, kissed her right hand
+wherewith she had held the sword, and wept likewise, saying: "Thanks
+be to thee who hast brought about the reckoning."
+
+The lady Gonde was like a woman drunk with joy, and could not find
+her tongue. At last, bursting into sobs, melting into tears, and
+embracing Magtelt eagerly:
+
+"Ah, ah," she cried out, "kiss me, kiss me, kiss me, little
+one! She has slain the Miserable, the sweet maid; the nightingale
+has vanquished the falcon! My child is come home again, home again
+my child. Noël! Thanks be to God who loves aged mothers and will not
+have them robbed of their children. Noël! See, Magtelt the beautiful,
+Magtelt the singing-bird, Magtelt the joyous, Magtelt the bright
+of heart, Magtelt the glorious, Magtelt the victorious, Magtelt my
+daughter, my child, my all, Noël!"
+
+And Magtelt smiled at her, caressing her and stroking her hands gently.
+
+And the lady Gonde, weeping freely, let her do, without speaking.
+
+"Ah," said Sir Roel, "I never saw my wife before in such festival
+mood." Then suddenly he cried out:
+
+"Festival," quoth he, "this should be a day of festival, the great
+feast of the house of Heurne!"
+
+And he threw open the door to call his pages, grooms, men-at-arms,
+and all the household.
+
+But they all held back, not daring to enter.
+
+"Ho!" cried he, in his great joyous voice, "where are cooks and
+kitchen-maids? Where are cauldrons, pots, and frying-pans? Where are
+barrels, kegs, flagons and bottles, tankards, mugs, and goblets? Where
+is clauwaert simple and double? Where is old wine and new wine? Where
+are hams and sausages, whales' tongues, and loins of beef, meat of the
+air, meat of the waters, and meat of the fields? Bring in everything
+there is and set it on the table, for this must be a feast-day in this
+house, feast for an emperor, a king, a prince; for"--and so saying
+he held up the Miserable's head by the hair--"our beloved maid has
+slain with her own hand the lord Siewert Halewyn."
+
+Hearing this they all cried out with a roar like thunder:
+
+"Praise be to God! Noël to our damosel!"
+
+"Go then," said Sir Roel, "and do as I have bid."
+
+And when the great feast was served the head was put in the middle
+of the table.
+
+On the morrow there was let cry war in the seigneury of Heurne. And
+Sir Roel went with a goodly force of men to attack by arms the castle
+of the Miserable, whereof all the relatives, friends, and followers
+were either hanged or slain.
+
+And My Lord the Count gave to the family of Heurne, the goods,
+titles and territories of Halewyn, excepting only the ugly shield,
+and theirs they remain to this day.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SMETSE SMEE
+
+
+I. Of Smetse, his belly, and his forge.
+
+Smetse Smee lived in the good town of Ghent, on the Quai aux Oignons,
+beside the fair River Lys.
+
+He was well skilled in his trade, rich in bodily fat, and with so jolly
+a countenance that the most melancholy of men were cheered and took
+heart for no more than the sight of him in his smithy, trotting about
+on his short legs, head up and belly forward, seeing to everything.
+
+When work was in full swing in his shop, Smetse, listening to the
+busy sounds round the fire, would say, with his hands clasped across
+his stomach, quietly and happily: "By Artevelde! what are drums,
+cymbals, fifes, viols, and bagpipes worth? For heavenly music give
+me my sledges beating, my anvils ringing, my bellows roaring, my good
+workmen singing and hammering."
+
+Then, speaking to them all: "Courage," he would say, "my children! Who
+works well from daybreak drinks the better for it at vespers. Whose is
+that feeble arm down there, tapping with his hammer so gently? Does
+he think he is cracking eggs, the faint-heart? To those bars, Dolf,
+and plunge them in the water. To that breastplate, Pier, beat it out
+for us fine and true: iron well beaten is proof against bullets. To
+that plough-share, Flipke, and good work to it, too: from the plough
+comes the world's bread. To the door, Toon, here comes the raw-boned
+nag of Don Sancio d'Avila, the knight with the sour countenance,
+brought hither by his raw-boned groom, who is for having him shod,
+no doubt: let him pay double for his Spanish haughtiness and his
+harshness to poor folk!"
+
+So went Smetse about his smithy, singing mostly, and whistling
+when he was not singing. And for the rest getting much honest gain,
+profiting in health, and, at vespers, drinking bruinbier with a will
+in the inn of Pensaert.
+
+
+
+
+II. How Slimbroek the Red put out the fire in Smetse's forge.
+
+By and by there came to the Quai aux Oignons a certain Adriaen
+Slimbroek, who set up, with the licence of the guild, another
+smithy. This Slimbroek was an ugly, wizened, lean and puny personage,
+white-faced, underhung in the jaw like a fox, and nicknamed the Red
+on account of the colour of his hair.
+
+Skilled in intrigue, expert in sharp-practice, master of arts in cant
+and hypocrisy, and making himself out to be the finest of smiths, he
+had interested in his business all the rich and gentle folk of the
+town, who from fear or otherwise held to the Spaniards and wished
+ill to those of the reformed faith. They were before, for the most
+part, customers of Smetse, but Slimbroek had put them against him,
+saying: "This Smetse is a knave to the bottom of his heart, he was a
+marauder in his young days, sailing the seas with the men of Zeeland
+in despite of Spain, on the side of this religion which they call
+reformed. He still has many friends and relatives in Walcheren, more
+particularly at Middelburg, Arnemuiden, Camp-Veere, and Flushing,
+all obstinate Protestants, and speaking of the Pope of Rome and my
+Lords the Archdukes without veneration.
+
+"And for the rest," added he, "this fellow Smetse is altogether an
+atheist, reading the bible of Antwerp in despite of the decrees,
+and going to church only because he is afraid, and not at all because
+he will."
+
+By such slanders as these Slimbroek robbed Smetse of all his customers.
+
+And soon the fire was out in the forge of the good smith, and soon,
+too, the savings were eaten up, and Dame Misery came to the dwelling.
+
+
+
+
+III. Wherein Slimbroek is seen in the river prettily tricked out.
+
+Brought to this pass Smetse, nevertheless, would not let himself take
+to despair; but he was always sad and heavy of heart when, sitting
+in his cold smithy and looking at all his good tools lying idle on
+the ground, he heard the fair sound of hammers and anvils coming from
+Slimbroek's shop.
+
+But what angered him most was that whenever he passed before
+Slimbroek's dwelling the traitor carrot-head would appear suddenly
+on the threshold, and, saluting him graciously and giving him fair
+compliments, would make a hundred flattering speeches, accompanied
+by as many hypocritical salutations, and all for the sake of poking
+fun at him and to laugh unkindly at his misery.
+
+These ugly encounters and grimaces went on a long while, and Smetse
+came to the end of his patience: "Ah," said he, "it angers me to
+be in such poor case; although I must submit, for such is the holy
+will of God. But it irks me too bitterly to see this wicked knave,
+who by his trickeries has taken away all my customers, so amusing
+himself with my misery."
+
+Meanwhile Slimbroek spared him not at all, and each day became sharper
+in speech, for the more wrong he did to the good smith the more hate
+he bore him.
+
+And Smetse swore to have his revenge on him, in such a way as to
+spoil thenceforward his taste for mockery.
+
+It so happened that one Sunday when he was standing on the Quai des
+Bateliers, looking at the river with a crowd of watermen, townsfolk,
+boys, and scholars who were idle for the holy day, suddenly there came
+out of a pothouse, wherein he had been swallowing many pints of ale,
+Slimbroek, bolder than usual on account of the drink. Seeing Smetse
+he came and placed himself close to him, and with much gesticulation,
+loud bursts of talk and laughter, said to him in an insolent tone:
+"Good day, Smetse, good day, my worthy friend. How is thy fine face? It
+seems to lose its fat, which was of good quality, Smetse. 'Tis a
+great pity. What is the reason for it? Art thou angry at the loss of
+thy customers, Smetse? Thou must drink well to bring back the joy to
+thy stomach, Smetse. We never see thee now at vespers in the inn of
+Pensaert; why, Smetse? Hast no pennies to get drink? I have plenty
+for thee, if thou wilt, Smetse." And he shook his money-bag to make
+it ring.
+
+"Thank thee kindly," said Smetse, "thou art too generous, Master
+Slimbroek, 'tis my turn to stand thee drink now."
+
+"Ah," cried Slimbroek, feigning pity and compassion, "why wilt thou
+stand drink to me? The world knows thou art not rich, Smetse."
+
+"Rich enough," answered the smith, "to stand thee the best draught
+thou ever had."
+
+"Hark to him," said Slimbroek to the crowd of watermen and townsfolk,
+"hark to him. Smetse will stand us drink! The world is coming to an
+end. 'Tis the year of golden rags. Smetse will stand us drink! Ah! I
+shall taste with great pleasure the bruinbier that Smetse will stand
+us. I am thirsty as an African desert, thirsty as Sunday, thirsty as
+a devil half-boiled in the cauldrons of Lucifer."
+
+"Drink then, Slimbroek," said Smetse, and threw him into the river.
+
+Seeing this the people who were on the quay applauded heartily, and
+all ran to the edge to have a good look at Slimbroek, who, falling
+into the water head first, had struck and broken through the belly
+of a dog a long while dead, which was floating down on the stream
+as such carrion will. And he was tricked out round the neck with
+this dog in a most marvellous manner, nor could he get rid of it,
+being busy with his arms at keeping himself afloat, and his face was
+smeared all over with offensive matter.
+
+Notwithstanding that he was half-blinded, he dared not come out on
+to the quay where Smetse was, but swam off towards the other bank,
+decked with his carrion and blowing like a hundred devils.
+
+"Well," said Smetse, "dost find the bruinbier to thy liking; is it
+not the best in all the land of Flanders? But my good sir, take off
+thy bonnet to drink; such headgear is not worn for river parties."
+
+When Slimbroek was in midstream, over against the bridge, Smetse
+went up on to this bridge with the other onlookers, and Slimbroek,
+in the midst of his puffing and snorting, cried out to Smetse:
+"I'll have thee hanged, accursed reformer!"
+
+"Ah," said the good smith, "you are mistaken, my friend; 'tis not I
+who am the reformer, but you, who devise these new bonnets. Where got
+you this one? I have never seen such a one, neither so beautiful,
+nor so richly ornamented with tufts and hangings. Is the fashion
+coming to Ghent by and by?"
+
+Slimbroek answered nothing, and struggled to get rid of the dead dog,
+but in vain, and having paused in his swimming for this purpose,
+went down to the bottom, and came up again more furious than ever,
+blowing harder, and trying all the while to tear off the body."
+
+"Leave your hat on, my master," said Smetse, "do not so put yourself
+out in order to salute me, I am not worth the trouble. Leave it on."
+
+At last Slimbroek climbed out of the water. On the quay he shook off
+the dog hastily and made away as fast as he could to his dwelling. But
+he was followed by a crowd of young watermen and boys, who ran after
+him hooting, whistling, covering him with mud and other filth. And
+they continued to do the same to his house-front after he had gone in.
+
+
+
+
+IV. Of the two branches.
+
+In this wise Smetse had his revenge on Slimbroek, who thereafter
+dared not look him in the face, and hid when he passed.
+
+But the good smith, nevertheless, had no more pleasure in anything
+than before, for with every passing day he became more and more needy,
+having already, with his wife, used up what help came to them from
+the guild, and also a small sum of silver from Middelburg in Walcheren.
+
+Ashamed to get his living by begging and knavery, and knowing how to
+bear with his lot no longer, he resolved to kill himself.
+
+So one night he left his house, and went out to the moats of the
+town, which are bordered by fine trees, forked and spreading down
+to the ground. There he fastened a stone to his neck, commended his
+soul to God, and, stepping back three paces to get a better start,
+ran and jumped.
+
+But while he was in the very act he was caught suddenly by two
+branches, which, falling upon his shoulders, gripped him like man's
+hands and held him fast where he was. These branches were neither
+cold nor hard, as wood naturally is, but supple and warm. And he
+heard at the same instant a strange and scoffing voice saying:
+"Where goest thou, Smetse?"
+
+But he could not answer by reason of his great astonishment.
+
+And although there was no wind the trunks and branches of the tree
+moved and swung about like serpents uncoiling, while all around there
+crackled above ten hundred thousand sparks.
+
+And Smetse grew more afraid, and a hot breath passed across his face,
+and the voice, speaking again, but nearer, or so it seemed, repeated:
+"Where goest thou, Smetse?"
+
+But he could not speak for fear, and because his throttle was dry
+and his teeth chattering.
+
+"Why," said the voice, "dost not dare answer him who wishes thee
+naught but well? Where goest thou, Smetse?"
+
+Hearing so pleasant and friendly a speech, the good smith took heart
+and answered with great humility: "Lord whom I cannot see, I was
+going to kill myself, for life is no longer bearable."
+
+"Smetse is mad," said the voice.
+
+"So I am, if you will, Lord," answered the smith; "nevertheless when
+my smithy is lost to me by the cunning of a wicked neighbour, and I
+have no way to live but by begging and knavery, 'twould be greater
+madness in me to live than to die."
+
+"Smetse," said the voice, "is mad to wish himself dead, for he shall
+have again, if he will, his fair smithy, his good red fire, his good
+workmen, and as many golden royals in his coffers as he sees sparks
+in this tree."
+
+"I," exclaimed the smith in great delight, "shall never have such
+fine things as that! They are not for such miserables as I."
+
+"Smetse," said the voice, "all things are possible to my master."
+
+"Ah," said the smith, "you come from the devil, Lord?"
+
+"Yes," answered the voice, "and I come to thee on his account to
+propose a bargain: For seven years thou shalt be rich, thou shalt
+have thy smithy the finest in the town of Ghent; thou shalt win gold
+enough to pave the Quai aux Oignons; thou shalt have in thy cellars
+enough beer and wine to wet all the dry throttles in Flanders; thou
+shalt eat the finest meats and the most delicate game; thou shalt have
+hams in plenty, sausages in abundance, mince-pies in heaps; every
+one shall respect thee, admire thee, sing thy praises; Slimbroek at
+the sight of it shall be filled with rage; and for all these great
+benefits thou hast only to give us thy soul at the end of seven years."
+
+"My soul?" said Smetse, "'tis the only thing I have; would you not,
+My Lord Devil, make me rich at a less price?"
+
+"Wilt thou or wilt thou not, smith?" said the voice.
+
+"Ah," answered Smetse, "you offer me things that are very desirable,
+even, My Lord Devil (if I may say it without offence), more than
+I wish; for if I might have only my forge and enough customers to
+keep the fire alight I should be happier than My Lord Albert or
+Madam Isabella."
+
+"Take or leave it, smith," said the voice.
+
+"Lord Devil," answered Smetse, "I beg you not to become angry with
+me, but to deign to consider that if you give me but my forge, and
+not all this gold, wine, and meats, you might perhaps be content to
+let my soul burn for a thousand years, which time is not at all to
+be compared with the great length of all eternity, but would seem
+long enough to whomever must pass it in the fire."
+
+"Thy forge for thee, thy soul for us; take or leave it, smith,"
+said the voice.
+
+"Ah," lamented Smetse, "'tis dear bought, and no offence to you,
+Lord Devil."
+
+"Well then, smith," said the voice, "to riches thou preferest
+beggary? Do as thou wilt. Ah, thou wilt have great joy when, walking
+with thy melancholy countenance about the streets of Ghent, thou art
+fled by every one and dogs snap at thy heels; when thy wife dies of
+hunger, and thou chantest mea culpa in vain; then when, alone in the
+world, thou beatest on thy shrunken belly the drum for a feast, and
+the little girls dancing to such music give thee a slap in the face
+for payment; then, at last, when thou dost hide thyself in thy house
+so that thy rags shall not be seen in the town, and there, scabby,
+chatter-tooth, vermin-fodder, thou diest alone on thy dung-hill like a
+leper, and art put into the earth, and Slimbroek comes to make merry
+at thy downfall."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "he would do it, the knave."
+
+"Do not await this vile end," said the voice, "it were better to die
+now: leap into the water, Smetse; leap, Smee."
+
+"Alas," lamented he, "if I give myself to you, I shall burn for
+all eternity."
+
+"Thou wilt not burn," said the voice, "but serve us for food,
+good smith."
+
+"I?" cried Smetse, much frightened at these words, "do you think to
+eat me down there? I am not good for eating, I must tell you. There
+is no meat more sour, tough, common, and vulgar than mine is. It has
+been at one time and another diseased with plague, itch, and other vile
+maladies. Ah, I should make you a shabby feast, you and the others, My
+Lord Devil, who have in hell so many souls which are noble, succulent,
+tasty, and well-fed. But mine is not at all good, I declare."
+
+"Thou art wrong, smith," said the voice. "Souls of wicked emperors,
+kings, princes, popes, famous captains of arms, conquerors, slayers
+of men, and other brigands, are always as hard as an eagle's beak;
+for so their omnipotence fashions them; we break our teeth off bit
+by bit in eating them. Others, having been eaten up beforehand by
+ambition and cruelty, which are like ravenous worms, give us hardly
+a crumb to pick. Souls of girls who, without want or hunger, sell
+for money what nature bids them give for nothing, are so rotten,
+putrid, and evil-smelling that the hungriest of devils will not touch
+them. Souls of vain men are bladders, and within there is nothing
+but wind; 'tis poor food. Souls of hypocrites, canters, liars, are
+like beautiful apples without, but beneath the skin are full of bile,
+gall, sour wine, and frightful poison; none of us will have any ado
+with them. Souls of envious men are as toads, who from spleen at
+being so ugly, run yellow spittle on whatever is clean and shining,
+from mouth, feet, and all their bodies. Souls of gluttons are naught
+but cow-dung. Souls of good drinkers are always tasty, and above all
+when they have about them the heavenly smell of good wine and good
+bruinbier. But there is no soul so tasty, delectable, succulent,
+or of such fine flavour as that of a good woman, a good workman,
+or a good smith such as thou. For, working without intermission,
+they have no time for sin to touch and stain them, unless it be once
+or twice only, and for this reason we catch them whenever we can;
+but 'tis a rare dish, kept for the royal table of My Lord Lucifer."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "you have made up your mind to eat me, I see well
+enough; nevertheless 'twould not cost you much to give me back my
+forge for nothing."
+
+"'Tis no great discomfort," said the voice, "to be so eaten, for My
+Lord and King has a mouth larger than had the fish whereby Jonah the
+Jew was swallowed in olden time; thou wilt go down like an oyster
+into his stomach, without having been wounded by his teeth in any
+wise; there, if it displease thee to stay, thou must dance with
+feet and hands as hard as thou canst, and My Lord will at once spit
+thee out, for he will not find it possible to stand for long such
+a drubbing. Falling at his feet thou wilt show him a joyous face,
+a steady look in his eyes, and a good countenance, and the same to
+Madam Astarte, who, without a doubt, will take thee for her pet, as
+she has done already to several; thereafter thou wilt have a joyous
+time, serving My Lady merrily and brushing his hair for My Lord;
+as for the rest of us, we shall be right glad to have you with us,
+for, among all these familiar vile and ugly faces of conquerors,
+plunderers, thieves, and assassins, 'twill do us good to see the
+honest countenance of a merry smith, as thou art."
+
+"My Lord Devil," said Smetse, "I do not merit such honour. I can
+well believe, from what you tell me, that 'tis pleasant enough down
+there with you. But I should be ill at ease, I must tell you, being
+naturally uncouth in the company of strangers; and so I should bring
+no joy with me, and should not be able to sing; and therefore you
+would get but poor amusement from me, I know in advance. Ah, give
+me back rather my good forge and my old customers, and hold me quit;
+this would be the act of a royal devil and would sit well upon you."
+
+Suddenly the voice spoke with anger: "Smith, wilt thou pay us in such
+ape's coin? Life is no longer of benefit to thee, death is abhorrent,
+and thou wouldst have from us without payment the seven full, rich and
+joyous years which I offer thee. Accept or refuse, thy forge for thee,
+thy soul for us, under the conditions I have told thee."
+
+"Alas," said Smetse, "then I will have it so, since it must be,
+Lord Devil!"
+
+"Well then," said the voice, "set thy mark in blood to this deed."
+
+And a black parchment, with a crow's quill, fell from the tree at the
+smith's feet. He read on the parchment, in letters of fire, the pact
+of seven years, opened his arm with his knife, and signed with the
+crow's quill. And while he was still holding the parchment and the
+quill, he felt them suddenly snatched from his hands with violence,
+but he saw nothing, and only heard a noise as of a man running in
+slipper-shoes, and the voice saying as it went into the distance:
+"Thou hast the seven years, Smetse." And the tree ceased its swaying,
+and the sparks in the branches went out.
+
+
+
+
+V. Of the flaming ball, of the forge relit, and of the terrible great
+buffet which the man with the lantern gave to Smetse's wife.
+
+Smetse, greatly amazed, rubbed his eyes, thinking he was
+dreaming. Suddenly shaking himself: "This devil," said he, "was he
+not making fun of me after all? Have I verily gotten my good forge
+back again? I will go and see."
+
+Having said this he started running in haste, and from far away saw a
+great light reddening the sky above the houses, and it seemed to him
+that the fire sending up this light was on the Quai aux Oignons; and
+he said to himself: "Could that be my forge?" And he ran the faster.
+
+Coming to the quay he found it lit up as if by a sun, from the
+paving-stones up to the tops of the trees which stood alongside,
+and he said to himself: "It is my forge."
+
+Then he was seized and shaken with joy, his legs failed him, and his
+breath grew short; but he kept running as hard as he could, and coming
+at last to his house he saw his smithy wide open as in the daytime,
+and at the back of it a great bright fire.
+
+Unable to contain himself at this sight he fell to dancing, leaping,
+and bursting out into laughter, crying: "I have my forge, my own
+forge! Ghent is mine!" Then he went in. Inspecting, examining, touching
+everything, he saw at the sides, laid out in good order, iron of all
+kinds: armour-iron, iron bars, plough-iron. "By Artevelde!" he said,
+"the devil was not lying!" And he took up a bar, and having made it
+red with the fire, which was done quickly, started beating it, making
+the hammer ring on the anvil like thunder, and crying: "Ha, so I have
+my good tools back again, and hear once more this good music which
+has so long been silent!" And while he was wiping away a tear of joy,
+which gave an unaccustomed wetness to his eye, he saw on a chest near
+by a good pewter pot standing, and beside it a fine mug, and he filled
+up the mug several times and drank it down with relish: "Ah," he said,
+"the good bruinbier, the drink which makes men! I had lost the taste
+for it! How good it is!" Then he went back to hammering the iron bar.
+
+While he was making all this noise, he heard himself called by name,
+and looking to see whence the voice came he perceived his wife in the
+half-open door which led from the kitchen, thrusting through her head
+and looking at him with a startled face.
+
+"Smetse," she said, "is it thou, my man?"
+
+"Yes, wife," said he.
+
+"Smetse," she said, "come close to me, I dare not set foot in this
+forge."
+
+"And why not, wife?" said he.
+
+"Alas," she said, clinging to him and gazing into the forge, "wert
+thou alone there, my man?"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Ah," she said, "Smetse, while you were away there were strange
+happenings!"
+
+"What happenings, wife?"
+
+"As I was lying in bed," she said, "suddenly the house trembled, and
+a flaming ball passed across our room, went out through the door,
+without hurting anything, down the stairs, and into the forge,
+where, bursting, as I suppose, it made a noise like a hundred
+thunder-claps. Suddenly all the windows and doors were thrown open
+with a great clatter Getting out of bed, I saw the quay all lit up,
+as it is now. Then, thinking that our house was on fire, I came down
+in haste, went into the forge, saw the fire lit, and heard the bellows
+working noisily. In each corner the iron of different kinds arranged
+itself in place according to the work for which it was used; but I
+could see no hands moving it, though there must have been some for
+sure. I began to cry out in a fright, when suddenly I felt, as it were,
+a glove of hot leather pressed against my mouth and holding it shut,
+while a voice said: 'Do not cry out, make no sound, if thou wilt not
+have thy husband burnt alive for the crime of sorcery.' Nevertheless
+he who thus ordered me to keep silent made himself more noise than I
+should ever have dared, but by a miracle none of our neighbours heard
+it. As for me, my man, I had no more heart to make a sound, and I
+fled back hither into the kitchen, where I was praying to God when
+I heard thy voice, and dared to open the door a crack. Oh, my man,
+since thou art here, explain, if thou can, all this tumult."
+
+"Wife," answered Smetse, "we must leave that to those more learned
+than ourselves. Think only to obey the order of the voice: keep thy
+mouth shut, speak to no one of what thou hast seen to-night, and go
+back to thy bed, for it is still pitch-dark."
+
+"I go," she said, "but wilt thou not come also, my man?"
+
+"I cannot leave the forge," said he.
+
+While he was speaking thus there came towards them, one after another,
+a baker carrying new-baked bread, a grocer carrying cheeses, and a
+butcher carrying hams.
+
+Smetse knew well enough that they were devils, from their white faces,
+hollow eyes, scorched hair, twisted fingers, and also from the fact
+that they walked with so little sound.
+
+His wife, amazed to see them coming into her house with all this food,
+would have stopped them, but they slipped between her hands like eels,
+and went into the kitchen, walking straight and silently.
+
+There, without a word spoken, the baker arranged his loaves in the
+pan, while the butcher and grocer put their cheeses and hams in the
+cool-of the cellar. And they finished their work, taking no notice
+of the smith's wife, who kept crying: "'Tis not here you must bring
+these things; you have made a mistake, I tell you, my good men. Go
+elsewhither."
+
+But they, notwithstanding her voice, arranged the loaves, meat,
+and cheeses quietly.
+
+This made the good woman more than ever put out, and she grew angry:
+"I tell you," she exclaimed, "you have made a mistake; do you not
+hear me? You have made a mistake, 'tis not here you should be; I say
+here, with us, in this place, in the house of Smetse the beggar,
+who has not a farthing to his name, who will never pay you. Alas,
+they will not listen to me!"
+
+And crying out at the top of her voice: "Masters, you are at Smetse's,
+do you not understand? Smetse the beggar! Do I not say it loud
+enough? Jesus, Lord, God! Smetse the needy! Smetse the ragged! Smetse
+the starved! Smetse who is rich in nothing but lice! Who will pay you
+nothing: do you hear me? Who will pay you nothing, nothing, nothing!"
+
+"Wife," said the smith, "you are losing your head, my dear. 'Tis I
+who sent for these good men."
+
+"Thou!" said his wife, "thou! but thou art mad, my man; yes, he is mad,
+my masters, altogether mad. Ah, 'tis thou who sent for them! 'Tis
+thou who sendest for loaves, hams, and cheeses in this profusion,
+like a rich man, when thou knowest well enough we cannot pay for them,
+and so showest thy bad faith!"
+
+"Wife," answered Smetse quietly, "we are rich, and will pay for
+everything."
+
+"We rich?" she said, "ah, poor beggar-man. Do I not know what is
+in our chest? Hast ever put thy nose in to see, any more than in
+the bread-pan? Art thou become the housewife? Alas, my man is mad,
+God help us!"
+
+Meanwhile the three men came back into the smithy.
+
+Seeing them again, the wife ran to them: "Master trades-men," said she,
+"you heard me well enough, for you are not deaf, I believe; we have
+nothing, we can pay you nothing; take back your provisions."
+
+But without looking at her, nor seeming to hear her, the three went
+off, walking stiff and silently.
+
+No sooner had they gone out than a brewer's cart drew up at the door,
+and the brewer's men came into the smithy carrying between them a
+great barrel full of bruinbier.
+
+"Smetse," said his wife, "this is too much! Master brewers, this is
+not for us; we do not like beer at all, we drink water. Take this
+barrel to one of our neighbours, it is no concern of ours, I tell you."
+
+None the less the brewer's men took down the barrel of bruinbier into
+the cellar, came up again, and went out to fetch others, and placed
+them alongside the first to the number of twenty. The good wife,
+trying to stop them, was pushed aside, while Smetse could not speak
+for laughing, and could only draw her to his side, and so prevent her
+from hurting herself on the barrels, which the men were carrying from
+street to cellar with marvellous speed and dispatch.
+
+"Oh," she wailed, "let me be! This is too much, Smetse! Alas! Now we
+are worse than beggars, we are debtors, Smetse: I shall go and throw
+myself into the river, my man. To run up debts to fill a famished
+stomach, that is shame enough; but to do so from simple gluttony,
+that is unbearable deceit. Canst thou not be content with bread and
+water got honestly with thy two hands? Art thou then become such a
+delicate feeder that thou must have cakes, fine cheeses, and full
+barrels? Smetse, Smetse, that is not like a good man of Ghent, but
+rather like a Spanish rogue. Oh, I shall go and drown myself, my man!"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, troubled at seeing her in such distress,
+"do not weep. 'Tis all ours, my dear, duly, and by right."
+
+"Ah," she said moaning, "'tis an ill thing to lose in this wise in
+your old age that honesty which was your only crown."
+
+While the smith was endeavouring, but in vain, to console her, there
+entered a vintner followed by three-and-thirty porters, each carrying
+a basket full of bottles containing precious wines of great rarity,
+as was shown by the shape of those said bottles.
+
+When the good wife saw them she was overcome with despair, and her
+courage failed her: "Come in," she said in a piteous voice, "come in,
+master vintners; the cellar is below. You have there a goodly number
+of bottles, six score for certain. That is none too much for us who
+are wealthy, wealthy of misery, vermin, and lice; come in, my masters,
+that is the door of the cellar. Put them all there, and more besides
+if you will."
+
+And giving Smetse a push: "Thou art happy, no doubt," said she, "for
+'tis a fine sight for a drunkard, such as thou art, to see all this
+good wine coming into the house without payment. Ah, he laughs!"
+
+"Yes, wife," said Smetse, "I laugh with content, for the wines are
+ours, ours the meats, ours the loaves and cheeses. Let us make merry
+over it together." And he tried to embrace her: but she, shaking
+herself free: "Oh, oh," she said, "he runs up debts, he tells lies,
+he laughs at his shame: he has all the vices, none is wanting."
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "all this is ours, I tell thee again. To this
+amount am I paid in advance for certain large orders which have been
+graciously given me."
+
+"Art thou not lying?" said she, growing a little calmer.
+
+"No," said he.
+
+"All this is ours?"
+
+"Yes," he said, "by the word of honour of a citizen of Ghent."
+
+"Ah, my man, then we are henceforward out of our trouble."
+
+"Yes, wife," said he.
+
+"'Tis a miracle from God."
+
+"Alas," said he.
+
+"But these men come hither by night, against the usual custom, tell
+me the reason of that."
+
+"He who knows the reason for everything," said Smetse, "is an evil
+prier. Such a one am not I."
+
+"But," said she, "they speak never a word."
+
+"They do not like to talk," said Smetse, "that is clear. Or it may
+be that their master chose them dumb, so that they should not waste
+time chattering with housewives."
+
+"Yes, that may be," she said, while the thirty-first porter was going
+past, "but 'tis very strange, I cannot hear their footfalls, my man?"
+
+"They have for certain," said Smetse, "soles to suit their work."
+
+"But," she said, "their faces are so pale, sad, and motionless,
+that they seem like faces of the dead."
+
+"Night-birds have never a good complexion," said Smetse.
+
+"But," said his wife, "I have never seen these men among the guilds
+of Ghent."
+
+"Thou dost not know them all," said Smetse.
+
+"That may be, my man."
+
+In this manner the smith and his wife held converse together, the one
+very curious and disturbed, the other confused and ashamed at his lies.
+
+Suddenly, as the three-and-thirtieth porter of the master-vintner was
+going out of the door, there rushed in in great haste a man of middling
+height, dressed in a short black smock, pale-haired, large-headed,
+wan-faced, stepping delicately, quick as the wind, stiff as a poker;
+for the rest, smiling continually, and carrying a lantern.
+
+The man came up to Smetse hurriedly, without speaking bade him follow,
+and seized him by the arm. When Smetse hung back he made him a quick
+sign to have no fear, and led him into the garden, whither they were
+followed by the good wife. There he took a spade, gave his lantern
+to Smetse to hold, dug in the earth rapidly and opened a great hole,
+pulled out of the hole a leathern bag, opened it quickly, and with a
+smile showed Smetse and his wife that it was full of gold coin. The
+good wife cried out at the sight of the gold, whereupon he gave her
+a terrible great buffet in the face, smiled again, saluted, turned
+on his heel and went off with his lantern.
+
+The good wife, knocked down by the force of the blow, and quite dazed,
+dared not cry out again, and only moaned softly: "Smetse, Smetse,"
+said she, "where art thou, my man? my cheek hurts me sorely."
+
+Smetse went to her and picked her up, saying: "Wife, let this buffet
+be a lesson to thee henceforward to control thy tongue better; thou
+hast disturbed with thy crying all the good men who have come here
+this night for my good; this last was less patient than the rest and
+punished thee, not without good reason."
+
+"Ah," she said, "I did ill not to obey thee; what must I do now,
+my man?"
+
+"Help me," said Smetse, "to carry the bag into the house."
+
+"That I will," she said.
+
+Having taken in the bag, not without some trouble, they emptied it
+into a coffer.
+
+"Ah," she said, seeing the gold run out of the bag and spread itself
+this way and that, "'tis a fine sight. But who was this man who showed
+thee this sack with such kindness, and who gave me this terrible
+great blow?"
+
+"A friend of mine," said Smetse, "a great discoverer of hidden
+treasure."
+
+"What is his name?" said she.
+
+"That," said Smetse, "I am not allowed to tell thee."
+
+"But, my man..."
+
+"Ah, wife, wife," said Smetse, "thou wilt know too much. Thy
+questioning will be thy death, my dear."
+
+"Alas," said she.
+
+
+
+
+VI. Wherein the wife of Smetse shows the great length of her tongue.
+
+When the day was up, Smetse and his wife sat down together to the
+good loaves, the fat ham, the fine cheese, the double bruinbier,
+and the good wines, and so eased their stomachs, hurt a little by
+being such a long while hungry.
+
+Suddenly there came in all the old workmen, and they said:
+
+"Baes Smetse, thou didst send for us; here we are, right glad to see
+thy fire lit up again, and to work for thee who wast always so good
+a master."
+
+"By Artevelde!" said Smetse, "here they all are: Pier, Dolf, Flipke,
+Toon, Hendrik, and the rest. Good day, my lads!" and he gripped them
+by the hand, "we must drink."
+
+While they were drinking, his wife said suddenly with a toss of the
+head: "But no one sent for you all! Is that not so, Smetse?"
+
+"Wife, wife," said the smith, "wilt thou never learn to hold thy
+tongue?"
+
+"But," said she, "I am speaking the truth, my man."
+
+"Thou art speaking foolishly," said he, "of things whereof thou knowest
+nothing. Stay in thy kitchen and do not come meddling in my forge."
+
+"Baesine," said Flipke, "without wishing to belie you, I must tell
+you that a message was sent to us in the name of the baes. For a man
+came in the middle of the night knocking on the doors of our houses,
+shouting out that we should all of us come hither without fail this
+morning for work of great urgency, and that for this we should each
+be given a royal as forfeit to our several masters. And we came,
+all of us, not wishing to leave our baes in the lurch."
+
+"'Tis good of you," said Smetse, "ye shall have the promised royal. But
+come with me, I will apportion to each of you the usual task." This he
+did, and once again the good music of sledges beating, anvils ringing,
+bellows blowing, and workmen singing was heard in the forge of the
+good smith.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse went to his wife and said to her with great
+heat: "Dost think it a fine thing to gainsay me before these good
+men! Chattering magpie, wilt never learn to hold thy tongue? Hast
+not already to-night been admonished sharply enough? Must thou have
+more telling?"
+
+"But, Smetse," said his wife, "I did not know that you had sent
+for them."
+
+"That is no reason," he said, "why thou shouldst give me the lie before
+all my workmen; canst thou not leave thy speaking until I have done,
+or else hold thy tongue altogether, which would be better still."
+
+"Smetse," said his wife, "I never saw you so angry before. Do not
+beat me, my man, I will be henceforward as dumb as this cheese."
+
+"So you should," said Smetse.
+
+"But, my man," said she, "canst not explain to me somewhat of all
+these happenings?"
+
+"Sometime," he said, and went back into his smithy.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of Smetse the Rich.
+
+That day there came to Smetse many persons, both notable and common,
+nobles, priests, burgesses, and peasants, to give him orders for much
+work, and so it went on again on other days, and all through the year.
+
+Soon the smithy became too small, and Smetse had to enlarge it by
+reason of the ever-growing numbers of his workmen. And the work which
+they did was so beautiful and so marvellously well done that the fame
+of it spread abroad to foreign and distant countries, and people came
+to see and admire it from Holland, Zeeland, Spain, Germany, England,
+and even from the land of the Turk.
+
+But Smetse, thinking of the seven years, was not happy at all.
+
+Soon his coffers were full of fine crusats, angelots, rose nobles,
+and golden jewels. But he found no pleasure in looking at all this
+wealth, for he thought them poor payment for giving his soul to the
+devil for all the length of eternity.
+
+Red Slimbroek lost all his customers, who came back one by one to
+Smetse. Ragged and miserable he used to come every day and lounge on
+the quay, watching from there the bright fire glowing in the forge
+of the good smith, and, so standing, he seemed dazed and stupid,
+like an owl watching a doit. Smetse, knowing that he was needy,
+sent him several customers to bring him some means of sustenance,
+and also more than once a gift of money. But although he thus repaid
+evil with good he was no longer happy, thinking of the seven years.
+
+Smetse's wife, finding him so wealthy, bought for dinner each
+Sunday legs of fat mutton, geese, capons, turkeys, and other good
+meats; invited to her table his relatives, friends, and workmen;
+and then there would be a great feast, well washed down with double
+bruinbier. But Smetse, though he ate and drank like an emperor, was not
+at all happy, thinking of the seven years. And the steam from the roast
+meats spread abroad on the Quai aux Oignons, so fragrant and succulent,
+and so sweetening the air, that all the dogs wandering in the streets
+of the town would stop before the house and sniff at the smell, and
+there on their haunches, nose in air, would wait for crumbs: and the
+beggars, of whom there were great numbers, came thither likewise and
+tried to drive away the dogs. Thereupon ensued furious battles, in
+which many were badly bitten. Seeing this, Smetse's wife and other
+women would come every Sunday to the door with baskets of alms,
+and there, before the meal began, would give the beggars good bread,
+slices of meat, and two farthings to get themselves drink, and all
+this with soft words and fair speaking; then they charged them to
+go away from the quay, which they did in an orderly manner. But the
+dogs stayed behind, and at the end of the feast there was given to
+them likewise food of some sort. And then they would go off also,
+taking each his bone or other booty.
+
+Smetse and his wife together took both dogs and men into their
+affection; to the beggars he gave food and shelter; and so also to
+all the dogs of Ghent that were lame, infirm, or sickly, until at
+length his house came to be called the Dogs' Hospital and the Home
+of the Poor.
+
+Nevertheless he was not at all happy, thinking of the seven years.
+
+Worn and troubled with these thoughts, Smetse stopped singing and
+lost his fat, shrivelled visibly, became melancholy and moody, and
+in his smithy said never a word, except to give a necessary order.
+
+And he was no longer called Smetse the Merry, but Smetse the Rich.
+
+And he counted the days.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. How there came a ragged, wayfarer to Smetse's door, and with him,
+on an ass, a sweet wife and a little child.
+
+On the two hundred and forty-fifth day of the seventh year, when
+the plum-trees were in bloom, Smetse, dumb as a stone, was taking
+a little noonday rest. He sat on a wooden bench opposite his door,
+and with melancholy mien looked at the trees planted all along the
+quay, and the small birds playing among the branches or squabbling
+and pecking one another over some morsel of food, and blinked in the
+bright sun which made these birds so merry, and heard at his back
+the goodly sounds of his forge, his wife preparing dinner, and his
+workmen hurrying at their work so that they might be off to their meal,
+for it was nearing the time; and he said to himself that in hell he
+would see neither the sun, nor the birds, nor the trees with their
+load of green leaves, nor hear any more the sounds of his forge,
+nor the smiths hurrying, nor his good wife preparing dinner.
+
+By and by the workmen came out, and Smetse was left sitting alone
+on his bench, pondering in his mind whether there were not some way
+whereby he might outwit the devil.
+
+Suddenly there drew up at his door a man of piteous appearance, with
+brown hair and beard, dressed like a ragged townsman, and carrying
+a great staff in his hand. He was walking beside an ass, and leading
+it along by a rein. On the ass rode a sweet and beautiful young woman
+with a noble mien, suckling a little child, who was quite naked, and
+of such gentle and winsome countenance that the sight of it warmed
+Smetse's heart.
+
+The ass stopped at the door of the smithy and began to bray loudly.
+
+"Master smith," said the man, "our ass has cast one of his shoes
+on his way hither, wilt thou be pleased to give orders that another
+should be given him?"
+
+"I will do it myself," said Smetse, "for I am alone here."
+
+"I should tell thee," said the man, "that we are beggars, without
+money."
+
+"Have no care for that," said Smetse, "I am rich enough to be able
+to shoe in silver without payment all the asses in Flanders."
+
+Hearing this the woman alighted from the ass and asked Smetse if she
+might sit down on the bench.
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+And while he was fastening up the beast, paring his hoof and fitting
+the shoe, he said to the man: "Whence come you, with this woman and
+this ass?"
+
+"We come," said the man, "from a distant country, and have still far
+to go."
+
+"And this child whom I see naked," said Smetse, "does he not oftentimes
+suffer from the cold?"
+
+"Nay," said the man, "for he is all warmth and all life."
+
+"Well, well," said Smetse, "you do not cry down your own children,
+master. But what is your meat and drink while you are travelling in
+this manner?"
+
+"Water from streams," said the man, "and such bread as is given us."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "that is not much, I see, for the ass's panniers
+are light. You must often go hungry."
+
+"Yes," said the man.
+
+"This," said Smetse, "is displeasing to me, and it is most unwholesome
+for a nursing mother to suffer hunger, for so the milk turns sour,
+and the child grows in sickly wise." And he called out to his wife:
+"Mother, bring hither as many loaves and hams as will fill the panniers
+of this beast. And do not forget some double bruinbier, 'tis heavenly
+comfort for poor travellers. And a good peck of oats for the ass."
+
+When the panniers were filled and the beast shod, the man said to
+Smetse: "Smith, it is in my mind to give thee some recompense for
+thy great goodness, for such as thou seest me I have great power."
+
+"Yes," said Smetse, with a smile, "I can see that well enough."
+
+"I am," said the man, "Joseph, nominal husband of the very blessed
+Virgin Mary, who is sitting on this bench, and this child that she
+has in her arms is Jesus, thy Saviour."
+
+Smetse, dumbfounded at these words, looked at the wayfarers with
+great astonishment, and saw about the man's head a nimbus of fire,
+a crown of stars about the woman's, and, about the child's, beautiful
+rays more brilliant than the sun, springing from his head and girdling
+him round with light.
+
+Thereupon he fell at their feet and said: "My Lord Jesus, Madam
+the Virgin, and my Master St. Joseph, grant me pardon for my lack
+of understanding."
+
+To this St. Joseph replied: "Thou art an honest man, Smetse, and
+righteous as well. For this reason I give thee leave to make three
+requests, the greatest thou canst think of, and my Lord Jesus will
+listen to them favourably."
+
+At these words Smetse was filled with joy, for it seemed to him that
+in this way he might perhaps escape the devil; but at the same time
+he did not dare to avow that he had traded his soul away. So he
+remained in silence for a few moments, thinking of what things he
+could ask, then suddenly said, with great respect: "My Lord Jesus,
+Madam St. Mary, and you, Master St. Joseph, will you please to enter
+my dwelling? There I can tell you what boons I ask."
+
+"We will," said St. Joseph.
+
+"Mother," said Smetse to his wife, "come hither and look to the ass
+of these noble lords."
+
+And Smetse went in before them, sweeping the threshold so that there
+should be no dust to touch the soles of their feet.
+
+And he took them into his garden, where there was a fine plum-tree in
+full blossom. "My Lord, Madam, and Sir," said Smetse, "will it please
+you to order that whosoever shall climb up into this plum-tree shall
+not be able to come down again unless I so desire?"
+
+"It will," said St. Joseph.
+
+Thence he led the way into the kitchen, where there stood a great and
+precious arm-chair, well padded in the seat, and of enormous weight.
+
+"My Lord, Madam, and Sir," said Smetse, "will it please you that
+whosoever shall sit in this chair shall not be able to rise unless
+I so desire?"
+
+"It will," said St. Joseph.
+
+Then Smetse fetched a sack, and, showing it to them, said: "My Lord,
+Madam, and Sir, will it please you that, whatsoever his stature,
+man or devil shall be able to get into this sack, but not out again,
+unless I so desire?"
+
+"It will," said St. Joseph.
+
+"My Lord, Madam, and Sir," said Smetse, "thanks be unto you. Now that I
+have made my three requests I have naught else to ask of your goodness,
+save only your blessing."
+
+"We will give it," said St. Joseph.
+
+And he blessed Smetse, and thereafter the holy family went upon
+their way.
+
+
+
+
+IX. What Smetse did in order to keep his secret.
+
+The good wife had heard nothing of what was said to her man by the
+celestial wayfarers, and she was amazed to see the behaviour and hear
+the speech of the good smith. But she was more so than ever when, on
+the departure of the all-powerful visitors, Smetse began to give forth
+bursts of laughter, to rub his hands, take hold of her, thump her on
+the chest, twist her this way and that, and say in a triumphant tone:
+"It may be, after all, that I shall not burn, that I shall not roast,
+that I shall not be eaten! Art not glad of it?"
+
+"Alas," she said, "I cannot understand what you are talking about,
+my man; have you gone mad?"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "do not show me the whites of thine eyes in
+this pitiful manner, 'tis no time for that. Canst not see how light
+my heart has grown? 'Tis because I have got rid of a burden on my
+shoulders heavier than the belfry itself; I say this belfry, our
+own, with the dragon taken from that of Bruges. And I am not to be
+eaten. By Artevelde! my legs bestir themselves of their own accord
+at the thought of it. I dance! Wilt not do likewise? Fie, moody one,
+brewing melancholy when her man is so happy! Kiss me, wife, kiss me,
+mother, for my proficiat; and so thou shouldst, for instead of despair
+I have found a good and steadfast hope. They think to roast me with
+sauces and feast off my flesh to their fill. I will have the laugh
+of them. Dance, wife, dance!"
+
+"Ah, Smetse," said she, "you should take a purge, my man; they say
+'tis good for madness."
+
+"Thou," he said, tapping her on the shoulder with great affection
+and tenderness, "talkest boldly."
+
+"Hark," said she, "to the good doctor preaching reason to me! But
+wert thou mad or not, Smetse, doffing thy bonnet as thou did to
+those beggars who came hither sowing their lice; giving to me, thy
+wife, their ass to hold; filling their hampers with our best bread,
+bruinbier, and ham; falling on thy knees before them to have their
+blessing, and treating them like archdukes, with a torrent of My Lords,
+Sirs, and Madams."
+
+At these words Smetse saw well enough that the lordly wayfarers had
+not wished to discover themselves to any but he. "Wife," he said,
+"thou must not question me further, for I can tell thee nothing of
+this mystic happening, which it is not given thee to understand."
+
+"Alas," said she, "then 'tis worse than madness, 'tis mystery. Thou
+dost ill to hide thyself from me in this wise, Smetse, for I have
+always lived in thy house, faithful to thee only, cherishing thine
+honour, husbanding thy wealth, neither lending nor borrowing, holding
+my tongue in the company of other wives, considering thy secrets as
+mine own and never breathing a word of them to any one."
+
+"I know it," said Smetse, "thou hast been a good and true wife."
+
+"Then why," said she, "knowing this, hast thou not more faith in
+me? Ah, my man, it hurts me; tell me the secret, I shall know how to
+keep it, I promise thee."
+
+"Wife," said he, "knowing nothing thou wilt be able to hold thy tongue
+the more easily."
+
+"Smetse," said she, "wilt thou verily tell me nothing?"
+
+"I cannot," said he.
+
+"Alas," said she.
+
+By and by the workmen came back, and Smetse gave each of them a good
+royal to get themselves drink.
+
+Whereat they were all so merry, and felt themselves so rich, that for
+three days none of them put his nose into the smithy, save one old
+man who was too withered, stiff, short of breath, and unsteady on
+his legs to go swimming with the others in the Lys, and afterwards
+drying in the sun among the tall grasses, dancing in the meadows
+to the music of rebecks, bagpipes, and cymbals, and at night in the
+tavern emptying pots and draining glasses.
+
+
+
+
+X. Of the Bloody Councillor.
+
+At length the day came on which the good smith was due to hand over
+his soul to the devil, for the seventh year had run out, and plums
+were once again ripe.
+
+At nightfall, when certain workmen were busy on a grating for the
+Franciscan brothers which was to be done that night, and had stayed
+behind with Smetse for that purpose, there came into the forge an
+evil-looking fellow, with greasy white hair, a rope round his neck,
+his jaw dropped, his tongue hanging out, and dressed in an ill-found
+habit like a nobleman's servant fallen on evil days.
+
+This fellow, without being heard by any one there as he walked
+across the floor, came quickly up to Smetse and put his hand on his
+shoulder. "Smetse," he said, "hast packed thy bundle?"
+
+Hearing this the smith swung round. "Packed," he said, "and how does
+my packing concern thee, master bald-pate?"
+
+"Smetse," replied the fellow in a harsh voice, "hast forgotten thy
+restored fortunes, and the good times thou hast enjoyed, and the
+black paper?"
+
+"No, no," said Smetse, doffing his bonnet with great humility, "I
+have not forgotten; pardon me, my lord, I could not call to mind your
+gracious countenance. Will you be pleased to come into my kitchen,
+and try a slice of fat ham, taste a pot of good bruinbier, and sip
+a bottle of wine? We have time enough for that, for the seven years
+are not yet struck, but want, if I am not mistaken, still two hours."
+
+"That is true," said the devil; "then let us go into thy kitchen."
+
+So they entered in and sat down to the table.
+
+The good wife was greatly astonished to see them come in. Smetse
+said to her: "Bring us wine, bruinbier, ham, sausages, bread, cakes,
+and cheeses, and the best of each that we have in the house."
+
+"But, Smetse," said she, "you waste the good things which God has
+given you. 'Tis well to come to the help of poor folk, but not to do
+more for one than another. Beggar-men are beggar-men, all are equal!"
+
+"Beggar-men!" exclaimed the devil, "that I am not and never was. Death
+to the beggar-men! To the gallows with the beggar-men!"
+
+"My lord," said Smetse, "I beg you not to be angry with my good wife,
+who knows you not at all. Wife, consider and look at our guest with
+great attention, but greater respect, and afterwards thou mayest tell
+thy gossips that thou hast seen my Lord Jacob Hessels, the greatest
+reaper of heretics that ever was.
+
+"Ah, wife, he mowed them down grandly, and had so many of them hanged,
+burnt, and tortured in divers ways, that he could drown himself a
+hundred times in the blood of his dead. Go, wife, go and fetch him
+meat and drink."
+
+While he was munching, Smetse said: "Ah, my lord, I soon recognized
+you by your particular way of saying: 'To the gallows!' and also by
+this rope which finished off your life in so evil a manner. For Our
+Lord said: 'Whoso liveth by the rope shall perish by the rope.' My
+Lord Ryhove was harsh and treacherous toward you, for besides taking
+your life he took also your beard, which was a fine one.
+
+"Ah, that was an evil trick to play on so good a councillor as you
+were in those days when you slept so quietly and peaceably in the
+Bloody Council--I should say the Council of Civil Disorders, speaking
+respectfully--and woke up only to say: 'To the gallows!' and then
+went to sleep again."
+
+"Yes," said the devil, "those were good times."
+
+"So they were," said Smetse, "times of riches and power for you, my
+lord. Ah, we owe you a great deal: the tithe tax, dropped by you into
+the ear of the Emperor Charles; the arrest of my lords of Egmont and
+Hoorn, whereof the warrant was written in your own fair hand, and of
+more than two thousand persons who perished at your command by fire,
+steel, and rope!"
+
+"I do not know the number," said the devil, "but it is large. Give me,
+Smetse, some more of this sausage, which is excellent."
+
+"Ah," said the smith, "'tis not good enough for your lordship. But
+you are drinking nothing. Empty this tankard, 'tis double bruinbier."
+
+"Smith," said the devil, "it is good also, but I tasted better at
+Pierkyn's tavern one day when five girls of the Reformed Faith were
+burnt together in the market-place. That frothed better. While we were
+drinking we heard these five maids singing psalms in the fire. Ah,
+we drank well that day! But think, Smetse, of the great perversity
+of those maids, all young and strong, and so fast set in their crimes
+that they sang their psalms without complaint, smiling at the fire and
+invoking God in a heretical fashion. Give me more to drink, Smetse."
+
+"But," said Smetse, "King Philip asked for your canonization at Rome,
+for having served Spain and the Pope so well; why then are you not
+in paradise, my lord?"
+
+"Alas," wept the devil, "I had no recognition of my former
+services. Those traitors of Reformers are with God, while I burn in
+the bottom of the pit. And there, without rest or respite, I have to
+sing heretical psalms; cruel punishment, unspeakable torment! These
+chants stick in my throat, scrape up and down in my breast, tearing
+my inner flesh like a bristling porcupine with iron spines. At every
+note a new wound, a bleeding sore: and always, always I have to keep
+singing, and so it will go on through all the length of eternity."
+
+At these words Smetse was very much frightened, thinking how heavily
+God had punished Jacob Hessels.
+
+"Drink, my lord," he said to him; "this bruinbier is balm to sore
+throttles."
+
+Suddenly the clock struck.
+
+"Come, Smetse," said the devil, "'tis the hour."
+
+But the good smith, without answering, heaved a great sigh.
+
+"What ails thee?" said the devil.
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "I am grieved at your incontinence. Have I
+welcomed you so ill that you will not let me go, before I leave here,
+to embrace my wife a last time and bid farewell to my good workmen,
+and to take one more look at my good plum-tree whose fruits are so
+rich and juicy? Ah, I would gladly refresh myself with one or two
+before I go off to that land where there is always thirst."
+
+"Do not think to escape me," said the devil.
+
+"That I would not, my lord," said Smetse. "Come with me, I pray you
+most humbly."
+
+"Very well," said the devil, "but not for long."
+
+In the garden Smetse began to sigh afresh.
+
+"Ah," he said, "look at my plums, my lord; will you be pleased to
+let me go up and eat my fill?"
+
+"Go up then," said the devil.
+
+Up in the tree Smetse began to eat in a most greedy manner, and suck
+in the juice of the plums with a great noise. "Ah," cried he, "plums
+of paradise, Christian plums, how fat you are! Princely plums, you
+would solace a hundred devils burning in the lowest parts of hell. By
+you, sweet plums, blessed plums, is thirst driven out of my throat;
+by you, adorable plums, gentle plums, is purged from my stomach all
+evil melancholy; by you, fresh plums, sugary plums, is diffused in
+my blood an infinite sweetness. Ah, juicy plums, joyous plums, faery
+plums, would that I could go on sucking you for ever!"
+
+And while he was saying all this, Smetse went on picking them, eating
+them and sipping the juice, without ever stopping.
+
+"Pox!" said the devil, "it makes my mouth water; why dost not throw
+me down some of these marvellous plums?"
+
+"Alas, my lord," said Smetse, "that I cannot do; they would melt
+into water on their fall, so delicate are they. But if you will be
+pleased to climb up into the tree you will find much pleasure in
+store for you."
+
+"Then I will," said the devil.
+
+When he was well settled on a stout branch and there regaling himself
+with plums, Smetse slipped down, picked up a stick lying on the grass
+and fell to belabouring him with great vigour.
+
+Feeling the stick on his back the devil would have leapt down on the
+smith, but could not move, for the skin of his seat held fast to the
+branch. And he snorted, ground his teeth, and foamed at the mouth
+with great rage, and also by reason of the pain which his tender skin
+caused him.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse gave him a good drubbing, caressed with his stick
+every quarter of his body in turn, bruised him to the bone, tore his
+habit, and gave him as strong and straight a beating as was ever
+given in the land of Flanders. And he kept saying: "You say not a
+word about my plums, my lord; they are good, none the less."
+
+"Ah," cried Hessels, "why am I not free!"
+
+"Alas, yes! why are you not free!" answered Smetse, "you would give me
+to some little butcher among your friends who would cut me up freely
+into slices like a ham, under your learned instruction, for you are,
+as I know well, a doctor of torment. But are you not being well
+tormented in turn by my stick? Alas, yes! why are you not free! You
+would hoist me up on some blessed gallows, and every one would see
+me hanging in the air, and freely would Master Hessels laugh. And so
+he would have his revenge on me for this excellent drubbing which
+I am giving him with such freedom. For nothing in this world is so
+free as a free stick falling freely on an unfree councillor. Alas,
+yes! why are you not free! You would free my head from my body, as you
+did with such satisfaction to my masters of Egmont and Hoorn. Alas,
+yes! why are you not free! then we should see Smetse in some good
+little fire, which would roast him freely, as was done to the poor
+maids of the reformed faith; and Smetse, like them, would be heard
+singing with a free soul to the God of free believers, and with a
+free conscience stronger than the flame, while Master Hessels drank
+bruinbier and said that it frothed nicely."
+
+"Oh," said the devil, "why beat me so cruelly, without pity for my
+white hairs?"
+
+"As for thy white hair," said Smetse, "'tis the hair of an old tiger
+who ate up our country. For this reason it gives me sweet pleasure to
+beat thee with this oaken stick; and also in order that thou mayst
+give me permission to stay another seven years on this earth, where
+I find myself so well content, if it so please thee."
+
+"Seven years!" said the devil, "do not count on that; I would rather
+bleed under thy stick."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "I see that your skin is fond of good blows. These
+are tasty ones, it is true. But the best of cheer is unwholesome if
+taken in excess. So when you have had enough of them, be so good as
+to tell me. I will put a stop to this feast, but for that I must have
+the seven years."
+
+"Never," said Hessels; and lifting his snout into the air like a
+baying dog, he cried out: "Devils to the rescue!" But this he did so
+loudly, and in such screeching wise, that at the sound of his cracked
+voice blaring out like a trumpet, all the workmen came to see what
+it was about.
+
+"You do not shout loud enough," said Smetse, "I will help you." And
+he beat him the harder, so that the devil cried the louder.
+
+"See," said Smetse, "how well this stick makes the little nightingale
+sing in my plum-tree. He is saying over his lied of love to call
+hither his fair mate. She will come by and by, my lord; but come down,
+I pray you, and await her below, for they say that the night dew is
+deadly at a height from the ground."
+
+"Baes," said certain workmen, "is it not my lord Jacob Hessels,
+the Bloody Councillor, who is perched up there in thy plum-tree?"
+
+"Yes, lads," answered Smetse, "'tis indeed that worthy man. He
+seeks high places now as he did all his life, and so also at the
+end of it, when he swung in the air, putting out his tongue at the
+passers-by. For that which is of the gallows returns to the gallows,
+and the rope will take back its own. 'Tis written."
+
+"Baes," said they, "can we not help to bring him down?"
+
+"Yes," said he. And the workmen went off to the smithy.
+
+Meanwhile the devil said nothing, trying all the time to get his
+seat away from the branch. And he struggled, wriggled about, twisted
+himself a hundred different ways, and used as levers, to lift himself
+up, feet, hands, and head, but all in vain.
+
+And Smetse, belabouring him well, said to him: "My lord Councillor,
+you are fast stuck, it seems, to the saddle; but I will have you out
+of it, have you out as fast as I can, for if I do not so, beating
+you with all my strength, you will tear up out of the ground the
+tree and its roots, and the good folk will see you walking along,
+dragging a plum-tree from your seat like a tail, which would be a
+piteous and laughable spectacle for such a noble devil as yourself
+to make. Give me rather the seven years."
+
+"Baes," said the workmen, who had returned from the smithy with
+hammers and iron bars, "here we are at your orders; what shall we do?"
+
+"Well," said Smetse, "since I have combed him down with oaken staves
+we will now louse him with hammers and bars."
+
+"Mercy, Smetse, mercy!" cried the devil; hammers and bars, this is
+too much; thou hast the seven years, smith."
+
+"Make haste," said Smetse, "and write me the quittance."
+
+"Here it is," said he.
+
+The smith took it, saw that it was in good order, and said: "I desire
+that thou come down."
+
+But the devil was so weak and enfeebled by the blows he had had that
+when he tried to leap he fell on his back. And he went off limping,
+shaking his fist at Smetse, and saying: "I await thee, in seven years,
+in hell, smith."
+
+"So you may," said Smetse.
+
+
+
+
+XI. Wherein the workmen hold fair speech with Smetse.
+
+While the devil was making off, Smetse, watching his workmen, saw
+that they were looking at one another strangely, spoke together in
+low voices, and seemed awkward in their manner, like people who would
+speak out, but dare not.
+
+And he said to himself: "Are they going to denounce me to the priests?"
+
+Suddenly Flipke the Bear came up to him. "Baes," said he, "we know
+well enough that this ghost of Hessels was sent to thee by him who is
+lord below; thou hast made a pact with the devil and art rich only
+by his money. We have guessed as much for some time. But so that
+thou should not be vexed, none of us have spoken of it in the town,
+and none will so speak. We would tell thee this to put thy mind at
+rest. And so now, baes, good night and quiet sleep to thee."
+
+"Thank you, lads," said Smetse, greatly softened.
+
+And they went their several ways.
+
+
+
+
+XII. How that Smetse would not give his secret into his wife's
+tongue's keeping.
+
+In the kitchen Smetse found his wife on her knees beating her breast,
+weeping, sighing, sobbing, and saying: "Jesus Lord God, he has made a
+pact with the devil; but 'tis not with my consent, I swear. And you
+also, Madam the Virgin, you know it, and you also, all my masters
+the saints. Ah, I am indeed wretched, not on my own account, but for
+my poor man, who for the sake of some miserable gold sold his soul
+to the devil! Alas, yes, sell it he did! Ah, my saintly masters,
+who are yourselves so happy and in such glory, pray the very good
+God for him, and deign to consider that if, as I dare hope, I die a
+Christian death and go to paradise, I shall be all alone there, eating
+my rice pudding with silver spoons, while my poor man is burning in
+hell, crying out in thirst and hunger, and I not able to give him
+either meat or drink.... Alas, that will make me so unhappy! Ah,
+my good masters the saints, Madam the Virgin, My Lord Jesus, he
+sinned but this once, and was all the rest of his life a good man,
+a good Christian, kind to the poor and soft of heart. Save him from
+the fires which burn for ever, and do not separate above those who
+were so long united below. Pray for him, pray for me, alas!"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "thou art very wretched, it seems."
+
+"Ah, wicked man," said she, "now I know all. 'Twas hell fire
+which came bursting into the house and lit up the forge; those
+master-bakers, brewers, and vintners were devils, all of them, and
+devil also that ugly man who showed thee the treasure and gave me
+so grievous a buffet. Who will dare to live peaceably in this house
+from now on? Alas, our food is the devil's, our drink also; devil's
+meat, loaves, and cheeses, devil's money, house, and all. Whoever
+should dig under this dwelling would see the fires of hell gush out
+incontinent. There are all the devils, I see them above, below, on the
+right hand, on the left, awaiting their prey with dropped jaws, like
+tigers. Ah, what a fine sight 'twill be to see my poor man torn into
+a hundred pieces by all these devils, and that in seven years, for he
+said, as I heard well enough, that he would come back in seven years."
+
+"Weep not, wife," said Smetse, "in seven years I may again be master
+as I was to-day."
+
+"But," said she, "if he had not gone up into the plum-tree, what
+wouldst thou have done, poor beggar-man? And what if he will not let
+himself fall a second time into thy snare as he did to-day?"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "he will so fall, for my snares are from heaven,
+and the things which are from God can always get the better of devils."
+
+"Art not lying again?" she said. "And wilt tell me what they are?"
+
+"That I cannot," said he, "for devils have sharp ears and would hear
+me telling thee, no matter how low I spoke; and then I should be
+taken off to hell without mercy."
+
+"Ah," said she, "then I will not ask, though 'tis not pleasant for me
+to live here in ignorance of everything, like a stranger. Nevertheless
+I would rather have thee silent and saved than talking and damned."
+
+"Wife," he said, "thou art wise when thou speakest so."
+
+"I will pray," she said, "every day for thy deliverance, and have a
+good mass said for thee at St. Bavon."
+
+"But," said he, "is it with devil's money thou wilt pay for this mass?"
+
+"Have no care for that," said she, "when this money enters the church
+coffers 'twill become suddenly holy."
+
+"Do as thou wilt, wife," said Smetse.
+
+"Ah," said she, "My Lord Jesus shall have a stout candle each day,
+and Madam the Virgin likewise."
+
+"Do not forget my master St. Joseph," said Smetse, "for we owe
+him much."
+
+
+
+
+XIII. Of the Bloody Duke.
+
+The end of the seventh year came again in its turn, and on the last
+evening there crossed the threshold of Smetse Smee's dwelling a man
+with a sharp and haughty Spanish face, a nose like a hawk's beak,
+hard and staring eyes, and a white beard, long and pointed. For the
+rest he was dressed in armour finely worked and most richly gilt;
+decorated with the illustrious order of the Fleece; wore a fine red
+sash; rested his left hand on the hilt of his sword, and held in his
+right the seven years' pact and a marshal's wand.
+
+Coming into the forge he walked straight towards Smetse, holding his
+head loftily and without deigning to notice any of the workmen.
+
+The smith was standing in a corner, wondering how he could make the
+devil who was sent for him sit down in the arm-chair, when Flipke
+ran quickly up to him and said in his ear: "Baes, the Bloody Duke is
+coming, take care!"
+
+"Woe!" said Smetse, speaking to himself, "'tis all up with me, if
+d'Alva has come to fetch me."
+
+Meanwhile the devil approached the smith, showed him the pact, and
+took him by the arm without a word to lead him off.
+
+"My Lord," said Smetse in a most sorrowful manner, "whither would you
+take me? To hell. I follow you. 'Tis too great honour for one so mean
+as I to be ordered by so noble a devil as yourself. But is it yet the
+appointed time? I think it is not, and your highness has too upright
+a soul to take me off before the time written in the deed. In the
+meantime I beg your highness to be seated: Flipke, a chair for My Lord;
+the best in my poor dwelling, the large, well-padded arm-chair which
+stands in my kitchen, beside the press, near the chimney, beneath
+the picture of my master St. Joseph. Wipe it well, lad, so that no
+dust may be left on it; and quick, for the noble duke is standing."
+
+Flipke ran into the kitchen and came back, saying: "Baes, I cannot
+lift that arm-chair alone, 'tis so heavy."
+
+Then Smetse feigned great anger and said to his workmen: "Do ye not
+hear? He cannot lift it alone. Go and help him, and if it takes ten
+of you let ten go. And quick now. Fie! the blockheads, can ye 'not
+see that the noble duke is standing?"
+
+Nine workmen ran to obey him and brought the chair into the forge,
+though not without difficulty. Smetse said: "Put it there, behind My
+Lord. Is there any dust on it? By Artevelde! they have not touched
+this corner. I will do it myself. Now 'tis as clean as new-washed
+glass. Will your highness deign to be seated?"
+
+This the devil did, and then looked round him with great haughtiness
+and disdain. But of a sudden the smith fell at his feet, and said
+with mocking laughter: "Sir duke, you see before you the most humble
+of your servants, a poor man living like a Christian, serving God,
+honouring princes, and anxious, if such is your lordly pleasure,
+to continue in this way of life seven years more."
+
+"Thou shalt not have one minute," said the devil, "come, Fleming,
+come with me."
+
+And he tried to rise from the chair, but could not. And while he
+was struggling with might and main, making a thousand vain efforts,
+the good smith cried joyously: "Would your highness get up? Ah,
+'tis too soon! Let your highness wait, he is not yet rested after
+his long journey; long, I make bold to say, for it must be a good
+hundred leagues from hell to my smithy, and that is a long way for
+such noble feet, by dusty roads. Ah, My Lord, let yourself rest a
+little in this good chair. Nevertheless, if you are in great haste
+to be off, grant me the seven years and I will give you in return
+your noble leave and a full flask of Spanish wine."
+
+"I care nothing for thy wine," answered the devil.
+
+"Baes," said Flipke, "offer him blood, he will drink then."
+
+"My lad," said Smetse, "thou knowest well enough we have no such thing
+as blood in our cellars hereabouts, for that is no Flemish drink,
+but one that we leave to Spain. Therefore his highness must be so good
+as to excuse me. Nevertheless, I think he is thirsty, not for blood,
+but for blows, and of those I will give him his illustrious fill,
+since he will not grant me the seven years."
+
+"Smith," said the devil, looking at Smetse with great contempt,
+"thou wouldst not dare beat me, I think?"
+
+"Yes, My Lord," said the good man. "You would have me dead. For
+my part I hold to my skin, and this not without good reason, for
+it has always been faithful to me and well fastened. Would it not
+be a criminal act to break off in this sudden fashion so close a
+partnership? And besides, you would take me off with you to hell,
+where the air is filled with the stench of the divers cookeries for
+damned souls which are set up there. Ah, rather than go thither I
+would beat your highness for seven years."
+
+"Fleming," said the devil, "thou speakest without respect."
+
+"Yes, My Lord," said Smetse, "but I will hit you with veneration."
+
+And so saying he gave him with his clenched fist a terrible great
+blow on the nose, whereat the devil seemed astonished, dazed, and
+angry, like a powerful king struck by a low-born servant. And he
+tried to leap upon the smith, clenched his fists, ground his teeth,
+and shot out blood from his nose, his mouth, his eyes, and his ears,
+so angry was he.
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "you seem angry, My Lord. But deign to consider
+that since you will not listen to my words, I must speak to you by
+blows. By this argument am I not doing my best to soften your heart
+to my piteous case? Alas, deign to consider that my humble fist is
+making its supplication as best it can to your illustrious eyes,
+begs seven years from your noble nose, implores them from your ducal
+jaw. Do not these respectful taps tell your lordly cheeks how happy,
+joyous, and well-liking I should be during those seven years? Ah,
+let yourself be convinced. But, I see, I must speak to you in another
+fashion, with the words of iron bars, the prayers of tongs, and the
+supplications of sledge-hammers. Lads," said the smith to his workmen,
+"will you be pleased to hold converse with My Lord?"
+
+"Yes, baes," said they.
+
+And together with Smetse they chose their tools. But it was the oldest
+who picked the heaviest ones, and were the hottest with rage, because
+it was they who in former days had lost, through the duke's doing,
+many friends and relatives by steel, by stake, and by live burial,
+and they cried: "God is on our side, he has delivered the enemy into
+our hands. Out upon the Bloody Duke, the master-butcher, the lord of
+the axe!"
+
+And all of them, young and old, cursed the devil with a thunder of
+cries; and they came up to him menacingly, surrounding the chair and
+raising their tools to strike.
+
+But Smetse stopped them and spoke again to the devil. "If your
+highness," he said, "is minded to hold to his noble bones, let him
+deign to grant me the seven years, for the time for laughter is past,
+let me tell you."
+
+"Baes," said the workmen, "whence comes to thee this kindness beyond
+measure? Why hold so long and fair parley with this fellow? Let us
+first break him up, and then he will offer thee the seven years of
+his own accord."
+
+"Seven years!" said the devil, "seven years! he shall not have so
+much as the shadow of a minute. Strike, men of Ghent, the lion is in
+the net; ye who could not find a hole deep enough to hide yourselves
+in when he was free and showed his fangs. Flemish cowards, see what
+I think of you and your threats." And he spat on them.
+
+At this spittle the bars, hammers, and other tools fell on him thick
+as hail, breaking his bones and the plates of his armour, and Smetse
+and his workmen said as they beat to their hearts' content:
+
+"Cowards were we, who wished to worship God in the sincerity of
+our hearts; valiant was he who prevented us with steel, stake, and
+live burial.
+
+"Cowards were we for having always laughed readily and drunk joyously,
+like men who, having done what they had to do, make light of the rest:
+valiant was this dark personage when he had poor men of the people
+arrested in the midst of their merrymaking at Kermis-time and put
+death where had been laughter.
+
+"Cowards were the eighteen thousand eight hundred persons who died for
+the glory of God; cowards those numberless others who by the rapine,
+brutality and insolence of the fighting men, lost their lives in these
+lands and others. Valiant was he who ordained their sufferings, and
+more valiant still when he celebrated his own evil deeds by a banquet.
+
+"Cowards were we always, we who, after a battle, treated our prisoners
+like brothers; valiant was he who, after the defeat in Friesland,
+had his own men slaughtered.
+
+"Cowards were we, who laboured without ceasing, spreading abroad over
+the whole world the work of our hands; valiant was he when, under the
+cloak of religion, he slew the richer among us without distinction
+between Romans and Reformers, and robbed us by pillage and extortion
+of thirty-six million florins. For the world is turned upside down;
+cowardly is the busy bee who makes the honey, and valiant the idle
+drone who steals it away. Spit, noble duke, on these Flemish cowards."
+
+But the duke could neither spit nor cough, for from the roughness of
+the blows they had given him he had altogether lost the shape of a man,
+so mingled and beaten together were bones, flesh, and steel. But there
+was no blood to be seen, which was a marvellous thing. Suddenly, while
+the workmen, wearied with beating, were taking breath, a weak voice
+came out from this hotch-potch of bones, flesh, and steel, saying:
+
+"Thou hast the seven years, Smetse."
+
+"Very well then, My Lord," said he, "sign the quittance."
+
+This the devil did.
+
+"And now," said Smetse, "will your highness please to get up."
+
+At these words, by great marvel, the devil regained his shape. But
+while he was walking away, holding up his head with great haughtiness
+and not deigning to look at his feet, he tripped over a sledge lying
+on the ground, and fell on his nose with great indignity, thereby
+giving much occasion for laughter to the workmen, who did not fail to
+make use of it. Picking himself up he threatened them with his fist,
+but they burst out laughing more loudly than ever. He came at them,
+grinding his teeth; they hooted him. He tried to strike with his
+sword a short and sturdy little workman; but the man seized the sword
+from his hands and broke it in three pieces. He struck another in the
+face with his fist, but the man gave him so good and valiant a kick
+as to send him sprawling on the quay with his legs in the air. There,
+flushing with shame, he melted into red smoke, like a vapour of blood,
+and the workmen heard a thousand joyous and merry voices, saying:
+"Beaten is the Bloody Duke, shamed is the lord of the axe, inglorious
+the prince of butchers! Vlaenderland tot eeuwigheid! Flanders for
+ever!" And a thousand pairs of hands beat applause all together. And
+the dawn broke.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. Of the great fears and pains of Smetse's wife.
+
+Smetse, going to look for his wife, found her in the kitchen on
+her knees before the picture of St. Joseph. "Well, mother," said he,
+"what didst think of our dance? Was it not a merry one? Ah, henceforth
+they will call our house the House of Beaten Devils."
+
+"Yes," said his wife, wagging her head, "yes, and also the house of
+Smetse who was carried away to hell. For that is where thou wilt go;
+I know it, I feel it, I foretell it. This devil's coming all accoutred
+for war presages evil. He will come back, no longer alone, but with
+a hundred thousand devils armed like himself. Ah, my poor man! They
+will carry lances, swords, pikes, hooked axes, and arquebuses. They
+will drag behind them canon which they will fire at us; and everything
+will be ground to pieces, thou, I, the smithy, and the workmen. Alas,
+everything will be levelled to the ground! And where our smithy now
+stands will be nothing but a sorry heap of dust. And the folk walking
+past along the quay will say when they see this dust: 'There lies
+the house of Smetse, the fool who sold his soul to the devil.' And
+I, after dying in this fashion, shall go to Paradise, as I dare to
+hope. But thee, my man, oh, woe unspeakable! they will take away with
+them and drag through fire, smoke, brimstone, pitch, boiling oil, to
+that terrible place where those are punished who, wishing to break
+a pact made with the devil, have no special help from God or his
+holy saints. Poor little man, my good comrade, dost know what there
+is in store for thee? Ho, a gulf as deep as the heavens are high,
+and studded all down its terrible sides with jutting points of rock,
+iron spikes, horrid spears, and a thousand dreadful pikes. And dost
+know what manner of gulf this is, my man? 'Tis a gulf wherein a man
+may keep falling always--dost understand me, always, always--gashed
+by the rocks, cut about by the spears, torn open by the pikes, always,
+always, down all the long length of eternity."
+
+"But, wife," said Smetse, "hast ever seen this gulf whereof thou
+speakest?"
+
+"Nay," said she, "but I know what manner of place it is, for I have
+often heard tell of it in the church of St. Bavon. And the good canon
+predicant would not lie."
+
+"Ah, no," said Smetse.
+
+
+
+
+XV. Of the Bloody King.
+
+When the last night of the seventh year was come Smetse was in his
+smithy, looking at the enchanted sack, and asking himself with much
+anxiety how he could make the devil get into it.
+
+While he was wondering, the smithy suddenly became filled with an evil
+stench of the most putrid, offensive and filthy kind. Innumerable
+lice swarmed over the threshold, ceiling, anvils, sledges, bars and
+bellows, Smetse and his men, who were all as if blinded, for these
+lice were as thick in the smithy as smoke, cloud, or fog.
+
+And a melancholy but imperative voice spoke, saying: "Smetse, come
+with me; the seven years have struck."
+
+And Smetse and his workmen, looking as well as they could in the
+direction whence the voice came, saw a man coming towards them with a
+royal crown on his head, and on his back a cloak of cloth-of-gold. But
+beneath the cloak the man was naked, and on his breast were four great
+abscesses, which formed together a single wide sore, and from this
+came the stench which filled the smithy, and the clouds of lice which
+swarmed round about. And he had on his right leg another abscess,
+more filthy, rank, and offensive than the rest. The man himself was
+white-faced, auburn-haired, red-bearded, with lips a little drawn,
+and mouth open somewhat. In his grey eyes were melancholy, envy,
+dissimulation, hypocrisy, harshness, and evil rancour.
+
+When the older workmen saw him they cried out in a voice like thunder:
+"Smetse, the Bloody King is here, take care!"
+
+"Silence," cried the smith, "peace there, silence and veneration! Let
+every man doff his bonnet to the greatest king that ever lived,
+Philip II by name, King of Castile, Leon, and Aragon, Count of
+Flanders, Duke of Burgundy and Brabant, Palatine of Holland and
+Zeeland, most illustrious of all illustrious princes, great among
+the great, victorious among victors. Sire," said he to the devil,
+"you do me unparalleled honour to come hither in person to lead me
+to hell, but my humble Ghentish lowness makes bold to suggest to
+your Royal and Palatine Highness that the appointed hour has not yet
+struck. Therefore if it pleases your Majesty I will pass on earth
+the brief time which is still left to me to live."
+
+"I allow it," said the devil.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse seemed unable to take his eyes off the devil, and
+showed himself very sorrowful and heavy, nodding his head, and saying
+several times:
+
+"Alas, alas! cruel torment! evil hour!"
+
+"What ails thee?" said the devil.
+
+"Sire," said Smetse, "nothing ails me but the great sorrow which I
+have at seeing how harsh God has been towards you, leaving you to
+bear in hell the malady whereof you died. Ah, 'tis a most pitiful
+sight to see so great a king as you consumed by these lice and eaten
+up with these abscesses."
+
+"I care nothing for thy pity," answered the king.
+
+"Sire," said Smetse further, "deign to think no evil of my words. I
+have never been taught fine ways of speech; but notwithstanding this
+I make bold to sympathize with your illustrious sufferings, and this
+the more in that I myself have known and suffered your ill, and you can
+still see, Sire, the terrible marks on my skin." And Smetse, uncovering
+his breast, showed the marks of the wounds which he had received from
+the traitor Spanish when he sailed the seas with the men of Zeeland.
+
+"But," said the devil-king, "thou seemest well enough cured,
+smith! Wast thou verily as sick as I?"
+
+"Like you, Sire," said Smetse, "I was nothing but a heap of living
+filth; like you I was fetid, rank, and offensive, and every one fled
+from me as they fled from you; like you I was eaten up with lice;
+but what could not be done for you by the most illustrious doctor
+Olias of Madrid, a humble carpenter did for me."
+
+At these words the devil-king cocked his ear. "In what place," said he,
+"does this carpenter dwell, and what is his name?"
+
+"He dwells," said Smetse, "in the heavens, and his name is Master
+St. Joseph."
+
+"And did this great saint appear to thee by especial miracle?"
+
+"Yes, Sire."
+
+"And by virtue of what didst thou merit this rare and blessed favour?"
+
+"Sire," answered Smetse, "I have never by my own virtue merited so
+much as the shadow of a single grain of particular grace, but in
+my sufferings I prayed humbly and with faith to my blessed patron,
+Master St. Joseph, and he deigned to come to my succour."
+
+"Tell me of this happening, smith."
+
+"Sire," said Smetse, holding up the sack, "this was my remedy."
+
+"This sack?" asked the devil.
+
+"Yes, Sire; but will your Majesty deign to look closely at the
+hemp whereof it is woven. Do you not think its quality altogether
+strange! Alas," said Smetse, running on with his talk, and appearing
+to go into an ecstasy, "'tis not given to us poor men to see every day
+such hemp as this. For this is not earthly hemp, but hemp of heaven,
+hemp from the good Paradise, sown by my master St. Joseph round about
+the tree of life, harvested and woven under his especial orders to
+make sacks wherein the beans are stored which my masters the angels
+eat on fast-days."
+
+"But," asked the devil, "how did this sack come into thy hands?"
+
+"Ah, Sire, by great marvel. One night I was in my bed, suffering twenty
+deaths from my ulcers, and almost at the point of giving up my soul. I
+saw my good wife weeping; I heard my neighbours and workmen, of whom
+there were many, saying round about my bed the prayers for the dying;
+my body was overcome with pain and my soul with despair. Nevertheless
+I kept praying to my blessed patron and swore that if he brought
+me out of that pass, I would burn to his honour in the church of
+St. Bavon such a candle as the fat of twenty sheep would not suffice
+to make. And my prayers were not in vain, Sire, for suddenly a hole
+opened in the ceiling above my head, a living flame and a celestial
+perfume filled the room, a sack came down through the hole, a man
+clothed in white followed the sack, walked in the air to my bed,
+pulled down the sheets which covered me, and in the twinkling of an
+eye put me in the sack and drew the strings tight round my neck. And
+then, behold the miracle! No sooner was I wrapped about with this
+good hemp than a genial warmth passed through me, my ulcers dried up,
+and the lice all perished suddenly with a terrible noise. After that
+the man told me with a smile about the hemp of heaven and the angelic
+beans, and finished his discourse by saying: 'Keep safe this remedy,
+'tis sent thee by my master St. Joseph. Whosoever shall use it shall
+be cured of all ills and saved for all eternity, if in the meantime he
+do not sell his soul to the devil!' Then the man went away. And what
+the good messenger told me was true, for by means of this sack from
+heaven, I cured Toon, my workman, of the king's evil; Pier of fever,
+Dolf of scurvy, Hendrik of the phlegm, and a score of others who owe
+it to me that they are still alive."
+
+When Smetse had finished his speech the devil-king seemed lost in deep
+reflection, then suddenly lifted his eyes to heaven, joined his hands,
+crossed himself again and again, and, falling to his knees, beat upon
+his breast, and with most lamentable cries prayed as here follows: "Ah,
+my Master St. Joseph, sweet Lord, blessed saint, immaculate husband of
+the Virgin without stain, you have deigned to make whole this smith,
+and he would have been saved by you for all eternity had he not sold
+his soul to the devil. But I, Master, I, a poor king, who pray to you,
+do you disdain to make me whole also, and to save me as you would
+have saved him? You know well, sweet Lord, how I devoted my life,
+my person, my goods and those of my subjects to the defence of our
+blessed religion; how I hated, as is right, the freedom to believe
+other things than those which are ordained for us; how I combated it
+by steel, stake, and live burial; how I saved in this wise from the
+venom of reform Brabant, Flanders, Artois, Hainault, Valenciennes,
+Lille, Douai, Orchies, Namur, Tournai, Tournaisie, Malines, and
+my other lands. Nevertheless I have been thrown into the fires of
+hell, and there suffer without respite the unutterable torment of
+my consuming ulcers and my devouring vermin. Ah, will you not make
+me whole, will you not save me? You are able, my Master. Yes, you
+will perform again for the sorrowing king the miracle which saved
+the smith. Then shall I be able to pass into paradise, blessing
+and glorifying your name through centuries and centuries. Save me,
+Master St. Joseph, save me. Amen."
+
+And the devil-king, crossing himself, beating his breast, and babbling
+paternosters turn by turn, rose to his feet and said to Smetse:
+"Put me in the sack, smith."
+
+This Smetse did gladly, rolled him into the sack, leaving only his
+head thrust out, drew tight round his neck the stout cords, and placed
+the devil on an anvil.
+
+At this spectacle the workmen burst out laughing, clapping their
+hands together, and saying a hundred merry things to one another.
+
+"Smith," asked the devil, "are these Flemings laughing at me?"
+
+"Yes, Sire."
+
+"What are they saying, smith?"
+
+"Oh, Sire, they are saying that horses are caught by means of corn;
+dogs by liver; asses by thistles; hogs by swill; trout by curdled
+blood; carp by cheese; pike by gudgeon; and a humbug of your kidney
+by tales of false miracles."
+
+"Ho, the traitor smith," howled the devil, grinding his teeth,
+"he has taken in vain the name of my Master St. Joseph, he has lied
+without shame."
+
+"Yes, Sire."
+
+"And thou wilt dare to beat me as thou didst Jacob Hessels and my
+faithful duke?"
+
+"Even more heartily, Sire. Nevertheless 'tis only if you so wish
+it. You shall be set free if you please. Free if you give me back the
+deed; beaten if you are fixed in your idea of carrying me off to hell."
+
+"Give thee back the deed! "roared the devil, "I would rather suffer
+a thousand deaths in a single moment."
+
+"Sire King," said Smetse, "I pray you to think of your bones, which
+seem to me none too sound as it is. Consider also that the opportunity
+is a good one for us to avenge on your person our poor Flanders, so
+drenched in blood at your hands. But it displeases me to pass a second
+time where has passed already the wrath of the very just God. So give
+me back the deed; grace, Sire King, or 'twill begin raining presently."
