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+*******The Project Gutenberg Etext of Rewards and Fairies******
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+Rewards and Fairies
+
+by Rudyard Kipling
+
+June, 1996 [Etext #556]
+
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+
+
+
+
+
+REWARDS AND FAIRIES
+
+RUDYARD KIPLING
+
+
+
+
+
+Contents
+ A Charm
+Introduction
+Cold Iron
+ Cold Iron
+Gloriana
+ The Two Cousins
+ The Looking-Glass
+The Wrong Thing
+ A Truthful Song
+ King Henry VII and the Shipwrights
+Marklake Witches
+ The Way through the Woods
+ Brookland Road
+The Knife and the Naked Chalk
+ The Run of the Downs
+ Song of the Men's Side
+Brother Square-Toes
+ Philadelphia
+ If -
+'A Priest in Spite of Himself'
+ A St Helena Lullaby
+ 'Poor Honest Men'
+The Conversion of St Wilfrid
+ Eddi's Service
+ Song of the Red War-Boat
+A Doctor of Medicine
+ An Astrologer's Song
+ 'Our Fathers of Old'
+Simple Simon
+ The Thousandth Man
+ Frankie's Trade
+The Tree of Justice
+ The Ballad of Minepit Shaw
+ A Carol
+
+
+
+
+A Charm
+
+
+Take of English earth as much
+As either hand may rightly clutch.
+In the taking of it breathe
+Prayer for all who lie beneath -
+Not the great nor well-bespoke,
+But the mere uncounted folk
+Of whose life and death is none
+Report or lamentation.
+Lay that earth upon thy heart,
+And thy sickness shall depart!
+
+It shall sweeten and make whole
+Fevered breath and festered soul;
+It shall mightily restrain
+Over-busy hand and brain;
+it shall ease thy mortal strife
+'Gainst the immortal woe of life,
+Till thyself restored shall prove
+By what grace the Heavens do move.
+
+Take of English flowers these -
+Spring's full-faced primroses,
+Summer's wild wide-hearted rose,
+Autumn's wall-flower of the close,
+And, thy darkness to illume,
+Winter's bee-thronged ivy-bloom.
+Seek and serve them where they bide
+From Candlemas to Christmas-tide,
+For these simples used aright
+Shall restore a failing sight.
+
+These shall cleanse and purify
+Webbed and inward-turning eye;
+These shall show thee treasure hid,
+Thy familiar fields amid,
+At thy threshold, on thy hearth,
+Or about thy daily path;
+And reveal (which is thy need)
+Every man a King indeed!
+
+
+
+
+Introduction
+
+
+Once upon a time, Dan and Una, brother and sister, living in the
+English country, had the good fortune to meet with Puck, alias
+Robin Goodfellow, alias Nick o' Lincoln, alias Lob-lie-by-the-
+Fire, the last survivor in England of those whom mortals call
+Fairies. Their proper name, of course, is 'The People of the Hills'.
+This Puck, by means of the magic of Oak, Ash, and Thorn, gave
+the children power
+
+ To see what they should see and hear what they should hear,
+ Though it should have happened three thousand year.
+
+The result was that from time to time, and in different places on
+the farm and in the fields and in the country about, they saw and
+talked to some rather interesting people. One of these, for
+instance, was a Knight of the Norman Conquest, another a young
+Centurion of a Roman Legion stationed in England, another a
+builder and decorator of King Henry VII's time; and so on and so
+forth; as I have tried to explain in a book called PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.
+
+A year or so later, the children met Puck once more, and
+though they were then older and wiser, and wore boots regularly
+instead of going barefooted when they got the chance, Puck was
+as kind to them as ever, and introduced them to more people of
+the old days.
+
+He was careful, of course, to take away their memory of their
+walks and conversations afterwards, but otherwise he did not
+interfere; and Dan and Una would find the strangest sort of
+persons in their gardens or woods.
+
+In the stories that follow I am trying to tell something about
+those people.
+
+
+
+
+COLD IRON
+
+
+When Dan and Una had arranged to go out before breakfast, they
+did not remember that it was Midsummer Morning. They only
+wanted to see the otter which, old Hobden said, had been fishing
+their brook for weeks; and early morning was the time to surprise
+him. As they tiptoed out of the house into the wonderful stillness,
+the church clock struck five. Dan took a few steps across the
+dew-blobbed lawn, and looked at his black footprints.
+
+'I think we ought to be kind to our poor boots,'he said. 'They'll
+get horrid wet.'
+
+it was their first summer in boots, and they hated them, so they
+took them off, and slung them round their necks, and paddled
+joyfully over the dripping turf where the shadows lay the wrong
+way, like evening in the East.
+The sun was well up and warm, but by the brook the last of the
+night mist still fumed off the water. They picked up the chain of
+otter's footprints on the mud, and followed it from the bank,
+between the weeds and the drenched mowing, while the birds
+shouted with surprise. Then the track left the brook and became a
+smear, as though a log had been dragged along.
+
+They traced it into Three Cows meadow, over the mill-sluice
+to the Forge, round Hobden's garden, and then up the slope till it
+ran out on the short turf and fern of Pook's Hill, and they heard
+the cock-pheasants crowing in the woods behind them.
+
+'No use!' said Dan, questing like a puzzled hound. 'The dew's
+drying off, and old Hobden says otters'll travel for miles.'
+
+'I'm sure we've travelled miles.' Una fanned herself with her
+hat. 'How still it is! It's going to be a regular roaster.' She looked
+down the valley, where no chimney yet smoked.
+
+'Hobden's up!' Dan pointed to the open door of the Forge
+cottage. 'What d'you suppose he has for breakfast?'
+'One of them. He says they eat good all times of the year,' Una
+jerked her head at some stately pheasants going down to the
+brook for a drink.
+
+A few steps farther on a fox broke almost under their bare feet,
+yapped, and trotted off.
+
+'Ah, Mus' Reynolds -Mus' Reynolds'-Dan was quoting from
+old Hobden, - 'if I knowed all you knowed, I'd know something.' [See 'The
+Winged Hats' in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.]
+
+I say,' - Una lowered her voice -'you know that funny feeling of
+things having happened before. I felt it when you said "Mus' Reynolds."'
+
+'So did I,' Dan began. 'What is it?'
+
+They faced each other, stammering with excitement.
+
+'Wait a shake! I'll remember in a minute. Wasn't it something
+about a fox - last year? Oh, I nearly had it then!' Dan cried.
+
+'Be quiet!' said Una, prancing excitedly. 'There was something
+happened before we met the fox last year. Hills! Broken Hills -
+the play at the theatre - see what you see -'
+
+'I remember now,' Dan shouted. 'It's as plain as the nose on
+your face - Pook's Hill - Puck's Hill - Puck!'
+
+'I remember, too,' said Una. 'And it's Midsummer Day again!'
+The young fern on a knoll rustled, and Puck walked out,
+chewing a green-topped rush.
+
+'Good Midsummer Morning to you! Here's a happy meeting,'
+said he. They shook hands all round, and asked questions.
+
+'You've wintered well,' he said after a while, and looked them
+up and down. 'Nothing much wrong with you, seemingly.'
+
+'They've put us into boots,' said Una. 'Look at my feet -
+they're all pale white, and my toes are squidged together awfully.'
+
+'Yes - boots make a difference.' Puck wriggled his brown,
+square, hairy foot, and cropped a dandelion flower between the
+big toe and the next.
+
+'I could do that - last year,' Dan said dismally, as he tried and
+failed. 'And boots simply ruin one's climbing.'
+
+'There must be some advantage to them, I suppose,'said Puck,
+or folk wouldn't wear them. Shall we come this way?'
+They sauntered along side by side till they reached the gate at
+the far end of the hillside. Here they halted just like cattle, and let
+the sun warm their backs while they listened to the flies in the wood.
+
+'Little Lindens is awake,' said Una, as she hung with her chin
+on the top rail. 'See the chimney smoke?'
+
+'Today's Thursday, isn't it?' Puck turned to look at the old pink
+farmhouse across the little valley. 'Mrs Vincey's baking day.
+Bread should rise well this weather.' He yawned, and that set
+them both yawning.
+
+The bracken about rustled and ticked and shook in every direction.
+They felt that little crowds were stealing past.
+
+'Doesn't that sound like - er - the People of the Hills?'said Una.
+
+'It's the birds and wild things drawing up to the woods before
+people get about,' said Puck, as though he were Ridley the keeper.
+
+'Oh, we know that. I only said it sounded like.'
+
+'As I remember 'em, the People of the Hills used to make more
+noise. They'd settle down for the day rather like small birds
+settling down for the night. But that was in the days when they
+carried the high hand. Oh, me! The deeds that I've had act and
+part in, you'd scarcely believe!'
+
+'I like that!' said Dan. 'After all you told us last year, too!'
+
+'Only, the minute you went away, you made us forget
+everything,' said Una.
+
+Puck laughed and shook his head. 'I shall this year, too. I've
+given you seizin of Old England, and I've taken away your Doubt
+and Fear, but your memory and remembrance between whiles I'll
+keep where old Billy Trott kept his night-lines - and that's where
+he could draw 'em up and hide 'em at need. Does that suit?' He
+twinkled mischievously.
+
+'It's got to suit,'said Una, and laughed. 'We Can't magic back at
+you.' She folded her arms and leaned against the gate. 'Suppose,
+now, you wanted to magic me into something - an otter? Could you?'
+
+'Not with those boots round your neck.'
+'I'll take them off.' She threw them on the turf. Dan's followed
+immediately. 'Now!' she said.
+
+'Less than ever now you've trusted me. Where there's true
+faith, there's no call for magic.' Puck's slow smile broadened all
+over his face.
+
+'But what have boots to do with it?' said Una, perching on the gate.
+
+'There's Cold Iron in them,' said Puck, and settled beside her.
+'Nails in the soles, I mean. It makes a difference.'
+
+'How?'
+'Can't you feel it does? You wouldn't like to go back to bare
+feet again, same as last year, would you? Not really?'
+
+'No-o. I suppose I shouldn't - not for always. I'm growing
+up, you know,' said Una.
+
+'But you told us last year, in the Long Slip - at the theatre - that
+you didn't mind Cold Iron,'said Dan.
+
+'I don't; but folks in housen, as the People of the Hills call them,
+must be ruled by Cold Iron. Folk in housen are born on the near
+side of Cold Iron - there's iron 'in every man's house, isn't there?
+They handle Cold Iron every day of their lives, and their fortune's
+made or spoilt by Cold Iron in some shape or other. That's how it
+goes with Flesh and Blood, and one can't prevent it.'
+
+'I don't quite see. How do you mean?'said Dan.
+
+'It would take me some time to tell you.'
+
+'Oh, it's ever so long to breakfast,' said Dan. 'We looked in the
+larder before we came out.' He unpocketed one big hunk of bread
+and Una another, which they shared with Puck.
+
+'That's Little Lindens' baking,' he said, as his white teeth sunk
+in it. 'I know Mrs Vincey's hand.' He ate with a slow sideways
+thrust and grind, just like old Hobden, and, like Hobden, hardly
+dropped a crumb. The sun flashed on Little Lindens' windows,
+and the cloudless sky grew stiller and hotter in the valley.
+
+'AH - Cold Iron,' he said at last to the impatient children. 'Folk
+in housen, as the People of the Hills say, grow careless about Cold
+Iron. They'll nail the Horseshoe over the front door, and forget to
+put it over the back. Then, some time or other, the People of the
+Hills slip in, find the cradle-babe in the corner, and -'
+
+'Oh, I know. Steal it and leave a changeling,'Una cried.
+
+'No,' said Puck firmly. 'All that talk of changelings is people's
+excuse for their own neglect. Never believe 'em. I'd whip 'em at
+the cart-tail through three parishes if I had my way.'
+
+'But they don't do it now,' said Una.
+
+'Whip, or neglect children? Umm! Some folks and some fields
+never alter. But the People of the Hills didn't work any changeling
+tricks. They'd tiptoe in and whisper and weave round the
+cradle-babe in the chimney-corner - a fag-end of a charm here, or
+half a spell there - like kettles singing; but when the babe's mind
+came to bud out afterwards, it would act differently from other
+people in its station. That's no advantage to man or maid. So I
+wouldn't allow it with my folks' babies here. I told Sir Huon so
+once.'
+
+'Who was Sir Huon?' Dan asked, and Puck turned on him in
+quiet astonishment.
+
+'Sir Huon of Bordeaux - he succeeded King Oberon. He had
+been a bold knight once, but he was lost on the road to Babylon, a
+long while back. Have you ever heard "How many miles to
+Babylon?"?'
+
+'Of course,' said Dan, flushing.
+
+'Well, Sir Huon was young when that song was new. But
+about tricks on mortal babies. I said to Sir Huon in the fern here,
+on just such a morning as this: "If you crave to act and influence
+on folk in housen, which I know is your desire, why don't you
+take some human cradle-babe by fair dealing, and bring him up
+among yourselves on the far side of Cold Iron - as Oberon did in
+time past? Then you could make him a splendid fortune, and send
+him out into the world."
+
+'"Time past is past time," says Sir Huon. "I doubt if we could
+do it. For one thing, the babe would have to be taken without
+wronging man, woman, or child. For another, he'd have to be
+born on the far side of Cold Iron - in some house where no Cold
+Iron ever stood; and for yet the third, he'd have to be kept from
+Cold Iron all his days till we let him find his fortune. No, it's not
+easy," he said, and he rode off, thinking. You see, Sir Huon had
+been a man once.
+'I happened to attend Lewes Market next Woden's Day even,
+and watched the slaves being sold there - same as pigs are sold at
+Robertsbridge Market nowadays. Only, the pigs have rings on
+their noses, and the slaves had rings round their necks.'
+
+'What sort of rings?' said Dan.
+
+'A ring of Cold Iron, four fingers wide, and a thumb thick, just
+like a quoit, but with a snap to it for to snap round the slave's
+neck. They used to do a big trade in slave-rings at the Forge here,
+and ship them to all parts of Old England, packed in oak sawdust.