+
+"Grace!" said the devil, "grace to a Fleming! perish Flanders
+rather! Ah, why have I not again, one single day, as much power,
+armies, and riches as I will; Flanders would give up her soul
+quickly. Then famine should reign in the land, parching the soil,
+drying up the water-springs and the life of plants; the last ghostly
+inhabitants of the empty towns would wander like phantoms in the
+streets, killing one another in heaps to find a little rotten food;
+bands of famished dogs would snatch newborn children from their
+mothers' withered breasts and devour them; famine should lie where
+had been plenty, dust where had been towns, crows where had been
+men; and on this earth stripped naked, stony, and desolate, on this
+burial-ground, I would set up a black cross with this inscription: Here
+lies Flanders the heretic, Philip of Spain passed over her breast!"
+
+So saying the devil foamed at the mouth with wrath, but scarce were
+his last words cold from his lips when all the hammers and bars in
+the smithy fell on him at once. And Smetse and his workmen, striking
+in turn, said: "This is for our broken charters and our privileges
+violated despite thine oath, for thou wast perjurer.
+
+"This is for that when we called thee thou didst not dare come into
+our land, where thy presence would have cooled the hottest heads,
+for thou wast coward.
+
+"This is for the innocent Marquess of Berg-op-Zoom, whom thou
+poisoned in prison, so that his inheritance might be thine; and for
+the Prince of Ascoly, whom thou madest to marry Dona Eufrasia, in
+child by thy seed, so that his wealth might enrich the bastard that
+was coming. The Prince died also, like so many others, for thou wert
+poisoner of bodies.
+
+"This is for the false witnesses paid by thee, and thy promise to
+ennoble whomever would kill Prince William for money, for thou wast
+poisoner of souls."
+
+And the blows fell heavy, and the king's crown was knocked off, and
+his body, like the duke's, was no more than a hotch-potch of bones
+and flesh, without any blood. But the workmen went on with their
+hammering, saying:
+
+"This is for thine invention of the Tourniquet, wherewith thou didst
+strangle Montigny, friend of thy son, for thou wast seeker of new
+tortures.
+
+"This is for the Duke of Alva, for the Counts of Egmont and Hoorn,
+for all our poor dead, for our merchants who went off to enrich
+England and Germany, for thou wast death and ruin to our land.
+
+"This is for thy wife, who died by thy deed, for thou wast husband
+without love.
+
+"This is for thy poor son Charles, who died without any sickness,
+for thou wast father without bowels.
+
+"This is for the hatred, cruelty, and slaughter with which thou didst
+make return for the gentleness, confidence, and goodwill of our land,
+for thou wast king without justice.
+
+"And this is for the Emperor, thy father, who, with his execrable
+proclamations and edicts, first sounded for our land the stroke of
+the evil hour. Give him a good drubbing on our account, and tell us
+thou wilt give back the deed to the baes."
+
+"Yes," wept a melancholy voice, coming from the heap of bones and
+flesh, "thou hast everything, Smetse, thou art free."
+
+"Give me back the parchment," said Smetse.
+
+"Open the sack," answered the voice.
+
+"Ho," cried Smetse, "yes, yes, indeed, I will open the sack wide,
+and Master Philip will leap out and take me off to hell with all
+speed. Oh, the good little devil! But 'tis not now the time for such
+high pranks. Therefore I make bold to beg your Majesty to give me
+first the parchment, which he may without difficulty pass up through
+this gap which is between his neck and the edge of the sacking."
+
+"I will not do it," said the devil.
+
+"That," said Smetse, "is as it pleases your subtle Majesty. In the
+sack he is, in the sack he may remain; I make no objection. Every
+man his own humour. But mine will be to leave him in his sack, and in
+this wise carry him off to Middelburg in Walcheren, and there ask the
+prefect that leave be given me to build a good little stone box in the
+market-place and therein to place your Majesty, leaving outside his
+melancholy countenance. So placed he will be able to see at a close
+view the happiness, joy, and prosperity of the men of the reformed
+faith: that will be a fine treat for him, which might be added to,
+on feast-days and market-days, by an unkind blow or two which people
+would give him in the face, or some wicked strokes with a stick, or
+some spittle dropped on him without respect. You will have besides,
+Sire, the unutterable satisfaction of seeing many good pilgrims
+from Flanders, Brabant, and your other blood-soaked countries come
+to Middelburg to pay back with good coin of their staves their old
+debt to your Most Merciful Majesty."
+
+"Ah," said the devil, "I will not have this shame put upon me. Take,
+smith, take the parchment."
+
+Smetse obeyed, and saw that it was indeed his own, then went and
+dipped it in holy water, where it turned into dust.
+
+At this he was filled with joy and opened the sack for the devil, whose
+bones moved and became joined again to one another. And he took on
+again his withered shape, his hungry vermin, and his devouring sores.
+
+Then, covering himself with his cloak of cloth-of-gold, he went out
+of the smithy, while Smetse cried after him: "Good journey to you,
+and a following wind, Master Philip!"
+
+And on the quay the devil kicked against a stone, which opened of
+itself and showed a great hole, wherein he was swallowed suddenly up
+like an oyster.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. Wherein Smetse beholds on the River Lys a most marvellous sight.
+
+When the devil had gone Smetse was almost off his head with joy, and
+ran to his wife, who had come to the door of the kitchen, and thumped
+her for joy, seized her, kissed her, hugged the good woman, shook her,
+pressed her to him, ran back to his men, shook them all by the hand,
+crying: "By Artevelde! I am quits, Smetse is quits!" And he seemed
+to have a tongue for nothing else but that he was quits! And he blew
+in his wife's ear, into his workmen's faces, and under the nose of a
+bald and wheezing old cat who sat up in one corner and got quit with
+him by a scratch in the face.
+
+"The rascal," said Smetse, "does not seem glad enough at my
+deliverance. Is he another devil, think you? They say they disguise
+themselves in every kind of shape. Ho," said he to the cat, who was
+arching her back in annoyance, "hast heard, listened, and understood,
+devil cat? I am quit and free, quit and franked, quit and happy,
+quit and rich! And I have made fools of all the devils. And from now
+on I will live gaily as becomes a quit smith. Wife, I will send this
+very day a hundred philipdalers to Slimbroek, so that that poor sinner
+may also rejoice at Smetse's quittance."
+
+But his wife said nothing, and when Smetse went to look for her he
+found her on the stair with a great bowl of holy water in her hands,
+in which she was dipping a fair sprig of palm branch.
+
+Coming into the smithy she began to sprinkle with the palm her man and
+the workmen, and also the hammers, anvils, bellows, and other tools.
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, trying to escape the wetting, "what art thou at?"
+
+"I am saving thee," said she, "presumptuous smith. Dost verily think
+that, being freed of devils, thou hast for thine own the chattels that
+come from them? Dost think that though they have lost the soul which
+was to be their payment they will leave thee thy riches. Ho, the good
+fool! They will come back again, yes; and if I do not sprinkle thee
+with this holy water, and myself likewise, and all these good men,
+who knows with what evils they may not torment us, alas!"
+
+And the good wife was working away with her palm-branch when suddenly
+a great thunder rumbled under the earth, shaking the quay, and the
+stones cracked, the panes shivered in the windows, all the doors and
+casements in the smithy opened of themselves, and a hot wind blew.
+
+"Ah," said she, "they are coming; pray, my man!"
+
+And suddenly there appeared in the sky the figure of a man, naked
+and of marvellous beauty. He was standing in a chariot of diamond,
+drawn by four flaming horses. And he held in his right hand a banner,
+whereon was written: "More beautiful than God." And from the body of
+this man, whereof the flesh shone brightly, came golden rays which
+lit up the Lys, the quay and the trees like sunlight. And the trees
+began to sway and swing their stems and branches, and all the quay
+seemed to roll like a ship upon the sea, and thousands of voices
+called out together: "Lord, we cry hunger and thirst; Lord, feed us;
+Lord, give us to drink."
+
+"Ah," said the good wife, "here is my Lord Lucifer and all his devils!"
+
+And when the voices had ceased the man made a sign with his hand,
+and of a sudden the waters of the Lys rose as if God had lifted up
+the river-bed. And the river became like a rough sea; but the waves
+did not roll on the quay, but each lifted separately, bearing on its
+crest a foam of fire. Then each of these flames rose into the air,
+drawing up the water like a pillar, and there seemed to poor Smetse
+and his wife and the men to be hundreds of thousands of these pillars
+of water, swaying and foaming.
+
+Then each pillar took on the form of a fearful animal, and suddenly
+there appeared, mingled together, striking and wounding one another,
+all the devils whose work was to torment poor damned souls. There were
+to be seen, crawling over crooked and shivering men's legs, monstrous
+crabs, devouring those who were servile in their lives. Near these
+crabs were ostriches bigger than horses, who ran along flapping their
+wings. Under their tails they had laurel-wreaths, sceptres, and crowns,
+and behind their tails were made to run those men who in our world
+spent all their time running after vain honours, without a care for
+doing good. And the ostriches went quicker than the wind, while the
+men ran without respite behind them in the effort to get the wreaths,
+crowns, and sceptres; but they could never reach them. In this way
+they were led to a treacherous pond full of loathsome mud, wherein they
+fell shamefully and stayed stuck for all eternity, whilst the mocking
+ostriches walked up and down on the bank dangling their bawbles.
+
+Among the ostriches were squadrons of many-coloured apes, diapered
+like butterflies, whose concern was with miserly Jewish and Lombard
+usurers. These men, when they entered hell, looked round them
+carefully, screwing up their eyes under their spectacles, collected
+from the ground divers rusty nails, old breeches, filthy rags, buttons
+showing the wood, and other old stuff, then dug a hole hastily, hid
+their treasures in it and went off to sit down some way away. The apes,
+seeing this, would leap on the hole, empty out its content, and throw
+it into the fire. Then the misers would weep, make lamentations, and
+be beaten by the apes, and at last go off to find some more secret
+place, hide there once again their new depredations, and see once
+again the hole emptied and the apes coming once again to beat them,
+and so on for all eternity.
+
+In the air, above the apes, soared eagles, who had, instead of a beak,
+four-and-twenty matchlock barrels firing together. These eagles were
+called Royal, because their concern was with conqueror princes, who
+were too fond in their lifetime of the sounds of war and cannon. And
+for their punishment these matchlocks were fired off in their faces
+again and again throughout eternity.
+
+Besides the ostriches, apes, and eagles, reared up a great serpent
+with a bear's coat, who writhed and twisted this way and that. He was
+of great length and breadth, beyond all measure, and had a hundred
+thousand hairy arms, in each of which he held an iron pike as sharp
+as a razor. He was called the Spaniards' Serpent, because in hell
+it was his task to gash about with his pikes without mercy all the
+bands of traitor pillagers who had despoiled our good country.
+
+Keeping clear of this serpent with great prudence, darted about
+mischievous little winged pigs whose tails were eels. These tails
+were designed for the perpetual teazing of such gluttons as came to
+hell. For the pig would come up to such a one, hold the eel close to
+his mouth, and, when he tried to bite it, suddenly fly away from him,
+and so on throughout eternity.
+
+There were to be seen also, marching up and down in their gorgeous
+feathers, monstrous peacocks. Whenever some vain dandy came their way,
+giving himself airs in his fine clothes, one of these peacocks would
+go to him and spread its tail, as if inviting him to pluck out a fine
+feather for his bonnet. But as soon as the dandy approached to take
+his feather, Master Peacock would let fly in his face with filthy
+and evil-smelling water, which spoilt all his fine clothes. And
+throughout eternity the dandy would try to get the feather, and
+throughout eternity be so swilled down.
+
+Among these fearful animals, wandered two by two male and female
+grasshoppers as big as a man, the one playing on a pipe, and the
+other brandishing a great knotted stick. Whenever they saw a man who,
+in his lifetime, leapt, by cowardice, from good to evil, from black to
+white, from fire to water, always on the side of the strongest, these
+grasshoppers would go to him, and one would play the pipe, while the
+other, leaning on his stick with great dignity, would say: "Leap for
+God," and the man would leap; "Leap for the Devil," and the man would
+leap again; "Leap for Calvin, leap for the Mass, leap for the goat,
+leap for the cabbage," and the man would keep leaping. But he never
+leapt high enough for the liking of the grasshopper with the stick,
+and so he was each time belaboured in a most pitiless manner. And he
+leapt without ceasing and was belaboured without respite, while the
+pipe made continual pleasant music, and so on throughout eternity.
+
+Farther on, naked and lying on cloths of gold, silk, and velvet,
+covered with pearls and a thousand resplendent gems, more beautiful
+than the most beautiful ladies of Ghent, Brussels, or Bruges,
+lascivious and smiling, singing, and playing on sweet instruments,
+were the wives of the devils. These dealt out punishment to old rakes,
+corrupters of youth and beauty. To them these she-devils would call
+out amorously, but they could never get near them. Throughout eternity
+these poor rakes had to look at them without being able to touch them
+even with the tip of the nail of their little finger. And they wept
+and made lamentation, but all in vain, and so on through centuries
+and centuries.
+
+There were also mischievous little devils with drums, made of the
+skins of hypocrites, whose masks hung down over the drum case as
+ornament. And the hypocrites to whom they belonged, without their
+skins, without their masks, in all their ugliness, ashamed, hooted,
+hissed, spat at, eaten up by horrible flies, and followed by the
+little devils beating their drums, had to wander up and down hell
+throughout eternity.
+
+It was good to see also the devils of conceited men. These were fine
+great leathern bottles full of wind, finished off with a beak, at the
+end of which was a reed. These bottles had eagle's feet and two good
+little arms, with fingers long enough to go round the widest part of
+the bottle. When the conceited man came into hell, saying: "I am great,
+I am grand, strong, beautiful, victorious, I will overcome Lucifer
+and marry his dam Astarte," the leathern bottles would come up to him
+and say, with a deep reverence: "My lord, will you be pleased to let
+us speak a word to you in secret, touching your high designs?" "Yes,"
+he would say. Then two bottles would stuff their reeds into his ears
+in such a manner that he could not get them out again, and begin to
+press in their bellies with their long fingers, so as to force wind
+into his head, which thereupon swelled up, large and always larger,
+and Master Self-Conceit rose into the air and went off to wander
+throughout eternity, with his head bumping the ceiling of hell,
+and his legs waving in the air in the efforts to get down again;
+but all in vain.
+
+Marvellous devils were certain apes of quicksilver, always running,
+tumbling, leaping, coming, and going. These devils bore down on
+the lazy fellows who were thrown to them, gave them a spade to dig
+earth with, a sword to polish, a tree to trim, or a book to con. The
+lazybones would look at the task set him, saying: "To-morrow,"
+and would stretch his arms, scratching and yawning. But as soon
+as he had his mouth wide open the ape would stuff into it a sponge
+soaked in quintessence of rhubarb. "This," he would say mockingly,
+"is for to-day; work, slug, work." Then, while the lazybones was
+retching, the devil would thump him, shake him a hundred different
+ways, giving him no more peace than a gadfly gives a horse, and so
+on throughout eternity.
+
+Pleasing devils were pretty little children very wide-awake and
+mischievous, whose concern was to teach learned orators to think,
+speak, weep, and laugh according to common nature. And when they did
+otherwise the little devils would rap them sharply on the knuckles. But
+the poor pedants could no longer learn, being too heavy, old, and
+stupid; so they had a rap on the knuckles every day and a whipping
+on Sundays.
+
+And all these devils cried out together: "Master, we are hungry;
+Master, give us to eat, pay somewhat for the good services we render
+thee."
+
+And suddenly the man in the chariot made a sign, and the good River
+Lys threw all these devils on the quay, as the sea splashes on the
+shore, and they hissed loud and terribly at landing.
+
+And Smetse, his wife, and the workmen heard the doors of the cellars
+open with a loud noise, and all the casks of bruinbier came hissing
+up the stairs, and hissing across the floor of the forge, and still
+hissing described a curve in the air and fell among the crowd of
+all the devils. And so also did the bottles of wine, so also the
+hams, loaves, and cheeses, and so also the good crusats, angelots,
+philipdalers, and other moneys, which were all changed into meat and
+drink. And the devils fell over one another, fought, scrambled, wounded
+themselves, forming only one great mass of battling monsters, howling
+and hissing, and each trying to get more than the others. When there
+was left neither drop nor crumb, the man in the chariot made another
+sign, and all the devils melted into black water and flowed into the
+river, where they disappeared. And the man vanished from the sky.
+
+And Smetse Smee was as poor as before, save for one little bag of
+golden royals, which his wife had by chance sprinkled with holy
+water, and which he kept, although it came from the devil. But this,
+as you shall see, did not profit him at all. And he lived with great
+content until he died suddenly one day in his smithy, at the great
+and blessed age of ninety-three years.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. Of Hell, of Purgatory, of the long ladder, and finally of
+Paradise.
+
+When he was dead his soul had to pass through Hell in the guise of a
+smith. Coming thither he saw, through the open windows, the devils
+which had so frightened him in the vision on the Lys, and who were
+now busy torturing and tormenting the poor damned souls as terribly
+as they could. And Smetse went to the doorkeeper; but the doorkeeper,
+on seeing him, howled out in a most awful fashion: "Smetse is here,
+Smetse Smee the traitor smith!" And he would not let him in. Hearing
+the hubbub, My Lord Lucifer, Madam Astarte, and all their court came
+to the windows, and all the other devils after them.
+
+And they all cried out in fear:
+
+"Shut the doors, 'tis the enchanted Smetse, Smetse the traitor smith,
+Smetse the beater of poor devils. If he comes in here he will overset,
+spoil, break up everything. Begone, Smetse!"
+
+"My masters," said Smetse, "if I do indeed come hither to look at
+your snouts, which are not beautiful I promise ye, 'tis not at all
+for my pleasure; and besides, I am not by any means anxious to come
+in. So do not make such a noise, master devils."
+
+"Yes, indeed, my fine smith," answered Madam Astarte, "thou showest
+a velvet pad now, but when thou art within thou wilt show thy claws
+and thine evil intention, and will slay us all, me, my good husband,
+and all our friends. Be off, Smetse; be off, Smee."
+
+"Madam," said Smetse, "you are indeed the most beautiful she-devil I
+ever saw, but that is, nevertheless, no reason why you should think
+so ill of a fellow-creature's intentions."
+
+"Hark to the fellow!" said Madam Astarte, "how he hides his wickedness
+under sugared words! Drive him away, devils, but do him no great harm."
+
+"Madam," said Smetse, "I beg you to listen."
+
+"Be off, smith!" cried out all the devils; and they threw burning
+coals at him, and whatever else they could find. And Smetse ran off
+as fast as his legs would take him.
+
+When he had travelled some way he came before Purgatory. On the other
+side was a ladder, with this inscription at its foot: "This is the
+road to the good Paradise."
+
+And Smetse, filled with joy, began to climb the ladder, which was made
+of golden thread, with here and there a sharp point sticking out, in
+virtue of that saying of God which tells us: "Broad is the way which
+leadeth to Hell, strait and rough the way to Heaven." And, indeed,
+Smetse soon had his feet sore. Nevertheless, he made his way upward
+without halting, and only stopped when he had counted ten hundred
+thousand rungs and could see no more of either earth or hell. And he
+became thirsty. Finding nothing to drink he became a little sullen,
+when suddenly he saw a little cloud coming past, and drank it up
+joyfully. It did not indeed seem to him as good drink as bruinbier,
+but he took consolation from the thought that it is not possible
+to have comforts everywhere alike. A little higher up the ladder he
+suddenly had hard work to keep his bonnet on his head, by reason of
+a treacherous autumn wind which was going down to earth to pull off
+the last leaves. And by this wind he was sorely shaken, and nearly
+lost his hold. After he was out of this pass he became hungry, and
+regretted the good earthly beef, smoked over pine-cones, which is so
+good a food for poor wayfarers. But he took heart, thinking that it
+is not given to man to understand everything.
+
+Suddenly he saw an eagle of terrible aspect coming upon him from the
+earth. Thinking for certain that he was some fat sheep, the eagle
+rose above him and would have dropped on him like a cannon-ball; but
+the good smith had no fear, bent to one side and caught the bird by
+the neck, which he wrung subtly. Then, still going up, he hastened to
+pluck it, ate morsels of it raw, and found them stringy. Nevertheless,
+he took this meat with patience, because he had no other. Then,
+patiently and bravely, he climbed for several days and several nights,
+seeing nothing but the blue of the sky and innumerable suns, moons,
+and stars above his head, under his feet, to right, to left, and
+everywhere. And he seemed to be in the midst of a fair great globe,
+whereof the inner walls had been painted this fair blue, strewn with
+all these suns, moons, and stars. And he was frightened by the great
+silence and by the immensity.
+
+Suddenly he felt a genial warmth, heard sweet voices singing, distant
+music, and the sound of a city toiling. And he saw a town of infinite
+size girt about with walls, over which he could see housetops, trees,
+and towers. And he felt that he was moving more quickly despite his
+own legs, and by and by, leaving the last rung behind, he set foot
+before the gate of the town.
+
+"By Artevelde!" said he, "here is the good Paradise."
+
+And he knocked on the gate; St. Peter came to open to him.
+
+Smetse was somewhat frightened at the gigantic appearance of the good
+saint, his great head of hair, his red beard, his large face, his high
+forehead, and his piercing eyes, with which he looked at him fixedly.
+
+"Who art thou?" quoth he.
+
+"Master St. Peter," said the smith, "I am Smetse Smee, who in his
+lifetime lived at Ghent on the Quai aux Oignons, and now prays you
+to let him enter your good Paradise."
+
+"No," said St. Peter.
+
+"Ah, my master!" said Smetse most piteously, "if 'tis because in my
+lifetime I sold my soul to the devil, I make bold to tell you that
+I repented most heartily, and was redeemed from his power and kept
+nothing that was his."
+
+"Excepting a sackful of royals," said the saint, "and on that account
+thou shalt not come in."
+
+"Master," said the smith, "I am not so guilty as you suppose; the sack
+stayed in my house because it had been blessed, and for that reason
+I thought I might well keep it. But take pity on me, for I knew not
+what I was doing. I pray you also to deign to consider that I come
+from a far country, that I am greatly tired, and would gladly rest
+in this good Paradise."
+
+"Be off, smith," said the saint, who was holding the door a crack open.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse had slipped through the opening, and taking off his
+leathern apron sat down, saying:
+
+"Master, I am here rightfully, you cannot turn me out."
+
+But St. Peter bade a troop of halberdier angels who were near at hand
+drive him away: and this the halberdier angels did with great dispatch.
+
+Thereafter, Smetse did not cease to beat on the door with his fists,
+and lamented, wept, and cried out: "Master, have pity on me, let
+me in, my master; I repent of all the sins I have committed, and
+even the others as well. Master, grant me permission to enter the
+blessed Paradise. Master...." But Master St. Peter, hearing this,
+put his head over the wall:
+
+"Smith," said he, "if thou wilt persist in this uproar, I shall have
+thee sent to Purgatory."
+
+And poor Smetse held his peace, and sat down on his seat, and so
+passed sad days, watching others enter.
+
+In this wise a week went by, during which he lived on a few scraps of
+bread which were thrown to him over the wall, and on grapes gathered
+from a sour vine which grew on the outer face of the wall of Paradise
+in this part.
+
+And Smetse was most unhappy, leading this idle existence. And he
+sought in his head for some work or other which would gladden him
+somewhat. Having found it, he shouted as loud as he could, and
+St. Peter put his head over the wall.
+
+"What wilt thou, Smetse?" said he.
+
+"Master," answered the smith, "will you be pleased to let me go down
+to earth for one night, so that I may see my good wife and look to
+my affairs?"
+
+"Thou mayst, Smetse," answered St. Peter.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. Wherein it is seen why Smetse was whipped.
+
+It was then All Saints' Eve; bitter was the cold, and Smetse's good
+wife was in her kitchen, brewing some good mixture of sugar, yolk of
+egg, and bruinbier, to cure her of an evil catarrh, which had lain
+upon her ever since her man died.
+
+Smetse came and knocked at the window of the kitchen, whereat his
+wife was greatly frightened.
+
+And she cried out sadly: "Do not come and torment me, my man, if
+'tis prayers thou wilt have. I say as many as I can, but I will say
+more if need be. Wilt thou have masses said? Thou shalt have them,
+and prayers and indulgences likewise. I will buy them, my man,
+I promise thee; but go back quickly whence thou camest."
+
+Nevertheless Smetse went on knocking. "'Tis not masses or prayers,"
+said he, "that I want, but shelter, food, and drink, for bitter is
+the cold, rude the wind, sharp the frost. Open, wife."
+
+But she, on hearing him speak thus, prayed the more and cried out
+the louder, and beat her breast and crossed herself, but made no move
+to open the door, saying only: "Go back, go back, my man; thou shalt
+have prayers and masses."
+
+Suddenly the smith discerned an open window in the attic. He climbed
+up and entered the house by that means, went down the stair, and,
+opening the door, appeared before his wife; but as she kept drawing
+back before him as he advanced, crying out and calling the neighbours
+at the top of her voice, Smetse stood still so as not to frighten
+her further, sat down on a stool, and said:
+
+"Dost not see, mother, that I am indeed Smetse, and wish thee no harm?"
+
+But his wife would listen to nothing and crept back into a
+corner. Thence with her teeth a-chatter, and her eyes open wide,
+she made a sign to him to leave her, for she could no longer find
+her tongue, by reason of her great fear.
+
+"Wife," said the smith in friendly tones, "is it thus that thou givest
+greeting and welcome to thy poor husband, after the long time he has
+been away? Alas, hast forgot our old comradeship and union?"
+
+Hearing this soft and joyous voice she answered in a low tone and
+with great timidity:
+
+"No, dead master."
+
+"Well then," said he, "why art thou so afraid? Dost not know thy man's
+fat face, his round paunch, and the voice which in former days sang
+so readily hereabout?"
+
+"Yes," she said, "I know thee well enough."
+
+And why," said he, "if thou knowest me, wilt not come to me and
+touch me?"
+
+"Ah," said she, "I dare not, master, for 'tis said that whatever
+member touches a dead man is itself dead."
+
+"Come, wife," said the smith, "and do not believe all these lying
+tales."
+
+"Smetse," said she, "will you in good truth do me no hurt?"
+
+"None," said he, and took her by the hand.
+
+"Ah," she said suddenly, "my poor man, thou art cold and hungry and
+thirsty indeed!"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Well then," said she, "eat, drink, and warm thyself."
+
+While Smetse was eating and drinking he told his wife how he had been
+forbidden the door to Paradise, and how he designed to take from the
+cellar a full cask of bruinbier and bottles of French wine, to sell
+to those who went into the Holy City, so that he might be well paid,
+and with the money he received buy himself better food.
+
+"This, my man," she said, "is all very well, but will Master St. Peter
+give thee permission to set up at the gates of Paradise such a tavern?"
+
+"Of that," he said, "I have hope."
+
+And Smetse, laden with his cask and bottles, went his way back,
+up towards the good Paradise.
+
+Having reached the foot of the wall he set up his tavern in the open
+air, for the weather is mild in this heavenly land, and on the first
+day all who went in drank at Smetse's stall, and paid him well out
+of compassion.
+
+But one or two became drunk, and entering Paradise in this state, set
+Master Peter inquiring into the cause of it; and having found it out
+he enjoined Smetse to stop his selling, and had him whipped grievously.
+
+
+
+
+XIX. Of the fair judgment of My Lord Jesus.
+
+Not long afterwards the good wife died also, by reason of the terror
+that had seized hold of her at the sight of her man's ghost.
+
+And her soul went straight towards Paradise, and there she saw, sitting
+with his seat against the wall, the poor Smetse in a fit of melancholy
+brooding. When he saw her he jumped up with great joy, and said:
+
+"Wife, I will go in with thee."
+
+"Dost thou dare?" said she.
+
+"I will hide myself," said he, "under thy skirt, which is wide enough
+for us both, and so I shall pass without being seen."
+
+When he had done this she knocked on the door, and Master St. Peter
+came to open it. "Come in," he said, "good wife." But seeing Smetse's
+feet below the hem of the skirt: "This wicked smith," he cried,
+"will he always be making fun of me? Be off, devil-baggage!"
+
+"Ah, my master," said she, "have pity on him, or else let me stay out,
+too, to keep him company."
+
+"No," said Master St. Peter, "thy place is here, his is outside. Come
+in then, and let him be off at once."
+
+And the good wife went in while Smetse stayed outside. But as soon
+as the noonday hour came, and the angel cooks had brought the good
+wife her beautiful rice pudding, she went to the wall and put her
+head over it.
+
+"Art thou there," she said, "my man?"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Art thou hungry?" she said.
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Well then," she said, "spread thy leathern apron; I will throw thee
+the pudding which has just been given me."
+
+"But thou," said he, "wilt thou eat nothing?"
+
+"No," said she, "for I have heard it said that there is supper by
+and by."
+
+Smetse ate the rice pudding, and was suddenly filled with comfort,
+for the pudding was more succulent and delicious than the finest meats
+of the earth. Meanwhile his wife went off to walk about in the good
+Paradise, and afterwards came back to Smetse to tell him what she
+had seen.
+
+"Ah," she said, "my man, 'tis a most beautiful place. Would that
+I could see thee within! Round about My Lord Jesus are the pure
+intelligences who discuss with him whatever is goodness, love, justice,
+knowledge, and beauty, and also the best means of governing men and
+making them happy. Their speech is like music. And all the while they
+keep throwing down to earth the seeds of beautiful, good, just and true
+thoughts. But men are so wicked and stupid that they tread underfoot
+these fair seeds or let them wither away. Farther on, established in
+their several places, are potters and goldsmiths, masons, painters,
+tanners and fullers, carpenters and shipbuilders, and thou shouldst
+see what fine work they do, each in his own trade. And when they have
+made some progress they cast down the seed of that also towards the
+earth, but 'tis lost oftentimes."
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "didst see no smiths?"
+
+"Yes," said she.
+
+"Alas," said he, "I would gladly be working alongside them, for I am
+ashamed to be sitting here like a leper, doing nothing and begging my
+bread. But listen, wife; since Master St. Peter will not let me in,
+go thou and ask grace for me from My Lord Jesus, who is kind and will
+let me in for certain."
+
+"I go, my man," said she.
+
+My Lord Jesus, who was in council with his doctors, saw her coming
+towards him. "I know thee, good wife," said he; "thou wast in thy
+lifetime wedded to Smetse the smith, who entreated me so well when,
+in the guise of a little child, I came down to earth with Master
+Joseph and Madam Mary. Is he not in Paradise, thy good man?"
+
+"Alas, no, My Lord!" answered she, "my man is at the door, most sad
+and out of heart, because Master St. Peter will not let him in."
+
+"Why is that?" said My Lord Jesus.
+
+"Ah, I cannot tell," said she.
+
+But the angel who writes down the faults of men in a record of brass,
+speaking suddenly, said: "Smetse cannot enter Paradise, for Smetse,
+delivered from the devil, kept devil's money."
+
+"Ah," said My Lord Jesus, "that is a great sin; but has he not repented
+of it?"
+
+"Yes," said the good wife, "he has repented, and, moreover, he has
+been all his life good, charitable, and compassionate."
+
+"Go and find him," said My Lord Jesus, "I will question him myself."
+
+Two or three halberdier angels ran to obey him, and brought Smetse
+before the Son of God, who spoke in this wise:
+
+"Smetse, is it true that thou didst keep devil's money?"
+
+"Yes, My Lord," answered the smith, whose knees were knocking together
+with fear.
+
+"Smetse, this is not good, for a man should rather suffer every ill,
+pain, and anguish, than keep the money of one who is wicked, ugly,
+unjust, and a liar, as is the devil. But hast thou no meritorious
+deed to tell me, to mitigate this great sin?"
+
+"My Lord," answered Smetse, "I fought a long while beside the men
+of Zeeland for freedom of conscience, and, doing this, suffered with
+them hunger and thirst."
+
+"This is good, Smetse, but didst thou persist in this fair conduct?"
+
+"Alas, no, My Lord!" said the smith, "for, to tell truth, my courage
+lacked constancy, and I went back to Ghent, where, like so many
+another, I came under the Spanish yoke."
+
+"This is bad, Smetse," answered My Lord Jesus.
+
+"My Lord," wept the good wife, "none was more generous than he to
+the poor, kind to every one, charitable to his enemies, even to the
+wicked Slimbroek."
+
+"This is good, Smetse," said My Lord Jesus; "but hast thou no other
+merit in thy favour?"
+
+"My Lord," said the smith, "I have always laboured with a good heart,
+hated idleness and melancholy, loved joy and merriment, sung gladly,
+and drunk with thankfulness the bruinbier which came to me from you."
+
+"This is good, Smetse, but it is not enough."
+
+"My Lord," answered the smith, "I thrashed as soundly as I could
+the wicked ghosts of Jacob Hessels, the Duke of Alva, and Philip II,
+King of Spain."
+
+"Smetse," said My Lord Jesus, "this is very good. I grant thee leave
+to enter my Paradise."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNIFORM WITH "FLEMISH LEGENDS"
+
+ THE LEGEND OF TYL ULENSPIEGEL
+
+ BY CHARLES DE COSTER
+
+ Translated by Geoffrey Whitworth. With 20 Woodcuts by
+ Albert Delstanche. 7s. 6d. net
+
+
+SOME PRESS OPINIONS
+
+"Tyl Ulenspiegel is not yet, in most English households, an old
+friend. Yet we believe that the fellow will soon make his brave and
+humorous way into the friendship of old and young. And the twenty
+full-page woodcuts with which M. Albert Delstanche has illustrated
+this edition will help the friendship on. All the heartiness, the
+ruggedness, the fun, and the gloom of one tragic period in the history
+of a homely and much-enduring people are expressed through the eye
+to the mind by M. Delstanche's knowledge and skill."--The Times.
+
+"An excellent translation has brought a notable example of modern
+Belgian literature within the reach of readers in this country. Taking
+as his central figure the scampish Tyl Ulenspiegel, already in the
+sixteenth century a traditional personage, De Coster produced a
+remarkable reconstruction of Flemish life in the days of Spanish
+oppression and of the famous 'Beggars'."--Scotsman.
+
+"On the large scale, the obvious work of a master, a man who knew
+sorrow but who loved to share the mirth and good living of his fellows,
+mocked impostors wherever he found them, and had a hatred of cruelty
+and injustice that is like lightning. It is one of the rare books,
+full of sad laughter and warm understanding, of the order of 'Don
+Quixote'."--The Nation.
+
+"It is a happy thought which has brought out Mr. Geoffrey Whitworth's
+version of 'The Legend of Tyl Ulenspiegel' now ... for the
+description of it as the 'national epic of Flanders' has much more
+meaning than such phrases usually have.... And all the adventures
+of Tyl and his friends have this quality of reality in fairy-land,
+whether they are grotesque or tragic. The book has tragedy in it
+to balance its boisterous comedy, but the two are combined in a
+style whose generosity and exuberance make their union complete
+and satisfactory. It is a great book indeed. Mr. Whitworth is to be
+congratulated on his excellently easy and vivid translation; and the
+woodcuts of M. Albert Delstanche are all exceedingly impressive and
+many exceedingly beautiful."--Land and Water.
+
+"It is hardly too much to say that De Coster's book is a work of pure
+genius.... At such a moment as the present no publication could be
+more timely than this English version of what will inevitably rank as
+a great epic of Belgian nationality.... For the rest, we have only to
+compliment the publishers, the translator, and the illustrator upon
+their joint efforts to present a fine work in a worthy and acceptable
+form."--The Guardian.
+
+"The illustrator's bold and luminous drawings certainly catch the
+bluff spirit of Charles de Coster's quaint masterpiece, in which the
+transition-age between mediævalism and modernity lives again so grimly,
+so shrewdly, so humorously. Here there is a suitable gift-book for all
+who love to travel in the highways of world-literature."--Morning Post.
+
+"It is, of course, for adults and not for children, with its grim
+horrors and its full-blooded jollity. What we have learnt to call the
+soul of a people is in it--the spirit of Flanders. The force of De
+Coster's style loses nothing in Mr. Geoffrey Whitworth's translation,
+and there are admirable illustrations cut on the wood by M. Albert
+Delstanche."--Daily Telegraph.
+
+"A most remarkable volume."--Glasgow Herald.
+
+"Reading it for the first time in Mr. Whitworth's admirable English
+version, one is amazed at first that it has not been rendered
+previously. De Coster will never require another English version,
+and this one book of 'glorious adventures' is aureole enough to ensure
+his place on the great hierarchy of literature."--The Bookman.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+[1] His biography has been written by Charles Potvin. Charles de
+Coster; Sa Biographie. Weissenbruch; Brussels.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Flemish Legends, by Charles de Coster
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Flemish Legends, by Charles de Coster
+
+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: Flemish Legends
+
+Author: Charles de Coster
+
+Illustrator: Albert Delstanche
+
+Translator: Harold Taylor
+
+Release Date: October 8, 2011 [EBook #37668]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLEMISH LEGENDS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
+Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
+made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+<div class="front">
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first"></p>
+<div class="figure xd20e121width"><img src="images/titlepage.gif" alt=
+"Original Title Page." width="479" height="720"></div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first xd20e127">Flemish Legends</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first"></p>
+<div class="figure xd20e132width" id="p000"><img src="images/p000.jpg"
+alt="The church of Haeckendover (page 40)" width="541" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">The church of Haeckendover (page 40)</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="titlePage">
+<div class="docTitle">
+<div class="mainTitle">Flemish Legends</div>
+</div>
+<div class="byline"><i>By</i> <span class="docAuthor">Charles de
+Coster</span><br>
+With eight woodcuts by<br>
+<span class="docAuthor">Albert Delstanche</span><br>
+Translated from the French<br>
+By <span class="docAuthor">Harold Taylor</span></div>
+<div class="docImprint">London: Chatto &amp; Windus<br>
+<span class="docDate">MCMXX</span></div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first xd20e127">Printed in England<br>
+At the Complete Press<br>
+West Norwood London <span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd20e177" href=
+"#xd20e177" name="xd20e177">v</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="toc" class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">Contents</h2>
+<table class="tocList">
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum"></td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"></td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">Page</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">I.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><span class="sc"><a href="#ch1">The
+Brotherhood of the Cheerful Countenance</a></span></td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">1</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">II.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><span class="sc"><a href="#ch2">The
+Three Sisters</a></span></td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">31</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">III.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><span class="sc"><a href="#ch3">Sir
+Halewyn</a></span></td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">43</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tocDivNum">IV.</td>
+<td class="tocDivTitle" colspan="5"><span class="sc"><a href=
+"#ch4">Smetse Smee</a></span></td>
+<td class="tocPageNum">101</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd20e227" href="#xd20e227" name=
+"xd20e227">vii</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">Illustrations</h2>
+<ul>
+<li><i><a href="#p000">The Church of Haeckendover</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class=
+"tocPagenum"><i>Frontispiece</i></span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p006">The Little Stone Boy</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">Facing page
+6</span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p052">The Man in White</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">52</span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p064">Sir Halewyn in the Wood</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">64</span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p092">The Song of the Head</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">92</span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p108">Smetse caught by the Two Branches</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">108</span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p126">In Smetse&rsquo;s Garden</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">126</span></li>
+<li><i><a href="#p150">The Devil-King and the Sack</a></i>
+&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; <span class="tocPagenum">150</span></li>
+</ul>
+<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd20e289" href="#xd20e289" name=
+"xd20e289">ix</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">Translator&rsquo;s Note</h2>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">There never was a book which needed less of an
+introduction than this one, unless it is that it should have an apology
+from the translator for his handling of so beautiful an original. But
+since so little is generally known of these Legends and their author a
+word of information may be demanded.</p>
+<p>Charles de Coster flourished in the middle part of the last century.
+He was brought up in the court of a great dignitary of the Roman
+Church, and intended for the aristocratic University of Louvain, but
+showed early his independent and democratic turn of mind by preferring
+the more popular University of Brussels, to which he made his own way.
+Here he fell in with a group of fellow-students and artistic
+enthusiasts which included F&eacute;licien Rops, with whom he was
+associated in a society called <i lang="fr">Les Joyeux</i>, and
+afterwards in a short-lived Review, to which they gave the name of that
+traditional Belgian figure of joyousness and high spirits,
+<i>Uylenspiegel</i>. It was in this that these Legends first appeared,
+written in the years 1856 and 1857, and soon afterwards published in
+book form.</p>
+<p>Belgian literature was not at that time in a very flourishing
+condition, and little general appreciation was shown of de
+Coster&rsquo;s work, but it was hailed with enthusiasm by a few of the
+more discerning critics, and won him a place on a Royal Commission
+which was investigating medi&aelig;val state papers. After publishing
+another book, <i lang="fr">Contes braban&ccedil;ons</i>, likewise based
+on the folk-lore of his country, he seems to have withdrawn into
+himself and led the life of a dreamer, wandering about among the
+peasants and burying himself in the wide countryside of Flanders, until
+he had completed his epic of the Spanish tyranny, <i>Ulenspiegel</i>,
+which has already been translated into English. None of these
+publications brought him any material recompense for his work, and he
+remained <span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd20e311" href="#xd20e311" name=
+"xd20e311">x</a>]</span>a poor man to the end of his life, in constant
+revolt against what he called the horrible power of money.<a class=
+"noteref" id="xd20e313src" href="#xd20e313" name=
+"xd20e313src">1</a></p>
+<p>The primitive stuff of these Legends is to be found scattered up and
+down, a piece here and a piece there, in the folk-lore of Brabant and
+Flanders. De Coster, who had an intense love of this folk-lore and at
+the same time, as he said, &ldquo;that particular kind of madness which
+is needed for such writing,&rdquo; set himself to give it a literary
+form. He has chosen to make that form so elaborate, and has worked his
+material to so fine a composition, that he must be considered to have
+produced an entirely original book. But he has not been unfaithful to
+his masters the people. <i>Sir Halewyn</i>, for instance, follows an
+old song. And the Faust-story of <i>Smetse Smee</i>, the jovial and
+ingenious smith, who gets the better of his bargain with the devil in
+so wholly satisfactory a fashion, crops up in one form or another again
+and again.</p>
+<p>The Legends were written in the idiom of the sixteenth century, the
+period to which the latest and longest of them roughly belongs. I
+believe that no more perfect example of <i>pastiche</i> exists in the
+language. But that is not of much interest to English readers, and I
+have made no attempt to reproduce the achievement. De Coster found
+modern French, with its rigidity of form, unsuitable to his subject and
+inapt to his genius. He seems to have had a mind so perfectly in tune
+with the Middle Ages that one may well believe that he found it
+actually more natural to write in the still fluid language of Rabelais
+than in that of his own day. The prose of the original is of arresting
+beauty, especially in <i>Sir Halewyn</i>; which, with its peculiarly
+Flemish tale of faery and enchantment, still beauty and glowing
+hearths, and the sombreness of northern forests brooding over them, I
+feel to be the high-water mark of his achievement. At times it becomes
+so rhythmic that one can hardly decide whether it is prose or poetry.
+It is not difficult to believe Potvin&rsquo;s report that de Coster
+spent <span class="pagenum">[<a id="xd20e335" href="#xd20e335" name=
+"xd20e335">xi</a>]</span>an immense amount of pains on his work,
+sometimes doing a page twenty times over before he was content to let
+it go.</p>
+<p>De Coster has been spoken of as a mouthpiece of Protestantism.
+Protestant, of course, is the last word in the world to describe him.
+No one can have regretted much more than he the passing of that
+warm-hearted time before the Reformation. One has but to read the story
+of the building of the church at Haeckendover in <i>The Three
+Sisters</i>, or the prayer of the girl Wantje to the Virgin in the tale
+of the hilarious <i>Brotherhood</i> to see how far this is true. It is
+only in <i>Smetse Smee</i>, when he comes to the time of the
+Inquisition, that he bursts out with that stream of invective and
+monstrous mockery which made the Polish refugee Karski say of him,
+&ldquo;Well roared, Fleming!&rdquo; And even then it is Spain rather
+than Catholicism which is the centre of his attack, and Philip II who
+is his aiming-point.</p>
+<p>Above all and before all de Coster loved the simple peasant-people
+of his own land, with their frank interest in good things to eat and
+good beer to drink, their aptitude for quarrelling and their great
+hearts. All his chief portraits are painted from them. The old homely
+nobility of Flanders, such as were the people of Heurne in the tale of
+<i>Halewyn</i>, he liked well enough, but he could not bear a rich man
+or a distant-mannered master of the Spanish type. A tale is told of him
+and his painter friend Dillens which may well stand as the key to his
+work. One day at Carnival-time they were in Ghent, and when the evening
+came Dillens asked what they should do. &ldquo;<i lang="fr">Voir le
+peuple!</i>&rdquo; cried de Coster, &ldquo;<i lang="fr">le peuple
+surtout! La bourgeoisie est la m&ecirc;me partout! Va voir le
+peuple!</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p class="signed">H. T. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb3" href="#pb3"
+name="pb3">3</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+<div class="footnotes">
+<hr class="fnsep">
+<p class="footnote"><span class="label"><a class="noteref" id=
+"xd20e313" href="#xd20e313src" name="xd20e313">1</a></span> His
+biography has been written by Charles Potvin. <i lang="fr">Charles de
+Coster; Sa Biographie</i>. Weissenbruch; Brussels.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="body">
+<div id="ch1" class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">The Brotherhood of the Cheerful Countenance</h2>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">I.</span> Of the sorrowful
+voice which Pieter Gans heard in his garden, and of the flame running
+over the grass.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">In the days when the Good Duke ruled over Brabant,
+there was to be found at Uccle, with its headquarters in the tavern of
+<i>The Horn</i>, a certain <i>Brotherhood of the Cheerful
+Countenance</i>, aptly enough so named, for every one of the
+<i>Brothers</i> had a wonderfully jolly face, finished off, as a sign
+of good living, with two chins at the least. That was the young ones;
+but the older ones had more.</p>
+<p>You shall hear, first of all, how this Brotherhood was founded:</p>
+<p>Pieter Gans, host of this same <i>Horn</i>, putting off his clothes
+one night to get into bed, heard in his garden a sorrowful voice,
+wailing: &ldquo;My tongue is scorching me. Drink! Drink! I shall die of
+thirst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thinking at first that it was some drunkard below, he continued to
+get into bed quietly, notwithstanding the voice, which kept crying out
+in the garden: &ldquo;Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst.&rdquo; But
+this persisted so long and in so melancholy a manner that at last
+Pieter Gans must needs get up and go to the window to see who it might
+be making so much noise. Thence he saw a long flame, of great
+brightness and strange upstanding shape, running over the grass; and,
+thinking that it must be some poor soul from purgatory in need of
+prayers, he set about repeating litanies, and went through above a
+hundred, but all in vain, for the voice never ceased crying out as
+before: &ldquo;Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After cock-crow he heard no more, and looking out again he saw with
+great satisfaction that the flame had disappeared.</p>
+<p>When morning came he went straightway to the church. There he told
+the story of these strange happenings to the <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb4" href="#pb4" name="pb4">4</a>]</span>priest, and
+caused a fair mass to be said for the repose of the poor soul; gave a
+golden <i>peter</i> to the clerk so that others might be said later,
+and returned home reassured.</p>
+<p>But on the following night the voice began its wailing anew, as
+lamentably as if it were that of a dying man hindered from dying. And
+so it went on night after night.</p>
+<p>Whence it came about that Pieter Gans grew moody and morose.</p>
+<p>Those who had known him in former days, rubicund, carrying a good
+paunch and a joyous face, wont to tell his matins with bottles and his
+vespers with flagons, would certainly never have recognized him.</p>
+<p>For he grew so wizened, dried up, thin, and of such piteous
+appearance that dogs used to start barking at the sight of him, as they
+do at beggars with their bundles.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">II.</span> How Jan Blaeskaek
+gave good counsel to Pieter Gans, and wherein covetousness is sadly
+punished.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">It so happened that while he was moping after this
+fashion, passing his days in misery and without any joy of them, alone
+in a corner like a leper, there came to the inn a certain Master Jan
+Blaeskaek, brewer of good beer, a hearty fellow, and of a jovial turn
+of mind.</p>
+<p>This visitor, seeing Pieter Gans looking at him nervously and
+shamefacedly, wagging his head like an old man, went up to him and
+shook him: &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;wake up, my friend, it
+gives me no pleasure to see thee sitting there like a
+corpse!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; answered Pieter Gans, &ldquo;I am not worth much
+more now, my master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And whence,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;hast thou gotten
+all this black melancholy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To which Pieter Gans made answer: &ldquo;Come away to some place
+where none will hear us. There I will tell thee the whole
+tale.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This he did. When Blaeskaek had heard to the end he <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb5" href="#pb5" name="pb5">5</a>]</span>said:
+&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis no Christian soul that cries in this manner, but the
+voice of a devil. It must be appeased. Therefore go thou and fetch from
+thy cellar a good cask of ale, and roll it out into the garden, to the
+place where thou didst see the flame shining.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I will,&rdquo; said Pieter Gans. But at vespers,
+thinking to himself that ale was precious stuff to set before devils,
+he put instead in that place a great bowl of clear water.</p>
+<p>Towards midnight he heard a voice more sorrowful than ever, calling
+out: &ldquo;Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he saw the bright flame dancing furiously over the bowl, which
+was suddenly broken with a loud report, and this in so violent a manner
+that the pieces flew up against the windows of the house.</p>
+<p>Then he began to sweat with terror and weep aloud, saying:
+&ldquo;Now &rsquo;tis all over, dear God, all over with me. Oh, that I
+had followed the advice of the wise Blaeskaek, for he is a man of good
+counsel, of excellent counsel! Master Devil, who are so thirsty, do not
+kill me to-night; to-morrow you shall drink good ale, Master Devil. Ah,
+&rsquo;tis ale of fair repute throughout the land, this ale, fit for
+kings or for good devils like yourself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nevertheless the voice continued to wail: &ldquo;Drink!
+Drink!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, there! Have a little patience, Master Devil; to-morrow
+you shall drink my best ale. It cost me many a golden <i>peter</i>, my
+master, and I will give you a whole barrelful. Do you not see that you
+must not strangle me to-night, but rather to-morrow if I do not keep my
+word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And after this fashion he wept and cried out until cock-crow. Then,
+finding that he was not dead, he said his matins with a better
+heart.</p>
+<p>At sun-up he went down himself to fetch the cask of ale from his
+cellar, and placed it in the middle of the grass, saying: &ldquo;Here
+is the freshest and the best drink I have; I am no niggard. So have
+pity on me, Master Devil.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb6"
+href="#pb6" name="pb6">6</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">III.</span> Of the songs,
+voices, mewlings, and sounds of kisses which Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek
+heard in the garden, and of the brave mien wherewith Master Merry-face
+sat on the cask of stone.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">At the third hour Blaeskaek came down and asked for
+news. Pieter Gans told his tale, and as he was about to go away again
+drew him aside and said: &ldquo;I have kept this secret from my
+servants, lest they should go and blab about it to the priests, and so
+I am as good as alone in the house. Do not therefore leave me, for it
+may happen that some evil will come of the business, and &rsquo;twould
+be well to have a good stomach in case of such event. Alone I should
+certainly have none, but together we shall have enough for both. It
+would be as well, then, to fortify ourselves against this assault on
+our courage. Instead of sleeping we will eat and drink
+heartily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For that,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;I am as ready as
+thou.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e459width" id="p006"><img src="images/p006.jpg"
+alt="The Little Stone Boy" width="538" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">The Little Stone Boy</p>
+</div>
+<p>Towards midnight the two comrades, tippling in a low room, fortified
+with good eating, but not without some apprehension nevertheless, heard
+the same voice outside, no longer sorrowful, but joyous, singing songs
+in a strange tongue; and there followed divers sweet chants, such as
+angels might sing (speaking with proper respect to them all), who in
+Paradise had drunken too much ambrosia, voices of women celestially
+soft, mewlings of tigers, sighs, noise of embraces and lovers&rsquo;
+kisses.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho, ho!&rdquo; cried Pieter Gans, &ldquo;what is this, dear
+Jesus? They are devils for a certainty. They will empty my cask
+altogether. And when they find my ale so good they will want more of
+it, and come crying every night and shouting louder than ever:
+&rsquo;Drink! Drink!&rsquo; And I shall be ruined, alas, alas! Come,
+friend Blaeskaek&rdquo;&mdash;and so saying he pulled out his
+<i>kuyf</i>, which is, as you may know, a strong knife well
+sharpened&mdash;&ldquo;Come, we must drive them off by force! But alone
+I have not the courage.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will come with you,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;but not
+until <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb7" href="#pb7" name=
+"pb7">7</a>]</span>a little later, at cock-crow. They say that after
+that hour devils cannot bite.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before the sun rose the cock crew.</p>
+<p>And he had, that morning, so martial a tone that you would have
+thought it a trumpet sounding.</p>
+<p>And hearing this trumpet all the devils suddenly put a stop to their
+drinking and singing.</p>
+<p>Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek were overjoyed at that, and ran out into
+the garden in haste.</p>
+<p>Pieter Gans, hurrying to look for his cask of ale, found it changed
+into stone, and on top of it, sitting horseback fashion, what seemed to
+be a young boy, quite naked, a fair, sweet little boy, gaily crowned
+with vine-leaves, with a bunch of grapes hanging over one ear, and in
+his right hand a staff with a fir-cone at the tip, and grapes and
+vine-branches twined round it.</p>
+<p>And although this little boy was made of stone, he had all the
+appearance of being alive, so merry a countenance had he.</p>
+<p>Greatly alarmed were Gans and Blaeskaek at the sight of this
+personage.</p>
+<p>And fearing both the wrath of the devil and the punishment of the
+Church, and swearing together to say no word about it to any one, they
+put the figure (which was but a few thumbs high) in a dark cellar where
+there was no drink kept.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IV.</span> Wherein the two
+worthy men set out for Brussels, capital city of Brabant, and of the
+manners and condition of Josse Cartuyvels the Apothecary.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Having done so much they set out together for
+Brussels, there to consult an old man, apothecary by trade, something
+of a glutton, but liked well enough by the common folk on account of a
+certain hotch-potch he made, well seasoned with rare herbs, for which
+he asked a not unreasonable price. He was reputed by the devout to have
+commerce with the devil, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb8" href="#pb8"
+name="pb8">8</a>]</span>on account of the miraculous cures which he
+effected in both man and beast by means of his herbs. Furthermore, he
+sold beer, which he bought from Blaeskaek. And he was hideous to look
+at, gouty, wizened, yellow as a guinea, wrinkled as an old apple, and
+with carbuncles on his neck.</p>
+<p>He lived in a house of mean appearance, in that part where you may
+now see the brewery of Claes van Volxem. Gans and Blaeskaek, coming
+thither, found him in his kitchen, making up his stews.</p>
+<p>The apothecary, seeing Gans in such a piteous melancholy state,
+asked him if he had some ill whereof he wished to be cured.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has nothing to be cured of,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek,
+&ldquo;save an evil fear which has been tormenting him for a week
+past.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thereupon they told him the whole story of the chubby-faced
+image.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear God!&rdquo; said Josse Cartuyvels, for such was the name
+of this doctor of stews, &ldquo;I know this devil well enough, and will
+show you his likeness.&rdquo; And taking them up to the top of his
+house, into a small room which he had there, he showed them a gallant
+image of that same devil, making merry with pretty maids and gay
+goat-foot companions.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what is the name,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;of this
+merry boy?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no doubt it is Bacchus,&rdquo; said Josse Cartuyvels.
+&ldquo;In olden times he was a god, but at the gracious coming of Our
+Lord Jesus Christ&rdquo;&mdash;here all three crossed
+themselves&mdash;&ldquo;he lost at once his power and his divinity. He
+was, in his time, good company, and more particularly notable as the
+inventor of wine, beer, and ale. It may be, on that account, that
+instead of hell he is only in purgatory, where no doubt he has become
+thirsty, and by God&rsquo;s permission was allowed to return to earth,
+once only, no more, and there sing this lamentable song which you heard
+in your garden. But I suppose that he was not allowed to cry his thirst
+in countries where wine is chiefly drunk, and that he <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb9" href="#pb9" name="pb9">9</a>]</span>came
+accordingly to Master Gans, knowing well enough that with him he would
+find the best ale in all Brabant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; said Gans, &ldquo;true, friend Cartuyvels, the
+best in the duchy; and he drank up, if you please, a whole barrelful,
+without paying me so much as the smallest gold piece, nor silver, nor
+even copper. That is not the conduct of an honest devil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Cartuyvels, &ldquo;there you are in error,
+and do not perceive what is for your good and what for evil. But if you
+will take the advice I am about to give you, you may find a way whereby
+you can make clear profit from this Bacchus, for he is, you must know,
+the god of jolly drinkers and good innkeepers, and I am disposed to
+think that he will do you a good turn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; asked Blaeskaek, &ldquo;what must we do
+now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have heard that this devil loves warmth and sunlight. So
+take him out, first of all, from this dark cellar. Then put him in some
+place whither the sun reaches, such as on top of the tall press which
+stands in the room where your customers sit and drink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sweet Jesus!&rdquo; exclaimed Pieter Gans, &ldquo;this is
+idolatry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In no wise,&rdquo; said the apothecary. &ldquo;I mean only
+this; that, put up where I tell you, sniffing the good smell of stoups
+and flagons, and hearing jolly talk, he will grow altogether frolicsome
+and happy. So may you bring Christian comfort to poor dead
+souls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if,&rdquo; said Pieter Gans, &ldquo;the priests should
+get wind of this statue, so shamelessly set up for all to
+see?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They cannot find you guilty of sin, for innocence keeps
+nothing secret. You will show this Bacchus openly to all your friends
+and relatives, and say that you found him buried under the earth in a
+corner of your garden. Thus you will make him seem an ancient relic, as
+indeed he is. Only take care to forget his name when you speak of him
+to any one, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb10" href="#pb10" name=
+"pb10">10</a>]</span>and, entitling him, as in jest, Master Merry-face,
+use this name for him always, and institute in his honour a jolly
+brotherhood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So we will,&rdquo; answered Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek
+together, and they then departed, not without having given the
+apothecary two large coins for his trouble.</p>
+<p>He did his best, however, to keep them back, so that they might
+partake of some of his heavenly hotch-potch, but Pieter Gans turned him
+a deaf ear, saying to himself that it was devil&rsquo;s cooking,
+unwholesome for a good Christian stomach. So they left him and set out
+again for Uccle.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">V.</span> Of the long
+conversation and great perplexity of Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek in the
+matter of the deviling; and how they returned to Uccle with a
+resolution taken.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">While they were on their way: &ldquo;Well,
+comrade,&rdquo; said Gans to Blaeskaek, &ldquo;what is thy opinion of
+this apothecary?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A dog of a heretic!&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;a heathen,
+a despiser of all good and all virtue. For &rsquo;twas treasonable and
+wicked counsel he gave us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True, my good friend, true. And is it not besides a great
+heresy to dare tell us that this deviling on his cask is he who
+invented beer, wine, and ale, when we have heard it preached every
+Sunday in our church that St. Noah, under the instruction of Our Lord
+Jesus Christ&rdquo;&mdash;here both crossed
+themselves&mdash;&ldquo;invented these things.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For my part,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;I know I have
+heard that preached above a hundred times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Here, seating themselves on the grass, they began to refresh
+themselves with a fine Ghent sausage, brought by Pieter Gans against
+such time as they should feel hungry.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, there,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;let us not forget the
+<i>Benedicite</i>, my friend. So, perhaps, we may escape burning. For
+&rsquo;tis to God we owe this meat: may he deign to keep us always in
+his holy faith.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb11" href="#pb11"
+name="pb11">11</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Amen</i>,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek; &ldquo;but, my master,
+between us we must certainly break up this wicked statue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He who has no sheep fears no wolves. &rsquo;Tis easy enough
+for thee to talk comfortably of breaking up this deviling.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Twould be a deed much to our credit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if he come back again to wail each night so piteously:
+&rsquo;Drink! Drink!&rsquo; And if he turn angry with me and cast
+spells on my beer and my wine, and make me as poor as Job! Nay, better
+follow the advice of the apothecary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aye, and if the priests learn of the statue, and call us both
+before the tribunal, and have us burnt as heretics and idolaters, what
+then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Gans, &ldquo;here are the good God on the one
+hand and the wicked devil on the other, fighting over our poor bodies,
+and we shall be pounded to nothing between them, alas, alas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;let us go to the good
+fathers openly, and tell them the whole affair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, alas! We shall be burnt, my good master, burnt without
+mercy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe there must be some way whereby to escape this
+danger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is none, my friend, there is none, and we shall be
+burnt. I feel myself already half roast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have thought of a way,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is none, my friend, there is no way whatever, unless it
+be the clemency of the worthy fathers. Canst see no pilgrim or
+wandering friar on the road?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we see such a one we must give him all our
+sausage&mdash;have we said our grace for it?&mdash;and all the bread in
+our wallet, and humbly invite him into our house, to eat a quarter of
+roast lamb, well washed down with old wine. I have not much of that
+kind, but I will gladly give him all there is of it. Canst not see such
+a one coming?&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb12" href="#pb12"
+name="pb12">12</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;No one,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek. &ldquo;But open those
+rabbit&rsquo;s ears of thine and hark to me: I will give thee good
+counsel, for I wish thee well, blubberer. We must follow the
+apothecary&rsquo;s advice in half-and-half fashion, so much only, you
+understand. &rsquo;Twould be idolatry of the most shameless kind to put
+up this statue in the public hall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, alas, by all the devils! yes, you are right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, then we will put him in a cupboard, which shall be
+well fastened, but with an opening on the top to let in the air.
+Therein we will also put a small keg of good beer, and ask him not to
+use it up too fast. In this way he will be, in fact, within the hall of
+the inn, and he will keep himself well hid for certain, for in his
+cupboard he will be able to take what pleasure he may from the songs of
+the drinkers, rattling of mugs, and clinking of bottles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Gans to that, &ldquo;no, we must follow
+wholly the apothecary&rsquo;s advice, for he knows more about devils
+than we. As for this deviling, we will do our best to satisfy him,
+according to our means. But in spite of it all, I fear we shall one day
+be burnt, alas, alas!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VI.</span> Wherein it is seen
+that the devil is not a good one; and of the evil trick which he played
+on the good wives of the drinkers.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">As soon as they reached <i>The Horn</i>, the two
+worthies took out from the cellar the statue of the deviling and put it
+with great respect on top of a press which stood in the hall.</p>
+<p>On the morrow there came to this inn nearly all the men of Uccle,
+brought together in this wise because on that day had been sold
+publicly in their stables two horses well bred by the late sheriff,
+Jacob Naeltjens. His son was in no mind to keep them, saying that a
+man&rsquo;s best steeds were his slipper-shoes.</p>
+<p>The men of Uccle were surprised and delighted when they saw the
+statue of the youngster on the press, especially when Blaeskaek told
+them that his name was Master Merry-face, <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb13" href="#pb13" name="pb13">13</a>]</span>and that it was proposed,
+by way of jest, to establish forthwith in his honour a jolly
+brotherhood.</p>
+<p>They were all willing to do this, and thereupon decided between them
+that no one should be of their brotherhood until he had drunk, as his
+baptism, four-and-twenty monstrous great cups of wine, while another
+brother beat twelve strokes on the plumpest belly of the company there
+present.</p>
+<p>Each night thereafter they gathered together at <i>The Horn</i>, and
+drank deep enough, as you may well guess.</p>
+<p>The most wonderful thing about the business was that in spite of
+this they worked all day like stout fellows, some at their crafts, some
+at their trades, others in the fields, contented one and all. But their
+good wives were not by any means contented, for as soon as vespers
+sounded all their husbands and sweethearts went off to <i>The Horn</i>,
+without giving them so much as a single thought, and there stayed until
+curfew.</p>
+<p>And when these worthies went home they did not beat their wives, as
+some drinkers do, but lay down quietly beside them in bed, and
+immediately, without saying a word, fell fast asleep and began to sound
+such fanfares with their noses as Master Porker makes with his
+snout.</p>
+<p>Then the poor women might thump them, cuff them, call their names as
+they would, to get them to sing their bedfellows a different sort of
+song, but all quite in vain: as well beat water to get fire out of
+it.</p>
+<p>They awoke only with cock-crow, but their temper in the morning was
+so rough and stormy that none of their womenfolk (that is to say, of
+such as were not asleep from weariness) dared say a word, either then
+or at the dinner-hour. All this was brought about by the evil power and
+influence of the deviling.</p>
+<p>On that account there was much sadness among the women, who said,
+all of them, that if such a state of things went on for long the race
+of the people of Uccle must needs become extinct, which would be a
+great pity. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb14" href="#pb14" name=
+"pb14">14</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VII.</span> Of the Great
+Parliament of the Women of Uccle.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">So it came about that the women decided between
+themselves to save the village from this fate, and to this end, while
+their menfolk were at drink with Pieter Gans, they met together at the
+house of a certain dame Syske, who was big, fat, loud-speaking, had
+hair upon her chin, and had buried five husbands, or else seven, I dare
+not particularize the number for fear of untruth.</p>
+<p>There, as a rebuke to their drunken husbands, they quenched their
+thirst with clear water.</p>
+<p>When all were present, the younger ones assembled on this side and
+the older on that, the ugly ones among the older, dame Syske opened the
+talk by saying that they must all go forthwith to <i>The Horn</i>, and
+there give these drinkers such a drubbing that they would be stiff and
+sore for a week because of it.</p>
+<p>The old and ugly ones applauded this proposal with their hands,
+their feet, their mouths, and their noses. There was a fine noise, you
+may well believe.</p>
+<p>But the young and pretty ones kept silent as fishes, all save one,
+very pretty, very fresh and very neat, bearing the name of Wantje, who
+said very modestly, and blushing somewhat, that it was of no use to
+belabour their worthy men in this fashion, but rather they must bring
+them back to good ways by gentleness and laughter.</p>
+<p>To this the dame Syske replied: &ldquo;Little one, thou canst
+understand nothing of men, for thou art but a maid, or so I believe.
+For my part I know well enough how I managed my several husbands, and
+that was neither by gentleness nor by laughter, I promise thee. They
+are all dead, the worthy men (may God rest their souls!), but I
+remember them clearly, and know very well that at the least wrongdoing
+I made them dance the stick-dance on the field of obedience. None dared
+eat or drink, sneeze or yawn, unless I had first given him leave.
+Little Job Syske, my last, did my cooking for me in my own house. He
+made a good cook, poor little <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb15" href=
+"#pb15" name="pb15">15</a>]</span>man. But I had to give him many good
+beatings to bring him to that, and so it was with the others as well.
+Therefore, little one, give up all these laughters and gentlenesses of
+thine, they are not worth much, I can tell thee. Let us rather go
+forthwith and cut ourselves good staves of greenwood, easy enough to
+find now that it is spring-time, and going off to <i>The Horn</i> let
+us make fall a good shower of blows on these unfaithful
+husbands.<span class="corr" id="xd20e665" title=
+"Not in source">&rdquo;</span></p>
+<p>At this the old and ugly ones broke out afresh into monstrous howls
+and tumult, crying, &ldquo;Out upon them! out on the drunkards! They
+want a good drubbing, they want a good hanging!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VIII.</span> Of the great wit
+which every woman has, and of the modest conversation which the maid
+Wantje held with the worthies at the inn.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On the morrow all these good women met together once
+again, and drank as before a great quantity of clear water; and
+afterwards went off, armed with sticks, to the place where they knew
+their men were to be found.</p>
+<p>Before the door of <i>The Horn</i> they stopped, and there a great
+council took place. The old ones wanted to go in with their sticks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Wantje, with the young and pretty ones,
+&ldquo;we would rather be beaten ourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark to these sillies!&rdquo; cried the old ones,
+&ldquo;these poor silly things. They have not an ounce of pride in
+their bodies, between the lot of them. Be guided by us, gentle ewekins:
+we will avenge the dignity of women for you upon these wretched
+drunkards.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That you shall not,&rdquo; said the young ones, &ldquo;as
+long as we are there.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That we shall,&rdquo; howled the old ones.</p>
+<p>But here a certain young and merry wife burst out laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See ye not,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;whence comes to these
+grannies <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb16" href="#pb16" name=
+"pb16">16</a>]</span>so great a rage and such a thirst for vengeance?
+&rsquo;Tis simple bragging, to make us believe that their old croakers
+of husbands still care to sing them songs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words the old hags were thrown into such a state of fury
+that one or two died of rage there and then. Others, having quite lost
+their heads, wanted to kill the maids and young wives who were laughing
+at them (and &rsquo;twas pretty music, all those fresh and merry
+voices), but the dame Syske stopped them from that, saying that for the
+present they must take counsel together and not kill one another.</p>
+<p>Continuing their discussion, they quarrelled, argued, chattered,
+jabbered in this and like fashion until curfew-time, when they
+separated without having made up their minds to anything, by reason of
+not having had time enough to talk it over.</p>
+<p>And there were spoken in this assembly of women more than
+877,849,002 words, each one as full of good sense as a cellarful of old
+wine.</p>
+<p>Pieter Gans, who, as they said, had rabbit&rsquo;s ears, hearing in
+the street a certain hum of chattering voices, cried out: &ldquo;Alas,
+alas! what is this now? Devils for a certainty, dear Jesus!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will go and see, little coward,&rdquo; answered Blaeskaek.
+But on opening the door he burst out laughing all at once, saying:
+&ldquo;Brothers, &rsquo;tis our wives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thereupon all the drinkers rose and went to the door; some with
+bottles in their hands, others brandishing flagons, others again
+clinking their mugs together like church bells. Blaeskaek went out of
+the room, crossed the threshold of the outer door, and stepped into the
+street.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, wives,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;what brings you here with
+all this greenwood?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words the young ones let fall their sticks to the ground,
+for they were ashamed to be caught with such weapons.</p>
+<p>But one old woman, brandishing hers in the air, answered
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb17" href="#pb17" name=
+"pb17">17</a>]</span>for the others: &ldquo;We come, drunkards, to tell
+you the tale of the stick, and give you a good thrashing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Woe, woe!&rdquo; wept Pieter Gans, &ldquo;that, I know, is my
+grandmother&rsquo;s voice.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it is, scoundrel,&rdquo; said the old woman.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the Brothers of the Cheerful Countenance, hearing all
+this, shook their sides merrily with laughing, and Blaeskaek said:
+&ldquo;Then come in, come in, good wives, and let us see how you do
+your drubbing. Are those good greenwood staves you have
+brought?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am glad of that. For our part we have ready for you some
+good rods, well pickled in vinegar, which we use for whipping
+disobedient boys. &rsquo;Twill doubtless give you all sweet pleasure to
+feel their caresses, and so recall the days of your youth. Will you be
+pleased to try them? We will give you plenty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But at these scoffing words the old women took fright and ran off as
+fast as their legs would carry them, more particularly mother Syske,
+making such terrible threats and noises as they went that they sounded
+to those jolly Brothers like a flight of screeching crows passing down
+the deserted streets.</p>
+<p>The young ones stayed before the door of the inn, and &rsquo;twas
+affecting to see them so humbly standing, gentle and submissive,
+waiting for some kindly word from their husbands or sweethearts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek, &ldquo;do you please to come
+in?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep them out,&rdquo; said Pieter Gans into Blaeskaek&rsquo;s
+ear, &ldquo;keep them out, or they will go chattering to the priests
+about the deviling, and we shall be burnt, my good friend.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am deaf,&rdquo; said Blaeskaek; &ldquo;come in, my
+dears.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thereupon entered all these good women, and took up <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb18" href="#pb18" name="pb18">18</a>]</span>their
+places, some by their husbands, others by their sweethearts, and the
+maids in a line on a bench modestly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Women,&rdquo; said the drinkers, &ldquo;you wish to join
+us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And to drink also?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And have not come here to tell us temperance
+stories?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said they, &ldquo;we have come without any other
+wish than to join our good husbands and sweethearts, and laugh with
+them, if that may be, with God&rsquo;s good will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Those are certainly fair words,&rdquo; said one old man,
+&ldquo;but I suspect beneath them some woman&rsquo;s artifice or
+other.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But no one paid him any heed, for by this time the women were seated
+all about the table, and you might hear this: &ldquo;Drink this, pretty
+sweet, &rsquo;tis a draught from heaven.&rdquo; &ldquo;Pour, neighbour,
+pour, pour out some more of this sweet drink.&rdquo; &ldquo;Who is a
+better man than I? I am the Duke; I have good wine and good
+wife!&rdquo; &ldquo;Ho, there! broach a fresh cask of wine; we must
+have the best there is to-day to pleasure these good dames.&rdquo;
+&ldquo;Courage! I have drunk too much; I am going to conquer the moon.
+But wait a little first. For the present I stay by this good wife of
+mine. Kiss me, sweet.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is not the place, before all these people,&rdquo; the
+women would answer. And with many caresses and pretty ways each said to
+her man: &ldquo;Come away home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They would indeed have been glad enough to go, all those good
+drinkers, but did not dare do it, being shamefaced in this matter in
+one another&rsquo;s presence.</p>
+<p>Guessing as much, the women talked of going back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, there!&rdquo; said the old man, &ldquo;is not that
+what I said. They want to have us outside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, my masters,&rdquo; said Wantje very sweetly, &ldquo;but
+I pray you remember that we are not accustomed to such strong drinks,
+nor even to their smell. Therefore, master, if we feel the need to go
+out into the fresh air &rsquo;tis assuredly <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb19" href="#pb19" name="pb19">19</a>]</span>without
+wanting to anger or sadden you in any way whatsoever. May God keep you
+merry, brothers.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And thereupon the good women went off, though the men tried to keep
+them back by force.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IX.</span> Wherein it is seen
+that the learned Thomas a Klapperibus knew what makes a drinker fidget
+on his stool.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Left thus to their pots and tankards they turned to
+one another in wonder, saying: &ldquo;Ah, look ye at these dames! Does
+it not always fall out in this wise; that they would have us do
+whatever they bid, and that with humility! Submissive they seem,
+tyrants they are. But look ye, is it to male or female that belongs
+properly the right of command in all matters? To the male. We are the
+males. Very well, then, let us drink! And we will at all times carry
+out our own wishes, which will presently be to sleep here in this inn,
+if we please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After this fashion they talked together for some time, feigning
+great anger, but being, in fact, eager enough to go and join their
+wives. By and by they fell silent, and so remained for a while, some
+yawning, others drumming tunes on the floor with their boots, others
+again, and these many, fidgeting on their seats, as if they were on
+sharp thorns.</p>
+<p>Suddenly a young townsman, but lately married, got up and left the
+hall, saying that by the advice of a leech he was forbidden to drink
+more than six-and-twenty mugs of ale, which number he had already
+taken.</p>
+<p>After he had gone they all began to excuse themselves, one with a
+pain in his stomach, another with a headache, others with a melancholy
+feeling or with the phlegm, and made off to their homes, excepting only
+one or two among the older men.</p>
+<p>And when they were once outside they hurried with all speed to join
+their wives. Thus was borne out what was written by the learned
+<i>Thomas a Klapperibus</i> in his great <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb20" href="#pb20" name="pb20">20</a>]</span>work <i>De Amore</i>, c.
+vi, wherein it is said, that woman has more power than the devil.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">X.</span> Of the brigand
+called Irontooth.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">But this thing never happened but once; for on the
+morrow when the drinkers were carousing at <i>The Horn</i> the good
+women who came thither to entice them away a second time were driven
+off in a shameful manner.</p>
+<p>And as for the men, they continued to drink and to shout hilarious
+carols.</p>
+<p>Several times the night-watchman of the town came in to warn them
+against making so much noise after the sun was set. Ha, they listened
+to him with all respect, and seemed quite abashed and repentant at
+their fault; each one said his <i>mea culpa</i>; and in the meantime
+they gave the poor watchman so abundantly to drink that when he got
+outside he went off straight away to do his round leaning against some
+wall, and there snoring like a bass-viol. The others continued their
+drinking bouts and heavy slumbering, whereof the unhappy wives never
+ceased to complain. And so on, in this fashion, for a month and four
+days.</p>
+<p>Now by great misfortune the good Duke had lately been at war with my
+Lord of Flanders, and although peace had been made between them there
+remained afoot a band of lewd and ribald scoundrels, who went about
+ravishing all the countryside and robbing the townsfolk.</p>
+<p>This same band was commanded by a savage captain, to whom was given
+the name of Irontooth, because on the top of his casque he wore a
+single spike, sharp and cruel, like the tooth of some devil or of one
+of the unicorns of hell, cut out into fantastic shape. In battle he
+would sometimes put down his head and use this tooth as a wild boar
+uses his tusks. In this manner were slain many brave soldiers of the
+duchy of Brabant. On this same casque he carried also an evil bird
+whose wings beat against the steel, whereof it was said that it
+screeched in battle in a terrible fashion. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb21" href="#pb21" name="pb21">21</a>]</span></p>
+<p>It was Irontooth&rsquo;s custom to come at night to the villages on
+which he was minded to carry out his forays, butchering without mercy
+the poor townsfolk in their sleep, and carrying off jewels, plate,
+women, and maids, but of these last only the young ones. As for the old
+women, he left them their lives, saying that it was not worth the while
+of killing them, for they would certainly die of fright by
+themselves.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XI.</span> In which it is
+seen how bravely the good wives of Uccle did the duty of men.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">It came about that one night when only a few stars
+were showing, and the moon shining a little, there came to Uccle a
+certain Master Andr&eacute; Bredael, running as hard as he could and
+quite out of breath.</p>
+<p>He brought this news: that being by chance behind a bush on the road
+to Paris, he had seen a troop of men go past, whom he thought to be the
+Irontooth&rsquo;s, for he had seen among them a spiked casque like that
+which the great brigand was wont to wear.</p>
+<p>While these men were halted by the roadside, and munching some food,
+he overheard them say that they were bound that night for Uccle, where
+they hoped to get good sport and fair plunder, but they said also that
+they must leave the high road and travel by small lanes, so that their
+passage should not be discovered. Master Bredael thought it most likely
+that they would debouch behind the church.</p>
+<p>Having learned so much he had hurried to Uccle by the Paris road,
+outdistancing the brigands by a good half-league, so that he might warn
+the townsmen to arms, and prepare a strong reception for these
+unwelcome travellers.</p>
+<p>And arriving there he hastened to the door of the prefecture and
+knocked loudly, so that the warning bell might be set ringing at once;
+but none came to open to him, for the good reason that the custodian,
+being one of the Brothers of the Cheerful Countenance, was fast asleep,
+like all the other drinkers. Andr&eacute; Bredael then sought other
+means of alarum, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb22" href="#pb22" name=
+"pb22">22</a>]</span>and shouted out so loudly: &ldquo;Fire! fire!
+<i lang="nl">Brand! brand!</i>&rdquo; that all the women and old men,
+and children who were too young to drink, leapt out of bed and ran to
+their windows to see what was going forward.</p>
+<p>Andr&eacute; Bredael made himself known to them and begged them to
+come down into the square, which they did with all dispatch. When they
+were all gathered round him he told them of the coming of Irontooth,
+and bade them go and wake their husbands.</p>
+<p>At these words the older women began to shout as if mad:
+&ldquo;Welcome to Irontooth, God&rsquo;s tooth in good deed, come to
+rip them all open! Ha, drinkers! now we shall see you, as a punishment
+from heaven, either hanged short or burnt alive or drowned without
+respite; and &rsquo;tis no more than your sins deserve!&rdquo; Then, as
+if they had wings to their feet, they flew into their houses, and there
+Master Bredael, who stayed with the younger women in the square, heard
+the enraged old hags shouting, whining, weeping, vociferating, thumping
+on chests and frying-pans, in an attempt to awaken their good men. At
+the same time they cried in their ears: &ldquo;Scoundrels, wake up!
+Sweet friends, come and protect us! Drunkards, do your duty for once in
+your accursed lives! Dear fellows, do you wish to find us dead by
+morning? Bear us no malice for our talk of thrashing you. We were
+foolish just then, and too hasty; ye were wise. But save us in this
+pass!&rdquo; And so on, mixing together smooth and bitter words, like
+milk and vinegar.</p>
+<p>But none of the men stirred.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is this?&rdquo; said Master Bredael.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, master,&rdquo; said the young women, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis
+as you see; they are as good as dead the night through, and so has it
+been a while past. If the angel of God himself were to come he would
+scarce be able to rouse them. Ah, must it be that after having left us
+lonely so long these wicked husbands will now leave us to die!&rdquo;
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb23" href="#pb23" name=
+"pb23">23</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not weep,&rdquo; said Andr&eacute; Bredael, &ldquo;this is
+no time for that. Do you love these husbands of yours?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And your sons?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And your little daughters, so sweet and winsome?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you are ready to defend them as best you can?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, then,&rdquo; said Bredael, &ldquo;go and fetch your
+men&rsquo;s bows and come back here with them as quickly as you can. We
+will think of some way to defend ourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Soon enough the women were back again, armed with bows which they
+had taken from their husbands, brothers, or sweethearts. These bows of
+Uccle were of great renown throughout the land, for they were as strong
+as steel, and winged their arrows with very great speed.</p>
+<p>With them came certain boys of twelve years old, or not much more,
+and one or two brave old men, but the women sent them back again
+indoors, saying that they must stay behind and look to the village.</p>
+<p>The good womenfolk then collected in a bunch in the square, talking
+with great ardour and courage, but not too much bragging withal. Every
+one was clad in a white gown, jacket, or shift, as is the customary
+night apparel of women. But on this occasion it was by the special
+favour of God that they were so clad, as you shall see by and by.</p>
+<p>Wantje, who was one of their number, standing very bold and calm,
+said suddenly that they must pray. Thereupon they all knelt devoutly,
+and the maid spoke thus:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam Mary the Virgin, who art queen of heaven as Madam the
+Duchess is queen of this country, give an ear to these poor wives and
+maids, humbly kneeling before you, who by reason of the drunkenness of
+their husbands and brothers must needs take on themselves men&rsquo;s
+duty and arm themselves to fight. If you will but make a small prayer
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb24" href="#pb24" name=
+"pb24">24</a>]</span>to My Lord Jesus to give us his aid we shall be
+sure enough of victory. And we will give you as thanksgiving a fair
+crown of gold, with rubies, turquoises and diamonds in its rim, a fair
+golden chain, a fair robe of brocade spangled over with silver, and the
+same to My Lord your son. Therefore pray for us, Madam Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And all the other good maids and wives said after Wantje:
+&ldquo;Pray for us, Madam Mary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly, as they were rising from their knees, they saw a beautiful
+bright star shoot from heaven to earth, not far from where they were.
+This was, no doubt, an angel from the good God, who came down from
+Paradise in this guise, to stand beside them and help them the more
+surely.</p>
+<p>Seeing the sign the good women took heart of grace, and Wantje spoke
+further, saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam the Virgin hearkens to us, &rsquo;tis certain. Let us
+now proceed to the gate of the village, beside the church of Our Lord,
+who dwells therein&rdquo;&mdash;here all crossed
+themselves&mdash;&ldquo;to await with confidence the coming of the
+Irontooth and his men. And when we see them near at hand let every
+woman draw her bow, without speaking, nor moving in any way. Madam the
+Virgin will guide the arrows.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well spoken, brave maid,&rdquo; said Master Bredael.
+&ldquo;Come, I see in those eyes of thine, so bright in the darkness,
+the breath of God, which is a flame, alight in thy maid&rsquo;s heart.
+We must do as she says, good wives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>This woman&rsquo;s army took up its place in line in the alley
+behind the church.</p>
+<p>After a while of waiting, wherein was much perplexity and anxiety,
+they heard the sound of footfalls and voices, growing louder as they
+listened, as of men on the march.</p>
+<p>And Wantje said: &ldquo;Madam Mary, they are coming; have pity on
+us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then a large body of men appeared before them, carrying lanterns.
+And they heard a monstrous, husky, devil&rsquo;s voice <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb25" href="#pb25" name="pb25">25</a>]</span>crying:
+&ldquo;Out, friends, out upon them! Loot for the Irontooth!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But here suddenly all these good women let fly their arrows with
+great precision, for though they themselves remained in darkness they
+could see the brigands, all lit up by their lanterns, as clearly as in
+daylight. Two hundred of the men fell at the first volley, some with
+arrows in their skulls, others in their necks, and several with them in
+their bellies.</p>
+<p>The Irontooth himself was among the first that the good women heard
+fall with a great thud, from an arrow let fly by Wantje, which pierced
+him through the eyeball neatly.</p>
+<p>Some were not wounded at all, but, having troubled conscience,
+thought when they saw all these white figures that &rsquo;twas the
+souls of those whom they had made pass from life into death, come back
+by God&rsquo;s grace to avenge themselves upon them. So they fell on
+their faces in the dust, as if dead from fear, crying out in a most
+piteous manner: &ldquo;Mercy, Lord God! send back to hell all these
+ghosts, we pray you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But when they saw the good wives bearing down on them fear put
+strength into their legs, and they made off as fast as they would carry
+them.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XII.</span> Wherein Pieter
+Gans is nearer the stake than the wine-barrel.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">When the enemy had been so far discomfited the women
+came back into the square and stood before the prefecture, not feeling
+any glory, but rather sadness at having had to shed Christian blood in
+this manner. Ah, they returned thanks with a full heart to Our Lady the
+Virgin and Our Lord Jesus, who had given them the victory.</p>
+<p>Nor did they forget in their thanksgiving the good angel who had
+come to their assistance in the form of a bright star. And they sang
+fair hymns and litanies very sweetly.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile all the cocks in the countryside awoke one by <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb26" href="#pb26" name="pb26">26</a>]</span>one and
+heralded with their clarions the new day about to dawn.</p>
+<p>And at that call, all the drinkers were roused from sleep, and ran
+to their doors to find out whence came this sweet music.</p>
+<p>And my lord the Sun laughed in the sky.</p>
+<p>And the worthy men came out into the square, and some of them, when
+they saw their wives in the assembly, were all for beating them because
+they had left their beds; but Andr&eacute; Bredael interposed and told
+them the whole story. Thereupon they were all amazed, ashamed, and
+repentant, seeing how well these brave petticoats had striven on their
+behalf. Pieter Gans, Blaeskaek, and Father Claessens, Dean of Uccle, a
+most saintly man, also came out into the square.</p>
+<p>Thereupon, seeing all this crowd assembled, Master Bredael spoke
+thus:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Friends,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you hear how that &rsquo;tis
+through the valour of your wives and daughters alone that you are not
+by this time sniffing the air of heaven. Therefore &rsquo;tis seemly
+that here and now you should promise, and take oath to it, not to drink
+any more except by their wish.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is all very well, Master Bredael,&rdquo; said one of the
+townsmen, &ldquo;but &rsquo;tis not plain drinking that puts us all
+into so deep a sleep. I speak of these things with knowledge, I who
+have drunk wine freely all my life, and hope still so to do with relish
+to the end of my days. There is something else to it, devilry and evil
+spells, or so I think. Come hither, Pieter Gans, come hither and talk
+to us somewhat, and if thou know anything, bring light to this dark
+matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, alas!&rdquo; said Pieter Gans, his head wagging and his
+teeth chattering (for he was afraid, poor fellow), &ldquo;alas, alas! I
+know nothing, my good friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;but thou dost know something
+of it, for I see thy head shaking and thy teeth chattering.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But at this point the Dean confronted Gans:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wicked Christian,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I can see well
+enough <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb27" href="#pb27" name=
+"pb27">27</a>]</span>thou hast had commerce with the devil, to the
+great despite of all these good men. Confess thy sin with all humility,
+and we will accord thee such grace as may be, but if thou deny it, thou
+shalt be punished with hot oil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Pieter Gans in tears, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis as I
+said; I shall be burnt, dear God! Blaeskaek, where art thou, my good
+friend? Give me thy help. Alas, alas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Blaeskaek had gone off in a hurry from fear of the holy
+Fathers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Pieter Gans, &ldquo;see how the traitor
+deserts me when danger threatens!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Speak,&rdquo; said the very reverend Father.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Master Dean,&rdquo; said Pieter Gans, weeping and
+wailing, &ldquo;I will tell you the whole story, without keeping back
+anything.... Master!&rdquo; he cried when he had come to the end of his
+recital, &ldquo;if you will not punish me too heavily, Master, I will
+give all my poor savings as a perpetual gift to the Church. I am a true
+Christian, that I vow, and no heretic. Moreover, I wish not to die
+until I have had sufficient time to do long and full penance. But have
+me not boiled in oil before I have had that time, I beg of
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As to that,&rdquo; answered the Dean, &ldquo;we shall see.