+But, as I was saying, there was a farmer out of the Weald who had
+bought a woman with a babe in her arms, and he didn't want any
+encumbrances to her driving his beasts home for him.'
+
+'Beast himself!' said Una, and kicked her bare heel on the gate.
+
+'So he blamed the auctioneer. "It's none o' my baby," the
+wench puts in. "I took it off a woman in our gang who died on
+Terrible Down yesterday." "I'll take it off to the church then,"
+says the farmer. "Mother Church'll make a monk of it, and we'll
+step along home."
+
+'It was dusk then. He slipped down to St Pancras' Church, and
+laid the babe at the cold chapel door. I breathed on the back of his
+stooping neck - and - I've heard he never could be warm at any fire
+afterwards. I should have been surprised if he could! Then I
+whipped up the babe, and came flying home here like a bat to his
+belfry.
+
+'On the dewy break of morning of Thor's own day -just such a
+day as this - I laid the babe outside the Hill here, and the People
+flocked up and wondered at the sight.
+
+'"You've brought him, then?" Sir Huon said, staring like any
+mortal man.
+
+'"Yes, and he's brought his mouth with him, too," I said. The
+babe was crying loud for his breakfast.
+
+'"What is he?" says Sir Huon, when the womenfolk had
+drawn him under to feed him.
+
+'"Full Moon and Morning Star may know," I says. "I don't.
+By what I could make out of him in the moonlight, he's without
+brand or blemish. I'll answer for it that he's born on the far side of
+Cold Iron, for he was born under a shaw on Terrible Down, and
+I've wronged neither man, woman, nor child in taking him, for
+he is the son of a dead slave-woman.
+
+'"All to the good, Robin," Sir Huon said. "He'll be the less
+anxious to leave us. Oh, we'll give him a splendid fortune, and we
+shall act and influence on folk in housen as we have always
+craved." His Lady came up then, and drew him under to watch
+the babe's wonderful doings.'
+'Who was his Lady?'said Dan.
+'The Lady Esclairmonde. She had been a woman once, till she
+followed Sir Huon across the fern, as we say. Babies are no special
+treat to me - I've watched too many of them - so I stayed on the
+Hill. Presently I heard hammering down at the Forge there.'Puck
+pointed towards Hobden's cottage. 'It was too early for any
+workmen, but it passed through my mind that the breaking day
+was Thor's own day. A slow north-east wind blew up and set the
+oaks sawing and fretting in a way I remembered; so I slipped over
+to see what I could see.'
+
+'And what did you see?'
+'A smith forging something or other out of Cold Iron. When it
+was finished, he weighed it in his hand (his back was towards me),
+and tossed it from him a longish quoit-throw down the valley. I
+saw Cold Iron flash in the sun, but I couldn't quite make out
+where it fell. That didn't trouble me. I knew it would be found
+sooner or later by someone.'
+
+'How did you know?'Dan went on.
+
+'Because I knew the Smith that made it,' said Puck quietly.
+
+'Wayland Smith?' Una suggested. [See 'Weland's Sword' in PUCK
+OF POOK'S HILL.]
+
+'No. I should have passed the time o' day with Wayland Smith,
+of course. This other was different. So' - Puck made a queer
+crescent in the air with his finger - 'I counted the blades of grass
+under my nose till the wind dropped and he had gone - he and his
+Hammer.'
+
+'Was it Thor then?' Una murmured under her breath.
+
+'Who else? It was Thor's own day.' Puck repeated the sign. 'I
+didn't tell Sir Huon or his Lady what I'd seen. Borrow trouble for
+yourself if that's your nature, but don't lend it to your neighbours.
+Moreover, I might have been mistaken about the Smith's
+work. He might have been making things for mere amusement,
+though it wasn't like him, or he might have thrown away an old
+piece of made iron. One can never be sure. So I held my tongue
+and enjoyed the babe. He was a wonderful child - and the People
+of the Hills were so set on him, they wouldn't have believed me.
+He took to me wonderfully. As soon as he could walk he'd putter
+forth with me all about my Hill here. Fern makes soft falling! He
+knew when day broke on earth above, for he'd thump, thump,
+thump, like an old buck-rabbit in a bury, and I'd hear him say
+"Opy!" till some one who knew the Charm let him out, and then
+it would be "Robin! Robin!" all round Robin Hood's barn, as we
+say, till he'd found me.'
+
+'The dear!' said Una. 'I'd like to have seen him!'
+'Yes, he was a boy. And when it came to learning his words -
+spells and such-like - he'd sit on the Hill in the long shadows,
+worrying out bits of charms to try on passersby. And when the
+bird flew to him, or the tree bowed to him for pure love's sake
+(like everything else on my Hill), he'd shout, "Robin! Look -see!
+Look, see, Robin!" and sputter out some spell or other that they
+had taught him, all wrong end first, till I hadn't the heart to tell
+him it was his own dear self and not the words that worked the
+wonder. When he got more abreast of his words, and could cast
+spells for sure, as we say, he took more and more notice of things
+and people in the world. People, of course, always drew him, for
+he was mortal all through.
+
+'Seeing that he was free to move among folk in housen, under
+or over Cold Iron, I used to take him along with me, night-
+walking, where he could watch folk, and I could keep him from
+touching Cold Iron. That wasn't so difficult as it sounds, because
+there are plenty of things besides Cold Iron in housen to catch a
+boy's fancy. He was a handful, though! I shan't forget when I took
+him to Little Lindens - his first night under a roof. The smell of
+the rushlights and the bacon on the beams - they were stuffing a
+feather-bed too, and it was a drizzling warm night - got into his
+head. Before I could stop him -we were hiding in the bakehouse -
+he'd whipped up a storm of wildfire, with flashlights and voices,
+which sent the folk shrieking into the garden, and a girl overset a
+hive there, and - of course he didn't know till then such things
+could touch him - he got badly stung, and came home with his
+face looking like kidney potatoes!
+'You can imagine how angry Sir Huon and Lady Esclairmonde
+were with poor Robin! They said the Boy was never to be trusted
+with me night-walking any more - and he took about as much
+notice of their order as he did of the bee-stings. Night after night,
+as soon as it was dark, I'd pick up his whistle in the wet fern, and
+off we'd flit together among folk in housen till break of day - he
+asking questions, and I answering according to my knowledge.
+Then we fell into mischief again!'Puck shook till the gate rattled.
+
+'We came across a man up at Brightling who was beating his
+wife with a bat in the garden. I was just going to toss the man over
+his own woodlump when the Boy jumped the hedge and ran at him.
+Of course the woman took her husband's part, and while the man
+beat him, the woman scratted his face. It wasn't till I danced
+among the cabbages like Brightling Beacon all ablaze that they
+gave up and ran indoors. The Boy's fine green-and-gold clothes
+were torn all to pieces, and he had been welted in twenty places
+with the man's bat, and scratted by the woman's nails to pieces.
+He looked like a Robertsbridge hopper on a Monday morning.
+
+'"Robin," said he, while I was trying to clean him down with a
+bunch of hay, "I don't quite understand folk in housen. I went to
+help that old woman, and she hit me, Robin!"
+
+'"What else did you expect?" I said. "That was the one time
+when you might have worked one of your charms, instead of
+running into three times your weight."
+
+'"I didn't think," he says. "But I caught the man one on the
+head that was as good as any charm. Did you see it work, Robin?"
+
+'"Mind your nose," I said. "Bleed it on a dockleaf - not your
+sleeve, for pity's sake." I knew what the Lady Esclairmonde
+would say.
+
+'He didn't care. He was as happy as a gipsy with a stolen pony,
+and the front part of his gold coat, all blood and grass stains,
+looked like ancient sacrifices.
+
+'Of course the People of the Hills laid the blame on me. The
+Boy could do nothing wrong, in their eyes.
+
+'"You are bringing him up to act and influence on folk in
+housen, when you're ready to let him go," I said. "Now he's
+begun to do it, why do you cry shame on me? That's no shame.
+It's his nature drawing him to his kind.
+
+'"But we don't want him to begin that way," the Lady
+Esclairmonde said. "We intend a splendid fortune for him - not
+your flitter-by-night, hedge-jumping, gipsy-work."
+
+'"I don't blame you, Robin," says Sir Huon, "but I do think
+you might look after the Boy more closely."
+
+'"I've kept him away from Cold Iron these sixteen years ," I
+said. "You know as well as I do, the first time he touches Cold
+Iron he'll find his own fortune, in spite of everything you intend
+for him. You owe me something for that."
+
+'Sir Huon, having been a man, was going to allow me the right
+of it, but the Lady Esclairmonde, being the Mother of all
+Mothers, over-persuaded him.
+
+'"We're very grateful," Sir Huon said, "but we think that just
+for the present you are about too much with him on the Hill."
+
+'"Though you have said it," I said, "I will give you a second chance."
+I did not like being called to account for my doings on my own Hill.
+I wouldn't have stood it even that far except I loved the Boy.
+
+'"No! No!" says the Lady Esclairmonde. "He's never any
+trouble when he's left to me and himself. It's your fault."
+
+'"You have said it," I answered. "Hear me! From now on till
+the Boy has found his fortune, whatever that may be, I vow to
+you all on my Hill, by Oak, and Ash, and Thorn, and by the
+Hammer of Asa Thor" - again Puck made that curious double-
+cut in the air - '"that you may leave me out of all your counts and
+reckonings." Then I went out'- he snapped his fingers -'like the
+puff of a candle, and though they called and cried, they made
+nothing by it. I didn't promise not to keep an eye on the Boy,
+though. I watched him close - close - close!
+
+'When he found what his people had forced me to do, he gave
+them a piece of his mind, but they all kissed and cried round him,
+and being only a boy, he came over to their way of thinking (I
+don't blame him), and called himself unkind and ungrateful; and
+it all ended in fresh shows and plays, and magics to distract him
+from folk in housen. Dear heart alive! How he used to call and call
+on me, and I couldn't answer, or even let him know that I was
+near!'
+
+'Not even once?' said Una. 'If he was very lonely?'
+'No, he couldn't,' said Dan, who had been thinking. 'Didn't
+you swear by the Hammer of Thor that you wouldn't, Puck?'
+
+'By that Hammer!' was the deep rumbled reply. Then he came
+back to his soft speaking voice. 'And the Boy was lonely, when he
+couldn't see me any more. He began to try to learn all learning (he
+had good teachers), but I saw him lift his eyes from the big black
+books towards folk in housen all the time. He studied song-
+making (good teachers he had too!), but he sang those songs with
+his back toward the Hill, and his face toward folk. I know! I have
+sat and grieved over him grieving within a rabbit's jump of him.
+Then he studied the High, Low, and Middle Magic. He had
+promised the Lady Esclairmonde he would never go near folk in
+housen; so he had to make shows and shadows for his mind to
+chew on.'
+'What sort of shows?' said Dan.
+
+'Just boy's Magic as we say. I'll show you some, some time. It
+pleased him for the while, and it didn't hurt any one in particular
+except a few men coming home late from the taverns. But I knew
+what it was a sign of, and I followed him like a weasel follows a
+rabbit. As good a boy as ever lived! I've seen him with Sir Huon
+and the Lady Esclairmonde stepping just as they stepped to avoid
+the track of Cold Iron in a furrow, or walking wide of some old
+ash-tot because a man had left his swop-hook or spade there; and
+all his heart aching to go straightforward among folk in housen all
+the time. Oh, a good boy! They always intended a fine fortune for
+him - but they could never find it in their heart to let him begin.
+I've heard that many warned them, but they wouldn't be warned.
+So it happened as it happened.
+
+'One hot night I saw the Boy roving about here wrapped in his
+flaming discontents. There was flash on flash against the clouds,
+and rush on rush of shadows down the valley till the shaws were
+full of his hounds giving tongue, and the woodways were packed
+with his knights in armour riding down into the water-mists - all
+his own Magic, of course. Behind them you could see great
+castles lifting slow and splendid on arches of moonshine, with
+maidens waving their hands at the windows, which all turned
+into roaring rivers; and then would come the darkness of his own
+young heart wiping out the whole slateful. But boy's Magic
+doesn't trouble me - or Merlin's either for that matter. I followed
+the Boy by the flashes and the whirling wildfire of his discontent,
+and oh, but I grieved for him! Oh, but I grieved for him! He
+pounded back and forth like a bullock in a strange pasture -
+sometimes alone - sometimes waist-deep among his shadow-
+hounds - sometimes leading his shadow-knights on a hawk-
+winged horse to rescue his shadow-girls. I never guessed he had
+such Magic at his command; but it's often that way with boys.
+
+'Just when the owl comes home for the second time, I saw Sir
+Huon and the Lady ride down my Hill, where there's not much
+Magic allowed except mine. They were very pleased at the Boy's
+Magic - the valley flared with it - and I heard them settling his
+splendid fortune when they should find it in their hearts to let him
+go to act and influence among folk in housen. Sir Huon was for
+making him a great King somewhere or other, and the Lady was
+for making him a marvellous wise man whom all should praise
+for his skill and kindness. She was very kind-hearted.
+
+'Of a sudden we saw the flashes of his discontents turned back
+on the clouds, and his shadow-hounds stopped baying.
+
+'"There's Magic fighting Magic over yonder," the Lady
+Esclairmonde cried, reigning up. "Who is against him?"
+
+'I could have told her, but I did not count it any of my business
+to speak of Asa Thor's comings and goings.
+
+'How did you know?'said Una.
+
+'A slow North-East wind blew up, sawing and fretting
+through the oaks in a way I remembered. The wildfire roared up,
+one last time in one sheet, and snuffed out like a rushlight, and a
+bucketful of stinging hail fell. We heard the Boy walking in the
+Long Slip - where I first met you.
+
+'"Here, oh, come here!" said the Lady Esclairmonde, and
+stretched out her arms in the dark.
+
+'He was coming slowly, but he stumbled in the footpath,
+being, of course, mortal man.
+
+'"Why, what's this?" he said to himself. We three heard him.
+
+'"Hold, lad, hold! 'Ware Cold Iron!" said Sir Huon, and they
+two swept down like nightjars, crying as they rode.
+
+'I ran at their stirrups, but it was too late. We felt that the Boy
+had touched Cold Iron somewhere in the dark, for the Horses of
+the Hill shied off, and whipped round, snorting.
+
+'Then I judged it was time for me to show myself in my own
+shape; so I did.
+
+'"Whatever it is," I said, "he has taken hold of it. Now we
+must find out whatever it is that he has taken hold of, for that will
+be his fortune."
+
+'"Come here, Robin," the Boy shouted, as soon as he heard
+my voice. "I don't know what I've hold of."
+
+'"It is in your hands," I called back. "Tell us if it is hard and
+cold, with jewels atop. For that will be a King's Sceptre. "
+
+'"Not by a furrow-long," he said, and stooped and tugged in
+the dark. We heard him.
+'"Has it a handle and two cutting edges?" I called. "For that'll
+be a Knight's Sword."
+
+'"No, it hasn't," he says. "It's neither ploughshare, whittle,
+hook, nor crook, nor aught I've yet seen men handle." By this
+time he was scratting in the dirt to prise it up.
+
+'"Whatever it is, you know who put it there, Robin," said Sir
+Huon to me, "or you would not ask those questions. You should
+have told me as soon as you knew."
+
+'"What could you or I have done against the Smith that made it
+and laid it for him to find?" I said, and I whispered Sir Huon what
+I had seen at the Forge on Thor's Day, when the babe was first
+brought to the Hill.
+
+'"Oh, good-bye, our dreams!" said Sir Huon. "It's neither
+sceptre, sword, nor plough! Maybe yet it's a bookful of learning,
+bound with iron clasps. There's a chance for a splendid fortune in
+that sometimes."
+
+'But we knew we were only speaking to comfort ourselves,
+and the Lady Esclairmonde, having been a woman, said so.
+
+'"Thur aie! Thor help us!" the Boy called. "It is round,
+without end, Cold Iron, four fingers wide and a thumb thick, and
+there is writing on the breadth of it."
+
+'"Read the writing if you have the learning," I called. The
+darkness had lifted by then, and the owl was out over the fern again.
+
+'He called back, reading the runes on the iron:
+
+ "Few can see
+ Further forth
+ Than when the child
+ Meets the Cold Iron."
+
+And there he stood, in clear starlight, with a new, heavy, shining
+slave-ring round his proud neck.
+
+'"Is this how it goes?" he asked, while the Lady Esclairmonde cried.
+
+'"That is how it goes," I said. He hadn't snapped the catch
+home yet, though.
+
+'"What fortune does it mean for him?" said Sir Huon, while
+the Boy fingered the ring. "You who walk under Cold Iron, you
+must tell us and teach us."
+
+'"Tell I can, but teach I cannot," I said. "The virtue of the Ring
+is only that he must go among folk in housen henceforward,
+doing what they want done, or what he knows they need, all Old
+England over. Never will he be his own master, nor yet ever any
+man's. He will get half he gives, and give twice what he gets, till
+his life's last breath; and if he lays aside his load before he draws
+that last breath, all his work will go for naught."
+
+'"Oh, cruel, wicked Thor!" cried the Lady Esclairmonde.
+"Ah, look see, all of you! The catch is still open! He hasn't locked
+it. He can still take it off. He can still come back. Come back!" She
+went as near as she dared, but she could not lay hands on Cold
+Iron. The Boy could have taken it off, yes. We waited to see if he
+would, but he put up his hand, and the snap locked home.
+
+'"What else could I have done?" said he.
+
+'"Surely, then, you will do," I said. "Morning's coming, and
+if you three have any farewells to make, make them now, for,
+after sunrise, Cold Iron must be your master."
+'So the three sat down, cheek by wet cheek, telling over their
+farewells till morning light. As good a boy as ever lived, he was.'
+
+'And what happened to him?' asked Dan.
+
+'When morning came, Cold Iron was master of him and his
+fortune, and he went to work among folk in housen. Presently he
+came across a maid like-minded with himself, and they were
+wedded, and had bushels of children, as the saying is. Perhaps
+you'll meet some of his breed, this year.'
+
+'Thank you,' said Una. 'But what did the poor Lady
+Esclairmonde do?'
+
+'What can you do when Asa Thor lays the Cold Iron in a lad's
+path? She and Sir Huon were comforted to think they had given
+the Boy good store of learning to act and influence on folk in
+housen. For he was a good boy! Isn't it getting on for breakfast-
+time? I'll walk with you a piece.'
+
+When they were well in the centre of the bone-dry fern, Dan
+nudged Una, who stopped and put on a boot as quickly as she could.
+'Now,' she said, 'you can't get any Oak, Ash, and Thorn leaves
+from here, and' - she balanced wildly on one leg - 'I'm standing
+on Cold Iron. What'll you do if we don't go away?'
+
+'E-eh? Of all mortal impudence!'said Puck, as Dan, also in one
+boot, grabbed his sister's hand to steady himself. He walked
+round them, shaking with delight. 'You think I can only work
+with a handful of dead leaves? This comes of taking away your
+Doubt and Fear! I'll show you!'
+
+
+A minute later they charged into old Hobden at his simple breakfast
+of cold roast pheasant, shouting that there was a wasps' nest in
+the fern which they had nearly stepped on, and asking him to
+come and smoke it out.
+'It's too early for wops-nests, an' I don't go diggin' in the Hill,
+not for shillin's,' said the old man placidly. 'You've a thorn in
+your foot, Miss Una. Sit down, and put on your t'other boot.
+You're too old to be caperin' barefoot on an empty stomach. Stay
+it with this chicken o' mine.'
+
+
+
+Cold Iron
+
+
+'Gold is for the mistress - silver for the maid!
+Copper for the craftsman cunning at his trade.'
+'Good!' said the Baron, sitting in his hall,
+'But Iron - Cold Iron - is master of them all!'
+
+So he made rebellion 'gainst the King his liege,
+Camped before his citadel and summoned it to siege -
+'Nay!' said the cannoneer on the castle wall,
+'But Iron - Cold Iron - shall be master of you all!'
+
+Woe for the Baron and his knights so strong,
+When the cruel cannon-balls laid 'em all along!
+He was taken prisoner, he was cast in thrall,
+And Iron - Cold Iron - was master of it all!
+
+Yet his King spake kindly (Oh, how kind a Lord!)
+'What if I release thee now and give thee back thy sword?'
+'Nay!' said the Baron, 'mock not at my fall,
+For Iron - Cold Iron - is master of men all.'
+
+'Tears are for the craven, prayers are for the clown -
+Halters for the silly neck that cannot keep a crown.'
+'As my loss is grievous, so my hope is small,
+For Iron - Cold Iron - must be master of men all!'
+
+Yet his King made answer (few such Kings there be!)
+'Here is Bread and here is Wine - sit and sup with me.
+Eat and drink in Mary's Name, the whiles I do recall
+How Iron - Cold Iron - can be master of men all!'
+
+He took the Wine and blessed It; He blessed and brake the Bread.
+With His own Hands He served Them, and presently He said:
+'Look! These Hands they pierced with nails outside my city wall
+Show Iron - Cold Iron - to be master of men all!
+
+'Wounds are for the desperate, blows are for the strong,
+Balm and oil for weary hearts all cut and bruised with wrong.
+I forgive thy treason - I redeem thy fall -
+For Iron - Cold Iron - must be master of men all!'
+
+'Crowns are for the valiant - sceptres for the bold!
+Thrones and powers for mighty men who dare to take and hold.'
+'Nay!' said the Baron, kneeling in his hall,
+'But Iron - Cold Iron - is master of men all!
+Iron, out of Calvary, is master of men all!'
+
+
+
+
+GLORIANA
+
+
+
+The Two Cousins
+
+
+Valour and Innocence
+Have latterly gone hence
+To certain death by certain shame attended.
+Envy - ah! even to tears! -
+The fortune of their years
+Which, though so few, yet so divinely ended.
+
+Scarce had they lifted up
+Life's full and fiery cup,
+Than they had set it down untouched before them.
+Before their day arose
+They beckoned it to close -
+Close in destruction and confusion o'er them.
+
+They did not stay to ask
+What prize should crown their task,
+Well sure that prize was such as no man strives for;
+But passed into eclipse,
+Her kiss upon their lips -
+Even Belphoebe's, whom they gave their lives for!
+
+
+
+Gloriana
+
+
+Willow Shaw, the little fenced wood where the hop-poles are
+stacked like Indian wigwams, had been given to Dan and Una for
+their very own kingdom when they were quite small. As they
+grew older, they contrived to keep it most particularly private.
+Even Phillips, the gardener, told them every time that he came in
+to take a hop-pole for his beans, and old Hobden would no more
+have thought of setting his rabbit-wires there without leave,
+given fresh each spring, than he would have torn down the calico
+and marking ink notice on the big willow which said: 'Grown-
+ups not allowed in the Kingdom unless brought.'
+
+Now you can understand their indignation when, one blowy
+July afternoon, as they were going up for a potato-roast, they saw
+somebody moving among the trees. They hurled themselves
+over the gate, dropping half the potatoes, and while they were
+picking them up Puck came out of a wigwam.
+
+:Oh, it's you, is it?' said Una. 'We thought it was people.'
+'I saw you were angry - from your legs,' he answered with a grin.
+
+'Well, it's our own Kingdom - not counting you, of course.'
+
+'That's rather why I came. A lady here wants to see you.'
+
+'What about?' said Dan cautiously.
+'Oh, just Kingdoms and things. She knows about Kingdoms.'
+
+There was a lady near the fence dressed in a long dark cloak that
+hid everything except her high red-heeled shoes. Her face was
+half covered by a black silk fringed mask, without goggles. And
+yet she did not look in the least as if she motored.
+
+Puck led them up to her and bowed solemnly. Una made the
+best dancing-lesson curtsy she could remember. The lady
+answered with a long, deep, slow, billowy one.
+
+'Since it seems that you are a Queen of this Kingdom,'she said,
+'I can do no less than acknowledge your sovereignty.' She turned
+sharply on staring Dan. 'What's in your head, lad? Manners?'
+
+'I was thinking how wonderfully you did that curtsy,' he answered.
+
+She laughed a rather shrill laugh. 'You're a courtier already. Do
+you know anything of dances, wench - or Queen, must I say?'
+
+'I've had some lessons, but I can't really dance a bit,' said Una.
+
+'You should learn, then.' The lady moved forward as though
+she would teach her at once. 'It gives a woman alone among men
+or her enemies time to think how she shall win or - lose. A
+woman can only work in man's play-time. Heigho!'She sat down
+on the bank.
+
+Old Middenboro, the lawn-mower pony, stumped across the
+paddock and hung his sorrowful head over the fence.
+
+'A pleasant Kingdom,' said the lady, looking round. 'Well
+enclosed. And how does your Majesty govern it? Who is your Minister?'
+
+Una did not quite understand. 'We don't play that,' she said.
+
+'Play?' The lady threw up her hands and laughed.
+
+'We have it for our own, together,' Dan explained.
+
+'And d'you never quarrel, young Burleigh?'
+
+'Sometimes, but then we don't tell.'
+
+The lady nodded. 'I've no brats of my own, but I understand
+keeping a secret between Queens and their Ministers. Ay de mi!
+
+But with no disrespect to present majesty, methinks your realm'
+small, and therefore likely to be coveted by man and beast. For Is
+example' - she pointed to Middenboro -'yonder old horse, with
+the face of a Spanish friar - does he never break in?'
+
+'He can't. Old Hobden stops all our gaps for us,' said Una, 'and
+we let Hobden catch rabbits in the Shaw.'
+
+The lady laughed like a man. 'I see! Hobden catches conies -
+rabbits - for himself, and guards your defences for you. Does he
+make a profit out of his coney-catching?'
+
+'We never ask,' said Una. 'Hobden's a particular friend of
+ours.'
+'Hoity-toity!' the lady began angrily. Then she laughed. 'But I
+forget. It is your Kingdom. I knew a maid once that had a larger
+one than this to defend, and so long as her men kept the fences
+stopped, she asked 'em no questions either.'
+
+'Was she trying to grow flowers?'said Una.
+
+'No, trees - perdurable trees. Her flowers all withered.' The
+lady leaned her head on her hand.
+
+'They do if you don't look after them. We've got a few. Would
+you like to see? I'll fetch you some.' Una ran off to the rank grass
+in the shade behind the wigwam, and came back with a handful of
+red flowers. 'Aren't they pretty?' she said. 'They're Virginia stock.'
+
+'Virginia?' said the lady, and lifted them to the fringe of
+her mask.
+
+'Yes. They come from Virginia. Did your maid ever plant any?'
+
+'Not herself - but her men adventured all over the earth to
+pluck or to plant flowers for her crown. They judged her worthy
+of them.'
+
+'And was she?' said Dan cheerfully.
+
+'Quien sabe? [who knows?] But at least, while her men toiled
+abroad she toiled in England, that they might find a safe home to
+come back to.'
+
+'And what was she called?'
+
+'Gloriana - Belphoebe - Elizabeth of England.' Her voice
+changed at each word.
+
+'You mean Queen Bess?'
+
+The lady bowed her head a little towards Dan. 'You name her
+lightly enough, young Burleigh. What might you know of her?'
+said she.
+
+, Well, I - I've seen the little green shoes she left at Brickwall
+House - down the road, you know. They're in a glass case -
+awfully tiny things.'
+
+'Oh, Burleigh, Burleigh!' she laughed. 'You are a courtier
+too soon.'
+
+'But they are,' Dan insisted. 'As little as dolls' shoes. Did you
+really know her well?'
+
+'Well. She was a - woman. I've been at her Court all my life.
+Yes, I remember when she danced after the banquet at Brickwall.
+They say she danced Philip of Spain out of a brand-new kingdom
+that day. Worth the price of a pair of old shoes - hey?'
+
+She thrust out one foot, and stooped forward to look at its
+broad flashing buckle.