+Now take us to the place where this devil is to be seen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By that time they were close to the church, and the priest went in
+to get therefrom some holy water before they started. Then all the men,
+women, and children of the village took their way to <i>The
+Horn.</i></p>
+<p>There the Dean demanded to see what had been the cause of those
+wicked spells which had been cast over so many worthy men, and Pieter
+Gans, with all humility, showed him the deviling, still smiling and
+holding his staff of vine-branches in his hand. And all the women,
+after looking at him for some time, said that he was very comely for a
+devil.</p>
+<p>The priest first crossed himself, then, dipping his fingers in the
+holy water, anointed therewith the brow, breast, and belly of the
+statue, which thereupon, by the grace of God, <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb28" href="#pb28" name="pb28">28</a>]</span>crumbled
+into dust, and a sorrowful voice was heard saying: &ldquo;<span lang=
+"gr-latn">Oi moi, &ocirc; ph&ocirc;s, tethn&ecirc;ka!</span>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And these words of the devil were explained by the priest to
+signify, in the Greek tongue: &ldquo;Woe is me! Light! I
+die!&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIII.</span> Of the great
+wonder and astonishment of My Lord the Duke when he heard of the valour
+of the women of Uccle.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">In the meantime the village sent to the Duke two
+trusty men, with a message to that high prince informing him in due
+order all that had occurred. These men met him already on his way to
+Uccle, for he had learnt by his runners the Irontooth&rsquo;s design,
+and knowing full well where he would find him was coming against him at
+all speed with a strong force of horsemen.</p>
+<p>As soon as the messengers saw who it was coming along the road they
+went down on their knees, but the good Duke would have none of this,
+and made them rise and walk at his stirrup.</p>
+<p>Before they had gone far they reached the scene of the
+brigands&rsquo; discomfiture. At the sight of all those heaped-up
+bodies the Duke halted, greatly astonished and no less pleased.
+&ldquo;And who,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;has slain all these scoundrels
+in this wise?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our womenfolk,&rdquo; said one of the messengers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is this thou&rsquo;rt telling me?&rdquo; said the Duke
+with a frown.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Before God, My Lord,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;I will tell
+you the whole story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so he did.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the Duke when he had done, &ldquo;who would
+have thought it of these good wives? I will reward them well for
+it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So saying he caused the casque of the Irontooth to be taken up and
+carried away. This casque was to be seen for many years in the armoury
+of My Lord Charles, who had it guarded with the utmost care.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb29" href="#pb29" name=
+"pb29">29</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIV.</span> In what manner
+was instituted the Order of the Women-Archers of Uccle and of the fine
+reward which My Lord gave to the brave maid Wantje.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On entering Uccle the good Duke saw coming towards him
+a large body of people, and in their midst a man crying out in a most
+piteous voice: &ldquo;Master! Master Priest! let me not be
+boiled!&rdquo; To which the answer was: &ldquo;We shall see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whence comes all this noise?&rdquo; said the Duke.</p>
+<p>But as soon as Pieter Gans saw who it was he ran towards him and
+threw his arms round his horse&rsquo;s legs. &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; he
+cried, &ldquo;My Lord Duke, let me not be boiled!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And why,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;should they boil one of
+my good men of Uccle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the very reverend Father Claessens, stepping forward, told him
+the whole story with great indignation, while Pieter Gans continued to
+blubber alongside in a most melancholy fashion. And thereon followed
+such confusion, with the one weeping and groaning, the other denouncing
+and syllogizing, and each so vehemently, that the good Duke could not
+tell which to listen to.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Wantje came forward out of the press, and, like Pieter
+Gans, cried: &ldquo;Mercy and pity!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said the maid, &ldquo;this man has sinned
+greatly against God, but only from simpleness of mind and a natural
+cowardice. The devil frightened him; he submitted to the devil. Pardon
+him, My Lord, for our sakes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maid,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;that was well spoken, and
+&rsquo;tis to thee I will hearken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the very reverend Father: &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;forgets to think of God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Father,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;I am not forgetful of
+that duty. Nevertheless I think he takes little pleasure in watching
+Christian fat smoke or a good man&rsquo;s flesh boil, but likes rather
+to see men gentle and kind, and not giving their fellows penance to do.
+And on this day when Our Lady the Virgin has deigned to perform a
+miracle for our sakes <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb30" href="#pb30"
+name="pb30">30</a>]</span>I will not sadden her mother&rsquo;s heart by
+the death of a Christian. Therefore none of the accused, neither this
+Pieter Gans nor any other there may be, shall this time go to the
+stake.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On hearing this Pieter Gans burst out laughing like a madman, and
+began to dance and sing, crying out the while: &ldquo;Praise to My
+Lord! I am not to be boiled. Brabant to the Good Duke!&rdquo; And all
+the townsfolk called out after him: &ldquo;Praise to My
+Lord!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then the Duke bade them be silent, and smiling:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, dames,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;who have this night done
+man&rsquo;s work so valiantly, come hither that I may give you a
+man&rsquo;s reward. First of all, to the bravest one among you I give
+this great chain of gold. Which is she?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The good women pushed Wantje forward before the Duke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis thee, sweet pleader.
+Wilt kiss me, though I be old?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, My Lord,&rdquo; said the maid. And so she did,
+notwithstanding that she was a little shamefaced over it.</p>
+<p>And the good Duke, having hung the chain round her neck, spoke
+further in this wise:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As for you all, good dames, who have this night so gallantly
+carried arms, I institute among you a most honourable Order, under the
+protection of Madam Mary the Virgin, and I direct that there shall be
+set up in this place a staff of a good length, and that each Sunday you
+shall come together here and draw the bow in archery, in memory of the
+time when with those bows you saved the lives of your husbands and
+children. And there shall be a fair crown of laurel and a fair purseful
+of golden <i>peters</i>, bright and new, to be awarded annually to the
+best archer of the year, and brought to her on a cushion by all the
+others together. And this purse will dower her if she be a maid, or, if
+she be a wife, will stand her in good stead against a time of
+famine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In this manner was instituted the Order of Women-Archers of Uccle,
+who still draw the bow like men every Sunday, under the protection of
+Our Lady the Virgin. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb33" href="#pb33"
+name="pb33">33</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch2" class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">The Three Sisters</h2>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">I.</span> Of the three noble
+ladies and their great beauty.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">In the year of Our Lord Jesus Christ 690, lived three
+maidens, descended, by male issue, from the noble line of the great
+emperor Octavian.</p>
+<p>Their names were Blanche, Claire, and Candide.</p>
+<p>Though they had dedicated the flower of their maidenhead to God, it
+is not to be supposed that this was for lack of lovers.</p>
+<p>For, on every day that passed, a crowd of people used to collect for
+nothing else than to see them go by on their way to church, and
+onlookers would say of them: &ldquo;See what gentle eyes, see what
+white hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>More than one, besides, with his mouth watering to look at them,
+would say sorrowfully: &ldquo;Must it be that such sweet maids as these
+should dedicate themselves to God, who has eleven thousand or more in
+his Paradise already.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But none so fair,&rdquo; answered an old wheezing merchant
+behind them, who was drinking in the fragrance of their dresses.</p>
+<p>And going off on his way, if the old man saw any young fellow
+loafing by the roadside, or lying on his belly in the grass to warm his
+back in the sun, he would give him a kick in the ribs, saying:
+&ldquo;Well now, dost thou care nothing to see the finest flowers of
+beauty that were ever blowing?&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">II.</span> How a prince of
+Araby was taken with love for the youngest sister, and what came of
+it.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Not a few young men tried to win them in marriage, but
+failing in this endeavour, turned moody and pined visibly away.</p>
+<p>Among them was a certain prince of Araby, who had himself baptized
+with great ceremony. And this for the sake of the youngest sister
+solely. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb34" href="#pb34" name=
+"pb34">34</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But, failing to attain his end, either by pleading or by force, set
+himself one morning before her door, and there let himself fall on his
+sword.</p>
+<p>The maid, hearing this fair lord cry out, came down in haste and had
+him carried in and laid on her own bed; whereat (for he was not quite
+dead) he found great solace.</p>
+<p>And when she bent over him to bathe and dress his wound, he roused
+what force he had left in him, kissed her on her red mouth, sighed like
+a man delivered from torment, and so gave up his soul happily.</p>
+<p>But the maid was not at all pleased at this kiss, for she considered
+it a dishonour to her divine husband Jesus. Nevertheless she wept for
+the fair lord, a little.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">III.</span> Wherein it is
+seen how Satan persecutes those ladies who seek to escape from the
+world.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">There were oftentimes a great crowd of suitors before
+the dwelling of the three ladies, some of them sighing laments, others
+prancing up and down on fine horses, others without uttering a word,
+but only looking up at the windows all the day long.</p>
+<p>And oftentimes these men would fight together and kill one another,
+from jealousy. At this the ladies were saddened exceedingly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the two elder to their sister, &ldquo;pray
+for us, white Blanche, white of soul and white of body, pray for us,
+little one. Jesus listens readily to the prayers of such maids as thou
+art.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My sisters,&rdquo; answered she, &ldquo;I am less worthy than
+you, but I will pray, if you so wish it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>Then the three sisters knelt down, and the youngest prayed in this
+manner:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kind Jesus, we have sinned against you assuredly, else you
+would not have let our beauty so touch these wicked <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb35" href="#pb35" name="pb35">35</a>]</span>men.
+Yes, we have indeed sinned, but, weaklings that we are, despite
+ourselves, Lord. Ah, grant us pardon for our great sorrow. You would
+have us for your own, and so indeed we have kept ourselves: our youth
+and beauty, mirth and sadness, vows and prayers, souls and bodies,
+thoughts and deeds, everything. In the morning, at noon, and at
+vesper-time, at all hours and all moments, do we not have you in our
+minds? When your bright sun rises, O beloved, and no less when your
+bright stars shine in your heaven, they can see us at prayer, and
+offering to you, not gold, frankincense, or myrrh, but our humble loves
+and our poor hearts. That is not enough, we know well. Dear one, teach
+us to do more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Pausing here they sighed sorrowfully, all three.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Kind Jesus,&rdquo; went on the youngest sister, &ldquo;we
+know well enough the desire of these men. They think themselves brave
+and handsome, and hope on this account to capture our love, but they
+are neither handsome, nor brave, nor good, as you are, Jesus. And yours
+we are and shall be always, and theirs never. Will you please to love
+us also a little, for you alone are our comfort and joy in this sad
+world, Jesus? We will not be unfaithful to you in anything. Ah, let us
+rather die quickly, for we hunger and thirst for you. If you will, let
+these evil men continue to pursue us with their loves, &rsquo;twill be
+but delight to suffer it for your sake. Nevertheless, the mortal
+husband leaves not his wife in danger, nor the betrothed his bride. Are
+you not better than they, and will you not keep us also from the snares
+of the enemy? If it be not pleasing to you, do nothing, but then it may
+be that one day some one will steal from us our virginity, which is
+yours only. Ah, dear beloved, rather let us pass our lives old, ugly,
+leprous, and then descend into purgatory, among devils, flame, and
+brimstone, there to wait until you deem us pure enough at length to
+take us into your Paradise, where we shall be allowed to see you and
+love you for ever. Have pity upon us. Amen.&rdquo; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb36" href="#pb36" name="pb36">36</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And having spoken thus, the poor child wept, and her sisters with
+her, saying: &ldquo;Pity, Jesus, pity.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IV.</span> Of the voice of
+the divine bridegroom, and of the horseman in silvern armour.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Suddenly they heard a low voice saying: &ldquo;Take
+heart.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;the husband deigns to speak to
+his brides.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And presently the room was filled with a perfume more delicate than
+that of a censer burning finest frankincense.</p>
+<p>Then the voice spake further: &ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; it said,
+&ldquo;when dawn breaks, go out from the town. Mount your palfreys,
+and, riding without halt, follow the road without heeding whither it
+leads. I will guide you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will obey you,&rdquo; they said, &ldquo;for you have made
+us the happiest of the daughters of men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And rising from their knees, they kissed one another joyfully.</p>
+<p>While the voice was speaking to them, there had come into the square
+a beautiful horseman in silvern armour, with a golden helm on his head,
+and, flying above that like a bird, a crest more brilliant than a
+flame. The horse whereon he rode was of pure white.</p>
+<p>None of those there had seen him coming, and he was as if risen from
+the ground among the crowd of lovers, who, seized with fear, dared not
+look him in the face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rascals,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;take these horses away out
+of the square. Do you not know that the noise of their hooves troubles
+these three ladies in their prayers?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And therewith he rode away towards the east.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the lovers to one another, &ldquo;saw you
+that silvern armour and that flaming crest? &rsquo;Twas an angel of God
+assuredly, come from Paradise for the sake of these three
+ladies.&rdquo; The more insistent among them muttered: &ldquo;He did
+not forbid us to stand on foot before the door, and in that wise we may
+yet remain with impunity.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb37"
+href="#pb37" name="pb37">37</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">V.</span> How, by the command
+of God, the three ladies rode to adventure.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On the morrow, therefore, before daylight, the suitors
+returned once again in great numbers, but first left their horses
+behind them in their stables. Soon after daybreak they saw the three
+ladies ride out from their courtyard, in obedience to the command which
+God had given them, each one mounted upon her palfrey. Supposing that
+they were but going out into the neighbouring meadows to take the clean
+air, they followed behind, one and all, singing merry carols in their
+honour.</p>
+<p>For so long as they were in the streets of the town the palfreys
+moved slowly, but once out in the open country they began
+galloping.</p>
+<p>The lovers tried still to follow them, but at last were forced to
+drop off, and fell one by one along the wayside.</p>
+<p>When they had covered some miles the palfreys stood still; and the
+three ladies, seeing that they had come free of their pursuers,
+resolved to give honour to God for his aid, and to this end to build
+him a fair church.</p>
+<p>Where? They did not know. But the thing was already decided in
+Paradise, as you shall see.</p>
+<p>For as soon as they were once again on their horses, the animals,
+guided by God&rsquo;s holy spirit, set off at a high trot.</p>
+<p>And leapt rivers, threaded forests, passed through towns, whereof
+the gates opened of themselves to let them by, and closed again after,
+bounded over walls and like obstacles.</p>
+<p>And startled every one they met, all amazed to see go by, quick as
+the wind, these three white horses and these three fair ladies.</p>
+<p>And travelled in this way for a thousand leagues, or rather
+more.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VI.</span> Of the diamond
+hammers, and foundations torn up from the ground.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">At Haeckendover, in the duchy of Brabant, the palfreys
+stood still once again, and neighed. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb38" href="#pb38" name="pb38">38</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And would not go one step forward, nor back.</p>
+<p>For this was where God had chosen to have his church.</p>
+<p>But the ladies, supposing that they had stopped there because they
+were tired, went on as far as Hoy-Bout on foot, and there determined to
+start building.</p>
+<p>Therefore they sent for the most skilful workers in stone, and
+master-builders also, in so great number that at the end of one day the
+foundations were two hands&rsquo; breadth high in the lowest part.</p>
+<p>And seeing this good beginning the ladies rejoiced greatly, and
+supposed their work agreeable to God.</p>
+<p>But on the morrow, alas, found all the stones torn up out of the
+ground.</p>
+<p>Thinking that by chance some traitor heretic had been buried in that
+place, who at night shook down the stones of their church with the
+trembling of his accursed bones, they removed to Steenen-Berg with
+their workmen, and there started afresh in the same manner as at
+Hoy-Bout.</p>
+<p>But on the morrow morning found the walls once again out of the
+ground.</p>
+<p>For the Lord Jesus was minded to be worshipped more particularly at
+Haeckendover.</p>
+<p>And sent, therefore, his angels by night, with hammers of diamond
+from the workshops of Paradise.</p>
+<p>And bade them tear down the work of the three ladies.</p>
+<p>Therefore the sisters, greatly perplexed and wondering, went down on
+their knees, praying God that he would tell them where he wished to
+have his church.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VII.</span> Of the youngest
+sister and the beautiful angel.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">And suddenly they saw a young man, of a beauty more
+than earthly, clad in a robe of the colour of the setting sun.</p>
+<p>Kindly he looked at them.</p>
+<p>Knowing him for God&rsquo;s angel, the three ladies fell on their
+faces before him.</p>
+<p>But the youngest, bolder than the others, as is the way <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb39" href="#pb39" name="pb39">39</a>]</span>with
+children, dared to steal a look at the fair ambassador, and, seeing him
+so comely, took heart and smiled.</p>
+<p>The angel took her by the hand, saying to her and to her sisters:
+&ldquo;Come and follow me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This they did.</p>
+<p>And thence they came to the spot where the church now stands, and
+the angel said to them: &ldquo;This is the place.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, My Lord,&rdquo; said the youngest joyously.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VIII.</span> How the three
+ladies saw a green island, with sweet flowers and birds thereon.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">At that time it was thirteen days past the feast of
+the Kings; snow had fallen heavily and set hard in frost after, by
+reason of a north wind which was blowing.</p>
+<p>And the three ladies saw before them, among the snow, as it were a
+green island.</p>
+<p>And this island was girt about with a cord of purple silk.</p>
+<p>And upon the island the air was fresh as in spring, and roses were
+blowing, with violets and jessamine, whose smell is like balm.</p>
+<p>But outside was naught but storm, north wind, and terrible cold.</p>
+<p>Towards the middle, where now stands the grand altar, was a
+holm-oak, covered with blossom as if it had been a Persian
+jessamine.</p>
+<p>In the branches, warblers, finches and nightingales sang to their
+hearts&rsquo; content the sweetest songs of Paradise.</p>
+<p>For these were angels, who had put on feathered guise, carolling in
+this fashion in God&rsquo;s honour.</p>
+<p>One fair nightingale, the sweetest singer of them all, held in his
+right claw a roll of parchment, whereon was written in letters of
+gold:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the place chosen by God and shown by him to the three
+maidens for the building of a church to the glory of Our Lord and
+Saviour Jesus Christ.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb40" href=
+"#pb40" name="pb40">40</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Great was the joy of the ladies at that sight, and the youngest said
+to the angel:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We see certainly that God loves us somewhat; what must we do
+now, My Lord Angel?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou must build the church here, little one,&rdquo; answered
+the messenger, &ldquo;and choose for this work twelve of the most
+skilled workmen, neither more nor less; God himself will be the
+thirteenth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And having said so much he returned to high heaven.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IX.</span> Of the church of
+Our Lord at Haeckendover, and of the strange mason who worked
+there.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Then all three went off in haste to choose from among
+the others the twelve good workmen who should set up the foundations of
+the church where they had seen the cord of purple silk.</p>
+<p>The work went on so well that it was a pleasure to see the stones
+mounting up, straight and quickly.</p>
+<p>But the miracle was this, that during the hours of labour the masons
+were always thirteen in number, but at dinner and at paytime twelve
+only.</p>
+<p>For the Lord Jesus was pleased to work with the others, but neither
+ate nor drank with them; he who in Paradise had such fine broth and
+such sweet fruits, and wine from the fountain of Saphir, which is a
+fountain giving forth without intermission wine of a richer yellow than
+liquid gold itself.</p>
+<p>Nor did he suffer for want of money; for that is an evil reserved to
+us needy, piteous, and ill-faring mortals.</p>
+<p>The building advanced so well that soon the bell was hung in the
+tower as a sign that the church was finished.</p>
+<p>Then the three maids entered in together; and, falling on her knees,
+the youngest said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By whom, divine husband and beloved Jesus, shall we dedicate
+this church built for your service?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To which the Lord Jesus replied: &ldquo;It is I Myself who
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb41" href="#pb41" name=
+"pb41">41</a>]</span>will consecrate and dedicate this church; let none
+come after me to consecrate it anew.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">X.</span> Of the two bishops,
+and the withered hands.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">By and by two venerable bishops passed through
+Haeckendover, and seeing the new church were minded to give it their
+blessing.</p>
+<p>They knew nothing of the words of Jesus to the three ladies, or they
+would not have thought of such temerity.</p>
+<p>But they were punished terribly none the less.</p>
+<p>For as one of them was about to bless the water for this purpose he
+became suddenly blind.</p>
+<p>And the other, who was holding the holy water brush, when he lifted
+his arms for the blessing, found them suddenly withered and stiffened,
+so that he could no longer move them.</p>
+<p>And perceiving that they had sinned in some way the two bishops were
+filled with repentance and prayed to the Lord Jesus to pardon them.</p>
+<p>And they were straightway pardoned, seeing that they had sinned in
+ignorance.</p>
+<p>And thereafter they came oftentimes most devoutly to Haeckendover.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb45" href="#pb45" name=
+"pb45">45</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch3" class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">Sir Halewyn</h2>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">I.</span> Of the two
+castles.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Sir Halewyn lifted up his voice in a song.</p>
+<p>And whatever maid heard that song must needs go to him straight
+away.</p>
+<p>And now to all good Flemings will I tell the tale of this Halewyn
+and his song, and of the brave maid Magtelt.</p>
+<p>There were two proud castles in the province of Flanders. In one
+dwelt Sir Roel de Heurne, with the lady Gonde, his good wife; Toon the
+Silent, his son; Magtelt, his fair daughter, and a host of pages,
+grooms, varlets, men-at-arms, and all the other members of the
+household, among whom an especial favourite was Anne-Mie, a girl of
+gentle blood, maid to the lady Magtelt.</p>
+<p>Of everything that was made by his peasants, Sir Roel took naught
+but what was the best.</p>
+<p>And the peasants said of him that it was a good master who took only
+as much as he needed, when he might have left them with nothing.</p>
+<p>In the other castle lived Sir Halewyn the Miserable, with his
+father, brother, mother, and sister, and a large following of rascals
+and brigands.</p>
+<p>And these were an ill-favoured crew, I can tell you, past masters of
+robbery, pillage, and murder, such as it is not good to meet at too
+close quarters.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">II.</span> Of Dirk, called
+the Crow.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">This family were issue by direct line of Dirk, the
+first of the Halewyns, to whom was given the name of the Crow, because
+he was as greedy of booty as a crow is of carrion.</p>
+<p>And also because he was clad all in black, and his men with him.</p>
+<p>This Dirk, who lived in the time of the great wars, was like a
+thunderbolt in battle, where, with his only weapon, <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb46" href="#pb46" name="pb46">46</a>]</span>a heavy
+club, furnished with a beak at one side, he broke javelins, splintered
+lances, and tore away mail as if it had been cloth; and no one could
+well resist his onslaught. And in this manner he so frightened his
+enemies that when they saw Dirk and his black soldiers bearing down
+upon them, shouting, yelling, without fear of any one, and in great
+number, they gave themselves up for dead before ever battle was
+joined.</p>
+<p>When victory was won and the more important booty divided (whereof
+Dirk always secured the lion&rsquo;s share and never came off badly),
+the other barons and their knights would leave the rest of the field to
+him and his followers, and would go off, saying: &ldquo;The pieces are
+for the crow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>No other man-at-arms would dare to stay behind then, or he would
+have been quickly taken and slain without waiting. And thereafter
+Dirk&rsquo;s men would begin to play the crow in earnest; cutting off
+fingers to get the rings on them, even of those not yet dead, who cried
+out to them for succour; chopping off heads and arms so that they might
+pull away clothes the more easily. And they even fought amongst
+themselves, and sometimes killed one another, over the bodies of the
+dead, for the sake of neck-pieces, straps of hide, or more paltry stuff
+still.</p>
+<p>And stayed sometimes on the battlefield over this business three
+days and three nights.</p>
+<p>When all the dead were stark naked they piled up their gains into
+carts which they brought for this purpose.</p>
+<p>And with these they returned to Dirk&rsquo;s castle, there to hold
+high revel and have good cheer. On the way they fought the peasants,
+taking whatever women and girls were at all comely, and did with them
+what they pleased. In this way they passed their lives fighting,
+pillaging, robbing the helpless, and caring nothing at all for either
+God or devil.</p>
+<p>Dirk the Crow became exceedingly powerful and got very much worship,
+both by reason of his prowess in battle and <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb47" href="#pb47" name="pb47">47</a>]</span>from the
+fact that My Lord the Count gave him after his victories the demesne of
+Halewyn, with powers of seigneury, both of the higher and the lower
+order.</p>
+<p>And he had a fine escutcheon made for himself, wherein was a crow
+<i>sable</i> on a field <i>or</i>, with this device: <i>The pieces are
+for the Crow.</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">III.</span> Of Sir Halewyn
+and how he carried himself in his youth.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">But to this strong Crow were born children of a quite
+other kind.</p>
+<p>For they were all, strangely enough, men of the quill and
+writing-desk, caring nothing for the fine arts of war, and despising
+all arms.</p>
+<p>These great clerks lost a good half of their heritage. For each year
+some stronger neighbour would rob them of a piece of it.</p>
+<p>And they begot puny and miserable children, with pale faces, who
+passed their time, as clerks are wont, lurking in corners, sitting
+huddled on stools, and whining chants and litanies in a melancholy
+fashion.</p>
+<p>Thus came to an end the good men of the line.</p>
+<p>Siewert Halewyn, who was the wretch of whom I am to tell you this
+tale, was as ugly, puny, woebegone, and sour-faced as the others, or
+even worse than they.</p>
+<p>And like them he was always lurking and hiding in corners, and
+shirking company, hated the sound of laughter, sweated ill-humour, and,
+moreover, was never seen to lift his head skywards like an honest man,
+but was all the while looking down at his boots, wept without reason,
+grumbled without cause, and never had any satisfaction in anything. For
+the rest he was a coward and cruel, delighting during his childhood in
+teasing, frightening and hurting puppies and kittens, sparrows,
+thrushes, finches, nightingales, and all small beasts.</p>
+<p>And even when he was older, he hardly dared to attack so large a
+thing as a wolf, though he were armed with his <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb48" href="#pb48" name="pb48">48</a>]</span>great
+sword. But as soon as the beast was brought down he would rain blows on
+it with high valour.</p>
+<p>So he went on until he was old enough to marry.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IV.</span> How Sir Halewyn
+wished to take himself a wife, and what the ladies and gentlewomen said
+to it.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Then, since he was the oldest of the family, he was
+sent off to the court of the Count, there to find himself a wife. But
+every one laughed at him, on account of his marvellous ugliness, more
+particularly the ladies and gentlewomen, who made fun of him among
+themselves, saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look at this fine knight! What is he doing here? He has come
+to marry us, I suppose.&mdash;Who would have him, for four castles, as
+many manors, ten thousand peasants and half the gold in the province?
+None.&mdash;And that is a pity, for between them they would get fine
+children, if they were to be like their father!&mdash;Ho, what fine
+hair he has, the devil must have limned it with an old nail; what a
+fine nose, &rsquo;tis like a withered plum, and what fair blue eyes, so
+marvellously ringed round with red.&mdash;See, he is going to cry! That
+will be pretty music.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Sir Halewyn, hearing the ladies talk after this fashion, could
+not find a word to answer them with, for between anger, shame, and
+sorrow his tongue was fast stuck to the roof of his mouth.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless he would take a lance at every tournament, and every
+time would be shamefully overcome, and the ladies, seeing him fall,
+would applaud loudly, crying out: &ldquo;Worship to the ill-favoured
+one! The old crow has lost his beak.&rdquo; Thus they compared him, for
+his shame, with Dirk, the old stock of the Halewyns, who had been so
+mighty in his day. And, acclaimed in this fashion every time he
+jousted, Sir Halewyn would go back from the field in sorrow to his
+pavilion. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb49" href="#pb49" name=
+"pb49">49</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">V.</span> How it came about
+that Sir Halewyn, after a certain tournament, called upon the devil for
+aid.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">At the third tournament wherein he was beaten there
+were on the field his father, mother, brother, and sister.</p>
+<p>And his father said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, look at my fine son, Siewert the soft, Siewert the
+overthrown, Siewert the faint-heart, coming back from jousting with his
+tail between his legs, like a dog thrashed with a great
+stick.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And his mother said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose for certain that My Lord the Count has put a gold
+chain round thy neck, and acclaimed thee publicly, for having so
+valiantly in this jousting jousted on thy back, as in the old days my
+lord of Beaufort was wont to make thee do. Holy God! that was a fine
+tumble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And his sister said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Welcome, my fair brother, what news do you bring? Thou wert
+the victor for certain, as I see from thy triumphant mien. But where is
+the wreath of the ladies?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And his brother said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is your lordly bearing, My Lord Siewert Halewyn the
+elder, descendant of the Crow with the great beak? For such a Crow
+vanquishes without much trouble eagles, goshawks, shrikes, gerfalcons,
+sparrow-hawks. Are you not thirsty, my brother, with the thirst of a
+baron, of a victor, I will not say of a villein? We have here some fine
+frog&rsquo;s wine, which will cool the fires of victory in your
+belly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; answered the Sire, grinding his teeth, &ldquo;if
+God gave me strength, I would make thee sing a different song Sir
+Brother.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And saying this, he pulled out his sword to do so, but the younger,
+parrying his thrust, cried out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bravo, uncrowlike Crow! Bravo, capon! Raise up our house, I
+beg of thee, Siewert the victorious!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; said the Sire, &ldquo;and why does this chatterer
+not go and joust as well as I? But he would not dare, being
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb50" href="#pb50" name=
+"pb50">50</a>]</span>that kind of coward who looks on at others,
+folding his arms and making fun of those who strive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he dismounted from his horse, went off and hid himself in his
+chamber, cried out to the four walls in a rage, prayed to the devil to
+give him strength and beauty, and promised him, on the oath of a
+knight, that he would give him his soul in exchange.</p>
+<p>So he called on him all through the night, crying out, weeping,
+bewailing his lot, minded at times even to kill himself. But the devil
+did not come, being busy elsewhere.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VI.</span> Of the rovings and
+wanderings of Sir Halewyn.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Every day after this, whether it were fair or foul,
+light sky or dark, storm or gentle breeze, rain, snow, or hail, Sir
+Halewyn wandered alone through the fields and woods.</p>
+<p>And children, seeing him, ran away in fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I must be very ugly!&rdquo; And he
+went on with his wandering.</p>
+<p>But if on his way he met some common man who had strength and
+beauty, he would bear down on him and oftentimes kill him with his
+sword.</p>
+<p>And every one grew to shun him, and to pray to God that he would
+soon remove their Lord from this world.</p>
+<p>And every night, Sir Halewyn called on the devil.</p>
+<p>But the devil would not come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the Sire sorrowfully, &ldquo;if thou wilt
+only give me strength and beauty in this life, I will give thee my soul
+in the other. &rsquo;Tis a good bargain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the devil never came.</p>
+<p>And he, restless, always in anguish and melancholy, was soon like an
+old man to look at, and was given the name throughout the country of
+the Ill-favoured Lord.</p>
+<p>And his heart was swollen with hatred and anger. And he cursed God.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb51" href="#pb51" name=
+"pb51">51</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VII.</span> Of the Prince of
+the Stones and of the song.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">One day in the season of plum-picking, having roved
+over the whole countryside, and even as far as Lille, on the way back
+to his castle he passed through a wood. Ambling along he saw among the
+undergrowth, alongside an oak, a stone which was of great length and
+broad in proportion.</p>
+<p>And he said: &ldquo;That will make me a good seat, comfortable
+enough to rest on for a little while.&rdquo; And sitting down on the
+stone he once again prayed to the devil to let him have health and
+beauty.</p>
+<p>By and by, although it was still daylight, and the small birds,
+warblers and finches, sang in the woods joyously, and there was a
+bright sun and a soft wind, Sir Halewyn went off to sleep, for he was
+very tired.</p>
+<p>Having slept until it was night, he was suddenly awakened by a
+strange sound. And he saw, by the light of the high moon and the clear
+stars, as it were a little animal, with a coat like a mossy stone, who
+was scratching up the earth beneath the rock, now and again thrusting
+his head into the hole he had made, as a dog does hunting moles.</p>
+<p>Sir Halewyn, thinking it was some wild thing, hit at it with his
+sword.</p>
+<p>But the sword was broken at its touch, and a little mannikin of
+stone leapt up on to his shoulders, and smote his cheeks sharply with
+his hard hands, and said, wheezing and laughing:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seek, Siewert Halewyn; seek song and sickle, sickle and song;
+seek, seek, ill-favoured one!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so saying he hopped about like a flea on the back of the
+Miserable, who bent forward as he was bid, and with a piece of his
+sword dug in the hole. And the stony cheek of the little mannikin was
+alongside his own, and his two eyes lit up the hole better than
+lanterns would have done.</p>
+<p>And biting Halewyn&rsquo;s flesh with his sharp teeth, striking him
+with his little fists, and with his nails pinching and pulling him, and
+laughing harshly, the little mannikin said: <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb52" href="#pb52" name="pb52">52</a>]</span>&ldquo;I
+am the Prince of the Stones, I have fine treasures; seek, seek,
+Miserable!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And saying this, he pommelled him beyond endurance. &ldquo;He
+wants,&rdquo; he screamed, mocking him, &ldquo;Siewert Halewyn wants
+strength and beauty, beauty and strength; seek then,
+Miserable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he pulled out his hair in handfuls, and tore his dress with his
+nails until he was all in rags, and kept saying, with great bursts of
+laughter: &ldquo;Strength and beauty, beauty and strength; seek, seek,
+Miserable!&rdquo; And he hung from his ears with his two hands, and
+kicked his stone feet in his face, notwithstanding that the Sire cried
+out with pain.</p>
+<p>And the little mannikin said: &ldquo;To get strength and beauty,
+seek, Halewyn, a song and a sickle, seek, Sir Miserable!&rdquo; And the
+Miserable went on scratching out the earth with his piece of sword.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the earth fell away under the stone, leaving a great hole
+open, and Halewyn, by the light of the mannikin&rsquo;s eyes, saw a
+sepulchre, and within the sepulchre a man lying, who was of marvellous
+beauty and had none of the appearance of death.</p>
+<p>This man was clad all in white, and in his hands held a sickle,
+whereof both handle and blade were of gold.</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e1523width" id="p052"><img src="images/p052.jpg"
+alt="The Man in White" width="544" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">The Man in White</p>
+</div>
+<p>&ldquo;Take the sickle,&rdquo; quoth the little mannikin, thumping
+his head with his fists.</p>
+<p>Sir Halewyn did as he was bid, and straightway the man in the tomb
+became dust, and from the dust came a white flame, tall and spreading,
+and from the white flame a wonderfully sweet song.</p>
+<p>And suddenly all about the wood was spread a perfume of cinnamon,
+frankincense, and sweet marjoram.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sing,&rdquo; said the mannikin, and the Miserable repeated
+the song. While he was singing his harsh voice was changed to a voice
+sweeter than an angel&rsquo;s, and he saw coming out of the depths of
+the wood a virgin of heavenly beauty and wholly naked; and she came and
+stood before him. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb53" href="#pb53"
+name="pb53">53</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, weeping, &ldquo;master of the golden
+sickle. I come, for I must obey; do not make me suffer too much in the
+taking of my heart, master of the golden sickle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then the virgin went away into the depths of the wood; and the
+mannikin, bursting out into laughter, threw Sir Halewyn down on to the
+ground, and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hast song and sickle; so shalt thou have strength and beauty;
+I am the Prince of the Stones; farewell, cousin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Halewyn, picking himself up, saw no more of either the mannikin
+or the naked maid; and studying well the golden sickle, and pondering
+in his mind what could be the meaning of the man in the tomb and the
+naked virgin, and inquiring within himself in perplexity what use he
+could make of the sickle and the sweet song, he saw suddenly on the
+blade a fair inscription, written in letters of fire.</p>
+<p>But he could not read the writing, for he was ignorant of all the
+arts; and, weeping with rage, he threw himself into the bushes, crying
+out: &ldquo;Help me, Prince of the Stones. Leave me not to die of
+despair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Thereupon the mannikin reappeared, leapt upon his shoulder, and,
+giving him a stout rap on the nose, read on one side of the blade of
+the sickle this inscription which follows:</p>
+<div class="lgouter">
+<p class="line">Song calls,</p>
+<p class="line">Sickle reaps.</p>
+<p class="line">In the heart of a maid shalt thou find:</p>
+<p class="line">Strength, beauty, honour, riches,</p>
+<p class="line">From the hands of a dead virgin.</p>
+</div>
+<p class="first">And upon the other side of the blade the mannikin read
+further:</p>
+<div class="lgouter">
+<p class="line">Whoso thou art shalt do this thing,</p>
+<p class="line">Writing read and song sing:</p>
+<p class="line">Seek well, hark and go;</p>
+<p class="line">No man shall lay thee low.</p>
+<p class="line">Song calls,</p>
+<p class="line">Sickle reaps.</p>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb54" href="#pb54" name=
+"pb54">54</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And having read this the mannikin went away once more.</p>
+<p>Suddenly the Miserable heard a sad voice saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wilt thou seek strength and beauty in death, blood, and
+tears?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ambitious heart, heart of stone,&rdquo; answered the voice.
+Then he heard nothing more.</p>
+<p>And he gazed at the sickle with its flaming letters until such time
+as My Lord Chanticleer called his hens awake.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VIII.</span> What Halewyn did
+to the little girl cutting faggots.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">The Miserable was overjoyed at what had come about,
+and inquired within himself whether it would be in the heart of a
+virgin child or of a marriageable virgin that he would find what was
+promised him, and so satisfy his great desire for worship and
+power.</p>
+<p>Pondering this he went a little way through the wood and stationed
+himself near to some cottages where he knew there were maids of divers
+ages, and there waited until morning.</p>
+<p>Soon after the sun was up, a little girl came out, nine years old,
+or rather less, and began collecting and cutting up faggots.</p>
+<p>Going up to her, he sang the song and showed her the sickle.</p>
+<p>Whereupon she cried out in fear, and ran away as fast as she
+could.</p>
+<p>But Halewyn, having quickly overtaken her, dragged her off by force
+to his castle.</p>
+<p>Going in, he met on the bridge his lady mother, who said to him:
+&ldquo;Where goest thou, Miserable, with this child?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To bring honour to our house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And his lady mother let him pass, thinking him mad.</p>
+<p>He went into his room, opened the side of the girl beneath a breast
+just budding, cut out the heart with the sickle, and drank the blood.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb55" href="#pb55" name=
+"pb55">55</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But he got no more strength from it than he had before.</p>
+<p>And weeping bitter tears, he cried: &ldquo;The sickle has played me
+false.&rdquo; And he threw down into the moat both the heart and the
+body.</p>
+<p>And the lady Halewyn seeing this poor heart and body dropping into
+the water, ordered that they should be taken out and brought to
+her.</p>
+<p>Seeing the body rent open under the breast, and the heart taken out,
+she became afraid lest Siewert her first-born was following dark
+practices.</p>
+<p>And she put the girl&rsquo;s heart back in her breast, and gave her
+a very fine and Christian burial, and had a fair great cross made on
+her winding-sheet, and afterwards she was put in the ground and a fair
+mass said for the quiet of her soul.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IX.</span> Of the heart of a
+maid and of the great strength which came to Sir Halewyn.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Sorely troubled, and falling on his knees, Halewyn
+said: &ldquo;Alas, is the spell then impotent? I sang, and she would
+not come to my singing! What would you have me do now, Lord Prince of
+the Stones? If it is that I must wait until nightfall, that I will do.
+Then, without doubt, having no sun to hinder your powers, you will give
+me strength and beauty, and all prowess, and you will send me the
+virgin I need.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he went at night to wander in the woods round about the
+cottages, and there, singing his song, and looking out to see if any
+were coming<span class="corr" id="xd20e1637" title=
+"Source: ,">.</span></p>
+<p>He saw by the light of the bright moon the daughter of Claes, a poor
+mad man, nicknamed the Dog-beater, because he used to thump and pommel
+grievously whomever he met, saying that these accursed dogs had robbed
+him of his coat, and must give it him back again.</p>
+<p>This girl took care of Claes very well, and would not marry, though
+she was a beautiful maid, saying: &ldquo;Since he is simple, I cannot
+leave him to look to himself.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb56" href="#pb56" name="pb56">56</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And every one, seeing her so stout-hearted, gave her, one some of
+his cheese, another some beans, another some flour, and so they lived
+together without wanting for food.</p>
+<p>The Miserable stood still at the edge of the wood and sang. And the
+maid walked straight towards the singing and fell on her knees before
+him.</p>
+<p>He went home to his castle, and she followed him, and entered in
+with him, saying no word.</p>
+<p>On the stair he met his brother, just returned from boar-hunting,
+who said, in mocking wise:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, is the Miserable about to get us a bastard?&rdquo; And to
+the girl: &ldquo;Well, mistress, thy heart must be fast set on my ugly
+brother that thou must needs follow him in this wise, without a word
+spoken.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Halewyn, in a rage, hit out at his brother&rsquo;s face with his
+sword.</p>
+<p>Then, passing him by, went up into his own room.</p>
+<p>And there, having shut fast the door, from fear of his brother, he
+stripped the girl quite naked, as he had seen the virgin in his vision.
+And the girl said that she was cold.</p>
+<p>Quickly he opened her breast with the golden blade, under the left
+pap.</p>
+<p>And as the maid gave the death-cry, the heart came out of itself on
+the blade.</p>
+<p>And the Miserable saw before his eyes the little mannikin coming out
+of the stones of the wall, who said to him, grinning:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Heart on heart gives strength and beauty. Halewyn shall hang
+the maid in the Gallows-field. And the body shall hang until the hour
+of God.&rdquo; Then he went back into the wall.</p>
+<p>Halewyn put the heart on his breast, and felt it beating firmly and
+taking root in his skin. And suddenly his bent back was straightened;
+and his arm found such strength that he broke easily in two a heavy
+oaken bench; and looking <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb57" href=
+"#pb57" name="pb57">57</a>]</span>at himself in a mirror-glass he saw
+an image so beautiful that he could scarce tell it for his own.</p>
+<p>And he felt in his veins the fire of youth burning.</p>
+<p>Going down into the great hall he found there at supper his father,
+mother, brother, and sister.</p>
+<p>None of them would have known him but for his voice, which was
+unchanged.</p>
+<p>And his mother rose and peered into his face to see him better.</p>
+<p>And he said to her: &ldquo;Woman, I am thine own son, Siewert
+Halewyn, the Invincible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But his brother, whom he had but lately smitten in the face, ran
+towards him hotly, saying: &ldquo;Cursed be the Invincible!&rdquo; and
+struck him with his knife. But the blade snapped off like glass against
+the body of the Miserable; whereupon the younger brother seized him in
+his arms, but the Miserable tore him off and threw him to one side as
+if he had been a caterpillar.</p>
+<p>Then he rushed at him with his head down, like a battering-ram, but
+as soon as his head touched the Miserable it was cut open, and the
+blood ran down over his face.</p>
+<p>And his father and mother, his sister and the wounded brother, threw
+themselves on their knees and asked his forgiveness, begging him, since
+he had become so powerful, to bring them riches and honour.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I will,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">X.</span> How the Miserable
+robbed a Lombard goldsmith, and of the pleasant speech of the ladies
+and gentlewomen.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On the morrow, armed only with the sickle, for he
+despised other arms on account of the strength which the spell gave
+him, Halewyn took the body of the maid to the Gallows-field and there
+hanged it on the tree.</p>
+<p>Then he rode off to the city of Ghent.</p>
+<p>And the ladies, gentlewomen and maidens of the town, <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb58" href="#pb58" name="pb58">58</a>]</span>seeing
+him pass by on his black horse, said among themselves: &ldquo;Who is
+this fair horseman?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis,&rdquo; he cried right proudly, &ldquo;Siewert
+Halewyn, who was called the Ill-favoured one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay, nay,&rdquo; said the bolder among them, &ldquo;you are
+making fun of us, My Lord, or else you have been changed by a
+fairy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and, moreover, I had fleshly
+knowledge of her; and so shall have of you, if I please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words the ladies and gentlewomen were not at all put
+out.</p>
+<p>And he went to the shop of a Lombard goldsmith in that town, who had
+at one time and another lent him six-and-twenty florins. But the
+goldsmith did not know him for himself.</p>
+<p>He told him that he was Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the goldsmith, &ldquo;then I pray, My Lord,
+that you will repay me my six-and-twenty florins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Halewyn, laughing: &ldquo;Take me,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;to the
+room where thou keepest thy gold.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said the goldsmith, &ldquo;that I will not,
+for all that I hold you in high esteem.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dog,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if thou dost not obey me I will
+strike thee dead instantly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the goldsmith, &ldquo;do not come blustering
+here, My Lord, for I am neither serf nor peasant, but a free burgess of
+this town. And if you are so minded as to lay your hands on me, I shall
+know how to get redress, I promise you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Halewyn struck him, and the burgess called for help.</p>
+<p>Hearing this cry, apprentices to the number of six came down into
+the shop, and, seeing Halewyn, ran to seize him.</p>
+<p>But he beat them off likewise and bade them show him where the gold
+was kept.</p>
+<p>Which they did, saying one to another: &ldquo;This is the
+Devil.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb59" href="#pb59" name=
+"pb59">59</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And the goldsmith, weeping: &ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said he,
+&ldquo;do not take it all.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I shall take what I will,&rdquo; said Halewyn; and he filled
+his money-bag.</p>
+<p>And in this way he took from the goldsmith more than seven hundred
+golden <i>bezants</i>.</p>
+<p>Then, seeing the poor man lamenting his lot, he struck him two or
+three hard blows, telling him not to whine so loud, and that before the
+month was out he would take from him double the amount.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XI.</span> Of the arrogant
+arms of Sir Halewyn.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">And the Miserable became the richest, most powerful,
+and most feared baron in the whole province.</p>
+<p>And blasphemously he compared himself to God.</p>
+<p>And considering that the old arms of Dirk, and his device, were too
+mean for his new magnificence:</p>
+<p>He sent to Bruges for painters in heraldry to fashion them
+afresh.</p>
+<p>These painters put the old crow away in one quarter, and on a field
+<i>argent</i> and <i>sable</i> blazoned a heart <i>gules</i> and a
+sickle <i>or</i>, with this device: <i>None can stand against
+me</i>.</p>
+<p>Moreover, he had this same blazon fashioned into a great standard
+which was flown from his castle keep. And also had it cut in stone over
+the gate. And on his shield, which he caused to be made larger so that
+the arrogant device might be seen to better advantage. And on his arms,
+his clothes, and wherever it could be put, there he had it as well.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XII.</span> How Sir Halewyn
+jousted with a knight of England.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">It so happened that at about this time My Lord of
+Flanders let call a tournament.</p>
+<p>And sent out to all his lords and barons to come to Ghent for that
+purpose.</p>
+<p>Halewyn went thither and set up his shield among the others.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb60" href="#pb60" name=
+"pb60">60</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But the barons and lords, seeing the arrogant device and the great
+size of the shield, were greatly put to offence thereat.</p>
+<p>And all of them jousted with him, but each was overthrown in
+turn.</p>
+<p>Among them was present an English knight of much prowess, who rode
+out to the middle of the tourney-field and stood straight and proud
+before Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;My Lord the Invincible, it
+displeases me to see thee planted there so arrogantly and unhorsing us
+all in this fashion. Wilt thou fight with me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I overcome thee, thou shalt be my servant and I shall take
+thee with me into Cornwall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And cause thee to grease my horses&rsquo; hooves, and empty
+the dung from the stable; and find out whether thou art invincible at
+such work also.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And if thou art not invincible, the invincible stick shall
+thrash thee invincibly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if thou overcome me, this shall be thy guerdon:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Five-and-twenty <i>bezants</i> which are in the house of thy
+Lord, the noble Count of Flanders; all the accoutrement of my horse,
+which is of fine mail; his fair saddle of pear-wood, covered with
+leather, and saddle-bows richly figured with ten horsemen lustily
+fighting and with Our Lord driving out the devil from one possessed;
+furthermore my helm of fine wrought steel, and on it a crest of silver,
+gilt over, with spread wings, which may very well, notwithstanding thy
+device, stand against thy bleeding heart, thy gaping sickle, and thy
+miserable crow. Well, My Lord the Invincible, dost think thou shalt win
+invincibly the five-and-twenty <i>bezants</i>, the helm of my head, and
+the trappings of my horse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Halewyn. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb61" href="#pb61" name="pb61">61</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Then, after My Lord himself had given the signal, they ran together
+with a great clatter.</p>
+<p>And the English knight was overthrown like the rest.</p>
+<p>Then all the ladies acclaimed and applauded the Miserable, crying
+out: &ldquo;Worship to Siewert Halewyn the noble, Siewert Halewyn the
+Fleming, Siewert Halewyn the Invincible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And on his way back to the house of My Lord, there to feast with
+him, he was by these ladies kissed, fondled, and made much of without
+stint.</p>
+<p>And, putting on the gear of the English knight, he went off to the
+towns of Bruges, Lille, and Ghent, thieving and ravishing
+everywhere.</p>
+<p>And came back from each expedition with much booty.</p>
+<p>And felt the heart all the while pouring live strength into his
+breast and beating against his skin.</p>
+<p>Then he went back to his own castle with the five-and-twenty
+<i>bezants</i> and the arms of the knight of England.</p>
+<p>When he sounded the horn there came to him his mother, who, seeing
+him so gilt over, was overcome with joy, and cried: &ldquo;He brings us
+riches, as he promised.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>And she fell at his feet and kissed them.</p>
+<p>As also did the younger brother, saying: &ldquo;Sir Brother thou
+hast lifted us up from poverty, I will willingly serve thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So shouldst thou, indeed,&rdquo; said Halewyn. Then, going
+into the hall: &ldquo;I would sup,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thou, woman,
+fetch me meat, and thou, fellow, drink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And on the morrow, and every day thereafter, he made to serve him at
+table, as if they had been his private servants, his father, mother,
+brother, and sister, turn by turn.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIII.</span> Of the heart
+dried up and of the dame Halewyn.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">But one morning while he was at meat in his castle,
+when his father and sister were gone to Bruges to buy corn-coloured
+cloth-of-scarlet for their clothes, <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb62"
+href="#pb62" name="pb62">62</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And he was being served, with all humility, by his mother and
+brother,</p>
+<p>He became suddenly quite cold, for the heart had ceased to beat.</p>
+<p>Putting his hand to his breast, he touched dried-up skin.</p>
+<p>Then he felt his face go back as it was before, his shoulders shrink
+down, his back hump up, and all his body lessen in stature.</p>
+<p>Looking at his mother and brother in turn, he saw them laughing and
+saying to each other: &ldquo;See, here is our master back in his old
+ugly skin, and with his old ugly face.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha, My Lord,&rdquo; said his brother, coming boldly up to him
+and speaking insolently, &ldquo;will you not take some of this
+<i>clauwaert</i> to hearten yourself? You have no longer, it seems,
+your former strength.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wilt try it?&rdquo; said the Miserable, and struck him with
+his fist, but did him no more hurt than if he had been a fly.</p>
+<p>Seeing this the younger brother grew bolder, and seating himself
+close to Halewyn on the seat:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you have had pudding enough,
+I think, &rsquo;tis my turn to eat.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he took the pudding from off his platter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord son,&rdquo; said his mother, &ldquo;now you shall
+give to me, who am old, some of this old wine you have kept for
+yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she took the cup out of his hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord brother,&rdquo; said the younger son, &ldquo;methinks
+you have too much of this roast of lamb with sweet chestnuts; I will
+take it, if you please.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he put the roast of lamb before his own place.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord son,&rdquo; said his mother, &ldquo;you do not much
+like, it seems, this fair cheese and barley tart, give it to me, I pray
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the Miserable, dumbfounded, gave it to her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord brother,&rdquo; said the younger son, &ldquo;you have
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb63" href="#pb63" name=
+"pb63">63</a>]</span>been sitting there long enough like an emperor,
+will you be pleased to stir your limbs now and serve us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the Miserable, getting up, served them as he was bidden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord son,&rdquo; said his mother, &ldquo;I see you now
+submissive to our orders, will you be pleased to ask my pardon for
+having so long kept me standing like a private servant, fetching you
+food and drink, though I am your mother?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the Miserable fell at her feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord brother,&rdquo; said the younger son, &ldquo;wilt
+thou be pleased to fall at my feet likewise, and kiss them, for that
+thou hast made me do the work of a serf?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I will not,&rdquo; said the Miserable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou wilt not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not,&rdquo; said the Miserable, and stepped back a
+pace.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come hither,&rdquo; said his brother.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not,&rdquo; said the Miserable.</p>
+<p>Then the younger ran at him, and, bearing him to the ground without
+difficulty, began thumping and pommelling him, and striking him in the
+face with his golden spurs, saying: &ldquo;Avenge thyself, Siewert
+Halewyn the Invincible. None can stand against thee, save I. Thou hast
+long treated us as serfs in thy house, now I will treat thee as a
+cheese and crush thee underfoot. Why dost thou not now caper as a kid,
+or fly away as a bird, Siewert the enchanted?&rdquo; and, going into a
+frenzy of rage, he drew his knife, saying: &ldquo;I will cut thee off
+thy head unless thou cry mercy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not,&rdquo; said the Miserable.</p>
+<p>But his mother, hearing these words, took quickly from the fire a
+handful of embers, and notwithstanding their heat, threw them into the
+eyes and mouth of the younger brother, saying: &ldquo;Thou shalt not
+kill my first-born, wicked son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And while the younger brother was howling by reason of the pain from
+the embers, which blinded him, his mother took the knife from him, and
+while he was twisting this way <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb64"
+href="#pb64" name="pb64">64</a>]</span>and that, swinging up his arms
+to strike whomever he could, she threw him down, shut him up in the
+room, and went out dragging her first-born after her. Then, although
+she was feeble with age, she carried Halewyn up into the tower on her
+back, as a shepherd carries a lamb (for he had quite lost his senses),
+and there tended him and bathed his face and breast, which were torn
+and bleeding, and there at nightfall left him and went away.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIV.</span> Of the great
+weakness of Sir Halewyn and of the days and nights which he spent in
+the forest.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">The Miserable, alone and somewhat comforted, rose to
+his feet, and was right glad to feel the sickle still at his belt;
+opened the door, listened to make sure that he could hear nothing, and
+that his brother was not there.</p>
+<p>And when the night was fully dark, went down the stair slowly,
+sitting-wise.</p>
+<p>For he was so weakened by the blows and wounds he had received that
+he could not hold himself upright by any means; and in this fashion he
+went on until he reached the bridge, and, finding that still down,
+crossed over it.</p>
+<p>And very wearily he made his way to the forest.</p>
+<p>But he could not, on account of his weakness, go so far as the
+cottages, which were a good two leagues distant to the northward.</p>
+<p>So, lying down among the leaves, he sang.</p>
+<p>But no maid came, for the song could not be heard from so far
+away.</p>
+<p>And so passed the first day.</p>
+<p>When night came again, cold rain began to fall, which sent him into
+a fever. But notwithstanding this he would not go back to his castle,
+for fear of his brother. Shivering, and with his teeth a-chatter, he
+dragged himself northward through the brake, and saw in a clearing a
+fair pretty maid, rosy-cheeked, fresh, slender, and neat, and he sang
+his song. But the girl did not come to him.</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e1964width" id="p064"><img src="images/p064.jpg"
+alt="Sir Halewyn in the Wood" width="541" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">Sir Halewyn in the Wood</p>
+</div>
+<p><span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb65" href="#pb65" name=
+"pb65">65</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And so passed the second day.</p>
+<p>That night the rain fell anew, and he could not move, so stiff was
+he from the cold, and he sang, but no maid came. At dawn the rain
+continued, and while he was lying there among the leaves a wolf came
+and sniffed at him, thinking him dead, but on seeing it draw near he
+cried out in a terrible fashion, and the wolf took fright and went off.
+Then he grew hungry, but could find himself nothing to eat. At vespers
+he sang anew, but no maid came.</p>
+<p>And so passed the third day.</p>
+<p>Towards midnight the sky cleared, and the wind grew warmer. But the
+Miserable, though he was suffering greatly from hunger, thirst, and
+weariness, dared not sleep. On the morning of the fourth day he saw a
+girl coming towards him who seemed to be a burgess&rsquo;s daughter.
+The girl would have run away on seeing him, but he cried out loudly:
+&ldquo;Help me! I am worn out with hunger and sickness.&rdquo; Then she
+drew near to him and said: &ldquo;I also am hungry.&rdquo; &ldquo;Art
+thou,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;a maid? &ldquo; &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said
+she, &ldquo;I have had to flee from Bruges, because the priests would
+have burnt me alive, on account of a brown mole which I have on my
+neck, of the size of a pea, coming, they say, from my having had
+fleshly commerce with the devil. But I have never seen the devil, and
+do not know what he is like.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He, without listening to her, asked again if she were a virgin, and,
+as the girl said nothing, he sang his song.</p>
+<p>But she did not move from where she stood, only saying: &ldquo;You
+have a very sweet and strong voice for one so wasted with sickness and
+hunger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he said to her: &ldquo;I am the lord Siewert Halewyn. Go to my
+castle and ask to be taken to my lady mother, and without speaking to
+any one else, whosoever he be, tell her that her son is hard put to it
+in the forest with hunger, fever, and weariness, and will die before
+long if none bring him help.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb66"
+href="#pb66" name="pb66">66</a>]</span></p>
+<p>The girl went off as he bid her, but coming out of the wood she saw
+in the Gallows-field the body of the maid hanging, and ran away in a
+fright. Passing into the territory of Sir Roel de Heurne she craved
+food and drink at the cottage of one of his peasants. And there she
+told how she had found Sir Halewyn dying of hunger. But she was told in
+reply that the said lord was crueller and more wicked than the devil
+himself, and should be left to be eaten by the wolves and other beasts
+of the forest.</p>
+<p>And the Miserable waited, lying in the leaves in great anguish.</p>
+<p>And so passed the fourth day.</p>
+<p>And at dawn of the fifth, having seen no more of the girl, he
+supposed that she had been caught by the priests and taken back to
+Bruges to be burnt.</p>
+<p>Quite disheartened, and chilled with the cold, and saying that he
+would soon die, he cursed the Prince of the Stones.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless, at vespers he sang once more.</p>
+<p>And he was then by the side of a forest way.</p>
+<p>And he saw coming through the trees a fair maid, who fell on her
+knees before him.</p>
+<p>And he did to her as he had done to the others.</p>
+<p>Then rose full of fresh strength, vigour, and beauty, and with the
+heart resting against his own went off to the Gallows-field, carrying
+the body, and there hanged it by that of the first virgin.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XV.</span> How the Miserable,
+having hanged fifteen virgins in the Gallows-field, held wicked revels
+and cruel orgies.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Sir Halewyn became most powerful and greatly feared,
+and killed up to fifteen virgins, whom he hanged in the
+Gallows-field.</p>
+<p>And he led a riotous life, eating, drinking, and carousing
+continually.</p>
+<p>All those ladies who had made fun of him in the days of his
+impotence and ugliness were brought to his castle. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb67" href="#pb67" name="pb67">67</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And having had his will of them he turned them out of doors like
+bitches, so wreaking upon them his evil vengeance.</p>
+<p>And from Lille, Ghent, and Bruges came the most beautiful
+courtesans, with their badge on their arms, and they ministered to his
+pleasure and to that of his friends, among whom the more evil were
+<i>Diederich Pater-noster</i>, so called because he was a great
+frequenter of churches; <i>Nellin the Wolf</i>, who in battle attacked
+only the fallen, as wolves do; and <i>Baudouin Sans Ears</i>, who in
+his court of justice always cried: &ldquo;Death, death,&rdquo; without
+waiting to hear any defence whatever.</p>
+<p>In company with the fair courtesans these same lords held revels and
+orgies without end, and took from their poor peasants all they had,
+corn, cheese, jewels, cocks, oxen, calves, and swine.</p>
+<p>Then, having stuffed themselves as full as they could hold, threw to
+their dogs choice viands and rich cakes<span class="corr" id=
+"xd20e2035" title="Source: :">.</span></p>
+<p>Gave to be broken and pounded up for their hawks and falcons, the
+meat of fowls, cockerels, and doves; had the hooves of their horses
+bathed in wine.</p>
+<p>Oftentimes until midnight, or even until cock-crow, there would be
+beating of drums, trilling of pipes, squeaking of viols, skirling of
+bagpipes, and winding of horns, for their entertainment.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XVI.</span> How the burgesses
+of the good town of Ghent gave protection to the virgins of the domain
+of Halewyn.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Meanwhile in the cottages of the peasant folk were
+tears, hunger, and great misery.</p>
+<p>And when the fifteenth maid had been taken in the domain of
+Halewyn,</p>
+<p>The mothers prayed to God that he would make them barren, or else
+that they might bear men-children only.</p>
+<p>And the fathers complained and said to one another sadly: &ldquo;Is
+it not a pitiful thing to see these sweet and gentle flowers of youth
+so brought to death and dishonour!&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb68" href="#pb68" name="pb68">68</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And some among them said: &ldquo;Let us go by night to the good town
+of Ghent, taking with us all our virgin daughters, and tell the whole
+tale to the burgesses, begging their blessed protection for them, and
+leaving them there in the town if we are so permitted. So they will
+escape death at the hands of our master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Every one who heard this plan thought it a good one; and all the
+peasants with daughters who were virgins took them off to Ghent, and
+there told the story to the commune, and the good men gave them
+protection.</p>
+<p>Then with lighter hearts the peasants returned to the domain of
+Halewyn.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XVII.</span> Of what Sir
+Halewyn did on the borders of his domain.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Not long afterwards a hard winter set in, with bitter
+cold and furious storm.</p>
+<p>And the heart of the fifteenth virgin no longer beat strong against
+Sir Halewyn&rsquo;s breast.</p>
+<p>And he sang, but none came. Wherefore he was disappointed and
+angry.</p>
+<p>But calling to mind that there were, in the castle of Sir Roel de
+Heurne, two girls supposed by common report to be virgins,</p>
+<p>And that this castle was no more than the fifth part of a league
+from the borders of his land,</p>
+<p>And that therefore the two maids would be able to hear and come to
+the call of his song,</p>
+<p>He went each night and stationed himself on the farthest border of
+his demesne, and there sang towards the said castle, notwithstanding
+the bitter cold, and the snow beginning to fall abundantly.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XVIII.</span> Of the damosels
+Magtelt and Anne-Mie, and of Schimmel the dapple-gray.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">While the Miserable was roaming the woods, Sir Roel de
+Heurne and the lady Gonde, his wife, richly clad, and wrapt
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb69" href="#pb69" name=
+"pb69">69</a>]</span>round with deer-skins, which give particular
+warmth to the body, were sitting snugly on their coffers before their
+good fire of oaken logs, chatting together as old folk will.</p>
+<p>But it was the Lady Gonde who spoke most, being the woman.</p>
+<p>And she said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My good man, do you hear the storm raging furiously in the
+forest?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered Sir Roel.</p>
+<p>And his lady said further:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God has been kind to give us, against this great cold, such a
+fine castle so strongly built, such good clothes, and such a bright
+fire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But above all,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;he has shown us his
+divine grace by giving us such good and brave children.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; answered the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;nowhere could you find a young
+man more valiant, courteous, gentle, and fitter to uphold our name than
+Toon, our son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Sire, &ldquo;he has saved my life in
+battle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said his lady, &ldquo;he has this fault, that he
+is so scant of words that we scarce know the tone of his voice. He is
+well called the Silent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is better worth to a man,&rdquo; said the Sire,
+&ldquo;in a good sword than in a long tongue.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here I see you, my lord,&rdquo; said the lady, &ldquo;pent up
+with your reflections, for sadness and gravity are the lot of old age,
+but I know well a certain maid who would smooth out your forehead and
+set you laughing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis possible,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;it is certainly possible, for
+when Magtelt our daughter comes into this room, I shall see my lord and
+husband turn happy at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words Sir Roel nodded his head and smiled a little.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb70" href="#pb70" name=
+"pb70">70</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; said his lady, &ldquo;for when Magtelt
+laughs, then laughs my old Roel; when she sings, then my old Roel grows
+thoughtful and nods his head happily, and if she passes by, he follows
+with smiling eyes each step of his little daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True, Gonde,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;for who is the well-being
+and joy of this house? &rsquo;Tis not I, who am old, and losing my
+teeth one by one; nor you either, my fellow in antiquity; nor the
+Silent either; nor Anne-Mie the private servant, who, though she is
+very sweet and healthy in her person, is something too quiet in her
+ways, and laughs only when she is set laughing. But she who makes our
+old age happy, she who is the nightingale in the house, she who is
+always coming and going, passing and repassing, flying hither and
+thither, singing and singing again, as happy as a peal of bells at
+Christmastide: &rsquo;tis our good daughter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So it is,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said his lady further, &ldquo;it is a happy thing
+for us to have such a child, since both of us have already cold in our
+feet at all seasons. For without her we should pass our time in
+sadness, and from our old feet the cold would creep up to our hearts,
+and so we should be taken to our graves more quickly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, wife,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;another damosel would have wished
+for love-suitors, and to go to the court of My Lord to get a husband.
+But our little maid gives no thought to that, for hereabout she loves
+no one but ourselves, and her who goes everywhere with her, and is as a
+sister to her, Anne-Mie the private servant; but not without teasing
+her a little in order to make her laugh.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;True,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; said his lady, &ldquo;and every one loves
+her, admires her, and respects her, pages, grooms, varlets,
+men-at-arms, private servants, serfs, and peasants, so joyous and
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb71" href="#pb71" name=
+"pb71">71</a>]</span>merry is she, so brave and gentle is her bearing.
+There is no one, even down to Schimmel, the great war-horse, who does
+not follow her like a dog. Ah! When he sees her coming he whinnies
+joyously; and she alone must bring him his oats and corn; from none
+other will he take a grain. She treats him like a man, and often gives
+him a great draught of <i>clauwaert</i>, which he drinks up with
+relish. She makes herself understood to him by words, but she must
+never be cross with him, or he makes as if to weep, and looks at her
+with so sad a manner that she cannot withstand it and then calls him to
+her, saying: &lsquo;Beautiful Schimmel, brave Schimmel,&rsquo; and
+other soft words; hearing which the good dapple-gray gets up and comes
+close to her to have more compliments. He suffers no one on his back
+but she, and when he is carrying her he is as proud as My Lord of
+Flanders at the head of his good barons and knights. So she has her
+sovereignty over every one, by joyousness, goodness, and fair
+speaking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said his lady, &ldquo;may the very good God watch
+over our little one, and may our old ears hear this fledgeling
+nightingale singing always.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Amen,&rdquo; said the Sire.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIX.</span> How Magtelt sang
+to Sir Roel the lied of the Lion, and the song of the Four
+Witches.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">While Sir Roel and the lady Gonde were talking
+together,</p>
+<p>The snow had fallen in great quantity,</p>
+<p>And had quite covered Magtelt and Anne-Mie, who were coming back
+from having taken an eagle-stone to the wife of Josse, for her to bind
+to her left thigh and so get ease in her lying-in.</p>
+<p>And the girls came into the great hall, where Sir Roel was sitting
+with his good wife.</p>
+<p>Magtelt, drawing close to her father, knelt to him in salutation.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb72" href="#pb72" name=
+"pb72">72</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And Sir Roel, having raised her up, kissed her on the brow.</p>
+<p>But Anne-Mie stayed quietly in a corner, as became a private
+servant.</p>
+<p>And it was a good sight to see these two maids wholly covered with
+snow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jesus-Maria,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde, &ldquo;see these two
+sillies, what have they been doing to get themselves clothed in snow in
+this fashion? To the fire quickly, children; draw to the fire and dry
+yourselves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence, wife,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;you make youth
+faint-heart. In my young days I went through cold, snow, hail, thunder,
+and tempest without a thought. And so do I still, when there is need
+to, and I will have Magtelt do the same. Thanks be to God! &rsquo;tis
+not from a fire of logs that a daughter of ours must get warmth, but
+from the natural fire which burns in the bodies of the children of old
+Roel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt, seeing him about to grow angry, went and knelt at his
+feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord father,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;we are not cold at all,
+for we have been leaping, dancing and frolicking so heartily, thumping
+and drubbing each other, that we turned winter into spring; furthermore
+we sang some fine songs, which I beg you will give me leave to sing
+over again to you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I will, little one,&rdquo; said Sir Roel. So Magtelt sang
+him the <i>lied</i>, of Roeland de Heurne <i>the Lion</i>, who came
+back from the Holy Land, and brought thence a great sword; and also the
+song of the <i>Four Witches</i>, wherein you may hear mewling of cats,
+bleating of goats, and the noise which they make with their tails in
+rainy weather.</p>
+<p>And Sir Roel forgot his anger.</p>
+<p>When Magtelt had done singing he caused supper to be served and the
+cross lit up, which threw over them a bright light from the four lamps
+burning at the end of each arm.</p>
+<p>And he made his daughter sit at his side. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb73" href="#pb73" name="pb73">73</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Anne-Mie came likewise to sit at table, beside the lady Gonde, who
+said: &ldquo;Young company warms old folk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And there were served to them that evening fine white bread, beef
+salted and smoked in the chimney among the sweet smoke of fir-cones,
+Ghent sausage, which was invented, they say, by <i>Boudwin the
+Glutton</i>, bastard of Flanders, and old <i>clauwaert</i>.</p>
+<p>Supper finished, and a prayer spoken, Magtelt and Anne-Mie went off
+to bed, in the same room, for Magtelt loved Anne-Mie like a sister and
+would have her by her side at all times.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XX.</span> Of the sixteenth
+virgin hanged.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Magtelt, with laughter, singing, and frolic, soon fell
+asleep.</p>
+<p>But Anne-Mie, being somewhat cold, could not close her eyes.</p>
+<p>And the Miserable came and stationed himself on the border of his
+land. Thence his voice rang out clear, soft, and melodious.</p>
+<p>And Anne-Mie heard it, and, forgetting that she was but lightly
+clad, rose up and went out of the castle by the postern.</p>
+<p>When she came into the open the snow smote harshly on her face, her
+breast, and her shoulders.</p>
+<p>And she tried to shield herself against this bitter cold and evil
+snow, but could not, for she had lain down to sleep nearly naked.</p>
+<p>Going towards the song she passed barefoot across the moat, whereof
+the water was hard frozen.</p>
+<p>And trying to mount the farther bank, which was high and slippery,
+she fell;</p>
+<p>And cut a great wound in her knee.</p>
+<p>Having picked herself up she entered the forest, wounding her bare
+feet on the stones, and her numbed body on the branches of trees.</p>
+<p>But she went her way without heeding.</p>
+<p>When she drew near to the Miserable she fell on her <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb74" href="#pb74" name="pb74">74</a>]</span>knees
+before him. And he did to her as he had done to the others.</p>
+<p>And Anne-Mie was the sixteenth virgin hanged in the
+Gallows-field.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXI.</span> How Magtelt
+sought Anne-Mie.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On the morrow Magtelt, being, as was customary, the
+first awake, said her prayers to My Lord Jesus and to Madam Saint
+Magtelt, her blessed patron.</p>
+<p>Having besought them earnestly for Sir Roel, the lady Gonde, the
+Silent, and all the household, most particularly for Anne-Mie, she
+looked at the maid&rsquo;s bed, and seeing its curtains half drawn she
+supposed that her companion was still asleep; and so, putting on her
+fine clothes, she kept saying as she moved up and down the room, or
+looked at herself in the mirror-glass:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho, Anne-Mie, wake up, wake up, Anne-Mie! Who sleeps late
+comes last to grass. The sparrows are awake and the hens also, and
+already their eggs are laid. Wake up, Anne-Mie, Schimmel is neighing in
+the stable, and the sun is shining bright on the snow; my lord father
+is scolding the servants, and my lady mother is interceding for them.
+Canst not smell the savoury odour of beans and good beef broiled with
+spices? I can smell it well enough, and it makes me hungry; wake up,
+Anne-Mie.&rdquo; But the girl could not possess herself in patience any
+longer, and threw the curtains wide open.</p>
+<p>Finding no Anne-Mie: &ldquo;There!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;the
+rogue, she has gone down without me; and without me, no doubt, is at
+this same moment eating those good beans and beef.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And going down the stairs at a run Magtelt entered the great hall,
+where, seeing Sir Roel her father, she knelt to him and asked his
+blessing, and then likewise to the lady Gonde.</p>
+<p>But her mother said to her: &ldquo;Where is Anne-Mie?&rdquo;
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb75" href="#pb75" name=
+"pb75">75</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot tell,&rdquo; said Magtelt, &ldquo;she is having some
+fun with us, I suppose, hidden in some corner.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;is not her way, for if any
+one here makes fun of others &rsquo;tis not she, but thou, little
+one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord father,&rdquo; said Magtelt, &ldquo;you make me
+anxious by talking so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;go and seek Anne-Mie; as
+for us, mother, let us eat; our old stomachs cannot wait for food as
+well as these young ones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde, &ldquo;I have no mind to eat;
+go, Magtelt, and find me Anne-Mie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Sir Roel helped himself to a great platterful of beans and good
+beef, and, falling to it, said that nothing was so easily put out,
+troubled, made anxious, as a woman, and this for nothing at all.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless he was himself a little uneasy, and from time to time
+looked up at the door, saying that the rascal of a girl would show
+herself suddenly from somewhere.</p>
+<p>But Magtelt, after searching the whole castle over, came back and
+said: &ldquo;I can find Anne-Mie nowhere.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXII.</span> How Magtelt wept
+bitterly, and of the fine dress which she had.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">And Magtelt had great sorrow in her heart, and wept,
+and made lament, crying: &ldquo;Anne-Mie, where art thou? Would I could
+see thee again!&rdquo; And falling on her knees before Sir Roel, she
+said: &ldquo;My lord father, I pray you to send our men-at-arms in
+goodly number in search for Anne-Mie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I will,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>The men-at-arms went out, but dared not pass on to the lands of
+Halewyn from fear of the spell.</p>
+<p>And on their return they said: &ldquo;We can hear nothing of
+Anne-Mie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Magtelt went up and stretched herself on her bed, and prayed to
+the good God to send her back her sweet comrade. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb76" href="#pb76" name="pb76">76</a>]</span></p>
+<p>On the second day she went and sat before the glazed window, and
+without intermission looked out all day at the countryside and the
+falling snow, and watched to see if Anne-Mie were coming.</p>
+<p>But Anne-Mie could not come.</p>
+<p>And on the third day the lids of her eyes bled for weeping. And on
+that day the snow ceased falling, the sky became clear, the sun shone
+therein, and the earth was hard frozen.</p>
+<p>And every day in the same place went and sat the sorrowing Magtelt,
+watching the countryside, thinking of Anne-Mie and saying nothing.</p>
+<p>Sir Roel, seeing her so low-hearted, sent to Bruges for some blue
+cloth-of-scarlet, for her to make herself a dress, and fine Cyprian
+gold for the border, and fine gold buttons of rich workmanship.</p>
+<p>Magtelt worked away at making this dress, but took no pleasure at
+all at the thought of all this fine apparel.</p>
+<p>And so passed away the week, and each day Magtelt worked at her
+dress, saying nothing and singing never, but weeping oftentimes.</p>
+<p>On the fifth day, when the dress was finished, well trimmed with the
+Cyprian gold and embellished with the rich buttons, the lady Gonde bade
+Magtelt don it, and then showed her her magnificence in a great
+mirror-glass; but Magtelt had no heart to be glad at seeing herself so
+beautiful, for she was thinking of Anne-Mie.</p>
+<p>And the lady Gonde, seeing how sad she was and silent, wept also,
+saying: &ldquo;Since our Magtelt stopped singing I have felt more
+bitterly the chill of winter and old age.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Sir Roel made no murmur, but became sullen and pensive, and
+drank <i>clauwaert</i> all day.</p>
+<p>And at times, turning angry, he bade Magtelt sing and be
+cheerful.</p>
+<p>And the maid sang merry <i>lieds</i> to the old man, who then turned
+joyous again, and Gonde as well.</p>
+<p>And they spent all their time before the fire, nodding <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb77" href="#pb77" name="pb77">77</a>]</span>their
+heads. And they said: &ldquo;The nightingale is come back again to the
+house, and her music makes the fires of spring sunshine stir in our
+bones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Magtelt, having done singing, would go off to hide herself in a
+corner and weep for Anne-Mie.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXIII.</span> Of Toon the
+Silent.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On the eighth day, the Silent went wolf-hunting.</p>
+<p>Following a certain beast he rode into the domain of Halewyn.</p>
+<p>And at vespers the lady Gonde, leaving the great hall to go to the
+kitchen for the ordering of supper, on opening the door saw Toon before
+her. He seemed loth to come in, and hung his head as if with shame.</p>
+<p>The lady Gonde, going to him, said: &ldquo;My son, why do you not
+come into the hall to bid good evening to the lord your
+father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Silent, without answering, went into the hall, and muttering
+short and sullen words by way of salutation, went to sit in the darkest
+corner.</p>
+<p>And the lady Gonde said to Sir Roel: &ldquo;Our son is angry at
+something, I think, since he goes off into a dark corner far away from
+us, against his habit.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Roel said to the Silent: &ldquo;Son, come hither to the light
+that we may see thy face.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He obeyed, and Sir Roel, the lady Gonde, and the sorrowing Magtelt
+saw that he was bleeding from the head and from the neck, and cast down
+his eyes, not daring to look them in the face.</p>
+<p>The lady Gonde cried out with fright on seeing the blood, and
+Magtelt came to him, and Sir Roel said: &ldquo;Who has given my son
+this shamed countenance, this downcast heart, and these wounds in his
+body?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Silent answered: &ldquo;Siewert Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;was my son so presumptuous
+as to attack the Invincible?&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb78"
+href="#pb78" name="pb78">78</a>]</span></p>
+<p>The Silent answered: &ldquo;Anne-Mie hanged in the Gallows-field of
+Siewert Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Woe!&rdquo; cried Sir Roel, &ldquo;our poor maid hanged!
+shame and sorrow upon us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord God,&rdquo; said Gonde, &ldquo;you smite us hard
+indeed.&rdquo; And she wept.</p>
+<p>But Magtelt could neither weep nor speak from the bitterness of the
+grief which laid hold upon her.</p>
+<p>And she looked at her brother fixedly, and his sunken face blenched,
+and from the wounds against his eyes dropped tears of blood, and his
+body was shaken with spasms.</p>
+<p>And the Silent sank into a seat, weeping dully like a wounded
+lion.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ha,&rdquo; quoth Sir Roel, hiding his face, &ldquo;this is
+the first man of the house of Heurne that has found need to sit
+weeping. Shame upon us, and without redress, for there is a spell
+woven.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the Silent stuffed his fingers into the wound in his neck,
+pressing out the blood; but he felt nothing of the pain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Toon,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde, &ldquo;do not dirty your
+wound with your fingers in this wise; you will poison it, my
+son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the Silent did not seem to hear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Toon,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde, &ldquo;do not do it; I,
+your mother, order you. Let me wash away this blood and dress with
+ointment these ugly sores.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While she hurried to prepare the ointment and to warm the water in a
+washing-basin, Toon did not cease his groaning and weeping. And he tore
+out the hair from his beard in a rage.</p>
+<p>And Sir Roel, watching him, said: &ldquo;When a man weeps &rsquo;tis
+blood and shame, shame without redress. Halewyn has a spell. Ah,
+presumptuous one, must thou then go to his castle to brave the
+Invincible?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Woe, my lord,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde, &ldquo;be not so
+bitter <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb79" href="#pb79" name=
+"pb79">79</a>]</span>angry with the Silent, for he showed fine courage
+in wishing to avenge Anne-Mie on the Miserable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;fine courage that brings
+shame to our house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;tell, Toon, the tale to thy
+father, to show him that thou art a worthy son to him none the
+less.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish it,&rdquo; said Sir Roel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord father,&rdquo; said the Silent, groaning, and
+speaking in short breaths, &ldquo;Anne-Mie hanging, Siewert Halewyn
+near to the gallows. He was laughing. I ran at him, cutting at his
+belly with my sword in the fashion of a cross to break the spell.
+Invincible! He laughed, saying: &lsquo;I will take Magtelt.&rsquo; I
+struck him with a knife; the blade turned. He laughed. He said:
+&lsquo;I do not care for punishment, be off.&rsquo; I did not go. I
+struck him with sword and knife together; in vain. He laughed. He said
+again: &lsquo;Be off.&rsquo; I could not. Then he struck me with the
+flat of his sword in the neck and breast, and with the hilt in the
+back, like a serf. He laughed. I lost sense from the blows. Beaten like
+a serf, my lord father, I could do naught against him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Roel, having heard Toon speak, was less angered, understanding
+that he had not been presumptuous, thinking also of his great pain and
+of his bitter groaning and his grievous shame.</p>
+<p>With the ointment ready and the water warm, the lady Gonde set to
+work to dress the wounds of her son, particularly that on his neck,
+which was a deep one.</p>
+<p>But Magtelt wept never a tear, and soon went off to her bed, not
+without a blessing from Sir Roel her father, and her lady mother.</p>
+<p>The three stayed a long while together before the fire, father,
+mother, and son, without a word spoken, for the Silent, moaning all the
+while, could not bear his defeat, and the lady Gonde wept and prayed;
+and Sir Roel, sad and ashamed, hid his face. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb80" href="#pb80" name="pb80">80</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXIV.</span> How the damosel
+Magtelt made a good resolution.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Magtelt, before she lay down on her bed, prayed, but
+not aloud. And her face was hard set with anger.</p>
+<p>And having undressed she lay down in her bed, tugging at her breast
+with her finger-nails from time to time, as if she were fighting for
+breath.</p>
+<p>And her breathing was as if she were in agony.</p>
+<p>For she was bitter sad and out of heart.</p>
+<p>But she did not weep.</p>
+<p>And she heard the high wind, forerunner of snow, lifting over the
+forest, and roaring like a stream in spate after heavy rain.</p>
+<p>And it tossed against the window glass dried leaves and branches,
+which beat on the pane like dead men&rsquo;s finger-nails.</p>
+<p>And it howled and whistled sadly in the chimney.</p>
+<p>And the sorrowing maid saw in her mind&rsquo;s eye Anne-Mie hanging
+in the Gallows-field and her poor body pecked by the crows, and she
+thought of the stain on her brave brother&rsquo;s honour, and of the
+fifteen poor virgins outraged by the Miserable.</p>
+<p>But she did not weep.</p>
+<p>For in her breast was a dumb pain, harsh anguish, and a bitter
+thirst for vengeance.</p>
+<p>And she asked very humbly of Our Lady if it were a good thing to let
+the Miserable any longer go killing the maidens of the land of
+Flanders.</p>
+<p>And at cock-crow she rose from her bed, and her eyes were bright,
+and proud was her countenance, and her head held high, and she said:
+&ldquo;I will go to Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And throwing herself on her knees she prayed to the very strong God
+to give her courage and strength for the revenge of Anne-Mie, Toon the
+Silent, and the fifteen virgins.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXV.</span> Of the sword of
+the Lion.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">At sun-up she went to Sir Roel, who was still in bed,
+on account of the cold. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb81" href=
+"#pb81" name="pb81">81</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Seeing her come in and fall on her knees before him, he said:
+&ldquo;What wilt thou, little one?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord father,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;may I go to
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At this he became afraid, and saw well enough that Magtelt, unable
+to rid her heart of the thought of Anne-Mie, was minded to avenge her.
+And he said with love and anger:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my daughter, no, not thou; who goes there will not come
+again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But seeing her go out of the room he never supposed that she would
+fail in her obedience.</p>
+<p>And Magtelt went thence to the lady Gonde, who was praying in the
+chapel for the repose of Anne-Mie&rsquo;s soul; and she pulled at her
+mother&rsquo;s dress, to show that she was there.</p>
+<p>When the lady Gonde turned her head, Magtelt fell on her knees
+before her:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;may I go to
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But her lady mother: &ldquo;Oh no, child, no, not thou; who goes
+there will not come again!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so saying, she opened her arms and let fall the golden ball
+wherewith she warmed her hands, so that the embers spread this way and
+that on the floor. Then she fell to moaning, weeping, trembling, and
+chattering with her teeth, and embraced the girl tightly as if she
+would never let her go.</p>
+<p>But she never supposed that she could fail in her obedience.</p>
+<p>And Magtelt went thence to Toon, who, despite his wounds, was
+already out of bed, and seated on his coffer, warming himself before a
+new-lit fire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;may I go to
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Saying this she held herself straight before him.</p>
+<p>The Silent lifted his head and looked at her severely, waiting for
+her to speak further.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Siewert Halewyn has killed
+this sweet maid whom I loved; and has done the same to fifteen other
+pitiful virgins, who are hanging in the Gallows-field <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb82" href="#pb82" name=
+"pb82">82</a>]</span>shamefully; he is for this country a greater evil
+than war, death, and pestilence; brother, I would kill him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Toon looked at Magtelt and answered nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;thou must not refuse me, for
+my heart bids me go. Canst thou not see how sad and downcast I am in
+this house, and how I shall die of sorrow if I do not that which I
+should. But having been to him I shall come back joyous and singing as
+before.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the Silent said not a word.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;dost fear for me, seeing how many
+good knights have assailed him and been by him shamefully overthrown,
+even thyself, my brave brother, who carriest even now his marks? I am
+not ignorant that on his shield is written: &lsquo;None can stand
+against me.&rsquo; But what others could not, one may do. He goes
+glorying in his strength, more terrible than an oliphant, prouder than
+a lion, thinking himself invincible, but when the beast goes with
+assurance the hunter follows the more easily. Brother, may I go to
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Magtelt had reached so far in her speech, suddenly there fell
+from the wall whereon it was fastened a fair sword well set and
+sharpened, and with the blade stout to the hilt. The handpiece was of
+cedar of Lebanon, set out with golden cresslets, and in the castle this
+sword was held to be of marvellous virtue and holiness, because it had
+been brought from the crusade by Roeland de Heurne, <i>the Lion</i>.