+
+'You've heard of Philip of Spain - long-suffering Philip,' she
+said, her eyes still on the shining stones. 'Faith, what some men
+will endure at some women's hands passes belief! If I had been a
+man, and a woman had played with me as Elizabeth played with
+Philip, I would have -' She nipped off one of the Virginia stocks
+and held it up between finger and thumb. 'But for all that' - she
+began to strip the leaves one by one - 'they say - and I am
+persuaded - that Philip loved her.' She tossed her head sideways.
+
+'I don't quite understand,' said Una.
+
+'The high heavens forbid that you should, wench!' She swept
+the flowers from her lap and stood up in the rush of shadows that
+the wind chased through the wood.
+
+'I should like to know about the shoes,' said Dan.
+
+'So ye shall, Burleigh. So ye shall, if ye watch me. 'Twill be as
+good as a play.'
+
+'We've never been to a play,' said Una.
+
+The lady looked at her and laughed. 'I'll make one for you.
+Watch! You are to imagine that she - Gloriana, Belphoebe, Elizabeth - has
+gone on a progress to Rye to comfort her sad heart
+(maids are often melancholic), and while she halts at Brickwall
+House, the village - what was its name?' She pushed Puck with
+her foot.
+
+'Norgem,' he croaked, and squatted by the wigwam.
+
+'Norgem village loyally entertains her with a masque or play,
+and a Latin oration spoken by the parson, for whose false quantities,
+if I'd made 'em in my girlhood, I should have been
+whipped.'
+
+'You whipped?' said Dan.
+
+'Soundly, sirrah, soundly! She stomachs the affront to her
+scholarship, makes her grateful, gracious thanks from the teeth
+outwards, thus'- (the lady yawned) -'Oh, a Queen may love her
+subjects in her heart, and yet be dog-wearied of 'em 'in body and
+mind - and so sits down'- her skirts foamed about her as she sat -
+'to a banquet beneath Brickwall Oak. Here for her sins she is
+waited upon by - What were the young cockerels' names that
+served Gloriana at table?'
+
+'Frewens, Courthopes, Fullers, Husseys,' Puck began.
+
+She held up her long jewelled hand. 'Spare the rest! They were
+the best blood of Sussex, and by so much the more clumsy in
+handling the dishes and plates. Wherefore' - she looked funnily
+over her shoulder - 'you are to think of Gloriana in a green and
+gold-laced habit, dreadfully expecting that the jostling youths
+behind her would, of pure jealousy or devotion, spatter it with
+sauces and wines. The gown was Philip's gift, too! At this happy
+juncture a Queen's messenger, mounted and mired, spurs up the
+Rye road and delivers her a letter' - she giggled -'a letter from a
+good, simple, frantic Spanish gentleman called - Don Philip.'
+
+'That wasn't Philip, King of Spain?'Dan asked.
+
+'Truly, it was. 'Twixt you and me and the bedpost, young
+Burleigh, these kings and queens are very like men and women,
+and I've heard they write each other fond, foolish letters that none
+of their ministers should open.'
+
+'Did her ministers ever open Queen Elizabeth's letters?' said Una.
+
+'Faith, yes! But she'd have done as much for theirs, any day.
+You are to think of Gloriana, then (they say she had a pretty
+hand), excusing herself thus to the company - for the Queen's
+time is never her own - and, while the music strikes up, reading
+Philip's letter, as I do.' She drew a real letter from her pocket, and
+held it out almost at arm's length, like the old post-mistress in the
+village when she reads telegrams.
+
+'Hm! Hm! Hm! Philip writes as ever most lovingly. He says his
+Gloriana is cold, for which reason he burns for her through a fair
+written page.' She turned it with a snap. 'What's here? Philip
+complains that certain of her gentlemen have fought against his
+generals in the Low Countries. He prays her to hang 'em when
+they re-enter her realms. (Hm, that's as may be.) Here's a list of
+burnt shipping slipped between two vows of burning adoration.
+Oh, poor Philip! His admirals at sea - no less than three of 'em -
+have been boarded, sacked, and scuttled on their lawful voyages
+by certain English mariners (gentlemen, he will not call them),
+who are now at large and working more piracies in his American
+ocean, which the Pope gave him. (He and the Pope should guard
+it, then!) Philip hears, but his devout ears will not credit it, that
+Gloriana in some fashion countenances these villains' misdeeds,
+shares in their booty, and - oh, shame! - has even lent them ships
+royal for their sinful thefts. Therefore he requires (which is a
+word Gloriana loves not), requires that she shall hang 'em when
+they return to England, and afterwards shall account to him for all
+the goods and gold they have plundered. A most loving request!
+If Gloriana will not be Philip's bride, she shall be his broker and
+his butcher! Should she still be stiff-necked, he writes - see where
+the pen digged the innocent paper! - that he hath both the means
+and the intention to be revenged on her. Aha! Now we come to
+the Spaniard in his shirt!' (She waved the letter merrily.) 'Listen
+here! Philip will prepare for Gloriana a destruction from the West
+- a destruction from the West - far exceeding that which Pedro de
+Avila wrought upon the Huguenots. And he rests and remains,
+kissing her feet and her hands, her slave, her enemy, or her
+conqueror, as he shall find that she uses him.'
+
+She thrust back the letter under her cloak, and went on acting,
+but in a softer voice. 'All this while - hark to it - the wind blows
+through Brickwall Oak, the music plays, and, with the
+company's eyes upon her, the Queen of England must think what
+this means. She cannot remember the name of Pedro de Avila,
+nor what he did to the Huguenots, nor when, nor where. She can
+only see darkly some dark motion moving in Philip's dark mind,
+for he hath never written before in this fashion. She must smile
+above the letter as though it were good news from her ministers -
+the smile that tires the mouth and the poor heart. What shall she
+do?' Again her voice changed.
+
+'You are to fancy that the music of a sudden wavers away.
+Chris Hatton, Captain of her bodyguard, quits the table all red
+and ruffled, and Gloriana's virgin ear catches the clash of swords
+at work behind a wall. The mothers of Sussex look round to
+count their chicks - I mean those young gamecocks that waited on
+her. Two dainty youths have stepped aside into Brickwall garden
+with rapier and dagger on a private point of honour. They are
+haled out through the gate, disarmed and glaring - the lively
+image of a brace of young Cupids transformed into pale, panting
+Cains. Ahem! Gloriana beckons awfully - thus! They come up for
+judgement. Their lives and estates lie at her mercy whom they
+have doubly offended, both as Queen and woman. But la! what
+will not foolish young men do for a beautiful maid?'
+
+'Why? What did she do? What had they done?' said Una.
+
+'Hsh! You mar the play! Gloriana had guessed the cause of the
+trouble. They were handsome lads. So she frowns a while and
+tells 'em not to be bigger fools than their mothers had made 'em,
+and warns 'em, if they do not kiss and be friends on the instant,
+she'll have Chris Hatton horse and birch 'em in the style of the
+new school at Harrow. (Chris looks sour at that.) Lastly, because
+she needed time to think on Philip's letter burning in her pocket,
+she signifies her pleasure to dance with 'em and teach 'em better
+manners. Whereat the revived company call down Heaven's blessing
+on her gracious head; Chris and the others prepare Brickwall
+House for a dance; and she walks in the clipped garden between
+those two lovely young sinners who are both ready to sink for
+shame. They confess their fault. It appears that midway in the
+banquet the elder - they were cousins - conceived that the Queen
+looked upon him with special favour. The younger, taking the
+look to himself, after some words gives the elder the lie. Hence, as
+she guessed, the duel.'
+
+'And which had she really looked at?' Dan asked.
+
+'Neither - except to wish them farther off. She was afraid all the
+while they'd spill dishes on her gown. She tells 'em this, poor
+chicks - and it completes their abasement. When they had grilled
+long enough, she says: "And so you would have fleshed your
+maiden swords for me - for me?" Faith, they would have been at
+it again if she'd egged 'em on! but their swords - oh, prettily they
+said it! - had been drawn for her once or twice already.
+
+'"And where?" says she. "On your hobby-horses before you
+were breeched?"
+
+'"On my own ship," says the elder. "My cousin was vice-
+admiral of our venture in his pinnace. We would not have you
+think of us as brawling children."
+
+'"No, no," says the younger, and flames like a very Tudor
+rose. "At least the Spaniards know us better."
+
+'"Admiral Boy - Vice-Admiral Babe," says Gloriana, "I cry
+your pardon. The heat of these present times ripens childhood to
+age more quickly than I can follow. But we are at peace with
+Spain. Where did you break your Queen's peace?"
+'"On the sea called the Spanish Main, though 'tis no more
+Spanish than my doublet," says the elder. Guess how that
+warmed Gloriana's already melting heart! She would never suffer
+any sea to be called Spanish in her private hearing.
+
+'"And why was I not told? What booty got you, and where
+have you hid it? Disclose," says she. "You stand in some danger
+of the gallows for pirates."
+
+'"The axe, most gracious lady," says the elder, "for we are
+gentle born." He spoke truth, but no woman can brook contradiction.
+"Hoity-toity!" says she, and, but that she remembered that she
+was Queen, she'd have cuffed the pair of 'em. "It shall be
+gallows, hurdle, and dung-cart if I choose."
+
+'"Had our Queen known of our going beforehand, Philip
+might have held her to blame for some small things we did on the
+seas," the younger lisps.
+
+'"As for treasure," says the elder, "we brought back but our
+bare lives. We were wrecked on the Gascons' Graveyard, where
+our sole company for three months was the bleached bones of De
+Avila's men."
+
+'Gloriana's mind jumped back to Philip's last letter.
+
+'"De Avila that destroyed the Huguenots? What d'you know
+of him?" she says. The music called from the house here, and they
+three turned back between the yews.
+
+'"Simply that De Avila broke in upon a plantation of Frenchmen
+on that coast, and very Spaniardly hung them all for heretics -
+eight hundred or so. The next year Dominique de Gorgues, a
+Gascon, broke in upon De Avila's men, and very justly hung 'em
+all for murderers - five hundred or so. No Christians inhabit there
+now, says the elder lad, "though 'tis a goodly land north of
+Florida. "
+
+'"How far is it from England?" asks prudent Gloriana.
+
+'"With a fair wind, six weeks. They say that Philip will plant it
+again soon." This was the younger, and he looked at her out of
+the corner of his innocent eye.
+
+'Chris Hatton, fuming, meets and leads her into Brickwall
+Hall, where she dances - thus. A woman can think while she
+dances - can think. I'll show you. Watch!'
+
+She took off her cloak slowly, and stood forth in dove-coloured
+satin, worked over with pearls that trembled like running water
+in the running shadows of the trees. Still talking - more to herself
+than to the children - she swam into a majestical dance of the
+stateliest balancings, the naughtiest wheelings and turnings aside,
+the most dignified sinkings, the gravest risings, all joined
+together by the elaboratest interlacing steps and circles.
+They leaned forward breathlessly to watch the splendid acting.
+
+'Would a Spaniard,' she began, looking on the ground, 'speak
+of his revenge till his revenge were ripe? No. Yet a man who
+loved a woman might threaten her 'in the hope that his threats
+would make her love him. Such things have been.' She moved
+slowly across a bar of sunlight. 'A destruction from the West may
+signify that Philip means to descend on Ireland. But then my Irish
+spies would have had some warning. The Irish keep no secrets.
+No - it is not Ireland. Now why - why - why' - the red shoes
+clicked and paused -'does Philip name Pedro Melendez de Avila,
+a general in his Americas, unless' - she turned more quickly -
+unless he intends to work his destruction from the Americas? Did
+he say De Avila only to put her off her guard, or for this once has
+his black pen betrayed his black heart? We' - she raised herself to
+her full height - 'England must forestall Master Philip. But not
+openly,'- she sank again -'we cannot fight Spain openly -not yet
+- not yet.' She stepped three paces as though she were pegging
+down some snare with her twinkling shoe-buckles. 'The Queen's
+mad gentlemen may fight Philip's poor admirals where they find
+'em, but England, Gloriana, Harry's daughter, must keep the
+peace. Perhaps, after all, Philip loves her - as many men and boys
+do. That may help England. Oh, what shall help England?'
+
+She raised her head - the masked head that seemed to have
+nothing to do with the busy feet - and stared straight at the children.
+
+'I think this is rather creepy,' said Una with a shiver. 'I wish
+she'd stop.'
+
+The lady held out her jewelled hand as though she were taking
+some one else's hand in the Grand Chain.
+
+'Can a ship go down into the Gascons' Graveyard and wait
+there?' she asked into the air, and passed on rustling.
+
+'She's pretending to ask one of the cousins, isn't she?' said Dan,
+and Puck nodded.
+
+Back she came in the silent, swaying, ghostly dance. They saw
+she was smiling beneath the mask, and they could hear her
+breathing hard.
+
+'I cannot lend you any of my ships for the venture; Philip would
+hear of it,' she whispered over her shoulder; 'but as much guns
+and powder as you ask, if you do not ask too -'Her voice shot up
+and she stamped her foot thrice. 'Louder! Louder, the music in the
+gallery! Oh, me, but I have burst out of my shoe!'
+
+She gathered her skirts in each hand, and began a curtsy. 'You
+will go at your own charges,' she whispered straight before her.
+'Oh, enviable and adorable age of youth!' Her eyes shone through
+the mask-holes. 'But I warn you you'll repent it. Put not your
+trust in princes - or Queens. Philip's ships'll blow you out of
+water. You'll not be frightened? Well, we'll talk on it again, when
+I return from Rye, dear lads.'
+
+The wonderful curtsy ended. She stood up. Nothing stirred on
+her except the rush of the shadows.
+
+'And so it was finished,' she said to the children. 'Why d'you
+not applaud?'
+
+'What was finished?' said Una.
+
+'The dance,' the lady replied offendedly. 'And a pair of
+green shoes.'
+
+'I don't understand a bit,' said Una.
+
+'Eh? What did you make of it, young Burleigh?'
+
+'I'm not quite sure,' Dan began, 'but -'
+
+'You never can be - with a woman. But -?'
+
+'But I thought Gloriana meant the cousins to go back to the
+Gascons' Graveyard, wherever that was.'