+And none dared use it.</p>
+<p>The sword, falling, lay at the feet of Magtelt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; said Magtelt, crossing herself, &ldquo;the
+good sword of the Lion has fallen at my feet; &rsquo;tis the very
+strong God showing thus his will. He must be obeyed, brother; let me go
+to Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Toon the Silent, crossing himself as Magtelt had done,
+answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis all one to me where thou go, if thou cherish thine
+honour and carry thy crown straight.&rdquo; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb83" href="#pb83" name="pb83">83</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Brother,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I thank you.&rdquo; And the
+noble maid began to tremble mightily from head to foot; and she who had
+not shed a tear on hearing of Anne-Mie&rsquo;s death and her
+brother&rsquo;s dishonour, fell to weeping abundantly, whereby her
+bitter anger was melted, and bursting into tears by reason of her great
+joy she said again: &ldquo;Brother, brother, &rsquo;tis the hour of
+God! I go to the reckoning!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she took the good sword.</p>
+<p>The Silent, seeing her so brave, lifted himself straight before her
+and put his hand on her shoulder. &ldquo;Go,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>And she went out.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXVI.</span> Of the noble
+apparel of the maid Magtelt.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">In her own room she dressed herself in her most
+beautiful clothes as quickly as she could.</p>
+<p>What did the fair maid put on her white body? A bodice finer than
+silk.</p>
+<p>And over the fine bodice?</p>
+<p>A robe of cloth-of-scarlet of Flemish blue, whereon were the arms of
+<i>de Heurne</i> marvellously worked, and the edges next to the feet
+and the neck embroidered with fine Cyprian gold.</p>
+<p>Wherewith did the fair maid bind in her slender waist?</p>
+<p>With a girdle of the hide of a lion, studded with gold.</p>
+<p>What had the fair maid on her beautiful shoulders?</p>
+<p>Her great <i>keirle</i>, which was of cramoisy stitched with Cyprian
+gold, and covered her from head to foot, for it was an ample cloak.</p>
+<p>What had the fair maid on her proud head?</p>
+<p>A fine crown of beaten gold, whence fell tresses of pale hair as
+long as herself.</p>
+<p>What held she in her little hand?</p>
+<p>The blessed sword brought from the crusade.</p>
+<p>So apparelled she went out to the stable, and harnessed Schimmel,
+the great war-horse, with his saddle of State, a <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb84" href="#pb84" name="pb84">84</a>]</span>fine
+leathern seat, painted in divers colours, and richly worked with
+gold.</p>
+<p>And they set out together, through the snow falling thickly.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXVII.</span> How Sir Roel
+and the lady Gonde questioned Toon the Silent, and of what he
+answered.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">While Magtelt was on her way to Halewyn, and when the
+first hour of her journey had already gone by, the lady Gonde
+questioned Sir Roel: &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;do you know
+where our daughter may be?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Roel said that he knew nothing of it; and speaking to the
+Silent: &ldquo;Son,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;dost thou know where thy
+sister has gone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Silent answered quietly: &ldquo;Magtelt is a brave maid; whom
+God leads he leads well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde, &ldquo;do not put yourself
+to the trouble of questioning him further, for saying so much he has
+used up his words.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Sir Roel to Toon: &ldquo;Son, dost thou not know where she
+is?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Magtelt,&rdquo; answered he, &ldquo;is a fair maid, and
+carries her crown straight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; exclaimed the lady Gonde, &ldquo;I am growing
+anxious; where is she then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she went off to search the castle thoroughly.</p>
+<p>But coming back she said to Sir Roel: &ldquo;She is nowhere in the
+house; she has defied our orders and gone to Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Roel, &ldquo;that cannot be. Children, in
+this country, were always obedient to their parents.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Toon,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;where is she? Toon, do you not
+know?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Miserable,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;fears the beautiful
+maid; whom God leads he leads well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Roel,&rdquo; cried out the lady Gonde, &ldquo;he knows where
+our Magtelt has gone!&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb85" href=
+"#pb85" name="pb85">85</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Son, answer,&rdquo; said Sir Roel.</p>
+<p>The Silent answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The sword of the crusade fell from the wall at the
+maid&rsquo;s feet. Whom God guides succeeds in everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Toon,&rdquo; cried the lady Gonde, &ldquo;where is
+Magtelt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The virgin,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;rides without fear, she
+goes faster than the armed man: whom God leads he leads
+well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lady Gonde groaned:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;our Magtelt will be killed, even
+now she is stiff frozen, sweet Jesus! The sword of the crusade is of no
+avail against Siewert Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Silent answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He glories in his strength, thinking himself invincible, but
+when the beast goes with assurance the hunter follows more
+easily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wicked son, how couldst thou think to send the little bird to
+the hawk, the virgin to the enemy of virgins?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Silent answered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She will come whither none looks to see her: whom God leads
+he leads well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said the lady Gonde to Roel, &ldquo;you hear what
+he says; she has gone to Halewyn, and &rsquo;tis this wicked son that
+gave her leave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Roel going to Toon:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Son,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we had here but one joy, that was
+our Magtelt. Thou hast abused thy privilege in giving her leave to go
+thither. If she comes not back to us by nightfall I will curse thee and
+banish thee from my house. May God hear me, and take from thee, in this
+world bread and salt, and in the other thy portion in
+Paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God,&rdquo; said the Silent, &ldquo;will guide the sword.
+Whosoever has done wrong, on him let fall the punishment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Gonde began crying out, weeping and making dole. Roel bade her be
+silent, and sent a goodly troop of men-at-arms in the direction she had
+taken. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb86" href="#pb86" name=
+"pb86">86</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But they came back without having seen anything of Magtelt, for they
+had not dared to go into the territory of Halewyn by reason of the
+spell.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXVIII.</span> The riding of
+the maid Magtelt.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Singing and winding her horn, rides the noble
+damosel.</p>
+<p>And she is beautiful with a beauty from heaven; fresh and rosy are
+her cheeks.</p>
+<p>And straight she carries her crown.</p>
+<p>And her little hand holds fast beneath her <i>keirle</i> the good
+sword of Roel the Lion.</p>
+<p>And wide open are her fearless eyes, searching the forest for Sir
+Halewyn.</p>
+<p>And she listens for the sound of his horse.</p>
+<p>But she hears nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.</p>
+<p>And she sees nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.</p>
+<p>What is it makes the flame glow in her clear brown eyes? It is her
+high courage.</p>
+<p>Why does she carry so straight her head and her crown? Because of
+the great strength in her heart.</p>
+<p>What is it so swells her breast? The cruel thought of Anne-Mie, and
+her brother&rsquo;s shame and the great crimes of Sir Halewyn.</p>
+<p>And ceaselessly she looks to see if he be not coming, and if she can
+hear nothing of the sound of his horse.</p>
+<p>But she sees nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.</p>
+<p>And she hears nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.</p>
+<p>And she sings.</p>
+<p>Then, speaking to Schimmel, she said: &ldquo;Together, good
+Schimmel, we are going to a lion. Canst not see him <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb87" href="#pb87" name="pb87">87</a>]</span>in his
+cavern, awaiting passers-by, and devouring poor maids?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Schimmel, hearing her, whinnied joyously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Schimmel,&rdquo; said Magtelt, &ldquo;thou art glad, I see,
+to be going to the revenge of Anne-Mie with the good sword.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Schimmel whinnied a second time.</p>
+<p>And Magtelt sought Sir Halewyn everywhere as she went through the
+forest. And she listened well for the sound of his horse, and looked to
+see if he were nowhere coming.</p>
+<p>And she saw nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.</p>
+<p>And she heard nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.</p>
+<p>And she wound her horn.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXIX.</span> Of the crow and
+the sparrow, of the hound, the horse and the seven echoes.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">When she reached the middle part of the forest, she
+saw through the thick snowflakes Sir Halewyn coming towards her.</p>
+<p>The Miserable had that day on his body a fine dress of blue cloth,
+on which was broidered in two colours his ugly arms. Round his waist he
+had a fair belt studded with lumps of gold, and at his belt the golden
+sickle, and over his dress a fair <i>opperst-kleed</i> of corn-coloured
+cloth-of-scarlet.</p>
+<p>Riding on his roan horse he came up to Magtelt, and she saw that he
+was handsome.</p>
+<p>Before his horse, barking and making a great noise, ran a hound like
+a wolf, which, on seeing Schimmel, leapt at him and bit him. But
+Schimmel, with a great kick which he let fly, set him dancing a sorry
+dance, and singing a pitiful song over his broken paw.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; thought the maid, &ldquo;God grant, brave
+Schimmel, that I may do better for the master than thou hast done for
+the dog.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb88" href="#pb88" name=
+"pb88">88</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And the Miserable came to her:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Salutation,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;fair maid with clear brown
+eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Salutation,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Siewert Halewyn the
+Invincible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the Miserable: &ldquo;What brings thee,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;into my lands?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My heart,&rdquo; said Magtelt, &ldquo;bade me come, I wished
+greatly to see thee, and am content now that I can look at thee face to
+face.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;have done and shall do all
+virgins, even more beautiful than thou art.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While they were talking together the wounded hound made a rush at
+the horse and hung on to Halewyn&rsquo;s <i>opperst-kleed</i> as if he
+would drag him down to the ground.</p>
+<p>Having done this, he went off and sat down in the snow beside the
+road, and there lifting up his muzzle howled most lamentably.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;my hound crying out to death.
+Hast no fear, maid?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I go,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;in God&rsquo;s
+keeping.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having moved forward a little way, talking and riding together, they
+saw in the air above their heads, a crow of great size, on whose neck
+was perched an angry little sparrow, pecking him, clutching him,
+pulling out his feathers and piping furiously. Wounded, torn open,
+flying this way and that, right, left, upward, downward, banging
+against the trees blindly, and croaking with pain, this crow at length
+fell dead, with his eyes pecked out, across Halewyn&rsquo;s saddle.
+Having looked at it a moment, he tossed it aside into the road; while
+the sparrow flew off to a bough, and there, shaking out his feathers
+merrily, fell a-piping at the top of his voice in celebration of his
+victory.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Magtelt, laughing to the sparrow, &ldquo;thou
+art of noble blood, little bird; come hither, I will find thee a fair
+cage and give thee thy fill of wheat, millet, hemp, and linseed.&rdquo;
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb89" href="#pb89" name=
+"pb89">89</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But Halewyn became mightily angry: &ldquo;Common little
+insolent!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;would that I had thee in a snare!
+Shouldst not then sing for long thy victory over this noble
+crow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>None the less the sparrow went on singing without a break, and in
+this wise seemed to mock at Halewyn, who said to Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dost dare to applaud and give heart to this little animal,
+knowing that my shield bears on it the crow of my glorious ancestor
+Dirk! Knowest thou not that like him thou hast but little longer to
+sing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;shall sing as long as it pleases
+God, my master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is for thee,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;no other master
+than I, for here I rule alone.&rdquo; Suddenly he turned very cold, for
+the heart of Anne-Mie, though it still beat, was become like ice in his
+breast. So, thinking that this heart was about to dry up, he said to
+Magtelt: &ldquo;Thou comest in good season, fair virgin.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whom God leads,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;comes always in good
+season.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;who art thou, riding in my land,
+singing and winding the horn, who bringest hither such insolent
+talk?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;am the Lady Magtelt, daughter of
+Roel <i>le Preux</i>, Lord of Heurne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;art thou not chilled, riding thus
+in the snow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;feels the cold in the race of
+the Lords of Heurne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;hast thou no fear, here at my
+side and on my own land, where no one dares to set foot?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;knows of fear in the race of
+the Lords of Heurne.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou art,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;a brave maid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;am daughter of Roel <i>le
+Preux</i>, Lord of Heurne.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb90"
+href="#pb90" name="pb90">90</a>]</span></p>
+<p>He answered nothing to that, and they went on a while without
+speaking.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he said, lifting his head arrogantly: &ldquo;Am I not truly
+the Invincible, the Beautiful, the Strong? Shall I not be so always?
+Yes, for all things come to my aid in the hour of victory. In former
+times I must needs sing, in cold, snow, wind, and darkness, to call
+virgins to me, but now the most proud, noble, and beautiful of maids
+comes hither in broad day without song to call her: sure sign of
+growing power. Who is my equal? None, save God. He has the heavens and
+I the earth, and over all living things triumph and mastery. Let come
+what may, armies, lightning, thunder, tempest; who can stand but
+I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I!&rdquo; answered to his hideous blasphemy seven voices
+speaking together.</p>
+<p>Those voices were the echo of the <i>Seven Giants</i>, which sent
+back every sound seven times over with great force and volume.</p>
+<p>But the Miserable: &ldquo;Hark!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;my Lord Echo
+dares to mock the Invincible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he burst <span class="corr" id="xd20e2798" title=
+"Source: our">out</span> laughing.</p>
+<p>But the echo burst out laughing likewise, and laughed loud, long,
+and terribly.</p>
+<p>And Halewyn appeared well pleased at the noise, and went on
+laughing, with the seven echoes after him.</p>
+<p>And it seemed to Magtelt as it were a thousand men hidden in the
+forest.</p>
+<p>And meanwhile the hound had taken fright and howled so desperately
+that it seemed to Magtelt as it were a thousand hounds in the forest
+crying out to death.</p>
+<p>The Miserable&rsquo;s horse had taken fright also, and was so
+terrified at his master&rsquo;s laughter, the dog&rsquo;s howls, and
+his own neighing, all ringing out together, that he plunged, reared,
+stood up on his hind legs like a man, laid back his ears with fear, and
+would, without doubt, have thrown Halewyn from his back, if, driving
+him onward with his <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb91" href="#pb91"
+name="pb91">91</a>]</span>spurs, he had not made him pass by force the
+place of the seven echoes.</p>
+<p>But Schimmel had not moved at all, and this strangely enough, for he
+was a young horse, apt to be alarmed.</p>
+<p>When the noise was over they rode on their way, speaking few words
+together as they rode.</p>
+<p>And together they came to the Gallows-field.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXX.</span> How Magtelt came
+to the Gallows-field.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">There Magtelt saw the sixteen virgins hanging, and
+amongst them Anne-Mie, and all were covered over with snow.</p>
+<p>Halewyn&rsquo;s horse began again to rear, plunge, and lay back his
+ears as a sign of fear; but Schimmel neighed, and pawed the ground
+proudly with his hoof.</p>
+<p>And Halewyn said to Magtelt: &ldquo;Thou hast there an unfaithful
+friend, who can neigh happily at the hour of thy death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt answered nothing, and looking steadfastly at those poor
+virgins prayed to the very strong God to help her in their revenge.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the Miserable alighted from his horse, and taking the
+golden sickle in his hand came towards Magtelt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the hour of thy death. Get
+down, therefore, as I have done.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And in his impatience he would have lifted her from Schimmel&rsquo;s
+back.</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;to get down by myself; if I
+must die &rsquo;twill be without weeping.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou art a fine girl,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>And she, having dismounted from her horse, said: &ldquo;My lord,
+before thou strikest, doff thine <i>opperst-kleed</i> of the colour of
+corn, for the blood of virgins gushes fiercely, and if mine should
+stain thee I should be grieved.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But before the <i>opperst-kleed</i> was off his shoulders, his head
+fell to the ground at his feet. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb92"
+href="#pb92" name="pb92">92</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And Magtelt, looking at the body, said: &ldquo;He strode
+confidently, thinking himself invincible; but when the beast goes with
+assurance the hunter follows more easily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And she crossed herself.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXXI.</span> Of the sixteen
+deaths and of the Prince of the Stones.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Suddenly the head spoke, saying: &ldquo;Go thou to the
+end of the road, and sound my horn aloud, so that my friends may
+hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To the end of the road will I not go; thine horn will I not
+sound; murderer&rsquo;s counsel will I not follow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the head, &ldquo;if thou art not the Virgin
+without pity, join me to my body, and with the heart that is in my
+breast anoint my red wound.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am the Virgin without pity; to thy body will I not join
+thee, and with the heart that is in thy breast will I not anoint thy
+red wound.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maid,&rdquo; said the head, weeping and speaking with great
+terror, &ldquo;maid, quickly, quickly, make on my body the sign of the
+cross, and carry me into my castle, for he is coming.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While the head was speaking, suddenly came out of the wood the
+Prince of the Stones, and he came and seated himself on the body of the
+Miserable, and taking in his hands the head: &ldquo;Salutation,&rdquo;
+he said, &ldquo;to the Ill-favoured one; art thou now content? What of
+thy triumphant bearing, my lord the Invincible? She whom thou calledst
+not came without a song: the virgin without fear, in whose hands is
+death. But thou must sing once again thy sweet song, the song to call
+virgins.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the head, &ldquo;make me not sing, Lord
+Prince of the Stones, for I know well enough that at the end there is
+great suffering.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sing,&rdquo; said the Prince of the Stones, &ldquo;sing,
+coward that <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb93" href="#pb93" name=
+"pb93">93</a>]</span>hast never wept to do evil, and now weepest at the
+time of punishment: sing, Miserable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the head, &ldquo;have pity, Lord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sing,&rdquo; said the Prince of the Stones, &ldquo;sing,
+&rsquo;tis the hour of God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord Prince,&rdquo; said the head, &ldquo;be not so hard
+in my evil hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sing, Miserable,&rdquo; said the Prince of the Stones,
+&ldquo;sing, &rsquo;tis the hour of the reckoning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the head, weeping, &ldquo;I will sing, since
+you are my master.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e2900width" id="p092"><img src="images/p092.jpg"
+alt="The Song of the Head" width="544" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">The Song of the Head</p>
+</div>
+<p>And the head sang the faery song.</p>
+<p>And suddenly there spread abroad in the air a smell of cinnamon,
+frankincense, and sweet marjoram.</p>
+<p>And the sixteen virgins, hearing the song, came down from the
+gallows and drew near to the body of Halewyn.</p>
+<p>And Magtelt, crossing herself, watched them pass, but felt no
+fear.</p>
+<p>And the first virgin, who was the daughter of the poor simpleton,
+Claes the Dog-beater, took the golden sickle, and cutting into the
+breast of the Miserable below the left nipple drew out a great ruby,
+and put this on her wound, where it melted into rich red blood in her
+breast.</p>
+<p>And the head let a great pitiful cry of pain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So,&rdquo; said the Prince of the Stones, &ldquo;did the poor
+virgins cry out when thou madest them pass from life unto death;
+sixteen times hast thou brought death about, sixteen times shalt thou
+die, besides the death thou hast suffered already. The cry is the cry
+of the body when the soul leaves it; sixteen times hast thou drawn this
+cry from other bodies, sixteen times shall cry out thine own; sing,
+Miserable, to call the virgins to the reckoning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the head sang again the faery song, while the first virgin
+walked away silently towards the wood like a living person.</p>
+<p>And the second virgin came to the body of the Miserable and did to
+it as the first had done. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb94" href=
+"#pb94" name="pb94">94</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And she also walked away into the wood like a living person.</p>
+<p>So did each of the sixteen virgins, and for each of them a ruby was
+changed into good red blood.</p>
+<p>And sixteen times the head sang the faery song, and sixteen times
+gave the death-cry.</p>
+<p>And one by one all the virgins went away into the depth of the
+wood.</p>
+<p>And the last of all, who was Anne-Mie, came to Magtelt, and kissing
+her right hand wherein she had held the sword: &ldquo;Blessed be
+thou,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;who camest without fear, and, delivering
+us from the spell, leadest us into paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Magtelt, &ldquo;must thou go so far away,
+Anne-Mie?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Anne-Mie, without hearing her, passed like the others into the
+depth of the wood, walking silently over the snow like a living
+person.</p>
+<p>While the head was weeping and uttering bitter plaints, came out
+from the forest the child of nine years old, whom the Miserable had
+killed first of all. Still wearing her shroud she approached and fell
+at the feet of the mannikin Prince of the Stones.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, kissing the head tenderly, stroking it,
+caressing it, and wiping away its tears, &ldquo;poor Miserable, I will
+pray for thee to the very good God, who readily hears the prayers of
+children.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the girl prayed in this wise:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dear Lord, see how much he is suffering! Is it not payment
+enough that he should die sixteen times? Ah, Lord, sweet Lord, and you,
+Madam Mary, who are so kind, deign to hear me and grant him
+forgiveness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the mannikin, starting up, pushed the child away and said
+harshly: &ldquo;This head is mine, thy prayers avail nothing; be off,
+little ragamuffin, go back whence thou came.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the child went away like the other maids into the depth of the
+wood. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb95" href="#pb95" name=
+"pb95">95</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Then he thrust his hand into the breast of the Miserable and pulled
+out a heart of stone: then, in his rasping voice, which hissed like a
+viper and scraped like a thousand pebbles under the iron sole of an
+armed man, he said: &ldquo;Ambitious heart, heart of stone, thou wast
+in thy lifetime cruel and a coward; thou couldst not be content with
+such ample gifts as God in His bounty had given thee, thou hadst no
+desire towards goodness, courage, or just dealing, but towards gold,
+power, and vain honours; thou hadst no love for anything, neither
+father, mother, brother, nor sister; and so, to get more power and
+higher jurisdiction, thou killedst the people of the land of Flanders,
+without shame: and so also thou didst set thyself to hurt the weak,
+sucking thy life from their life, and thy blood from their blood. So
+have done and so shall always do this reptile order of ambitious ugly
+men. Blessed be God, who, by the hands of this frail and winsome maid,
+has cut off thine head from thy neck and taken thee from the
+world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke he had thrown the heart down into the snow, and
+trampling over it with great despite, kicking it with his toe like a
+vile thing, and laughing bitterly, he spoke again in his rasping
+voice:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stone thou art, stone shalt thou be a thousand years, but a
+live stone, a suffering stone. And when men come and carve thee, cleave
+thee, grind thee to powder, thou shalt endure it all without being able
+to cry out. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and bleed, my
+cousin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou hast starved poor folk, so shalt thou starve a thousand
+years; thou hast brought cold into their homes, thou shalt freeze in
+like manner. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and bleed, my
+cousin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou shalt be a hearth-stone and burn with the heat;
+paving-stone, and let men walk over thee; stone of a church, and bear
+upon thee all the weight of the building; and thou shalt suffer every
+evil, pain, and anguish. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and
+endure, my cousin.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb96" href=
+"#pb96" name="pb96">96</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Having said this the Prince of the Stones, driving before him with
+his foot the Miserable&rsquo;s heart, disappeared among the trees of
+the forest.</p>
+<p>Then Magtelt looked at the head, and saw that its eyes were open
+wide. She took it up and washed it with snow, then, carrying it with
+her, rode away on Schimmel, leaving near the body Halewyn&rsquo;s horse
+and hound, the one moaning softly, the other watching it with sorrowful
+wonderment.</p>
+<p>As she took up the head, the hound growled, but did not dare touch
+her.</p>
+<p>And while she rode away, horse and hound stayed by the body,
+downcast and sad, and covered with the snow which fell without
+ceasing.</p>
+<p>And they seemed to be guarding their master.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXXII.</span> How father,
+mother, and sister sought everywhere their son and brother, and could
+not find him.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Singing and winding her horn rides the noble maid
+Magtelt.</p>
+<p>And in her heart is joy, at the thought that Anne-Mie, the fifteen
+virgins, and Toon the Silent are avenged.</p>
+<p>And her hand holds fast beneath her <i>keirle</i> the good sword and
+the head of Halewyn.</p>
+<p>And Schimmel trots quickly, eager to be back in his stable.</p>
+<p>While she was riding she saw, through the thick snow falling, an old
+man coming towards her on a black horse.</p>
+<p>And the old man said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my son
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I left thy son Halewyn well placed, taking his diversion in
+the snow with sixteen maidens.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the old man rode on.</p>
+<p>When she had gone farther she saw, through the thick snow falling, a
+young and rosy-cheeked damosel coming towards her on a white palfrey.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb97" href="#pb97" name=
+"pb97">97</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And the damosel said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my brother
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go farther, to the Gallows-field, where thou shalt see thy
+brother in like guise to the sixteen maidens.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the damosel rode on.</p>
+<p>Farther still on her way, Magtelt saw, through the thick snow
+falling, a young man of haughty and stiff-necked countenance coming
+towards her on a roan charger.</p>
+<p>And the young man said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my brother
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thy brother is a fair lord, so fair that round him sixteen
+maidens stand sentinel, unwilling to let him go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the young man rode on.</p>
+<p>After travelling on her way still farther, she saw, through the
+thick snow falling, an old woman, high-coloured and of robust seeming,
+despite her great age, coming towards her.</p>
+<p>And the old woman said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my son
+Halewyn?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thy son Siewert Halewyn is dead; see, here is his head
+beneath my <i>keirle</i>, and his blood running thick on my
+dress.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the old woman cried out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If thou had spoken these words earlier thou shouldst not have
+ridden so far.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Magtelt:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou art fortunate, old woman, in that I have left thee thine
+own body and not slain thee as I have thy son.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the old dame took fright and made off.</p>
+<p>And night fell. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb98" href="#pb98"
+name="pb98">98</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XXXIII.</span> Of the feast
+in the castle of Heurne, and of the head upon the table.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Schimmel trotted quickly, and soon Magtelt reached her
+father&rsquo;s castle and there sounded the horn.</p>
+<p>Josse van Ryhove, who was gate-keeper that night, was filled with
+amazement at the sight of her. Then he cried out: &ldquo;Thanks be to
+God, &rsquo;tis our damosel come home again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And all the household ran to the gate crying out likewise with great
+noise and much shouting: &ldquo;Our damosel is come home.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Magtelt, going into the great hall, went to Sir Roel and knelt
+before him:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord father,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;here is the head of
+Siewert Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Roel, taking the head in his hands and looking at it well, was
+so overcome with joy that he wept for the first time since the eyes
+were in his head.</p>
+<p>And the Silent, rising up, came to Magtelt, kissed her right hand
+wherewith she had held the sword, and wept likewise, saying:
+&ldquo;Thanks be to thee who hast brought about the
+reckoning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lady Gonde was like a woman drunk with joy, and could not find
+her tongue. At last, bursting into sobs, melting into tears, and
+embracing Magtelt eagerly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, ah,&rdquo; she cried out, &ldquo;kiss me, kiss me, kiss
+me, little one! She has slain the Miserable, the sweet maid; the
+nightingale has vanquished the falcon! My child is come home again,
+home again my child. No&euml;l! Thanks be to God who loves aged mothers
+and will not have them robbed of their children. No&euml;l! See,
+Magtelt the beautiful, Magtelt the singing-bird, Magtelt the joyous,
+Magtelt the bright of heart, Magtelt the glorious, Magtelt the
+victorious, Magtelt my daughter, my child, my all,
+No&euml;l!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Magtelt smiled at her, caressing her and stroking her hands
+gently. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb99" href="#pb99" name=
+"pb99">99</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And the lady Gonde, weeping freely, let her do, without
+speaking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;I never saw my wife before
+in such festival mood.&rdquo; Then suddenly he cried out:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Festival,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;this should be a day of
+festival, the great feast of the house of Heurne!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he threw open the door to call his pages, grooms, men-at-arms,
+and all the household.</p>
+<p>But they all held back, not daring to enter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; cried he, in his great joyous voice, &ldquo;where
+are cooks and kitchen-maids? Where are cauldrons, pots, and
+frying-pans? Where are barrels, kegs, flagons and bottles, tankards,
+mugs, and goblets? Where is <i>clauwaert</i> simple and double? Where
+is old wine and new wine? Where are hams and sausages, whales&rsquo;
+tongues, and loins of beef, meat of the air, meat of the waters, and
+meat of the fields? Bring in everything there is and set it on the
+table, for this must be a feast-day in this house, feast for an
+emperor, a king, a prince; for&rdquo;&mdash;and so saying he held up
+the Miserable&rsquo;s head by the hair&mdash;&ldquo;our beloved maid
+has slain with her own hand the lord Siewert Halewyn.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hearing this they all cried out with a roar like thunder:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Praise be to God! No&euml;l to our damosel!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go then,&rdquo; said Sir Roel, &ldquo;and do as I have
+bid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And when the great feast was served the head was put in the middle
+of the table.</p>
+<p>On the morrow there was let cry war in the seigneury of Heurne. And
+Sir Roel went with a goodly force of men to attack by arms the castle
+of the Miserable, whereof all the relatives, friends, and followers
+were either hanged or slain.</p>
+<p>And My Lord the Count gave to the family of Heurne, the goods,
+titles and territories of Halewyn, excepting only the ugly shield, and
+theirs they remain to this day. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb103"
+href="#pb103" name="pb103">103</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div id="ch4" class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h2 class="main">Smetse Smee</h2>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">I.</span> Of Smetse, his
+belly, and his forge.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Smetse Smee lived in the good town of Ghent, on the
+Quai aux Oignons, beside the fair River Lys.</p>
+<p>He was well skilled in his trade, rich in bodily fat, and with so
+jolly a countenance that the most melancholy of men were cheered and
+took heart for no more than the sight of him in his smithy, trotting
+about on his short legs, head up and belly forward, seeing to
+everything.</p>
+<p>When work was in full swing in his shop, Smetse, listening to the
+busy sounds round the fire, would say, with his hands clasped across
+his stomach, quietly and happily: &ldquo;By Artevelde! what are drums,
+cymbals, fifes, viols, and bagpipes worth? For heavenly music give me
+my sledges beating, my anvils ringing, my bellows roaring, my good
+workmen singing and hammering.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then, speaking to them all: &ldquo;Courage,&rdquo; he would say,
+&ldquo;my children! Who works well from daybreak drinks the better for
+it at vespers. Whose is that feeble arm down there, tapping with his
+hammer so gently? Does he think he is cracking eggs, the faint-heart?
+To those bars, Dolf, and plunge them in the water. To that breastplate,
+Pier, beat it out for us fine and true: iron well beaten is proof
+against bullets. To that plough-share, Flipke, and good work to it,
+too: from the plough comes the world&rsquo;s bread. To the door, Toon,
+here comes the raw-boned nag of Don Sancio d&rsquo;Avila, the knight
+with the sour countenance, brought hither by his raw-boned groom, who
+is for having him shod, no doubt: let him pay double for his Spanish
+haughtiness and his harshness to poor folk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So went Smetse about his smithy, singing mostly, and whistling when
+he was not singing. And for the rest getting much honest gain,
+profiting in health, and, at vespers, drinking <i>bruinbier</i> with a
+will in the inn of Pensaert. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb104" href=
+"#pb104" name="pb104">104</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">II.</span> How Slimbroek the
+Red put out the fire in Smetse&rsquo;s forge.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">By and by there came to the Quai aux Oignons a certain
+Adriaen Slimbroek, who set up, with the licence of the guild, another
+smithy. This Slimbroek was an ugly, wizened, lean and puny personage,
+white-faced, underhung in the jaw like a fox, and nicknamed the Red on
+account of the colour of his hair.</p>
+<p>Skilled in intrigue, expert in sharp-practice, master of arts in
+cant and hypocrisy, and making himself out to be the finest of smiths,
+he had interested in his business all the rich and gentle folk of the
+town, who from fear or otherwise held to the Spaniards and wished ill
+to those of the reformed faith. They were before, for the most part,
+customers of Smetse, but Slimbroek had put them against him, saying:
+&ldquo;This Smetse is a knave to the bottom of his heart, he was a
+marauder in his young days, sailing the seas with the men of Zeeland in
+despite of Spain, on the side of this religion which they call
+reformed. He still has many friends and relatives in Walcheren, more
+particularly at Middelburg, Arnemuiden, Camp-Veere, and Flushing, all
+obstinate Protestants, and speaking of the Pope of Rome and my Lords
+the Archdukes without veneration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And for the rest,&rdquo; added he, &ldquo;this fellow Smetse
+is altogether an atheist, reading the bible of Antwerp in despite of
+the decrees, and going to church only because he is afraid, and not at
+all because he will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By such slanders as these Slimbroek robbed Smetse of all his
+customers.</p>
+<p>And soon the fire was out in the forge of the good smith, and soon,
+too, the savings were eaten up, and Dame Misery came to the
+dwelling.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">III.</span> Wherein Slimbroek
+is seen in the river prettily tricked out.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Brought to this pass Smetse, nevertheless, would not
+let himself take to despair; but he was always sad and heavy
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb105" href="#pb105" name=
+"pb105">105</a>]</span>of heart when, sitting in his cold smithy and
+looking at all his good tools lying idle on the ground, he heard the
+fair sound of hammers and anvils coming from Slimbroek&rsquo;s
+shop.</p>
+<p>But what angered him most was that whenever he passed before
+Slimbroek&rsquo;s dwelling the traitor carrot-head would appear
+suddenly on the threshold, and, saluting him graciously and giving him
+fair compliments, would make a hundred flattering speeches, accompanied
+by as many hypocritical salutations, and all for the sake of poking fun
+at him and to laugh unkindly at his misery.</p>
+<p>These ugly encounters and grimaces went on a long while, and Smetse
+came to the end of his patience: &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;it
+angers me to be in such poor case; although I must submit, for such is
+the holy will of God. But it irks me too bitterly to see this wicked
+knave, who by his trickeries has taken away all my customers, so
+amusing himself with my misery.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Slimbroek spared him not at all, and each day became
+sharper in speech, for the more wrong he did to the good smith the more
+hate he bore him.</p>
+<p>And Smetse swore to have his revenge on him, in such a way as to
+spoil thenceforward his taste for mockery.</p>
+<p>It so happened that one Sunday when he was standing on the Quai des
+Bateliers, looking at the river with a crowd of watermen, townsfolk,
+boys, and scholars who were idle for the holy day, suddenly there came
+out of a pothouse, wherein he had been swallowing many pints of ale,
+Slimbroek, bolder than usual on account of the drink. Seeing Smetse he
+came and placed himself close to him, and with much gesticulation, loud
+bursts of talk and laughter, said to him in an insolent tone:
+&ldquo;Good day, Smetse, good day, my worthy friend. How is thy fine
+face? It seems to lose its fat, which was of good quality, Smetse.
+&rsquo;Tis a great pity. What is the reason for it? Art thou angry at
+the loss of thy customers, Smetse? Thou must drink well to bring back
+the joy to thy stomach, Smetse. We never see thee <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb106" href="#pb106" name="pb106">106</a>]</span>now
+at vespers in the inn of Pensaert; why, Smetse? Hast no pennies to get
+drink? I have plenty for thee, if thou wilt, Smetse.&rdquo; And he
+shook his money-bag to make it ring.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank thee kindly,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;thou art too
+generous, Master Slimbroek, &rsquo;tis my turn to stand thee drink
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; cried Slimbroek, feigning pity and compassion,
+&ldquo;why wilt thou stand drink to me? The world knows thou art not
+rich, Smetse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rich enough,&rdquo; answered the smith, &ldquo;to stand thee
+the best draught thou ever had.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark to him,&rdquo; said Slimbroek to the crowd of watermen
+and townsfolk, &ldquo;hark to him. Smetse will stand us drink! The
+world is coming to an end. &rsquo;Tis the year of golden rags. Smetse
+will stand us drink! Ah! I shall taste with great pleasure the
+<i>bruinbier</i> that Smetse will stand us. I am thirsty as an African
+desert, thirsty as Sunday, thirsty as a devil half-boiled in the
+cauldrons of Lucifer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drink then, Slimbroek,&rdquo; said Smetse, and threw him into
+the river.</p>
+<p>Seeing this the people who were on the quay applauded heartily, and
+all ran to the edge to have a good look at Slimbroek, who, falling into
+the water head first, had struck and broken through the belly of a dog
+a long while dead, which was floating down on the stream as such
+carrion will. And he was tricked out round the neck with this dog in a
+most marvellous manner, nor could he get rid of it, being busy with his
+arms at keeping himself afloat, and his face was smeared all over with
+offensive matter.</p>
+<p>Notwithstanding that he was half-blinded, he dared not come out on
+to the quay where Smetse was, but swam off towards the other bank,
+decked with his carrion and blowing like a hundred devils.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;dost find the
+<i>bruinbier</i> to thy liking; is it not the best in all the land of
+Flanders? But <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb107" href="#pb107" name=
+"pb107">107</a>]</span>my good sir, take off thy bonnet to drink; such
+headgear is not worn for river parties.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When Slimbroek was in midstream, over against the bridge, Smetse
+went up on to this bridge with the other onlookers, and Slimbroek, in
+the midst of his puffing and snorting, cried out to Smetse:
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have thee hanged, accursed reformer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the good smith, &ldquo;you are mistaken, my
+friend; &rsquo;tis not I who am the reformer, but you, who devise these
+new bonnets. Where got you this one? I have never seen such a one,
+neither so beautiful, nor so richly ornamented with tufts and hangings.
+Is the fashion coming to Ghent by and by?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Slimbroek answered nothing, and struggled to get rid of the dead
+dog, but in vain, and having paused in his swimming for this purpose,
+went down to the bottom, and came up again more furious than ever,
+blowing harder, and trying all the while to tear off the
+body.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Leave your hat on, my master,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;do
+not so put yourself out in order to salute me, I am not worth the
+trouble. Leave it on.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At last Slimbroek climbed out of the water. On the quay he shook off
+the dog hastily and made away as fast as he could to his dwelling. But
+he was followed by a crowd of young watermen and boys, who ran after
+him hooting, whistling, covering him with mud and other filth. And they
+continued to do the same to his house-front after he had gone in.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IV.</span> Of the two
+branches.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">In this wise Smetse had his revenge on Slimbroek, who
+thereafter dared not look him in the face, and hid when he passed.</p>
+<p>But the good smith, nevertheless, had no more pleasure in anything
+than before, for with every passing day he became more and more needy,
+having already, with his wife, used <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb108" href="#pb108" name="pb108">108</a>]</span>up what help came to
+them from the guild, and also a small sum of silver from Middelburg in
+Walcheren.</p>
+<p>Ashamed to get his living by begging and knavery, and knowing how to
+bear with his lot no longer, he resolved to kill himself.</p>
+<p>So one night he left his house, and went out to the moats of the
+town, which are bordered by fine trees, forked and spreading down to
+the ground. There he fastened a stone to his neck, commended his soul
+to God, and, stepping back three paces to get a better start, ran and
+jumped.</p>
+<p>But while he was in the very act he was caught suddenly by two
+branches, which, falling upon his shoulders, gripped him like
+man&rsquo;s hands and held him fast where he was. These branches were
+neither cold nor hard, as wood naturally is, but supple and warm. And
+he heard at the same instant a strange and scoffing voice saying:
+&ldquo;Where goest thou, Smetse?&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e3226width" id="p108"><img src="images/p108.jpg"
+alt="Smetse caught by the Two Branches" width="533" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">Smetse caught by the Two Branches</p>
+</div>
+<p>But he could not answer by reason of his great astonishment.</p>
+<p>And although there was no wind the trunks and branches of the tree
+moved and swung about like serpents uncoiling, while all around there
+crackled above ten hundred thousand sparks.</p>
+<p>And Smetse grew more afraid, and a hot breath passed across his
+face, and the voice, speaking again, but nearer, or so it seemed,
+repeated: &ldquo;Where goest thou, Smetse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he could not speak for fear, and because his throttle was dry
+and his teeth chattering.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;dost not dare answer him
+who wishes thee naught but well? Where goest thou, Smetse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hearing so pleasant and friendly a speech, the good smith took heart
+and answered with great humility: &ldquo;Lord whom I cannot see, I was
+going to kill myself, for life is no longer bearable.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse is mad,&rdquo; said the voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So I am, if you will, Lord,&rdquo; answered the smith;
+&ldquo;nevertheless <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb109" href="#pb109"
+name="pb109">109</a>]</span>when my smithy is lost to me by the cunning
+of a wicked neighbour, and I have no way to live but by begging and
+knavery, &rsquo;twould be greater madness in me to live than to
+die.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;is mad to wish himself
+dead, for he shall have again, if he will, his fair smithy, his good
+red fire, his good workmen, and as many golden <i>royals</i> in his
+coffers as he sees sparks in this tree.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I,&rdquo; exclaimed the smith in great delight, &ldquo;shall
+never have such fine things as that! They are not for such miserables
+as I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;all things are possible
+to my master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;you come from the devil,
+Lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; answered the voice, &ldquo;and I come to thee on
+his account to propose a bargain: For seven years thou shalt be rich,
+thou shalt have thy smithy the finest in the town of Ghent; thou shalt
+win gold enough to pave the Quai aux Oignons; thou shalt have in thy
+cellars enough beer and wine to wet all the dry throttles in Flanders;
+thou shalt eat the finest meats and the most delicate game; thou shalt
+have hams in plenty, sausages in abundance, mince-pies in heaps; every
+one shall respect thee, admire thee, sing thy praises; Slimbroek at the
+sight of it shall be filled with rage; and for all these great benefits
+thou hast only to give us thy soul at the end of seven
+years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My soul?&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis the only thing
+I have; would you not, My Lord Devil, make me rich at a less
+price?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wilt thou or wilt thou not, smith?&rdquo; said the voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; answered Smetse, &ldquo;you offer me things that
+are very desirable, even, My Lord Devil (if I may say it without
+offence), more than I wish; for if I might have only my forge and
+enough customers to keep the fire alight I should be happier than My
+Lord Albert or Madam Isabella.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take or leave it, smith,&rdquo; said the voice. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb110" href="#pb110" name="pb110">110</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord Devil,&rdquo; answered Smetse, &ldquo;I beg you not to
+become angry with me, but to deign to consider that if you give me but
+my forge, and not all this gold, wine, and meats, you might perhaps be
+content to let my soul burn for a thousand years, which time is not at
+all to be compared with the great length of all eternity, but would
+seem long enough to whomever must pass it in the fire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thy forge for thee, thy soul for us; take or leave it,
+smith,&rdquo; said the voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; lamented Smetse, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis dear bought,
+and no offence to you, Lord Devil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then, smith,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;to riches
+thou preferest beggary? Do as thou wilt. Ah, thou wilt have great joy
+when, walking with thy melancholy countenance about the streets of
+Ghent, thou art fled by every one and dogs snap at thy heels; when thy
+wife dies of hunger, and thou chantest <i>mea culpa</i> in vain; then
+when, alone in the world, thou beatest on thy shrunken belly the drum
+for a feast, and the little girls dancing to such music give thee a
+slap in the face for payment; then, at last, when thou dost hide
+thyself in thy house so that thy rags shall not be seen in the town,
+and there, scabby, chatter-tooth, vermin-fodder, thou diest alone on
+thy dung-hill like a leper, and art put into the earth, and Slimbroek
+comes to make merry at thy downfall.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;he would do it, the
+knave.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not await this vile end,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;it
+were better to die now: leap into the water, Smetse; leap,
+Smee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; lamented he, &ldquo;if I give myself to you, I
+shall burn for all eternity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou wilt not burn,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;but serve
+us for food, good smith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I?&rdquo; cried Smetse, much frightened at these words,
+&ldquo;do you think to eat me down there? I am not good for eating, I
+must tell you. There is no meat more sour, tough, <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb111" href="#pb111" name=
+"pb111">111</a>]</span>common, and vulgar than mine is. It has been at
+one time and another diseased with plague, itch, and other vile
+maladies. Ah, I should make you a shabby feast, you and the others, My
+Lord Devil, who have in hell so many souls which are noble, succulent,
+tasty, and well-fed. But mine is not at all good, I declare.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou art wrong, smith,&rdquo; said the voice. &ldquo;Souls of
+wicked emperors, kings, princes, popes, famous captains of arms,
+conquerors, slayers of men, and other brigands, are always as hard as
+an eagle&rsquo;s beak; for so their omnipotence fashions them; we break
+our teeth off bit by bit in eating them. Others, having been eaten up
+beforehand by ambition and cruelty, which are like ravenous worms, give
+us hardly a crumb to pick. Souls of girls who, without want or hunger,
+sell for money what nature bids them give for nothing, are so rotten,
+putrid, and evil-smelling that the hungriest of devils will not touch
+them. Souls of vain men are bladders, and within there is nothing but
+wind; &rsquo;tis poor food. Souls of hypocrites, canters, liars, are
+like beautiful apples without, but beneath the skin are full of bile,
+gall, sour wine, and frightful poison; none of us will have any ado
+with them. Souls of envious men are as toads, who from spleen at being
+so ugly, run yellow spittle on whatever is clean and shining, from
+mouth, feet, and all their bodies. Souls of gluttons are naught but
+cow-dung. Souls of good drinkers are always tasty, and above all when
+they have about them the heavenly smell of good wine and good
+<i>bruinbier</i>. But there is no soul so tasty, delectable, succulent,
+or of such fine flavour as that of a good woman, a good workman, or a
+good smith such as thou. For, working without intermission, they have
+no time for sin to touch and stain them, unless it be once or twice
+only, and for this reason we catch them whenever we can; but &rsquo;tis
+a rare dish, kept for the royal table of My Lord Lucifer.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;you have made up your mind to
+eat me, I see well enough; nevertheless &rsquo;twould not cost you much
+to give me back my forge for nothing.&rdquo; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb112" href="#pb112" name="pb112">112</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis no great discomfort,&rdquo; said the voice,
+&ldquo;to be so eaten, for My Lord and King has a mouth larger than had
+the fish whereby Jonah the Jew was swallowed in olden time; thou wilt
+go down like an oyster into his stomach, without having been wounded by
+his teeth in any wise; there, if it displease thee to stay, thou must
+dance with feet and hands as hard as thou canst, and My Lord will at
+once spit thee out, for he will not find it possible to stand for long
+such a drubbing. Falling at his feet thou wilt show him a joyous face,
+a steady look in his eyes, and a good countenance, and the same to
+Madam Astarte, who, without a doubt, will take thee for her pet, as she
+has done already to several; thereafter thou wilt have a joyous time,
+serving My Lady merrily and brushing his hair for My Lord; as for the
+rest of us, we shall be right glad to have you with us, for, among all
+these familiar vile and ugly faces of conquerors, plunderers, thieves,
+and assassins, &rsquo;twill do us good to see the honest countenance of
+a merry smith, as thou art.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord Devil,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I do not merit such
+honour. I can well believe, from what you tell me, that &rsquo;tis
+pleasant enough down there with you. But I should be ill at ease, I
+must tell you, being naturally uncouth in the company of strangers; and
+so I should bring no joy with me, and should not be able to sing; and
+therefore you would get but poor amusement from me, I know in advance.
+Ah, give me back rather my good forge and my old customers, and hold me
+quit; this would be the act of a royal devil and would sit well upon
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly the voice spoke with anger: &ldquo;Smith, wilt thou pay us
+in such ape&rsquo;s coin? Life is no longer of benefit to thee, death
+is abhorrent, and thou wouldst have from us without payment the seven
+full, rich and joyous years which I offer thee. Accept or refuse, thy
+forge for thee, thy soul for us, under the conditions I have told
+thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;then I will have it so,
+since it must be, Lord Devil!&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb113" href="#pb113" name="pb113">113</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then,&rdquo; said the voice, &ldquo;set thy mark in
+blood to this deed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And a black parchment, with a crow&rsquo;s quill, fell from the tree
+at the smith&rsquo;s feet. He read on the parchment, in letters of
+fire, the pact of seven years, opened his arm with his knife, and
+signed with the crow&rsquo;s quill. And while he was still holding the
+parchment and the quill, he felt them suddenly snatched from his hands
+with violence, but he saw nothing, and only heard a noise as of a man
+running in slipper-shoes, and the voice saying as it went into the
+distance: &ldquo;Thou hast the seven years, Smetse.&rdquo; And the tree
+ceased its swaying, and the sparks in the branches went out.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">V.</span> Of the flaming
+ball, of the forge relit, and of the terrible great buffet which the
+man with the lantern gave to Smetse&rsquo;s wife.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Smetse, greatly amazed, rubbed his eyes, thinking he
+was dreaming. Suddenly shaking himself: &ldquo;This devil,&rdquo; said
+he, &ldquo;was he not making fun of me after all? Have I verily gotten
+my good forge back again? I will go and see.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Having said this he started running in haste, and from far away saw
+a great light reddening the sky above the houses, and it seemed to him
+that the fire sending up this light was on the Quai aux Oignons; and he
+said to himself: &ldquo;Could that be my forge?&rdquo; And he ran the
+faster.</p>
+<p>Coming to the quay he found it lit up as if by a sun, from the
+paving-stones up to the tops of the trees which stood alongside, and he
+said to himself: &ldquo;It is my forge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then he was seized and shaken with joy, his legs failed him, and his
+breath grew short; but he kept running as hard as he could, and coming
+at last to his house he saw his smithy wide open as in the daytime, and
+at the back of it a great bright fire.</p>
+<p>Unable to contain himself at this sight he fell to dancing, leaping,
+and bursting out into laughter, crying: &ldquo;I have my forge, my own
+forge! Ghent is mine!&rdquo; Then he went in. Inspecting, examining,
+touching everything, he saw at <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb114"
+href="#pb114" name="pb114">114</a>]</span>the sides, laid out in good
+order, iron of all kinds: armour-iron, iron bars, plough-iron.
+&ldquo;By Artevelde!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the devil was not
+lying!&rdquo; And he took up a bar, and having made it red with the
+fire, which was done quickly, started beating it, making the hammer
+ring on the anvil like thunder, and crying: &ldquo;Ha, so I have my
+good tools back again, and hear once more this good music which has so
+long been silent!&rdquo; And while he was wiping away a tear of joy,
+which gave an unaccustomed wetness to his eye, he saw on a chest near
+by a good pewter pot standing, and beside it a fine mug, and he filled
+up the mug several times and drank it down with relish:
+&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;the good <i>bruinbier</i>, the drink
+which makes men! I had lost the taste for it! How good it is!&rdquo;
+Then he went back to hammering the iron bar.</p>
+<p>While he was making all this noise, he heard himself called by name,
+and looking to see whence the voice came he perceived his wife in the
+half-open door which led from the kitchen, thrusting through her head
+and looking at him with a startled face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is it thou, my
+man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, wife,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;come close to me, I dare not
+set foot in this forge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And why not, wife?&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; she said, clinging to him and gazing into the
+forge, &ldquo;wert thou alone there, my man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;Smetse, while you were away there
+were strange happenings!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What happenings, wife?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I was lying in bed,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;suddenly the
+house trembled, and a flaming ball passed across our room, went out
+through the door, without hurting anything, down the stairs, and into
+the forge, where, bursting, as I suppose, it made a noise like a
+hundred thunder-claps. Suddenly all <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb115" href="#pb115" name="pb115">115</a>]</span>the windows and doors
+were thrown open with a great clatter Getting out of bed, I saw the
+quay all lit up, as it is now. Then, thinking that our house was on
+fire, I came down in haste, went into the forge, saw the fire lit, and
+heard the bellows working noisily. In each corner the iron of different
+kinds arranged itself in place according to the work for which it was
+used; but I could see no hands moving it, though there must have been
+some for sure. I began to cry out in a fright, when suddenly I felt, as
+it were, a glove of hot leather pressed against my mouth and holding it
+shut, while a voice said: &lsquo;Do not cry out, make no sound, if thou
+wilt not have thy husband burnt alive for the crime of sorcery.&rsquo;
+Nevertheless he who thus ordered me to keep silent made himself more
+noise than I should ever have dared, but by a miracle none of our
+neighbours heard it. As for me, my man, I had no more heart to make a
+sound, and I fled back hither into the kitchen, where I was praying to
+God when I heard thy voice, and dared to open the door a crack. Oh, my
+man, since thou art here, explain, if thou can, all this
+tumult.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; answered Smetse, &ldquo;we must leave that to
+those more learned than ourselves. Think only to obey the order of the
+voice: keep thy mouth shut, speak to no one of what thou hast seen
+to-night, and go back to thy bed, for it is still
+pitch-dark.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I go,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;but wilt thou not come also, my
+man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot leave the forge,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>While he was speaking thus there came towards them, one after
+another, a baker carrying new-baked bread, a grocer carrying cheeses,
+and a butcher carrying hams.</p>
+<p>Smetse knew well enough that they were devils, from their white
+faces, hollow eyes, scorched hair, twisted fingers, and also from the
+fact that they walked with so little sound.</p>
+<p>His wife, amazed to see them coming into her house with all this
+food, would have stopped them, but they slipped <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb116" href="#pb116" name=
+"pb116">116</a>]</span>between her hands like eels, and went into the
+kitchen, walking straight and silently.</p>
+<p>There, without a word spoken, the baker arranged his loaves in the
+pan, while the butcher and grocer put their cheeses and hams in the
+cool-of the cellar. And they finished their work, taking no notice of
+the smith&rsquo;s wife, who kept crying: &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not here you
+must bring these things; you have made a mistake, I tell you, my good
+men. Go elsewhither.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But they, notwithstanding her voice, arranged the loaves, meat, and
+cheeses quietly.</p>
+<p>This made the good woman more than ever put out, and she grew angry:
+&ldquo;I tell you,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;you have made a
+mistake; do you not hear me? You have made a mistake, &rsquo;tis not
+here you should be; I say here, with us, in this place, in the house of
+Smetse the beggar, who has not a farthing to his name, who will never
+pay you. Alas, they will not listen to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And crying out at the top of her voice: &ldquo;Masters, you are at
+Smetse&rsquo;s, do you not understand? Smetse the beggar! Do I not say
+it loud enough? Jesus, Lord, God! Smetse the needy! Smetse the ragged!
+Smetse the starved! Smetse who is rich in nothing but lice! Who will
+pay you nothing: do you hear me? Who will pay you nothing, nothing,
+nothing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;you are losing your head,
+my dear. &rsquo;Tis I who sent for these good men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou!&rdquo; said his wife, &ldquo;thou! but thou art mad, my
+man; yes, he is mad, my masters, altogether mad. Ah, &rsquo;tis thou
+who sent for them! &rsquo;Tis thou who sendest for loaves, hams, and
+cheeses in this profusion, like a rich man, when thou knowest well
+enough we cannot pay for them, and so showest thy bad faith!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; answered Smetse quietly, &ldquo;we are rich, and
+will pay for everything.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We rich?&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;ah, poor beggar-man. Do I
+not know what is in our chest? Hast ever put thy nose in to
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb117" href="#pb117" name=
+"pb117">117</a>]</span>see, any more than in the bread-pan? Art thou
+become the housewife? Alas, my man is mad, God help us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the three men came back into the smithy.</p>
+<p>Seeing them again, the wife ran to them: &ldquo;Master
+trades-men,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;you heard me well enough, for you
+are not deaf, I believe; we have nothing, we can pay you nothing; take
+back your provisions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But without looking at her, nor seeming to hear her, the three went
+off, walking stiff and silently.</p>
+<p>No sooner had they gone out than a brewer&rsquo;s cart drew up at
+the door, and the brewer&rsquo;s men came into the smithy carrying
+between them a great barrel full of <i>bruinbier</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said his wife, &ldquo;this is too much! Master
+brewers, this is not for us; we do not like beer at all, we drink
+water. Take this barrel to one of our neighbours, it is no concern of
+ours, I tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>None the less the brewer&rsquo;s men took down the barrel of
+<i>bruinbier</i> into the cellar, came up again, and went out to fetch
+others, and placed them alongside the first to the number of twenty.
+The good wife, trying to stop them, was pushed aside, while Smetse
+could not speak for laughing, and could only draw her to his side, and
+so prevent her from hurting herself on the barrels, which the men were
+carrying from street to cellar with marvellous speed and dispatch.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she wailed, &ldquo;let me be! This is too much,
+Smetse! Alas! Now we are worse than beggars, we are debtors, Smetse: I
+shall go and throw myself into the river, my man. To run up debts to
+fill a famished stomach, that is shame enough; but to do so from simple
+gluttony, that is unbearable deceit. Canst thou not be content with
+bread and water got honestly with thy two hands? Art thou then become
+such a delicate feeder that thou must have cakes, fine cheeses, and
+full barrels? Smetse, Smetse, that is not like a good man of Ghent, but
+rather like a Spanish rogue. Oh, I shall go and drown myself, my
+man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, troubled at seeing her in such
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb118" href="#pb118" name=
+"pb118">118</a>]</span>distress, &ldquo;do not weep. &rsquo;Tis all
+ours, my dear, duly, and by right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said moaning, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis an ill thing
+to lose in this wise in your old age that honesty which was your only
+crown.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While the smith was endeavouring, but in vain, to console her, there
+entered a vintner followed by three-and-thirty porters, each carrying a
+basket full of bottles containing precious wines of great rarity, as
+was shown by the shape of those said bottles.</p>
+<p>When the good wife saw them she was overcome with despair, and her
+courage failed her: &ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; she said in a piteous voice,
+&ldquo;come in, master vintners; the cellar is below. You have there a
+goodly number of bottles, six score for certain. That is none too much
+for us who are wealthy, wealthy of misery, vermin, and lice; come in,
+my masters, that is the door of the cellar. Put them all there, and
+more besides if you will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And giving Smetse a push: &ldquo;Thou art happy, no doubt,&rdquo;
+said she, &ldquo;for &rsquo;tis a fine sight for a drunkard, such as
+thou art, to see all this good wine coming into the house without
+payment. Ah, he laughs!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I laugh with content,
+for the wines are ours, ours the meats, ours the loaves and cheeses.
+Let us make merry over it together.&rdquo; And he tried to embrace her:
+but she, shaking herself free: &ldquo;Oh, oh,&rdquo; she said,
+&ldquo;he runs up debts, he tells lies, he laughs at his shame: he has
+all the vices, none is wanting.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;all this is ours, I tell
+thee again. To this amount am I paid in advance for certain large
+orders which have been graciously given me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Art thou not lying?&rdquo; said she, growing a little
+calmer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All this is ours?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;by the word of honour of a
+citizen of Ghent.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb119" href=
+"#pb119" name="pb119">119</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, my man, then we are henceforward out of our
+trouble.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, wife,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis a miracle from God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But these men come hither by night, against the usual custom,
+tell me the reason of that.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He who knows the reason for everything,&rdquo; said Smetse,
+&ldquo;is an evil prier. Such a one am not I.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;they speak never a
+word.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They do not like to talk,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;that is
+clear. Or it may be that their master chose them dumb, so that they
+should not waste time chattering with housewives.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, that may be,&rdquo; she said, while the thirty-first
+porter was going past, &ldquo;but &rsquo;tis very strange, I cannot
+hear their footfalls, my man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They have for certain,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;soles to
+suit their work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;their faces are so pale, sad,
+and motionless, that they seem like faces of the dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Night-birds have never a good complexion,&rdquo; said
+Smetse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said his wife, &ldquo;I have never seen these men
+among the guilds of Ghent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou dost not know them all,&rdquo; said Smetse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That may be, my man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In this manner the smith and his wife held converse together, the
+one very curious and disturbed, the other confused and ashamed at his
+lies.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, as the three-and-thirtieth porter of the master-vintner
+was going out of the door, there rushed in in great haste a man of
+middling height, dressed in a short black smock, pale-haired,
+large-headed, wan-faced, stepping delicately, quick as the wind, stiff
+as a poker; for the rest, smiling continually, and carrying a
+lantern.</p>
+<p>The man came up to Smetse hurriedly, without speaking <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb120" href="#pb120" name="pb120">120</a>]</span>bade
+him follow, and seized him by the arm. When Smetse hung back he made
+him a quick sign to have no fear, and led him into the garden, whither
+they were followed by the good wife. There he took a spade, gave his
+lantern to Smetse to hold, dug in the earth rapidly and opened a great
+hole, pulled out of the hole a leathern bag, opened it quickly, and
+with a smile showed Smetse and his wife that it was full of gold coin.
+The good wife cried out at the sight of the gold, whereupon he gave her
+a terrible great buffet in the face, smiled again, saluted, turned on
+his heel and went off with his lantern.</p>
+<p>The good wife, knocked down by the force of the blow, and quite
+dazed, dared not cry out again, and only moaned softly: &ldquo;Smetse,
+Smetse,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;where art thou, my man? my cheek hurts
+me sorely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Smetse went to her and picked her up, saying: &ldquo;Wife, let this
+buffet be a lesson to thee henceforward to control thy tongue better;
+thou hast disturbed with thy crying all the good men who have come here
+this night for my good; this last was less patient than the rest and
+punished thee, not without good reason.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I did ill not to obey thee; what
+must I do now, my man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Help me,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;to carry the bag into the
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I will,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>Having taken in the bag, not without some trouble, they emptied it
+into a coffer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, seeing the gold run out of the bag and
+spread itself this way and that, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis a fine sight. But
+who was this man who showed thee this sack with such kindness, and who
+gave me this terrible great blow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A friend of mine,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;a great
+discoverer of hidden treasure.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is his name?&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I am not allowed to tell
+thee.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb121" href="#pb121" name=
+"pb121">121</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, my man...&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, wife, wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;thou wilt know too
+much. Thy questioning will be thy death, my dear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VI.</span> Wherein the wife
+of Smetse shows the great length of her tongue.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">When the day was up, Smetse and his wife sat down
+together to the good loaves, the fat ham, the fine cheese, the double
+<i>bruinbier</i>, and the good wines, and so eased their stomachs, hurt
+a little by being such a long while hungry.</p>
+<p>Suddenly there came in all the old workmen, and they said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baes</i> Smetse, thou didst send for us; here we are,
+right glad to see thy fire lit up again, and to work for thee who wast
+always so good a master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Artevelde!&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;here they all are:
+Pier, Dolf, Flipke, Toon, Hendrik, and the rest. Good day, my
+lads!&rdquo; and he gripped them by the hand, &ldquo;we must
+drink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While they were drinking, his wife said suddenly with a toss of the
+head: &ldquo;But no one sent for you all! Is that not so,
+Smetse?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife, wife,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;wilt thou never
+learn to hold thy tongue?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;I am speaking the truth, my
+man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou art speaking foolishly,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;of things
+whereof thou knowest nothing. Stay in thy kitchen and do not come
+meddling in my forge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baesine</i><span class="corr" id="xd20e3539" title=
+"Not in source">,</span>&rdquo; said Flipke, &ldquo;without wishing to
+belie you, I must tell you that a message was sent to us in the name of
+the <i>baes</i>. For a man came in the middle of the night knocking on
+the doors of our houses, shouting out that we should all of us come
+hither without fail this morning for work of great urgency, and that
+for this we should each be given a <i>royal</i> as forfeit to our
+several masters. And we came, all of us, not wishing to leave our
+<i>baes</i> in the lurch.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb122"
+href="#pb122" name="pb122">122</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;&rsquo;Tis good of you,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;ye shall
+have the promised <i>royal</i>. But come with me, I will apportion to
+each of you the usual task.&rdquo; This he did, and once again the good
+music of sledges beating, anvils ringing, bellows blowing, and workmen
+singing was heard in the forge of the good smith.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Smetse went to his wife and said to her with great heat:
+&ldquo;Dost think it a fine thing to gainsay me before these good men!
+Chattering magpie, wilt never learn to hold thy tongue? Hast not
+already to-night been admonished sharply enough? Must thou have more
+telling?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Smetse,&rdquo; said his wife, &ldquo;I did not know that
+you had sent for them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is no reason,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;why thou shouldst
+give me the lie before all my workmen; canst thou not leave thy
+speaking until I have done, or else hold thy tongue altogether, which
+would be better still.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said his wife, &ldquo;I never saw you so angry
+before. Do not beat me, my man, I will be henceforward as dumb as this
+cheese.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you should,&rdquo; said Smetse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, my man,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;canst not explain to me
+somewhat of all these happenings?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sometime,&rdquo; he said, and went back into his smithy.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VII.</span> Of Smetse the
+Rich.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">That day there came to Smetse many persons, both
+notable and common, nobles, priests, burgesses, and peasants, to give
+him orders for much work, and so it went on again on other days, and
+all through the year.</p>
+<p>Soon the smithy became too small, and Smetse had to enlarge it by
+reason of the ever-growing numbers of his workmen. And the work which
+they did was so beautiful and so marvellously well done that the fame
+of it spread abroad to foreign and distant countries, and people came
+to see and admire it from Holland, Zeeland, Spain, Germany, England,
+and even from the land of the Turk. <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb123" href="#pb123" name="pb123">123</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But Smetse, thinking of the seven years, was not happy at all.</p>
+<p>Soon his coffers were full of fine <i>crusats</i>, <i>angelots</i>,
+<i>rose nobles</i>, and golden jewels. But he found no pleasure in
+looking at all this wealth, for he thought them poor payment for giving
+his soul to the devil for all the length of eternity.</p>
+<p>Red Slimbroek lost all his customers, who came back one by one to
+Smetse. Ragged and miserable he used to come every day and lounge on
+the quay, watching from there the bright fire glowing in the forge of
+the good smith, and, so standing, he seemed dazed and stupid, like an
+owl watching a doit. Smetse, knowing that he was needy, sent him
+several customers to bring him some means of sustenance, and also more
+than once a gift of money. But although he thus repaid evil with good
+he was no longer happy, thinking of the seven years.</p>
+<p>Smetse&rsquo;s wife, finding him so wealthy, bought for dinner each
+Sunday legs of fat mutton, geese, capons, turkeys, and other good
+meats; invited to her table his relatives, friends, and workmen; and
+then there would be a great feast, well washed down with double
+<i>bruinbier</i>. But Smetse, though he ate and drank like an emperor,
+was not at all happy, thinking of the seven years. And the steam from
+the roast meats spread abroad on the Quai aux Oignons, so fragrant and
+succulent, and so sweetening the air, that all the dogs wandering in
+the streets of the town would stop before the house and sniff at the
+smell, and there on their haunches, nose in air, would wait for crumbs:
+and the beggars, of whom there were great numbers, came thither
+likewise and tried to drive away the dogs. Thereupon ensued furious
+battles, in which many were badly bitten. Seeing this, Smetse&rsquo;s
+wife and other women would come every Sunday to the door with baskets
+of alms, and there, before the meal began, would give the beggars good
+bread, slices of meat, and two farthings to get themselves drink, and
+all this with soft words and fair speaking; then they charged them to
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb124" href="#pb124" name=
+"pb124">124</a>]</span>go away from the quay, which they did in an
+orderly manner. But the dogs stayed behind, and at the end of the feast
+there was given to them likewise food of some sort. And then they would
+go off also, taking each his bone or other booty.</p>
+<p>Smetse and his wife together took both dogs and men into their
+affection; to the beggars he gave food and shelter; and so also to all
+the dogs of Ghent that were lame, infirm, or sickly, until at length
+his house came to be called the Dogs&rsquo; Hospital and the Home of
+the Poor.</p>
+<p>Nevertheless he was not at all happy, thinking of the seven
+years.</p>
+<p>Worn and troubled with these thoughts, Smetse stopped singing and
+lost his fat, shrivelled visibly, became melancholy and moody, and in
+his smithy said never a word, except to give a necessary order.</p>
+<p>And he was no longer called <i>Smetse the Merry</i>, but <i>Smetse
+the Rich</i>.</p>
+<p>And he counted the days.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">VIII.</span> How there came a
+ragged, wayfarer to Smetse&rsquo;s door, and with him, on an ass, a
+sweet wife and a little child.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">On the two hundred and forty-fifth day of the seventh
+year, when the plum-trees were in bloom, Smetse, dumb as a stone, was
+taking a little noonday rest. He sat on a wooden bench opposite his
+door, and with melancholy mien looked at the trees planted all along
+the quay, and the small birds playing among the branches or squabbling
+and pecking one another over some morsel of food, and blinked in the
+bright sun which made these birds so merry, and heard at his back the
+goodly sounds of his forge, his wife preparing dinner, and his workmen
+hurrying at their work so that they might be off to their meal, for it
+was nearing the time; and he said to himself that in hell he would see
+neither the sun, nor the birds, nor the trees with their load of green
+leaves, nor hear any more the sounds of his forge, nor the smiths
+hurrying, nor his good wife preparing dinner. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb125" href="#pb125" name="pb125">125</a>]</span></p>
+<p>By and by the workmen came out, and Smetse was left sitting alone on
+his bench, pondering in his mind whether there were not some way
+whereby he might outwit the devil.</p>
+<p>Suddenly there drew up at his door a man of piteous appearance, with
+brown hair and beard, dressed like a ragged townsman, and carrying a
+great staff in his hand. He was walking beside an ass, and leading it
+along by a rein. On the ass rode a sweet and beautiful young woman with
+a noble mien, suckling a little child, who was quite naked, and of such
+gentle and winsome countenance that the sight of it warmed
+Smetse&rsquo;s heart.</p>
+<p>The ass stopped at the door of the smithy and began to bray
+loudly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Master smith,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;our ass has cast
+one of his shoes on his way hither, wilt thou be pleased to give orders
+that another should be given him?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will do it myself,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;for I am
+alone here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I should tell thee,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;that we are
+beggars, without money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have no care for that,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I am rich
+enough to be able to shoe in silver without payment all the asses in
+Flanders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hearing this the woman alighted from the ass and asked Smetse if she
+might sit down on the bench.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>And while he was fastening up the beast, paring his hoof and fitting
+the shoe, he said to the man: &ldquo;Whence come you, with this woman
+and this ass?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We come,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;from a distant country,
+and have still far to go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this child whom I see naked,&rdquo; said Smetse,
+&ldquo;does he not oftentimes suffer from the cold?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;for he is all warmth and all
+life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;you do not cry down
+your own children, master. But what is your meat and drink while you
+are travelling in this manner?&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb126" href="#pb126" name="pb126">126</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Water from streams,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;and such
+bread as is given us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;that is not much, I see, for
+the ass&rsquo;s panniers are light. You must often go
+hungry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;is displeasing to me, and it
+is most unwholesome for a nursing mother to suffer hunger, for so the
+milk turns sour, and the child grows in sickly wise.&rdquo; And he
+called out to his wife: &ldquo;Mother, bring hither as many loaves and
+hams as will fill the panniers of this beast. And do not forget some
+double <i>bruinbier</i>, &rsquo;tis heavenly comfort for poor
+travellers. And a good peck of oats for the ass.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When the panniers were filled and the beast shod, the man said to
+Smetse: &ldquo;Smith, it is in my mind to give thee some recompense for
+thy great goodness, for such as thou seest me I have great
+power.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said Smetse, with a smile, &ldquo;I can see that
+well enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am,&rdquo; said the man, &ldquo;Joseph, nominal husband of
+the very blessed Virgin Mary, who is sitting on this bench, and this
+child that she has in her arms is Jesus, thy Saviour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Smetse, dumbfounded at these words, looked at the wayfarers with
+great astonishment, and saw about the man&rsquo;s head a nimbus of
+fire, a crown of stars about the woman&rsquo;s, and, about the
+child&rsquo;s, beautiful rays more brilliant than the sun, springing
+from his head and girdling him round with light.</p>
+<p>Thereupon he fell at their feet and said: &ldquo;My Lord Jesus,
+Madam the Virgin, and my Master St. Joseph, grant me pardon for my lack
+of understanding.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>To this St. Joseph replied: &ldquo;Thou art an honest man, Smetse,
+and righteous as well. For this reason I give thee leave to make three
+requests, the greatest thou canst think of, and my Lord Jesus will
+listen to them favourably.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words Smetse was filled with joy, for it seemed to him that
+in this way he might perhaps escape the devil; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb127" href="#pb127" name="pb127">127</a>]</span>but
+at the same time he did not dare to avow that he had traded his soul
+away. So he remained in silence for a few moments, thinking of what
+things he could ask, then suddenly said, with great respect: &ldquo;My
+Lord Jesus, Madam St. Mary, and you, Master St. Joseph, will you please
+to enter my dwelling? There I can tell you what boons I ask.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will,&rdquo; said St. Joseph.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mother,&rdquo; said Smetse to his wife, &ldquo;come hither
+and look to the ass of these noble lords.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Smetse went in before them, sweeping the threshold so that there
+should be no dust to touch the soles of their feet.</p>
+<p>And he took them into his garden, where there was a fine plum-tree
+in full blossom. &ldquo;My Lord, Madam, and Sir,&rdquo; said Smetse,
+&ldquo;will it please you to order that whosoever shall climb up into
+this plum-tree shall not be able to come down again unless I so
+desire?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will,&rdquo; said St. Joseph.</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e3698width" id="p126"><img src="images/p126.jpg"
+alt="In Smetse&rsquo;s Garden" width="547" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">In Smetse&rsquo;s Garden</p>
+</div>
+<p>Thence he led the way into the kitchen, where there stood a great
+and precious arm-chair, well padded in the seat, and of enormous
+weight.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord, Madam, and Sir,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;will it
+please you that whosoever shall sit in this chair shall not be able to
+rise unless I so desire?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will,&rdquo; said St. Joseph.</p>
+<p>Then Smetse fetched a sack, and, showing it to them, said: &ldquo;My
+Lord, Madam, and Sir, will it please you that, whatsoever his stature,
+man or devil shall be able to get into this sack, but not out again,
+unless I so desire?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It will,&rdquo; said St. Joseph.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord, Madam, and Sir,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;thanks be
+unto you. Now that I have made my three requests I have naught else to
+ask of your goodness, save only your blessing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will give it,&rdquo; said St. Joseph.</p>
+<p>And he blessed Smetse, and thereafter the holy family went upon
+their way. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb128" href="#pb128" name=
+"pb128">128</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">IX.</span> What Smetse did in
+order to keep his secret.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">The good wife had heard nothing of what was said to
+her man by the celestial wayfarers, and she was amazed to see the
+behaviour and hear the speech of the good smith. But she was more so
+than ever when, on the departure of the all-powerful visitors, Smetse
+began to give forth bursts of laughter, to rub his hands, take hold of
+her, thump her on the chest, twist her this way and that, and say in a
+triumphant tone: &ldquo;It may be, after all, that I shall not burn,
+that I shall not roast, that I shall not be eaten! Art not glad of
+it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I cannot understand what you
+are talking about, my man; have you gone mad?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;do not show me the whites of
+thine eyes in this pitiful manner, &rsquo;tis no time for that. Canst
+not see how light my heart has grown? &rsquo;Tis because I have got rid
+of a burden on my shoulders heavier than the belfry itself; I say this
+belfry, our own, with the dragon taken from that of Bruges. And I am
+not to be eaten. By Artevelde! my legs bestir themselves of their own
+accord at the thought of it. I dance! Wilt not do likewise? Fie, moody
+one, brewing melancholy when her man is so happy! Kiss me, wife, kiss
+me, mother, for my <i>proficiat</i>; and so thou shouldst, for instead
+of despair I have found a good and steadfast hope. They think to roast
+me with sauces and feast off my flesh to their fill. I will have the
+laugh of them. Dance, wife, dance!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Smetse,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;you should take a purge,
+my man; they say &rsquo;tis good for madness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou,&rdquo; he said, tapping her on the shoulder with great
+affection and tenderness, &ldquo;talkest boldly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;to the good doctor preaching
+reason to me! But wert thou mad or not, Smetse, doffing thy bonnet as
+thou did to those beggars who came hither sowing their lice; giving to
+me, thy wife, their ass to hold; filling their hampers with our best
+bread, <i>bruinbier</i>, and ham; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb129"
+href="#pb129" name="pb129">129</a>]</span>falling on thy knees before
+them to have their blessing, and treating them like archdukes, with a
+torrent of My Lords, Sirs, and Madams.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words Smetse saw well enough that the lordly wayfarers had
+not wished to discover themselves to any but he. &ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; he
+said, &ldquo;thou must not question me further, for I can tell thee
+nothing of this mystic happening, which it is not given thee to
+understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;then &rsquo;tis worse than
+madness, &rsquo;tis mystery. Thou dost ill to hide thyself from me in
+this wise, Smetse, for I have always lived in thy house, faithful to
+thee only, cherishing thine honour, husbanding thy wealth, neither
+lending nor borrowing, holding my tongue in the company of other wives,
+considering thy secrets as mine own and never breathing a word of them
+to any one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know it,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;thou hast been a good
+and true wife.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then why,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;knowing this, hast thou not
+more faith in me? Ah, my man, it hurts me; tell me the secret, I shall
+know how to keep it, I promise thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;knowing nothing thou wilt be
+able to hold thy tongue the more easily.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;wilt thou verily tell me
+nothing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>By and by the workmen came back, and Smetse gave each of them a good
+<i>royal</i> to get themselves drink.</p>
+<p>Whereat they were all so merry, and felt themselves so rich, that
+for three days none of them put his nose into the smithy, save one old
+man who was too withered, stiff, short of breath, and unsteady on his
+legs to go swimming with the others in the Lys, and afterwards drying
+in the sun among the tall grasses, dancing in the meadows to the music
+of rebecks, bagpipes, and cymbals, and at night in the tavern emptying
+pots and draining glasses. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb130" href=
+"#pb130" name="pb130">130</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">X.</span> Of the Bloody
+Councillor.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">At length the day came on which the good smith was due
+to hand over his soul to the devil, for the seventh year had run out,
+and plums were once again ripe.</p>
+<p>At nightfall, when certain workmen were busy on a grating for the
+Franciscan brothers which was to be done that night, and had stayed
+behind with Smetse for that purpose, there came into the forge an
+evil-looking fellow, with greasy white hair, a rope round his neck, his
+jaw dropped, his tongue hanging out, and dressed in an ill-found habit
+like a nobleman&rsquo;s servant fallen on evil days.</p>
+<p>This fellow, without being heard by any one there as he walked
+across the floor, came quickly up to Smetse and put his hand on his
+shoulder. &ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;hast packed thy
+bundle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hearing this the smith swung round. &ldquo;Packed,&rdquo; he said,
+&ldquo;and how does my packing concern thee, master
+bald-pate?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; replied the fellow in a harsh voice,
+&ldquo;hast forgotten thy restored fortunes, and the good times thou
+hast enjoyed, and the black paper?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Smetse, doffing his bonnet with great
+humility, &ldquo;I have not forgotten; pardon me, my lord, I could not
+call to mind your gracious countenance. Will you be pleased to come
+into my kitchen, and try a slice of fat ham, taste a pot of good
+<i>bruinbier</i>, and sip a bottle of wine? We have time enough for
+that, for the seven years are not yet struck, but want, if I am not
+mistaken, still two hours.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That is true,&rdquo; said the devil; &ldquo;then let us go
+into thy kitchen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So they entered in and sat down to the table.</p>
+<p>The good wife was greatly astonished to see them come in. Smetse
+said to her: &ldquo;Bring us wine, <i>bruinbier</i>, ham, sausages,
+bread, cakes, and cheeses, and the best of each that we have in the
+house.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Smetse,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;you waste the good
+things <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb131" href="#pb131" name=
+"pb131">131</a>]</span>which God has given you. &rsquo;Tis well to come
+to the help of poor folk, but not to do more for one than another.
+Beggar-men are beggar-men, all are equal!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Beggar-men!&rdquo; exclaimed the devil, &ldquo;that I am not
+and never was. Death to the beggar-men! To the gallows with the
+beggar-men!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I beg you not to be angry
+with my good wife, who knows you not at all. Wife, consider and look at
+our guest with great attention, but greater respect, and afterwards
+thou mayest tell thy gossips that thou hast seen my Lord Jacob Hessels,
+the greatest reaper of heretics that ever was.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, wife, he mowed them down grandly, and had so many of them
+hanged, burnt, and tortured in divers ways, that he could drown himself
+a hundred times in the blood of his dead. Go, wife, go and fetch him
+meat and drink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While he was munching, Smetse said: &ldquo;Ah, my lord, I soon
+recognized you by your particular way of saying: &lsquo;To the
+gallows!&rsquo; and also by this rope which finished off your life in
+so evil a manner. For Our Lord said: &lsquo;Whoso liveth by the rope
+shall perish by the rope.&rsquo; My Lord Ryhove was harsh and
+treacherous toward you, for besides taking your life he took also your
+beard, which was a fine one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, that was an evil trick to play on so good a councillor as
+you were in those days when you slept so quietly and peaceably in the
+Bloody Council&mdash;I should say the Council of Civil Disorders,
+speaking respectfully&mdash;and woke up only to say: &rsquo;To the
+gallows!&rsquo; and then went to sleep again.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;those were good
+times.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So they were,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;times of riches and
+power for you, my lord. Ah, we owe you a great deal: the tithe tax,
+dropped by you into the ear of the Emperor Charles; the arrest of my
+lords of Egmont and Hoorn, whereof the warrant was written in your own
+fair hand, and of more than two thousand persons who perished at your
+command by fire, steel, and rope!&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb132" href="#pb132" name="pb132">132</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;I do not know the number,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;but
+it is large. Give me, Smetse, some more of this sausage, which is
+excellent.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis not good enough
+for your lordship. But you are drinking nothing. Empty this tankard,
+&rsquo;tis double <i>bruinbier</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smith,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;it is good also, but I
+tasted better at Pierkyn&rsquo;s tavern one day when five girls of the
+Reformed Faith were burnt together in the market-place. That frothed
+better. While we were drinking we heard these five maids singing psalms
+in the fire. Ah, we drank well that day! But think, Smetse, of the
+great perversity of those maids, all young and strong, and so fast set
+in their crimes that they sang their psalms without complaint, smiling
+at the fire and invoking God in a heretical fashion. Give me more to
+drink, Smetse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;King Philip asked for your
+canonization at Rome, for having served Spain and the Pope so well; why
+then are you not in paradise, my lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; wept the devil, &ldquo;I had no recognition of
+my former services. Those traitors of Reformers are with God, while I
+burn in the bottom of the pit. And there, without rest or respite, I
+have to sing heretical psalms; cruel punishment, unspeakable torment!
+These chants stick in my throat, scrape up and down in my breast,
+tearing my inner flesh like a bristling porcupine with iron spines. At
+every note a new wound, a bleeding sore: and always, always I have to
+keep singing, and so it will go on through all the length of
+eternity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words Smetse was very much frightened, thinking how heavily
+God had punished Jacob Hessels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drink, my lord,&rdquo; he said to him; &ldquo;this
+<i>bruinbier</i> is balm to sore throttles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly the clock struck.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Smetse,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis the
+hour.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb133" href="#pb133" name=
+"pb133">133</a>]</span></p>
+<p>But the good smith, without answering, heaved a great sigh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What ails thee?&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I am grieved at your
+incontinence. Have I welcomed you so ill that you will not let me go,
+before I leave here, to embrace my wife a last time and bid farewell to
+my good workmen, and to take one more look at my good plum-tree whose
+fruits are so rich and juicy? Ah, I would gladly refresh myself with
+one or two before I go off to that land where there is always
+thirst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not think to escape me,&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I would not, my lord,&rdquo; said Smetse. &ldquo;Come
+with me, I pray you most humbly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;but not for
+long.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In the garden Smetse began to sigh afresh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;look at my plums, my lord; will
+you be pleased to let me go up and eat my fill?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go up then,&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>Up in the tree Smetse began to eat in a most greedy manner, and suck
+in the juice of the plums with a great noise. &ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; cried
+he, &ldquo;plums of paradise, Christian plums, how fat you are!