+
+''Twas Virginia after-wards. Her plantation of Virginia.'
+
+'Virginia afterwards, and stop Philip from taking it. Didn't she
+say she'd lend 'em guns?'
+
+'Right so. But not ships - then.'
+
+'And I thought you meant they must have told her they'd do it
+off their own bat, without getting her into a row with Philip. Was
+I right?'
+
+'Near enough for a Minister of the Queen. But remember she
+gave the lads full time to change their minds. She was three long
+days at Rye Royal - knighting of fat Mayors. When she came back
+to Brickwall, they met her a mile down the road, and she could
+feel their eyes burn through her riding-mask. Chris Hatton, poor
+fool, was vexed at it.
+
+'"YOU would not birch them when I gave you the chance,"
+says she to Chris. "Now you must get me half an hour's private
+speech with 'em in Brickwall garden. Eve tempted Adam in a
+garden. Quick, man, or I may repent!"'
+
+'She was a Queen. Why did she not send for them herself?' said Una.
+
+The lady shook her head. 'That was never her way. I've seen
+her walk to her own mirror by bye-ends, and the woman that
+cannot walk straight there is past praying for. Yet I would have
+you pray for her! What else - what else in England's name could
+she have done?' She lifted her hand to her throat for a moment.
+'Faith,' she cried, 'I'd forgotten the little green shoes! She left 'em
+at Brickwall - so she did. And I remember she gave the Norgem
+parson - John Withers, was he? - a text for his sermon - "Over
+Edom have I cast out my shoe." Neat, if he'd understood!'
+
+'I don't understand,' said Una. 'What about the two cousins?'
+
+'You are as cruel as a woman,' the lady answered. 'I was not to
+blame. I told you I gave 'em time to change their minds. On my
+honour (ay de mi!), she asked no more of 'em at first than to wait a
+while off that coast - the Gascons' Graveyard - to hover a little if
+their ships chanced to pass that way - they had only one tall ship
+and a pinnace - only to watch and bring me word of Philip's
+doings. One must watch Philip always. What a murrain right had
+he to make any plantation there, a hundred leagues north of his
+Spanish Main, and only six weeks from England? By my dread
+father's soul, I tell you he had none - none!' She stamped her red
+foot again, and the two children shrunk back for a second.
+
+'Nay, nay. You must not turn from me too! She laid it all fairly
+before the lads in Brickwall garden between the yews. I told 'em
+that if Philip sent a fleet (and to make a plantation he could not
+well send less), their poor little cock-boats could not sink it. They
+answered that, with submission, the fight would be their own
+concern. She showed 'em again that there could be only one end
+to it - quick death on the sea, or slow death in Philip's prisons.
+They asked no more than to embrace death for my sake. Many
+men have prayed to me for life. I've refused 'em, and slept none
+the worse after; but when my men, my tall, fantastical young
+men, beseech me on their knees for leave to die for me, it shakes
+me - ah, it shakes me to the marrow of my old bones.'
+Her chest sounded like a board as she hit it.
+'She showed 'em all. I told 'em that this was no time for open
+war with Spain. If by miracle inconceivable they prevailed against
+Philip's fleet, Philip would hold me accountable. For England's
+sake, to save war, I should e'en be forced (I told 'em so) to give
+him up their young lives. If they failed, and again by some miracle
+escaped Philip's hand, and crept back to England with their bare
+lives, they must lie - oh, I told 'em all - under my sovereign
+displeasure. She could not know them, see them, nor hear their
+names, nor stretch out a finger to save them from the gallows, if
+Philip chose to ask it.
+
+'"Be it the gallows, then," says the elder. (I could have wept,
+but that my face was made for the day.)
+
+'"Either way - any way - this venture is death, which I know
+you fear not. But it is death with assured dishonour," I cried.
+
+'"Yet our Queen will know in her heart what we have done,"
+says the younger.
+'"Sweetheart," I said. "A queen has no heart."
+
+'"But she is a woman, and a woman would not forget," says
+the elder. "We will go!" They knelt at my feet.
+
+'"Nay, dear lads - but here!" I said, and I opened my arms to
+them and I kissed them.
+
+'"Be ruled by me," I said. "We'll hire some ill-featured old
+tarry-breeks of an admiral to watch the Graveyard, and you shall
+come to Court."
+
+'"Hire whom you please," says the elder; "we are ruled by
+you, body and soul"; and the younger, who shook most when I
+kissed 'em, says between his white lips, "I think you have power
+to make a god of a man."
+
+'"Come to Court and be sure of't," I said.
+
+'They shook their heads and I knew - I knew, that go they
+would. If I had not kissed them - perhaps I might have prevailed.'
+
+'Then why did you do it?' said Una. 'I don't think you knew
+really what you wanted done.'
+
+'May it please your Majesty' - the lady bowed her head low -
+'this Gloriana whom I have represented for your pleasure was a
+woman and a Queen. Remember her when you come to your Kingdom.'
+
+'But- did the cousins go to the Gascons' Graveyard?' said Dan,
+as Una frowned.
+
+'They went,' said the lady.
+
+'Did they ever come back?' Una began; but - 'Did they stop
+King Philip's fleet?' Dan interrupted.
+
+The lady turned to him eagerly.
+
+'D'you think they did right to go?' she asked.
+
+'I don't see what else they could have done,' Dan replied, after
+thinking it over.
+
+'D'you think she did right to send 'em?' The lady's voice rose a
+little.
+
+'Well,' said Dan, 'I don't see what else she could have done,
+either - do you? How did they stop King Philip from getting Virginia?'
+
+'There's the sad part of it. They sailed out that autumn from
+Rye Royal, and there never came back so much as a single
+rope-yarn to show what had befallen them. The winds blew, and
+they were not. Does that make you alter your mind, young Burleigh?'
+'I expect they were drowned, then. Anyhow, Philip didn't
+score, did he?'
+
+'Gloriana wiped out her score with Philip later. But if Philip
+had won, would you have blamed Gloriana for wasting those
+lads' lives?'
+
+'Of course not. She was bound to try to stop him.'
+
+The lady coughed. 'You have the root of the matter in you.
+Were I Queen, I'd make you Minister.'
+
+'We don't play that game,' said Una, who felt that she disliked
+the lady as much as she disliked the noise the high wind made
+tearing through Willow Shaw.
+
+'Play!' said the lady with a laugh, and threw up her hands
+affectedly. The sunshine caught the jewels on her many rings and
+made them flash till Una's eyes dazzled, and she had to rub them.
+Then she saw Dan on his knees picking up the potatoes they had
+spilled at the gate.
+
+'There wasn't anybody in the Shaw, after all,' he said. 'Didn't
+you think you saw someone?'
+
+'I'm most awfully glad there isn't,' said Una. Then they went
+on with the potato-roast.
+
+
+The Looking-Glass
+
+Queen Bess Was Harry's daughter!
+
+The Queen was in her chamber, and she was middling old,
+Her petticoat was satin and her stomacher was gold.
+Backwards and forwards and sideways did she pass,
+Making up her mind to face the cruel looking-glass.
+The cruel looking-glass that will never show a lass
+As comely or as kindly or as young as once she was!
+
+The Queen was in her chamber, a-combing of her hair,
+There came Queen Mary's spirit and it stood behind her chair,
+Singing, 'Backwards and forwards and sideways you may pass,
+But I will stand behind you till you face the looking-glass.
+The cruel looking-glass that will never show a lass
+As lovely or unlucky or as lonely as I was!'
+
+The Queen was in her chamber, a-weeping very sore,
+There came Lord Leicester's spirit and it scratched upon the door,
+Singing, 'Backwards and forwards and sideways may you pass,
+But I will walk beside you till you face the looking-glass.
+The cruel looking-glass that will never show a lass
+As hard and unforgiving or as wicked as you was!'
+
+The Queen was in her chamber; her sins were on her head;
+She looked the spirits up and down and statelily she said:
+'Backwards and forwards and sideways though I've been,
+Yet I am Harry's daughter and I am England's Queen!'
+And she faced the looking-glass (and whatever else there was),
+And she saw her day was over and she saw her beauty pass
+In the cruel looking-glass that can always hurt a lass
+More hard than any ghost there is or any man there was!
+
+
+
+
+THE WRONG THING
+
+
+
+A Truthful Song
+
+
+ THE BRICKLAYER:
+
+I tell this tale, which is strictly true,
+just by way of convincing you
+How very little since things were made
+Things have altered in the building trade.
+
+A year ago, come the middle o' March,
+We was building flats near the Marble Arch,
+When a thin young man with coal-black hair
+Came up to watch us working there.
+
+Now there wasn't a trick in brick or stone
+That this young man hadn't seen or known;
+Nor there wasn't a tool from trowel to maul
+But this young man could use 'em all!
+Then up and spoke the plumbyers bold,
+Which was laying the pipes for the hot and cold:
+'Since you with us have made so free,
+Will you kindly say what your name might be?'
+
+The young man kindly answered them:
+'It might be Lot or Methusalem,
+Or it might be Moses (a man I hate),
+Whereas it is Pharaoh surnamed the Great.
+
+'Your glazing is new and your plumbing's strange,
+But other-wise I perceive no change,
+And in less than a month, if you do as I bid,
+I'd learn you to build me a Pyramid.'
+
+ THE SAILOR:
+
+I tell this tale, which is stricter true,
+just by way of convincing you
+How very little since things was made
+Things have altered in the shipwright's trade.
+
+In Blackwall Basin yesterday
+A China barque re-fitting lay,
+When a fat old man with snow-white hair
+Came up to watch us working there.
+
+Now there wasn't a knot which the riggers knew
+But the old man made it - and better too;
+Nor there wasn't a sheet, or a lift, or a brace,
+But the old man knew its lead and place.
+
+Then up and spake the caulkyers bold,
+Which was packing the pump in the after-hold:
+'Since you with us have made so free,
+Will you kindly tell what your name might be?'
+
+The old man kindly answered them:
+'it might be Japhet, it might be Shem,
+Or it might be Ham (though his skin was dark),
+Whereas it is Noah, commanding the Ark.
+
+'Your wheel is new and your pumps are strange,
+But otherwise I perceive no change,
+And in less than a week, if she did not ground,
+I'd sail this hooker the wide world round!'
+
+ BOTH: We tell these tales, which are strictest true, etc.
+
+
+
+The Wrong Thing
+
+
+Dan had gone in for building model boats; but after he had filled
+the schoolroom with chips, which he expected Una to clear away,
+they turned him out of doors and he took all his tools up the hill to
+Mr Springett's yard, where he knew he could make as much mess
+as he chose. Old Mr Springett was a builder, contractor, and
+sanitary engineer, and his yard, which opened off the village
+street, was always full of interesting things. At one end of it was a
+long loft, reached by a ladder, where he kept his iron-bound
+scaffold-planks, tins of paints, pulleys, and odds and ends he had
+found in old houses. He would sit here by the hour watching his
+carts as they loaded or unloaded in the yard below, while Dan
+gouged and grunted at the carpenter's bench near the loft
+window. Mr Springett and Dan had always been particular
+friends, for Mr Springett was so old he could remember when
+railways were being made in the southern counties of England,
+and people were allowed to drive dogs in carts.
+
+One hot, still afternoon - the tar-paper on the roof smelt like
+ships - Dan, in his shirt-sleeves, was smoothing down a new
+schooner's bow, and Mr Springett was talking of barns and
+houses he had built. He said he never forgot any stick or stone he
+had ever handled, or any man, woman, or child he had ever met.
+just then he was very proud of the Village Hall at the entrance of
+the village, which he had finished a few weeks before.
+
+'An' I don't mind tellin' you, Mus' Dan,' he said, 'that the Hall
+will be my last job top of this mortal earth. I didn't make ten
+pounds - no, nor yet five - out o' the whole contrac', but my
+name's lettered on the foundation stone - Ralph Springett, Builder
+- and the stone she's bedded on four foot good concrete. If she
+shifts any time these five hundred years, I'll sure-ly turn in my
+grave. I told the Lunnon architec' so when he come down to
+oversee my work.'
+
+'What did he say?' Dan was sandpapering the schooner's port bow.
+
+'Nothing. The Hall ain't more than one of his small jobs for
+him, but 'tain't small to me, an' my name is cut and lettered,
+frontin' the village street, I do hope an' pray, for time everlastin'.
+You'll want the little round file for that holler in her bow. Who's
+there?' Mr Springett turned stiffly in his chair.
+
+A long pile of scaffold-planks ran down the centre of the loft.
+Dan looked, and saw Hal o' the Draft's touzled head beyond
+them. [See 'Hal o' the Draft' in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.]
+
+'Be you the builder of the Village Hall?' he asked of Mr Springett.
+
+'I be,' was the answer. 'But if you want a job -'
+
+Hal laughed. 'No, faith!'he said. 'Only the Hall is as good and
+honest a piece of work as I've ever run a rule over. So, being born
+hereabouts, and being reckoned a master among masons, and
+accepted as a master mason, I made bold to pay my brotherly
+respects to the builder.'
+
+'Aa - um!' Mr Springett looked important. 'I be a bit rusty, but
+I'll try ye!'
+
+He asked Hal several curious questions, and the answers must
+have pleased him, for he invited Hal to sit down. Hal moved up,
+always keeping behind the pile of planks so that only his head
+showed, and sat down on a trestle in the dark corner at the back of
+Mr Springett's desk. He took no notice of Dan, but talked at once
+to Mr Springett about bricks, and cement, and lead and glass, and
+after a while Dan went on with his work. He knew Mr Springett
+was pleased, because he tugged his white sandy beard, and
+smoked his pipe in short puffs. The two men seemed to agree
+about everything, but when grown-ups agree they interrupt each
+other almost as much as if they were quarrelling. Hal said
+something about workmen.
+
+'Why, that's what I always say,' Mr Springett cried. 'A man
+who can only do one thing, he's but next-above-fool to the man
+that can't do nothin'. That's where the Unions make their mistake.'
+
+'My thought to the very dot.' Dan heard Hal slap his tight-
+hosed leg. 'I've suffered 'in my time from these same Guilds -
+Unions, d'you call 'em? All their precious talk of the mysteries of
+their trades - why, what does it come to?'
+
+'Nothin'! You've justabout hit it,' said Mr Springett, and
+rammed his hot tobacco with his thumb.
+
+'Take the art of wood-carving,'Hal went on. He reached across
+the planks, grabbed a wooden mallet, and moved his other hand
+as though he wanted something. Mr Springett without a word
+passed him one of Dan's broad chisels. 'Ah! Wood-carving, for
+example. If you can cut wood and have a fair draft of what ye
+mean to do, a' Heaven's name take chisel and maul and let drive at
+it, say I! You'll soon find all the mystery, forsooth, of wood-
+carving under your proper hand!' Whack, came the mallet on the
+chisel, and a sliver of wood curled up in front of it. Mr Springett
+watched like an old raven.
+
+'All art is one, man - one!' said Hal between whacks; 'and to
+wait on another man to finish out -'
+
+'To finish out your work ain't no sense,' Mr Springett cut in.
+'That's what I'm always sayin' to the boy here.' He nodded
+towards Dan. 'That's what I said when I put the new wheel into
+Brewster's Mill in Eighteen hundred Seventy-two. I reckoned I
+was millwright enough for the job 'thout bringin' a man from
+Lunnon. An' besides, dividin' work eats up profits, no bounds.'
+
+Hal laughed his beautiful deep laugh, and Mr Springett joined
+in till Dan laughed too.
+
+'You handle your tools, I can see,' said Mr Springett. 'I reckon,
+if you're any way like me, you've found yourself hindered by
+those - Guilds, did you call 'em? - Unions, we say.'
+
+'You may say so!' Hal pointed to a white scar on his cheekbone.
+'This is a remembrance from the Master watching-Foreman of Masons
+on Magdalen Tower, because, please you, I dared to carve stone without
+their leave. They said a stone had slipped from the cornice by accident.'
+
+'I know them accidents. There's no way to disprove 'em. An'
+stones ain't the only things that slip,' Mr Springett grunted. Hal
+went on:
+
+'I've seen a scaffold-plank keckle and shoot a too-clever workman
+thirty foot on to the cold chancel floor below. And a rope can
+break -'
+'Yes, natural as nature; an' lime'll fly up in a man's eyes without
+any breath o' wind sometimes,' said Mr Springett. 'But who's to
+show 'twasn't a accident?'
+
+'Who do these things?' Dan asked, and straightened his back at
+the bench as he turned the schooner end-for-end in the vice to get
+at her counter.
+
+'Them which don't wish other men to work no better nor
+quicker than they do,' growled Mr Springett. 'Don't pinch her so
+hard in the vice, Mus' Dan. Put a piece o' rag in the jaws, or you'll
+bruise her. More than that'- he turned towards Hal -'if a man has
+his private spite laid up against you, the Unions give him his
+excuse for workin' it off.'
+
+'Well I know it,'said Hal.
+
+'They never let you go, them spiteful ones. I knowed a plasterer
+in Eighteen hundred Sixty-one - down to the wells. He was a
+Frenchy - a bad enemy he was.'
+'I had mine too. He was an Italian, called Benedetto. I met him
+first at Oxford on Magdalen Tower when I was learning my trade
+-or trades, I should say. A bad enemy he was, as you say, but he
+came to be my singular good friend,' said Hal as he put down the
+mallet and settled himself comfortably.
+
+'What might his trade have been - plastering' Mr Springett asked.
+
+'Plastering of a sort. He worked in stucco - fresco we call it.
+Made pictures on plaster. Not but what he had a fine sweep of the
+hand in drawing. He'd take the long sides of a cloister, trowel on
+his stuff, and roll out his great all-abroad pictures of saints and
+croppy-topped trees quick as a webster unrolling cloth almost.
+Oh, Benedetto could draw, but 'a was a little-minded man,
+professing to be full of secrets of colour or plaster - common
+tricks, all of 'em - and his one single talk was how Tom, Dick or
+Harry had stole this or t'other secret art from him.'
+
+'I know that sort,' said Mr Springett. 'There's no keeping peace
+or making peace with such. An' they're mostly born an' bone idle.'
+
+'True. Even his fellow-countrymen laughed at his jealousy. We
+two came to loggerheads early on Magdalen Tower. I was a
+youngster then. Maybe I spoke my mind about his work.'
+
+'You shouldn't never do that.' Mr Springett shook his head.
+'That sort lay it up against you.'
+
+'True enough. This Benedetto did most specially. Body o' me,
+the man lived to hate me! But I always kept my eyes open on a
+plank or a scaffold. I was mighty glad to be shut of him when he
+quarrelled with his Guild foreman, and went off, nose in air, and
+paints under his arm. But' - Hal leaned forward -'if you hate a
+man or a man hates you -'
+
+'I know. You're everlastin' running acrost him,' Mr Springett
+interrupted. 'Excuse me, sir.' He leaned out of the window, and
+shouted to a carter who was loading a cart with bricks.
+
+'Ain't you no more sense than to heap 'em up that way?' he
+said. 'Take an' throw a hundred of 'em off. It's more than the
+team can compass. Throw 'em off, I tell you, and make another
+trip for what's left over. Excuse me, sir. You was sayin'-'
+
+'I was saying that before the end of the year I went to Bury to
+strengthen the lead-work in the great Abbey east window there.'
+
+'Now that's just one of the things I've never done. But I mind
+there was a cheap excursion to Chichester in Eighteen hundred
+Seventy-nine, an' I went an' watched 'em leadin' a won'erful fine
+window in Chichester Cathedral. I stayed watchin' till 'twas time
+for us to go back. Dunno as I had two drinks p'raps, all that day.'
+
+Hal smiled. 'At Bury, then, sure enough, I met my enemy
+Benedetto. He had painted a picture in plaster on the south wall of
+the Refectory - a noble place for a noble thing - a picture of
+Jonah.'
+
+'Ah! Jonah an' his whale. I've never been as far as Bury. You've
+worked about a lot,' said Mr Springett, with his eyes on the
+carter below.
+
+'No. Not the whale. This was a picture of Jonah and the
+pompion that withered. But all that Benedetto had shown was a
+peevish grey-beard huggled up in angle-edged drapery beneath a
+pompion on a wooden trellis. This last, being a dead thing, he'd
+drawn it as 'twere to the life. But fierce old Jonah, bared in the
+sun, angry even to death that his cold prophecy was disproven -
+Jonah, ashamed, and already hearing the children of Nineveh
+running to mock him - ah, that was what Benedetto had not
+drawn!'
+
+'He better ha' stuck to his whale, then,' said Mr Springett.
+
+'He'd ha' done no better with that. He draws the damp cloth off
+the picture, an' shows it to me. I was a craftsman too, d'ye see?'
+
+'"Tis good," I said, "but it goes no deeper than the plaster."
+
+'"What?" he said in a whisper.
+
+'"Be thy own judge, Benedetto," I answered. "Does it go
+deeper than the plaster?"
+
+'He reeled against a piece of dry wall. "No," he says, "and I
+know it. I could not hate thee more than I have done these five
+years, but if I live, I will try, Hal. I will try." Then he goes away. I
+pitied him, but I had spoken truth. His picture went no deeper
+than the plaster.'
+
+'Ah!' said Mr Springett, who had turned quite red. 'You was
+talkin' so fast I didn't understand what you was drivin' at. I've
+seen men - good workmen they was - try to do more than they
+could do, and - and they couldn't compass it. They knowed it,
+and it nigh broke their hearts like. You was in your right, o'
+course, sir, to say what you thought o' his work; but if you'll
+excuse me, was you in your duty?'
+
+'I was wrong to say it,' Hal replied. 'God forgive me - I was
+young! He was workman enough himself to know where he
+failed. But it all came evens in the long run. By the same token,
+did ye ever hear o' one Torrigiano - Torrisany we called him?'
+
+'I can't say I ever did. Was he a Frenchy like?'
+
+'No, a hectoring, hard-mouthed, long-sworded Italian
+builder, as vain as a peacock and as strong as a bull, but, mark
+you, a master workman. More than that - he could get his best
+work out of the worst men.'
+
+'Which it's a gift. I had a foreman-bricklayer like him once,'
+said Mr Springett. 'He used to prod 'em in the back like with a
+pointing-trowel, and they did wonders.'
+
+I've seen our Torrisany lay a 'prentice down with one buffet
+and raise him with another - to make a mason of him. I worked
+under him at building a chapel in London - a chapel and a tomb
+for the King.'
+
+'I never knew kings went to chapel much,' said Mr Springett.
+'But I always hold with a man - don't care who he be - seein'
+about his own grave before he dies. 'Tidn't the sort of thing to
+leave to your family after the will's read. I reckon 'twas a fine vault?'
+
+'None finer in England. This Torrigiano had the contract for it,
+as you'd say. He picked master craftsmen from all parts -
+England, France, Italy, the Low Countries - no odds to him so
+long as they knew their work, and he drove them like - like pigs at
+Brightling Fair. He called us English all pigs. We suffered it
+because he was a master in his craft. If he misliked any work that a
+man had done, with his own great hands he'd rive it out, and tear
+it down before us all. "Ah, you pig - you English pig!" he'd
+scream in the dumb wretch's face. "You answer me? You look at
+me? You think at me? Come out with me into the cloisters. I will
+teach you carving myself. I will gild you all over!" But when his
+passion had blown out, he'd slip his arm round the man's neck,
+and impart knowledge worth gold. 'Twould have done your
+heart good, Mus' Springett, to see the two hundred of us
+masons, jewellers, carvers, gilders, iron-workers and the rest - all
+toiling like cock-angels, and this mad Italian hornet fleeing one to
+next up and down the chapel. Done your heart good, it would!'
+
+'I believe you,' said Mr Springett. 'In Eighteen hundred Fifty-four,
+I mind, the railway was bein' made into Hastin's. There was
+two thousand navvies on it - all young - all strong - an' I was one
+of 'em. Oh, dearie me! Excuse me, sir, but was your enemy
+workin' with you?'
+
+'Benedetto? Be sure he was. He followed me like a lover. He
+painted pictures on the chapel ceiling - slung from a chair.
+Torrigiano made us promise not to fight till the work should be
+finished. We were both master craftsmen, do ye see, and he
+needed us. None the less, I never went aloft to carve 'thout testing
+all my ropes and knots each morning. We were never far from
+each other. Benedetto 'ud sharpen his knife on his sole while he
+waited for his plaster to dry - wheet, wheet, wheet. I'd hear it where
+I hung chipping round a pillar-head, and we'd nod to each other
+friendly-like. Oh, he was a craftsman, was Benedetto, but his
+hate spoiled his eye and his hand. I mind the night I had finished
+the models for the bronze saints round the tomb; Torrigiano
+embraced me before all the chapel, and bade me to supper. I met
+Benedetto when I came out. He was slavering in the porch Like a
+mad dog.'
+
+'Workin' himself up to it?' said Mr Springett. 'Did he have it in
+at ye that night?'
+
+'No, no. That time he kept his oath to Torrigiano. But I pitied
+him. Eh, well! Now I come to my own follies. I had never
+thought too little of myself; but after Torrisany had put his arm
+round my neck, I - I' - Hal broke into a laugh - 'I lay there was not
+much odds 'twixt me and a cock-sparrow in his pride.'
+
+'I was pretty middlin' young once on a time,' said Mr Springett.
+
+'Then ye know that a man can't drink and dice and dress fine,
+and keep company above his station, but his work suffers for it,
+Mus' Springett.'
+
+'I never held much with dressin' up, but - you're right! The
+worst mistakes I ever made they was made of a Monday
+morning,' Mr Springett answered. 'We've all been one sort of
+fool or t'other. Mus' Dan, Mus' Dan, take the smallest gouge, or
+you'll be spluttin' her stem works clean out. Can't ye see the grain
+of the wood don't favour a chisel?'
+
+'I'll spare you some of my follies. But there was a man called
+Brygandyne - Bob Brygandyne - Clerk of the King's Ships, a
+little, smooth, bustling atomy, as clever as a woman to get work
+done for nothin' - a won'erful smooth-tongued pleader. He made
+much o' me, and asked me to draft him out a drawing, a piece of
+carved and gilt scroll-work for the bows of one of the King's
+Ships - the SOVEREIGN was her name.'
+
+'Was she a man-of-war?'asked Dan.
+
+'She was a warship, and a woman called Catherine of Castile
+desired the King to give her the ship for a pleasure-ship of her own.
+I did not know at the time, but she'd been at Bob to get this
+scroll-work done and fitted that the King might see it. I made him
+the picture, in an hour, all of a heat after supper - one great
+heaving play of dolphins and a Neptune or so reining in webby-
+footed sea-horses, and Arion with his harp high atop of them. It
+was twenty-three foot long, and maybe nine foot deep - painted
+and gilt.'
+
+It must ha' justabout looked fine,' said Mr Springett.
+
+'That's the curiosity of it. 'Twas bad - rank bad. In my conceit I
+must needs show it to Torrigiano, in the chapel. He straddles his
+legs, hunches his knife behind him, and whistles like a storm-cock
+through a sleet-shower. Benedetto was behind him. We were
+never far apart, I've told you.
+
+'"That is pig's work," says our Master. "Swine's work. You
+make any more such things, even after your fine Court suppers,
+and you shall be sent away."
+
+'Benedetto licks his lips like a cat. "It is so bad then, Master?"
+he says. "What a pity!"
+
+'"Yes," says Torrigiano. "Scarcely you could do things so bad.
+I will condescend to show."
+
+'He talks to me then and there. No shouting, no swearing (it
+was too bad for that); but good, memorable counsel, bitten in
+slowly. Then he sets me to draft out a pair of iron gates, to take, as
+he said, the taste of my naughty dolphins out of my mouth. Iron's
+sweet stuff if you don't torture her, and hammered work is all
+pure, truthful line, with a reason and a support for every curve
+and bar of it. A week at that settled my stomach handsomely, and
+the Master let me put the work through the smithy, where I
+sweated out more of my foolish pride.'