+Princely plums, you would solace a hundred devils burning in the lowest
+parts of hell. By you, sweet plums, blessed plums, is thirst driven out
+of my throat; by you, adorable plums, gentle plums, is purged from my
+stomach all evil melancholy; by you, fresh plums, sugary plums, is
+diffused in my blood an infinite sweetness. Ah, juicy plums, joyous
+plums, faery plums, would that I could go on sucking you for
+ever!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And while he was saying all this, Smetse went on picking them,
+eating them and sipping the juice, without ever stopping.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pox!&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;it makes my mouth water;
+why dost not throw me down some of these marvellous plums?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, my lord,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;that I cannot do;
+they <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb134" href="#pb134" name=
+"pb134">134</a>]</span>would melt into water on their fall, so delicate
+are they. But if you will be pleased to climb up into the tree you will
+find much pleasure in store for you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then I will,&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>When he was well settled on a stout branch and there regaling
+himself with plums, Smetse slipped down, picked up a stick lying on the
+grass and fell to belabouring him with great vigour.</p>
+<p>Feeling the stick on his back the devil would have leapt down on the
+smith, but could not move, for the skin of his seat held fast to the
+branch. And he snorted, ground his teeth, and foamed at the mouth with
+great rage, and also by reason of the pain which his tender skin caused
+him.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Smetse gave him a good drubbing, caressed with his stick
+every quarter of his body in turn, bruised him to the bone, tore his
+habit, and gave him as strong and straight a beating as was ever given
+in the land of Flanders. And he kept saying: &ldquo;You say not a word
+about my plums, my lord; they are good, none the less.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; cried Hessels, &ldquo;why am I not
+free!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, yes! why are you not free!&rdquo; answered Smetse,
+&ldquo;you would give me to some little butcher among your friends who
+would cut me up freely into slices like a ham, under your learned
+instruction, for you are, as I know well, a doctor of torment. But are
+you not being well tormented in turn by my stick? Alas, yes! why are
+you not free! You would hoist me up on some blessed gallows, and every
+one would see me hanging in the air, and freely would Master Hessels
+laugh. And so he would have his revenge on me for this excellent
+drubbing which I am giving him with such freedom. For nothing in this
+world is so free as a free stick falling freely on an unfree
+councillor. Alas, yes! why are you not free! You would free my head
+from my body, as you did with such satisfaction to my masters of Egmont
+and Hoorn. Alas, yes! why are you not free! then we should see Smetse
+in some good little fire, which would roast him <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb135" href="#pb135" name=
+"pb135">135</a>]</span>freely, as was done to the poor maids of the
+reformed faith; and Smetse, like them, would be heard singing with a
+free soul to the God of free believers, and with a free conscience
+stronger than the flame, while Master Hessels drank <i>bruinbier</i>
+and said that it frothed nicely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;why beat me so cruelly,
+without pity for my white hairs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As for thy white hair,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis
+the hair of an old tiger who ate up our country. For this reason it
+gives me sweet pleasure to beat thee with this oaken stick; and also in
+order that thou mayst give me permission to stay another seven years on
+this earth, where I find myself so well content, if it so please
+thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seven years!&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;do not count on
+that; I would rather bleed under thy stick.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I see that your skin is fond
+of good blows. These are tasty ones, it is true. But the best of cheer
+is unwholesome if taken in excess. So when you have had enough of them,
+be so good as to tell me. I will put a stop to this feast, but for that
+I must have the seven years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never,&rdquo; said Hessels; and lifting his snout into the
+air like a baying dog, he cried out: &ldquo;Devils to the
+rescue!&rdquo; But this he did so loudly, and in such screeching wise,
+that at the sound of his cracked voice blaring out like a trumpet, all
+the workmen came to see what it was about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You do not shout loud enough,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I
+will help you.&rdquo; And he beat him the harder, so that the devil
+cried the louder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;how well this stick makes the
+little nightingale sing in my plum-tree. He is saying over his
+<i>lied</i> of love to call hither his fair mate. She will come by and
+by, my lord; but come down, I pray you, and await her below, for they
+say that the night dew is deadly at a height from the
+ground.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baes</i>,&rdquo; said certain workmen, &ldquo;is it not my
+lord Jacob <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb136" href="#pb136" name=
+"pb136">136</a>]</span>Hessels, the Bloody Councillor, who is perched
+up there in thy plum-tree?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, lads,&rdquo; answered Smetse, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis indeed
+that worthy man. He seeks high places now as he did all his life, and
+so also at the end of it, when he swung in the air, putting out his
+tongue at the passers-by. For that which is of the gallows returns to
+the gallows, and the rope will take back its own. &rsquo;Tis
+written.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baes</i>,&rdquo; said they, &ldquo;can we not help to
+bring him down?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he. And the workmen went off to the
+smithy.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the devil said nothing, trying all the time to get his
+seat away from the branch. And he struggled, wriggled about, twisted
+himself a hundred different ways, and used as levers, to lift himself
+up, feet, hands, and head, but all in vain.</p>
+<p>And Smetse, belabouring him well, said to him: &ldquo;My lord
+Councillor, you are fast stuck, it seems, to the saddle; but I will
+have you out of it, have you out as fast as I can, for if I do not so,
+beating you with all my strength, you will tear up out of the ground
+the tree and its roots, and the good folk will see you walking along,
+dragging a plum-tree from your seat like a tail, which would be a
+piteous and laughable spectacle for such a noble devil as yourself to
+make. Give me rather the seven years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baes</i>,&rdquo; said the workmen, who had returned from
+the smithy with hammers and iron bars, &ldquo;here we are at your
+orders; what shall we do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;since I have combed him down
+with oaken staves we will now louse him with hammers and
+bars.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mercy, Smetse, mercy!&rdquo; cried the devil; hammers and
+bars, this is too much; thou hast the seven years, smith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Make haste,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;and write me the
+quittance.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb137" href="#pb137"
+name="pb137">137</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here it is,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>The smith took it, saw that it was in good order, and said: &ldquo;I
+desire that thou come down.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the devil was so weak and enfeebled by the blows he had had that
+when he tried to leap he fell on his back. And he went off limping,
+shaking his fist at Smetse, and saying: &ldquo;I await thee, in seven
+years, in hell, smith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So you may,&rdquo; said Smetse.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XI.</span> Wherein the
+workmen hold fair speech with Smetse.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">While the devil was making off, Smetse, watching his
+workmen, saw that they were looking at one another strangely, spoke
+together in low voices, and seemed awkward in their manner, like people
+who would speak out, but dare not.</p>
+<p>And he said to himself: &ldquo;Are they going to denounce me to the
+priests?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly Flipke the Bear came up to him. &ldquo;<i>Baes</i>,&rdquo;
+said he, &ldquo;we know well enough that this ghost of Hessels was sent
+to thee by him who is lord below; thou hast made a pact with the devil
+and art rich only by his money. We have guessed as much for some time.
+But so that thou should not be vexed, none of us have spoken of it in
+the town, and none will so speak. We would tell thee this to put thy
+mind at rest. And so now, <i>baes</i>, good night and quiet sleep to
+thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, lads,&rdquo; said Smetse, greatly softened.</p>
+<p>And they went their several ways.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XII.</span> How that Smetse
+would not give his secret into his wife&rsquo;s tongue&rsquo;s
+keeping.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">In the kitchen Smetse found his wife on her knees
+beating her breast, weeping, sighing, sobbing, and saying: &ldquo;Jesus
+Lord God, he has made a pact with the devil; but &rsquo;tis not with my
+consent, I swear. And you also, Madam the Virgin, you know it, and you
+also, all my masters the saints. Ah, I am indeed wretched, not on my
+own account, but for <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb138" href="#pb138"
+name="pb138">138</a>]</span>my poor man, who for the sake of some
+miserable gold sold his soul to the devil! Alas, yes, sell it he did!
+Ah, my saintly masters, who are yourselves so happy and in such glory,
+pray the very good God for him, and deign to consider that if, as I
+dare hope, I die a Christian death and go to paradise, I shall be all
+alone there, eating my rice pudding with silver spoons, while my poor
+man is burning in hell, crying out in thirst and hunger, and I not able
+to give him either meat or drink.... Alas, that will make me so
+unhappy! Ah, my good masters the saints, Madam the Virgin, My Lord
+Jesus, he sinned but this once, and was all the rest of his life a good
+man, a good Christian, kind to the poor and soft of heart. Save him
+from the fires which burn for ever, and do not separate above those who
+were so long united below. Pray for him, pray for me, alas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;thou art very wretched, it
+seems.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, wicked man,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;now I know all.
+&rsquo;Twas hell fire which came bursting into the house and lit up the
+forge; those master-bakers, brewers, and vintners were devils, all of
+them, and devil also that ugly man who showed thee the treasure and
+gave me so grievous a buffet. Who will dare to live peaceably in this
+house from now on? Alas, our food is the devil&rsquo;s, our drink also;
+devil&rsquo;s meat, loaves, and cheeses, devil&rsquo;s money, house,
+and all. Whoever should dig under this dwelling would see the fires of
+hell gush out incontinent. There are all the devils, I see them above,
+below, on the right hand, on the left, awaiting their prey with dropped
+jaws, like tigers. Ah, what a fine sight &rsquo;twill be to see my poor
+man torn into a hundred pieces by all these devils, and that in seven
+years, for he said, as I heard well enough, that he would come back in
+seven years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Weep not, wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;in seven years I
+may again be master as I was to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;if he had not gone up into the
+plum-tree, what wouldst thou have done, poor beggar-man? And
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb139" href="#pb139" name=
+"pb139">139</a>]</span>what if he will not let himself fall a second
+time into thy snare as he did to-day?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;he will so fall, for my
+snares are from heaven, and the things which are from God can always
+get the better of devils.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Art not lying again?&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;And wilt tell me
+what they are?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That I cannot,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;for devils have sharp
+ears and would hear me telling thee, no matter how low I spoke; and
+then I should be taken off to hell without mercy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;then I will not ask, though
+&rsquo;tis not pleasant for me to live here in ignorance of everything,
+like a stranger. Nevertheless I would rather have thee silent and saved
+than talking and damned.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;thou art wise when thou speakest
+so.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will pray,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;every day for thy
+deliverance, and have a good mass said for thee at St.
+Bavon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is it with devil&rsquo;s money
+thou wilt pay for this mass?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have no care for that,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;when this
+money enters the church coffers &rsquo;twill become suddenly
+holy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do as thou wilt, wife,&rdquo; said Smetse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;My Lord Jesus shall have a stout
+candle each day, and Madam the Virgin likewise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do not forget my master St. Joseph,&rdquo; said Smetse,
+&ldquo;for we owe him much.&rdquo;</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIII.</span> Of the Bloody
+Duke.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">The end of the seventh year came again in its turn,
+and on the last evening there crossed the threshold of Smetse
+Smee&rsquo;s dwelling a man with a sharp and haughty Spanish face, a
+nose like a hawk&rsquo;s beak, hard and staring eyes, and a white
+beard, long and pointed. For the rest he was dressed in armour finely
+worked and most richly gilt; decorated with the illustrious order of
+the Fleece; wore a fine red sash; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb140"
+href="#pb140" name="pb140">140</a>]</span>rested his left hand on the
+hilt of his sword, and held in his right the seven years&rsquo; pact
+and a marshal&rsquo;s wand.</p>
+<p>Coming into the forge he walked straight towards Smetse, holding his
+head loftily and without deigning to notice any of the workmen.</p>
+<p>The smith was standing in a corner, wondering how he could make the
+devil who was sent for him sit down in the arm-chair, when Flipke ran
+quickly up to him and said in his ear: &ldquo;<i>Baes</i>, the Bloody
+Duke is coming, take care!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Woe!&rdquo; said Smetse, speaking to himself,
+&ldquo;&rsquo;tis all up with me, if d&rsquo;Alva has come to fetch
+me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Meanwhile the devil approached the smith, showed him the pact, and
+took him by the arm without a word to lead him off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said Smetse in a most sorrowful manner,
+&ldquo;whither would you take me? To hell. I follow you. &rsquo;Tis too
+great honour for one so mean as I to be ordered by so noble a devil as
+yourself. But is it yet the appointed time? I think it is not, and your
+highness has too upright a soul to take me off before the time written
+in the deed. In the meantime I beg your highness to be seated: Flipke,
+a chair for My Lord; the best in my poor dwelling, the large,
+well-padded arm-chair which stands in my kitchen, beside the press,
+near the chimney, beneath the picture of my master St. Joseph. Wipe it
+well, lad, so that no dust may be left on it; and quick, for the noble
+duke is standing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Flipke ran into the kitchen and came back, saying:
+&ldquo;<i>Baes</i>, I cannot lift that arm-chair alone, &rsquo;tis so
+heavy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Then Smetse feigned great anger and said to his workmen: &ldquo;Do
+ye not hear? He cannot lift it alone. Go and help him, and if it takes
+ten of you let ten go. And quick now. Fie! the blockheads, can ye
+&rsquo;not see that the noble duke is standing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nine workmen ran to obey him and brought the chair into the forge,
+though not without difficulty. Smetse said: &ldquo;Put it there, behind
+My Lord. Is there any dust on it? <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb141"
+href="#pb141" name="pb141">141</a>]</span>By Artevelde! they have not
+touched this corner. I will do it myself. Now &rsquo;tis as clean as
+new-washed glass. Will your highness deign to be seated?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This the devil did, and then looked round him with great haughtiness
+and disdain. But of a sudden the smith fell at his feet, and said with
+mocking laughter: &ldquo;Sir duke, you see before you the most humble
+of your servants, a poor man living like a Christian, serving God,
+honouring princes, and anxious, if such is your lordly pleasure, to
+continue in this way of life seven years more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou shalt not have one minute,&rdquo; said the devil,
+&ldquo;come, Fleming, come with me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he tried to rise from the chair, but could not. And while he was
+struggling with might and main, making a thousand vain efforts, the
+good smith cried joyously: &ldquo;Would your highness get up? Ah,
+&rsquo;tis too soon! Let your highness wait, he is not yet rested after
+his long journey; long, I make bold to say, for it must be a good
+hundred leagues from hell to my smithy, and that is a long way for such
+noble feet, by dusty roads. Ah, My Lord, let yourself rest a little in
+this good chair. Nevertheless, if you are in great haste to be off,
+grant me the seven years and I will give you in return your noble leave
+and a full flask of Spanish wine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I care nothing for thy wine,&rdquo; answered the devil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baes</i>,&rdquo; said Flipke, &ldquo;offer him blood, he
+will drink then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My lad,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;thou knowest well enough
+we have no such thing as blood in our cellars hereabouts, for that is
+no Flemish drink, but one that we leave to Spain. Therefore his
+highness must be so good as to excuse me. Nevertheless, I think he is
+thirsty, not for blood, but for blows, and of those I will give him his
+illustrious fill, since he will not grant me the seven
+years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smith,&rdquo; said the devil, looking at Smetse with great
+contempt, &ldquo;thou wouldst not dare beat me, I think?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, My Lord,&rdquo; said the good man. &ldquo;You would have
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb142" href="#pb142" name=
+"pb142">142</a>]</span>me dead. For my part I hold to my skin, and this
+not without good reason, for it has always been faithful to me and well
+fastened. Would it not be a criminal act to break off in this sudden
+fashion so close a partnership? And besides, you would take me off with
+you to hell, where the air is filled with the stench of the divers
+cookeries for damned souls which are set up there. Ah, rather than go
+thither I would beat your highness for seven years.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fleming,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;thou speakest without
+respect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, My Lord,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;but I will hit you
+with veneration.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And so saying he gave him with his clenched fist a terrible great
+blow on the nose, whereat the devil seemed astonished, dazed, and
+angry, like a powerful king struck by a low-born servant. And he tried
+to leap upon the smith, clenched his fists, ground his teeth, and shot
+out blood from his nose, his mouth, his eyes, and his ears, so angry
+was he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;you seem angry, My Lord. But
+deign to consider that since you will not listen to my words, I must
+speak to you by blows. By this argument am I not doing my best to
+soften your heart to my piteous case? Alas, deign to consider that my
+humble fist is making its supplication as best it can to your
+illustrious eyes, begs seven years from your noble nose, implores them
+from your ducal jaw. Do not these respectful taps tell your lordly
+cheeks how happy, joyous, and well-liking I should be during those
+seven years? Ah, let yourself be convinced. But, I see, I must speak to
+you in another fashion, with the words of iron bars, the prayers of
+tongs, and the supplications of sledge-hammers. Lads,&rdquo; said the
+smith to his workmen, &ldquo;will you be pleased to hold converse with
+My Lord?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, <i>baes</i>,&rdquo; said they.</p>
+<p>And together with Smetse they chose their tools. But it was the
+oldest who picked the heaviest ones, and were the hottest with rage,
+because it was they who in former days <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb143" href="#pb143" name="pb143">143</a>]</span>had lost, through the
+duke&rsquo;s doing, many friends and relatives by steel, by stake, and
+by live burial, and they cried: &ldquo;God is on our side, he has
+delivered the enemy into our hands. Out upon the Bloody Duke, the
+master-butcher, the lord of the axe!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And all of them, young and old, cursed the devil with a thunder of
+cries; and they came up to him menacingly, surrounding the chair and
+raising their tools to strike.</p>
+<p>But Smetse stopped them and spoke again to the devil. &ldquo;If your
+highness,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;is minded to hold to his noble bones,
+let him deign to grant me the seven years, for the time for laughter is
+past, let me tell you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Baes</i>,&rdquo; said the workmen, &ldquo;whence comes to
+thee this kindness beyond measure? Why hold so long and fair parley
+with this fellow? Let us first break him up, and then he will offer
+thee the seven years of his own accord.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Seven years!&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;seven years! he
+shall not have so much as the shadow of a minute. Strike, men of Ghent,
+the lion is in the net; ye who could not find a hole deep enough to
+hide yourselves in when he was free and showed his fangs. Flemish
+cowards, see what I think of you and your threats.&rdquo; And he spat
+on them.</p>
+<p>At this spittle the bars, hammers, and other tools fell on him thick
+as hail, breaking his bones and the plates of his armour, and Smetse
+and his workmen said as they beat to their hearts&rsquo; content:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cowards were we, who wished to worship God in the sincerity
+of our hearts; valiant was he who prevented us with steel, stake, and
+live burial.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cowards were we for having always laughed readily and drunk
+joyously, like men who, having done what they had to do, make light of
+the rest: valiant was this dark personage when he had poor men of the
+people arrested in the midst of their merrymaking at <i>Kermis</i>-time
+and put death where had been laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cowards were the eighteen thousand eight hundred <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb144" href="#pb144" name=
+"pb144">144</a>]</span>persons who died for the glory of God; cowards
+those numberless others who by the rapine, brutality and insolence of
+the fighting men, lost their lives in these lands and others. Valiant
+was he who ordained their sufferings, and more valiant still when he
+celebrated his own evil deeds by a banquet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cowards were we always, we who, after a battle, treated our
+prisoners like brothers; valiant was he who, after the defeat in
+Friesland, had his own men slaughtered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Cowards were we, who laboured without ceasing, spreading
+abroad over the whole world the work of our hands; valiant was he when,
+under the cloak of religion, he slew the richer among us without
+distinction between Romans and Reformers, and robbed us by pillage and
+extortion of thirty-six million florins. For the world is turned upside
+down; cowardly is the busy bee who makes the honey, and valiant the
+idle drone who steals it away. Spit, noble duke, on these Flemish
+cowards.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the duke could neither spit nor cough, for from the roughness of
+the blows they had given him he had altogether lost the shape of a man,
+so mingled and beaten together were bones, flesh, and steel. But there
+was no blood to be seen, which was a marvellous thing. Suddenly, while
+the workmen, wearied with beating, were taking breath, a weak voice
+came out from this hotch-potch of bones, flesh, and steel, saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou hast the seven years, Smetse.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well then, My Lord,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;sign the
+quittance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This the devil did.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;will your highness please
+to get up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words, by great marvel, the devil regained his shape. But
+while he was walking away, holding up his head with great haughtiness
+and not deigning to look at his feet, he tripped over a sledge lying on
+the ground, and fell on his <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb145" href=
+"#pb145" name="pb145">145</a>]</span>nose with great indignity, thereby
+giving much occasion for laughter to the workmen, who did not fail to
+make use of it. Picking himself up he threatened them with his fist,
+but they burst out laughing more loudly than ever. He came at them,
+grinding his teeth; they hooted him. He tried to strike with his sword
+a short and sturdy little workman; but the man seized the sword from
+his hands and broke it in three pieces. He struck another in the face
+with his fist, but the man gave him so good and valiant a kick as to
+send him sprawling on the quay with his legs in the air. There,
+flushing with shame, he melted into red smoke, like a vapour of blood,
+and the workmen heard a thousand joyous and merry voices, saying:
+&ldquo;Beaten is the Bloody Duke, shamed is the lord of the axe,
+inglorious the prince of butchers! <i lang="nl">Vlaenderland tot
+eeuwigheid!</i> Flanders for ever!&rdquo; And a thousand pairs of hands
+beat applause all together. And the dawn broke.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIV.</span> Of the great
+fears and pains of Smetse&rsquo;s wife.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Smetse, going to look for his wife, found her in the
+kitchen on her knees before the picture of St. Joseph. &ldquo;Well,
+mother,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;what didst think of our dance? Was it
+not a merry one? Ah, henceforth they will call our house the House of
+Beaten Devils.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said his wife, wagging her head, &ldquo;yes, and
+also the house of Smetse who was carried away to hell. For that is
+where thou wilt go; I know it, I feel it, I foretell it. This
+devil&rsquo;s coming all accoutred for war presages evil. He will come
+back, no longer alone, but with a hundred thousand devils armed like
+himself. Ah, my poor man! They will carry lances, swords, pikes, hooked
+axes, and arquebuses. They will drag behind them canon which they will
+fire at us; and everything will be ground to pieces, thou, I, the
+smithy, and the workmen. Alas, everything will be levelled to the
+ground! And where our smithy now stands will be nothing but a sorry
+heap of dust. And the folk walking <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb146"
+href="#pb146" name="pb146">146</a>]</span>past along the quay will say
+when they see this dust: &lsquo;There lies the house of Smetse, the
+fool who sold his soul to the devil.&rsquo; And I, after dying in this
+fashion, shall go to Paradise, as I dare to hope. But thee, my man, oh,
+woe unspeakable! they will take away with them and drag through fire,
+smoke, brimstone, pitch, boiling oil, to that terrible place where
+those are punished who, wishing to break a pact made with the devil,
+have no special help from God or his holy saints. Poor little man, my
+good comrade, dost know what there is in store for thee? Ho, a gulf as
+deep as the heavens are high, and studded all down its terrible sides
+with jutting points of rock, iron spikes, horrid spears, and a thousand
+dreadful pikes. And dost know what manner of gulf this is, my man?
+&rsquo;Tis a gulf wherein a man may keep falling always&mdash;dost
+understand me, always, always&mdash;gashed by the rocks, cut about by
+the spears, torn open by the pikes, always, always, down all the long
+length of eternity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;hast ever seen this
+gulf whereof thou speakest?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;but I know what manner of place
+it is, for I have often heard tell of it in the church of St. Bavon.
+And the good canon predicant would not lie.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, no,&rdquo; said Smetse.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XV.</span> Of the Bloody
+King.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">When the last night of the seventh year was come
+Smetse was in his smithy, looking at the enchanted sack, and asking
+himself with much anxiety how he could make the devil get into it.</p>
+<p>While he was wondering, the smithy suddenly became filled with an
+evil stench of the most putrid, offensive and filthy kind. Innumerable
+lice swarmed over the threshold, ceiling, anvils, sledges, bars and
+bellows, Smetse and his men, who were all as if blinded, for these lice
+were as thick in the smithy as smoke, cloud, or fog. <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb147" href="#pb147" name="pb147">147</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And a melancholy but imperative voice spoke, saying: &ldquo;Smetse,
+come with me; the seven years have struck.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Smetse and his workmen, looking as well as they could in the
+direction whence the voice came, saw a man coming towards them with a
+royal crown on his head, and on his back a cloak of cloth-of-gold. But
+beneath the cloak the man was naked, and on his breast were four great
+abscesses, which formed together a single wide sore, and from this came
+the stench which filled the smithy, and the clouds of lice which
+swarmed round about. And he had on his right leg another abscess, more
+filthy, rank, and offensive than the rest. The man himself was
+white-faced, auburn-haired, red-bearded, with lips a little drawn, and
+mouth open somewhat. In his grey eyes were melancholy, envy,
+dissimulation, hypocrisy, harshness, and evil rancour.</p>
+<p>When the older workmen saw him they cried out in a voice like
+thunder: &ldquo;Smetse, the Bloody King is here, take care!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silence,&rdquo; cried the smith, &ldquo;peace there, silence
+and veneration! Let every man doff his bonnet to the greatest king that
+ever lived, Philip II by name, King of Castile, Leon, and Aragon, Count
+of Flanders, Duke of Burgundy and Brabant, Palatine of Holland and
+Zeeland, most illustrious of all illustrious princes, great among the
+great, victorious among victors. Sire,&rdquo; said he to the devil,
+&ldquo;you do me unparalleled honour to come hither in person to lead
+me to hell, but my humble Ghentish lowness makes bold to suggest to
+your Royal and Palatine Highness that the appointed hour has not yet
+struck. Therefore if it pleases your Majesty I will pass on earth the
+brief time which is still left to me to live.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I allow it,&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Smetse seemed unable to take his eyes off the devil, and
+showed himself very sorrowful and heavy, nodding his head, and saying
+several times:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, alas! cruel torment! evil hour!&rdquo; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb148" href="#pb148" name="pb148">148</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;What ails thee?&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;nothing ails me but the
+great sorrow which I have at seeing how harsh God has been towards you,
+leaving you to bear in hell the malady whereof you died. Ah, &rsquo;tis
+a most pitiful sight to see so great a king as you consumed by these
+lice and eaten up with these abscesses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I care nothing for thy pity,&rdquo; answered the king.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; said Smetse further, &ldquo;deign to think no
+evil of my words. I have never been taught fine ways of speech; but
+notwithstanding this I make bold to sympathize with your illustrious
+sufferings, and this the more in that I myself have known and suffered
+your ill, and you can still see, Sire, the terrible marks on my
+skin.&rdquo; And Smetse, uncovering his breast, showed the marks of the
+wounds which he had received from the traitor Spanish when he sailed
+the seas with the men of Zeeland.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said the devil-king, &ldquo;thou seemest well
+enough cured, smith! Wast thou verily as sick as I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Like you, Sire,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I was nothing but
+a heap of living filth; like you I was fetid, rank, and offensive, and
+every one fled from me as they fled from you; like you I was eaten up
+with lice; but what could not be done for you by the most illustrious
+doctor Olias of Madrid, a humble carpenter did for me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At these words the devil-king cocked his ear. &ldquo;In what
+place,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;does this carpenter dwell, and what is
+his name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He dwells,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;in the heavens, and his
+name is Master St. Joseph.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And did this great saint appear to thee by especial
+miracle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Sire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And by virtue of what didst thou merit this rare and blessed
+favour?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; answered Smetse, &ldquo;I have never by my own
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb149" href="#pb149" name=
+"pb149">149</a>]</span>virtue merited so much as the shadow of a single
+grain of particular grace, but in my sufferings I prayed humbly and
+with faith to my blessed patron, Master St. Joseph, and he deigned to
+come to my succour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me of this happening, smith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire,&rdquo; said Smetse, holding up the sack, &ldquo;this
+was my remedy.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This sack?&rdquo; asked the devil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Sire; but will your Majesty deign to look closely at the
+hemp whereof it is woven. Do you not think its quality altogether
+strange! Alas,&rdquo; said Smetse, running on with his talk, and
+appearing to go into an ecstasy, &ldquo;&rsquo;tis not given to us poor
+men to see every day such hemp as this. For this is not earthly hemp,
+but hemp of heaven, hemp from the good Paradise, sown by my master St.
+Joseph round about the tree of life, harvested and woven under his
+especial orders to make sacks wherein the beans are stored which my
+masters the angels eat on fast-days.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; asked the devil, &ldquo;how did this sack come
+into thy hands?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, Sire, by great marvel. One night I was in my bed,
+suffering twenty deaths from my ulcers, and almost at the point of
+giving up my soul. I saw my good wife weeping; I heard my neighbours
+and workmen, of whom there were many, saying round about my bed the
+prayers for the dying; my body was overcome with pain and my soul with
+despair. Nevertheless I kept praying to my blessed patron and swore
+that if he brought me out of that pass, I would burn to his honour in
+the church of St. Bavon such a candle as the fat of twenty sheep would
+not suffice to make. And my prayers were not in vain, Sire, for
+suddenly a hole opened in the ceiling above my head, a living flame and
+a celestial perfume filled the room, a sack came down through the hole,
+a man clothed in white followed the sack, walked in the air to my bed,
+pulled down the sheets which covered me, and in the twinkling of an eye
+put me in the sack and drew the strings <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb150" href="#pb150" name="pb150">150</a>]</span>tight round my neck.
+And then, behold the miracle! No sooner was I wrapped about with this
+good hemp than a genial warmth passed through me, my ulcers dried up,
+and the lice all perished suddenly with a terrible noise. After that
+the man told me with a smile about the hemp of heaven and the angelic
+beans, and finished his discourse by saying: &rsquo;Keep safe this
+remedy, &rsquo;tis sent thee by my master St. Joseph. Whosoever shall
+use it shall be cured of all ills and saved for all eternity, if in the
+meantime he do not sell his soul to the devil!&rsquo; Then the man went
+away. And what the good messenger told me was true, for by means of
+this sack from heaven, I cured Toon, my workman, of the king&rsquo;s
+evil; Pier of fever, Dolf of scurvy, Hendrik of the phlegm, and a score
+of others who owe it to me that they are still alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<div class="figure xd20e4221width" id="p150"><img src="images/p150.jpg"
+alt="The Devil-King and the Sack" width="549" height="720">
+<p class="figureHead">The Devil-King and the Sack</p>
+</div>
+<p>When Smetse had finished his speech the devil-king seemed lost in
+deep reflection, then suddenly lifted his eyes to heaven, joined his
+hands, crossed himself again and again, and, falling to his knees, beat
+upon his breast, and with most lamentable cries prayed as here follows:
+&ldquo;Ah, my Master St. Joseph, sweet Lord, blessed saint, immaculate
+husband of the Virgin without stain, you have deigned to make whole
+this smith, and he would have been saved by you for all eternity had he
+not sold his soul to the devil. But I, Master, I, a poor king, who pray
+to you, do you disdain to make me whole also, and to save me as you
+would have saved him? You know well, sweet Lord, how I devoted my life,
+my person, my goods and those of my subjects to the defence of our
+blessed religion; how I hated, as is right, the freedom to believe
+other things than those which are ordained for us; how I combated it by
+steel, stake, and live burial; how I saved in this wise from the venom
+of reform Brabant, Flanders, Artois, Hainault, Valenciennes, Lille,
+Douai, Orchies, Namur, Tournai, Tournaisie, Malines, and my other
+lands. Nevertheless I have been thrown into the fires of hell, and
+there suffer without respite the unutterable torment <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb151" href="#pb151" name="pb151">151</a>]</span>of
+my consuming ulcers and my devouring vermin. Ah, will you not make me
+whole, will you not save me? You are able, my Master. Yes, you will
+perform again for the sorrowing king the miracle which saved the smith.
+Then shall I be able to pass into paradise, blessing and glorifying
+your name through centuries and centuries. Save me, Master St. Joseph,
+save me. Amen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the devil-king, crossing himself, beating his breast, and
+babbling paternosters turn by turn, rose to his feet and said to
+Smetse: &ldquo;Put me in the sack, smith.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>This Smetse did gladly, rolled him into the sack, leaving only his
+head thrust out, drew tight round his neck the stout cords, and placed
+the devil on an anvil.<a id="xd20e4233" name="xd20e4233"></a></p>
+<p>At this spectacle the workmen burst out laughing, clapping their
+hands together, and saying a hundred merry things to one another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smith,&rdquo; asked the devil, &ldquo;are these Flemings
+laughing at me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Sire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are they saying, smith?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Sire, they are saying that horses are caught by means of
+corn; dogs by liver; asses by thistles; hogs by swill; trout by curdled
+blood; carp by cheese; pike by gudgeon; and a humbug of your kidney by
+tales of false miracles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho, the traitor smith,&rdquo; howled the devil, grinding his
+teeth, &ldquo;he has taken in vain the name of my Master St. Joseph, he
+has lied without shame.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, Sire.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And thou wilt dare to beat me as thou didst Jacob Hessels and
+my faithful duke?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even more heartily, Sire. Nevertheless &rsquo;tis only if you
+so wish it. You shall be set free if you please. Free if you give me
+back the deed; beaten if you are fixed in your idea of carrying me off
+to hell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give thee back the deed! &ldquo;roared the devil, &ldquo;I
+would rather suffer a thousand deaths in a single moment.&rdquo;
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb152" href="#pb152" name=
+"pb152">152</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sire King,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I pray you to think of
+your bones, which seem to me none too sound as it is. Consider also
+that the opportunity is a good one for us to avenge on your person our
+poor Flanders, so drenched in blood at your hands. But it displeases me
+to pass a second time where has passed already the wrath of the very
+just God. So give me back the deed; grace, Sire King, or &rsquo;twill
+begin raining presently.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Grace!&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;grace to a Fleming!
+perish Flanders rather! Ah, why have I not again, one single day, as
+much power, armies, and riches as I will; Flanders would give up her
+soul quickly. Then famine should reign in the land, parching the soil,
+drying up the water-springs and the life of plants; the last ghostly
+inhabitants of the empty towns would wander like phantoms in the
+streets, killing one another in heaps to find a little rotten food;
+bands of famished dogs would snatch newborn children from their
+mothers&rsquo; withered breasts and devour them; famine should lie
+where had been plenty, dust where had been towns, crows where had been
+men; and on this earth stripped naked, stony, and desolate, on this
+burial-ground, I would set up a black cross with this inscription: Here
+lies Flanders the heretic, Philip of Spain passed over her
+breast!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So saying the devil foamed at the mouth with wrath, but scarce were
+his last words cold from his lips when all the hammers and bars in the
+smithy fell on him at once. And Smetse and his workmen, striking in
+turn, said: &ldquo;This is for our broken charters and our privileges
+violated despite thine oath, for thou wast perjurer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for that when we called thee thou didst not dare come
+into our land, where thy presence would have cooled the hottest heads,
+for thou wast coward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for the innocent Marquess of Berg-op-Zoom, whom thou
+poisoned in prison, so that his inheritance might be thine; and for the
+Prince of Ascoly, whom thou madest to marry Dona Eufrasia, in child by
+thy seed, so that his <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb153" href=
+"#pb153" name="pb153">153</a>]</span>wealth might enrich the bastard
+that was coming. The Prince died also, like so many others, for thou
+wert poisoner of bodies.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for the false witnesses paid by thee, and thy promise
+to ennoble whomever would kill Prince William for money, for thou wast
+poisoner of souls.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the blows fell heavy, and the king&rsquo;s crown was knocked
+off, and his body, like the duke&rsquo;s, was no more than a
+hotch-potch of bones and flesh, without any blood. But the workmen went
+on with their hammering, saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for thine invention of the <i>Tourniquet</i>,
+wherewith thou didst strangle Montigny, friend of thy son, for thou
+wast seeker of new tortures.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for the Duke of Alva, for the Counts of Egmont and
+Hoorn, for all our poor dead, for our merchants who went off to enrich
+England and Germany, for thou wast death and ruin to our land.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for thy wife, who died by thy deed, for thou wast
+husband without love.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for thy poor son Charles, who died without any
+sickness, for thou wast father without bowels.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is for the hatred, cruelty, and slaughter with which
+thou didst make return for the gentleness, confidence, and goodwill of
+our land, for thou wast king without justice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And this is for the Emperor, thy father, who, with his
+execrable proclamations and edicts, first sounded for our land the
+stroke of the evil hour. Give him a good drubbing on our account, and
+tell us thou wilt give back the deed to the <i>baes</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; wept a melancholy voice, coming from the heap of
+bones and flesh, &ldquo;thou hast everything, Smetse, thou art
+free.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give me back the parchment,&rdquo; said Smetse.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Open the sack,&rdquo; answered the voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ho,&rdquo; cried Smetse, &ldquo;yes, yes, indeed, I will open
+the sack wide, and Master Philip will leap out and take me off
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb154" href="#pb154" name=
+"pb154">154</a>]</span>to hell with all speed. Oh, the good little
+devil! But &rsquo;tis not now the time for such high pranks. Therefore
+I make bold to beg your Majesty to give me first the parchment, which
+he may without difficulty pass up through this gap which is between his
+neck and the edge of the sacking.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will not do it,&rdquo; said the devil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;is as it pleases your subtle
+Majesty. In the sack he is, in the sack he may remain; I make no
+objection. Every man his own humour. But mine will be to leave him in
+his sack, and in this wise carry him off to Middelburg in Walcheren,
+and there ask the prefect that leave be given me to build a good little
+stone box in the market-place and therein to place your Majesty,
+leaving outside his melancholy countenance. So placed he will be able
+to see at a close view the happiness, joy, and prosperity of the men of
+the reformed faith: that will be a fine treat for him, which might be
+added to, on feast-days and market-days, by an unkind blow or two which
+people would give him in the face, or some wicked strokes with a stick,
+or some spittle dropped on him without respect. You will have besides,
+Sire, the unutterable satisfaction of seeing many good pilgrims from
+Flanders, Brabant, and your other blood-soaked countries come to
+Middelburg to pay back with good coin of their staves their old debt to
+your Most Merciful Majesty.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the devil, &ldquo;I will not have this shame
+put upon me. Take, smith, take the parchment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Smetse obeyed, and saw that it was indeed his own, then went and
+dipped it in holy water, where it turned into dust.</p>
+<p>At this he was filled with joy and opened the sack for the devil,
+whose bones moved and became joined again to one another. And he took
+on again his withered shape, his hungry vermin, and his devouring
+sores.</p>
+<p>Then, covering himself with his cloak of cloth-of-gold, he went out
+of the smithy, while Smetse cried after him: &ldquo;Good journey to
+you, and a following wind, Master Philip!&rdquo; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb155" href="#pb155" name="pb155">155</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And on the quay the devil kicked against a stone, which opened of
+itself and showed a great hole, wherein he was swallowed suddenly up
+like an oyster.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XVI.</span> Wherein Smetse
+beholds on the River Lys a most marvellous sight.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">When the devil had gone Smetse was almost off his head
+with joy, and ran to his wife, who had come to the door of the kitchen,
+and thumped her for joy, seized her, kissed her, hugged the good woman,
+shook her, pressed her to him, ran back to his men, shook them all by
+the hand, crying: &ldquo;By Artevelde! I am quits, Smetse is
+quits!&rdquo; And he seemed to have a tongue for nothing else but that
+he was quits! And he blew in his wife&rsquo;s ear, into his
+workmen&rsquo;s faces, and under the nose of a bald and wheezing old
+cat who sat up in one corner and got quit with him by a scratch in the
+face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The rascal,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;does not seem glad
+enough at my deliverance. Is he another devil, think you? They say they
+disguise themselves in every kind of shape. Ho,&rdquo; said he to the
+cat, who was arching her back in annoyance, &ldquo;hast heard,
+listened, and understood, devil cat? I am quit and free, quit and
+franked, quit and happy, quit and rich! And I have made fools of all
+the devils. And from now on I will live gaily as becomes a quit smith.
+Wife, I will send this very day a hundred <i>philipdalers</i> to
+Slimbroek, so that that poor sinner may also rejoice at Smetse&rsquo;s
+quittance.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But his wife said nothing, and when Smetse went to look for her he
+found her on the stair with a great bowl of holy water in her hands, in
+which she was dipping a fair sprig of palm branch.</p>
+<p>Coming into the smithy she began to sprinkle with the palm her man
+and the workmen, and also the hammers, anvils, bellows, and other
+tools.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, trying to escape the wetting,
+&ldquo;what art thou at?&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb156"
+href="#pb156" name="pb156">156</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am saving thee,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;presumptuous smith.
+Dost verily think that, being freed of devils, thou hast for thine own
+the chattels that come from them? Dost think that though they have lost
+the soul which was to be their payment they will leave thee thy riches.
+Ho, the good fool! They will come back again, yes; and if I do not
+sprinkle thee with this holy water, and myself likewise, and all these
+good men, who knows with what evils they may not torment us,
+alas!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the good wife was working away with her palm-branch when
+suddenly a great thunder rumbled under the earth, shaking the quay, and
+the stones cracked, the panes shivered in the windows, all the doors
+and casements in the smithy opened of themselves, and a hot wind
+blew.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;they are coming; pray, my
+man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And suddenly there appeared in the sky the figure of a man, naked
+and of marvellous beauty. He was standing in a chariot of diamond,
+drawn by four flaming horses. And he held in his right hand a banner,
+whereon was written: &ldquo;More beautiful than God.&rdquo; And from
+the body of this man, whereof the flesh shone brightly, came golden
+rays which lit up the Lys, the quay and the trees like sunlight. And
+the trees began to sway and swing their stems and branches, and all the
+quay seemed to roll like a ship upon the sea, and thousands of voices
+called out together: &ldquo;Lord, we cry hunger and thirst; Lord, feed
+us; Lord, give us to drink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the good wife, &ldquo;here is my Lord Lucifer
+and all his devils!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And when the voices had ceased the man made a sign with his hand,
+and of a sudden the waters of the Lys rose as if God had lifted up the
+river-bed. And the river became like a rough sea; but the waves did not
+roll on the quay, but each lifted separately, bearing on its crest a
+foam of fire. Then each of these flames rose into the air, drawing up
+the water like a pillar, and there seemed to poor Smetse and his wife
+and the men to be hundreds of thousands of these pillars of water,
+swaying and foaming. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb157" href="#pb157"
+name="pb157">157</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Then each pillar took on the form of a fearful animal, and suddenly
+there appeared, mingled together, striking and wounding one another,
+all the devils whose work was to torment poor damned souls. There were
+to be seen, crawling over crooked and shivering men&rsquo;s legs,
+monstrous crabs, devouring those who were servile in their lives. Near
+these crabs were ostriches bigger than horses, who ran along flapping
+their wings. Under their tails they had laurel-wreaths, sceptres, and
+crowns, and behind their tails were made to run those men who in our
+world spent all their time running after vain honours, without a care
+for doing good. And the ostriches went quicker than the wind, while the
+men ran without respite behind them in the effort to get the wreaths,
+crowns, and sceptres; but they could never reach them. In this way they
+were led to a treacherous pond full of loathsome mud, wherein they fell
+shamefully and stayed stuck for all eternity, whilst the mocking
+ostriches walked up and down on the bank dangling their bawbles.</p>
+<p>Among the ostriches were squadrons of many-coloured apes, diapered
+like butterflies, whose concern was with miserly Jewish and Lombard
+usurers. These men, when they entered hell, looked round them
+carefully, screwing up their eyes under their spectacles, collected
+from the ground divers rusty nails, old breeches, filthy rags, buttons
+showing the wood, and other old stuff, then dug a hole hastily, hid
+their treasures in it and went off to sit down some way away. The apes,
+seeing this, would leap on the hole, empty out its content, and throw
+it into the fire. Then the misers would weep, make lamentations, and be
+beaten by the apes, and at last go off to find some more secret place,
+hide there once again their new depredations, and see once again the
+hole emptied and the apes coming once again to beat them, and so on for
+all eternity.</p>
+<p>In the air, above the apes, soared eagles, who had, instead of a
+beak, four-and-twenty matchlock barrels firing together. These eagles
+were called Royal, because their concern was <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb158" href="#pb158" name="pb158">158</a>]</span>with
+conqueror princes, who were too fond in their lifetime of the sounds of
+war and cannon. And for their punishment these matchlocks were fired
+off in their faces again and again throughout eternity.</p>
+<p>Besides the ostriches, apes, and eagles, reared up a great serpent
+with a bear&rsquo;s coat, who writhed and twisted this way and that. He
+was of great length and breadth, beyond all measure, and had a hundred
+thousand hairy arms, in each of which he held an iron pike as sharp as
+a razor. He was called the Spaniards&rsquo; Serpent, because in hell it
+was his task to gash about with his pikes without mercy all the bands
+of traitor pillagers who had despoiled our good country.</p>
+<p>Keeping clear of this serpent with great prudence, darted about
+mischievous little winged pigs whose tails were eels. These tails were
+designed for the perpetual teazing of such gluttons as came to hell.
+For the pig would come up to such a one, hold the eel close to his
+mouth, and, when he tried to bite it, suddenly fly away from him, and
+so on throughout eternity.</p>
+<p>There were to be seen also, marching up and down in their gorgeous
+feathers, monstrous peacocks. Whenever some vain dandy came their way,
+giving himself airs in his fine clothes, one of these peacocks would go
+to him and spread its tail, as if inviting him to pluck out a fine
+feather for his bonnet. But as soon as the dandy approached to take his
+feather, Master Peacock would let fly in his face with filthy and
+evil-smelling water, which spoilt all his fine clothes. And throughout
+eternity the dandy would try to get the feather, and throughout
+eternity be so swilled down.</p>
+<p>Among these fearful animals, wandered two by two male and female
+grasshoppers as big as a man, the one playing on a pipe, and the other
+brandishing a great knotted stick. Whenever they saw a man who, in his
+lifetime, leapt, by cowardice, from good to evil, from black to white,
+from fire to water, always on the side of the strongest, these
+grasshoppers would go to him, and one would play the pipe, while the
+other, leaning on his stick with great dignity, would <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb159" href="#pb159" name="pb159">159</a>]</span>say:
+&ldquo;Leap for God,&rdquo; and the man would leap; &ldquo;Leap for the
+Devil,&rdquo; and the man would leap again; &ldquo;Leap for Calvin,
+leap for the Mass, leap for the goat, leap for the cabbage,&rdquo; and
+the man would keep leaping. But he never leapt high enough for the
+liking of the grasshopper with the stick, and so he was each time
+belaboured in a most pitiless manner. And he leapt without ceasing and
+was belaboured without respite, while the pipe made continual pleasant
+music, and so on throughout eternity.</p>
+<p>Farther on, naked and lying on cloths of gold, silk, and velvet,
+covered with pearls and a thousand resplendent gems, more beautiful
+than the most beautiful ladies of Ghent, Brussels, or Bruges,
+lascivious and smiling, singing, and playing on sweet instruments, were
+the wives of the devils. These dealt out punishment to old rakes,
+corrupters of youth and beauty. To them these she-devils would call out
+amorously, but they could never get near them. Throughout eternity
+these poor rakes had to look at them without being able to touch them
+even with the tip of the nail of their little finger. And they wept and
+made lamentation, but all in vain, and so on through centuries and
+centuries.</p>
+<p>There were also mischievous little devils with drums, made of the
+skins of hypocrites, whose masks hung down over the drum case as
+ornament. And the hypocrites to whom they belonged, without their
+skins, without their masks, in all their ugliness, ashamed, hooted,
+hissed, spat at, eaten up by horrible flies, and followed by the little
+devils beating their drums, had to wander up and down hell throughout
+eternity.</p>
+<p>It was good to see also the devils of conceited men. These were fine
+great leathern bottles full of wind, finished off with a beak, at the
+end of which was a reed. These bottles had eagle&rsquo;s feet and two
+good little arms, with fingers long enough to go round the widest part
+of the bottle. When the conceited man came into hell, saying: &ldquo;I
+am great, I am grand, strong, beautiful, victorious, I will overcome
+Lucifer and marry his dam Astarte,&rdquo; the leathern bottles would
+come <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb160" href="#pb160" name=
+"pb160">160</a>]</span>up to him and say, with a deep reverence:
+&ldquo;My lord, will you be pleased to let us speak a word to you in
+secret, touching your high designs?&rdquo; &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he would
+say. Then two bottles would stuff their reeds into his ears in such a
+manner that he could not get them out again, and begin to press in
+their bellies with their long fingers, so as to force wind into his
+head, which thereupon swelled up, large and always larger, and Master
+Self-Conceit rose into the air and went off to wander throughout
+eternity, with his head bumping the ceiling of hell, and his legs
+waving in the air in the efforts to get down again; but all in
+vain.</p>
+<p>Marvellous devils were certain apes of quicksilver, always running,
+tumbling, leaping, coming, and going. These devils bore down on the
+lazy fellows who were thrown to them, gave them a spade to dig earth
+with, a sword to polish, a tree to trim, or a book to con. The
+lazybones would look at the task set him, saying:
+&ldquo;To-morrow,&rdquo; and would stretch his arms, scratching and
+yawning. But as soon as he had his mouth wide open the ape would stuff
+into it a sponge soaked in quintessence of rhubarb. &ldquo;This,&rdquo;
+he would say mockingly, &ldquo;is for to-day; work, slug, work.&rdquo;
+Then, while the lazybones was retching, the devil would thump him,
+shake him a hundred different ways, giving him no more peace than a
+gadfly gives a horse, and so on throughout eternity.</p>
+<p>Pleasing devils were pretty little children very wide-awake and
+mischievous, whose concern was to teach learned orators to think,
+speak, weep, and laugh according to common nature. And when they did
+otherwise the little devils would rap them sharply on the knuckles. But
+the poor pedants could no longer learn, being too heavy, old, and
+stupid; so they had a rap on the knuckles every day and a whipping on
+Sundays.</p>
+<p>And all these devils cried out together: &ldquo;Master, we are
+hungry; Master, give us to eat, pay somewhat for the good services we
+render thee.&rdquo; <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb161" href="#pb161"
+name="pb161">161</a>]</span></p>
+<p>And suddenly the man in the chariot made a sign, and the good River
+Lys threw all these devils on the quay, as the sea splashes on the
+shore, and they hissed loud and terribly at landing.</p>
+<p>And Smetse, his wife, and the workmen heard the doors of the cellars
+open with a loud noise, and all the casks of <i>bruinbier</i> came
+hissing up the stairs, and hissing across the floor of the forge, and
+still hissing described a curve in the air and fell among the crowd of
+all the devils. And so also did the bottles of wine, so also the hams,
+loaves, and cheeses, and so also the good <i>crusats</i>,
+<i>angelots</i>, <i>philipdalers</i>, and other moneys, which were all
+changed into meat and drink. And the devils fell over one another,
+fought, scrambled, wounded themselves, forming only one great mass of
+battling monsters, howling and hissing, and each trying to get more
+than the others. When there was left neither drop nor crumb, the man in
+the chariot made another sign, and all the devils melted into black
+water and flowed into the river, where they disappeared. And the man
+vanished from the sky.</p>
+<p>And Smetse Smee was as poor as before, save for one little bag of
+golden <i>royals</i>, which his wife had by chance sprinkled with holy
+water, and which he kept, although it came from the devil. But this, as
+you shall see, did not profit him at all. And he lived with great
+content until he died suddenly one day in his smithy, at the great and
+blessed age of ninety-three years.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XVII.</span> Of Hell, of
+Purgatory, of the long ladder, and finally of Paradise.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">When he was dead his soul had to pass through Hell in
+the guise of a smith. Coming thither he saw, through the open windows,
+the devils which had so frightened him in the vision on the Lys, and
+who were now busy torturing and tormenting the poor damned souls as
+terribly as they could. And Smetse went to the doorkeeper; but the
+doorkeeper, on seeing him, howled out in a most awful fashion:
+&ldquo;Smetse <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb162" href="#pb162" name=
+"pb162">162</a>]</span>is here, Smetse Smee the traitor smith!&rdquo;
+And he would not let him in. Hearing the hubbub, My Lord Lucifer, Madam
+Astarte, and all their court came to the windows, and all the other
+devils after them.</p>
+<p>And they all cried out in fear:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shut the doors, &rsquo;tis the enchanted Smetse, Smetse the
+traitor smith, Smetse the beater of poor devils. If he comes in here he
+will overset, spoil, break up everything. Begone, Smetse!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My masters,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;if I do indeed come
+hither to look at your snouts, which are not beautiful I promise ye,
+&rsquo;tis not at all for my pleasure; and besides, I am not by any
+means anxious to come in. So do not make such a noise, master
+devils.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, indeed, my fine smith,&rdquo; answered Madam Astarte,
+&ldquo;thou showest a velvet pad now, but when thou art within thou
+wilt show thy claws and thine evil intention, and will slay us all, me,
+my good husband, and all our friends. Be off, Smetse; be off,
+Smee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;you are indeed the most
+beautiful she-devil I ever saw, but that is, nevertheless, no reason
+why you should think so ill of a fellow-creature&rsquo;s
+intentions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hark to the fellow!&rdquo; said Madam Astarte, &ldquo;how he
+hides his wickedness under sugared words! Drive him away, devils, but
+do him no great harm.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Madam,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;I beg you to
+listen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be off, smith!&rdquo; cried out all the devils; and they
+threw burning coals at him, and whatever else they could find. And
+Smetse ran off as fast as his legs would take him.</p>
+<p>When he had travelled some way he came before Purgatory. On the
+other side was a ladder, with this inscription at its foot: &ldquo;This
+is the road to the good Paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Smetse, filled with joy, began to climb the ladder, which was
+made of golden thread, with here and there a <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb163" href="#pb163" name=
+"pb163">163</a>]</span>sharp point sticking out, in virtue of that
+saying of God which tells us: &ldquo;Broad is the way which leadeth to
+Hell, strait and rough the way to Heaven.&rdquo; And, indeed, Smetse
+soon had his feet sore. Nevertheless, he made his way upward without
+halting, and only stopped when he had counted ten hundred thousand
+rungs and could see no more of either earth or hell. And he became
+thirsty. Finding nothing to drink he became a little sullen, when
+suddenly he saw a little cloud coming past, and drank it up joyfully.
+It did not indeed seem to him as good drink as <i>bruinbier</i>, but he
+took consolation from the thought that it is not possible to have
+comforts everywhere alike. A little higher up the ladder he suddenly
+had hard work to keep his bonnet on his head, by reason of a
+treacherous autumn wind which was going down to earth to pull off the
+last leaves. And by this wind he was sorely shaken, and nearly lost his
+hold. After he was out of this pass he became hungry, and regretted the
+good earthly beef, smoked over pine-cones, which is so good a food for
+poor wayfarers. But he took heart, thinking that it is not given to man
+to understand everything.</p>
+<p>Suddenly he saw an eagle of terrible aspect coming upon him from the
+earth. Thinking for certain that he was some fat sheep, the eagle rose
+above him and would have dropped on him like a cannon-ball; but the
+good smith had no fear, bent to one side and caught the bird by the
+neck, which he wrung subtly. Then, still going up, he hastened to pluck
+it, ate morsels of it raw, and found them stringy. Nevertheless, he
+took this meat with patience, because he had no other. Then, patiently
+and bravely, he climbed for several days and several nights, seeing
+nothing but the blue of the sky and innumerable suns, moons, and stars
+above his head, under his feet, to right, to left, and everywhere. And
+he seemed to be in the midst of a fair great globe, whereof the inner
+walls had been painted this fair blue, strewn with all these suns,
+moons, and stars. And he was frightened by the great silence and by the
+immensity. <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb164" href="#pb164" name=
+"pb164">164</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Suddenly he felt a genial warmth, heard sweet voices singing,
+distant music, and the sound of a city toiling. And he saw a town of
+infinite size girt about with walls, over which he could see housetops,
+trees, and towers. And he felt that he was moving more quickly despite
+his own legs, and by and by, leaving the last rung behind, he set foot
+before the gate of the town.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;By Artevelde!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;here is the good
+Paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And he knocked on the gate; St. Peter came to open to him.</p>
+<p>Smetse was somewhat frightened at the gigantic appearance of the
+good saint, his great head of hair, his red beard, his large face, his
+high forehead, and his piercing eyes, with which he looked at him
+fixedly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who art thou?&rdquo; quoth he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Master St. Peter,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;I am Smetse
+Smee, who in his lifetime lived at Ghent on the Quai aux Oignons, and
+now prays you to let him enter your good Paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said St. Peter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, my master!&rdquo; said Smetse most piteously, &ldquo;if
+&rsquo;tis because in my lifetime I sold my soul to the devil, I make
+bold to tell you that I repented most heartily, and was redeemed from
+his power and kept nothing that was his.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Excepting a sackful of <i>royals</i>,&rdquo; said the saint,
+&ldquo;and on that account thou shalt not come in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Master,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;I am not so guilty as
+you suppose; the sack stayed in my house because it had been blessed,
+and for that reason I thought I might well keep it. But take pity on
+me, for I knew not what I was doing. I pray you also to deign to
+consider that I come from a far country, that I am greatly tired, and
+would gladly rest in this good Paradise.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be off, smith,&rdquo; said the saint, who was holding the
+door a crack open.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile Smetse had slipped through the opening, and taking off his
+leathern apron sat down, saying: <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb165"
+href="#pb165" name="pb165">165</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Master, I am here rightfully, you cannot turn me
+out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But St. Peter bade a troop of halberdier angels who were near at
+hand drive him away: and this the halberdier angels did with great
+dispatch.</p>
+<p>Thereafter, Smetse did not cease to beat on the door with his fists,
+and lamented, wept, and cried out: &ldquo;Master, have pity on me, let
+me in, my master; I repent of all the sins I have committed, and even
+the others as well. Master, grant me permission to enter the blessed
+Paradise. Master....&rdquo; But Master St. Peter, hearing this, put his
+head over the wall:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smith,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if thou wilt persist in this
+uproar, I shall have thee sent to Purgatory.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And poor Smetse held his peace, and sat down on his seat, and so
+passed sad days, watching others enter.</p>
+<p>In this wise a week went by, during which he lived on a few scraps
+of bread which were thrown to him over the wall, and on grapes gathered
+from a sour vine which grew on the outer face of the wall of Paradise
+in this part.</p>
+<p>And Smetse was most unhappy, leading this idle existence. And he
+sought in his head for some work or other which would gladden him
+somewhat. Having found it, he shouted as loud as he could, and St.
+Peter put his head over the wall.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What wilt thou, Smetse?&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Master,&rdquo; answered the smith, &ldquo;will you be pleased
+to let me go down to earth for one night, so that I may see my good
+wife and look to my affairs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thou mayst, Smetse,&rdquo; answered St. Peter.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XVIII.</span> Wherein it is
+seen why Smetse was whipped.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">It was then All Saints&rsquo; Eve; bitter was the
+cold, and Smetse&rsquo;s good wife was in her kitchen, brewing some
+good mixture of sugar, yolk of egg, and <i>bruinbier</i>, to cure her
+of an evil catarrh, which had lain upon her ever since her man died.
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb166" href="#pb166" name=
+"pb166">166</a>]</span></p>
+<p>Smetse came and knocked at the window of the kitchen, whereat his
+wife was greatly frightened.</p>
+<p>And she cried out sadly: &ldquo;Do not come and torment me, my man,
+if &rsquo;tis prayers thou wilt have. I say as many as I can, but I
+will say more if need be. Wilt thou have masses said? Thou shalt have
+them, and prayers and indulgences likewise. I will buy them, my man, I
+promise thee; but go back quickly whence thou camest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nevertheless Smetse went on knocking. &ldquo;&rsquo;Tis not masses
+or prayers,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that I want, but shelter, food, and
+drink, for bitter is the cold, rude the wind, sharp the frost. Open,
+wife.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But she, on hearing him speak thus, prayed the more and cried out
+the louder, and beat her breast and crossed herself, but made no move
+to open the door, saying only: &ldquo;Go back, go back, my man; thou
+shalt have prayers and masses.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly the smith discerned an open window in the attic. He climbed
+up and entered the house by that means, went down the stair, and,
+opening the door, appeared before his wife; but as she kept drawing
+back before him as he advanced, crying out and calling the neighbours
+at the top of her voice, Smetse stood still so as not to frighten her
+further, sat down on a stool, and said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dost not see, mother, that I am indeed Smetse, and wish thee
+no harm?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But his wife would listen to nothing and crept back into a corner.
+Thence with her teeth a-chatter, and her eyes open wide, she made a
+sign to him to leave her, for she could no longer find her tongue, by
+reason of her great fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said the smith in friendly tones, &ldquo;is it
+thus that thou givest greeting and welcome to thy poor husband, after
+the long time he has been away? Alas, hast forgot our old comradeship
+and union?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hearing this soft and joyous voice she answered in a low tone and
+with great timidity: <span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb167" href="#pb167"
+name="pb167">167</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, dead master.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;why art thou so afraid?
+Dost not know thy man&rsquo;s fat face, his round paunch, and the voice
+which in former days sang so readily hereabout?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;I know thee well
+enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And why,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;if thou knowest me, wilt not come to
+me and touch me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;I dare not, master, for
+&rsquo;tis said that whatever member touches a dead man is itself
+dead.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, wife,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;and do not believe
+all these lying tales.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;will you in good truth do me
+no hurt?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;None,&rdquo; said he, and took her by the hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said suddenly, &ldquo;my poor man, thou art
+cold and hungry and thirsty indeed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;eat, drink, and warm
+thyself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While Smetse was eating and drinking he told his wife how he had
+been forbidden the door to Paradise, and how he designed to take from
+the cellar a full cask of <i>bruinbier</i> and bottles of French wine,
+to sell to those who went into the Holy City, so that he might be well
+paid, and with the money he received buy himself better food.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This, my man,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;is all very well, but
+will Master St. Peter give thee permission to set up at the gates of
+Paradise such a tavern?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of that,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I have hope.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Smetse, laden with his cask and bottles, went his way back, up
+towards the good Paradise.</p>
+<p>Having reached the foot of the wall he set up his tavern in the open
+air, for the weather is mild in this heavenly land, and on the first
+day all who went in drank at Smetse&rsquo;s stall, and paid him well
+out of compassion.</p>
+<p>But one or two became drunk, and entering Paradise in this state,
+set Master Peter inquiring into the cause of it; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb168" href="#pb168" name="pb168">168</a>]</span>and
+having found it out he enjoined Smetse to stop his selling, and had him
+whipped grievously.</p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="div2"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divHead">
+<h3 class="main"><span class="headDivNum">XIX.</span> Of the fair
+judgment of My Lord Jesus.</h3>
+</div>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first">Not long afterwards the good wife died also, by reason
+of the terror that had seized hold of her at the sight of her
+man&rsquo;s ghost.</p>
+<p>And her soul went straight towards Paradise, and there she saw,
+sitting with his seat against the wall, the poor Smetse in a fit of
+melancholy brooding. When he saw her he jumped up with great joy, and
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife, I will go in with thee.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dost thou dare?&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will hide myself,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;under thy skirt,
+which is wide enough for us both, and so I shall pass without being
+seen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>When he had done this she knocked on the door, and Master St. Peter
+came to open it. &ldquo;Come in,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;good
+wife.&rdquo; But seeing Smetse&rsquo;s feet below the hem of the skirt:
+&ldquo;This wicked smith,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;will he always be
+making fun of me? Be off, devil-baggage!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, my master,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;have pity on him, or
+else let me stay out, too, to keep him company.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said Master St. Peter, &ldquo;thy place is here,
+his is outside. Come in then, and let him be off at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And the good wife went in while Smetse stayed outside. But as soon
+as the noonday hour came, and the angel cooks had brought the good wife
+her beautiful rice pudding, she went to the wall and put her head over
+it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Art thou there,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Art thou hungry?&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said he.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well then,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;spread thy leathern apron;
+I will throw thee the pudding which has just been given me.&rdquo;
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb169" href="#pb169" name=
+"pb169">169</a>]</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;But thou,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;wilt thou eat
+nothing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;for I have heard it said that
+there is supper by and by.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Smetse ate the rice pudding, and was suddenly filled with comfort,
+for the pudding was more succulent and delicious than the finest meats
+of the earth. Meanwhile his wife went off to walk about in the good
+Paradise, and afterwards came back to Smetse to tell him what she had
+seen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;my man, &rsquo;tis a most
+beautiful place. Would that I could see thee within! Round about My
+Lord Jesus are the pure intelligences who discuss with him whatever is
+goodness, love, justice, knowledge, and beauty, and also the best means
+of governing men and making them happy. Their speech is like music. And
+all the while they keep throwing down to earth the seeds of beautiful,
+good, just and true thoughts. But men are so wicked and stupid that
+they tread underfoot these fair seeds or let them wither away. Farther
+on, established in their several places, are potters and goldsmiths,
+masons, painters, tanners and fullers, carpenters and shipbuilders, and
+thou shouldst see what fine work they do, each in his own trade. And
+when they have made some progress they cast down the seed of that also
+towards the earth, but &rsquo;tis lost oftentimes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wife,&rdquo; said Smetse, &ldquo;didst see no
+smiths?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I would gladly be working
+alongside them, for I am ashamed to be sitting here like a leper, doing
+nothing and begging my bread. But listen, wife; since Master St. Peter
+will not let me in, go thou and ask grace for me from My Lord Jesus,
+who is kind and will let me in for certain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I go, my man,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>My Lord Jesus, who was in council with his doctors, saw her coming
+towards him. &ldquo;I know thee, good wife,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;thou
+wast in thy lifetime wedded to Smetse the smith, who entreated me so
+well when, in the guise of a little <span class="pagenum">[<a id=
+"pb170" href="#pb170" name="pb170">170</a>]</span>child, I came down to
+earth with Master Joseph and Madam Mary. Is he not in Paradise, thy
+good man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, no, My Lord!&rdquo; answered she, &ldquo;my man is at
+the door, most sad and out of heart, because Master St. Peter will not
+let him in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why is that?&rdquo; said My Lord Jesus.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, I cannot tell,&rdquo; said she.</p>
+<p>But the angel who writes down the faults of men in a record of
+brass, speaking suddenly, said: &ldquo;Smetse cannot enter Paradise,
+for Smetse, delivered from the devil, kept devil&rsquo;s
+money.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said My Lord Jesus, &ldquo;that is a great sin;
+but has he not repented of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said the good wife, &ldquo;he has repented, and,
+moreover, he has been all his life good, charitable, and
+compassionate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go and find him,&rdquo; said My Lord Jesus, &ldquo;I will
+question him myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Two or three halberdier angels ran to obey him, and brought Smetse
+before the Son of God, who spoke in this wise:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse, is it true that thou didst keep devil&rsquo;s
+money?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, My Lord,&rdquo; answered the smith, whose knees were
+knocking together with fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse, this is not good, for a man should rather suffer
+every ill, pain, and anguish, than keep the money of one who is wicked,
+ugly, unjust, and a liar, as is the devil. But hast thou no meritorious
+deed to tell me, to mitigate this great sin?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; answered Smetse, &ldquo;I fought a long while
+beside the men of Zeeland for freedom of conscience, and, doing this,
+suffered with them hunger and thirst.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is good, Smetse, but didst thou persist in this fair
+conduct?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Alas, no, My Lord!&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;for, to tell
+truth, my courage lacked constancy, and I went back to Ghent,
+<span class="pagenum">[<a id="pb171" href="#pb171" name=
+"pb171">171</a>]</span>where, like so many another, I came under the
+Spanish yoke.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is bad, Smetse,&rdquo; answered My Lord Jesus.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; wept the good wife, &ldquo;none was more
+generous than he to the poor, kind to every one, charitable to his
+enemies, even to the wicked Slimbroek.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is good, Smetse,&rdquo; said My Lord Jesus; &ldquo;but
+hast thou no other merit in thy favour?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; said the smith, &ldquo;I have always laboured
+with a good heart, hated idleness and melancholy, loved joy and
+merriment, sung gladly, and drunk with thankfulness the
+<i>bruinbier</i> which came to me from you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is good, Smetse, but it is not enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo; answered the smith, &ldquo;I thrashed as
+soundly as I could the wicked ghosts of Jacob Hessels, the Duke of
+Alva, and Philip II, King of Spain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Smetse,&rdquo; said My Lord Jesus, &ldquo;this is very good.
+I grant thee leave to enter my Paradise.&rdquo; <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb173" href="#pb173" name="pb173">173</a>]</span></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="back">
+<div class="div1"><span class="pagenum">[<a href=
+"#toc">Contents</a>]</span>
+<div class="divBody">
+<p class="first xd20e4673"><span class="xd20e4674">UNIFORM WITH
+&ldquo;FLEMISH LEGENDS&rdquo;</span></p>
+<p class="xd20e4677"><a class="pglink xd20e51" title=
+"Link to Project Gutenberg ebook" href=
+"https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/37599">THE LEGEND OF TYL
+ULENSPIEGEL</a></p>
+<p class="xd20e4673">BY CHARLES DE COSTER</p>
+<p class="xd20e127">Translated by <span class="sc">Geoffrey
+Whitworth</span>. With 20 Woodcuts by <span class="sc">Albert
+Delstanche</span>. 7s. 6d. net</p>
+<hr class="tb">
+<p class="xd20e4673"><span class="xd20e4694">SOME PRESS
+OPINIONS</span></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tyl Ulenspiegel is not yet, in most English households, an
+old friend. Yet we believe that the fellow will soon make his brave and
+humorous way into the friendship of old and young. And the twenty
+full-page woodcuts with which M. Albert Delstanche has illustrated this
+edition will help the friendship on. All the heartiness, the
+ruggedness, the fun, and the gloom of one tragic period in the history
+of a homely and much-enduring people are expressed through the eye to
+the mind by M. Delstanche&rsquo;s knowledge and
+skill.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>The Times.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;An excellent translation has brought a notable example of
+modern Belgian literature within the reach of readers in this country.
+Taking as his central figure the scampish Tyl Ulenspiegel, already in
+the sixteenth century a traditional personage, De Coster produced a
+remarkable reconstruction of Flemish life in the days of Spanish
+oppression and of the famous
+&lsquo;Beggars&rsquo;.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Scotsman.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;On the large scale, the obvious work of a master, a man who
+knew sorrow but who loved to share the mirth and good living of his
+fellows, mocked impostors wherever he found them, and had a hatred of
+cruelty and injustice that is like lightning. It is one of the rare
+books, full of sad laughter and warm understanding, of the order of
+&lsquo;Don Quixote&rsquo;.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>The Nation.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a happy thought which has brought out Mr. Geoffrey
+Whitworth&rsquo;s version of &lsquo;The Legend of Tyl
+Ulenspiegel&rsquo; now ... for the description of it as the
+&lsquo;national epic of Flanders&rsquo; has much <span class=
+"pagenum">[<a id="pb174" href="#pb174" name="pb174">174</a>]</span>more
+meaning than such phrases usually have.... And all the adventures of
+Tyl and his friends have this quality of reality in fairy-land, whether
+they are grotesque or tragic. The book has tragedy in it to balance its
+boisterous comedy, but the two are combined in a style whose generosity
+and exuberance make their union complete and satisfactory. It is a
+great book indeed. Mr. Whitworth is to be congratulated on his
+excellently easy and vivid translation; and the woodcuts of M. Albert
+Delstanche are all exceedingly impressive and many exceedingly
+beautiful.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Land and Water.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is hardly too much to say that De Coster&rsquo;s book is a
+work of pure genius.... At such a moment as the present no publication
+could be more timely than this English version of what will inevitably
+rank as a great epic of Belgian nationality.... For the rest, we have
+only to compliment the publishers, the translator, and the illustrator
+upon their joint efforts to present a fine work in a worthy and
+acceptable form.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>The Guardian.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;The illustrator&rsquo;s bold and luminous drawings certainly
+catch the bluff spirit of Charles de Coster&rsquo;s quaint masterpiece,
+in which the transition-age between medi&aelig;valism and modernity
+lives again so grimly, so shrewdly, so humorously. Here there is a
+suitable gift-book for all who love to travel in the highways of
+world-literature.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Morning Post.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is, of course, for adults and not for children, with its
+grim horrors and its full-blooded jollity. What we have learnt to call
+the soul of a people is in it&mdash;the spirit of Flanders. The force
+of De Coster&rsquo;s style loses nothing in Mr. Geoffrey
+Whitworth&rsquo;s translation, and there are admirable illustrations
+cut on the wood by M. Albert Delstanche.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Daily
+Telegraph.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;A most remarkable volume.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>Glasgow
+Herald.</i></p>
+<p>&ldquo;Reading it for the first time in Mr. Whitworth&rsquo;s
+admirable English version, one is amazed at first that it has not been
+rendered previously. De Coster will never require another English
+version, and this one book of &lsquo;glorious adventures&rsquo; is
+aureole enough to ensure his place on the great hierarchy of
+literature.&rdquo;&mdash;<i>The Bookman.</i></p>
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="transcribernote">
+<h2 class="main">Colophon</h2>
+<h3 class="main">Availability</h3>
+<p class="first">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 <a class="exlink xd20e51"
+title="External link" href="https://www.gutenberg.org/license" rel=
+"license">Project Gutenberg License</a> included with this eBook or
+online at <a class="exlink xd20e51" title="External link" href=
+"https://www.gutenberg.org/" rel="home">www.gutenberg.org</a>.</p>
+<p>This eBook is produced by the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+at <a class="exlink xd20e51" title="External link" href=
+"https://www.pgdp.net/">www.pgdp.net</a> (This file was produced from
+images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American
+Libraries).</p>
+<p>Scans for this work are available from the Internet Archive (US
+edition: <a class="exlink xd20e51" title="External link" href=
+"http://www.archive.org/details/flemishlegends00costrich">1</a>; UK
+edition: <a class="exlink xd20e51" title="External link" href=
+"http://www.archive.org/details/flemishlegends00costiala">1</a>,
+<a class="exlink xd20e51" title="External link" href=
+"http://www.archive.org/details/flemishlegends00costuoft">2</a>.)</p>
+<p>Related Library of Congress catalog page: <a class="catlink" href=
+"http://lccn.loc.gov/20026992">20026992</a>.</p>
+<p>Related Open Library catalog page (for source): <a class="catlink"
+href="http://openlibrary.org/books/OL6630959M">OL6630959M</a>.</p>
+<p>Related Open Library catalog page (for work): <a class="catlink"
+href="http://openlibrary.org/works/OL1274412W">OL1274412W</a>.</p>
+<p>Related WorldCat catalog page: <a class="catlink" href=
+"http://www.worldcat.org/oclc/381646">381646</a>.</p>
+<h3 class="main">Encoding</h3>
+<p class="first"></p>
+<h3 class="main">Revision History</h3>
+<ul>
+<li>2011-10-07 Started.</li>
+</ul>
+<h3 class="main">External References</h3>
+<p>This Project Gutenberg eBook contains external references. These
+links may not work for you.</p>
+<h3 class="main">Corrections</h3>
+<p>The following corrections have been applied to the text:</p>
+<table width="75%" summary=
+"Overview of corrections applied to the text.">
+<tr>
+<th>Page</th>
+<th>Source</th>
+<th>Correction</th>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20" valign="top"><a class="pageref" href=
+"#xd20e665">15</a></td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">&rdquo;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20" valign="top"><a class="pageref" href=
+"#xd20e1637">55</a></td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">,</td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20" valign="top"><a class="pageref" href=
+"#xd20e2035">67</a></td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">:</td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20" valign="top"><a class="pageref" href=
+"#xd20e2798">90</a></td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">our</td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">out</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20" valign="top"><a class="pageref" href=
+"#xd20e3539">121</a></td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">[<i>Not in source</i>]</td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">,</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="width20" valign="top"><a class="pageref" href=
+"#xd20e4233">151</a></td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">&rdquo;</td>
+<td class="width40" valign="bottom">[<i>Deleted</i>]</td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Flemish Legends, by Charles de Coster
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLEMISH LEGENDS ***
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+</pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Flemish Legends, by Charles de Coster
+
+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: Flemish Legends
+
+Author: Charles de Coster
+
+Illustrator: Albert Delstanche
+
+Translator: Harold Taylor
+
+Release Date: October 8, 2011 [EBook #37668]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK FLEMISH LEGENDS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Jeroen Hellingman and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net/ for Project
+Gutenberg (This file was produced from images generously
+made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ FLEMISH LEGENDS
+ By CHARLES DE COSTER
+
+ With eight woodcuts by
+ Albert Delstanche
+
+ Translated from the French
+ By Harold Taylor
+
+
+ London: Chatto & Windus
+ MCMXX
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+ Page
+ I. The Brotherhood of the Cheerful Countenance 1
+ II. The Three Sisters 31
+ III. Sir Halewyn 43
+ IV. Smetse Smee 101
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+
+ The Church of Haeckendover Frontispiece
+ The Little Stone Boy Facing page 6
+ The Man in White 52
+ Sir Halewyn in the Wood 64
+ The Song of the Head 92
+ Smetse caught by the Two Branches 108
+ In Smetse's Garden 126
+ The Devil-King and the Sack 150
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATOR'S NOTE
+
+
+There never was a book which needed less of an introduction than this
+one, unless it is that it should have an apology from the translator
+for his handling of so beautiful an original. But since so little is
+generally known of these Legends and their author a word of information
+may be demanded.
+
+Charles de Coster flourished in the middle part of the last century. He
+was brought up in the court of a great dignitary of the Roman Church,
+and intended for the aristocratic University of Louvain, but showed
+early his independent and democratic turn of mind by preferring
+the more popular University of Brussels, to which he made his own
+way. Here he fell in with a group of fellow-students and artistic
+enthusiasts which included Felicien Rops, with whom he was associated
+in a society called Les Joyeux, and afterwards in a short-lived Review,
+to which they gave the name of that traditional Belgian figure of
+joyousness and high spirits, Uylenspiegel. It was in this that these
+Legends first appeared, written in the years 1856 and 1857, and soon
+afterwards published in book form.
+
+Belgian literature was not at that time in a very flourishing
+condition, and little general appreciation was shown of de Coster's
+work, but it was hailed with enthusiasm by a few of the more
+discerning critics, and won him a place on a Royal Commission which
+was investigating mediaeval state papers. After publishing another book,
+Contes brabancons, likewise based on the folk-lore of his country, he
+seems to have withdrawn into himself and led the life of a dreamer,
+wandering about among the peasants and burying himself in the wide
+countryside of Flanders, until he had completed his epic of the
+Spanish tyranny, Ulenspiegel, which has already been translated into
+English. None of these publications brought him any material recompense
+for his work, and he remained a poor man to the end of his life, in
+constant revolt against what he called the horrible power of money. [1]
+
+The primitive stuff of these Legends is to be found scattered up and
+down, a piece here and a piece there, in the folk-lore of Brabant
+and Flanders. De Coster, who had an intense love of this folk-lore
+and at the same time, as he said, "that particular kind of madness
+which is needed for such writing," set himself to give it a literary
+form. He has chosen to make that form so elaborate, and has worked
+his material to so fine a composition, that he must be considered
+to have produced an entirely original book. But he has not been
+unfaithful to his masters the people. Sir Halewyn, for instance,
+follows an old song. And the Faust-story of Smetse Smee, the jovial
+and ingenious smith, who gets the better of his bargain with the
+devil in so wholly satisfactory a fashion, crops up in one form or
+another again and again.
+
+The Legends were written in the idiom of the sixteenth century, the
+period to which the latest and longest of them roughly belongs. I
+believe that no more perfect example of pastiche exists in the
+language. But that is not of much interest to English readers, and
+I have made no attempt to reproduce the achievement. De Coster found
+modern French, with its rigidity of form, unsuitable to his subject
+and inapt to his genius. He seems to have had a mind so perfectly in
+tune with the Middle Ages that one may well believe that he found it
+actually more natural to write in the still fluid language of Rabelais
+than in that of his own day. The prose of the original is of arresting
+beauty, especially in Sir Halewyn; which, with its peculiarly Flemish
+tale of faery and enchantment, still beauty and glowing hearths,
+and the sombreness of northern forests brooding over them, I feel
+to be the high-water mark of his achievement. At times it becomes so
+rhythmic that one can hardly decide whether it is prose or poetry. It
+is not difficult to believe Potvin's report that de Coster spent an
+immense amount of pains on his work, sometimes doing a page twenty
+times over before he was content to let it go.
+
+De Coster has been spoken of as a mouthpiece of
+Protestantism. Protestant, of course, is the last word in the world to
+describe him. No one can have regretted much more than he the passing
+of that warm-hearted time before the Reformation. One has but to read
+the story of the building of the church at Haeckendover in The Three
+Sisters, or the prayer of the girl Wantje to the Virgin in the tale
+of the hilarious Brotherhood to see how far this is true. It is only
+in Smetse Smee, when he comes to the time of the Inquisition, that he
+bursts out with that stream of invective and monstrous mockery which
+made the Polish refugee Karski say of him, "Well roared, Fleming!" And
+even then it is Spain rather than Catholicism which is the centre of
+his attack, and Philip II who is his aiming-point.
+
+Above all and before all de Coster loved the simple peasant-people
+of his own land, with their frank interest in good things to eat
+and good beer to drink, their aptitude for quarrelling and their
+great hearts. All his chief portraits are painted from them. The
+old homely nobility of Flanders, such as were the people of Heurne
+in the tale of Halewyn, he liked well enough, but he could not bear
+a rich man or a distant-mannered master of the Spanish type. A tale
+is told of him and his painter friend Dillens which may well stand
+as the key to his work. One day at Carnival-time they were in Ghent,
+and when the evening came Dillens asked what they should do. "Voir
+le peuple!" cried de Coster, "le peuple surtout! La bourgeoisie est
+la meme partout! Va voir le peuple!"
+
+
+H. T.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE BROTHERHOOD OF THE CHEERFUL COUNTENANCE
+
+
+I. Of the sorrowful voice which Pieter Gans heard in his garden,
+and of the flame running over the grass.
+
+In the days when the Good Duke ruled over Brabant, there was to be
+found at Uccle, with its headquarters in the tavern of The Horn, a
+certain Brotherhood of the Cheerful Countenance, aptly enough so named,
+for every one of the Brothers had a wonderfully jolly face, finished
+off, as a sign of good living, with two chins at the least. That was
+the young ones; but the older ones had more.
+
+You shall hear, first of all, how this Brotherhood was founded:
+
+Pieter Gans, host of this same Horn, putting off his clothes one
+night to get into bed, heard in his garden a sorrowful voice, wailing:
+"My tongue is scorching me. Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst."
+
+Thinking at first that it was some drunkard below, he continued to
+get into bed quietly, notwithstanding the voice, which kept crying
+out in the garden: "Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst." But this
+persisted so long and in so melancholy a manner that at last Pieter
+Gans must needs get up and go to the window to see who it might be
+making so much noise. Thence he saw a long flame, of great brightness
+and strange upstanding shape, running over the grass; and, thinking
+that it must be some poor soul from purgatory in need of prayers,
+he set about repeating litanies, and went through above a hundred,
+but all in vain, for the voice never ceased crying out as before:
+"Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst."
+
+After cock-crow he heard no more, and looking out again he saw with
+great satisfaction that the flame had disappeared.
+
+When morning came he went straightway to the church. There he told the
+story of these strange happenings to the priest, and caused a fair mass
+to be said for the repose of the poor soul; gave a golden peter to the
+clerk so that others might be said later, and returned home reassured.
+
+But on the following night the voice began its wailing anew, as
+lamentably as if it were that of a dying man hindered from dying. And
+so it went on night after night.
+
+Whence it came about that Pieter Gans grew moody and morose.
+
+Those who had known him in former days, rubicund, carrying a good
+paunch and a joyous face, wont to tell his matins with bottles and
+his vespers with flagons, would certainly never have recognized him.
+
+For he grew so wizened, dried up, thin, and of such piteous appearance
+that dogs used to start barking at the sight of him, as they do at
+beggars with their bundles.
+
+
+
+
+II. How Jan Blaeskaek gave good counsel to Pieter Gans, and wherein
+covetousness is sadly punished.
+
+It so happened that while he was moping after this fashion, passing
+his days in misery and without any joy of them, alone in a corner
+like a leper, there came to the inn a certain Master Jan Blaeskaek,
+brewer of good beer, a hearty fellow, and of a jovial turn of mind.
+
+This visitor, seeing Pieter Gans looking at him nervously and
+shamefacedly, wagging his head like an old man, went up to him and
+shook him: "Come," said he, "wake up, my friend, it gives me no
+pleasure to see thee sitting there like a corpse!"
+
+"Alas," answered Pieter Gans, "I am not worth much more now,
+my master."
+
+"And whence," said Blaeskaek, "hast thou gotten all this black
+melancholy?"
+
+To which Pieter Gans made answer: "Come away to some place where none
+will hear us. There I will tell thee the whole tale."
+
+This he did. When Blaeskaek had heard to the end he said: "'Tis no
+Christian soul that cries in this manner, but the voice of a devil. It
+must be appeased. Therefore go thou and fetch from thy cellar a good
+cask of ale, and roll it out into the garden, to the place where thou
+didst see the flame shining."
+
+"That I will," said Pieter Gans. But at vespers, thinking to himself
+that ale was precious stuff to set before devils, he put instead in
+that place a great bowl of clear water.
+
+Towards midnight he heard a voice more sorrowful than ever, calling
+out: "Drink! Drink! I shall die of thirst."
+
+And he saw the bright flame dancing furiously over the bowl, which
+was suddenly broken with a loud report, and this in so violent a
+manner that the pieces flew up against the windows of the house.
+
+Then he began to sweat with terror and weep aloud, saying: "Now
+'tis all over, dear God, all over with me. Oh, that I had followed
+the advice of the wise Blaeskaek, for he is a man of good counsel,
+of excellent counsel! Master Devil, who are so thirsty, do not kill
+me to-night; to-morrow you shall drink good ale, Master Devil. Ah,
+'tis ale of fair repute throughout the land, this ale, fit for kings
+or for good devils like yourself!"
+
+Nevertheless the voice continued to wail: "Drink! Drink!"
+
+"There, there! Have a little patience, Master Devil; to-morrow you
+shall drink my best ale. It cost me many a golden peter, my master,
+and I will give you a whole barrelful. Do you not see that you must not
+strangle me to-night, but rather to-morrow if I do not keep my word."
+
+And after this fashion he wept and cried out until cock-crow. Then,
+finding that he was not dead, he said his matins with a better heart.
+
+At sun-up he went down himself to fetch the cask of ale from his
+cellar, and placed it in the middle of the grass, saying: "Here is
+the freshest and the best drink I have; I am no niggard. So have pity
+on me, Master Devil."
+
+
+
+
+III. Of the songs, voices, mewlings, and sounds of kisses which Pieter
+Gans and Blaeskaek heard in the garden, and of the brave mien wherewith
+Master Merry-face sat on the cask of stone.
+
+At the third hour Blaeskaek came down and asked for news. Pieter Gans
+told his tale, and as he was about to go away again drew him aside
+and said: "I have kept this secret from my servants, lest they should
+go and blab about it to the priests, and so I am as good as alone in
+the house. Do not therefore leave me, for it may happen that some
+evil will come of the business, and 'twould be well to have a good
+stomach in case of such event. Alone I should certainly have none,
+but together we shall have enough for both. It would be as well, then,
+to fortify ourselves against this assault on our courage. Instead of
+sleeping we will eat and drink heartily."
+
+"For that," said Blaeskaek, "I am as ready as thou."
+
+Towards midnight the two comrades, tippling in a low room, fortified
+with good eating, but not without some apprehension nevertheless, heard
+the same voice outside, no longer sorrowful, but joyous, singing songs
+in a strange tongue; and there followed divers sweet chants, such as
+angels might sing (speaking with proper respect to them all), who in
+Paradise had drunken too much ambrosia, voices of women celestially
+soft, mewlings of tigers, sighs, noise of embraces and lovers' kisses.
+
+"Ho, ho!" cried Pieter Gans, "what is this, dear Jesus? They are devils
+for a certainty. They will empty my cask altogether. And when they find
+my ale so good they will want more of it, and come crying every night
+and shouting louder than ever: 'Drink! Drink!' And I shall be ruined,
+alas, alas! Come, friend Blaeskaek"--and so saying he pulled out his
+kuyf, which is, as you may know, a strong knife well sharpened--"Come,
+we must drive them off by force! But alone I have not the courage."
+
+"I will come with you," said Blaeskaek, "but not until a little later,
+at cock-crow. They say that after that hour devils cannot bite."
+
+Before the sun rose the cock crew.
+
+And he had, that morning, so martial a tone that you would have
+thought it a trumpet sounding.
+
+And hearing this trumpet all the devils suddenly put a stop to their
+drinking and singing.
+
+Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek were overjoyed at that, and ran out into
+the garden in haste.
+
+Pieter Gans, hurrying to look for his cask of ale, found it changed
+into stone, and on top of it, sitting horseback fashion, what
+seemed to be a young boy, quite naked, a fair, sweet little boy,
+gaily crowned with vine-leaves, with a bunch of grapes hanging over
+one ear, and in his right hand a staff with a fir-cone at the tip,
+and grapes and vine-branches twined round it.
+
+And although this little boy was made of stone, he had all the
+appearance of being alive, so merry a countenance had he.
+
+Greatly alarmed were Gans and Blaeskaek at the sight of this personage.
+
+And fearing both the wrath of the devil and the punishment of the
+Church, and swearing together to say no word about it to any one,
+they put the figure (which was but a few thumbs high) in a dark cellar
+where there was no drink kept.
+
+
+
+
+IV. Wherein the two worthy men set out for Brussels, capital city
+of Brabant, and of the manners and condition of Josse Cartuyvels
+the Apothecary.
+
+Having done so much they set out together for Brussels, there to
+consult an old man, apothecary by trade, something of a glutton,
+but liked well enough by the common folk on account of a certain
+hotch-potch he made, well seasoned with rare herbs, for which he
+asked a not unreasonable price. He was reputed by the devout to have
+commerce with the devil, on account of the miraculous cures which he
+effected in both man and beast by means of his herbs. Furthermore,
+he sold beer, which he bought from Blaeskaek. And he was hideous to
+look at, gouty, wizened, yellow as a guinea, wrinkled as an old apple,
+and with carbuncles on his neck.
+
+He lived in a house of mean appearance, in that part where you may
+now see the brewery of Claes van Volxem. Gans and Blaeskaek, coming
+thither, found him in his kitchen, making up his stews.
+
+The apothecary, seeing Gans in such a piteous melancholy state,
+asked him if he had some ill whereof he wished to be cured.
+
+"He has nothing to be cured of," said Blaeskaek, "save an evil fear
+which has been tormenting him for a week past."
+
+Thereupon they told him the whole story of the chubby-faced image.
+
+"Dear God!" said Josse Cartuyvels, for such was the name of this
+doctor of stews, "I know this devil well enough, and will show you his
+likeness." And taking them up to the top of his house, into a small
+room which he had there, he showed them a gallant image of that same
+devil, making merry with pretty maids and gay goat-foot companions.
+
+"And what is the name," said Blaeskaek, "of this merry boy?"
+
+"I have no doubt it is Bacchus," said Josse Cartuyvels. "In olden
+times he was a god, but at the gracious coming of Our Lord Jesus
+Christ"--here all three crossed themselves--"he lost at once his
+power and his divinity. He was, in his time, good company, and more
+particularly notable as the inventor of wine, beer, and ale. It may be,
+on that account, that instead of hell he is only in purgatory, where
+no doubt he has become thirsty, and by God's permission was allowed to
+return to earth, once only, no more, and there sing this lamentable
+song which you heard in your garden. But I suppose that he was not
+allowed to cry his thirst in countries where wine is chiefly drunk,
+and that he came accordingly to Master Gans, knowing well enough that
+with him he would find the best ale in all Brabant."
+
+"True," said Gans, "true, friend Cartuyvels, the best in the duchy;
+and he drank up, if you please, a whole barrelful, without paying me
+so much as the smallest gold piece, nor silver, nor even copper. That
+is not the conduct of an honest devil."
+
+"Ah!" said Cartuyvels, "there you are in error, and do not perceive
+what is for your good and what for evil. But if you will take the
+advice I am about to give you, you may find a way whereby you can make
+clear profit from this Bacchus, for he is, you must know, the god of
+jolly drinkers and good innkeepers, and I am disposed to think that
+he will do you a good turn."
+
+"Well, then," asked Blaeskaek, "what must we do now?"
+
+"I have heard that this devil loves warmth and sunlight. So take him
+out, first of all, from this dark cellar. Then put him in some place
+whither the sun reaches, such as on top of the tall press which stands
+in the room where your customers sit and drink."
+
+"Sweet Jesus!" exclaimed Pieter Gans, "this is idolatry."
+
+"In no wise," said the apothecary. "I mean only this; that, put up
+where I tell you, sniffing the good smell of stoups and flagons, and
+hearing jolly talk, he will grow altogether frolicsome and happy. So
+may you bring Christian comfort to poor dead souls."
+
+"But if," said Pieter Gans, "the priests should get wind of this
+statue, so shamelessly set up for all to see?"
+
+"They cannot find you guilty of sin, for innocence keeps nothing
+secret. You will show this Bacchus openly to all your friends and
+relatives, and say that you found him buried under the earth in a
+corner of your garden. Thus you will make him seem an ancient relic, as
+indeed he is. Only take care to forget his name when you speak of him
+to any one, and, entitling him, as in jest, Master Merry-face, use this
+name for him always, and institute in his honour a jolly brotherhood."
+
+"So we will," answered Pieter Gans and Blaeskaek together, and they
+then departed, not without having given the apothecary two large
+coins for his trouble.
+
+He did his best, however, to keep them back, so that they might partake
+of some of his heavenly hotch-potch, but Pieter Gans turned him a deaf
+ear, saying to himself that it was devil's cooking, unwholesome for
+a good Christian stomach. So they left him and set out again for Uccle.
+
+
+
+
+V. Of the long conversation and great perplexity of Pieter Gans and
+Blaeskaek in the matter of the deviling; and how they returned to
+Uccle with a resolution taken.
+
+While they were on their way: "Well, comrade," said Gans to Blaeskaek,
+"what is thy opinion of this apothecary?"
+
+"A dog of a heretic!" said Blaeskaek, "a heathen, a despiser of all
+good and all virtue. For 'twas treasonable and wicked counsel he
+gave us."
+
+"True, my good friend, true. And is it not besides a great heresy
+to dare tell us that this deviling on his cask is he who invented
+beer, wine, and ale, when we have heard it preached every Sunday in
+our church that St. Noah, under the instruction of Our Lord Jesus
+Christ"--here both crossed themselves--"invented these things."
+
+"For my part," said Blaeskaek, "I know I have heard that preached
+above a hundred times."
+
+Here, seating themselves on the grass, they began to refresh themselves
+with a fine Ghent sausage, brought by Pieter Gans against such time
+as they should feel hungry.
+
+"There, there," said he, "let us not forget the Benedicite, my
+friend. So, perhaps, we may escape burning. For 'tis to God we owe
+this meat: may he deign to keep us always in his holy faith."
+
+"Amen," said Blaeskaek; "but, my master, between us we must certainly
+break up this wicked statue."
+
+"He who has no sheep fears no wolves. 'Tis easy enough for thee to
+talk comfortably of breaking up this deviling."
+
+"'Twould be a deed much to our credit."
+
+"But if he come back again to wail each night so piteously:
+'Drink! Drink!' And if he turn angry with me and cast spells on my
+beer and my wine, and make me as poor as Job! Nay, better follow the
+advice of the apothecary."
+
+"Aye, and if the priests learn of the statue, and call us both before
+the tribunal, and have us burnt as heretics and idolaters, what then?"
+
+"Ah," said Gans, "here are the good God on the one hand and the wicked
+devil on the other, fighting over our poor bodies, and we shall be
+pounded to nothing between them, alas, alas!"
+
+"Well," said Blaeskaek, "let us go to the good fathers openly, and
+tell them the whole affair."
+
+"Alas, alas! We shall be burnt, my good master, burnt without mercy."
+
+"I believe there must be some way whereby to escape this danger."
+
+"There is none, my friend, there is none, and we shall be burnt. I
+feel myself already half roast."
+
+"I have thought of a way," said Blaeskaek.
+
+"There is none, my friend, there is no way whatever, unless it be
+the clemency of the worthy fathers. Canst see no pilgrim or wandering
+friar on the road?"
+
+"None."
+
+"If we see such a one we must give him all our sausage--have we said
+our grace for it?--and all the bread in our wallet, and humbly invite
+him into our house, to eat a quarter of roast lamb, well washed down
+with old wine. I have not much of that kind, but I will gladly give
+him all there is of it. Canst not see such a one coming?"
+
+"No one," said Blaeskaek. "But open those rabbit's ears of thine
+and hark to me: I will give thee good counsel, for I wish thee well,
+blubberer. We must follow the apothecary's advice in half-and-half
+fashion, so much only, you understand. 'Twould be idolatry of the
+most shameless kind to put up this statue in the public hall."
+
+"Alas, alas, by all the devils! yes, you are right."
+
+"Very well, then we will put him in a cupboard, which shall be well
+fastened, but with an opening on the top to let in the air. Therein
+we will also put a small keg of good beer, and ask him not to use
+it up too fast. In this way he will be, in fact, within the hall of
+the inn, and he will keep himself well hid for certain, for in his
+cupboard he will be able to take what pleasure he may from the songs
+of the drinkers, rattling of mugs, and clinking of bottles."
+
+"No," said Gans to that, "no, we must follow wholly the apothecary's
+advice, for he knows more about devils than we. As for this deviling,
+we will do our best to satisfy him, according to our means. But in
+spite of it all, I fear we shall one day be burnt, alas, alas!"
+
+
+
+
+VI. Wherein it is seen that the devil is not a good one; and of the
+evil trick which he played on the good wives of the drinkers.
+
+As soon as they reached The Horn, the two worthies took out from the
+cellar the statue of the deviling and put it with great respect on
+top of a press which stood in the hall.
+
+On the morrow there came to this inn nearly all the men of Uccle,
+brought together in this wise because on that day had been sold
+publicly in their stables two horses well bred by the late sheriff,
+Jacob Naeltjens. His son was in no mind to keep them, saying that a
+man's best steeds were his slipper-shoes.
+
+The men of Uccle were surprised and delighted when they saw the statue
+of the youngster on the press, especially when Blaeskaek told them
+that his name was Master Merry-face, and that it was proposed, by
+way of jest, to establish forthwith in his honour a jolly brotherhood.
+
+They were all willing to do this, and thereupon decided between
+them that no one should be of their brotherhood until he had drunk,
+as his baptism, four-and-twenty monstrous great cups of wine, while
+another brother beat twelve strokes on the plumpest belly of the
+company there present.
+
+Each night thereafter they gathered together at The Horn, and drank
+deep enough, as you may well guess.
+
+The most wonderful thing about the business was that in spite of this
+they worked all day like stout fellows, some at their crafts, some at
+their trades, others in the fields, contented one and all. But their
+good wives were not by any means contented, for as soon as vespers
+sounded all their husbands and sweethearts went off to The Horn,
+without giving them so much as a single thought, and there stayed
+until curfew.
+
+And when these worthies went home they did not beat their wives,
+as some drinkers do, but lay down quietly beside them in bed, and
+immediately, without saying a word, fell fast asleep and began to sound
+such fanfares with their noses as Master Porker makes with his snout.
+
+Then the poor women might thump them, cuff them, call their names as
+they would, to get them to sing their bedfellows a different sort of
+song, but all quite in vain: as well beat water to get fire out of it.
+
+They awoke only with cock-crow, but their temper in the morning was
+so rough and stormy that none of their womenfolk (that is to say,
+of such as were not asleep from weariness) dared say a word, either
+then or at the dinner-hour. All this was brought about by the evil
+power and influence of the deviling.
+
+On that account there was much sadness among the women, who said,
+all of them, that if such a state of things went on for long the race
+of the people of Uccle must needs become extinct, which would be a
+great pity.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of the Great Parliament of the Women of Uccle.
+
+So it came about that the women decided between themselves to save the
+village from this fate, and to this end, while their menfolk were at
+drink with Pieter Gans, they met together at the house of a certain
+dame Syske, who was big, fat, loud-speaking, had hair upon her chin,
+and had buried five husbands, or else seven, I dare not particularize
+the number for fear of untruth.
+
+There, as a rebuke to their drunken husbands, they quenched their
+thirst with clear water.
+
+When all were present, the younger ones assembled on this side and
+the older on that, the ugly ones among the older, dame Syske opened
+the talk by saying that they must all go forthwith to The Horn, and
+there give these drinkers such a drubbing that they would be stiff
+and sore for a week because of it.
+
+The old and ugly ones applauded this proposal with their hands,
+their feet, their mouths, and their noses. There was a fine noise,
+you may well believe.
+
+But the young and pretty ones kept silent as fishes, all save one,
+very pretty, very fresh and very neat, bearing the name of Wantje,
+who said very modestly, and blushing somewhat, that it was of no use
+to belabour their worthy men in this fashion, but rather they must
+bring them back to good ways by gentleness and laughter.
+
+To this the dame Syske replied: "Little one, thou canst understand
+nothing of men, for thou art but a maid, or so I believe. For my part
+I know well enough how I managed my several husbands, and that was
+neither by gentleness nor by laughter, I promise thee. They are all
+dead, the worthy men (may God rest their souls!), but I remember them
+clearly, and know very well that at the least wrongdoing I made them
+dance the stick-dance on the field of obedience. None dared eat or
+drink, sneeze or yawn, unless I had first given him leave. Little Job
+Syske, my last, did my cooking for me in my own house. He made a good
+cook, poor little man. But I had to give him many good beatings to
+bring him to that, and so it was with the others as well. Therefore,
+little one, give up all these laughters and gentlenesses of thine,
+they are not worth much, I can tell thee. Let us rather go forthwith
+and cut ourselves good staves of greenwood, easy enough to find now
+that it is spring-time, and going off to The Horn let us make fall
+a good shower of blows on these unfaithful husbands."
+
+At this the old and ugly ones broke out afresh into monstrous howls
+and tumult, crying, "Out upon them! out on the drunkards! They want
+a good drubbing, they want a good hanging!"
+
+
+
+
+VIII. Of the great wit which every woman has, and of the modest
+conversation which the maid Wantje held with the worthies at the inn.
+
+On the morrow all these good women met together once again, and drank
+as before a great quantity of clear water; and afterwards went off,
+armed with sticks, to the place where they knew their men were to
+be found.
+
+Before the door of The Horn they stopped, and there a great council
+took place. The old ones wanted to go in with their sticks.
+
+"No," said Wantje, with the young and pretty ones, "we would rather
+be beaten ourselves."
+
+"Hark to these sillies!" cried the old ones, "these poor silly
+things. They have not an ounce of pride in their bodies, between
+the lot of them. Be guided by us, gentle ewekins: we will avenge the
+dignity of women for you upon these wretched drunkards."
+
+"That you shall not," said the young ones, "as long as we are there."
+
+"That we shall," howled the old ones.
+
+But here a certain young and merry wife burst out laughing.
+
+"See ye not," said she, "whence comes to these grannies so great a
+rage and such a thirst for vengeance? 'Tis simple bragging, to make
+us believe that their old croakers of husbands still care to sing
+them songs."
+
+At these words the old hags were thrown into such a state of fury
+that one or two died of rage there and then. Others, having quite
+lost their heads, wanted to kill the maids and young wives who were
+laughing at them (and 'twas pretty music, all those fresh and merry
+voices), but the dame Syske stopped them from that, saying that for
+the present they must take counsel together and not kill one another.
+
+Continuing their discussion, they quarrelled, argued, chattered,
+jabbered in this and like fashion until curfew-time, when they
+separated without having made up their minds to anything, by reason
+of not having had time enough to talk it over.
+
+And there were spoken in this assembly of women more than 877,849,002
+words, each one as full of good sense as a cellarful of old wine.
+
+Pieter Gans, who, as they said, had rabbit's ears, hearing in
+the street a certain hum of chattering voices, cried out: "Alas,
+alas! what is this now? Devils for a certainty, dear Jesus!"
+
+"I will go and see, little coward," answered Blaeskaek. But on
+opening the door he burst out laughing all at once, saying: "Brothers,
+'tis our wives."
+
+Thereupon all the drinkers rose and went to the door; some with bottles
+in their hands, others brandishing flagons, others again clinking
+their mugs together like church bells. Blaeskaek went out of the room,
+crossed the threshold of the outer door, and stepped into the street.
+
+"Well, wives," said he, "what brings you here with all this greenwood?"
+
+At these words the young ones let fall their sticks to the ground,
+for they were ashamed to be caught with such weapons.
+
+But one old woman, brandishing hers in the air, answered for the
+others: "We come, drunkards, to tell you the tale of the stick,
+and give you a good thrashing."
+
+"Woe, woe!" wept Pieter Gans, "that, I know, is my grandmother's
+voice."
+
+"So it is, scoundrel," said the old woman.
+
+Meanwhile the Brothers of the Cheerful Countenance, hearing all
+this, shook their sides merrily with laughing, and Blaeskaek said:
+"Then come in, come in, good wives, and let us see how you do your
+drubbing. Are those good greenwood staves you have brought?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"I am glad of that. For our part we have ready for you some good
+rods, well pickled in vinegar, which we use for whipping disobedient
+boys. 'Twill doubtless give you all sweet pleasure to feel their
+caresses, and so recall the days of your youth. Will you be pleased
+to try them? We will give you plenty."
+
+But at these scoffing words the old women took fright and ran off as
+fast as their legs would carry them, more particularly mother Syske,
+making such terrible threats and noises as they went that they sounded
+to those jolly Brothers like a flight of screeching crows passing
+down the deserted streets.
+
+The young ones stayed before the door of the inn, and 'twas affecting
+to see them so humbly standing, gentle and submissive, waiting for
+some kindly word from their husbands or sweethearts.
+
+"Well," said Blaeskaek, "do you please to come in?"
+
+"Yes," said they all.
+
+"Keep them out," said Pieter Gans into Blaeskaek's ear, "keep them
+out, or they will go chattering to the priests about the deviling,
+and we shall be burnt, my good friend."
+
+"I am deaf," said Blaeskaek; "come in, my dears."
+
+Thereupon entered all these good women, and took up their places,
+some by their husbands, others by their sweethearts, and the maids
+in a line on a bench modestly.
+
+"Women," said the drinkers, "you wish to join us?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And to drink also?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And have not come here to tell us temperance stories?"
+
+"Nay," said they, "we have come without any other wish than to join
+our good husbands and sweethearts, and laugh with them, if that may
+be, with God's good will."
+
+"Those are certainly fair words," said one old man, "but I suspect
+beneath them some woman's artifice or other."
+
+But no one paid him any heed, for by this time the women were seated
+all about the table, and you might hear this: "Drink this, pretty
+sweet, 'tis a draught from heaven." "Pour, neighbour, pour, pour out
+some more of this sweet drink." "Who is a better man than I? I am the
+Duke; I have good wine and good wife!" "Ho, there! broach a fresh cask
+of wine; we must have the best there is to-day to pleasure these good
+dames." "Courage! I have drunk too much; I am going to conquer the
+moon. But wait a little first. For the present I stay by this good
+wife of mine. Kiss me, sweet."
+
+"This is not the place, before all these people," the women would
+answer. And with many caresses and pretty ways each said to her man:
+"Come away home."
+
+They would indeed have been glad enough to go, all those good
+drinkers, but did not dare do it, being shamefaced in this matter in
+one another's presence.
+
+Guessing as much, the women talked of going back.
+
+"There, there!" said the old man, "is not that what I said. They want
+to have us outside."
+
+"Nay, my masters," said Wantje very sweetly, "but I pray you remember
+that we are not accustomed to such strong drinks, nor even to their
+smell. Therefore, master, if we feel the need to go out into the
+fresh air 'tis assuredly without wanting to anger or sadden you in
+any way whatsoever. May God keep you merry, brothers."
+
+And thereupon the good women went off, though the men tried to keep
+them back by force.
+
+
+
+
+IX. Wherein it is seen that the learned Thomas a Klapperibus knew
+what makes a drinker fidget on his stool.
+
+Left thus to their pots and tankards they turned to one another
+in wonder, saying: "Ah, look ye at these dames! Does it not always
+fall out in this wise; that they would have us do whatever they bid,
+and that with humility! Submissive they seem, tyrants they are. But
+look ye, is it to male or female that belongs properly the right of
+command in all matters? To the male. We are the males. Very well,
+then, let us drink! And we will at all times carry out our own wishes,
+which will presently be to sleep here in this inn, if we please."
+
+After this fashion they talked together for some time, feigning great
+anger, but being, in fact, eager enough to go and join their wives. By
+and by they fell silent, and so remained for a while, some yawning,
+others drumming tunes on the floor with their boots, others again, and
+these many, fidgeting on their seats, as if they were on sharp thorns.
+
+Suddenly a young townsman, but lately married, got up and left the
+hall, saying that by the advice of a leech he was forbidden to drink
+more than six-and-twenty mugs of ale, which number he had already
+taken.
+
+After he had gone they all began to excuse themselves, one with a pain
+in his stomach, another with a headache, others with a melancholy
+feeling or with the phlegm, and made off to their homes, excepting
+only one or two among the older men.
+
+And when they were once outside they hurried with all speed to join
+their wives. Thus was borne out what was written by the learned Thomas
+a Klapperibus in his great work De Amore, c. vi, wherein it is said,
+that woman has more power than the devil.
+
+
+
+
+X. Of the brigand called Irontooth.
+
+But this thing never happened but once; for on the morrow when the
+drinkers were carousing at The Horn the good women who came thither
+to entice them away a second time were driven off in a shameful manner.
+
+And as for the men, they continued to drink and to shout hilarious
+carols.
+
+Several times the night-watchman of the town came in to warn them
+against making so much noise after the sun was set. Ha, they listened
+to him with all respect, and seemed quite abashed and repentant at
+their fault; each one said his mea culpa; and in the meantime they gave
+the poor watchman so abundantly to drink that when he got outside he
+went off straight away to do his round leaning against some wall, and
+there snoring like a bass-viol. The others continued their drinking
+bouts and heavy slumbering, whereof the unhappy wives never ceased
+to complain. And so on, in this fashion, for a month and four days.
+
+Now by great misfortune the good Duke had lately been at war with
+my Lord of Flanders, and although peace had been made between them
+there remained afoot a band of lewd and ribald scoundrels, who went
+about ravishing all the countryside and robbing the townsfolk.
+
+This same band was commanded by a savage captain, to whom was given
+the name of Irontooth, because on the top of his casque he wore a
+single spike, sharp and cruel, like the tooth of some devil or of
+one of the unicorns of hell, cut out into fantastic shape. In battle
+he would sometimes put down his head and use this tooth as a wild
+boar uses his tusks. In this manner were slain many brave soldiers
+of the duchy of Brabant. On this same casque he carried also an evil
+bird whose wings beat against the steel, whereof it was said that it
+screeched in battle in a terrible fashion.
+
+It was Irontooth's custom to come at night to the villages on which he
+was minded to carry out his forays, butchering without mercy the poor
+townsfolk in their sleep, and carrying off jewels, plate, women, and
+maids, but of these last only the young ones. As for the old women,
+he left them their lives, saying that it was not worth the while of
+killing them, for they would certainly die of fright by themselves.
+
+
+
+
+XI. In which it is seen how bravely the good wives of Uccle did the
+duty of men.
+
+It came about that one night when only a few stars were showing,
+and the moon shining a little, there came to Uccle a certain Master
+Andre Bredael, running as hard as he could and quite out of breath.
+
+He brought this news: that being by chance behind a bush on the road
+to Paris, he had seen a troop of men go past, whom he thought to be
+the Irontooth's, for he had seen among them a spiked casque like that
+which the great brigand was wont to wear.
+
+While these men were halted by the roadside, and munching some food,
+he overheard them say that they were bound that night for Uccle,
+where they hoped to get good sport and fair plunder, but they said
+also that they must leave the high road and travel by small lanes,
+so that their passage should not be discovered. Master Bredael thought
+it most likely that they would debouch behind the church.
+
+Having learned so much he had hurried to Uccle by the Paris road,
+outdistancing the brigands by a good half-league, so that he might
+warn the townsmen to arms, and prepare a strong reception for these
+unwelcome travellers.
+
+And arriving there he hastened to the door of the prefecture and
+knocked loudly, so that the warning bell might be set ringing at once;
+but none came to open to him, for the good reason that the custodian,
+being one of the Brothers of the Cheerful Countenance, was fast asleep,
+like all the other drinkers. Andre Bredael then sought other means of
+alarum, and shouted out so loudly: "Fire! fire! Brand! brand!" that all
+the women and old men, and children who were too young to drink, leapt
+out of bed and ran to their windows to see what was going forward.
+
+Andre Bredael made himself known to them and begged them to come
+down into the square, which they did with all dispatch. When they
+were all gathered round him he told them of the coming of Irontooth,
+and bade them go and wake their husbands.
+
+At these words the older women began to shout as if mad: "Welcome to
+Irontooth, God's tooth in good deed, come to rip them all open! Ha,
+drinkers! now we shall see you, as a punishment from heaven, either
+hanged short or burnt alive or drowned without respite; and 'tis no
+more than your sins deserve!" Then, as if they had wings to their
+feet, they flew into their houses, and there Master Bredael, who
+stayed with the younger women in the square, heard the enraged old
+hags shouting, whining, weeping, vociferating, thumping on chests
+and frying-pans, in an attempt to awaken their good men. At the same
+time they cried in their ears: "Scoundrels, wake up! Sweet friends,
+come and protect us! Drunkards, do your duty for once in your accursed
+lives! Dear fellows, do you wish to find us dead by morning? Bear us
+no malice for our talk of thrashing you. We were foolish just then,
+and too hasty; ye were wise. But save us in this pass!" And so on,
+mixing together smooth and bitter words, like milk and vinegar.
+
+But none of the men stirred.
+
+"What is this?" said Master Bredael.
+
+"Alas, master," said the young women, "'tis as you see; they are as
+good as dead the night through, and so has it been a while past. If
+the angel of God himself were to come he would scarce be able to
+rouse them. Ah, must it be that after having left us lonely so long
+these wicked husbands will now leave us to die!"
+
+"Do not weep," said Andre Bredael, "this is no time for that. Do you
+love these husbands of yours?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And your sons?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And your little daughters, so sweet and winsome?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"And you are ready to defend them as best you can?"
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+"Well, then," said Bredael, "go and fetch your men's bows and come
+back here with them as quickly as you can. We will think of some way
+to defend ourselves."
+
+Soon enough the women were back again, armed with bows which they
+had taken from their husbands, brothers, or sweethearts. These bows
+of Uccle were of great renown throughout the land, for they were as
+strong as steel, and winged their arrows with very great speed.
+
+With them came certain boys of twelve years old, or not much more,
+and one or two brave old men, but the women sent them back again
+indoors, saying that they must stay behind and look to the village.
+
+The good womenfolk then collected in a bunch in the square, talking
+with great ardour and courage, but not too much bragging withal. Every
+one was clad in a white gown, jacket, or shift, as is the customary
+night apparel of women. But on this occasion it was by the special
+favour of God that they were so clad, as you shall see by and by.
+
+Wantje, who was one of their number, standing very bold and calm,
+said suddenly that they must pray. Thereupon they all knelt devoutly,
+and the maid spoke thus:
+
+"Madam Mary the Virgin, who art queen of heaven as Madam the Duchess
+is queen of this country, give an ear to these poor wives and maids,
+humbly kneeling before you, who by reason of the drunkenness of their
+husbands and brothers must needs take on themselves men's duty and
+arm themselves to fight. If you will but make a small prayer to My
+Lord Jesus to give us his aid we shall be sure enough of victory. And
+we will give you as thanksgiving a fair crown of gold, with rubies,
+turquoises and diamonds in its rim, a fair golden chain, a fair robe
+of brocade spangled over with silver, and the same to My Lord your
+son. Therefore pray for us, Madam Mary."
+
+And all the other good maids and wives said after Wantje: "Pray for
+us, Madam Mary."
+
+Suddenly, as they were rising from their knees, they saw a beautiful
+bright star shoot from heaven to earth, not far from where they
+were. This was, no doubt, an angel from the good God, who came down
+from Paradise in this guise, to stand beside them and help them the
+more surely.
+
+Seeing the sign the good women took heart of grace, and Wantje spoke
+further, saying:
+
+"Madam the Virgin hearkens to us, 'tis certain. Let us now proceed
+to the gate of the village, beside the church of Our Lord, who dwells
+therein"--here all crossed themselves--"to await with confidence the
+coming of the Irontooth and his men. And when we see them near at
+hand let every woman draw her bow, without speaking, nor moving in
+any way. Madam the Virgin will guide the arrows."
+
+"Well spoken, brave maid," said Master Bredael. "Come, I see in those
+eyes of thine, so bright in the darkness, the breath of God, which is a
+flame, alight in thy maid's heart. We must do as she says, good wives."
+
+"Yes, yes," said they.
+
+This woman's army took up its place in line in the alley behind
+the church.
+
+After a while of waiting, wherein was much perplexity and anxiety,
+they heard the sound of footfalls and voices, growing louder as they
+listened, as of men on the march.
+
+And Wantje said: "Madam Mary, they are coming; have pity on us!"
+
+Then a large body of men appeared before them, carrying lanterns. And
+they heard a monstrous, husky, devil's voice crying: "Out, friends,
+out upon them! Loot for the Irontooth!"
+
+But here suddenly all these good women let fly their arrows with
+great precision, for though they themselves remained in darkness they
+could see the brigands, all lit up by their lanterns, as clearly as
+in daylight. Two hundred of the men fell at the first volley, some
+with arrows in their skulls, others in their necks, and several with
+them in their bellies.
+
+The Irontooth himself was among the first that the good women heard
+fall with a great thud, from an arrow let fly by Wantje, which pierced
+him through the eyeball neatly.
+
+Some were not wounded at all, but, having troubled conscience, thought
+when they saw all these white figures that 'twas the souls of those
+whom they had made pass from life into death, come back by God's
+grace to avenge themselves upon them. So they fell on their faces in
+the dust, as if dead from fear, crying out in a most piteous manner:
+"Mercy, Lord God! send back to hell all these ghosts, we pray you."
+
+But when they saw the good wives bearing down on them fear put strength
+into their legs, and they made off as fast as they would carry them.
+
+
+
+
+XII. Wherein Pieter Gans is nearer the stake than the wine-barrel.
+
+When the enemy had been so far discomfited the women came back into
+the square and stood before the prefecture, not feeling any glory,
+but rather sadness at having had to shed Christian blood in this
+manner. Ah, they returned thanks with a full heart to Our Lady the
+Virgin and Our Lord Jesus, who had given them the victory.
+
+Nor did they forget in their thanksgiving the good angel who had come
+to their assistance in the form of a bright star. And they sang fair
+hymns and litanies very sweetly.
+
+Meanwhile all the cocks in the countryside awoke one by one and
+heralded with their clarions the new day about to dawn.
+
+And at that call, all the drinkers were roused from sleep, and ran
+to their doors to find out whence came this sweet music.
+
+And my lord the Sun laughed in the sky.
+
+And the worthy men came out into the square, and some of them, when
+they saw their wives in the assembly, were all for beating them
+because they had left their beds; but Andre Bredael interposed and
+told them the whole story. Thereupon they were all amazed, ashamed,
+and repentant, seeing how well these brave petticoats had striven on
+their behalf. Pieter Gans, Blaeskaek, and Father Claessens, Dean of
+Uccle, a most saintly man, also came out into the square.
+
+Thereupon, seeing all this crowd assembled, Master Bredael spoke thus:
+
+"Friends," said he, "you hear how that 'tis through the valour of
+your wives and daughters alone that you are not by this time sniffing
+the air of heaven. Therefore 'tis seemly that here and now you should
+promise, and take oath to it, not to drink any more except by their
+wish."
+
+"That is all very well, Master Bredael," said one of the townsmen,
+"but 'tis not plain drinking that puts us all into so deep a sleep. I
+speak of these things with knowledge, I who have drunk wine freely
+all my life, and hope still so to do with relish to the end of my
+days. There is something else to it, devilry and evil spells, or so I
+think. Come hither, Pieter Gans, come hither and talk to us somewhat,
+and if thou know anything, bring light to this dark matter."
+
+"Alas, alas!" said Pieter Gans, his head wagging and his teeth
+chattering (for he was afraid, poor fellow), "alas, alas! I know
+nothing, my good friends."
+
+"Nay," said the man, "but thou dost know something of it, for I see
+thy head shaking and thy teeth chattering."
+
+But at this point the Dean confronted Gans:
+
+"Wicked Christian," said he, "I can see well enough thou hast had
+commerce with the devil, to the great despite of all these good
+men. Confess thy sin with all humility, and we will accord thee such
+grace as may be, but if thou deny it, thou shalt be punished with
+hot oil."
+
+"Ah," said Pieter Gans in tears, "'tis as I said; I shall be burnt,
+dear God! Blaeskaek, where art thou, my good friend? Give me thy
+help. Alas, alas!"
+
+But Blaeskaek had gone off in a hurry from fear of the holy Fathers.
+
+"Ah," said Pieter Gans, "see how the traitor deserts me when danger
+threatens!"
+
+"Speak," said the very reverend Father.
+
+"Yes, Master Dean," said Pieter Gans, weeping and wailing, "I will tell
+you the whole story, without keeping back anything.... Master!" he
+cried when he had come to the end of his recital, "if you will not
+punish me too heavily, Master, I will give all my poor savings as a
+perpetual gift to the Church. I am a true Christian, that I vow, and
+no heretic. Moreover, I wish not to die until I have had sufficient
+time to do long and full penance. But have me not boiled in oil before
+I have had that time, I beg of you."
+
+"As to that," answered the Dean, "we shall see. Now take us to the
+place where this devil is to be seen."
+
+By that time they were close to the church, and the priest went in to
+get therefrom some holy water before they started. Then all the men,
+women, and children of the village took their way to The Horn.
+
+There the Dean demanded to see what had been the cause of those wicked
+spells which had been cast over so many worthy men, and Pieter Gans,
+with all humility, showed him the deviling, still smiling and holding
+his staff of vine-branches in his hand. And all the women, after
+looking at him for some time, said that he was very comely for a devil.
+
+The priest first crossed himself, then, dipping his fingers in the
+holy water, anointed therewith the brow, breast, and belly of the
+statue, which thereupon, by the grace of God, crumbled into dust,
+and a sorrowful voice was heard saying: "Oi moi, o phos, tethneka!"
+
+And these words of the devil were explained by the priest to signify,
+in the Greek tongue: "Woe is me! Light! I die!"
+
+
+
+
+XIII. Of the great wonder and astonishment of My Lord the Duke when
+he heard of the valour of the women of Uccle.
+
+In the meantime the village sent to the Duke two trusty men, with a
+message to that high prince informing him in due order all that had
+occurred. These men met him already on his way to Uccle, for he had
+learnt by his runners the Irontooth's design, and knowing full well
+where he would find him was coming against him at all speed with a
+strong force of horsemen.
+
+As soon as the messengers saw who it was coming along the road they
+went down on their knees, but the good Duke would have none of this,
+and made them rise and walk at his stirrup.
+
+Before they had gone far they reached the scene of the brigands'
+discomfiture. At the sight of all those heaped-up bodies the Duke
+halted, greatly astonished and no less pleased. "And who," quoth he,
+"has slain all these scoundrels in this wise?"
+
+"Our womenfolk," said one of the messengers.
+
+"What is this thou'rt telling me?" said the Duke with a frown.
+
+"Before God, My Lord," said the man, "I will tell you the whole story."
+
+And so he did.
+
+"Well," said the Duke when he had done, "who would have thought it
+of these good wives? I will reward them well for it."
+
+So saying he caused the casque of the Irontooth to be taken up and
+carried away. This casque was to be seen for many years in the armoury
+of My Lord Charles, who had it guarded with the utmost care.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. In what manner was instituted the Order of the Women-Archers
+of Uccle and of the fine reward which My Lord gave to the brave
+maid Wantje.
+
+On entering Uccle the good Duke saw coming towards him a large body of
+people, and in their midst a man crying out in a most piteous voice:
+"Master! Master Priest! let me not be boiled!" To which the answer was:
+"We shall see."
+
+"Whence comes all this noise?" said the Duke.
+
+But as soon as Pieter Gans saw who it was he ran towards him and threw
+his arms round his horse's legs. "My Lord," he cried, "My Lord Duke,
+let me not be boiled!"
+
+"And why," said the Duke, "should they boil one of my good men
+of Uccle?"
+
+But the very reverend Father Claessens, stepping forward, told him
+the whole story with great indignation, while Pieter Gans continued to
+blubber alongside in a most melancholy fashion. And thereon followed
+such confusion, with the one weeping and groaning, the other denouncing
+and syllogizing, and each so vehemently, that the good Duke could
+not tell which to listen to.
+
+Suddenly Wantje came forward out of the press, and, like Pieter Gans,
+cried: "Mercy and pity!"
+
+"My Lord," said the maid, "this man has sinned greatly against God,
+but only from simpleness of mind and a natural cowardice. The devil
+frightened him; he submitted to the devil. Pardon him, My Lord,
+for our sakes."
+
+"Maid," said the Duke, "that was well spoken, and 'tis to thee I
+will hearken."
+
+But the very reverend Father: "My Lord," said he, "forgets to think
+of God."
+
+"Father," said the Duke, "I am not forgetful of that duty. Nevertheless
+I think he takes little pleasure in watching Christian fat smoke or
+a good man's flesh boil, but likes rather to see men gentle and kind,
+and not giving their fellows penance to do. And on this day when Our
+Lady the Virgin has deigned to perform a miracle for our sakes I will
+not sadden her mother's heart by the death of a Christian. Therefore
+none of the accused, neither this Pieter Gans nor any other there
+may be, shall this time go to the stake."
+
+On hearing this Pieter Gans burst out laughing like a madman, and
+began to dance and sing, crying out the while: "Praise to My Lord! I
+am not to be boiled. Brabant to the Good Duke!" And all the townsfolk
+called out after him: "Praise to My Lord!"
+
+Then the Duke bade them be silent, and smiling:
+
+"Well, dames," said he, "who have this night done man's work so
+valiantly, come hither that I may give you a man's reward. First
+of all, to the bravest one among you I give this great chain of
+gold. Which is she?"
+
+The good women pushed Wantje forward before the Duke.
+
+"Ah," said he, "'tis thee, sweet pleader. Wilt kiss me, though I
+be old?"
+
+"Yes, My Lord," said the maid. And so she did, notwithstanding that
+she was a little shamefaced over it.
+
+And the good Duke, having hung the chain round her neck, spoke further
+in this wise:
+
+"As for you all, good dames, who have this night so gallantly carried
+arms, I institute among you a most honourable Order, under the
+protection of Madam Mary the Virgin, and I direct that there shall be
+set up in this place a staff of a good length, and that each Sunday
+you shall come together here and draw the bow in archery, in memory of
+the time when with those bows you saved the lives of your husbands and
+children. And there shall be a fair crown of laurel and a fair purseful
+of golden peters, bright and new, to be awarded annually to the best
+archer of the year, and brought to her on a cushion by all the others
+together. And this purse will dower her if she be a maid, or, if she
+be a wife, will stand her in good stead against a time of famine."
+
+In this manner was instituted the Order of Women-Archers of Uccle,
+who still draw the bow like men every Sunday, under the protection
+of Our Lady the Virgin.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE THREE SISTERS
+
+
+I. Of the three noble ladies and their great beauty.
+
+In the year of Our Lord Jesus Christ 690, lived three maidens,
+descended, by male issue, from the noble line of the great emperor
+Octavian.
+
+Their names were Blanche, Claire, and Candide.
+
+Though they had dedicated the flower of their maidenhead to God,
+it is not to be supposed that this was for lack of lovers.
+
+For, on every day that passed, a crowd of people used to collect
+for nothing else than to see them go by on their way to church,
+and onlookers would say of them: "See what gentle eyes, see what
+white hands!"
+
+More than one, besides, with his mouth watering to look at them,
+would say sorrowfully: "Must it be that such sweet maids as these
+should dedicate themselves to God, who has eleven thousand or more
+in his Paradise already."
+
+"But none so fair," answered an old wheezing merchant behind them,
+who was drinking in the fragrance of their dresses.
+
+And going off on his way, if the old man saw any young fellow loafing
+by the roadside, or lying on his belly in the grass to warm his back
+in the sun, he would give him a kick in the ribs, saying: "Well now,
+dost thou care nothing to see the finest flowers of beauty that were
+ever blowing?"
+
+
+
+
+II. How a prince of Araby was taken with love for the youngest sister,
+and what came of it.
+
+Not a few young men tried to win them in marriage, but failing in
+this endeavour, turned moody and pined visibly away.
+
+Among them was a certain prince of Araby, who had himself baptized with
+great ceremony. And this for the sake of the youngest sister solely.
+
+But, failing to attain his end, either by pleading or by force, set
+himself one morning before her door, and there let himself fall on
+his sword.
+
+The maid, hearing this fair lord cry out, came down in haste and had
+him carried in and laid on her own bed; whereat (for he was not quite
+dead) he found great solace.
+
+And when she bent over him to bathe and dress his wound, he roused
+what force he had left in him, kissed her on her red mouth, sighed
+like a man delivered from torment, and so gave up his soul happily.
+
+But the maid was not at all pleased at this kiss, for she considered
+it a dishonour to her divine husband Jesus. Nevertheless she wept
+for the fair lord, a little.
+
+
+
+
+III. Wherein it is seen how Satan persecutes those ladies who seek
+to escape from the world.
+
+There were oftentimes a great crowd of suitors before the dwelling
+of the three ladies, some of them sighing laments, others prancing
+up and down on fine horses, others without uttering a word, but only
+looking up at the windows all the day long.
+
+And oftentimes these men would fight together and kill one another,
+from jealousy. At this the ladies were saddened exceedingly.
+
+"Ah," said the two elder to their sister, "pray for us, white Blanche,
+white of soul and white of body, pray for us, little one. Jesus
+listens readily to the prayers of such maids as thou art."
+
+"My sisters," answered she, "I am less worthy than you, but I will
+pray, if you so wish it."
+
+"Yes," said they.
+
+Then the three sisters knelt down, and the youngest prayed in this
+manner:
+
+"Kind Jesus, we have sinned against you assuredly, else you would not
+have let our beauty so touch these wicked men. Yes, we have indeed
+sinned, but, weaklings that we are, despite ourselves, Lord. Ah,
+grant us pardon for our great sorrow. You would have us for your own,
+and so indeed we have kept ourselves: our youth and beauty, mirth
+and sadness, vows and prayers, souls and bodies, thoughts and deeds,
+everything. In the morning, at noon, and at vesper-time, at all hours
+and all moments, do we not have you in our minds? When your bright
+sun rises, O beloved, and no less when your bright stars shine in
+your heaven, they can see us at prayer, and offering to you, not gold,
+frankincense, or myrrh, but our humble loves and our poor hearts. That
+is not enough, we know well. Dear one, teach us to do more."
+
+Pausing here they sighed sorrowfully, all three.
+
+"Kind Jesus," went on the youngest sister, "we know well enough
+the desire of these men. They think themselves brave and handsome,
+and hope on this account to capture our love, but they are neither
+handsome, nor brave, nor good, as you are, Jesus. And yours we are
+and shall be always, and theirs never. Will you please to love us
+also a little, for you alone are our comfort and joy in this sad
+world, Jesus? We will not be unfaithful to you in anything. Ah,
+let us rather die quickly, for we hunger and thirst for you. If you
+will, let these evil men continue to pursue us with their loves,
+'twill be but delight to suffer it for your sake. Nevertheless,
+the mortal husband leaves not his wife in danger, nor the betrothed
+his bride. Are you not better than they, and will you not keep us
+also from the snares of the enemy? If it be not pleasing to you, do
+nothing, but then it may be that one day some one will steal from us
+our virginity, which is yours only. Ah, dear beloved, rather let us
+pass our lives old, ugly, leprous, and then descend into purgatory,
+among devils, flame, and brimstone, there to wait until you deem us
+pure enough at length to take us into your Paradise, where we shall
+be allowed to see you and love you for ever. Have pity upon us. Amen."
+
+And having spoken thus, the poor child wept, and her sisters with her,
+saying: "Pity, Jesus, pity."
+
+
+
+
+IV. Of the voice of the divine bridegroom, and of the horseman in
+silvern armour.
+
+Suddenly they heard a low voice saying: "Take heart."
+
+"Hark," they said, "the husband deigns to speak to his brides."
+
+And presently the room was filled with a perfume more delicate than
+that of a censer burning finest frankincense.
+
+Then the voice spake further: "To-morrow," it said, "when dawn breaks,
+go out from the town. Mount your palfreys, and, riding without halt,
+follow the road without heeding whither it leads. I will guide you."
+
+"We will obey you," they said, "for you have made us the happiest of
+the daughters of men."
+
+And rising from their knees, they kissed one another joyfully.
+
+While the voice was speaking to them, there had come into the square a
+beautiful horseman in silvern armour, with a golden helm on his head,
+and, flying above that like a bird, a crest more brilliant than a
+flame. The horse whereon he rode was of pure white.
+
+None of those there had seen him coming, and he was as if risen from
+the ground among the crowd of lovers, who, seized with fear, dared
+not look him in the face.
+
+"Rascals," quoth he, "take these horses away out of the square. Do
+you not know that the noise of their hooves troubles these three
+ladies in their prayers?"
+
+And therewith he rode away towards the east.
+
+"Ah," said the lovers to one another, "saw you that silvern armour
+and that flaming crest? 'Twas an angel of God assuredly, come from
+Paradise for the sake of these three ladies." The more insistent among
+them muttered: "He did not forbid us to stand on foot before the door,
+and in that wise we may yet remain with impunity."
+
+
+
+
+V. How, by the command of God, the three ladies rode to adventure.
+
+On the morrow, therefore, before daylight, the suitors returned once
+again in great numbers, but first left their horses behind them in
+their stables. Soon after daybreak they saw the three ladies ride out
+from their courtyard, in obedience to the command which God had given
+them, each one mounted upon her palfrey. Supposing that they were but
+going out into the neighbouring meadows to take the clean air, they
+followed behind, one and all, singing merry carols in their honour.
+
+For so long as they were in the streets of the town the palfreys
+moved slowly, but once out in the open country they began galloping.
+
+The lovers tried still to follow them, but at last were forced to
+drop off, and fell one by one along the wayside.
+
+When they had covered some miles the palfreys stood still; and the
+three ladies, seeing that they had come free of their pursuers,
+resolved to give honour to God for his aid, and to this end to build
+him a fair church.
+
+Where? They did not know. But the thing was already decided in
+Paradise, as you shall see.
+
+For as soon as they were once again on their horses, the animals,
+guided by God's holy spirit, set off at a high trot.
+
+And leapt rivers, threaded forests, passed through towns, whereof the
+gates opened of themselves to let them by, and closed again after,
+bounded over walls and like obstacles.
+
+And startled every one they met, all amazed to see go by, quick as
+the wind, these three white horses and these three fair ladies.
+
+And travelled in this way for a thousand leagues, or rather more.
+
+
+
+
+VI. Of the diamond hammers, and foundations torn up from the ground.
+
+At Haeckendover, in the duchy of Brabant, the palfreys stood still
+once again, and neighed.
+
+And would not go one step forward, nor back.
+
+For this was where God had chosen to have his church.
+
+But the ladies, supposing that they had stopped there because they
+were tired, went on as far as Hoy-Bout on foot, and there determined
+to start building.
+
+Therefore they sent for the most skilful workers in stone, and
+master-builders also, in so great number that at the end of one day
+the foundations were two hands' breadth high in the lowest part.
+
+And seeing this good beginning the ladies rejoiced greatly, and
+supposed their work agreeable to God.
+
+But on the morrow, alas, found all the stones torn up out of the
+ground.
+
+Thinking that by chance some traitor heretic had been buried in
+that place, who at night shook down the stones of their church with
+the trembling of his accursed bones, they removed to Steenen-Berg
+with their workmen, and there started afresh in the same manner as
+at Hoy-Bout.
+
+But on the morrow morning found the walls once again out of the ground.
+
+For the Lord Jesus was minded to be worshipped more particularly
+at Haeckendover.
+
+And sent, therefore, his angels by night, with hammers of diamond
+from the workshops of Paradise.
+
+And bade them tear down the work of the three ladies.
+
+Therefore the sisters, greatly perplexed and wondering, went down on
+their knees, praying God that he would tell them where he wished to
+have his church.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of the youngest sister and the beautiful angel.
+
+And suddenly they saw a young man, of a beauty more than earthly,
+clad in a robe of the colour of the setting sun.
+
+Kindly he looked at them.
+
+Knowing him for God's angel, the three ladies fell on their faces
+before him.
+
+But the youngest, bolder than the others, as is the way with children,
+dared to steal a look at the fair ambassador, and, seeing him so
+comely, took heart and smiled.
+
+The angel took her by the hand, saying to her and to her sisters:
+"Come and follow me."
+
+This they did.
+
+And thence they came to the spot where the church now stands, and
+the angel said to them: "This is the place."
+
+"Thank you, My Lord," said the youngest joyously.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. How the three ladies saw a green island, with sweet flowers
+and birds thereon.
+
+At that time it was thirteen days past the feast of the Kings; snow
+had fallen heavily and set hard in frost after, by reason of a north
+wind which was blowing.
+
+And the three ladies saw before them, among the snow, as it were a
+green island.
+
+And this island was girt about with a cord of purple silk.
+
+And upon the island the air was fresh as in spring, and roses were
+blowing, with violets and jessamine, whose smell is like balm.
+
+But outside was naught but storm, north wind, and terrible cold.
+
+Towards the middle, where now stands the grand altar, was a holm-oak,
+covered with blossom as if it had been a Persian jessamine.
+
+In the branches, warblers, finches and nightingales sang to their
+hearts' content the sweetest songs of Paradise.
+
+For these were angels, who had put on feathered guise, carolling in
+this fashion in God's honour.
+
+One fair nightingale, the sweetest singer of them all, held in his
+right claw a roll of parchment, whereon was written in letters of gold:
+
+"This is the place chosen by God and shown by him to the three maidens
+for the building of a church to the glory of Our Lord and Saviour
+Jesus Christ."
+
+Great was the joy of the ladies at that sight, and the youngest said
+to the angel:
+
+"We see certainly that God loves us somewhat; what must we do now,
+My Lord Angel?"
+
+"Thou must build the church here, little one," answered the messenger,
+"and choose for this work twelve of the most skilled workmen, neither
+more nor less; God himself will be the thirteenth."
+
+And having said so much he returned to high heaven.
+
+
+
+
+IX. Of the church of Our Lord at Haeckendover, and of the strange
+mason who worked there.
+
+Then all three went off in haste to choose from among the others the
+twelve good workmen who should set up the foundations of the church
+where they had seen the cord of purple silk.
+
+The work went on so well that it was a pleasure to see the stones
+mounting up, straight and quickly.
+
+But the miracle was this, that during the hours of labour the masons
+were always thirteen in number, but at dinner and at paytime twelve
+only.
+
+For the Lord Jesus was pleased to work with the others, but neither
+ate nor drank with them; he who in Paradise had such fine broth and
+such sweet fruits, and wine from the fountain of Saphir, which is a
+fountain giving forth without intermission wine of a richer yellow
+than liquid gold itself.
+
+Nor did he suffer for want of money; for that is an evil reserved to
+us needy, piteous, and ill-faring mortals.
+
+The building advanced so well that soon the bell was hung in the
+tower as a sign that the church was finished.
+
+Then the three maids entered in together; and, falling on her knees,
+the youngest said:
+
+"By whom, divine husband and beloved Jesus, shall we dedicate this
+church built for your service?"
+
+To which the Lord Jesus replied: "It is I Myself who will consecrate
+and dedicate this church; let none come after me to consecrate
+it anew."
+
+
+
+
+X. Of the two bishops, and the withered hands.
+
+By and by two venerable bishops passed through Haeckendover, and
+seeing the new church were minded to give it their blessing.
+
+They knew nothing of the words of Jesus to the three ladies, or they
+would not have thought of such temerity.
+
+But they were punished terribly none the less.
+
+For as one of them was about to bless the water for this purpose he
+became suddenly blind.
+
+And the other, who was holding the holy water brush, when he lifted
+his arms for the blessing, found them suddenly withered and stiffened,
+so that he could no longer move them.
+
+And perceiving that they had sinned in some way the two bishops were
+filled with repentance and prayed to the Lord Jesus to pardon them.
+
+And they were straightway pardoned, seeing that they had sinned
+in ignorance.
+
+And thereafter they came oftentimes most devoutly to Haeckendover.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SIR HALEWYN
+
+
+I. Of the two castles.
+
+Sir Halewyn lifted up his voice in a song.
+
+And whatever maid heard that song must needs go to him straight away.
+
+And now to all good Flemings will I tell the tale of this Halewyn
+and his song, and of the brave maid Magtelt.
+
+There were two proud castles in the province of Flanders. In one
+dwelt Sir Roel de Heurne, with the lady Gonde, his good wife;
+Toon the Silent, his son; Magtelt, his fair daughter, and a host
+of pages, grooms, varlets, men-at-arms, and all the other members
+of the household, among whom an especial favourite was Anne-Mie,
+a girl of gentle blood, maid to the lady Magtelt.
+
+Of everything that was made by his peasants, Sir Roel took naught
+but what was the best.
+
+And the peasants said of him that it was a good master who took only
+as much as he needed, when he might have left them with nothing.
+
+In the other castle lived Sir Halewyn the Miserable, with his father,
+brother, mother, and sister, and a large following of rascals and
+brigands.
+
+And these were an ill-favoured crew, I can tell you, past masters of
+robbery, pillage, and murder, such as it is not good to meet at too
+close quarters.
+
+
+
+
+II. Of Dirk, called the Crow.
+
+This family were issue by direct line of Dirk, the first of the
+Halewyns, to whom was given the name of the Crow, because he was as
+greedy of booty as a crow is of carrion.
+
+And also because he was clad all in black, and his men with him.
+
+This Dirk, who lived in the time of the great wars, was like a
+thunderbolt in battle, where, with his only weapon, a heavy club,
+furnished with a beak at one side, he broke javelins, splintered
+lances, and tore away mail as if it had been cloth; and no one could
+well resist his onslaught. And in this manner he so frightened his
+enemies that when they saw Dirk and his black soldiers bearing down
+upon them, shouting, yelling, without fear of any one, and in great
+number, they gave themselves up for dead before ever battle was joined.
+
+When victory was won and the more important booty divided (whereof Dirk
+always secured the lion's share and never came off badly), the other
+barons and their knights would leave the rest of the field to him and
+his followers, and would go off, saying: "The pieces are for the crow."
+
+No other man-at-arms would dare to stay behind then, or he would have
+been quickly taken and slain without waiting. And thereafter Dirk's
+men would begin to play the crow in earnest; cutting off fingers to
+get the rings on them, even of those not yet dead, who cried out to
+them for succour; chopping off heads and arms so that they might pull
+away clothes the more easily. And they even fought amongst themselves,
+and sometimes killed one another, over the bodies of the dead, for
+the sake of neck-pieces, straps of hide, or more paltry stuff still.
+
+And stayed sometimes on the battlefield over this business three days
+and three nights.
+
+When all the dead were stark naked they piled up their gains into
+carts which they brought for this purpose.
+
+And with these they returned to Dirk's castle, there to hold high
+revel and have good cheer. On the way they fought the peasants,
+taking whatever women and girls were at all comely, and did with
+them what they pleased. In this way they passed their lives fighting,
+pillaging, robbing the helpless, and caring nothing at all for either
+God or devil.
+
+Dirk the Crow became exceedingly powerful and got very much worship,
+both by reason of his prowess in battle and from the fact that My
+Lord the Count gave him after his victories the demesne of Halewyn,
+with powers of seigneury, both of the higher and the lower order.
+
+And he had a fine escutcheon made for himself, wherein was a crow
+sable on a field or, with this device: The pieces are for the Crow.
+
+
+
+
+III. Of Sir Halewyn and how he carried himself in his youth.
+
+But to this strong Crow were born children of a quite other kind.
+
+For they were all, strangely enough, men of the quill and writing-desk,
+caring nothing for the fine arts of war, and despising all arms.
+
+These great clerks lost a good half of their heritage. For each year
+some stronger neighbour would rob them of a piece of it.
+
+And they begot puny and miserable children, with pale faces, who passed
+their time, as clerks are wont, lurking in corners, sitting huddled
+on stools, and whining chants and litanies in a melancholy fashion.
+
+Thus came to an end the good men of the line.
+
+Siewert Halewyn, who was the wretch of whom I am to tell you this
+tale, was as ugly, puny, woebegone, and sour-faced as the others,
+or even worse than they.
+
+And like them he was always lurking and hiding in corners, and
+shirking company, hated the sound of laughter, sweated ill-humour, and,
+moreover, was never seen to lift his head skywards like an honest man,
+but was all the while looking down at his boots, wept without reason,
+grumbled without cause, and never had any satisfaction in anything. For
+the rest he was a coward and cruel, delighting during his childhood
+in teasing, frightening and hurting puppies and kittens, sparrows,
+thrushes, finches, nightingales, and all small beasts.
+
+And even when he was older, he hardly dared to attack so large a thing
+as a wolf, though he were armed with his great sword. But as soon as
+the beast was brought down he would rain blows on it with high valour.
+
+So he went on until he was old enough to marry.
+
+
+
+
+IV. How Sir Halewyn wished to take himself a wife, and what the ladies
+and gentlewomen said to it.
+
+Then, since he was the oldest of the family, he was sent off to the
+court of the Count, there to find himself a wife. But every one laughed
+at him, on account of his marvellous ugliness, more particularly the
+ladies and gentlewomen, who made fun of him among themselves, saying:
+
+"Look at this fine knight! What is he doing here? He has come to marry
+us, I suppose.--Who would have him, for four castles, as many manors,
+ten thousand peasants and half the gold in the province? None.--And
+that is a pity, for between them they would get fine children, if
+they were to be like their father!--Ho, what fine hair he has, the
+devil must have limned it with an old nail; what a fine nose, 'tis
+like a withered plum, and what fair blue eyes, so marvellously ringed
+round with red.--See, he is going to cry! That will be pretty music."
+
+And Sir Halewyn, hearing the ladies talk after this fashion, could
+not find a word to answer them with, for between anger, shame, and
+sorrow his tongue was fast stuck to the roof of his mouth.
+
+Nevertheless he would take a lance at every tournament, and every
+time would be shamefully overcome, and the ladies, seeing him fall,
+would applaud loudly, crying out: "Worship to the ill-favoured one! The
+old crow has lost his beak." Thus they compared him, for his shame,
+with Dirk, the old stock of the Halewyns, who had been so mighty
+in his day. And, acclaimed in this fashion every time he jousted,
+Sir Halewyn would go back from the field in sorrow to his pavilion.
+
+
+
+
+V. How it came about that Sir Halewyn, after a certain tournament,
+called upon the devil for aid.
+
+At the third tournament wherein he was beaten there were on the field
+his father, mother, brother, and sister.
+
+And his father said:
+
+"Well, look at my fine son, Siewert the soft, Siewert the overthrown,
+Siewert the faint-heart, coming back from jousting with his tail
+between his legs, like a dog thrashed with a great stick."
+
+And his mother said:
+
+"I suppose for certain that My Lord the Count has put a gold chain
+round thy neck, and acclaimed thee publicly, for having so valiantly
+in this jousting jousted on thy back, as in the old days my lord of
+Beaufort was wont to make thee do. Holy God! that was a fine tumble."
+
+And his sister said:
+
+"Welcome, my fair brother, what news do you bring? Thou wert the
+victor for certain, as I see from thy triumphant mien. But where is
+the wreath of the ladies?"
+
+And his brother said:
+
+"Where is your lordly bearing, My Lord Siewert Halewyn the
+elder, descendant of the Crow with the great beak? For such a Crow
+vanquishes without much trouble eagles, goshawks, shrikes, gerfalcons,
+sparrow-hawks. Are you not thirsty, my brother, with the thirst of
+a baron, of a victor, I will not say of a villein? We have here some
+fine frog's wine, which will cool the fires of victory in your belly."
+
+"Ha," answered the Sire, grinding his teeth, "if God gave me strength,
+I would make thee sing a different song Sir Brother."
+
+And saying this, he pulled out his sword to do so, but the younger,
+parrying his thrust, cried out:
+
+"Bravo, uncrowlike Crow! Bravo, capon! Raise up our house, I beg of
+thee, Siewert the victorious!"
+
+"Ha," said the Sire, "and why does this chatterer not go and joust as
+well as I? But he would not dare, being that kind of coward who looks
+on at others, folding his arms and making fun of those who strive."
+
+Then he dismounted from his horse, went off and hid himself in his
+chamber, cried out to the four walls in a rage, prayed to the devil
+to give him strength and beauty, and promised him, on the oath of a
+knight, that he would give him his soul in exchange.
+
+So he called on him all through the night, crying out, weeping,
+bewailing his lot, minded at times even to kill himself. But the
+devil did not come, being busy elsewhere.
+
+
+
+
+VI. Of the rovings and wanderings of Sir Halewyn.
+
+Every day after this, whether it were fair or foul, light sky or dark,
+storm or gentle breeze, rain, snow, or hail, Sir Halewyn wandered
+alone through the fields and woods.
+
+And children, seeing him, ran away in fear.
+
+"Ah," said he, "I must be very ugly!" And he went on with his
+wandering.
+
+But if on his way he met some common man who had strength and beauty,
+he would bear down on him and oftentimes kill him with his sword.
+
+And every one grew to shun him, and to pray to God that he would soon
+remove their Lord from this world.
+
+And every night, Sir Halewyn called on the devil.
+
+But the devil would not come.
+
+"Ah," said the Sire sorrowfully, "if thou wilt only give me strength
+and beauty in this life, I will give thee my soul in the other. 'Tis
+a good bargain."
+
+But the devil never came.
+
+And he, restless, always in anguish and melancholy, was soon like an
+old man to look at, and was given the name throughout the country of
+the Ill-favoured Lord.
+
+And his heart was swollen with hatred and anger. And he cursed God.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of the Prince of the Stones and of the song.
+
+One day in the season of plum-picking, having roved over the whole
+countryside, and even as far as Lille, on the way back to his castle
+he passed through a wood. Ambling along he saw among the undergrowth,
+alongside an oak, a stone which was of great length and broad in
+proportion.
+
+And he said: "That will make me a good seat, comfortable enough to
+rest on for a little while." And sitting down on the stone he once
+again prayed to the devil to let him have health and beauty.
+
+By and by, although it was still daylight, and the small birds,
+warblers and finches, sang in the woods joyously, and there was a
+bright sun and a soft wind, Sir Halewyn went off to sleep, for he
+was very tired.
+
+Having slept until it was night, he was suddenly awakened by a strange
+sound. And he saw, by the light of the high moon and the clear stars,
+as it were a little animal, with a coat like a mossy stone, who was
+scratching up the earth beneath the rock, now and again thrusting
+his head into the hole he had made, as a dog does hunting moles.
+
+Sir Halewyn, thinking it was some wild thing, hit at it with his sword.
+
+But the sword was broken at its touch, and a little mannikin of stone
+leapt up on to his shoulders, and smote his cheeks sharply with his
+hard hands, and said, wheezing and laughing:
+
+"Seek, Siewert Halewyn; seek song and sickle, sickle and song; seek,
+seek, ill-favoured one!"
+
+And so saying he hopped about like a flea on the back of the Miserable,
+who bent forward as he was bid, and with a piece of his sword dug in
+the hole. And the stony cheek of the little mannikin was alongside
+his own, and his two eyes lit up the hole better than lanterns would
+have done.
+
+And biting Halewyn's flesh with his sharp teeth, striking him with
+his little fists, and with his nails pinching and pulling him, and
+laughing harshly, the little mannikin said: "I am the Prince of the
+Stones, I have fine treasures; seek, seek, Miserable!"
+
+And saying this, he pommelled him beyond endurance. "He wants," he
+screamed, mocking him, "Siewert Halewyn wants strength and beauty,
+beauty and strength; seek then, Miserable."
+
+And he pulled out his hair in handfuls, and tore his dress with his
+nails until he was all in rags, and kept saying, with great bursts
+of laughter: "Strength and beauty, beauty and strength; seek, seek,
+Miserable!" And he hung from his ears with his two hands, and kicked
+his stone feet in his face, notwithstanding that the Sire cried out
+with pain.
+
+And the little mannikin said: "To get strength and beauty, seek,
+Halewyn, a song and a sickle, seek, Sir Miserable!" And the Miserable
+went on scratching out the earth with his piece of sword.
+
+Suddenly the earth fell away under the stone, leaving a great
+hole open, and Halewyn, by the light of the mannikin's eyes, saw a
+sepulchre, and within the sepulchre a man lying, who was of marvellous
+beauty and had none of the appearance of death.
+
+This man was clad all in white, and in his hands held a sickle,
+whereof both handle and blade were of gold.
+
+"Take the sickle," quoth the little mannikin, thumping his head with
+his fists.
+
+Sir Halewyn did as he was bid, and straightway the man in the tomb
+became dust, and from the dust came a white flame, tall and spreading,
+and from the white flame a wonderfully sweet song.
+
+And suddenly all about the wood was spread a perfume of cinnamon,
+frankincense, and sweet marjoram.
+
+"Sing," said the mannikin, and the Miserable repeated the song. While
+he was singing his harsh voice was changed to a voice sweeter than
+an angel's, and he saw coming out of the depths of the wood a virgin
+of heavenly beauty and wholly naked; and she came and stood before him.
+
+"Ah," she said, weeping, "master of the golden sickle. I come, for I
+must obey; do not make me suffer too much in the taking of my heart,
+master of the golden sickle."
+
+Then the virgin went away into the depths of the wood; and the
+mannikin, bursting out into laughter, threw Sir Halewyn down on to
+the ground, and said:
+
+"Hast song and sickle; so shalt thou have strength and beauty; I am
+the Prince of the Stones; farewell, cousin."
+
+And Halewyn, picking himself up, saw no more of either the mannikin
+or the naked maid; and studying well the golden sickle, and pondering
+in his mind what could be the meaning of the man in the tomb and the
+naked virgin, and inquiring within himself in perplexity what use he
+could make of the sickle and the sweet song, he saw suddenly on the
+blade a fair inscription, written in letters of fire.
+
+But he could not read the writing, for he was ignorant of all the arts;
+and, weeping with rage, he threw himself into the bushes, crying out:
+"Help me, Prince of the Stones. Leave me not to die of despair."
+
+Thereupon the mannikin reappeared, leapt upon his shoulder, and,
+giving him a stout rap on the nose, read on one side of the blade of
+the sickle this inscription which follows:
+
+
+ Song calls,
+ Sickle reaps.
+ In the heart of a maid shalt thou find:
+ Strength, beauty, honour, riches,
+ From the hands of a dead virgin.
+
+
+And upon the other side of the blade the mannikin read further:
+
+
+ Whoso thou art shalt do this thing,
+ Writing read and song sing:
+ Seek well, hark and go;
+ No man shall lay thee low.
+ Song calls,
+ Sickle reaps.
+
+
+And having read this the mannikin went away once more.
+
+Suddenly the Miserable heard a sad voice saying:
+
+"Wilt thou seek strength and beauty in death, blood, and tears?"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Ambitious heart, heart of stone," answered the voice. Then he heard
+nothing more.
+
+And he gazed at the sickle with its flaming letters until such time
+as My Lord Chanticleer called his hens awake.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. What Halewyn did to the little girl cutting faggots.
+
+The Miserable was overjoyed at what had come about, and inquired
+within himself whether it would be in the heart of a virgin child or
+of a marriageable virgin that he would find what was promised him,
+and so satisfy his great desire for worship and power.
+
+Pondering this he went a little way through the wood and stationed
+himself near to some cottages where he knew there were maids of divers
+ages, and there waited until morning.
+
+Soon after the sun was up, a little girl came out, nine years old,
+or rather less, and began collecting and cutting up faggots.
+
+Going up to her, he sang the song and showed her the sickle.
+
+Whereupon she cried out in fear, and ran away as fast as she could.
+
+But Halewyn, having quickly overtaken her, dragged her off by force
+to his castle.
+
+Going in, he met on the bridge his lady mother, who said to him:
+"Where goest thou, Miserable, with this child?"
+
+He answered:
+
+"To bring honour to our house."
+
+And his lady mother let him pass, thinking him mad.
+
+He went into his room, opened the side of the girl beneath a breast
+just budding, cut out the heart with the sickle, and drank the blood.
+
+But he got no more strength from it than he had before.
+
+And weeping bitter tears, he cried: "The sickle has played me
+false." And he threw down into the moat both the heart and the body.
+
+And the lady Halewyn seeing this poor heart and body dropping into
+the water, ordered that they should be taken out and brought to her.
+
+Seeing the body rent open under the breast, and the heart taken out,
+she became afraid lest Siewert her first-born was following dark
+practices.
+
+And she put the girl's heart back in her breast, and gave her a very
+fine and Christian burial, and had a fair great cross made on her
+winding-sheet, and afterwards she was put in the ground and a fair
+mass said for the quiet of her soul.
+
+
+
+
+IX. Of the heart of a maid and of the great strength which came to
+Sir Halewyn.
+
+Sorely troubled, and falling on his knees, Halewyn said: "Alas, is the
+spell then impotent? I sang, and she would not come to my singing! What
+would you have me do now, Lord Prince of the Stones? If it is that
+I must wait until nightfall, that I will do. Then, without doubt,
+having no sun to hinder your powers, you will give me strength and
+beauty, and all prowess, and you will send me the virgin I need."
+
+And he went at night to wander in the woods round about the cottages,
+and there, singing his song, and looking out to see if any were coming.
+
+He saw by the light of the bright moon the daughter of Claes, a poor
+mad man, nicknamed the Dog-beater, because he used to thump and pommel
+grievously whomever he met, saying that these accursed dogs had robbed
+him of his coat, and must give it him back again.
+
+This girl took care of Claes very well, and would not marry, though
+she was a beautiful maid, saying: "Since he is simple, I cannot leave
+him to look to himself."
+
+And every one, seeing her so stout-hearted, gave her, one some of
+his cheese, another some beans, another some flour, and so they lived
+together without wanting for food.
+
+The Miserable stood still at the edge of the wood and sang. And
+the maid walked straight towards the singing and fell on her knees
+before him.
+
+He went home to his castle, and she followed him, and entered in with
+him, saying no word.
+
+On the stair he met his brother, just returned from boar-hunting,
+who said, in mocking wise:
+
+"Ah, is the Miserable about to get us a bastard?" And to the girl:
+"Well, mistress, thy heart must be fast set on my ugly brother that
+thou must needs follow him in this wise, without a word spoken."
+
+But Halewyn, in a rage, hit out at his brother's face with his sword.
+
+Then, passing him by, went up into his own room.
+
+And there, having shut fast the door, from fear of his brother,
+he stripped the girl quite naked, as he had seen the virgin in his
+vision. And the girl said that she was cold.
+
+Quickly he opened her breast with the golden blade, under the left pap.
+
+And as the maid gave the death-cry, the heart came out of itself on
+the blade.
+
+And the Miserable saw before his eyes the little mannikin coming out
+of the stones of the wall, who said to him, grinning:
+
+"Heart on heart gives strength and beauty. Halewyn shall hang the
+maid in the Gallows-field. And the body shall hang until the hour of
+God." Then he went back into the wall.
+
+Halewyn put the heart on his breast, and felt it beating firmly and
+taking root in his skin. And suddenly his bent back was straightened;
+and his arm found such strength that he broke easily in two a heavy
+oaken bench; and looking at himself in a mirror-glass he saw an image
+so beautiful that he could scarce tell it for his own.
+
+And he felt in his veins the fire of youth burning.
+
+Going down into the great hall he found there at supper his father,
+mother, brother, and sister.
+
+None of them would have known him but for his voice, which was
+unchanged.
+
+And his mother rose and peered into his face to see him better.
+
+And he said to her: "Woman, I am thine own son, Siewert Halewyn,
+the Invincible."
+
+But his brother, whom he had but lately smitten in the face, ran
+towards him hotly, saying: "Cursed be the Invincible!" and struck
+him with his knife. But the blade snapped off like glass against the
+body of the Miserable; whereupon the younger brother seized him in
+his arms, but the Miserable tore him off and threw him to one side
+as if he had been a caterpillar.
+
+Then he rushed at him with his head down, like a battering-ram, but
+as soon as his head touched the Miserable it was cut open, and the
+blood ran down over his face.
+
+And his father and mother, his sister and the wounded brother, threw
+themselves on their knees and asked his forgiveness, begging him,
+since he had become so powerful, to bring them riches and honour.
+
+"That I will," said he.
+
+
+
+
+X. How the Miserable robbed a Lombard goldsmith, and of the pleasant
+speech of the ladies and gentlewomen.
+
+On the morrow, armed only with the sickle, for he despised other arms
+on account of the strength which the spell gave him, Halewyn took the
+body of the maid to the Gallows-field and there hanged it on the tree.
+
+Then he rode off to the city of Ghent.
+
+And the ladies, gentlewomen and maidens of the town, seeing him pass by
+on his black horse, said among themselves: "Who is this fair horseman?"
+
+"'Tis," he cried right proudly, "Siewert Halewyn, who was called the
+Ill-favoured one."
+
+"Nay, nay," said the bolder among them, "you are making fun of us,
+My Lord, or else you have been changed by a fairy."
+
+"Yes," said he, "and, moreover, I had fleshly knowledge of her;
+and so shall have of you, if I please."
+
+At these words the ladies and gentlewomen were not at all put out.
+
+And he went to the shop of a Lombard goldsmith in that town, who
+had at one time and another lent him six-and-twenty florins. But the
+goldsmith did not know him for himself.
+
+He told him that he was Sir Halewyn.
+
+"Ah," said the goldsmith, "then I pray, My Lord, that you will repay
+me my six-and-twenty florins."
+
+But Halewyn, laughing: "Take me," he said, "to the room where thou
+keepest thy gold."
+
+"My Lord," said the goldsmith, "that I will not, for all that I hold
+you in high esteem."
+
+"Dog," said he, "if thou dost not obey me I will strike thee dead
+instantly."
+
+"Ha!" said the goldsmith, "do not come blustering here, My Lord, for
+I am neither serf nor peasant, but a free burgess of this town. And
+if you are so minded as to lay your hands on me, I shall know how to
+get redress, I promise you."
+
+Then Halewyn struck him, and the burgess called for help.
+
+Hearing this cry, apprentices to the number of six came down into
+the shop, and, seeing Halewyn, ran to seize him.
+
+But he beat them off likewise and bade them show him where the gold
+was kept.
+
+Which they did, saying one to another: "This is the Devil."
+
+And the goldsmith, weeping: "My Lord," said he, "do not take it all."
+
+"I shall take what I will," said Halewyn; and he filled his money-bag.
+
+And in this way he took from the goldsmith more than seven hundred
+golden bezants.
+
+Then, seeing the poor man lamenting his lot, he struck him two or
+three hard blows, telling him not to whine so loud, and that before
+the month was out he would take from him double the amount.
+
+
+
+
+XI. Of the arrogant arms of Sir Halewyn.
+
+And the Miserable became the richest, most powerful, and most feared
+baron in the whole province.
+
+And blasphemously he compared himself to God.
+
+And considering that the old arms of Dirk, and his device, were too
+mean for his new magnificence:
+
+He sent to Bruges for painters in heraldry to fashion them afresh.
+
+These painters put the old crow away in one quarter, and on a field
+argent and sable blazoned a heart gules and a sickle or, with this
+device: None can stand against me.
+
+Moreover, he had this same blazon fashioned into a great standard which
+was flown from his castle keep. And also had it cut in stone over the
+gate. And on his shield, which he caused to be made larger so that the
+arrogant device might be seen to better advantage. And on his arms,
+his clothes, and wherever it could be put, there he had it as well.
+
+
+
+
+XII. How Sir Halewyn jousted with a knight of England.
+
+It so happened that at about this time My Lord of Flanders let call
+a tournament.
+
+And sent out to all his lords and barons to come to Ghent for that
+purpose.
+
+Halewyn went thither and set up his shield among the others.
+
+But the barons and lords, seeing the arrogant device and the great
+size of the shield, were greatly put to offence thereat.
+
+And all of them jousted with him, but each was overthrown in turn.
+
+Among them was present an English knight of much prowess, who rode
+out to the middle of the tourney-field and stood straight and proud
+before Sir Halewyn.
+
+"Well," quoth he, "My Lord the Invincible, it displeases me to see thee
+planted there so arrogantly and unhorsing us all in this fashion. Wilt
+thou fight with me?"
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"If I overcome thee, thou shalt be my servant and I shall take thee
+with me into Cornwall."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"And cause thee to grease my horses' hooves, and empty the dung
+from the stable; and find out whether thou art invincible at such
+work also."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"And if thou art not invincible, the invincible stick shall thrash
+thee invincibly."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+"But if thou overcome me, this shall be thy guerdon:
+
+"Five-and-twenty bezants which are in the house of thy Lord, the
+noble Count of Flanders; all the accoutrement of my horse, which is
+of fine mail; his fair saddle of pear-wood, covered with leather,
+and saddle-bows richly figured with ten horsemen lustily fighting and
+with Our Lord driving out the devil from one possessed; furthermore
+my helm of fine wrought steel, and on it a crest of silver, gilt
+over, with spread wings, which may very well, notwithstanding thy
+device, stand against thy bleeding heart, thy gaping sickle, and thy
+miserable crow. Well, My Lord the Invincible, dost think thou shalt
+win invincibly the five-and-twenty bezants, the helm of my head,
+and the trappings of my horse?"
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+Then, after My Lord himself had given the signal, they ran together
+with a great clatter.
+
+And the English knight was overthrown like the rest.
+
+Then all the ladies acclaimed and applauded the Miserable, crying out:
+"Worship to Siewert Halewyn the noble, Siewert Halewyn the Fleming,
+Siewert Halewyn the Invincible."
+
+And on his way back to the house of My Lord, there to feast with him,
+he was by these ladies kissed, fondled, and made much of without stint.
+
+And, putting on the gear of the English knight, he went off to the
+towns of Bruges, Lille, and Ghent, thieving and ravishing everywhere.
+
+And came back from each expedition with much booty.
+
+And felt the heart all the while pouring live strength into his breast
+and beating against his skin.
+
+Then he went back to his own castle with the five-and-twenty bezants
+and the arms of the knight of England.
+
+When he sounded the horn there came to him his mother, who, seeing him
+so gilt over, was overcome with joy, and cried: "He brings us riches,
+as he promised."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Halewyn.
+
+And she fell at his feet and kissed them.
+
+As also did the younger brother, saying: "Sir Brother thou hast lifted
+us up from poverty, I will willingly serve thee."
+
+"So shouldst thou, indeed," said Halewyn. Then, going into the hall:
+"I would sup," he said, "thou, woman, fetch me meat, and thou,
+fellow, drink."
+
+And on the morrow, and every day thereafter, he made to serve him at
+table, as if they had been his private servants, his father, mother,
+brother, and sister, turn by turn.
+
+
+
+
+XIII. Of the heart dried up and of the dame Halewyn.
+
+But one morning while he was at meat in his castle, when his father
+and sister were gone to Bruges to buy corn-coloured cloth-of-scarlet
+for their clothes,
+
+And he was being served, with all humility, by his mother and brother,
+
+He became suddenly quite cold, for the heart had ceased to beat.
+
+Putting his hand to his breast, he touched dried-up skin.
+
+Then he felt his face go back as it was before, his shoulders shrink
+down, his back hump up, and all his body lessen in stature.
+
+Looking at his mother and brother in turn, he saw them laughing and
+saying to each other: "See, here is our master back in his old ugly
+skin, and with his old ugly face."
+
+"Ha, My Lord," said his brother, coming boldly up to him and speaking
+insolently, "will you not take some of this clauwaert to hearten
+yourself? You have no longer, it seems, your former strength."
+
+"Wilt try it?" said the Miserable, and struck him with his fist,
+but did him no more hurt than if he had been a fly.
+
+Seeing this the younger brother grew bolder, and seating himself
+close to Halewyn on the seat:
+
+"My lord," said he, "you have had pudding enough, I think, 'tis my
+turn to eat."
+
+And he took the pudding from off his platter.
+
+"My lord son," said his mother, "now you shall give to me, who am old,
+some of this old wine you have kept for yourself."
+
+And she took the cup out of his hand.
+
+"My lord brother," said the younger son, "methinks you have too
+much of this roast of lamb with sweet chestnuts; I will take it,
+if you please."
+
+And he put the roast of lamb before his own place.
+
+"My lord son," said his mother, "you do not much like, it seems,
+this fair cheese and barley tart, give it to me, I pray you."
+
+And the Miserable, dumbfounded, gave it to her.
+
+"My lord brother," said the younger son, "you have been sitting there
+long enough like an emperor, will you be pleased to stir your limbs
+now and serve us?"
+
+And the Miserable, getting up, served them as he was bidden.
+
+"My lord son," said his mother, "I see you now submissive to our
+orders, will you be pleased to ask my pardon for having so long kept
+me standing like a private servant, fetching you food and drink,
+though I am your mother?"
+
+And the Miserable fell at her feet.
+
+"My lord brother," said the younger son, "wilt thou be pleased to
+fall at my feet likewise, and kiss them, for that thou hast made me
+do the work of a serf?"
+
+"That I will not," said the Miserable.
+
+"Thou wilt not?"
+
+"I will not," said the Miserable, and stepped back a pace.
+
+"Come hither," said his brother.
+
+"I will not," said the Miserable.
+
+Then the younger ran at him, and, bearing him to the ground without
+difficulty, began thumping and pommelling him, and striking him in the
+face with his golden spurs, saying: "Avenge thyself, Siewert Halewyn
+the Invincible. None can stand against thee, save I. Thou hast long
+treated us as serfs in thy house, now I will treat thee as a cheese
+and crush thee underfoot. Why dost thou not now caper as a kid, or
+fly away as a bird, Siewert the enchanted?" and, going into a frenzy
+of rage, he drew his knife, saying: "I will cut thee off thy head
+unless thou cry mercy."
+
+"I will not," said the Miserable.
+
+But his mother, hearing these words, took quickly from the fire a
+handful of embers, and notwithstanding their heat, threw them into
+the eyes and mouth of the younger brother, saying: "Thou shalt not
+kill my first-born, wicked son."
+
+And while the younger brother was howling by reason of the pain from
+the embers, which blinded him, his mother took the knife from him,
+and while he was twisting this way and that, swinging up his arms to
+strike whomever he could, she threw him down, shut him up in the room,
+and went out dragging her first-born after her. Then, although she was
+feeble with age, she carried Halewyn up into the tower on her back,
+as a shepherd carries a lamb (for he had quite lost his senses),
+and there tended him and bathed his face and breast, which were torn
+and bleeding, and there at nightfall left him and went away.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. Of the great weakness of Sir Halewyn and of the days and nights
+which he spent in the forest.
+
+The Miserable, alone and somewhat comforted, rose to his feet, and
+was right glad to feel the sickle still at his belt; opened the door,
+listened to make sure that he could hear nothing, and that his brother
+was not there.
+
+And when the night was fully dark, went down the stair slowly,
+sitting-wise.
+
+For he was so weakened by the blows and wounds he had received that
+he could not hold himself upright by any means; and in this fashion
+he went on until he reached the bridge, and, finding that still down,
+crossed over it.
+
+And very wearily he made his way to the forest.
+
+But he could not, on account of his weakness, go so far as the
+cottages, which were a good two leagues distant to the northward.
+
+So, lying down among the leaves, he sang.
+
+But no maid came, for the song could not be heard from so far away.
+
+And so passed the first day.
+
+When night came again, cold rain began to fall, which sent him into
+a fever. But notwithstanding this he would not go back to his castle,
+for fear of his brother. Shivering, and with his teeth a-chatter, he
+dragged himself northward through the brake, and saw in a clearing
+a fair pretty maid, rosy-cheeked, fresh, slender, and neat, and he
+sang his song. But the girl did not come to him.
+
+And so passed the second day.
+
+That night the rain fell anew, and he could not move, so stiff was
+he from the cold, and he sang, but no maid came. At dawn the rain
+continued, and while he was lying there among the leaves a wolf came
+and sniffed at him, thinking him dead, but on seeing it draw near he
+cried out in a terrible fashion, and the wolf took fright and went
+off. Then he grew hungry, but could find himself nothing to eat. At
+vespers he sang anew, but no maid came.
+
+And so passed the third day.
+
+Towards midnight the sky cleared, and the wind grew warmer. But the
+Miserable, though he was suffering greatly from hunger, thirst, and
+weariness, dared not sleep. On the morning of the fourth day he saw
+a girl coming towards him who seemed to be a burgess's daughter. The
+girl would have run away on seeing him, but he cried out loudly:
+"Help me! I am worn out with hunger and sickness." Then she drew near
+to him and said: "I also am hungry." "Art thou," he said, "a maid? "
+"Ah," said she, "I have had to flee from Bruges, because the priests
+would have burnt me alive, on account of a brown mole which I have
+on my neck, of the size of a pea, coming, they say, from my having
+had fleshly commerce with the devil. But I have never seen the devil,
+and do not know what he is like."
+
+He, without listening to her, asked again if she were a virgin, and,
+as the girl said nothing, he sang his song.
+
+But she did not move from where she stood, only saying: "You have
+a very sweet and strong voice for one so wasted with sickness and
+hunger."
+
+Then he said to her: "I am the lord Siewert Halewyn. Go to my castle
+and ask to be taken to my lady mother, and without speaking to any
+one else, whosoever he be, tell her that her son is hard put to it
+in the forest with hunger, fever, and weariness, and will die before
+long if none bring him help."
+
+The girl went off as he bid her, but coming out of the wood she saw
+in the Gallows-field the body of the maid hanging, and ran away in a
+fright. Passing into the territory of Sir Roel de Heurne she craved
+food and drink at the cottage of one of his peasants. And there she
+told how she had found Sir Halewyn dying of hunger. But she was told
+in reply that the said lord was crueller and more wicked than the
+devil himself, and should be left to be eaten by the wolves and other
+beasts of the forest.
+
+And the Miserable waited, lying in the leaves in great anguish.
+
+And so passed the fourth day.
+
+And at dawn of the fifth, having seen no more of the girl, he supposed
+that she had been caught by the priests and taken back to Bruges to
+be burnt.
+
+Quite disheartened, and chilled with the cold, and saying that he
+would soon die, he cursed the Prince of the Stones.
+
+Nevertheless, at vespers he sang once more.
+
+And he was then by the side of a forest way.
+
+And he saw coming through the trees a fair maid, who fell on her
+knees before him.
+
+And he did to her as he had done to the others.
+
+Then rose full of fresh strength, vigour, and beauty, and with the
+heart resting against his own went off to the Gallows-field, carrying
+the body, and there hanged it by that of the first virgin.
+
+
+
+
+XV. How the Miserable, having hanged fifteen virgins in the
+Gallows-field, held wicked revels and cruel orgies.
+
+Sir Halewyn became most powerful and greatly feared, and killed up
+to fifteen virgins, whom he hanged in the Gallows-field.
+
+And he led a riotous life, eating, drinking, and carousing continually.
+
+All those ladies who had made fun of him in the days of his impotence
+and ugliness were brought to his castle.
+
+And having had his will of them he turned them out of doors like
+bitches, so wreaking upon them his evil vengeance.
+
+And from Lille, Ghent, and Bruges came the most beautiful courtesans,
+with their badge on their arms, and they ministered to his pleasure
+and to that of his friends, among whom the more evil were Diederich
+Pater-noster, so called because he was a great frequenter of churches;
+Nellin the Wolf, who in battle attacked only the fallen, as wolves
+do; and Baudouin Sans Ears, who in his court of justice always cried:
+"Death, death," without waiting to hear any defence whatever.