+
+'Good stuff is good iron,' said Mr Springett. 'I done a pair of
+lodge gates once in Eighteen hundred Sixty-three.'
+
+'Oh, I forgot to say that Bob Brygandyne whipped away my
+draft of the ship's scroll-work, and would not give it back to me
+to re-draw. He said 'twould do well enough. Howsoever, my
+lawful work kept me too busied to remember him. Body o' me,
+but I worked that winter upon the gates and the bronzes for the
+tomb as I'd never worked before! I was leaner than a lath, but I
+lived - I lived then!' Hal looked at Mr Springett with his wise,
+crinkled-up eyes, and the old man smiled back.
+
+'Ouch!' Dan cried. He had been hollowing out the schooner's
+after-deck, the little gouge had slipped and gashed the ball of his
+left thumb, - an ugly, triangular tear.
+
+'That came of not steadying your wrist,' said Hal calmly.
+'Don't bleed over the wood. Do your work with your heart's
+blood, but no need to let it show.' He rose and peered into a
+corner of the loft.
+
+Mr Springett had risen too, and swept down a ball of cobwebs
+from a rafter.
+
+'Clap that on,' was all he said, 'and put your handkerchief atop.
+'Twill cake over in a minute. It don't hurt now, do it?'
+
+'No,' said Dan indignantly. 'You know it has happened lots of
+times. I'll tie it up myself. Go on, sir.'
+
+'And it'll happen hundreds of times more,' said Hal with a
+friendly nod as he sat down again. But he did not go on till Dan's
+hand was tied up properly. Then he said:
+
+'One dark December day - too dark to judge colour - we was
+all sitting and talking round the fires in the chapel (you heard good
+talk there), when Bob Brygandyne bustles in and - "Hal, you're
+sent for," he squeals. I was at Torrigiano's feet on a pile of
+put-locks, as I might be here, toasting a herring on my knife's
+point. 'Twas the one English thing our Master liked - salt herring.
+
+'"I'm busy, about my art," I calls.
+
+
+'"Art?" says Bob. "What's Art compared to your scroll-work
+for the SOVEREIGN? Come."
+
+'"Be sure your sins will find you out," says Torrigiano. "Go
+with him and see." As I followed Bob out I was aware of Benedetto,
+like a black spot when the eyes are tired, sliddering up
+behind me.
+
+'Bob hurries through the streets in the raw fog, slips into a
+doorway, up stairs, along passages, and at last thrusts me into a
+little cold room vilely hung with Flemish tapestries, and no
+furnishing except a table and my draft of the SOVEREIGN's scrollwork.
+Here he leaves me. Presently comes in a dark, long-nosed
+man in a fur cap.
+
+'"Master Harry Dawe?" said he.
+
+'"The same," I says. "Where a plague has Bob Brygandyne gone?"
+
+'His thin eyebrows surged up in a piece and come down again
+in a stiff bar. "He went to the King," he says.
+
+'"All one. Where's your pleasure with me?" I says, shivering,
+for it was mortal cold.
+
+'He lays his hand flat on my draft. "Master Dawe," he says,
+"do you know the present price of gold leaf for all this wicked
+gilding of yours?"
+
+'By that I guessed he was some cheese-paring clerk or other of
+the King's Ships, so I gave him the price. I forget it now, but it
+worked out to thirty pounds - carved, gilt, and fitted in place.
+
+'"Thirty pounds!" he said, as though I had pulled a tooth of
+him. "You talk as though thirty pounds was to be had for the
+asking. None the less," he says, "your draft's a fine piece of work."
+
+'I'd been looking at it ever since I came in, and 'twas viler even
+than I judged it at first. My eye and hand had been purified the
+past months, d'ye see, by my iron work.
+
+'"I could do it better now," I said. The more I studied my
+squabby Neptunes the less I liked 'em; and Arion was a pure
+flaming shame atop of the unbalanced dolphins.
+
+'"I doubt it will be fresh expense to draft it again," he says.
+
+'"Bob never paid me for the first draft. I lay he'll never pay me
+for the second. 'Twill cost the King nothing if I re-draw it," I says.
+
+'"There's a woman wishes it to be done quickly," he says.
+"We'll stick to your first drawing, Master Dawe. But thirty
+pounds is thirty pounds. You must make it less.'
+
+'And all the while the faults in my draft fair leaped out and hit
+me between the eyes. At any cost, I thinks to myself, I must get it
+back and re-draft it. He grunts at me impatiently, and a splendid
+thought comes to me, which shall save me. By the same token,
+It was quite honest.'
+
+'They ain't always,' says Mr Springett. 'How did you get out of it?'
+
+'By the truth. I says to Master Fur Cap, as I might to you here, I
+says, "I'll tell you something, since you seem a knowledgeable
+man. Is the SOVEREIGN to lie in Thames river all her days, or will she
+take the high seas?"
+
+'"Oh," he says quickly, "the King keeps no cats that don't
+catch mice. She must sail the seas, Master Dawe. She'll be hired to
+merchants for the trade. She'll be out in all shapes o' weathers.
+Does that make any odds?"
+'"Why, then," says I, "the first heavy sea she sticks her nose
+into'll claw off half that scroll-work, and the next will finish it. If
+she's meant for a pleasure-ship give me my draft again, and I'll
+porture you a pretty, light piece of scroll-work, good cheap. If
+she's meant for the open- sea, pitch the draft into the fire. She can
+never carry that weight on her bows.
+
+'He looks at me squintlings and plucks his under-lip.
+
+'"Is this your honest, unswayed opinion?" he says.
+
+'"Body o' me! Ask about!" I says. "Any seaman could tell you
+'tis true. I'm advising you against my own profit, but why I do so
+is my own concern.
+
+'"Not altogether ", he says. "It's some of mine. You've saved
+me thirty pounds, Master Dawe, and you've given me good
+arguments to use against a willful woman that wants my fine new
+ship for her own toy. We'll not have any scroll-work." His face
+shined with pure joy.
+
+'"Then see that the thirty pounds you've saved on it are
+honestly paid the King," I says, "and keep clear o' women-folk."
+I gathered up my draft and crumpled it under my arm. "If that's
+all you need of me I'll be gone," I says. "I'm pressed."
+
+'He turns him round and fumbles in a corner. "Too pressed to
+be made a knight, Sir Harry?" he says, and comes at me smiling,
+with three-quarters of a rusty sword.
+
+'I pledge you my Mark I never guessed it was the King till that
+moment. I kneeled, and he tapped me on the shoulder.
+
+'"Rise up, Sir Harry Dawe," he says, and, in the same breath,
+"I'm pressed, too," and slips through the tapestries, leaving me
+like a stuck calf.
+
+'It come over me, in a bitter wave like, that here was I, a master
+craftsman, who had worked no bounds, soul or body, to make
+the King's tomb and chapel a triumph and a glory for all time; and
+here, d'ye see, I was made knight, not for anything I'd slaved
+over, or given my heart and guts to, but expressedly because I'd
+saved him thirty pounds and a tongue-lashing from Catherine of
+Castille - she that had asked for the ship. That thought shrivelled
+me with insides while I was folding away my draft. On the heels
+of it - maybe you'll see why - I began to grin to myself. I thought
+of the earnest simplicity of the man - the King, I should say -
+because I'd saved him the money; his smile as though he'd won
+half France! I thought of my own silly pride and foolish expectations
+that some day he'd honour me as a master craftsman. I
+thought of the broken-tipped sword he'd found behind the
+hangings; the dirt of the cold room, and his cold eye, wrapped up
+in his own concerns, scarcely resting on me. Then I remembered
+the solemn chapel roof and the bronzes about the stately tomb
+he'd lie in, and - d'ye see? - the unreason of it all - the mad high
+humour of it all - took hold on me till I sat me down on a dark
+stair-head in a passage, and laughed till I could laugh no more.
+What else could I have done?
+
+'I never heard his feet behind me - he always walked like a cat -
+but his arm slid round my neck, pulling me back where I sat, till
+my head lay on his chest, and his left hand held the knife plumb
+over my heart - Benedetto! Even so I laughed - the fit was beyond
+my holding - laughed while he ground his teeth in my ear. He was
+stark crazed for the time.
+
+'"Laugh," he said. "Finish the laughter. I'll not cut ye short.
+Tell me now" - he wrenched at my head - "why the King chose
+to honour you, - you - you - you lickspittle Englishman? I am full
+of patience now. I have waited so long." Then he was off at score
+about his Jonah in Bury Refectory, and what I'd said of it, and his
+pictures in the chapel which all men praised and none looked at
+twice (as if that was my fault!), and a whole parcel of words and
+looks treasured up against me through years.
+
+'"Ease off your arm a little," I said. "I cannot die by choking,
+for I am just dubbed knight, Benedetto."
+
+'"Tell me, and I'll confess ye, Sir Harry Dawe, Knight.
+There's a long night before ye. Tell," says he.
+
+'So I told him - his chin on my crown - told him all; told it as
+well and with as many words as I have ever told a tale at a supper
+with Torrigiano. I knew Benedetto would understand, for, mad
+or sad, he was a craftsman. I believed it to be the last tale I'd ever
+tell top of mortal earth, and I would not put out bad work before I
+left the Lodge. All art's one art, as I said. I bore Benedetto no
+malice. My spirits, d'ye see, were catched up in a high, solemn
+exaltation, and I saw all earth's vanities foreshortened and little,
+laid out below me like a town from a cathedral scaffolding. I told
+him what befell, and what I thought of it. I gave him the King's
+very voice at "Master Dawe, you've saved me thirty pounds!";
+his peevish grunt while he looked for the sword; and how the
+badger-eyed figures of Glory and Victory leered at me from the
+Flemish hangings. Body o' me, 'twas a fine, noble tale, and, as I
+thought, my last work on earth.
+
+'"That is how I was honoured by the King," I said. "They'll
+hang ye for killing me, Benedetto. And, since you've killed in the
+King's Palace, they'll draw and quarter you; but you're too mad
+to care. Grant me, though, ye never heard a better tale."
+'He said nothing, but I felt him shake. My head on his chest
+shook; his right arm fell away, his left dropped the knife, and he
+leaned with both hands on my shoulder - shaking - shaking! I
+turned me round. No need to put my foot on his knife. The man
+was speechless with laughter - honest craftsman's mirth. The first
+time I'd ever seen him laugh. You know the mirth that cuts off the
+very breath, while ye stamp and snatch at the short ribs? That was
+Benedetto's case.
+
+'When he began to roar and bay and whoop in the passage, I
+haled him out into the street, and there we leaned against the wall
+and had it all over again - waving our hands and wagging our
+heads - till the watch came to know if we were drunk.
+
+'Benedetto says to 'em, solemn as an owl: "You have saved me
+thirty pounds, Mus' Dawe," and off he pealed. In some sort we
+were mad-drunk - I because dear life had been given back to me,
+and he because, as he said afterwards, because the old crust of
+hatred round his heart was broke up and carried away by
+laughter. His very face had changed too.
+
+'"Hal," he cries, "I forgive thee. Forgive me too, Hal. Oh,
+you English, you English! Did it gall thee, Hal, to see the rust on
+the dirty sword? Tell me again, Hal, how the King grunted with
+joy. Oh, let us tell the Master."
+
+'So we reeled back to the chapel, arms round each other's
+necks, and when we could speak - he thought we'd been fighting -
+we told the Master. Yes, we told Torrigiano, and he laughed till
+he rolled on the new cold pavement. Then he knocked our heads together.
+
+'"Ah, you English!" he cried. "You are more than pigs. You
+are English. Now you are well punished for your dirty fishes. Put
+the draft in the fire, and never do so any more. You are a fool, Hal,
+and you are a fool, Benedetto, but I need your works to please this
+beautiful English King."
+
+'"And I meant to kill Hal," says Benedetto. "Master, I meant
+to kill him because the English King had made him a knight."
+
+'"Ah!" says the Master, shaking his finger. "Benedetto, if you
+had killed my Hal, I should have killed you - in the cloister. But
+you are a craftsman too, so I should have killed you like a
+craftsman, very, very slowly - in an hour, if I could spare the
+time!" That was Torrigiano - the Master!'
+
+Mr Springett sat quite still for some time after Hal had finished.
+Then he turned dark red; then he rocked to and fro; then he
+coughed and wheezed till the tears ran down his face. Dan knew
+by this that he was laughing, but it surprised Hal at first.
+
+'Excuse me, sir,' said Mr Springett, 'but I was thinkin' of some
+stables I built for a gentleman in Eighteen hundred Seventy-four.
+They was stables in blue brick - very particular work. Dunno as
+they weren't the best job which ever I'd done. But the gentleman's
+lady - she'd come from Lunnon, new married - she was all
+for buildin' what was called a haw-haw - what you an' me 'ud call
+a dik - right acrost his park. A middlin' big job which I'd have had
+the contract of, for she spoke to me in the library about it. But I
+told her there was a line o' springs just where she wanted to dig
+her ditch, an' she'd flood the park if she went on.'
+
+'Were there any springs at all?' said Hal.
+
+'Bound to be springs everywhere if you dig deep enough, ain't
+there? But what I said about the springs put her out o' conceit o'
+diggin' haw-haws, an' she took an' built a white tile dairy instead.
+But when I sent in my last bill for the stables, the gentleman he
+paid it 'thout even lookin' at it, and I hadn't forgotten nothin', I do
+assure you. More than that, he slips two five-pound notes into my
+hand in the library, an'"Ralph, he says - he allers called me by
+name - "Ralph," he says, "you've saved me a heap of expense an'
+trouble this autumn." I didn't say nothin', o' course. I knowed he
+didn't want any haws-haws digged acrost his park no more'n I
+did, but I never said nothin'. No more he didn't say nothin' about
+my blue-brick stables, which was really the best an' honestest
+piece o' work I'd done in quite a while. He give me ten pounds for
+savin' him a hem of a deal o' trouble at home. I reckon things are
+pretty much alike, all times, in all places.'
+
+Hal and he laughed together. Dan couldn't quite understand
+what they thought so funny, and went on with his work for some
+time without speaking.