+
+In company with the fair courtesans these same lords held revels and
+orgies without end, and took from their poor peasants all they had,
+corn, cheese, jewels, cocks, oxen, calves, and swine.
+
+Then, having stuffed themselves as full as they could hold, threw to
+their dogs choice viands and rich cakes.
+
+Gave to be broken and pounded up for their hawks and falcons, the
+meat of fowls, cockerels, and doves; had the hooves of their horses
+bathed in wine.
+
+Oftentimes until midnight, or even until cock-crow, there would be
+beating of drums, trilling of pipes, squeaking of viols, skirling of
+bagpipes, and winding of horns, for their entertainment.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. How the burgesses of the good town of Ghent gave protection to
+the virgins of the domain of Halewyn.
+
+Meanwhile in the cottages of the peasant folk were tears, hunger,
+and great misery.
+
+And when the fifteenth maid had been taken in the domain of Halewyn,
+
+The mothers prayed to God that he would make them barren, or else
+that they might bear men-children only.
+
+And the fathers complained and said to one another sadly: "Is it not
+a pitiful thing to see these sweet and gentle flowers of youth so
+brought to death and dishonour!"
+
+And some among them said: "Let us go by night to the good town of
+Ghent, taking with us all our virgin daughters, and tell the whole
+tale to the burgesses, begging their blessed protection for them,
+and leaving them there in the town if we are so permitted. So they
+will escape death at the hands of our master."
+
+Every one who heard this plan thought it a good one; and all the
+peasants with daughters who were virgins took them off to Ghent,
+and there told the story to the commune, and the good men gave them
+protection.
+
+Then with lighter hearts the peasants returned to the domain of
+Halewyn.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. Of what Sir Halewyn did on the borders of his domain.
+
+Not long afterwards a hard winter set in, with bitter cold and
+furious storm.
+
+And the heart of the fifteenth virgin no longer beat strong against
+Sir Halewyn's breast.
+
+And he sang, but none came. Wherefore he was disappointed and angry.
+
+But calling to mind that there were, in the castle of Sir Roel de
+Heurne, two girls supposed by common report to be virgins,
+
+And that this castle was no more than the fifth part of a league from
+the borders of his land,
+
+And that therefore the two maids would be able to hear and come to
+the call of his song,
+
+He went each night and stationed himself on the farthest border of
+his demesne, and there sang towards the said castle, notwithstanding
+the bitter cold, and the snow beginning to fall abundantly.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. Of the damosels Magtelt and Anne-Mie, and of Schimmel the
+dapple-gray.
+
+While the Miserable was roaming the woods, Sir Roel de Heurne and the
+lady Gonde, his wife, richly clad, and wrapt round with deer-skins,
+which give particular warmth to the body, were sitting snugly on their
+coffers before their good fire of oaken logs, chatting together as
+old folk will.
+
+But it was the Lady Gonde who spoke most, being the woman.
+
+And she said:
+
+"My good man, do you hear the storm raging furiously in the forest?"
+
+"Yes," answered Sir Roel.
+
+And his lady said further:
+
+"God has been kind to give us, against this great cold, such a fine
+castle so strongly built, such good clothes, and such a bright fire."
+
+"Yes," answered the Sire.
+
+"But above all," said she, "he has shown us his divine grace by giving
+us such good and brave children."
+
+"True," answered the Sire.
+
+"For," said she, "nowhere could you find a young man more valiant,
+courteous, gentle, and fitter to uphold our name than Toon, our son."
+
+"Yes," said the Sire, "he has saved my life in battle."
+
+"But," said his lady, "he has this fault, that he is so scant of
+words that we scarce know the tone of his voice. He is well called
+the Silent."
+
+"There is better worth to a man," said the Sire, "in a good sword
+than in a long tongue."
+
+"Here I see you, my lord," said the lady, "pent up with your
+reflections, for sadness and gravity are the lot of old age, but I
+know well a certain maid who would smooth out your forehead and set
+you laughing."
+
+"'Tis possible," said the Sire.
+
+"Yes," said she, "it is certainly possible, for when Magtelt our
+daughter comes into this room, I shall see my lord and husband turn
+happy at once."
+
+At these words Sir Roel nodded his head and smiled a little.
+
+"Yes, yes," said his lady, "for when Magtelt laughs, then laughs my
+old Roel; when she sings, then my old Roel grows thoughtful and nods
+his head happily, and if she passes by, he follows with smiling eyes
+each step of his little daughter."
+
+"True, Gonde," said the Sire.
+
+"Yes, yes," said she, "for who is the well-being and joy of this
+house? 'Tis not I, who am old, and losing my teeth one by one; nor you
+either, my fellow in antiquity; nor the Silent either; nor Anne-Mie
+the private servant, who, though she is very sweet and healthy in her
+person, is something too quiet in her ways, and laughs only when she
+is set laughing. But she who makes our old age happy, she who is the
+nightingale in the house, she who is always coming and going, passing
+and repassing, flying hither and thither, singing and singing again,
+as happy as a peal of bells at Christmastide: 'tis our good daughter."
+
+"So it is," said the Sire.
+
+"Ah," said his lady further, "it is a happy thing for us to have
+such a child, since both of us have already cold in our feet at all
+seasons. For without her we should pass our time in sadness, and from
+our old feet the cold would creep up to our hearts, and so we should
+be taken to our graves more quickly."
+
+"Yes, wife," said the Sire.
+
+"Ah," said she, "another damosel would have wished for love-suitors,
+and to go to the court of My Lord to get a husband. But our little
+maid gives no thought to that, for hereabout she loves no one but
+ourselves, and her who goes everywhere with her, and is as a sister
+to her, Anne-Mie the private servant; but not without teasing her a
+little in order to make her laugh."
+
+"True," said the Sire.
+
+"Yes, yes," said his lady, "and every one loves her, admires her, and
+respects her, pages, grooms, varlets, men-at-arms, private servants,
+serfs, and peasants, so joyous and merry is she, so brave and gentle
+is her bearing. There is no one, even down to Schimmel, the great
+war-horse, who does not follow her like a dog. Ah! When he sees her
+coming he whinnies joyously; and she alone must bring him his oats and
+corn; from none other will he take a grain. She treats him like a man,
+and often gives him a great draught of clauwaert, which he drinks up
+with relish. She makes herself understood to him by words, but she must
+never be cross with him, or he makes as if to weep, and looks at her
+with so sad a manner that she cannot withstand it and then calls him
+to her, saying: 'Beautiful Schimmel, brave Schimmel,' and other soft
+words; hearing which the good dapple-gray gets up and comes close to
+her to have more compliments. He suffers no one on his back but she,
+and when he is carrying her he is as proud as My Lord of Flanders at
+the head of his good barons and knights. So she has her sovereignty
+over every one, by joyousness, goodness, and fair speaking."
+
+"Yes," said the Sire.
+
+"Ah," said his lady, "may the very good God watch over our little one,
+and may our old ears hear this fledgeling nightingale singing always."
+
+"Amen," said the Sire.
+
+
+
+
+XIX. How Magtelt sang to Sir Roel the lied of the Lion, and the song
+of the Four Witches.
+
+While Sir Roel and the lady Gonde were talking together,
+
+The snow had fallen in great quantity,
+
+And had quite covered Magtelt and Anne-Mie, who were coming back from
+having taken an eagle-stone to the wife of Josse, for her to bind to
+her left thigh and so get ease in her lying-in.
+
+And the girls came into the great hall, where Sir Roel was sitting
+with his good wife.
+
+Magtelt, drawing close to her father, knelt to him in salutation.
+
+And Sir Roel, having raised her up, kissed her on the brow.
+
+But Anne-Mie stayed quietly in a corner, as became a private servant.
+
+And it was a good sight to see these two maids wholly covered with
+snow.
+
+"Jesus-Maria," said the lady Gonde, "see these two sillies, what have
+they been doing to get themselves clothed in snow in this fashion? To
+the fire quickly, children; draw to the fire and dry yourselves."
+
+"Silence, wife," said Sir Roel, "you make youth faint-heart. In my
+young days I went through cold, snow, hail, thunder, and tempest
+without a thought. And so do I still, when there is need to, and
+I will have Magtelt do the same. Thanks be to God! 'tis not from a
+fire of logs that a daughter of ours must get warmth, but from the
+natural fire which burns in the bodies of the children of old Roel."
+
+But Magtelt, seeing him about to grow angry, went and knelt at
+his feet.
+
+"Lord father," said she, "we are not cold at all, for we have been
+leaping, dancing and frolicking so heartily, thumping and drubbing each
+other, that we turned winter into spring; furthermore we sang some fine
+songs, which I beg you will give me leave to sing over again to you."
+
+"So I will, little one," said Sir Roel. So Magtelt sang him the lied,
+of Roeland de Heurne the Lion, who came back from the Holy Land,
+and brought thence a great sword; and also the song of the Four
+Witches, wherein you may hear mewling of cats, bleating of goats,
+and the noise which they make with their tails in rainy weather.
+
+And Sir Roel forgot his anger.
+
+When Magtelt had done singing he caused supper to be served and the
+cross lit up, which threw over them a bright light from the four
+lamps burning at the end of each arm.
+
+And he made his daughter sit at his side.
+
+Anne-Mie came likewise to sit at table, beside the lady Gonde, who
+said: "Young company warms old folk."
+
+And there were served to them that evening fine white bread, beef
+salted and smoked in the chimney among the sweet smoke of fir-cones,
+Ghent sausage, which was invented, they say, by Boudwin the Glutton,
+bastard of Flanders, and old clauwaert.
+
+Supper finished, and a prayer spoken, Magtelt and Anne-Mie went off
+to bed, in the same room, for Magtelt loved Anne-Mie like a sister
+and would have her by her side at all times.
+
+
+
+
+XX. Of the sixteenth virgin hanged.
+
+Magtelt, with laughter, singing, and frolic, soon fell asleep.
+
+But Anne-Mie, being somewhat cold, could not close her eyes.
+
+And the Miserable came and stationed himself on the border of his
+land. Thence his voice rang out clear, soft, and melodious.
+
+And Anne-Mie heard it, and, forgetting that she was but lightly clad,
+rose up and went out of the castle by the postern.
+
+When she came into the open the snow smote harshly on her face,
+her breast, and her shoulders.
+
+And she tried to shield herself against this bitter cold and evil snow,
+but could not, for she had lain down to sleep nearly naked.
+
+Going towards the song she passed barefoot across the moat, whereof
+the water was hard frozen.
+
+And trying to mount the farther bank, which was high and slippery,
+she fell;
+
+And cut a great wound in her knee.
+
+Having picked herself up she entered the forest, wounding her bare
+feet on the stones, and her numbed body on the branches of trees.
+
+But she went her way without heeding.
+
+When she drew near to the Miserable she fell on her knees before
+him. And he did to her as he had done to the others.
+
+And Anne-Mie was the sixteenth virgin hanged in the Gallows-field.
+
+
+
+
+XXI. How Magtelt sought Anne-Mie.
+
+On the morrow Magtelt, being, as was customary, the first awake,
+said her prayers to My Lord Jesus and to Madam Saint Magtelt, her
+blessed patron.
+
+Having besought them earnestly for Sir Roel, the lady Gonde, the
+Silent, and all the household, most particularly for Anne-Mie,
+she looked at the maid's bed, and seeing its curtains half drawn
+she supposed that her companion was still asleep; and so, putting on
+her fine clothes, she kept saying as she moved up and down the room,
+or looked at herself in the mirror-glass:
+
+"Ho, Anne-Mie, wake up, wake up, Anne-Mie! Who sleeps late comes last
+to grass. The sparrows are awake and the hens also, and already their
+eggs are laid. Wake up, Anne-Mie, Schimmel is neighing in the stable,
+and the sun is shining bright on the snow; my lord father is scolding
+the servants, and my lady mother is interceding for them. Canst
+not smell the savoury odour of beans and good beef broiled with
+spices? I can smell it well enough, and it makes me hungry; wake up,
+Anne-Mie." But the girl could not possess herself in patience any
+longer, and threw the curtains wide open.
+
+Finding no Anne-Mie: "There!" she said, "the rogue, she has gone down
+without me; and without me, no doubt, is at this same moment eating
+those good beans and beef."
+
+And going down the stairs at a run Magtelt entered the great hall,
+where, seeing Sir Roel her father, she knelt to him and asked his
+blessing, and then likewise to the lady Gonde.
+
+But her mother said to her: "Where is Anne-Mie?"
+
+"I cannot tell," said Magtelt, "she is having some fun with us,
+I suppose, hidden in some corner."
+
+"That," said Sir Roel, "is not her way, for if any one here makes
+fun of others 'tis not she, but thou, little one."
+
+"My lord father," said Magtelt, "you make me anxious by talking so."
+
+"Well," said Sir Roel, "go and seek Anne-Mie; as for us, mother,
+let us eat; our old stomachs cannot wait for food as well as these
+young ones."
+
+"Ah," said the lady Gonde, "I have no mind to eat; go, Magtelt,
+and find me Anne-Mie."
+
+But Sir Roel helped himself to a great platterful of beans and good
+beef, and, falling to it, said that nothing was so easily put out,
+troubled, made anxious, as a woman, and this for nothing at all.
+
+Nevertheless he was himself a little uneasy, and from time to time
+looked up at the door, saying that the rascal of a girl would show
+herself suddenly from somewhere.
+
+But Magtelt, after searching the whole castle over, came back and said:
+"I can find Anne-Mie nowhere."
+
+
+
+
+XXII. How Magtelt wept bitterly, and of the fine dress which she had.
+
+And Magtelt had great sorrow in her heart, and wept, and made lament,
+crying: "Anne-Mie, where art thou? Would I could see thee again!" And
+falling on her knees before Sir Roel, she said: "My lord father, I pray
+you to send our men-at-arms in goodly number in search for Anne-Mie."
+
+"So I will," said he.
+
+The men-at-arms went out, but dared not pass on to the lands of
+Halewyn from fear of the spell.
+
+And on their return they said: "We can hear nothing of Anne-Mie."
+
+And Magtelt went up and stretched herself on her bed, and prayed to
+the good God to send her back her sweet comrade.
+
+On the second day she went and sat before the glazed window, and
+without intermission looked out all day at the countryside and the
+falling snow, and watched to see if Anne-Mie were coming.
+
+But Anne-Mie could not come.
+
+And on the third day the lids of her eyes bled for weeping. And on
+that day the snow ceased falling, the sky became clear, the sun shone
+therein, and the earth was hard frozen.
+
+And every day in the same place went and sat the sorrowing Magtelt,
+watching the countryside, thinking of Anne-Mie and saying nothing.
+
+Sir Roel, seeing her so low-hearted, sent to Bruges for some blue
+cloth-of-scarlet, for her to make herself a dress, and fine Cyprian
+gold for the border, and fine gold buttons of rich workmanship.
+
+Magtelt worked away at making this dress, but took no pleasure at
+all at the thought of all this fine apparel.
+
+And so passed away the week, and each day Magtelt worked at her dress,
+saying nothing and singing never, but weeping oftentimes.
+
+On the fifth day, when the dress was finished, well trimmed with the
+Cyprian gold and embellished with the rich buttons, the lady Gonde
+bade Magtelt don it, and then showed her her magnificence in a great
+mirror-glass; but Magtelt had no heart to be glad at seeing herself
+so beautiful, for she was thinking of Anne-Mie.
+
+And the lady Gonde, seeing how sad she was and silent, wept also,
+saying: "Since our Magtelt stopped singing I have felt more bitterly
+the chill of winter and old age."
+
+And Sir Roel made no murmur, but became sullen and pensive, and drank
+clauwaert all day.
+
+And at times, turning angry, he bade Magtelt sing and be cheerful.
+
+And the maid sang merry lieds to the old man, who then turned joyous
+again, and Gonde as well.
+
+And they spent all their time before the fire, nodding their heads. And
+they said: "The nightingale is come back again to the house, and her
+music makes the fires of spring sunshine stir in our bones."
+
+And Magtelt, having done singing, would go off to hide herself in a
+corner and weep for Anne-Mie.
+
+
+
+
+XXIII. Of Toon the Silent.
+
+On the eighth day, the Silent went wolf-hunting.
+
+Following a certain beast he rode into the domain of Halewyn.
+
+And at vespers the lady Gonde, leaving the great hall to go to the
+kitchen for the ordering of supper, on opening the door saw Toon before
+her. He seemed loth to come in, and hung his head as if with shame.
+
+The lady Gonde, going to him, said: "My son, why do you not come into
+the hall to bid good evening to the lord your father?"
+
+The Silent, without answering, went into the hall, and muttering
+short and sullen words by way of salutation, went to sit in the
+darkest corner.
+
+And the lady Gonde said to Sir Roel: "Our son is angry at something,
+I think, since he goes off into a dark corner far away from us,
+against his habit."
+
+Sir Roel said to the Silent: "Son, come hither to the light that we
+may see thy face."
+
+He obeyed, and Sir Roel, the lady Gonde, and the sorrowing Magtelt
+saw that he was bleeding from the head and from the neck, and cast
+down his eyes, not daring to look them in the face.
+
+The lady Gonde cried out with fright on seeing the blood, and Magtelt
+came to him, and Sir Roel said: "Who has given my son this shamed
+countenance, this downcast heart, and these wounds in his body?"
+
+The Silent answered: "Siewert Halewyn."
+
+"Why," said Sir Roel, "was my son so presumptuous as to attack the
+Invincible?"
+
+The Silent answered: "Anne-Mie hanged in the Gallows-field of Siewert
+Halewyn."
+
+"Woe!" cried Sir Roel, "our poor maid hanged! shame and sorrow
+upon us!"
+
+"Lord God," said Gonde, "you smite us hard indeed." And she wept.
+
+But Magtelt could neither weep nor speak from the bitterness of the
+grief which laid hold upon her.
+
+And she looked at her brother fixedly, and his sunken face blenched,
+and from the wounds against his eyes dropped tears of blood, and his
+body was shaken with spasms.
+
+And the Silent sank into a seat, weeping dully like a wounded lion.
+
+"Ha," quoth Sir Roel, hiding his face, "this is the first man of the
+house of Heurne that has found need to sit weeping. Shame upon us,
+and without redress, for there is a spell woven."
+
+And the Silent stuffed his fingers into the wound in his neck,
+pressing out the blood; but he felt nothing of the pain.
+
+"Toon," said the lady Gonde, "do not dirty your wound with your
+fingers in this wise; you will poison it, my son."
+
+But the Silent did not seem to hear.
+
+"Toon," said the lady Gonde, "do not do it; I, your mother, order
+you. Let me wash away this blood and dress with ointment these
+ugly sores."
+
+While she hurried to prepare the ointment and to warm the water in
+a washing-basin, Toon did not cease his groaning and weeping. And he
+tore out the hair from his beard in a rage.
+
+And Sir Roel, watching him, said: "When a man weeps 'tis blood and
+shame, shame without redress. Halewyn has a spell. Ah, presumptuous
+one, must thou then go to his castle to brave the Invincible?"
+
+"Woe, my lord," said the lady Gonde, "be not so bitter angry with the
+Silent, for he showed fine courage in wishing to avenge Anne-Mie on
+the Miserable."
+
+"Yes," said Sir Roel, "fine courage that brings shame to our house."
+
+"Tell," said she, "tell, Toon, the tale to thy father, to show him
+that thou art a worthy son to him none the less."
+
+"I wish it," said Sir Roel.
+
+"My lord father," said the Silent, groaning, and speaking in short
+breaths, "Anne-Mie hanging, Siewert Halewyn near to the gallows. He
+was laughing. I ran at him, cutting at his belly with my sword in the
+fashion of a cross to break the spell. Invincible! He laughed, saying:
+'I will take Magtelt.' I struck him with a knife; the blade turned. He
+laughed. He said: 'I do not care for punishment, be off.' I did not
+go. I struck him with sword and knife together; in vain. He laughed. He
+said again: 'Be off.' I could not. Then he struck me with the flat
+of his sword in the neck and breast, and with the hilt in the back,
+like a serf. He laughed. I lost sense from the blows. Beaten like a
+serf, my lord father, I could do naught against him."
+
+Sir Roel, having heard Toon speak, was less angered, understanding
+that he had not been presumptuous, thinking also of his great pain
+and of his bitter groaning and his grievous shame.
+
+With the ointment ready and the water warm, the lady Gonde set to
+work to dress the wounds of her son, particularly that on his neck,
+which was a deep one.
+
+But Magtelt wept never a tear, and soon went off to her bed, not
+without a blessing from Sir Roel her father, and her lady mother.
+
+The three stayed a long while together before the fire, father, mother,
+and son, without a word spoken, for the Silent, moaning all the while,
+could not bear his defeat, and the lady Gonde wept and prayed; and
+Sir Roel, sad and ashamed, hid his face.
+
+
+
+
+XXIV. How the damosel Magtelt made a good resolution.
+
+Magtelt, before she lay down on her bed, prayed, but not aloud. And
+her face was hard set with anger.
+
+And having undressed she lay down in her bed, tugging at her breast
+with her finger-nails from time to time, as if she were fighting
+for breath.
+
+And her breathing was as if she were in agony.
+
+For she was bitter sad and out of heart.
+
+But she did not weep.
+
+And she heard the high wind, forerunner of snow, lifting over the
+forest, and roaring like a stream in spate after heavy rain.
+
+And it tossed against the window glass dried leaves and branches,
+which beat on the pane like dead men's finger-nails.
+
+And it howled and whistled sadly in the chimney.
+
+And the sorrowing maid saw in her mind's eye Anne-Mie hanging in the
+Gallows-field and her poor body pecked by the crows, and she thought
+of the stain on her brave brother's honour, and of the fifteen poor
+virgins outraged by the Miserable.
+
+But she did not weep.
+
+For in her breast was a dumb pain, harsh anguish, and a bitter thirst
+for vengeance.
+
+And she asked very humbly of Our Lady if it were a good thing to
+let the Miserable any longer go killing the maidens of the land
+of Flanders.
+
+And at cock-crow she rose from her bed, and her eyes were bright,
+and proud was her countenance, and her head held high, and she said:
+"I will go to Halewyn."
+
+And throwing herself on her knees she prayed to the very strong God
+to give her courage and strength for the revenge of Anne-Mie, Toon
+the Silent, and the fifteen virgins.
+
+
+
+
+XXV. Of the sword of the Lion.
+
+At sun-up she went to Sir Roel, who was still in bed, on account of
+the cold.
+
+Seeing her come in and fall on her knees before him, he said: "What
+wilt thou, little one?"
+
+"My lord father," she said, "may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+At this he became afraid, and saw well enough that Magtelt, unable
+to rid her heart of the thought of Anne-Mie, was minded to avenge
+her. And he said with love and anger:
+
+"No, my daughter, no, not thou; who goes there will not come again!"
+
+But seeing her go out of the room he never supposed that she would
+fail in her obedience.
+
+And Magtelt went thence to the lady Gonde, who was praying in the
+chapel for the repose of Anne-Mie's soul; and she pulled at her
+mother's dress, to show that she was there.
+
+When the lady Gonde turned her head, Magtelt fell on her knees
+before her:
+
+"Mother," said she, "may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+But her lady mother: "Oh no, child, no, not thou; who goes there will
+not come again!"
+
+And so saying, she opened her arms and let fall the golden ball
+wherewith she warmed her hands, so that the embers spread this way
+and that on the floor. Then she fell to moaning, weeping, trembling,
+and chattering with her teeth, and embraced the girl tightly as if
+she would never let her go.
+
+But she never supposed that she could fail in her obedience.
+
+And Magtelt went thence to Toon, who, despite his wounds, was already
+out of bed, and seated on his coffer, warming himself before a
+new-lit fire.
+
+"Brother," she said, "may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+Saying this she held herself straight before him.
+
+The Silent lifted his head and looked at her severely, waiting for
+her to speak further.
+
+"Brother," she said, "Siewert Halewyn has killed this sweet maid whom
+I loved; and has done the same to fifteen other pitiful virgins,
+who are hanging in the Gallows-field shamefully; he is for this
+country a greater evil than war, death, and pestilence; brother,
+I would kill him."
+
+But Toon looked at Magtelt and answered nothing.
+
+"Brother," said she, "thou must not refuse me, for my heart bids
+me go. Canst thou not see how sad and downcast I am in this house,
+and how I shall die of sorrow if I do not that which I should. But
+having been to him I shall come back joyous and singing as before."
+
+But the Silent said not a word.
+
+"Ah," she said, "dost fear for me, seeing how many good knights have
+assailed him and been by him shamefully overthrown, even thyself, my
+brave brother, who carriest even now his marks? I am not ignorant that
+on his shield is written: 'None can stand against me.' But what others
+could not, one may do. He goes glorying in his strength, more terrible
+than an oliphant, prouder than a lion, thinking himself invincible,
+but when the beast goes with assurance the hunter follows the more
+easily. Brother, may I go to Halewyn?"
+
+When Magtelt had reached so far in her speech, suddenly there
+fell from the wall whereon it was fastened a fair sword well set
+and sharpened, and with the blade stout to the hilt. The handpiece
+was of cedar of Lebanon, set out with golden cresslets, and in the
+castle this sword was held to be of marvellous virtue and holiness,
+because it had been brought from the crusade by Roeland de Heurne,
+the Lion. And none dared use it.
+
+The sword, falling, lay at the feet of Magtelt.
+
+"Brother," said Magtelt, crossing herself, "the good sword of the
+Lion has fallen at my feet; 'tis the very strong God showing thus
+his will. He must be obeyed, brother; let me go to Halewyn."
+
+And Toon the Silent, crossing himself as Magtelt had done, answered:
+
+"'Tis all one to me where thou go, if thou cherish thine honour and
+carry thy crown straight."
+
+"Brother," she said, "I thank you." And the noble maid began to
+tremble mightily from head to foot; and she who had not shed a
+tear on hearing of Anne-Mie's death and her brother's dishonour,
+fell to weeping abundantly, whereby her bitter anger was melted,
+and bursting into tears by reason of her great joy she said again:
+"Brother, brother, 'tis the hour of God! I go to the reckoning!"
+
+And she took the good sword.
+
+The Silent, seeing her so brave, lifted himself straight before her
+and put his hand on her shoulder. "Go," said he.
+
+And she went out.
+
+
+
+
+XXVI. Of the noble apparel of the maid Magtelt.
+
+In her own room she dressed herself in her most beautiful clothes as
+quickly as she could.
+
+What did the fair maid put on her white body? A bodice finer than silk.
+
+And over the fine bodice?
+
+A robe of cloth-of-scarlet of Flemish blue, whereon were the arms
+of de Heurne marvellously worked, and the edges next to the feet and
+the neck embroidered with fine Cyprian gold.
+
+Wherewith did the fair maid bind in her slender waist?
+
+With a girdle of the hide of a lion, studded with gold.
+
+What had the fair maid on her beautiful shoulders?
+
+Her great keirle, which was of cramoisy stitched with Cyprian gold,
+and covered her from head to foot, for it was an ample cloak.
+
+What had the fair maid on her proud head?
+
+A fine crown of beaten gold, whence fell tresses of pale hair as long
+as herself.
+
+What held she in her little hand?
+
+The blessed sword brought from the crusade.
+
+So apparelled she went out to the stable, and harnessed Schimmel,
+the great war-horse, with his saddle of State, a fine leathern seat,
+painted in divers colours, and richly worked with gold.
+
+And they set out together, through the snow falling thickly.
+
+
+
+
+XXVII. How Sir Roel and the lady Gonde questioned Toon the Silent,
+and of what he answered.
+
+While Magtelt was on her way to Halewyn, and when the first hour of
+her journey had already gone by, the lady Gonde questioned Sir Roel:
+"Sir," she said, "do you know where our daughter may be?"
+
+Sir Roel said that he knew nothing of it; and speaking to the Silent:
+"Son," said he, "dost thou know where thy sister has gone?"
+
+The Silent answered quietly: "Magtelt is a brave maid; whom God leads
+he leads well."
+
+"Sir," said the lady Gonde, "do not put yourself to the trouble of
+questioning him further, for saying so much he has used up his words."
+
+But Sir Roel to Toon: "Son, dost thou not know where she is?"
+
+"Magtelt," answered he, "is a fair maid, and carries her crown
+straight."
+
+"Ah," exclaimed the lady Gonde, "I am growing anxious; where is
+she then?"
+
+And she went off to search the castle thoroughly.
+
+But coming back she said to Sir Roel: "She is nowhere in the house;
+she has defied our orders and gone to Halewyn."
+
+"Wife," said Roel, "that cannot be. Children, in this country, were
+always obedient to their parents."
+
+"Toon," said she, "where is she? Toon, do you not know?"
+
+"The Miserable," he answered, "fears the beautiful maid; whom God
+leads he leads well."
+
+"Roel," cried out the lady Gonde, "he knows where our Magtelt has
+gone!"
+
+"Son, answer," said Sir Roel.
+
+The Silent answered:
+
+"The sword of the crusade fell from the wall at the maid's feet. Whom
+God guides succeeds in everything."
+
+"Toon," cried the lady Gonde, "where is Magtelt?"
+
+"The virgin," he said, "rides without fear, she goes faster than the
+armed man: whom God leads he leads well."
+
+The lady Gonde groaned:
+
+"Ah," she said, "our Magtelt will be killed, even now she is stiff
+frozen, sweet Jesus! The sword of the crusade is of no avail against
+Siewert Halewyn."
+
+The Silent answered:
+
+"He glories in his strength, thinking himself invincible, but when
+the beast goes with assurance the hunter follows more easily."
+
+"Wicked son, how couldst thou think to send the little bird to the
+hawk, the virgin to the enemy of virgins?"
+
+The Silent answered:
+
+"She will come whither none looks to see her: whom God leads he
+leads well."
+
+"Sir," said the lady Gonde to Roel, "you hear what he says; she has
+gone to Halewyn, and 'tis this wicked son that gave her leave."
+
+Sir Roel going to Toon:
+
+"Son," said he, "we had here but one joy, that was our Magtelt. Thou
+hast abused thy privilege in giving her leave to go thither. If she
+comes not back to us by nightfall I will curse thee and banish thee
+from my house. May God hear me, and take from thee, in this world
+bread and salt, and in the other thy portion in Paradise."
+
+"God," said the Silent, "will guide the sword. Whosoever has done
+wrong, on him let fall the punishment."
+
+Gonde began crying out, weeping and making dole. Roel bade her be
+silent, and sent a goodly troop of men-at-arms in the direction she
+had taken.
+
+But they came back without having seen anything of Magtelt, for
+they had not dared to go into the territory of Halewyn by reason of
+the spell.
+
+
+
+
+XXVIII. The riding of the maid Magtelt.
+
+Singing and winding her horn, rides the noble damosel.
+
+And she is beautiful with a beauty from heaven; fresh and rosy are
+her cheeks.
+
+And straight she carries her crown.
+
+And her little hand holds fast beneath her keirle the good sword of
+Roel the Lion.
+
+And wide open are her fearless eyes, searching the forest for Sir
+Halewyn.
+
+And she listens for the sound of his horse.
+
+But she hears nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.
+
+And she sees nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.
+
+What is it makes the flame glow in her clear brown eyes? It is her
+high courage.
+
+Why does she carry so straight her head and her crown? Because of
+the great strength in her heart.
+
+What is it so swells her breast? The cruel thought of Anne-Mie,
+and her brother's shame and the great crimes of Sir Halewyn.
+
+And ceaselessly she looks to see if he be not coming, and if she can
+hear nothing of the sound of his horse.
+
+But she sees nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.
+
+And she hears nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.
+
+And she sings.
+
+Then, speaking to Schimmel, she said: "Together, good Schimmel, we are
+going to a lion. Canst not see him in his cavern, awaiting passers-by,
+and devouring poor maids?"
+
+And Schimmel, hearing her, whinnied joyously.
+
+"Schimmel," said Magtelt, "thou art glad, I see, to be going to the
+revenge of Anne-Mie with the good sword."
+
+And Schimmel whinnied a second time.
+
+And Magtelt sought Sir Halewyn everywhere as she went through the
+forest. And she listened well for the sound of his horse, and looked
+to see if he were nowhere coming.
+
+And she saw nothing, except the air whitened with snow, and white
+also the long road, and white also the leafless trees.
+
+And she heard nothing, except, in the heavy silence, the still sound
+of snowflakes falling quietly like feathers.
+
+And she wound her horn.
+
+
+
+
+XXIX. Of the crow and the sparrow, of the hound, the horse and the
+seven echoes.
+
+When she reached the middle part of the forest, she saw through the
+thick snowflakes Sir Halewyn coming towards her.
+
+The Miserable had that day on his body a fine dress of blue cloth,
+on which was broidered in two colours his ugly arms. Round his waist
+he had a fair belt studded with lumps of gold, and at his belt the
+golden sickle, and over his dress a fair opperst-kleed of corn-coloured
+cloth-of-scarlet.
+
+Riding on his roan horse he came up to Magtelt, and she saw that he
+was handsome.
+
+Before his horse, barking and making a great noise, ran a hound like
+a wolf, which, on seeing Schimmel, leapt at him and bit him. But
+Schimmel, with a great kick which he let fly, set him dancing a sorry
+dance, and singing a pitiful song over his broken paw.
+
+"Ah," thought the maid, "God grant, brave Schimmel, that I may do
+better for the master than thou hast done for the dog."
+
+And the Miserable came to her:
+
+"Salutation," he said, "fair maid with clear brown eyes."
+
+"Salutation," she said, "Siewert Halewyn the Invincible."
+
+But the Miserable: "What brings thee," he said, "into my lands?"
+
+"My heart," said Magtelt, "bade me come, I wished greatly to see thee,
+and am content now that I can look at thee face to face."
+
+"So," said he, "have done and shall do all virgins, even more beautiful
+than thou art."
+
+While they were talking together the wounded hound made a rush at the
+horse and hung on to Halewyn's opperst-kleed as if he would drag him
+down to the ground.
+
+Having done this, he went off and sat down in the snow beside the road,
+and there lifting up his muzzle howled most lamentably.
+
+"See," said he, "my hound crying out to death. Hast no fear, maid?"
+
+"I go," she said, "in God's keeping."
+
+Having moved forward a little way, talking and riding together, they
+saw in the air above their heads, a crow of great size, on whose neck
+was perched an angry little sparrow, pecking him, clutching him,
+pulling out his feathers and piping furiously. Wounded, torn open,
+flying this way and that, right, left, upward, downward, banging
+against the trees blindly, and croaking with pain, this crow at length
+fell dead, with his eyes pecked out, across Halewyn's saddle. Having
+looked at it a moment, he tossed it aside into the road; while the
+sparrow flew off to a bough, and there, shaking out his feathers
+merrily, fell a-piping at the top of his voice in celebration of
+his victory.
+
+"Ah," said Magtelt, laughing to the sparrow, "thou art of noble blood,
+little bird; come hither, I will find thee a fair cage and give thee
+thy fill of wheat, millet, hemp, and linseed."
+
+But Halewyn became mightily angry: "Common little insolent!" he cried,
+"would that I had thee in a snare! Shouldst not then sing for long
+thy victory over this noble crow."
+
+None the less the sparrow went on singing without a break, and in
+this wise seemed to mock at Halewyn, who said to Magtelt:
+
+"Dost dare to applaud and give heart to this little animal,
+knowing that my shield bears on it the crow of my glorious ancestor
+Dirk! Knowest thou not that like him thou hast but little longer
+to sing?"
+
+"I," she said, "shall sing as long as it pleases God, my master."
+
+"There is for thee," said he, "no other master than I, for here I
+rule alone." Suddenly he turned very cold, for the heart of Anne-Mie,
+though it still beat, was become like ice in his breast. So, thinking
+that this heart was about to dry up, he said to Magtelt: "Thou comest
+in good season, fair virgin."
+
+"Whom God leads," said she, "comes always in good season."
+
+"But," he said, "who art thou, riding in my land, singing and winding
+the horn, who bringest hither such insolent talk?"
+
+"I," said she, "am the Lady Magtelt, daughter of Roel le Preux,
+Lord of Heurne."
+
+"And," said he, "art thou not chilled, riding thus in the snow?"
+
+"None," she said, "feels the cold in the race of the Lords of Heurne."
+
+"And," said he, "hast thou no fear, here at my side and on my own land,
+where no one dares to set foot?"
+
+"None," she said, "knows of fear in the race of the Lords of Heurne."
+
+"Thou art," said he, "a brave maid."
+
+"I," she said, "am daughter of Roel le Preux, Lord of Heurne."
+
+He answered nothing to that, and they went on a while without speaking.
+
+Suddenly he said, lifting his head arrogantly: "Am I not truly the
+Invincible, the Beautiful, the Strong? Shall I not be so always? Yes,
+for all things come to my aid in the hour of victory. In former times
+I must needs sing, in cold, snow, wind, and darkness, to call virgins
+to me, but now the most proud, noble, and beautiful of maids comes
+hither in broad day without song to call her: sure sign of growing
+power. Who is my equal? None, save God. He has the heavens and I the
+earth, and over all living things triumph and mastery. Let come what
+may, armies, lightning, thunder, tempest; who can stand but I?"
+
+"I!" answered to his hideous blasphemy seven voices speaking together.
+
+Those voices were the echo of the Seven Giants, which sent back every
+sound seven times over with great force and volume.
+
+But the Miserable: "Hark!" said he, "my Lord Echo dares to mock
+the Invincible."
+
+And he burst out laughing.
+
+But the echo burst out laughing likewise, and laughed loud, long,
+and terribly.
+
+And Halewyn appeared well pleased at the noise, and went on laughing,
+with the seven echoes after him.
+
+And it seemed to Magtelt as it were a thousand men hidden in the
+forest.
+
+And meanwhile the hound had taken fright and howled so desperately
+that it seemed to Magtelt as it were a thousand hounds in the forest
+crying out to death.
+
+The Miserable's horse had taken fright also, and was so terrified
+at his master's laughter, the dog's howls, and his own neighing,
+all ringing out together, that he plunged, reared, stood up on
+his hind legs like a man, laid back his ears with fear, and would,
+without doubt, have thrown Halewyn from his back, if, driving him
+onward with his spurs, he had not made him pass by force the place
+of the seven echoes.
+
+But Schimmel had not moved at all, and this strangely enough, for he
+was a young horse, apt to be alarmed.
+
+When the noise was over they rode on their way, speaking few words
+together as they rode.
+
+And together they came to the Gallows-field.
+
+
+
+
+XXX. How Magtelt came to the Gallows-field.
+
+There Magtelt saw the sixteen virgins hanging, and amongst them
+Anne-Mie, and all were covered over with snow.
+
+Halewyn's horse began again to rear, plunge, and lay back his ears
+as a sign of fear; but Schimmel neighed, and pawed the ground proudly
+with his hoof.
+
+And Halewyn said to Magtelt: "Thou hast there an unfaithful friend,
+who can neigh happily at the hour of thy death."
+
+But Magtelt answered nothing, and looking steadfastly at those poor
+virgins prayed to the very strong God to help her in their revenge.
+
+Meanwhile the Miserable alighted from his horse, and taking the golden
+sickle in his hand came towards Magtelt.
+
+"It is," he said, "the hour of thy death. Get down, therefore, as I
+have done."
+
+And in his impatience he would have lifted her from Schimmel's back.
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Leave me," she said, "to get down by myself; if I must die 'twill
+be without weeping."
+
+"Thou art a fine girl," said he.
+
+And she, having dismounted from her horse, said: "My lord, before
+thou strikest, doff thine opperst-kleed of the colour of corn, for
+the blood of virgins gushes fiercely, and if mine should stain thee
+I should be grieved."
+
+But before the opperst-kleed was off his shoulders, his head fell to
+the ground at his feet.
+
+And Magtelt, looking at the body, said: "He strode confidently,
+thinking himself invincible; but when the beast goes with assurance
+the hunter follows more easily."
+
+And she crossed herself.
+
+
+
+
+XXXI. Of the sixteen deaths and of the Prince of the Stones.
+
+Suddenly the head spoke, saying: "Go thou to the end of the road,
+and sound my horn aloud, so that my friends may hear."
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"To the end of the road will I not go; thine horn will I not sound;
+murderer's counsel will I not follow."
+
+"Ah," said the head, "if thou art not the Virgin without pity, join
+me to my body, and with the heart that is in my breast anoint my
+red wound."
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"I am the Virgin without pity; to thy body will I not join thee, and
+with the heart that is in thy breast will I not anoint thy red wound."
+
+"Maid," said the head, weeping and speaking with great terror,
+"maid, quickly, quickly, make on my body the sign of the cross,
+and carry me into my castle, for he is coming."
+
+While the head was speaking, suddenly came out of the wood the Prince
+of the Stones, and he came and seated himself on the body of the
+Miserable, and taking in his hands the head: "Salutation," he said,
+"to the Ill-favoured one; art thou now content? What of thy triumphant
+bearing, my lord the Invincible? She whom thou calledst not came
+without a song: the virgin without fear, in whose hands is death. But
+thou must sing once again thy sweet song, the song to call virgins."
+
+"Ah," said the head, "make me not sing, Lord Prince of the Stones,
+for I know well enough that at the end there is great suffering."
+
+"Sing," said the Prince of the Stones, "sing, coward that hast never
+wept to do evil, and now weepest at the time of punishment: sing,
+Miserable."
+
+"Ah," said the head, "have pity, Lord."
+
+"Sing," said the Prince of the Stones, "sing, 'tis the hour of God."
+
+"My lord Prince," said the head, "be not so hard in my evil hour."
+
+"Sing, Miserable," said the Prince of the Stones, "sing, 'tis the
+hour of the reckoning."
+
+"Ah," said the head, weeping, "I will sing, since you are my master."
+
+And the head sang the faery song.
+
+And suddenly there spread abroad in the air a smell of cinnamon,
+frankincense, and sweet marjoram.
+
+And the sixteen virgins, hearing the song, came down from the gallows
+and drew near to the body of Halewyn.
+
+And Magtelt, crossing herself, watched them pass, but felt no fear.
+
+And the first virgin, who was the daughter of the poor simpleton, Claes
+the Dog-beater, took the golden sickle, and cutting into the breast
+of the Miserable below the left nipple drew out a great ruby, and put
+this on her wound, where it melted into rich red blood in her breast.
+
+And the head let a great pitiful cry of pain.
+
+"So," said the Prince of the Stones, "did the poor virgins cry out
+when thou madest them pass from life unto death; sixteen times hast
+thou brought death about, sixteen times shalt thou die, besides the
+death thou hast suffered already. The cry is the cry of the body
+when the soul leaves it; sixteen times hast thou drawn this cry from
+other bodies, sixteen times shall cry out thine own; sing, Miserable,
+to call the virgins to the reckoning."
+
+And the head sang again the faery song, while the first virgin walked
+away silently towards the wood like a living person.
+
+And the second virgin came to the body of the Miserable and did to
+it as the first had done.
+
+And she also walked away into the wood like a living person.
+
+So did each of the sixteen virgins, and for each of them a ruby was
+changed into good red blood.
+
+And sixteen times the head sang the faery song, and sixteen times
+gave the death-cry.
+
+And one by one all the virgins went away into the depth of the wood.
+
+And the last of all, who was Anne-Mie, came to Magtelt, and kissing
+her right hand wherein she had held the sword: "Blessed be thou,"
+she said, "who camest without fear, and, delivering us from the spell,
+leadest us into paradise."
+
+"Ah," said Magtelt, "must thou go so far away, Anne-Mie?"
+
+But Anne-Mie, without hearing her, passed like the others into the
+depth of the wood, walking silently over the snow like a living person.
+
+While the head was weeping and uttering bitter plaints, came out
+from the forest the child of nine years old, whom the Miserable had
+killed first of all. Still wearing her shroud she approached and fell
+at the feet of the mannikin Prince of the Stones.
+
+"Ah," she said, kissing the head tenderly, stroking it, caressing it,
+and wiping away its tears, "poor Miserable, I will pray for thee to
+the very good God, who readily hears the prayers of children."
+
+And the girl prayed in this wise:
+
+"Dear Lord, see how much he is suffering! Is it not payment enough that
+he should die sixteen times? Ah, Lord, sweet Lord, and you, Madam Mary,
+who are so kind, deign to hear me and grant him forgiveness."
+
+But the mannikin, starting up, pushed the child away and said
+harshly: "This head is mine, thy prayers avail nothing; be off,
+little ragamuffin, go back whence thou came."
+
+And the child went away like the other maids into the depth of
+the wood.
+
+Then he thrust his hand into the breast of the Miserable and pulled
+out a heart of stone: then, in his rasping voice, which hissed like
+a viper and scraped like a thousand pebbles under the iron sole of
+an armed man, he said: "Ambitious heart, heart of stone, thou wast in
+thy lifetime cruel and a coward; thou couldst not be content with such
+ample gifts as God in His bounty had given thee, thou hadst no desire
+towards goodness, courage, or just dealing, but towards gold, power,
+and vain honours; thou hadst no love for anything, neither father,
+mother, brother, nor sister; and so, to get more power and higher
+jurisdiction, thou killedst the people of the land of Flanders,
+without shame: and so also thou didst set thyself to hurt the weak,
+sucking thy life from their life, and thy blood from their blood. So
+have done and so shall always do this reptile order of ambitious ugly
+men. Blessed be God, who, by the hands of this frail and winsome maid,
+has cut off thine head from thy neck and taken thee from the world."
+
+As he spoke he had thrown the heart down into the snow, and trampling
+over it with great despite, kicking it with his toe like a vile thing,
+and laughing bitterly, he spoke again in his rasping voice:
+
+"Stone thou art, stone shalt thou be a thousand years, but a live
+stone, a suffering stone. And when men come and carve thee, cleave
+thee, grind thee to powder, thou shalt endure it all without being
+able to cry out. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and bleed,
+my cousin.
+
+"Thou hast starved poor folk, so shalt thou starve a thousand years;
+thou hast brought cold into their homes, thou shalt freeze in like
+manner. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and bleed, my cousin.
+
+"Thou shalt be a hearth-stone and burn with the heat; paving-stone,
+and let men walk over thee; stone of a church, and bear upon thee all
+the weight of the building; and thou shalt suffer every evil, pain,
+and anguish. Ambitious heart, heart of stone, suffer and endure,
+my cousin."
+
+Having said this the Prince of the Stones, driving before him with his
+foot the Miserable's heart, disappeared among the trees of the forest.
+
+Then Magtelt looked at the head, and saw that its eyes were open
+wide. She took it up and washed it with snow, then, carrying it with
+her, rode away on Schimmel, leaving near the body Halewyn's horse and
+hound, the one moaning softly, the other watching it with sorrowful
+wonderment.
+
+As she took up the head, the hound growled, but did not dare touch her.
+
+And while she rode away, horse and hound stayed by the body, downcast
+and sad, and covered with the snow which fell without ceasing.
+
+And they seemed to be guarding their master.
+
+
+
+
+XXXII. How father, mother, and sister sought everywhere their son
+and brother, and could not find him.
+
+Singing and winding her horn rides the noble maid Magtelt.
+
+And in her heart is joy, at the thought that Anne-Mie, the fifteen
+virgins, and Toon the Silent are avenged.
+
+And her hand holds fast beneath her keirle the good sword and the
+head of Halewyn.
+
+And Schimmel trots quickly, eager to be back in his stable.
+
+While she was riding she saw, through the thick snow falling, an old
+man coming towards her on a black horse.
+
+And the old man said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my son Halewyn?"
+
+And Magtelt:
+
+"I left thy son Halewyn well placed, taking his diversion in the snow
+with sixteen maidens."
+
+And the old man rode on.
+
+When she had gone farther she saw, through the thick snow falling,
+a young and rosy-cheeked damosel coming towards her on a white palfrey.
+
+And the damosel said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my brother Halewyn?"
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Go farther, to the Gallows-field, where thou shalt see thy brother
+in like guise to the sixteen maidens."
+
+And the damosel rode on.
+
+Farther still on her way, Magtelt saw, through the thick snow falling,
+a young man of haughty and stiff-necked countenance coming towards
+her on a roan charger.
+
+And the young man said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my brother Halewyn?"
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Thy brother is a fair lord, so fair that round him sixteen maidens
+stand sentinel, unwilling to let him go."
+
+And the young man rode on.
+
+After travelling on her way still farther, she saw, through the thick
+snow falling, an old woman, high-coloured and of robust seeming,
+despite her great age, coming towards her.
+
+And the old woman said:
+
+"Beautiful maid, riding so fast, hast seen my son Halewyn?"
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Thy son Siewert Halewyn is dead; see, here is his head beneath my
+keirle, and his blood running thick on my dress."
+
+And the old woman cried out:
+
+"If thou had spoken these words earlier thou shouldst not have ridden
+so far."
+
+But Magtelt:
+
+"Thou art fortunate, old woman, in that I have left thee thine own
+body and not slain thee as I have thy son."
+
+And the old dame took fright and made off.
+
+And night fell.
+
+
+
+
+XXXIII. Of the feast in the castle of Heurne, and of the head upon
+the table.
+
+Schimmel trotted quickly, and soon Magtelt reached her father's castle
+and there sounded the horn.
+
+Josse van Ryhove, who was gate-keeper that night, was filled with
+amazement at the sight of her. Then he cried out: "Thanks be to God,
+'tis our damosel come home again."
+
+And all the household ran to the gate crying out likewise with great
+noise and much shouting: "Our damosel is come home."
+
+Magtelt, going into the great hall, went to Sir Roel and knelt
+before him:
+
+"My lord father," she said, "here is the head of Siewert Halewyn."
+
+Sir Roel, taking the head in his hands and looking at it well, was
+so overcome with joy that he wept for the first time since the eyes
+were in his head.
+
+And the Silent, rising up, came to Magtelt, kissed her right hand
+wherewith she had held the sword, and wept likewise, saying: "Thanks
+be to thee who hast brought about the reckoning."
+
+The lady Gonde was like a woman drunk with joy, and could not find
+her tongue. At last, bursting into sobs, melting into tears, and
+embracing Magtelt eagerly:
+
+"Ah, ah," she cried out, "kiss me, kiss me, kiss me, little
+one! She has slain the Miserable, the sweet maid; the nightingale
+has vanquished the falcon! My child is come home again, home again
+my child. Noel! Thanks be to God who loves aged mothers and will not
+have them robbed of their children. Noel! See, Magtelt the beautiful,
+Magtelt the singing-bird, Magtelt the joyous, Magtelt the bright
+of heart, Magtelt the glorious, Magtelt the victorious, Magtelt my
+daughter, my child, my all, Noel!"
+
+And Magtelt smiled at her, caressing her and stroking her hands gently.
+
+And the lady Gonde, weeping freely, let her do, without speaking.
+
+"Ah," said Sir Roel, "I never saw my wife before in such festival
+mood." Then suddenly he cried out:
+
+"Festival," quoth he, "this should be a day of festival, the great
+feast of the house of Heurne!"
+
+And he threw open the door to call his pages, grooms, men-at-arms,
+and all the household.
+
+But they all held back, not daring to enter.
+
+"Ho!" cried he, in his great joyous voice, "where are cooks and
+kitchen-maids? Where are cauldrons, pots, and frying-pans? Where are
+barrels, kegs, flagons and bottles, tankards, mugs, and goblets? Where
+is clauwaert simple and double? Where is old wine and new wine? Where
+are hams and sausages, whales' tongues, and loins of beef, meat of the
+air, meat of the waters, and meat of the fields? Bring in everything
+there is and set it on the table, for this must be a feast-day in this
+house, feast for an emperor, a king, a prince; for"--and so saying
+he held up the Miserable's head by the hair--"our beloved maid has
+slain with her own hand the lord Siewert Halewyn."
+
+Hearing this they all cried out with a roar like thunder:
+
+"Praise be to God! Noel to our damosel!"
+
+"Go then," said Sir Roel, "and do as I have bid."
+
+And when the great feast was served the head was put in the middle
+of the table.
+
+On the morrow there was let cry war in the seigneury of Heurne. And
+Sir Roel went with a goodly force of men to attack by arms the castle
+of the Miserable, whereof all the relatives, friends, and followers
+were either hanged or slain.
+
+And My Lord the Count gave to the family of Heurne, the goods,
+titles and territories of Halewyn, excepting only the ugly shield,
+and theirs they remain to this day.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+SMETSE SMEE
+
+
+I. Of Smetse, his belly, and his forge.
+
+Smetse Smee lived in the good town of Ghent, on the Quai aux Oignons,
+beside the fair River Lys.
+
+He was well skilled in his trade, rich in bodily fat, and with so jolly
+a countenance that the most melancholy of men were cheered and took
+heart for no more than the sight of him in his smithy, trotting about
+on his short legs, head up and belly forward, seeing to everything.
+
+When work was in full swing in his shop, Smetse, listening to the
+busy sounds round the fire, would say, with his hands clasped across
+his stomach, quietly and happily: "By Artevelde! what are drums,
+cymbals, fifes, viols, and bagpipes worth? For heavenly music give
+me my sledges beating, my anvils ringing, my bellows roaring, my good
+workmen singing and hammering."
+
+Then, speaking to them all: "Courage," he would say, "my children! Who
+works well from daybreak drinks the better for it at vespers. Whose is
+that feeble arm down there, tapping with his hammer so gently? Does
+he think he is cracking eggs, the faint-heart? To those bars, Dolf,
+and plunge them in the water. To that breastplate, Pier, beat it out
+for us fine and true: iron well beaten is proof against bullets. To
+that plough-share, Flipke, and good work to it, too: from the plough
+comes the world's bread. To the door, Toon, here comes the raw-boned
+nag of Don Sancio d'Avila, the knight with the sour countenance,
+brought hither by his raw-boned groom, who is for having him shod,
+no doubt: let him pay double for his Spanish haughtiness and his
+harshness to poor folk!"
+
+So went Smetse about his smithy, singing mostly, and whistling
+when he was not singing. And for the rest getting much honest gain,
+profiting in health, and, at vespers, drinking bruinbier with a will
+in the inn of Pensaert.
+
+
+
+
+II. How Slimbroek the Red put out the fire in Smetse's forge.
+
+By and by there came to the Quai aux Oignons a certain Adriaen
+Slimbroek, who set up, with the licence of the guild, another
+smithy. This Slimbroek was an ugly, wizened, lean and puny personage,
+white-faced, underhung in the jaw like a fox, and nicknamed the Red
+on account of the colour of his hair.
+
+Skilled in intrigue, expert in sharp-practice, master of arts in cant
+and hypocrisy, and making himself out to be the finest of smiths, he
+had interested in his business all the rich and gentle folk of the
+town, who from fear or otherwise held to the Spaniards and wished
+ill to those of the reformed faith. They were before, for the most
+part, customers of Smetse, but Slimbroek had put them against him,
+saying: "This Smetse is a knave to the bottom of his heart, he was a
+marauder in his young days, sailing the seas with the men of Zeeland
+in despite of Spain, on the side of this religion which they call
+reformed. He still has many friends and relatives in Walcheren, more
+particularly at Middelburg, Arnemuiden, Camp-Veere, and Flushing,
+all obstinate Protestants, and speaking of the Pope of Rome and my
+Lords the Archdukes without veneration.
+
+"And for the rest," added he, "this fellow Smetse is altogether an
+atheist, reading the bible of Antwerp in despite of the decrees,
+and going to church only because he is afraid, and not at all because
+he will."
+
+By such slanders as these Slimbroek robbed Smetse of all his customers.
+
+And soon the fire was out in the forge of the good smith, and soon,
+too, the savings were eaten up, and Dame Misery came to the dwelling.
+
+
+
+
+III. Wherein Slimbroek is seen in the river prettily tricked out.
+
+Brought to this pass Smetse, nevertheless, would not let himself take
+to despair; but he was always sad and heavy of heart when, sitting
+in his cold smithy and looking at all his good tools lying idle on
+the ground, he heard the fair sound of hammers and anvils coming from
+Slimbroek's shop.
+
+But what angered him most was that whenever he passed before
+Slimbroek's dwelling the traitor carrot-head would appear suddenly
+on the threshold, and, saluting him graciously and giving him fair
+compliments, would make a hundred flattering speeches, accompanied
+by as many hypocritical salutations, and all for the sake of poking
+fun at him and to laugh unkindly at his misery.
+
+These ugly encounters and grimaces went on a long while, and Smetse
+came to the end of his patience: "Ah," said he, "it angers me to
+be in such poor case; although I must submit, for such is the holy
+will of God. But it irks me too bitterly to see this wicked knave,
+who by his trickeries has taken away all my customers, so amusing
+himself with my misery."
+
+Meanwhile Slimbroek spared him not at all, and each day became sharper
+in speech, for the more wrong he did to the good smith the more hate
+he bore him.
+
+And Smetse swore to have his revenge on him, in such a way as to
+spoil thenceforward his taste for mockery.
+
+It so happened that one Sunday when he was standing on the Quai des
+Bateliers, looking at the river with a crowd of watermen, townsfolk,
+boys, and scholars who were idle for the holy day, suddenly there came
+out of a pothouse, wherein he had been swallowing many pints of ale,
+Slimbroek, bolder than usual on account of the drink. Seeing Smetse
+he came and placed himself close to him, and with much gesticulation,
+loud bursts of talk and laughter, said to him in an insolent tone:
+"Good day, Smetse, good day, my worthy friend. How is thy fine face? It
+seems to lose its fat, which was of good quality, Smetse. 'Tis a
+great pity. What is the reason for it? Art thou angry at the loss of
+thy customers, Smetse? Thou must drink well to bring back the joy to
+thy stomach, Smetse. We never see thee now at vespers in the inn of
+Pensaert; why, Smetse? Hast no pennies to get drink? I have plenty
+for thee, if thou wilt, Smetse." And he shook his money-bag to make
+it ring.
+
+"Thank thee kindly," said Smetse, "thou art too generous, Master
+Slimbroek, 'tis my turn to stand thee drink now."
+
+"Ah," cried Slimbroek, feigning pity and compassion, "why wilt thou
+stand drink to me? The world knows thou art not rich, Smetse."
+
+"Rich enough," answered the smith, "to stand thee the best draught
+thou ever had."
+
+"Hark to him," said Slimbroek to the crowd of watermen and townsfolk,
+"hark to him. Smetse will stand us drink! The world is coming to an
+end. 'Tis the year of golden rags. Smetse will stand us drink! Ah! I
+shall taste with great pleasure the bruinbier that Smetse will stand
+us. I am thirsty as an African desert, thirsty as Sunday, thirsty as
+a devil half-boiled in the cauldrons of Lucifer."
+
+"Drink then, Slimbroek," said Smetse, and threw him into the river.
+
+Seeing this the people who were on the quay applauded heartily, and
+all ran to the edge to have a good look at Slimbroek, who, falling
+into the water head first, had struck and broken through the belly
+of a dog a long while dead, which was floating down on the stream
+as such carrion will. And he was tricked out round the neck with
+this dog in a most marvellous manner, nor could he get rid of it,
+being busy with his arms at keeping himself afloat, and his face was
+smeared all over with offensive matter.
+
+Notwithstanding that he was half-blinded, he dared not come out on
+to the quay where Smetse was, but swam off towards the other bank,
+decked with his carrion and blowing like a hundred devils.
+
+"Well," said Smetse, "dost find the bruinbier to thy liking; is it
+not the best in all the land of Flanders? But my good sir, take off
+thy bonnet to drink; such headgear is not worn for river parties."
+
+When Slimbroek was in midstream, over against the bridge, Smetse
+went up on to this bridge with the other onlookers, and Slimbroek,
+in the midst of his puffing and snorting, cried out to Smetse:
+"I'll have thee hanged, accursed reformer!"
+
+"Ah," said the good smith, "you are mistaken, my friend; 'tis not I
+who am the reformer, but you, who devise these new bonnets. Where got
+you this one? I have never seen such a one, neither so beautiful,
+nor so richly ornamented with tufts and hangings. Is the fashion
+coming to Ghent by and by?"
+
+Slimbroek answered nothing, and struggled to get rid of the dead dog,
+but in vain, and having paused in his swimming for this purpose,
+went down to the bottom, and came up again more furious than ever,
+blowing harder, and trying all the while to tear off the body."
+
+"Leave your hat on, my master," said Smetse, "do not so put yourself
+out in order to salute me, I am not worth the trouble. Leave it on."
+
+At last Slimbroek climbed out of the water. On the quay he shook off
+the dog hastily and made away as fast as he could to his dwelling. But
+he was followed by a crowd of young watermen and boys, who ran after
+him hooting, whistling, covering him with mud and other filth. And
+they continued to do the same to his house-front after he had gone in.
+
+
+
+
+IV. Of the two branches.
+
+In this wise Smetse had his revenge on Slimbroek, who thereafter
+dared not look him in the face, and hid when he passed.
+
+But the good smith, nevertheless, had no more pleasure in anything
+than before, for with every passing day he became more and more needy,
+having already, with his wife, used up what help came to them from
+the guild, and also a small sum of silver from Middelburg in Walcheren.
+
+Ashamed to get his living by begging and knavery, and knowing how to
+bear with his lot no longer, he resolved to kill himself.
+
+So one night he left his house, and went out to the moats of the
+town, which are bordered by fine trees, forked and spreading down
+to the ground. There he fastened a stone to his neck, commended his
+soul to God, and, stepping back three paces to get a better start,
+ran and jumped.
+
+But while he was in the very act he was caught suddenly by two
+branches, which, falling upon his shoulders, gripped him like man's
+hands and held him fast where he was. These branches were neither
+cold nor hard, as wood naturally is, but supple and warm. And he
+heard at the same instant a strange and scoffing voice saying:
+"Where goest thou, Smetse?"
+
+But he could not answer by reason of his great astonishment.
+
+And although there was no wind the trunks and branches of the tree
+moved and swung about like serpents uncoiling, while all around there
+crackled above ten hundred thousand sparks.
+
+And Smetse grew more afraid, and a hot breath passed across his face,
+and the voice, speaking again, but nearer, or so it seemed, repeated:
+"Where goest thou, Smetse?"
+
+But he could not speak for fear, and because his throttle was dry
+and his teeth chattering.
+
+"Why," said the voice, "dost not dare answer him who wishes thee
+naught but well? Where goest thou, Smetse?"
+
+Hearing so pleasant and friendly a speech, the good smith took heart
+and answered with great humility: "Lord whom I cannot see, I was
+going to kill myself, for life is no longer bearable."
+
+"Smetse is mad," said the voice.
+
+"So I am, if you will, Lord," answered the smith; "nevertheless when
+my smithy is lost to me by the cunning of a wicked neighbour, and I
+have no way to live but by begging and knavery, 'twould be greater
+madness in me to live than to die."
+
+"Smetse," said the voice, "is mad to wish himself dead, for he shall
+have again, if he will, his fair smithy, his good red fire, his good
+workmen, and as many golden royals in his coffers as he sees sparks
+in this tree."
+
+"I," exclaimed the smith in great delight, "shall never have such
+fine things as that! They are not for such miserables as I."
+
+"Smetse," said the voice, "all things are possible to my master."
+
+"Ah," said the smith, "you come from the devil, Lord?"
+
+"Yes," answered the voice, "and I come to thee on his account to
+propose a bargain: For seven years thou shalt be rich, thou shalt
+have thy smithy the finest in the town of Ghent; thou shalt win gold
+enough to pave the Quai aux Oignons; thou shalt have in thy cellars
+enough beer and wine to wet all the dry throttles in Flanders; thou
+shalt eat the finest meats and the most delicate game; thou shalt have
+hams in plenty, sausages in abundance, mince-pies in heaps; every
+one shall respect thee, admire thee, sing thy praises; Slimbroek at
+the sight of it shall be filled with rage; and for all these great
+benefits thou hast only to give us thy soul at the end of seven years."
+
+"My soul?" said Smetse, "'tis the only thing I have; would you not,
+My Lord Devil, make me rich at a less price?"
+
+"Wilt thou or wilt thou not, smith?" said the voice.
+
+"Ah," answered Smetse, "you offer me things that are very desirable,
+even, My Lord Devil (if I may say it without offence), more than
+I wish; for if I might have only my forge and enough customers to
+keep the fire alight I should be happier than My Lord Albert or
+Madam Isabella."
+
+"Take or leave it, smith," said the voice.
+
+"Lord Devil," answered Smetse, "I beg you not to become angry with
+me, but to deign to consider that if you give me but my forge, and
+not all this gold, wine, and meats, you might perhaps be content to
+let my soul burn for a thousand years, which time is not at all to
+be compared with the great length of all eternity, but would seem
+long enough to whomever must pass it in the fire."
+
+"Thy forge for thee, thy soul for us; take or leave it, smith,"
+said the voice.
+
+"Ah," lamented Smetse, "'tis dear bought, and no offence to you,
+Lord Devil."
+
+"Well then, smith," said the voice, "to riches thou preferest
+beggary? Do as thou wilt. Ah, thou wilt have great joy when, walking
+with thy melancholy countenance about the streets of Ghent, thou art
+fled by every one and dogs snap at thy heels; when thy wife dies of
+hunger, and thou chantest mea culpa in vain; then when, alone in the
+world, thou beatest on thy shrunken belly the drum for a feast, and
+the little girls dancing to such music give thee a slap in the face
+for payment; then, at last, when thou dost hide thyself in thy house
+so that thy rags shall not be seen in the town, and there, scabby,
+chatter-tooth, vermin-fodder, thou diest alone on thy dung-hill like a
+leper, and art put into the earth, and Slimbroek comes to make merry
+at thy downfall."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "he would do it, the knave."
+
+"Do not await this vile end," said the voice, "it were better to die
+now: leap into the water, Smetse; leap, Smee."
+
+"Alas," lamented he, "if I give myself to you, I shall burn for
+all eternity."
+
+"Thou wilt not burn," said the voice, "but serve us for food,
+good smith."
+
+"I?" cried Smetse, much frightened at these words, "do you think to
+eat me down there? I am not good for eating, I must tell you. There
+is no meat more sour, tough, common, and vulgar than mine is. It has
+been at one time and another diseased with plague, itch, and other vile
+maladies. Ah, I should make you a shabby feast, you and the others, My
+Lord Devil, who have in hell so many souls which are noble, succulent,
+tasty, and well-fed. But mine is not at all good, I declare."
+
+"Thou art wrong, smith," said the voice. "Souls of wicked emperors,
+kings, princes, popes, famous captains of arms, conquerors, slayers
+of men, and other brigands, are always as hard as an eagle's beak;
+for so their omnipotence fashions them; we break our teeth off bit
+by bit in eating them. Others, having been eaten up beforehand by
+ambition and cruelty, which are like ravenous worms, give us hardly
+a crumb to pick. Souls of girls who, without want or hunger, sell
+for money what nature bids them give for nothing, are so rotten,
+putrid, and evil-smelling that the hungriest of devils will not touch
+them. Souls of vain men are bladders, and within there is nothing
+but wind; 'tis poor food. Souls of hypocrites, canters, liars, are
+like beautiful apples without, but beneath the skin are full of bile,
+gall, sour wine, and frightful poison; none of us will have any ado
+with them. Souls of envious men are as toads, who from spleen at
+being so ugly, run yellow spittle on whatever is clean and shining,
+from mouth, feet, and all their bodies. Souls of gluttons are naught
+but cow-dung. Souls of good drinkers are always tasty, and above all
+when they have about them the heavenly smell of good wine and good
+bruinbier. But there is no soul so tasty, delectable, succulent,
+or of such fine flavour as that of a good woman, a good workman,
+or a good smith such as thou. For, working without intermission,
+they have no time for sin to touch and stain them, unless it be once
+or twice only, and for this reason we catch them whenever we can;
+but 'tis a rare dish, kept for the royal table of My Lord Lucifer."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "you have made up your mind to eat me, I see well
+enough; nevertheless 'twould not cost you much to give me back my
+forge for nothing."
+
+"'Tis no great discomfort," said the voice, "to be so eaten, for My
+Lord and King has a mouth larger than had the fish whereby Jonah the
+Jew was swallowed in olden time; thou wilt go down like an oyster
+into his stomach, without having been wounded by his teeth in any
+wise; there, if it displease thee to stay, thou must dance with
+feet and hands as hard as thou canst, and My Lord will at once spit
+thee out, for he will not find it possible to stand for long such
+a drubbing. Falling at his feet thou wilt show him a joyous face,
+a steady look in his eyes, and a good countenance, and the same to
+Madam Astarte, who, without a doubt, will take thee for her pet, as
+she has done already to several; thereafter thou wilt have a joyous
+time, serving My Lady merrily and brushing his hair for My Lord;
+as for the rest of us, we shall be right glad to have you with us,
+for, among all these familiar vile and ugly faces of conquerors,
+plunderers, thieves, and assassins, 'twill do us good to see the
+honest countenance of a merry smith, as thou art."
+
+"My Lord Devil," said Smetse, "I do not merit such honour. I can
+well believe, from what you tell me, that 'tis pleasant enough down
+there with you. But I should be ill at ease, I must tell you, being
+naturally uncouth in the company of strangers; and so I should bring
+no joy with me, and should not be able to sing; and therefore you
+would get but poor amusement from me, I know in advance. Ah, give
+me back rather my good forge and my old customers, and hold me quit;
+this would be the act of a royal devil and would sit well upon you."
+
+Suddenly the voice spoke with anger: "Smith, wilt thou pay us in such
+ape's coin? Life is no longer of benefit to thee, death is abhorrent,
+and thou wouldst have from us without payment the seven full, rich and
+joyous years which I offer thee. Accept or refuse, thy forge for thee,
+thy soul for us, under the conditions I have told thee."
+
+"Alas," said Smetse, "then I will have it so, since it must be,
+Lord Devil!"
+
+"Well then," said the voice, "set thy mark in blood to this deed."
+
+And a black parchment, with a crow's quill, fell from the tree at the
+smith's feet. He read on the parchment, in letters of fire, the pact
+of seven years, opened his arm with his knife, and signed with the
+crow's quill. And while he was still holding the parchment and the
+quill, he felt them suddenly snatched from his hands with violence,
+but he saw nothing, and only heard a noise as of a man running in
+slipper-shoes, and the voice saying as it went into the distance:
+"Thou hast the seven years, Smetse." And the tree ceased its swaying,
+and the sparks in the branches went out.
+
+
+
+
+V. Of the flaming ball, of the forge relit, and of the terrible great
+buffet which the man with the lantern gave to Smetse's wife.
+
+Smetse, greatly amazed, rubbed his eyes, thinking he was
+dreaming. Suddenly shaking himself: "This devil," said he, "was he
+not making fun of me after all? Have I verily gotten my good forge
+back again? I will go and see."
+
+Having said this he started running in haste, and from far away saw a
+great light reddening the sky above the houses, and it seemed to him
+that the fire sending up this light was on the Quai aux Oignons; and
+he said to himself: "Could that be my forge?" And he ran the faster.
+
+Coming to the quay he found it lit up as if by a sun, from the
+paving-stones up to the tops of the trees which stood alongside,
+and he said to himself: "It is my forge."
+
+Then he was seized and shaken with joy, his legs failed him, and his
+breath grew short; but he kept running as hard as he could, and coming
+at last to his house he saw his smithy wide open as in the daytime,
+and at the back of it a great bright fire.
+
+Unable to contain himself at this sight he fell to dancing, leaping,
+and bursting out into laughter, crying: "I have my forge, my own
+forge! Ghent is mine!" Then he went in. Inspecting, examining, touching
+everything, he saw at the sides, laid out in good order, iron of all
+kinds: armour-iron, iron bars, plough-iron. "By Artevelde!" he said,
+"the devil was not lying!" And he took up a bar, and having made it
+red with the fire, which was done quickly, started beating it, making
+the hammer ring on the anvil like thunder, and crying: "Ha, so I have
+my good tools back again, and hear once more this good music which
+has so long been silent!" And while he was wiping away a tear of joy,
+which gave an unaccustomed wetness to his eye, he saw on a chest near
+by a good pewter pot standing, and beside it a fine mug, and he filled
+up the mug several times and drank it down with relish: "Ah," he said,
+"the good bruinbier, the drink which makes men! I had lost the taste
+for it! How good it is!" Then he went back to hammering the iron bar.
+
+While he was making all this noise, he heard himself called by name,
+and looking to see whence the voice came he perceived his wife in the
+half-open door which led from the kitchen, thrusting through her head
+and looking at him with a startled face.
+
+"Smetse," she said, "is it thou, my man?"
+
+"Yes, wife," said he.
+
+"Smetse," she said, "come close to me, I dare not set foot in this
+forge."
+
+"And why not, wife?" said he.
+
+"Alas," she said, clinging to him and gazing into the forge, "wert
+thou alone there, my man?"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Ah," she said, "Smetse, while you were away there were strange
+happenings!"
+
+"What happenings, wife?"
+
+"As I was lying in bed," she said, "suddenly the house trembled, and
+a flaming ball passed across our room, went out through the door,
+without hurting anything, down the stairs, and into the forge,
+where, bursting, as I suppose, it made a noise like a hundred
+thunder-claps. Suddenly all the windows and doors were thrown open
+with a great clatter Getting out of bed, I saw the quay all lit up,
+as it is now. Then, thinking that our house was on fire, I came down
+in haste, went into the forge, saw the fire lit, and heard the bellows
+working noisily. In each corner the iron of different kinds arranged
+itself in place according to the work for which it was used; but I
+could see no hands moving it, though there must have been some for
+sure. I began to cry out in a fright, when suddenly I felt, as it were,
+a glove of hot leather pressed against my mouth and holding it shut,
+while a voice said: 'Do not cry out, make no sound, if thou wilt not
+have thy husband burnt alive for the crime of sorcery.' Nevertheless
+he who thus ordered me to keep silent made himself more noise than I
+should ever have dared, but by a miracle none of our neighbours heard
+it. As for me, my man, I had no more heart to make a sound, and I
+fled back hither into the kitchen, where I was praying to God when
+I heard thy voice, and dared to open the door a crack. Oh, my man,
+since thou art here, explain, if thou can, all this tumult."
+
+"Wife," answered Smetse, "we must leave that to those more learned
+than ourselves. Think only to obey the order of the voice: keep thy
+mouth shut, speak to no one of what thou hast seen to-night, and go
+back to thy bed, for it is still pitch-dark."
+
+"I go," she said, "but wilt thou not come also, my man?"
+
+"I cannot leave the forge," said he.
+
+While he was speaking thus there came towards them, one after another,
+a baker carrying new-baked bread, a grocer carrying cheeses, and a
+butcher carrying hams.
+
+Smetse knew well enough that they were devils, from their white faces,
+hollow eyes, scorched hair, twisted fingers, and also from the fact
+that they walked with so little sound.
+
+His wife, amazed to see them coming into her house with all this food,
+would have stopped them, but they slipped between her hands like eels,
+and went into the kitchen, walking straight and silently.
+
+There, without a word spoken, the baker arranged his loaves in the
+pan, while the butcher and grocer put their cheeses and hams in the
+cool-of the cellar. And they finished their work, taking no notice
+of the smith's wife, who kept crying: "'Tis not here you must bring
+these things; you have made a mistake, I tell you, my good men. Go
+elsewhither."
+
+But they, notwithstanding her voice, arranged the loaves, meat,
+and cheeses quietly.
+
+This made the good woman more than ever put out, and she grew angry:
+"I tell you," she exclaimed, "you have made a mistake; do you not
+hear me? You have made a mistake, 'tis not here you should be; I say
+here, with us, in this place, in the house of Smetse the beggar,
+who has not a farthing to his name, who will never pay you. Alas,
+they will not listen to me!"
+
+And crying out at the top of her voice: "Masters, you are at Smetse's,
+do you not understand? Smetse the beggar! Do I not say it loud
+enough? Jesus, Lord, God! Smetse the needy! Smetse the ragged! Smetse
+the starved! Smetse who is rich in nothing but lice! Who will pay you
+nothing: do you hear me? Who will pay you nothing, nothing, nothing!"
+
+"Wife," said the smith, "you are losing your head, my dear. 'Tis I
+who sent for these good men."
+
+"Thou!" said his wife, "thou! but thou art mad, my man; yes, he is mad,
+my masters, altogether mad. Ah, 'tis thou who sent for them! 'Tis
+thou who sendest for loaves, hams, and cheeses in this profusion,
+like a rich man, when thou knowest well enough we cannot pay for them,
+and so showest thy bad faith!"
+
+"Wife," answered Smetse quietly, "we are rich, and will pay for
+everything."
+
+"We rich?" she said, "ah, poor beggar-man. Do I not know what is
+in our chest? Hast ever put thy nose in to see, any more than in
+the bread-pan? Art thou become the housewife? Alas, my man is mad,
+God help us!"
+
+Meanwhile the three men came back into the smithy.
+
+Seeing them again, the wife ran to them: "Master trades-men," said she,
+"you heard me well enough, for you are not deaf, I believe; we have
+nothing, we can pay you nothing; take back your provisions."
+
+But without looking at her, nor seeming to hear her, the three went
+off, walking stiff and silently.
+
+No sooner had they gone out than a brewer's cart drew up at the door,
+and the brewer's men came into the smithy carrying between them a
+great barrel full of bruinbier.
+
+"Smetse," said his wife, "this is too much! Master brewers, this is
+not for us; we do not like beer at all, we drink water. Take this
+barrel to one of our neighbours, it is no concern of ours, I tell you."
+
+None the less the brewer's men took down the barrel of bruinbier into
+the cellar, came up again, and went out to fetch others, and placed
+them alongside the first to the number of twenty. The good wife,
+trying to stop them, was pushed aside, while Smetse could not speak
+for laughing, and could only draw her to his side, and so prevent her
+from hurting herself on the barrels, which the men were carrying from
+street to cellar with marvellous speed and dispatch.
+
+"Oh," she wailed, "let me be! This is too much, Smetse! Alas! Now we
+are worse than beggars, we are debtors, Smetse: I shall go and throw
+myself into the river, my man. To run up debts to fill a famished
+stomach, that is shame enough; but to do so from simple gluttony,
+that is unbearable deceit. Canst thou not be content with bread and
+water got honestly with thy two hands? Art thou then become such a
+delicate feeder that thou must have cakes, fine cheeses, and full
+barrels? Smetse, Smetse, that is not like a good man of Ghent, but
+rather like a Spanish rogue. Oh, I shall go and drown myself, my man!"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, troubled at seeing her in such distress,
+"do not weep. 'Tis all ours, my dear, duly, and by right."
+
+"Ah," she said moaning, "'tis an ill thing to lose in this wise in
+your old age that honesty which was your only crown."
+
+While the smith was endeavouring, but in vain, to console her, there
+entered a vintner followed by three-and-thirty porters, each carrying
+a basket full of bottles containing precious wines of great rarity,
+as was shown by the shape of those said bottles.
+
+When the good wife saw them she was overcome with despair, and her
+courage failed her: "Come in," she said in a piteous voice, "come in,
+master vintners; the cellar is below. You have there a goodly number
+of bottles, six score for certain. That is none too much for us who
+are wealthy, wealthy of misery, vermin, and lice; come in, my masters,
+that is the door of the cellar. Put them all there, and more besides
+if you will."
+
+And giving Smetse a push: "Thou art happy, no doubt," said she, "for
+'tis a fine sight for a drunkard, such as thou art, to see all this
+good wine coming into the house without payment. Ah, he laughs!"
+
+"Yes, wife," said Smetse, "I laugh with content, for the wines are
+ours, ours the meats, ours the loaves and cheeses. Let us make merry
+over it together." And he tried to embrace her: but she, shaking
+herself free: "Oh, oh," she said, "he runs up debts, he tells lies,
+he laughs at his shame: he has all the vices, none is wanting."
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "all this is ours, I tell thee again. To this
+amount am I paid in advance for certain large orders which have been
+graciously given me."
+
+"Art thou not lying?" said she, growing a little calmer.
+
+"No," said he.
+
+"All this is ours?"
+
+"Yes," he said, "by the word of honour of a citizen of Ghent."
+
+"Ah, my man, then we are henceforward out of our trouble."
+
+"Yes, wife," said he.
+
+"'Tis a miracle from God."
+
+"Alas," said he.
+
+"But these men come hither by night, against the usual custom, tell
+me the reason of that."
+
+"He who knows the reason for everything," said Smetse, "is an evil
+prier. Such a one am not I."
+
+"But," said she, "they speak never a word."
+
+"They do not like to talk," said Smetse, "that is clear. Or it may
+be that their master chose them dumb, so that they should not waste
+time chattering with housewives."
+
+"Yes, that may be," she said, while the thirty-first porter was going
+past, "but 'tis very strange, I cannot hear their footfalls, my man?"
+
+"They have for certain," said Smetse, "soles to suit their work."
+
+"But," she said, "their faces are so pale, sad, and motionless,
+that they seem like faces of the dead."
+
+"Night-birds have never a good complexion," said Smetse.
+
+"But," said his wife, "I have never seen these men among the guilds
+of Ghent."
+
+"Thou dost not know them all," said Smetse.
+
+"That may be, my man."
+
+In this manner the smith and his wife held converse together, the one
+very curious and disturbed, the other confused and ashamed at his lies.
+
+Suddenly, as the three-and-thirtieth porter of the master-vintner was
+going out of the door, there rushed in in great haste a man of middling
+height, dressed in a short black smock, pale-haired, large-headed,
+wan-faced, stepping delicately, quick as the wind, stiff as a poker;
+for the rest, smiling continually, and carrying a lantern.
+
+The man came up to Smetse hurriedly, without speaking bade him follow,
+and seized him by the arm. When Smetse hung back he made him a quick
+sign to have no fear, and led him into the garden, whither they were
+followed by the good wife. There he took a spade, gave his lantern
+to Smetse to hold, dug in the earth rapidly and opened a great hole,
+pulled out of the hole a leathern bag, opened it quickly, and with a
+smile showed Smetse and his wife that it was full of gold coin. The
+good wife cried out at the sight of the gold, whereupon he gave her
+a terrible great buffet in the face, smiled again, saluted, turned
+on his heel and went off with his lantern.
+
+The good wife, knocked down by the force of the blow, and quite dazed,
+dared not cry out again, and only moaned softly: "Smetse, Smetse,"
+said she, "where art thou, my man? my cheek hurts me sorely."
+
+Smetse went to her and picked her up, saying: "Wife, let this buffet
+be a lesson to thee henceforward to control thy tongue better; thou
+hast disturbed with thy crying all the good men who have come here
+this night for my good; this last was less patient than the rest and
+punished thee, not without good reason."
+
+"Ah," she said, "I did ill not to obey thee; what must I do now,
+my man?"
+
+"Help me," said Smetse, "to carry the bag into the house."
+
+"That I will," she said.
+
+Having taken in the bag, not without some trouble, they emptied it
+into a coffer.
+
+"Ah," she said, seeing the gold run out of the bag and spread itself
+this way and that, "'tis a fine sight. But who was this man who showed
+thee this sack with such kindness, and who gave me this terrible
+great blow?"
+
+"A friend of mine," said Smetse, "a great discoverer of hidden
+treasure."
+
+"What is his name?" said she.
+
+"That," said Smetse, "I am not allowed to tell thee."
+
+"But, my man..."
+
+"Ah, wife, wife," said Smetse, "thou wilt know too much. Thy
+questioning will be thy death, my dear."
+
+"Alas," said she.
+
+
+
+
+VI. Wherein the wife of Smetse shows the great length of her tongue.
+
+When the day was up, Smetse and his wife sat down together to the
+good loaves, the fat ham, the fine cheese, the double bruinbier,
+and the good wines, and so eased their stomachs, hurt a little by
+being such a long while hungry.
+
+Suddenly there came in all the old workmen, and they said:
+
+"Baes Smetse, thou didst send for us; here we are, right glad to see
+thy fire lit up again, and to work for thee who wast always so good
+a master."
+
+"By Artevelde!" said Smetse, "here they all are: Pier, Dolf, Flipke,
+Toon, Hendrik, and the rest. Good day, my lads!" and he gripped them
+by the hand, "we must drink."
+
+While they were drinking, his wife said suddenly with a toss of the
+head: "But no one sent for you all! Is that not so, Smetse?"
+
+"Wife, wife," said the smith, "wilt thou never learn to hold thy
+tongue?"
+
+"But," said she, "I am speaking the truth, my man."
+
+"Thou art speaking foolishly," said he, "of things whereof thou knowest
+nothing. Stay in thy kitchen and do not come meddling in my forge."
+
+"Baesine," said Flipke, "without wishing to belie you, I must tell
+you that a message was sent to us in the name of the baes. For a man
+came in the middle of the night knocking on the doors of our houses,
+shouting out that we should all of us come hither without fail this
+morning for work of great urgency, and that for this we should each
+be given a royal as forfeit to our several masters. And we came,
+all of us, not wishing to leave our baes in the lurch."
+
+"'Tis good of you," said Smetse, "ye shall have the promised royal. But
+come with me, I will apportion to each of you the usual task." This he
+did, and once again the good music of sledges beating, anvils ringing,
+bellows blowing, and workmen singing was heard in the forge of the
+good smith.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse went to his wife and said to her with great
+heat: "Dost think it a fine thing to gainsay me before these good
+men! Chattering magpie, wilt never learn to hold thy tongue? Hast
+not already to-night been admonished sharply enough? Must thou have
+more telling?"
+
+"But, Smetse," said his wife, "I did not know that you had sent
+for them."
+
+"That is no reason," he said, "why thou shouldst give me the lie before
+all my workmen; canst thou not leave thy speaking until I have done,
+or else hold thy tongue altogether, which would be better still."
+
+"Smetse," said his wife, "I never saw you so angry before. Do not
+beat me, my man, I will be henceforward as dumb as this cheese."
+
+"So you should," said Smetse.
+
+"But, my man," said she, "canst not explain to me somewhat of all
+these happenings?"
+
+"Sometime," he said, and went back into his smithy.
+
+
+
+
+VII. Of Smetse the Rich.
+
+That day there came to Smetse many persons, both notable and common,
+nobles, priests, burgesses, and peasants, to give him orders for much
+work, and so it went on again on other days, and all through the year.
+
+Soon the smithy became too small, and Smetse had to enlarge it by
+reason of the ever-growing numbers of his workmen. And the work which
+they did was so beautiful and so marvellously well done that the fame
+of it spread abroad to foreign and distant countries, and people came
+to see and admire it from Holland, Zeeland, Spain, Germany, England,
+and even from the land of the Turk.
+
+But Smetse, thinking of the seven years, was not happy at all.
+
+Soon his coffers were full of fine crusats, angelots, rose nobles,
+and golden jewels. But he found no pleasure in looking at all this
+wealth, for he thought them poor payment for giving his soul to the
+devil for all the length of eternity.
+
+Red Slimbroek lost all his customers, who came back one by one to
+Smetse. Ragged and miserable he used to come every day and lounge on
+the quay, watching from there the bright fire glowing in the forge
+of the good smith, and, so standing, he seemed dazed and stupid,
+like an owl watching a doit. Smetse, knowing that he was needy,
+sent him several customers to bring him some means of sustenance,
+and also more than once a gift of money. But although he thus repaid
+evil with good he was no longer happy, thinking of the seven years.
+
+Smetse's wife, finding him so wealthy, bought for dinner each
+Sunday legs of fat mutton, geese, capons, turkeys, and other good
+meats; invited to her table his relatives, friends, and workmen;
+and then there would be a great feast, well washed down with double
+bruinbier. But Smetse, though he ate and drank like an emperor, was not
+at all happy, thinking of the seven years. And the steam from the roast
+meats spread abroad on the Quai aux Oignons, so fragrant and succulent,
+and so sweetening the air, that all the dogs wandering in the streets
+of the town would stop before the house and sniff at the smell, and
+there on their haunches, nose in air, would wait for crumbs: and the
+beggars, of whom there were great numbers, came thither likewise and
+tried to drive away the dogs. Thereupon ensued furious battles, in
+which many were badly bitten. Seeing this, Smetse's wife and other
+women would come every Sunday to the door with baskets of alms,
+and there, before the meal began, would give the beggars good bread,
+slices of meat, and two farthings to get themselves drink, and all
+this with soft words and fair speaking; then they charged them to
+go away from the quay, which they did in an orderly manner. But the
+dogs stayed behind, and at the end of the feast there was given to
+them likewise food of some sort. And then they would go off also,
+taking each his bone or other booty.
+
+Smetse and his wife together took both dogs and men into their
+affection; to the beggars he gave food and shelter; and so also to
+all the dogs of Ghent that were lame, infirm, or sickly, until at
+length his house came to be called the Dogs' Hospital and the Home
+of the Poor.
+
+Nevertheless he was not at all happy, thinking of the seven years.
+
+Worn and troubled with these thoughts, Smetse stopped singing and
+lost his fat, shrivelled visibly, became melancholy and moody, and
+in his smithy said never a word, except to give a necessary order.
+
+And he was no longer called Smetse the Merry, but Smetse the Rich.
+
+And he counted the days.
+
+
+
+
+VIII. How there came a ragged, wayfarer to Smetse's door, and with him,
+on an ass, a sweet wife and a little child.
+
+On the two hundred and forty-fifth day of the seventh year, when
+the plum-trees were in bloom, Smetse, dumb as a stone, was taking
+a little noonday rest. He sat on a wooden bench opposite his door,
+and with melancholy mien looked at the trees planted all along the
+quay, and the small birds playing among the branches or squabbling
+and pecking one another over some morsel of food, and blinked in the
+bright sun which made these birds so merry, and heard at his back
+the goodly sounds of his forge, his wife preparing dinner, and his
+workmen hurrying at their work so that they might be off to their meal,
+for it was nearing the time; and he said to himself that in hell he
+would see neither the sun, nor the birds, nor the trees with their
+load of green leaves, nor hear any more the sounds of his forge,
+nor the smiths hurrying, nor his good wife preparing dinner.
+
+By and by the workmen came out, and Smetse was left sitting alone
+on his bench, pondering in his mind whether there were not some way
+whereby he might outwit the devil.
+
+Suddenly there drew up at his door a man of piteous appearance, with
+brown hair and beard, dressed like a ragged townsman, and carrying
+a great staff in his hand. He was walking beside an ass, and leading
+it along by a rein. On the ass rode a sweet and beautiful young woman
+with a noble mien, suckling a little child, who was quite naked, and
+of such gentle and winsome countenance that the sight of it warmed
+Smetse's heart.
+
+The ass stopped at the door of the smithy and began to bray loudly.
+
+"Master smith," said the man, "our ass has cast one of his shoes
+on his way hither, wilt thou be pleased to give orders that another
+should be given him?"
+
+"I will do it myself," said Smetse, "for I am alone here."
+
+"I should tell thee," said the man, "that we are beggars, without
+money."
+
+"Have no care for that," said Smetse, "I am rich enough to be able
+to shoe in silver without payment all the asses in Flanders."
+
+Hearing this the woman alighted from the ass and asked Smetse if she
+might sit down on the bench.
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+And while he was fastening up the beast, paring his hoof and fitting
+the shoe, he said to the man: "Whence come you, with this woman and
+this ass?"
+
+"We come," said the man, "from a distant country, and have still far
+to go."
+
+"And this child whom I see naked," said Smetse, "does he not oftentimes
+suffer from the cold?"
+
+"Nay," said the man, "for he is all warmth and all life."
+
+"Well, well," said Smetse, "you do not cry down your own children,
+master. But what is your meat and drink while you are travelling in
+this manner?"
+
+"Water from streams," said the man, "and such bread as is given us."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "that is not much, I see, for the ass's panniers
+are light. You must often go hungry."
+
+"Yes," said the man.
+
+"This," said Smetse, "is displeasing to me, and it is most unwholesome
+for a nursing mother to suffer hunger, for so the milk turns sour,
+and the child grows in sickly wise." And he called out to his wife:
+"Mother, bring hither as many loaves and hams as will fill the panniers
+of this beast. And do not forget some double bruinbier, 'tis heavenly
+comfort for poor travellers. And a good peck of oats for the ass."
+
+When the panniers were filled and the beast shod, the man said to
+Smetse: "Smith, it is in my mind to give thee some recompense for
+thy great goodness, for such as thou seest me I have great power."
+
+"Yes," said Smetse, with a smile, "I can see that well enough."
+
+"I am," said the man, "Joseph, nominal husband of the very blessed
+Virgin Mary, who is sitting on this bench, and this child that she
+has in her arms is Jesus, thy Saviour."
+
+Smetse, dumbfounded at these words, looked at the wayfarers with
+great astonishment, and saw about the man's head a nimbus of fire,
+a crown of stars about the woman's, and, about the child's, beautiful
+rays more brilliant than the sun, springing from his head and girdling
+him round with light.
+
+Thereupon he fell at their feet and said: "My Lord Jesus, Madam
+the Virgin, and my Master St. Joseph, grant me pardon for my lack
+of understanding."
+
+To this St. Joseph replied: "Thou art an honest man, Smetse, and
+righteous as well. For this reason I give thee leave to make three
+requests, the greatest thou canst think of, and my Lord Jesus will
+listen to them favourably."
+
+At these words Smetse was filled with joy, for it seemed to him that
+in this way he might perhaps escape the devil; but at the same time
+he did not dare to avow that he had traded his soul away. So he
+remained in silence for a few moments, thinking of what things he
+could ask, then suddenly said, with great respect: "My Lord Jesus,
+Madam St. Mary, and you, Master St. Joseph, will you please to enter
+my dwelling? There I can tell you what boons I ask."
+
+"We will," said St. Joseph.
+
+"Mother," said Smetse to his wife, "come hither and look to the ass
+of these noble lords."
+
+And Smetse went in before them, sweeping the threshold so that there
+should be no dust to touch the soles of their feet.
+
+And he took them into his garden, where there was a fine plum-tree in
+full blossom. "My Lord, Madam, and Sir," said Smetse, "will it please
+you to order that whosoever shall climb up into this plum-tree shall
+not be able to come down again unless I so desire?"
+
+"It will," said St. Joseph.
+
+Thence he led the way into the kitchen, where there stood a great and
+precious arm-chair, well padded in the seat, and of enormous weight.
+
+"My Lord, Madam, and Sir," said Smetse, "will it please you that
+whosoever shall sit in this chair shall not be able to rise unless
+I so desire?"
+
+"It will," said St. Joseph.
+
+Then Smetse fetched a sack, and, showing it to them, said: "My Lord,
+Madam, and Sir, will it please you that, whatsoever his stature,
+man or devil shall be able to get into this sack, but not out again,
+unless I so desire?"
+
+"It will," said St. Joseph.
+
+"My Lord, Madam, and Sir," said Smetse, "thanks be unto you. Now that I
+have made my three requests I have naught else to ask of your goodness,
+save only your blessing."
+
+"We will give it," said St. Joseph.
+
+And he blessed Smetse, and thereafter the holy family went upon
+their way.
+
+
+
+
+IX. What Smetse did in order to keep his secret.
+
+The good wife had heard nothing of what was said to her man by the
+celestial wayfarers, and she was amazed to see the behaviour and hear
+the speech of the good smith. But she was more so than ever when, on
+the departure of the all-powerful visitors, Smetse began to give forth
+bursts of laughter, to rub his hands, take hold of her, thump her on
+the chest, twist her this way and that, and say in a triumphant tone:
+"It may be, after all, that I shall not burn, that I shall not roast,
+that I shall not be eaten! Art not glad of it?"
+
+"Alas," she said, "I cannot understand what you are talking about,
+my man; have you gone mad?"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "do not show me the whites of thine eyes in
+this pitiful manner, 'tis no time for that. Canst not see how light
+my heart has grown? 'Tis because I have got rid of a burden on my
+shoulders heavier than the belfry itself; I say this belfry, our
+own, with the dragon taken from that of Bruges. And I am not to be
+eaten. By Artevelde! my legs bestir themselves of their own accord
+at the thought of it. I dance! Wilt not do likewise? Fie, moody one,
+brewing melancholy when her man is so happy! Kiss me, wife, kiss me,
+mother, for my proficiat; and so thou shouldst, for instead of despair
+I have found a good and steadfast hope. They think to roast me with
+sauces and feast off my flesh to their fill. I will have the laugh
+of them. Dance, wife, dance!"
+
+"Ah, Smetse," said she, "you should take a purge, my man; they say
+'tis good for madness."
+
+"Thou," he said, tapping her on the shoulder with great affection
+and tenderness, "talkest boldly."
+
+"Hark," said she, "to the good doctor preaching reason to me! But
+wert thou mad or not, Smetse, doffing thy bonnet as thou did to
+those beggars who came hither sowing their lice; giving to me, thy
+wife, their ass to hold; filling their hampers with our best bread,
+bruinbier, and ham; falling on thy knees before them to have their
+blessing, and treating them like archdukes, with a torrent of My Lords,
+Sirs, and Madams."
+
+At these words Smetse saw well enough that the lordly wayfarers had
+not wished to discover themselves to any but he. "Wife," he said,
+"thou must not question me further, for I can tell thee nothing of
+this mystic happening, which it is not given thee to understand."
+
+"Alas," said she, "then 'tis worse than madness, 'tis mystery. Thou
+dost ill to hide thyself from me in this wise, Smetse, for I have
+always lived in thy house, faithful to thee only, cherishing thine
+honour, husbanding thy wealth, neither lending nor borrowing, holding
+my tongue in the company of other wives, considering thy secrets as
+mine own and never breathing a word of them to any one."
+
+"I know it," said Smetse, "thou hast been a good and true wife."
+
+"Then why," said she, "knowing this, hast thou not more faith in
+me? Ah, my man, it hurts me; tell me the secret, I shall know how to
+keep it, I promise thee."
+
+"Wife," said he, "knowing nothing thou wilt be able to hold thy tongue
+the more easily."
+
+"Smetse," said she, "wilt thou verily tell me nothing?"
+
+"I cannot," said he.
+
+"Alas," said she.
+
+By and by the workmen came back, and Smetse gave each of them a good
+royal to get themselves drink.
+
+Whereat they were all so merry, and felt themselves so rich, that for
+three days none of them put his nose into the smithy, save one old
+man who was too withered, stiff, short of breath, and unsteady on
+his legs to go swimming with the others in the Lys, and afterwards
+drying in the sun among the tall grasses, dancing in the meadows
+to the music of rebecks, bagpipes, and cymbals, and at night in the
+tavern emptying pots and draining glasses.
+
+
+
+
+X. Of the Bloody Councillor.
+
+At length the day came on which the good smith was due to hand over
+his soul to the devil, for the seventh year had run out, and plums
+were once again ripe.
+
+At nightfall, when certain workmen were busy on a grating for the
+Franciscan brothers which was to be done that night, and had stayed
+behind with Smetse for that purpose, there came into the forge an
+evil-looking fellow, with greasy white hair, a rope round his neck,
+his jaw dropped, his tongue hanging out, and dressed in an ill-found
+habit like a nobleman's servant fallen on evil days.
+
+This fellow, without being heard by any one there as he walked
+across the floor, came quickly up to Smetse and put his hand on his
+shoulder. "Smetse," he said, "hast packed thy bundle?"
+
+Hearing this the smith swung round. "Packed," he said, "and how does
+my packing concern thee, master bald-pate?"
+
+"Smetse," replied the fellow in a harsh voice, "hast forgotten thy
+restored fortunes, and the good times thou hast enjoyed, and the
+black paper?"
+
+"No, no," said Smetse, doffing his bonnet with great humility, "I
+have not forgotten; pardon me, my lord, I could not call to mind your
+gracious countenance. Will you be pleased to come into my kitchen,
+and try a slice of fat ham, taste a pot of good bruinbier, and sip
+a bottle of wine? We have time enough for that, for the seven years
+are not yet struck, but want, if I am not mistaken, still two hours."
+
+"That is true," said the devil; "then let us go into thy kitchen."
+
+So they entered in and sat down to the table.
+
+The good wife was greatly astonished to see them come in. Smetse
+said to her: "Bring us wine, bruinbier, ham, sausages, bread, cakes,
+and cheeses, and the best of each that we have in the house."
+
+"But, Smetse," said she, "you waste the good things which God has
+given you. 'Tis well to come to the help of poor folk, but not to do
+more for one than another. Beggar-men are beggar-men, all are equal!"
+
+"Beggar-men!" exclaimed the devil, "that I am not and never was. Death
+to the beggar-men! To the gallows with the beggar-men!"
+
+"My lord," said Smetse, "I beg you not to be angry with my good wife,
+who knows you not at all. Wife, consider and look at our guest with
+great attention, but greater respect, and afterwards thou mayest tell
+thy gossips that thou hast seen my Lord Jacob Hessels, the greatest
+reaper of heretics that ever was.
+
+"Ah, wife, he mowed them down grandly, and had so many of them hanged,
+burnt, and tortured in divers ways, that he could drown himself a
+hundred times in the blood of his dead. Go, wife, go and fetch him
+meat and drink."
+
+While he was munching, Smetse said: "Ah, my lord, I soon recognized
+you by your particular way of saying: 'To the gallows!' and also by
+this rope which finished off your life in so evil a manner. For Our
+Lord said: 'Whoso liveth by the rope shall perish by the rope.' My
+Lord Ryhove was harsh and treacherous toward you, for besides taking
+your life he took also your beard, which was a fine one.
+
+"Ah, that was an evil trick to play on so good a councillor as you
+were in those days when you slept so quietly and peaceably in the
+Bloody Council--I should say the Council of Civil Disorders, speaking
+respectfully--and woke up only to say: 'To the gallows!' and then
+went to sleep again."
+
+"Yes," said the devil, "those were good times."
+
+"So they were," said Smetse, "times of riches and power for you, my
+lord. Ah, we owe you a great deal: the tithe tax, dropped by you into
+the ear of the Emperor Charles; the arrest of my lords of Egmont and
+Hoorn, whereof the warrant was written in your own fair hand, and of
+more than two thousand persons who perished at your command by fire,
+steel, and rope!"
+
+"I do not know the number," said the devil, "but it is large. Give me,
+Smetse, some more of this sausage, which is excellent."
+
+"Ah," said the smith, "'tis not good enough for your lordship. But
+you are drinking nothing. Empty this tankard, 'tis double bruinbier."
+
+"Smith," said the devil, "it is good also, but I tasted better at
+Pierkyn's tavern one day when five girls of the Reformed Faith were
+burnt together in the market-place. That frothed better. While we were
+drinking we heard these five maids singing psalms in the fire. Ah,
+we drank well that day! But think, Smetse, of the great perversity
+of those maids, all young and strong, and so fast set in their crimes
+that they sang their psalms without complaint, smiling at the fire and
+invoking God in a heretical fashion. Give me more to drink, Smetse."
+
+"But," said Smetse, "King Philip asked for your canonization at Rome,
+for having served Spain and the Pope so well; why then are you not
+in paradise, my lord?"
+
+"Alas," wept the devil, "I had no recognition of my former
+services. Those traitors of Reformers are with God, while I burn in
+the bottom of the pit. And there, without rest or respite, I have to
+sing heretical psalms; cruel punishment, unspeakable torment! These
+chants stick in my throat, scrape up and down in my breast, tearing
+my inner flesh like a bristling porcupine with iron spines. At every
+note a new wound, a bleeding sore: and always, always I have to keep
+singing, and so it will go on through all the length of eternity."
+
+At these words Smetse was very much frightened, thinking how heavily
+God had punished Jacob Hessels.
+
+"Drink, my lord," he said to him; "this bruinbier is balm to sore
+throttles."
+
+Suddenly the clock struck.
+
+"Come, Smetse," said the devil, "'tis the hour."
+
+But the good smith, without answering, heaved a great sigh.
+
+"What ails thee?" said the devil.
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "I am grieved at your incontinence. Have I
+welcomed you so ill that you will not let me go, before I leave here,
+to embrace my wife a last time and bid farewell to my good workmen,
+and to take one more look at my good plum-tree whose fruits are so
+rich and juicy? Ah, I would gladly refresh myself with one or two
+before I go off to that land where there is always thirst."
+
+"Do not think to escape me," said the devil.
+
+"That I would not, my lord," said Smetse. "Come with me, I pray you
+most humbly."
+
+"Very well," said the devil, "but not for long."
+
+In the garden Smetse began to sigh afresh.
+
+"Ah," he said, "look at my plums, my lord; will you be pleased to
+let me go up and eat my fill?"
+
+"Go up then," said the devil.
+
+Up in the tree Smetse began to eat in a most greedy manner, and suck
+in the juice of the plums with a great noise. "Ah," cried he, "plums
+of paradise, Christian plums, how fat you are! Princely plums, you
+would solace a hundred devils burning in the lowest parts of hell. By
+you, sweet plums, blessed plums, is thirst driven out of my throat;
+by you, adorable plums, gentle plums, is purged from my stomach all
+evil melancholy; by you, fresh plums, sugary plums, is diffused in
+my blood an infinite sweetness. Ah, juicy plums, joyous plums, faery
+plums, would that I could go on sucking you for ever!"
+
+And while he was saying all this, Smetse went on picking them, eating
+them and sipping the juice, without ever stopping.
+
+"Pox!" said the devil, "it makes my mouth water; why dost not throw
+me down some of these marvellous plums?"
+
+"Alas, my lord," said Smetse, "that I cannot do; they would melt
+into water on their fall, so delicate are they. But if you will be
+pleased to climb up into the tree you will find much pleasure in
+store for you."
+
+"Then I will," said the devil.
+
+When he was well settled on a stout branch and there regaling himself
+with plums, Smetse slipped down, picked up a stick lying on the grass
+and fell to belabouring him with great vigour.
+
+Feeling the stick on his back the devil would have leapt down on the
+smith, but could not move, for the skin of his seat held fast to the
+branch. And he snorted, ground his teeth, and foamed at the mouth
+with great rage, and also by reason of the pain which his tender skin
+caused him.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse gave him a good drubbing, caressed with his stick
+every quarter of his body in turn, bruised him to the bone, tore his
+habit, and gave him as strong and straight a beating as was ever
+given in the land of Flanders. And he kept saying: "You say not a
+word about my plums, my lord; they are good, none the less."
+
+"Ah," cried Hessels, "why am I not free!"
+
+"Alas, yes! why are you not free!" answered Smetse, "you would give me
+to some little butcher among your friends who would cut me up freely
+into slices like a ham, under your learned instruction, for you are,
+as I know well, a doctor of torment. But are you not being well
+tormented in turn by my stick? Alas, yes! why are you not free! You
+would hoist me up on some blessed gallows, and every one would see
+me hanging in the air, and freely would Master Hessels laugh. And so
+he would have his revenge on me for this excellent drubbing which
+I am giving him with such freedom. For nothing in this world is so
+free as a free stick falling freely on an unfree councillor. Alas,
+yes! why are you not free! You would free my head from my body, as you
+did with such satisfaction to my masters of Egmont and Hoorn. Alas,
+yes! why are you not free! then we should see Smetse in some good
+little fire, which would roast him freely, as was done to the poor
+maids of the reformed faith; and Smetse, like them, would be heard
+singing with a free soul to the God of free believers, and with a
+free conscience stronger than the flame, while Master Hessels drank
+bruinbier and said that it frothed nicely."
+
+"Oh," said the devil, "why beat me so cruelly, without pity for my
+white hairs?"
+
+"As for thy white hair," said Smetse, "'tis the hair of an old tiger
+who ate up our country. For this reason it gives me sweet pleasure to
+beat thee with this oaken stick; and also in order that thou mayst
+give me permission to stay another seven years on this earth, where
+I find myself so well content, if it so please thee."
+
+"Seven years!" said the devil, "do not count on that; I would rather
+bleed under thy stick."
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "I see that your skin is fond of good blows. These
+are tasty ones, it is true. But the best of cheer is unwholesome if
+taken in excess. So when you have had enough of them, be so good as
+to tell me. I will put a stop to this feast, but for that I must have
+the seven years."
+
+"Never," said Hessels; and lifting his snout into the air like a
+baying dog, he cried out: "Devils to the rescue!" But this he did so
+loudly, and in such screeching wise, that at the sound of his cracked
+voice blaring out like a trumpet, all the workmen came to see what
+it was about.
+
+"You do not shout loud enough," said Smetse, "I will help you." And
+he beat him the harder, so that the devil cried the louder.
+
+"See," said Smetse, "how well this stick makes the little nightingale
+sing in my plum-tree. He is saying over his lied of love to call
+hither his fair mate. She will come by and by, my lord; but come down,
+I pray you, and await her below, for they say that the night dew is
+deadly at a height from the ground."
+
+"Baes," said certain workmen, "is it not my lord Jacob Hessels,
+the Bloody Councillor, who is perched up there in thy plum-tree?"
+
+"Yes, lads," answered Smetse, "'tis indeed that worthy man. He
+seeks high places now as he did all his life, and so also at the
+end of it, when he swung in the air, putting out his tongue at the
+passers-by. For that which is of the gallows returns to the gallows,
+and the rope will take back its own. 'Tis written."
+
+"Baes," said they, "can we not help to bring him down?"
+
+"Yes," said he. And the workmen went off to the smithy.
+
+Meanwhile the devil said nothing, trying all the time to get his
+seat away from the branch. And he struggled, wriggled about, twisted
+himself a hundred different ways, and used as levers, to lift himself
+up, feet, hands, and head, but all in vain.
+
+And Smetse, belabouring him well, said to him: "My lord Councillor,
+you are fast stuck, it seems, to the saddle; but I will have you out
+of it, have you out as fast as I can, for if I do not so, beating
+you with all my strength, you will tear up out of the ground the
+tree and its roots, and the good folk will see you walking along,
+dragging a plum-tree from your seat like a tail, which would be a
+piteous and laughable spectacle for such a noble devil as yourself
+to make. Give me rather the seven years."
+
+"Baes," said the workmen, who had returned from the smithy with
+hammers and iron bars, "here we are at your orders; what shall we do?"
+
+"Well," said Smetse, "since I have combed him down with oaken staves
+we will now louse him with hammers and bars."
+
+"Mercy, Smetse, mercy!" cried the devil; hammers and bars, this is
+too much; thou hast the seven years, smith."
+
+"Make haste," said Smetse, "and write me the quittance."
+
+"Here it is," said he.
+
+The smith took it, saw that it was in good order, and said: "I desire
+that thou come down."
+
+But the devil was so weak and enfeebled by the blows he had had that
+when he tried to leap he fell on his back. And he went off limping,
+shaking his fist at Smetse, and saying: "I await thee, in seven years,
+in hell, smith."
+
+"So you may," said Smetse.
+
+
+
+
+XI. Wherein the workmen hold fair speech with Smetse.
+
+While the devil was making off, Smetse, watching his workmen, saw
+that they were looking at one another strangely, spoke together in
+low voices, and seemed awkward in their manner, like people who would
+speak out, but dare not.
+
+And he said to himself: "Are they going to denounce me to the priests?"
+
+Suddenly Flipke the Bear came up to him. "Baes," said he, "we know
+well enough that this ghost of Hessels was sent to thee by him who is
+lord below; thou hast made a pact with the devil and art rich only
+by his money. We have guessed as much for some time. But so that
+thou should not be vexed, none of us have spoken of it in the town,
+and none will so speak. We would tell thee this to put thy mind at
+rest. And so now, baes, good night and quiet sleep to thee."
+
+"Thank you, lads," said Smetse, greatly softened.
+
+And they went their several ways.
+
+
+
+
+XII. How that Smetse would not give his secret into his wife's
+tongue's keeping.
+
+In the kitchen Smetse found his wife on her knees beating her breast,
+weeping, sighing, sobbing, and saying: "Jesus Lord God, he has made a
+pact with the devil; but 'tis not with my consent, I swear. And you
+also, Madam the Virgin, you know it, and you also, all my masters
+the saints. Ah, I am indeed wretched, not on my own account, but for
+my poor man, who for the sake of some miserable gold sold his soul
+to the devil! Alas, yes, sell it he did! Ah, my saintly masters,
+who are yourselves so happy and in such glory, pray the very good
+God for him, and deign to consider that if, as I dare hope, I die a
+Christian death and go to paradise, I shall be all alone there, eating
+my rice pudding with silver spoons, while my poor man is burning in
+hell, crying out in thirst and hunger, and I not able to give him
+either meat or drink.... Alas, that will make me so unhappy! Ah,
+my good masters the saints, Madam the Virgin, My Lord Jesus, he
+sinned but this once, and was all the rest of his life a good man,
+a good Christian, kind to the poor and soft of heart. Save him from
+the fires which burn for ever, and do not separate above those who
+were so long united below. Pray for him, pray for me, alas!"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "thou art very wretched, it seems."
+
+"Ah, wicked man," said she, "now I know all. 'Twas hell fire
+which came bursting into the house and lit up the forge; those
+master-bakers, brewers, and vintners were devils, all of them, and
+devil also that ugly man who showed thee the treasure and gave me
+so grievous a buffet. Who will dare to live peaceably in this house
+from now on? Alas, our food is the devil's, our drink also; devil's
+meat, loaves, and cheeses, devil's money, house, and all. Whoever
+should dig under this dwelling would see the fires of hell gush out
+incontinent. There are all the devils, I see them above, below, on the
+right hand, on the left, awaiting their prey with dropped jaws, like
+tigers. Ah, what a fine sight 'twill be to see my poor man torn into
+a hundred pieces by all these devils, and that in seven years, for he
+said, as I heard well enough, that he would come back in seven years."
+
+"Weep not, wife," said Smetse, "in seven years I may again be master
+as I was to-day."
+
+"But," said she, "if he had not gone up into the plum-tree, what
+wouldst thou have done, poor beggar-man? And what if he will not let
+himself fall a second time into thy snare as he did to-day?"
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "he will so fall, for my snares are from heaven,
+and the things which are from God can always get the better of devils."
+
+"Art not lying again?" she said. "And wilt tell me what they are?"
+
+"That I cannot," said he, "for devils have sharp ears and would hear
+me telling thee, no matter how low I spoke; and then I should be
+taken off to hell without mercy."
+
+"Ah," said she, "then I will not ask, though 'tis not pleasant for me
+to live here in ignorance of everything, like a stranger. Nevertheless
+I would rather have thee silent and saved than talking and damned."
+
+"Wife," he said, "thou art wise when thou speakest so."
+
+"I will pray," she said, "every day for thy deliverance, and have a
+good mass said for thee at St. Bavon."
+
+"But," said he, "is it with devil's money thou wilt pay for this mass?"
+
+"Have no care for that," said she, "when this money enters the church
+coffers 'twill become suddenly holy."
+
+"Do as thou wilt, wife," said Smetse.
+
+"Ah," said she, "My Lord Jesus shall have a stout candle each day,
+and Madam the Virgin likewise."
+
+"Do not forget my master St. Joseph," said Smetse, "for we owe
+him much."
+
+
+
+
+XIII. Of the Bloody Duke.
+
+The end of the seventh year came again in its turn, and on the last
+evening there crossed the threshold of Smetse Smee's dwelling a man
+with a sharp and haughty Spanish face, a nose like a hawk's beak,
+hard and staring eyes, and a white beard, long and pointed. For the
+rest he was dressed in armour finely worked and most richly gilt;
+decorated with the illustrious order of the Fleece; wore a fine red
+sash; rested his left hand on the hilt of his sword, and held in his
+right the seven years' pact and a marshal's wand.
+
+Coming into the forge he walked straight towards Smetse, holding his
+head loftily and without deigning to notice any of the workmen.
+
+The smith was standing in a corner, wondering how he could make the
+devil who was sent for him sit down in the arm-chair, when Flipke
+ran quickly up to him and said in his ear: "Baes, the Bloody Duke is
+coming, take care!"
+
+"Woe!" said Smetse, speaking to himself, "'tis all up with me, if
+d'Alva has come to fetch me."
+
+Meanwhile the devil approached the smith, showed him the pact, and
+took him by the arm without a word to lead him off.
+
+"My Lord," said Smetse in a most sorrowful manner, "whither would you
+take me? To hell. I follow you. 'Tis too great honour for one so mean
+as I to be ordered by so noble a devil as yourself. But is it yet the
+appointed time? I think it is not, and your highness has too upright
+a soul to take me off before the time written in the deed. In the
+meantime I beg your highness to be seated: Flipke, a chair for My Lord;
+the best in my poor dwelling, the large, well-padded arm-chair which
+stands in my kitchen, beside the press, near the chimney, beneath
+the picture of my master St. Joseph. Wipe it well, lad, so that no
+dust may be left on it; and quick, for the noble duke is standing."
+
+Flipke ran into the kitchen and came back, saying: "Baes, I cannot
+lift that arm-chair alone, 'tis so heavy."
+
+Then Smetse feigned great anger and said to his workmen: "Do ye not
+hear? He cannot lift it alone. Go and help him, and if it takes ten
+of you let ten go. And quick now. Fie! the blockheads, can ye 'not
+see that the noble duke is standing?"
+
+Nine workmen ran to obey him and brought the chair into the forge,
+though not without difficulty. Smetse said: "Put it there, behind My
+Lord. Is there any dust on it? By Artevelde! they have not touched
+this corner. I will do it myself. Now 'tis as clean as new-washed
+glass. Will your highness deign to be seated?"
+
+This the devil did, and then looked round him with great haughtiness
+and disdain. But of a sudden the smith fell at his feet, and said
+with mocking laughter: "Sir duke, you see before you the most humble
+of your servants, a poor man living like a Christian, serving God,
+honouring princes, and anxious, if such is your lordly pleasure,
+to continue in this way of life seven years more."
+
+"Thou shalt not have one minute," said the devil, "come, Fleming,
+come with me."
+
+And he tried to rise from the chair, but could not. And while he
+was struggling with might and main, making a thousand vain efforts,
+the good smith cried joyously: "Would your highness get up? Ah,
+'tis too soon! Let your highness wait, he is not yet rested after
+his long journey; long, I make bold to say, for it must be a good
+hundred leagues from hell to my smithy, and that is a long way for
+such noble feet, by dusty roads. Ah, My Lord, let yourself rest a
+little in this good chair. Nevertheless, if you are in great haste
+to be off, grant me the seven years and I will give you in return
+your noble leave and a full flask of Spanish wine."
+
+"I care nothing for thy wine," answered the devil.
+
+"Baes," said Flipke, "offer him blood, he will drink then."
+
+"My lad," said Smetse, "thou knowest well enough we have no such thing
+as blood in our cellars hereabouts, for that is no Flemish drink,
+but one that we leave to Spain. Therefore his highness must be so good
+as to excuse me. Nevertheless, I think he is thirsty, not for blood,
+but for blows, and of those I will give him his illustrious fill,
+since he will not grant me the seven years."
+
+"Smith," said the devil, looking at Smetse with great contempt,
+"thou wouldst not dare beat me, I think?"
+
+"Yes, My Lord," said the good man. "You would have me dead. For
+my part I hold to my skin, and this not without good reason, for
+it has always been faithful to me and well fastened. Would it not
+be a criminal act to break off in this sudden fashion so close a
+partnership? And besides, you would take me off with you to hell,
+where the air is filled with the stench of the divers cookeries for
+damned souls which are set up there. Ah, rather than go thither I
+would beat your highness for seven years."
+
+"Fleming," said the devil, "thou speakest without respect."
+
+"Yes, My Lord," said Smetse, "but I will hit you with veneration."
+
+And so saying he gave him with his clenched fist a terrible great
+blow on the nose, whereat the devil seemed astonished, dazed, and
+angry, like a powerful king struck by a low-born servant. And he
+tried to leap upon the smith, clenched his fists, ground his teeth,
+and shot out blood from his nose, his mouth, his eyes, and his ears,
+so angry was he.
+
+"Ah," said Smetse, "you seem angry, My Lord. But deign to consider
+that since you will not listen to my words, I must speak to you by
+blows. By this argument am I not doing my best to soften your heart
+to my piteous case? Alas, deign to consider that my humble fist is
+making its supplication as best it can to your illustrious eyes,
+begs seven years from your noble nose, implores them from your ducal
+jaw. Do not these respectful taps tell your lordly cheeks how happy,
+joyous, and well-liking I should be during those seven years? Ah,
+let yourself be convinced. But, I see, I must speak to you in another
+fashion, with the words of iron bars, the prayers of tongs, and the
+supplications of sledge-hammers. Lads," said the smith to his workmen,
+"will you be pleased to hold converse with My Lord?"
+
+"Yes, baes," said they.
+
+And together with Smetse they chose their tools. But it was the oldest
+who picked the heaviest ones, and were the hottest with rage, because
+it was they who in former days had lost, through the duke's doing,
+many friends and relatives by steel, by stake, and by live burial,
+and they cried: "God is on our side, he has delivered the enemy into
+our hands. Out upon the Bloody Duke, the master-butcher, the lord of
+the axe!"
+
+And all of them, young and old, cursed the devil with a thunder of
+cries; and they came up to him menacingly, surrounding the chair and
+raising their tools to strike.
+
+But Smetse stopped them and spoke again to the devil. "If your
+highness," he said, "is minded to hold to his noble bones, let him
+deign to grant me the seven years, for the time for laughter is past,
+let me tell you."
+
+"Baes," said the workmen, "whence comes to thee this kindness beyond
+measure? Why hold so long and fair parley with this fellow? Let us
+first break him up, and then he will offer thee the seven years of
+his own accord."
+
+"Seven years!" said the devil, "seven years! he shall not have so
+much as the shadow of a minute. Strike, men of Ghent, the lion is in
+the net; ye who could not find a hole deep enough to hide yourselves
+in when he was free and showed his fangs. Flemish cowards, see what
+I think of you and your threats." And he spat on them.
+
+At this spittle the bars, hammers, and other tools fell on him thick
+as hail, breaking his bones and the plates of his armour, and Smetse
+and his workmen said as they beat to their hearts' content:
+
+"Cowards were we, who wished to worship God in the sincerity of
+our hearts; valiant was he who prevented us with steel, stake, and
+live burial.
+
+"Cowards were we for having always laughed readily and drunk joyously,
+like men who, having done what they had to do, make light of the rest:
+valiant was this dark personage when he had poor men of the people
+arrested in the midst of their merrymaking at Kermis-time and put
+death where had been laughter.
+
+"Cowards were the eighteen thousand eight hundred persons who died for
+the glory of God; cowards those numberless others who by the rapine,
+brutality and insolence of the fighting men, lost their lives in these
+lands and others. Valiant was he who ordained their sufferings, and
+more valiant still when he celebrated his own evil deeds by a banquet.
+
+"Cowards were we always, we who, after a battle, treated our prisoners
+like brothers; valiant was he who, after the defeat in Friesland,
+had his own men slaughtered.
+
+"Cowards were we, who laboured without ceasing, spreading abroad over
+the whole world the work of our hands; valiant was he when, under the
+cloak of religion, he slew the richer among us without distinction
+between Romans and Reformers, and robbed us by pillage and extortion
+of thirty-six million florins. For the world is turned upside down;
+cowardly is the busy bee who makes the honey, and valiant the idle
+drone who steals it away. Spit, noble duke, on these Flemish cowards."
+
+But the duke could neither spit nor cough, for from the roughness of
+the blows they had given him he had altogether lost the shape of a man,
+so mingled and beaten together were bones, flesh, and steel. But there
+was no blood to be seen, which was a marvellous thing. Suddenly, while
+the workmen, wearied with beating, were taking breath, a weak voice
+came out from this hotch-potch of bones, flesh, and steel, saying:
+
+"Thou hast the seven years, Smetse."
+
+"Very well then, My Lord," said he, "sign the quittance."
+
+This the devil did.
+
+"And now," said Smetse, "will your highness please to get up."
+
+At these words, by great marvel, the devil regained his shape. But
+while he was walking away, holding up his head with great haughtiness
+and not deigning to look at his feet, he tripped over a sledge lying
+on the ground, and fell on his nose with great indignity, thereby
+giving much occasion for laughter to the workmen, who did not fail to
+make use of it. Picking himself up he threatened them with his fist,
+but they burst out laughing more loudly than ever. He came at them,
+grinding his teeth; they hooted him. He tried to strike with his
+sword a short and sturdy little workman; but the man seized the sword
+from his hands and broke it in three pieces. He struck another in the
+face with his fist, but the man gave him so good and valiant a kick
+as to send him sprawling on the quay with his legs in the air. There,
+flushing with shame, he melted into red smoke, like a vapour of blood,
+and the workmen heard a thousand joyous and merry voices, saying:
+"Beaten is the Bloody Duke, shamed is the lord of the axe, inglorious
+the prince of butchers! Vlaenderland tot eeuwigheid! Flanders for
+ever!" And a thousand pairs of hands beat applause all together. And
+the dawn broke.
+
+
+
+
+XIV. Of the great fears and pains of Smetse's wife.
+
+Smetse, going to look for his wife, found her in the kitchen on
+her knees before the picture of St. Joseph. "Well, mother," said he,
+"what didst think of our dance? Was it not a merry one? Ah, henceforth
+they will call our house the House of Beaten Devils."
+
+"Yes," said his wife, wagging her head, "yes, and also the house of
+Smetse who was carried away to hell. For that is where thou wilt go;
+I know it, I feel it, I foretell it. This devil's coming all accoutred
+for war presages evil. He will come back, no longer alone, but with
+a hundred thousand devils armed like himself. Ah, my poor man! They
+will carry lances, swords, pikes, hooked axes, and arquebuses. They
+will drag behind them canon which they will fire at us; and everything
+will be ground to pieces, thou, I, the smithy, and the workmen. Alas,
+everything will be levelled to the ground! And where our smithy now
+stands will be nothing but a sorry heap of dust. And the folk walking
+past along the quay will say when they see this dust: 'There lies
+the house of Smetse, the fool who sold his soul to the devil.' And
+I, after dying in this fashion, shall go to Paradise, as I dare to
+hope. But thee, my man, oh, woe unspeakable! they will take away with
+them and drag through fire, smoke, brimstone, pitch, boiling oil, to
+that terrible place where those are punished who, wishing to break
+a pact made with the devil, have no special help from God or his
+holy saints. Poor little man, my good comrade, dost know what there
+is in store for thee? Ho, a gulf as deep as the heavens are high,
+and studded all down its terrible sides with jutting points of rock,
+iron spikes, horrid spears, and a thousand dreadful pikes. And dost
+know what manner of gulf this is, my man? 'Tis a gulf wherein a man
+may keep falling always--dost understand me, always, always--gashed
+by the rocks, cut about by the spears, torn open by the pikes, always,
+always, down all the long length of eternity."
+
+"But, wife," said Smetse, "hast ever seen this gulf whereof thou
+speakest?"
+
+"Nay," said she, "but I know what manner of place it is, for I have
+often heard tell of it in the church of St. Bavon. And the good canon
+predicant would not lie."
+
+"Ah, no," said Smetse.
+
+
+
+
+XV. Of the Bloody King.
+
+When the last night of the seventh year was come Smetse was in his
+smithy, looking at the enchanted sack, and asking himself with much
+anxiety how he could make the devil get into it.
+
+While he was wondering, the smithy suddenly became filled with an evil
+stench of the most putrid, offensive and filthy kind. Innumerable
+lice swarmed over the threshold, ceiling, anvils, sledges, bars and
+bellows, Smetse and his men, who were all as if blinded, for these
+lice were as thick in the smithy as smoke, cloud, or fog.
+
+And a melancholy but imperative voice spoke, saying: "Smetse, come
+with me; the seven years have struck."
+
+And Smetse and his workmen, looking as well as they could in the
+direction whence the voice came, saw a man coming towards them with a
+royal crown on his head, and on his back a cloak of cloth-of-gold. But
+beneath the cloak the man was naked, and on his breast were four great
+abscesses, which formed together a single wide sore, and from this
+came the stench which filled the smithy, and the clouds of lice which
+swarmed round about. And he had on his right leg another abscess,
+more filthy, rank, and offensive than the rest. The man himself was
+white-faced, auburn-haired, red-bearded, with lips a little drawn,
+and mouth open somewhat. In his grey eyes were melancholy, envy,
+dissimulation, hypocrisy, harshness, and evil rancour.
+
+When the older workmen saw him they cried out in a voice like thunder:
+"Smetse, the Bloody King is here, take care!"
+
+"Silence," cried the smith, "peace there, silence and veneration! Let
+every man doff his bonnet to the greatest king that ever lived,
+Philip II by name, King of Castile, Leon, and Aragon, Count of
+Flanders, Duke of Burgundy and Brabant, Palatine of Holland and
+Zeeland, most illustrious of all illustrious princes, great among
+the great, victorious among victors. Sire," said he to the devil,
+"you do me unparalleled honour to come hither in person to lead me
+to hell, but my humble Ghentish lowness makes bold to suggest to
+your Royal and Palatine Highness that the appointed hour has not yet
+struck. Therefore if it pleases your Majesty I will pass on earth
+the brief time which is still left to me to live."
+
+"I allow it," said the devil.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse seemed unable to take his eyes off the devil, and
+showed himself very sorrowful and heavy, nodding his head, and saying
+several times:
+
+"Alas, alas! cruel torment! evil hour!"
+
+"What ails thee?" said the devil.
+
+"Sire," said Smetse, "nothing ails me but the great sorrow which I
+have at seeing how harsh God has been towards you, leaving you to
+bear in hell the malady whereof you died. Ah, 'tis a most pitiful
+sight to see so great a king as you consumed by these lice and eaten
+up with these abscesses."
+
+"I care nothing for thy pity," answered the king.
+
+"Sire," said Smetse further, "deign to think no evil of my words. I
+have never been taught fine ways of speech; but notwithstanding this
+I make bold to sympathize with your illustrious sufferings, and this
+the more in that I myself have known and suffered your ill, and you can
+still see, Sire, the terrible marks on my skin." And Smetse, uncovering
+his breast, showed the marks of the wounds which he had received from
+the traitor Spanish when he sailed the seas with the men of Zeeland.
+
+"But," said the devil-king, "thou seemest well enough cured,
+smith! Wast thou verily as sick as I?"
+
+"Like you, Sire," said Smetse, "I was nothing but a heap of living
+filth; like you I was fetid, rank, and offensive, and every one fled
+from me as they fled from you; like you I was eaten up with lice;
+but what could not be done for you by the most illustrious doctor
+Olias of Madrid, a humble carpenter did for me."
+
+At these words the devil-king cocked his ear. "In what place," said he,
+"does this carpenter dwell, and what is his name?"
+
+"He dwells," said Smetse, "in the heavens, and his name is Master
+St. Joseph."
+
+"And did this great saint appear to thee by especial miracle?"
+
+"Yes, Sire."
+
+"And by virtue of what didst thou merit this rare and blessed favour?"
+
+"Sire," answered Smetse, "I have never by my own virtue merited so
+much as the shadow of a single grain of particular grace, but in
+my sufferings I prayed humbly and with faith to my blessed patron,
+Master St. Joseph, and he deigned to come to my succour."
+
+"Tell me of this happening, smith."
+
+"Sire," said Smetse, holding up the sack, "this was my remedy."
+
+"This sack?" asked the devil.
+
+"Yes, Sire; but will your Majesty deign to look closely at the
+hemp whereof it is woven. Do you not think its quality altogether
+strange! Alas," said Smetse, running on with his talk, and appearing
+to go into an ecstasy, "'tis not given to us poor men to see every day
+such hemp as this. For this is not earthly hemp, but hemp of heaven,
+hemp from the good Paradise, sown by my master St. Joseph round about
+the tree of life, harvested and woven under his especial orders to
+make sacks wherein the beans are stored which my masters the angels
+eat on fast-days."
+
+"But," asked the devil, "how did this sack come into thy hands?"
+
+"Ah, Sire, by great marvel. One night I was in my bed, suffering twenty
+deaths from my ulcers, and almost at the point of giving up my soul. I
+saw my good wife weeping; I heard my neighbours and workmen, of whom
+there were many, saying round about my bed the prayers for the dying;
+my body was overcome with pain and my soul with despair. Nevertheless
+I kept praying to my blessed patron and swore that if he brought
+me out of that pass, I would burn to his honour in the church of
+St. Bavon such a candle as the fat of twenty sheep would not suffice
+to make. And my prayers were not in vain, Sire, for suddenly a hole
+opened in the ceiling above my head, a living flame and a celestial
+perfume filled the room, a sack came down through the hole, a man
+clothed in white followed the sack, walked in the air to my bed,
+pulled down the sheets which covered me, and in the twinkling of an
+eye put me in the sack and drew the strings tight round my neck. And
+then, behold the miracle! No sooner was I wrapped about with this
+good hemp than a genial warmth passed through me, my ulcers dried up,
+and the lice all perished suddenly with a terrible noise. After that
+the man told me with a smile about the hemp of heaven and the angelic
+beans, and finished his discourse by saying: 'Keep safe this remedy,
+'tis sent thee by my master St. Joseph. Whosoever shall use it shall
+be cured of all ills and saved for all eternity, if in the meantime he
+do not sell his soul to the devil!' Then the man went away. And what
+the good messenger told me was true, for by means of this sack from
+heaven, I cured Toon, my workman, of the king's evil; Pier of fever,
+Dolf of scurvy, Hendrik of the phlegm, and a score of others who owe
+it to me that they are still alive."
+
+When Smetse had finished his speech the devil-king seemed lost in deep
+reflection, then suddenly lifted his eyes to heaven, joined his hands,
+crossed himself again and again, and, falling to his knees, beat upon
+his breast, and with most lamentable cries prayed as here follows: "Ah,
+my Master St. Joseph, sweet Lord, blessed saint, immaculate husband of
+the Virgin without stain, you have deigned to make whole this smith,
+and he would have been saved by you for all eternity had he not sold
+his soul to the devil. But I, Master, I, a poor king, who pray to you,
+do you disdain to make me whole also, and to save me as you would
+have saved him? You know well, sweet Lord, how I devoted my life,
+my person, my goods and those of my subjects to the defence of our
+blessed religion; how I hated, as is right, the freedom to believe
+other things than those which are ordained for us; how I combated it
+by steel, stake, and live burial; how I saved in this wise from the
+venom of reform Brabant, Flanders, Artois, Hainault, Valenciennes,
+Lille, Douai, Orchies, Namur, Tournai, Tournaisie, Malines, and
+my other lands. Nevertheless I have been thrown into the fires of
+hell, and there suffer without respite the unutterable torment of
+my consuming ulcers and my devouring vermin. Ah, will you not make
+me whole, will you not save me? You are able, my Master. Yes, you
+will perform again for the sorrowing king the miracle which saved
+the smith. Then shall I be able to pass into paradise, blessing
+and glorifying your name through centuries and centuries. Save me,
+Master St. Joseph, save me. Amen."
+
+And the devil-king, crossing himself, beating his breast, and babbling
+paternosters turn by turn, rose to his feet and said to Smetse:
+"Put me in the sack, smith."
+
+This Smetse did gladly, rolled him into the sack, leaving only his
+head thrust out, drew tight round his neck the stout cords, and placed
+the devil on an anvil.
+
+At this spectacle the workmen burst out laughing, clapping their
+hands together, and saying a hundred merry things to one another.
+
+"Smith," asked the devil, "are these Flemings laughing at me?"
+
+"Yes, Sire."
+
+"What are they saying, smith?"
+
+"Oh, Sire, they are saying that horses are caught by means of corn;
+dogs by liver; asses by thistles; hogs by swill; trout by curdled
+blood; carp by cheese; pike by gudgeon; and a humbug of your kidney
+by tales of false miracles."
+
+"Ho, the traitor smith," howled the devil, grinding his teeth,
+"he has taken in vain the name of my Master St. Joseph, he has lied
+without shame."
+
+"Yes, Sire."
+
+"And thou wilt dare to beat me as thou didst Jacob Hessels and my
+faithful duke?"
+
+"Even more heartily, Sire. Nevertheless 'tis only if you so wish
+it. You shall be set free if you please. Free if you give me back the
+deed; beaten if you are fixed in your idea of carrying me off to hell."
+
+"Give thee back the deed! "roared the devil, "I would rather suffer
+a thousand deaths in a single moment."
+
+"Sire King," said Smetse, "I pray you to think of your bones, which
+seem to me none too sound as it is. Consider also that the opportunity
+is a good one for us to avenge on your person our poor Flanders, so
+drenched in blood at your hands. But it displeases me to pass a second
+time where has passed already the wrath of the very just God. So give
+me back the deed; grace, Sire King, or 'twill begin raining presently."
+
+"Grace!" said the devil, "grace to a Fleming! perish Flanders
+rather! Ah, why have I not again, one single day, as much power,
+armies, and riches as I will; Flanders would give up her soul
+quickly. Then famine should reign in the land, parching the soil,
+drying up the water-springs and the life of plants; the last ghostly
+inhabitants of the empty towns would wander like phantoms in the
+streets, killing one another in heaps to find a little rotten food;
+bands of famished dogs would snatch newborn children from their
+mothers' withered breasts and devour them; famine should lie where
+had been plenty, dust where had been towns, crows where had been
+men; and on this earth stripped naked, stony, and desolate, on this
+burial-ground, I would set up a black cross with this inscription: Here
+lies Flanders the heretic, Philip of Spain passed over her breast!"
+
+So saying the devil foamed at the mouth with wrath, but scarce were
+his last words cold from his lips when all the hammers and bars in
+the smithy fell on him at once. And Smetse and his workmen, striking
+in turn, said: "This is for our broken charters and our privileges
+violated despite thine oath, for thou wast perjurer.
+
+"This is for that when we called thee thou didst not dare come into
+our land, where thy presence would have cooled the hottest heads,
+for thou wast coward.
+
+"This is for the innocent Marquess of Berg-op-Zoom, whom thou
+poisoned in prison, so that his inheritance might be thine; and for
+the Prince of Ascoly, whom thou madest to marry Dona Eufrasia, in
+child by thy seed, so that his wealth might enrich the bastard that
+was coming. The Prince died also, like so many others, for thou wert
+poisoner of bodies.
+
+"This is for the false witnesses paid by thee, and thy promise to
+ennoble whomever would kill Prince William for money, for thou wast
+poisoner of souls."
+
+And the blows fell heavy, and the king's crown was knocked off, and
+his body, like the duke's, was no more than a hotch-potch of bones
+and flesh, without any blood. But the workmen went on with their
+hammering, saying:
+
+"This is for thine invention of the Tourniquet, wherewith thou didst
+strangle Montigny, friend of thy son, for thou wast seeker of new
+tortures.
+
+"This is for the Duke of Alva, for the Counts of Egmont and Hoorn,
+for all our poor dead, for our merchants who went off to enrich
+England and Germany, for thou wast death and ruin to our land.
+
+"This is for thy wife, who died by thy deed, for thou wast husband
+without love.
+
+"This is for thy poor son Charles, who died without any sickness,
+for thou wast father without bowels.
+
+"This is for the hatred, cruelty, and slaughter with which thou didst
+make return for the gentleness, confidence, and goodwill of our land,
+for thou wast king without justice.
+
+"And this is for the Emperor, thy father, who, with his execrable
+proclamations and edicts, first sounded for our land the stroke of
+the evil hour. Give him a good drubbing on our account, and tell us
+thou wilt give back the deed to the baes."
+
+"Yes," wept a melancholy voice, coming from the heap of bones and
+flesh, "thou hast everything, Smetse, thou art free."
+
+"Give me back the parchment," said Smetse.
+
+"Open the sack," answered the voice.
+
+"Ho," cried Smetse, "yes, yes, indeed, I will open the sack wide,
+and Master Philip will leap out and take me off to hell with all
+speed. Oh, the good little devil! But 'tis not now the time for such
+high pranks. Therefore I make bold to beg your Majesty to give me
+first the parchment, which he may without difficulty pass up through
+this gap which is between his neck and the edge of the sacking."
+
+"I will not do it," said the devil.
+
+"That," said Smetse, "is as it pleases your subtle Majesty. In the
+sack he is, in the sack he may remain; I make no objection. Every
+man his own humour. But mine will be to leave him in his sack, and in
+this wise carry him off to Middelburg in Walcheren, and there ask the
+prefect that leave be given me to build a good little stone box in the
+market-place and therein to place your Majesty, leaving outside his
+melancholy countenance. So placed he will be able to see at a close
+view the happiness, joy, and prosperity of the men of the reformed
+faith: that will be a fine treat for him, which might be added to,
+on feast-days and market-days, by an unkind blow or two which people
+would give him in the face, or some wicked strokes with a stick, or
+some spittle dropped on him without respect. You will have besides,
+Sire, the unutterable satisfaction of seeing many good pilgrims
+from Flanders, Brabant, and your other blood-soaked countries come
+to Middelburg to pay back with good coin of their staves their old
+debt to your Most Merciful Majesty."
+
+"Ah," said the devil, "I will not have this shame put upon me. Take,
+smith, take the parchment."
+
+Smetse obeyed, and saw that it was indeed his own, then went and
+dipped it in holy water, where it turned into dust.
+
+At this he was filled with joy and opened the sack for the devil, whose
+bones moved and became joined again to one another. And he took on
+again his withered shape, his hungry vermin, and his devouring sores.
+
+Then, covering himself with his cloak of cloth-of-gold, he went out
+of the smithy, while Smetse cried after him: "Good journey to you,
+and a following wind, Master Philip!"
+
+And on the quay the devil kicked against a stone, which opened of
+itself and showed a great hole, wherein he was swallowed suddenly up
+like an oyster.
+
+
+
+
+XVI. Wherein Smetse beholds on the River Lys a most marvellous sight.
+
+When the devil had gone Smetse was almost off his head with joy, and
+ran to his wife, who had come to the door of the kitchen, and thumped
+her for joy, seized her, kissed her, hugged the good woman, shook her,
+pressed her to him, ran back to his men, shook them all by the hand,
+crying: "By Artevelde! I am quits, Smetse is quits!" And he seemed
+to have a tongue for nothing else but that he was quits! And he blew
+in his wife's ear, into his workmen's faces, and under the nose of a
+bald and wheezing old cat who sat up in one corner and got quit with
+him by a scratch in the face.
+
+"The rascal," said Smetse, "does not seem glad enough at my
+deliverance. Is he another devil, think you? They say they disguise
+themselves in every kind of shape. Ho," said he to the cat, who was
+arching her back in annoyance, "hast heard, listened, and understood,
+devil cat? I am quit and free, quit and franked, quit and happy,
+quit and rich! And I have made fools of all the devils. And from now
+on I will live gaily as becomes a quit smith. Wife, I will send this
+very day a hundred philipdalers to Slimbroek, so that that poor sinner
+may also rejoice at Smetse's quittance."
+
+But his wife said nothing, and when Smetse went to look for her he
+found her on the stair with a great bowl of holy water in her hands,
+in which she was dipping a fair sprig of palm branch.
+
+Coming into the smithy she began to sprinkle with the palm her man and
+the workmen, and also the hammers, anvils, bellows, and other tools.
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, trying to escape the wetting, "what art thou at?"
+
+"I am saving thee," said she, "presumptuous smith. Dost verily think
+that, being freed of devils, thou hast for thine own the chattels that
+come from them? Dost think that though they have lost the soul which
+was to be their payment they will leave thee thy riches. Ho, the good
+fool! They will come back again, yes; and if I do not sprinkle thee
+with this holy water, and myself likewise, and all these good men,
+who knows with what evils they may not torment us, alas!"
+
+And the good wife was working away with her palm-branch when suddenly
+a great thunder rumbled under the earth, shaking the quay, and the
+stones cracked, the panes shivered in the windows, all the doors and
+casements in the smithy opened of themselves, and a hot wind blew.
+
+"Ah," said she, "they are coming; pray, my man!"
+
+And suddenly there appeared in the sky the figure of a man, naked
+and of marvellous beauty. He was standing in a chariot of diamond,
+drawn by four flaming horses. And he held in his right hand a banner,
+whereon was written: "More beautiful than God." And from the body of
+this man, whereof the flesh shone brightly, came golden rays which
+lit up the Lys, the quay and the trees like sunlight. And the trees
+began to sway and swing their stems and branches, and all the quay
+seemed to roll like a ship upon the sea, and thousands of voices
+called out together: "Lord, we cry hunger and thirst; Lord, feed us;
+Lord, give us to drink."
+
+"Ah," said the good wife, "here is my Lord Lucifer and all his devils!"
+
+And when the voices had ceased the man made a sign with his hand,
+and of a sudden the waters of the Lys rose as if God had lifted up
+the river-bed. And the river became like a rough sea; but the waves
+did not roll on the quay, but each lifted separately, bearing on its
+crest a foam of fire. Then each of these flames rose into the air,
+drawing up the water like a pillar, and there seemed to poor Smetse
+and his wife and the men to be hundreds of thousands of these pillars
+of water, swaying and foaming.
+
+Then each pillar took on the form of a fearful animal, and suddenly
+there appeared, mingled together, striking and wounding one another,
+all the devils whose work was to torment poor damned souls. There were
+to be seen, crawling over crooked and shivering men's legs, monstrous
+crabs, devouring those who were servile in their lives. Near these
+crabs were ostriches bigger than horses, who ran along flapping their
+wings. Under their tails they had laurel-wreaths, sceptres, and crowns,
+and behind their tails were made to run those men who in our world
+spent all their time running after vain honours, without a care for
+doing good. And the ostriches went quicker than the wind, while the
+men ran without respite behind them in the effort to get the wreaths,
+crowns, and sceptres; but they could never reach them. In this way
+they were led to a treacherous pond full of loathsome mud, wherein they
+fell shamefully and stayed stuck for all eternity, whilst the mocking
+ostriches walked up and down on the bank dangling their bawbles.
+
+Among the ostriches were squadrons of many-coloured apes, diapered
+like butterflies, whose concern was with miserly Jewish and Lombard
+usurers. These men, when they entered hell, looked round them
+carefully, screwing up their eyes under their spectacles, collected
+from the ground divers rusty nails, old breeches, filthy rags, buttons
+showing the wood, and other old stuff, then dug a hole hastily, hid
+their treasures in it and went off to sit down some way away. The apes,
+seeing this, would leap on the hole, empty out its content, and throw
+it into the fire. Then the misers would weep, make lamentations, and
+be beaten by the apes, and at last go off to find some more secret
+place, hide there once again their new depredations, and see once
+again the hole emptied and the apes coming once again to beat them,
+and so on for all eternity.
+
+In the air, above the apes, soared eagles, who had, instead of a beak,
+four-and-twenty matchlock barrels firing together. These eagles were
+called Royal, because their concern was with conqueror princes, who
+were too fond in their lifetime of the sounds of war and cannon. And
+for their punishment these matchlocks were fired off in their faces
+again and again throughout eternity.
+
+Besides the ostriches, apes, and eagles, reared up a great serpent
+with a bear's coat, who writhed and twisted this way and that. He was
+of great length and breadth, beyond all measure, and had a hundred
+thousand hairy arms, in each of which he held an iron pike as sharp
+as a razor. He was called the Spaniards' Serpent, because in hell
+it was his task to gash about with his pikes without mercy all the
+bands of traitor pillagers who had despoiled our good country.
+
+Keeping clear of this serpent with great prudence, darted about
+mischievous little winged pigs whose tails were eels. These tails
+were designed for the perpetual teazing of such gluttons as came to
+hell. For the pig would come up to such a one, hold the eel close to
+his mouth, and, when he tried to bite it, suddenly fly away from him,
+and so on throughout eternity.
+
+There were to be seen also, marching up and down in their gorgeous
+feathers, monstrous peacocks. Whenever some vain dandy came their way,
+giving himself airs in his fine clothes, one of these peacocks would
+go to him and spread its tail, as if inviting him to pluck out a fine
+feather for his bonnet. But as soon as the dandy approached to take
+his feather, Master Peacock would let fly in his face with filthy
+and evil-smelling water, which spoilt all his fine clothes. And
+throughout eternity the dandy would try to get the feather, and
+throughout eternity be so swilled down.
+
+Among these fearful animals, wandered two by two male and female
+grasshoppers as big as a man, the one playing on a pipe, and the
+other brandishing a great knotted stick. Whenever they saw a man who,
+in his lifetime, leapt, by cowardice, from good to evil, from black to
+white, from fire to water, always on the side of the strongest, these
+grasshoppers would go to him, and one would play the pipe, while the
+other, leaning on his stick with great dignity, would say: "Leap for
+God," and the man would leap; "Leap for the Devil," and the man would
+leap again; "Leap for Calvin, leap for the Mass, leap for the goat,
+leap for the cabbage," and the man would keep leaping. But he never
+leapt high enough for the liking of the grasshopper with the stick,
+and so he was each time belaboured in a most pitiless manner. And he
+leapt without ceasing and was belaboured without respite, while the
+pipe made continual pleasant music, and so on throughout eternity.
+
+Farther on, naked and lying on cloths of gold, silk, and velvet,
+covered with pearls and a thousand resplendent gems, more beautiful
+than the most beautiful ladies of Ghent, Brussels, or Bruges,
+lascivious and smiling, singing, and playing on sweet instruments,
+were the wives of the devils. These dealt out punishment to old rakes,
+corrupters of youth and beauty. To them these she-devils would call
+out amorously, but they could never get near them. Throughout eternity
+these poor rakes had to look at them without being able to touch them
+even with the tip of the nail of their little finger. And they wept
+and made lamentation, but all in vain, and so on through centuries
+and centuries.
+
+There were also mischievous little devils with drums, made of the
+skins of hypocrites, whose masks hung down over the drum case as
+ornament. And the hypocrites to whom they belonged, without their
+skins, without their masks, in all their ugliness, ashamed, hooted,
+hissed, spat at, eaten up by horrible flies, and followed by the
+little devils beating their drums, had to wander up and down hell
+throughout eternity.
+
+It was good to see also the devils of conceited men. These were fine
+great leathern bottles full of wind, finished off with a beak, at the
+end of which was a reed. These bottles had eagle's feet and two good
+little arms, with fingers long enough to go round the widest part of
+the bottle. When the conceited man came into hell, saying: "I am great,
+I am grand, strong, beautiful, victorious, I will overcome Lucifer
+and marry his dam Astarte," the leathern bottles would come up to him
+and say, with a deep reverence: "My lord, will you be pleased to let
+us speak a word to you in secret, touching your high designs?" "Yes,"
+he would say. Then two bottles would stuff their reeds into his ears
+in such a manner that he could not get them out again, and begin to
+press in their bellies with their long fingers, so as to force wind
+into his head, which thereupon swelled up, large and always larger,
+and Master Self-Conceit rose into the air and went off to wander
+throughout eternity, with his head bumping the ceiling of hell,
+and his legs waving in the air in the efforts to get down again;
+but all in vain.
+
+Marvellous devils were certain apes of quicksilver, always running,
+tumbling, leaping, coming, and going. These devils bore down on
+the lazy fellows who were thrown to them, gave them a spade to dig
+earth with, a sword to polish, a tree to trim, or a book to con. The
+lazybones would look at the task set him, saying: "To-morrow,"
+and would stretch his arms, scratching and yawning. But as soon
+as he had his mouth wide open the ape would stuff into it a sponge
+soaked in quintessence of rhubarb. "This," he would say mockingly,
+"is for to-day; work, slug, work." Then, while the lazybones was
+retching, the devil would thump him, shake him a hundred different
+ways, giving him no more peace than a gadfly gives a horse, and so
+on throughout eternity.
+
+Pleasing devils were pretty little children very wide-awake and
+mischievous, whose concern was to teach learned orators to think,
+speak, weep, and laugh according to common nature. And when they did
+otherwise the little devils would rap them sharply on the knuckles. But
+the poor pedants could no longer learn, being too heavy, old, and
+stupid; so they had a rap on the knuckles every day and a whipping
+on Sundays.
+
+And all these devils cried out together: "Master, we are hungry;
+Master, give us to eat, pay somewhat for the good services we render
+thee."
+
+And suddenly the man in the chariot made a sign, and the good River
+Lys threw all these devils on the quay, as the sea splashes on the
+shore, and they hissed loud and terribly at landing.
+
+And Smetse, his wife, and the workmen heard the doors of the cellars
+open with a loud noise, and all the casks of bruinbier came hissing
+up the stairs, and hissing across the floor of the forge, and still
+hissing described a curve in the air and fell among the crowd of
+all the devils. And so also did the bottles of wine, so also the
+hams, loaves, and cheeses, and so also the good crusats, angelots,
+philipdalers, and other moneys, which were all changed into meat and
+drink. And the devils fell over one another, fought, scrambled, wounded
+themselves, forming only one great mass of battling monsters, howling
+and hissing, and each trying to get more than the others. When there
+was left neither drop nor crumb, the man in the chariot made another
+sign, and all the devils melted into black water and flowed into the
+river, where they disappeared. And the man vanished from the sky.
+
+And Smetse Smee was as poor as before, save for one little bag of
+golden royals, which his wife had by chance sprinkled with holy
+water, and which he kept, although it came from the devil. But this,
+as you shall see, did not profit him at all. And he lived with great
+content until he died suddenly one day in his smithy, at the great
+and blessed age of ninety-three years.
+
+
+
+
+XVII. Of Hell, of Purgatory, of the long ladder, and finally of
+Paradise.
+
+When he was dead his soul had to pass through Hell in the guise of a
+smith. Coming thither he saw, through the open windows, the devils
+which had so frightened him in the vision on the Lys, and who were
+now busy torturing and tormenting the poor damned souls as terribly
+as they could. And Smetse went to the doorkeeper; but the doorkeeper,
+on seeing him, howled out in a most awful fashion: "Smetse is here,
+Smetse Smee the traitor smith!" And he would not let him in. Hearing
+the hubbub, My Lord Lucifer, Madam Astarte, and all their court came
+to the windows, and all the other devils after them.
+
+And they all cried out in fear:
+
+"Shut the doors, 'tis the enchanted Smetse, Smetse the traitor smith,
+Smetse the beater of poor devils. If he comes in here he will overset,
+spoil, break up everything. Begone, Smetse!"
+
+"My masters," said Smetse, "if I do indeed come hither to look at
+your snouts, which are not beautiful I promise ye, 'tis not at all
+for my pleasure; and besides, I am not by any means anxious to come
+in. So do not make such a noise, master devils."
+
+"Yes, indeed, my fine smith," answered Madam Astarte, "thou showest
+a velvet pad now, but when thou art within thou wilt show thy claws
+and thine evil intention, and will slay us all, me, my good husband,
+and all our friends. Be off, Smetse; be off, Smee."
+
+"Madam," said Smetse, "you are indeed the most beautiful she-devil I
+ever saw, but that is, nevertheless, no reason why you should think
+so ill of a fellow-creature's intentions."
+
+"Hark to the fellow!" said Madam Astarte, "how he hides his wickedness
+under sugared words! Drive him away, devils, but do him no great harm."
+
+"Madam," said Smetse, "I beg you to listen."
+
+"Be off, smith!" cried out all the devils; and they threw burning
+coals at him, and whatever else they could find. And Smetse ran off
+as fast as his legs would take him.
+
+When he had travelled some way he came before Purgatory. On the other
+side was a ladder, with this inscription at its foot: "This is the
+road to the good Paradise."
+
+And Smetse, filled with joy, began to climb the ladder, which was made
+of golden thread, with here and there a sharp point sticking out, in
+virtue of that saying of God which tells us: "Broad is the way which
+leadeth to Hell, strait and rough the way to Heaven." And, indeed,
+Smetse soon had his feet sore. Nevertheless, he made his way upward
+without halting, and only stopped when he had counted ten hundred
+thousand rungs and could see no more of either earth or hell. And he
+became thirsty. Finding nothing to drink he became a little sullen,
+when suddenly he saw a little cloud coming past, and drank it up
+joyfully. It did not indeed seem to him as good drink as bruinbier,
+but he took consolation from the thought that it is not possible
+to have comforts everywhere alike. A little higher up the ladder he
+suddenly had hard work to keep his bonnet on his head, by reason of
+a treacherous autumn wind which was going down to earth to pull off
+the last leaves. And by this wind he was sorely shaken, and nearly
+lost his hold. After he was out of this pass he became hungry, and
+regretted the good earthly beef, smoked over pine-cones, which is so
+good a food for poor wayfarers. But he took heart, thinking that it
+is not given to man to understand everything.
+
+Suddenly he saw an eagle of terrible aspect coming upon him from the
+earth. Thinking for certain that he was some fat sheep, the eagle
+rose above him and would have dropped on him like a cannon-ball; but
+the good smith had no fear, bent to one side and caught the bird by
+the neck, which he wrung subtly. Then, still going up, he hastened to
+pluck it, ate morsels of it raw, and found them stringy. Nevertheless,
+he took this meat with patience, because he had no other. Then,
+patiently and bravely, he climbed for several days and several nights,
+seeing nothing but the blue of the sky and innumerable suns, moons,
+and stars above his head, under his feet, to right, to left, and
+everywhere. And he seemed to be in the midst of a fair great globe,
+whereof the inner walls had been painted this fair blue, strewn with
+all these suns, moons, and stars. And he was frightened by the great
+silence and by the immensity.
+
+Suddenly he felt a genial warmth, heard sweet voices singing, distant
+music, and the sound of a city toiling. And he saw a town of infinite
+size girt about with walls, over which he could see housetops, trees,
+and towers. And he felt that he was moving more quickly despite his
+own legs, and by and by, leaving the last rung behind, he set foot
+before the gate of the town.
+
+"By Artevelde!" said he, "here is the good Paradise."
+
+And he knocked on the gate; St. Peter came to open to him.
+
+Smetse was somewhat frightened at the gigantic appearance of the good
+saint, his great head of hair, his red beard, his large face, his high
+forehead, and his piercing eyes, with which he looked at him fixedly.
+
+"Who art thou?" quoth he.
+
+"Master St. Peter," said the smith, "I am Smetse Smee, who in his
+lifetime lived at Ghent on the Quai aux Oignons, and now prays you
+to let him enter your good Paradise."
+
+"No," said St. Peter.
+
+"Ah, my master!" said Smetse most piteously, "if 'tis because in my
+lifetime I sold my soul to the devil, I make bold to tell you that
+I repented most heartily, and was redeemed from his power and kept
+nothing that was his."
+
+"Excepting a sackful of royals," said the saint, "and on that account
+thou shalt not come in."
+
+"Master," said the smith, "I am not so guilty as you suppose; the sack
+stayed in my house because it had been blessed, and for that reason
+I thought I might well keep it. But take pity on me, for I knew not
+what I was doing. I pray you also to deign to consider that I come
+from a far country, that I am greatly tired, and would gladly rest
+in this good Paradise."
+
+"Be off, smith," said the saint, who was holding the door a crack open.
+
+Meanwhile Smetse had slipped through the opening, and taking off his
+leathern apron sat down, saying:
+
+"Master, I am here rightfully, you cannot turn me out."
+
+But St. Peter bade a troop of halberdier angels who were near at hand
+drive him away: and this the halberdier angels did with great dispatch.
+
+Thereafter, Smetse did not cease to beat on the door with his fists,
+and lamented, wept, and cried out: "Master, have pity on me, let
+me in, my master; I repent of all the sins I have committed, and
+even the others as well. Master, grant me permission to enter the
+blessed Paradise. Master...." But Master St. Peter, hearing this,
+put his head over the wall:
+
+"Smith," said he, "if thou wilt persist in this uproar, I shall have
+thee sent to Purgatory."
+
+And poor Smetse held his peace, and sat down on his seat, and so
+passed sad days, watching others enter.
+
+In this wise a week went by, during which he lived on a few scraps of
+bread which were thrown to him over the wall, and on grapes gathered
+from a sour vine which grew on the outer face of the wall of Paradise
+in this part.
+
+And Smetse was most unhappy, leading this idle existence. And he
+sought in his head for some work or other which would gladden him
+somewhat. Having found it, he shouted as loud as he could, and
+St. Peter put his head over the wall.
+
+"What wilt thou, Smetse?" said he.
+
+"Master," answered the smith, "will you be pleased to let me go down
+to earth for one night, so that I may see my good wife and look to
+my affairs?"
+
+"Thou mayst, Smetse," answered St. Peter.
+
+
+
+
+XVIII. Wherein it is seen why Smetse was whipped.
+
+It was then All Saints' Eve; bitter was the cold, and Smetse's good
+wife was in her kitchen, brewing some good mixture of sugar, yolk of
+egg, and bruinbier, to cure her of an evil catarrh, which had lain
+upon her ever since her man died.
+
+Smetse came and knocked at the window of the kitchen, whereat his
+wife was greatly frightened.
+
+And she cried out sadly: "Do not come and torment me, my man, if
+'tis prayers thou wilt have. I say as many as I can, but I will say
+more if need be. Wilt thou have masses said? Thou shalt have them,
+and prayers and indulgences likewise. I will buy them, my man,
+I promise thee; but go back quickly whence thou camest."
+
+Nevertheless Smetse went on knocking. "'Tis not masses or prayers,"
+said he, "that I want, but shelter, food, and drink, for bitter is
+the cold, rude the wind, sharp the frost. Open, wife."
+
+But she, on hearing him speak thus, prayed the more and cried out
+the louder, and beat her breast and crossed herself, but made no move
+to open the door, saying only: "Go back, go back, my man; thou shalt
+have prayers and masses."
+
+Suddenly the smith discerned an open window in the attic. He climbed
+up and entered the house by that means, went down the stair, and,
+opening the door, appeared before his wife; but as she kept drawing
+back before him as he advanced, crying out and calling the neighbours
+at the top of her voice, Smetse stood still so as not to frighten
+her further, sat down on a stool, and said:
+
+"Dost not see, mother, that I am indeed Smetse, and wish thee no harm?"
+
+But his wife would listen to nothing and crept back into a
+corner. Thence with her teeth a-chatter, and her eyes open wide,
+she made a sign to him to leave her, for she could no longer find
+her tongue, by reason of her great fear.
+
+"Wife," said the smith in friendly tones, "is it thus that thou givest
+greeting and welcome to thy poor husband, after the long time he has
+been away? Alas, hast forgot our old comradeship and union?"
+
+Hearing this soft and joyous voice she answered in a low tone and
+with great timidity:
+
+"No, dead master."
+
+"Well then," said he, "why art thou so afraid? Dost not know thy man's
+fat face, his round paunch, and the voice which in former days sang
+so readily hereabout?"
+
+"Yes," she said, "I know thee well enough."
+
+And why," said he, "if thou knowest me, wilt not come to me and
+touch me?"
+
+"Ah," said she, "I dare not, master, for 'tis said that whatever
+member touches a dead man is itself dead."
+
+"Come, wife," said the smith, "and do not believe all these lying
+tales."
+
+"Smetse," said she, "will you in good truth do me no hurt?"
+
+"None," said he, and took her by the hand.
+
+"Ah," she said suddenly, "my poor man, thou art cold and hungry and
+thirsty indeed!"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Well then," said she, "eat, drink, and warm thyself."
+
+While Smetse was eating and drinking he told his wife how he had been
+forbidden the door to Paradise, and how he designed to take from the
+cellar a full cask of bruinbier and bottles of French wine, to sell
+to those who went into the Holy City, so that he might be well paid,
+and with the money he received buy himself better food.
+
+"This, my man," she said, "is all very well, but will Master St. Peter
+give thee permission to set up at the gates of Paradise such a tavern?"
+
+"Of that," he said, "I have hope."
+
+And Smetse, laden with his cask and bottles, went his way back,
+up towards the good Paradise.
+
+Having reached the foot of the wall he set up his tavern in the open
+air, for the weather is mild in this heavenly land, and on the first
+day all who went in drank at Smetse's stall, and paid him well out
+of compassion.
+
+But one or two became drunk, and entering Paradise in this state, set
+Master Peter inquiring into the cause of it; and having found it out
+he enjoined Smetse to stop his selling, and had him whipped grievously.
+
+
+
+
+XIX. Of the fair judgment of My Lord Jesus.
+
+Not long afterwards the good wife died also, by reason of the terror
+that had seized hold of her at the sight of her man's ghost.
+
+And her soul went straight towards Paradise, and there she saw, sitting
+with his seat against the wall, the poor Smetse in a fit of melancholy
+brooding. When he saw her he jumped up with great joy, and said:
+
+"Wife, I will go in with thee."
+
+"Dost thou dare?" said she.
+
+"I will hide myself," said he, "under thy skirt, which is wide enough
+for us both, and so I shall pass without being seen."
+
+When he had done this she knocked on the door, and Master St. Peter
+came to open it. "Come in," he said, "good wife." But seeing Smetse's
+feet below the hem of the skirt: "This wicked smith," he cried,
+"will he always be making fun of me? Be off, devil-baggage!"
+
+"Ah, my master," said she, "have pity on him, or else let me stay out,
+too, to keep him company."
+
+"No," said Master St. Peter, "thy place is here, his is outside. Come
+in then, and let him be off at once."
+
+And the good wife went in while Smetse stayed outside. But as soon
+as the noonday hour came, and the angel cooks had brought the good
+wife her beautiful rice pudding, she went to the wall and put her
+head over it.
+
+"Art thou there," she said, "my man?"
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Art thou hungry?" she said.
+
+"Yes," said he.
+
+"Well then," she said, "spread thy leathern apron; I will throw thee
+the pudding which has just been given me."
+
+"But thou," said he, "wilt thou eat nothing?"
+
+"No," said she, "for I have heard it said that there is supper by
+and by."
+
+Smetse ate the rice pudding, and was suddenly filled with comfort,
+for the pudding was more succulent and delicious than the finest meats
+of the earth. Meanwhile his wife went off to walk about in the good
+Paradise, and afterwards came back to Smetse to tell him what she
+had seen.
+
+"Ah," she said, "my man, 'tis a most beautiful place. Would that
+I could see thee within! Round about My Lord Jesus are the pure
+intelligences who discuss with him whatever is goodness, love, justice,
+knowledge, and beauty, and also the best means of governing men and
+making them happy. Their speech is like music. And all the while they
+keep throwing down to earth the seeds of beautiful, good, just and true
+thoughts. But men are so wicked and stupid that they tread underfoot
+these fair seeds or let them wither away. Farther on, established in
+their several places, are potters and goldsmiths, masons, painters,
+tanners and fullers, carpenters and shipbuilders, and thou shouldst
+see what fine work they do, each in his own trade. And when they have
+made some progress they cast down the seed of that also towards the
+earth, but 'tis lost oftentimes."
+
+"Wife," said Smetse, "didst see no smiths?"
+
+"Yes," said she.
+
+"Alas," said he, "I would gladly be working alongside them, for I am
+ashamed to be sitting here like a leper, doing nothing and begging my
+bread. But listen, wife; since Master St. Peter will not let me in,
+go thou and ask grace for me from My Lord Jesus, who is kind and will
+let me in for certain."
+
+"I go, my man," said she.
+
+My Lord Jesus, who was in council with his doctors, saw her coming
+towards him. "I know thee, good wife," said he; "thou wast in thy
+lifetime wedded to Smetse the smith, who entreated me so well when,
+in the guise of a little child, I came down to earth with Master
+Joseph and Madam Mary. Is he not in Paradise, thy good man?"
+
+"Alas, no, My Lord!" answered she, "my man is at the door, most sad
+and out of heart, because Master St. Peter will not let him in."
+
+"Why is that?" said My Lord Jesus.
+
+"Ah, I cannot tell," said she.
+
+But the angel who writes down the faults of men in a record of brass,
+speaking suddenly, said: "Smetse cannot enter Paradise, for Smetse,
+delivered from the devil, kept devil's money."
+
+"Ah," said My Lord Jesus, "that is a great sin; but has he not repented
+of it?"
+
+"Yes," said the good wife, "he has repented, and, moreover, he has
+been all his life good, charitable, and compassionate."
+
+"Go and find him," said My Lord Jesus, "I will question him myself."
+
+Two or three halberdier angels ran to obey him, and brought Smetse
+before the Son of God, who spoke in this wise:
+
+"Smetse, is it true that thou didst keep devil's money?"
+
+"Yes, My Lord," answered the smith, whose knees were knocking together
+with fear.
+
+"Smetse, this is not good, for a man should rather suffer every ill,
+pain, and anguish, than keep the money of one who is wicked, ugly,
+unjust, and a liar, as is the devil. But hast thou no meritorious
+deed to tell me, to mitigate this great sin?"
+
+"My Lord," answered Smetse, "I fought a long while beside the men
+of Zeeland for freedom of conscience, and, doing this, suffered with
+them hunger and thirst."
+
+"This is good, Smetse, but didst thou persist in this fair conduct?"
+
+"Alas, no, My Lord!" said the smith, "for, to tell truth, my courage
+lacked constancy, and I went back to Ghent, where, like so many
+another, I came under the Spanish yoke."
+
+"This is bad, Smetse," answered My Lord Jesus.
+
+"My Lord," wept the good wife, "none was more generous than he to
+the poor, kind to every one, charitable to his enemies, even to the
+wicked Slimbroek."
+
+"This is good, Smetse," said My Lord Jesus; "but hast thou no other
+merit in thy favour?"
+
+"My Lord," said the smith, "I have always laboured with a good heart,
+hated idleness and melancholy, loved joy and merriment, sung gladly,
+and drunk with thankfulness the bruinbier which came to me from you."
+
+"This is good, Smetse, but it is not enough."
+
+"My Lord," answered the smith, "I thrashed as soundly as I could
+the wicked ghosts of Jacob Hessels, the Duke of Alva, and Philip II,
+King of Spain."
+
+"Smetse," said My Lord Jesus, "this is very good. I grant thee leave
+to enter my Paradise."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ UNIFORM WITH "FLEMISH LEGENDS"
+
+ THE LEGEND OF TYL ULENSPIEGEL
+
+ BY CHARLES DE COSTER
+
+ Translated by Geoffrey Whitworth. With 20 Woodcuts by
+ Albert Delstanche. 7s. 6d. net
+
+
+SOME PRESS OPINIONS
+
+"Tyl Ulenspiegel is not yet, in most English households, an old
+friend. Yet we believe that the fellow will soon make his brave and
+humorous way into the friendship of old and young. And the twenty
+full-page woodcuts with which M. Albert Delstanche has illustrated
+this edition will help the friendship on. All the heartiness, the
+ruggedness, the fun, and the gloom of one tragic period in the history
+of a homely and much-enduring people are expressed through the eye
+to the mind by M. Delstanche's knowledge and skill."--The Times.
+
+"An excellent translation has brought a notable example of modern
+Belgian literature within the reach of readers in this country. Taking
+as his central figure the scampish Tyl Ulenspiegel, already in the
+sixteenth century a traditional personage, De Coster produced a
+remarkable reconstruction of Flemish life in the days of Spanish
+oppression and of the famous 'Beggars'."--Scotsman.
+
+"On the large scale, the obvious work of a master, a man who knew
+sorrow but who loved to share the mirth and good living of his fellows,
+mocked impostors wherever he found them, and had a hatred of cruelty
+and injustice that is like lightning. It is one of the rare books,
+full of sad laughter and warm understanding, of the order of 'Don
+Quixote'."--The Nation.
+
+"It is a happy thought which has brought out Mr. Geoffrey Whitworth's
+version of 'The Legend of Tyl Ulenspiegel' now ... for the
+description of it as the 'national epic of Flanders' has much more
+meaning than such phrases usually have.... And all the adventures
+of Tyl and his friends have this quality of reality in fairy-land,
+whether they are grotesque or tragic. The book has tragedy in it
+to balance its boisterous comedy, but the two are combined in a
+style whose generosity and exuberance make their union complete
+and satisfactory. It is a great book indeed. Mr. Whitworth is to be
+congratulated on his excellently easy and vivid translation; and the
+woodcuts of M. Albert Delstanche are all exceedingly impressive and
+many exceedingly beautiful."--Land and Water.
+
+"It is hardly too much to say that De Coster's book is a work of pure
+genius.... At such a moment as the present no publication could be
+more timely than this English version of what will inevitably rank as
+a great epic of Belgian nationality.... For the rest, we have only to
+compliment the publishers, the translator, and the illustrator upon
+their joint efforts to present a fine work in a worthy and acceptable
+form."--The Guardian.
+
+"The illustrator's bold and luminous drawings certainly catch the
+bluff spirit of Charles de Coster's quaint masterpiece, in which the
+transition-age between mediaevalism and modernity lives again so grimly,
+so shrewdly, so humorously. Here there is a suitable gift-book for all
+who love to travel in the highways of world-literature."--Morning Post.
+
+"It is, of course, for adults and not for children, with its grim
+horrors and its full-blooded jollity. What we have learnt to call the
+soul of a people is in it--the spirit of Flanders. The force of De
+Coster's style loses nothing in Mr. Geoffrey Whitworth's translation,
+and there are admirable illustrations cut on the wood by M. Albert
+Delstanche."--Daily Telegraph.
+
+"A most remarkable volume."--Glasgow Herald.
+
+"Reading it for the first time in Mr. Whitworth's admirable English
+version, one is amazed at first that it has not been rendered
+previously. De Coster will never require another English version,
+and this one book of 'glorious adventures' is aureole enough to ensure
+his place on the great hierarchy of literature."--The Bookman.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+NOTE
+
+
+[1] His biography has been written by Charles Potvin. Charles de
+Coster; Sa Biographie. Weissenbruch; Brussels.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Flemish Legends, by Charles de Coster
+
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