+
+When he looked up, Mr Springett, alone, was wiping his eyes
+with his green-and-yellow pocket-handkerchief.
+
+'Bless me, Mus' Dan, I've been asleep,' he said. 'An' I've
+dreamed a dream which has made me laugh - laugh as I ain't
+laughed in a long day. I can't remember what 'twas all about, but
+they do say that when old men take to laughin' in their sleep,
+they're middlin' ripe for the next world. Have you been workin'
+honest, Mus' Dan?'
+
+'Ra-ather,' said Dan, unclamping the schooner from the vice.
+'And look how I've cut myself with the small gouge.'
+
+'Ye-es. You want a lump o' cobwebs to that,' said Mr
+Springett. 'Oh, I see you've put it on already. That's right, Mus'
+Dan.'
+
+
+
+King Henry VII and the Shipwrights
+
+Harry our King in England from London town is gone,
+And comen to Hamull on the Hoke in the countie of Suthampton.
+For there lay the MARY OF THE TOWER, his ship of war so strong,
+And he would discover, certaynely, if his shipwrights did him wrong.
+
+He told not none of his setting forth, nor yet where he would go
+(But only my Lord of Arundel), and meanly did he show,
+In an old jerkin and patched hose that no man might him mark;
+With his frieze hood and cloak about, he looked like any clerk.
+He was at Hamull on the Hoke about the hour of the tide,
+And saw the MARY haled into dock, the winter to abide,
+With all her tackle and habiliments which are the King his own;
+But then ran on his false shipwrights and stripped her to the bone.
+
+They heaved the main-mast overboard, that was of a trusty tree,
+And they wrote down it was spent and lost by force of weather at sea.
+But they sawen it into planks and strakes as far as it might go,
+To maken beds for their own wives and little children also.
+
+There was a knave called Slingawai, he crope beneath the deck,
+Crying: 'Good felawes, come and see! The ship is nigh a wreck!
+For the storm that took our tall main-mast, it blew so fierce and fell,
+Alack! it hath taken the kettles and pans, and this brass pott as well!'
+
+With that he set the pott on his head and hied him up the hatch,
+While all the shipwrights ran below to find what they might snatch;
+All except Bob Brygandyne and he was a yeoman good,
+He caught Slingawai round the waist and threw him on to the mud.
+
+'I have taken plank and rope and nail, without the King his leave,
+After the custom of Portesmouth, but I will not suffer a thief.
+Nay, never lift up thy hand at me! There's no clean hands in the trade.
+Steal in measure,' quo' Brygandyne. 'There's measure in all things made!'
+
+'Gramercy, yeoman!' said our King. 'Thy counsel liketh me.'
+And he pulled a whistle out of his neck and whistled whistles three.
+Then came my Lord of Arundel pricking across the down,
+And behind him the Mayor and Burgesses of merry Suthampton town.
+
+They drew the naughty shipwrights up, with the kettles in their hands,
+And bound them round the forecastle to wait the King's commands.
+But 'Since ye have made your beds,' said the King, 'ye needs must lie
+thereon.
+For the sake of your wives and little ones - felawes, get you gone!'
+
+When they had beaten Slingawai, out of his own lips,
+Our King appointed Brygandyne to be Clerk of all his ships.
+'Nay, never lift up thy hands to me - there's no clean hands in the trade.
+But steal in measure,'said Harry our King. 'There's measure in all things
+made!'
+
+God speed the 'Mary of the Tower,' the 'Sovereign' and 'Grace Dieu,'
+The 'Sweepstakes' and the 'Mary Fortune,' and the 'Henry of Bristol' too!
+All tall ships that sail on the sea, or in our harbours stand,
+That they may keep measure with Harry our King and peace in Engeland!
+
+
+
+MARKLAKE WITCHES
+
+
+
+The Way Through the Woods
+
+
+They shut the road through the woods
+Seventy years ago.
+Weather and rain have undone it again,
+And now you would never know
+There was once a road through the woods
+Before they planted the trees.
+It is underneath the coppice and heath,
+And the thin anemones.
+Only the keeper sees
+That, where the ring-dove broods,
+And the badgers roll at ease,
+There was once a road through the woods.
+
+Yet, if you enter the woods
+Of a summer evening late,
+When the night-air cools on the trout-ringed pools
+Where the otter whistles his mate
+(They fear not men in the woods
+Because they see so few),
+You will hear the beat of a horse's feet
+And the swish of a skirt in the dew,
+Steadily cantering through
+The misty solitudes,
+As though they perfectly knew
+The old lost road through the woods ...
+But there is no road through the woods!
+
+
+
+Marklake Witches
+
+
+When Dan took up boat-building, Una coaxed Mrs Vincey, the
+farmer's wife at Little Lindens, to teach her to milk. Mrs Vincey
+milks in the pasture in summer, which is different from milking
+in the shed, because the cows are not tied up, and until they know
+you they will not stand still. After three weeks Una could milk
+Red Cow or Kitty Shorthorn quite dry, without her wrists
+aching, and then she allowed Dan to look. But milking did not
+amuse him, and it was pleasanter for Una to be alone in the quiet
+pastures with quiet-spoken Mrs Vincey. So, evening after evening,
+she slipped across to Little Lindens, took her stool from the
+fern-clump beside the fallen oak, and went to work, her pail
+between her knees, and her head pressed hard into the cow's
+flank. As often as not, Mrs Vincey would be milking cross Pansy
+at the other end of the pasture, and would not come near till it was
+time to strain and pour off.
+
+Once, in the middle of a milking, Kitty Shorthorn boxed Una's
+ear with her tail.
+
+'You old pig!' said Una, nearly crying, for a cow's tail can hurt.
+
+'Why didn't you tie it down, child?' said a voice behind her.
+
+'I meant to, but the flies are so bad I let her off - and this is what
+she's done!' Una looked round, expecting Puck, and saw a curly-
+haired girl, not much taller than herself, but older, dressed in a
+curious high-waisted, lavender-coloured riding-habit, with a
+high hunched collar and a deep cape and a belt fastened with a steel
+clasp. She wore a yellow velvet cap and tan gauntlets, and carried
+a real hunting-crop. Her cheeks were pale except for two pretty
+pink patches in the middle, and she talked with little gasps at the
+end of her sentences, as though she had been running.
+
+'You don't milk so badly, child,' she said, and when she smiled
+her teeth showed small and even and pearly.
+
+'Can you milk?' Una asked, and then flushed, for she heard
+Puck's chuckle.
+
+He stepped out of the fern and sat down, holding Kitty Short-
+horn's tail. 'There isn't much,' he said, 'that Miss Philadelphia
+doesn't know about milk - or, for that matter, butter and eggs.
+She's a great housewife.'
+
+'Oh,' said Una. 'I'm sorry I can't shake hands. Mine are all
+milky; but Mrs Vincey is going to teach me butter-making this summer.'
+'Ah! I'm going to London this summer,' the girl said, 'to my
+aunt in Bloomsbury.' She coughed as she began to hum, '"Oh,
+what a town! What a wonderful metropolis!"
+
+'You've got a cold,' said Una.
+
+'No. Only my stupid cough. But it's vastly better than it was
+last winter. It will disappear in London air. Every one says so.
+D'you like doctors, child?'
+
+'I don't know any,' Una replied. 'But I'm sure I shouldn't.'
+
+'Think yourself lucky, child. I beg your pardon,' the girl
+laughed, for Una frowned.
+
+'I'm not a child, and my name's Una,'she said.
+
+'Mine's Philadelphia. But everybody except Rene calls me Phil.
+I'm Squire Bucksteed's daughter - over at Marklake yonder.' She
+jerked her little round chin towards the south behind Dallington.
+'Sure-ly you know Marklake?'
+
+'We went a picnic to Marklake Green once,' said Una. 'It's
+awfully pretty. I like all those funny little roads that don't lead
+anywhere.'
+
+'They lead over our land,' said Philadelphia stiffly, 'and the
+coach road is only four miles away. One can go anywhere from
+the Green. I went to the Assize Ball at Lewes last year.' She spun
+round and took a few dancing steps, but stopped with her hand to
+her side.
+
+'It gives me a stitch,' she explained. 'No odds. 'Twill go away
+in London air. That's the latest French step, child. Rene taught it
+me. D'you hate the French, chi - Una?'
+
+'Well, I hate French, of course, but I don't mind Ma'm'selle.
+She's rather decent. Is Rene your French governess?'
+
+Philadelphia laughed till she caught her breath again.
+
+'Oh no! Rene's a French prisoner - on parole. That means he's
+promised not to escape till he has been properly exchanged for an
+Englishman. He's only a doctor, so I hope they won't think him
+worth exchanging. My uncle captured him last year in the
+FERDINAND privateer, off Belle Isle, and he cured my uncle of a
+r-r-raging toothache. Of course, after that we couldn't let him lie
+among the common French prisoners at Rye, and so he stays with
+us. He's of very old family - a Breton, which is nearly next door
+to being a true Briton, my father says - and he wears his hair
+clubbed - not powdered. Much more becoming, don't you think?'
+
+'I don't know what you're -' Una began, but Puck, the other
+side of the pail, winked, and she went on with her milking.
+'He's going to be a great French physician when the war is over.
+He makes me bobbins for my lace-pillow now - he's very clever
+with his hands; but he'd doctor our people on the Green if they
+would let him. Only our Doctor - Doctor Break - says he's an
+emp - or imp something - worse than imposter. But my Nurse
+says -'
+
+'Nurse! You're ever so old. What have you got a nurse for?'
+Una finished milking, and turned round on her stool as Kitty
+Shorthorn grazed off.
+
+'Because I can't get rid of her. Old Cissie nursed my mother,
+and she says she'll nurse me till she dies. The idea! She never lets
+me alone. She thinks I'm delicate. She has grown infirm in her
+understanding, you know. Mad - quite mad, poor Cissie!'
+
+
+'Really mad?' said Una. 'Or just silly?'
+
+'Crazy, I should say - from the things she does. Her devotion to
+me is terribly embarrassing. You know I have all the keys of the
+Hall except the brewery and the tenants' kitchen. I give out all
+stores and the linen and plate.'
+
+'How jolly! I love store-rooms and giving out things.'
+
+Ah, it's a great responsibility, you'll find, when you come to
+my age. Last year Dad said I was fatiguing myself with my duties,
+and he actually wanted me to give up the keys to old Amoore, our
+housekeeper. I wouldn't. I hate her. I said, "No, sir. I am Mistress
+of Marklake Hall just as long as I live, because I'm never going to
+be married, and I shall give out stores and linen till I die!"
+
+And what did your father say?'
+
+'Oh, I threatened to pin a dishclout to his coat-tail. He ran
+away. Every one's afraid of Dad, except me.' Philadelphia
+stamped her foot. 'The idea! If I can't make my own father happy
+in his own house, I'd like to meet the woman that can, and - and -
+I'd have the living hide off her!'
+
+She cut with her long-thonged whip. It cracked like a pistol-
+shot across the still pasture. Kitty Shorthorn threw up her head
+and trotted away.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' Philadelphia said; 'but it makes me furious.
+Don't you hate those ridiculous old quizzes with their feathers
+and fronts, who come to dinner and call you "child" in your own
+chair at your own table?'
+
+'I don't always come to dinner , said Una, 'but I hate being
+called "child." Please tell me about store-rooms and giving out things.'
+
+Ah, it's a great responsibility - particularly with that old cat
+Amoore looking at the lists over your shoulder. And such a
+shocking thing happened last summer! Poor crazy Cissie, my
+Nurse that I was telling you of, she took three solid silver
+tablespoons.'
+
+'Took! But isn't that stealing?' Una cried.
+
+'Hsh!' said Philadelphia, looking round at Puck. 'All I say is she
+took them without my leave. I made it right afterwards. So, as
+Dad says - and he's a magistrate-, it wasn't a legal offence; it was
+only compounding a felony.
+
+'It sounds awful,' said Una.
+
+'It was. My dear, I was furious! I had had the keys for ten
+months, and I'd never lost anything before. I said nothing at first,
+because a big house offers so many chances of things being
+mislaid, and coming to hand later. "Fetching up in the lee-
+scuppers," my uncle calls it. But next week I spoke to old Cissie
+about it when she was doing my hair at night, and she said I
+wasn't to worry my heart for trifles!'
+
+'Isn't it like 'em?' Una burst out. 'They see you're worried over
+
+
+something that really matters, and they say, "Don't worry"; as if
+that did any good!'
+
+'I quite agree with you, my dear; quite agree with you! I told
+Ciss the spoons were solid silver, and worth forty shillings, so if
+the thief were found, he'd be tried for his life.'
+'Hanged, do you mean?'Una said.
+
+'They ought to be; but Dad says no jury will hang a man
+nowadays for a forty-shilling theft. They transport 'em into penal
+servitude at the uttermost ends of the earth beyond the seas, for
+the term of their natural life. I told Cissie that, and I saw her
+tremble in my mirror. Then she cried, and caught hold of my
+knees, and I couldn't for my life understand what it was all about,
+- she cried so. Can you guess, my dear, what that poor crazy thing
+had done? It was midnight before I pieced it together. She had
+given the spoons to Jerry Gamm, the Witchmaster on the Green,
+so that he might put a charm on me! Me!'
+
+'Put a charm on you? Why?'
+
+'That's what I asked; and then I saw how mad poor Cissie was!
+You know this stupid little cough of mine? It will disappear as
+soon as I go to London. She was troubled about that, and about
+my being so thin, and she told me Jerry had promised her, if she
+would bring him three silver spoons, that he'd charm my cough
+away and make me plump - "flesh up," she said. I couldn't help
+laughing; but it was a terrible night! I had to put Cissie into my
+own bed, and stroke her hand till she cried herself to sleep. What
+else could I have done? When she woke, and I coughed - I suppose
+I can cough in my own room if I please - she said that she'd killed
+me, and asked me to have her hanged at Lewes sooner than send
+her to the uttermost ends of the earth away from me.'
+
+'How awful! What did you do, Phil?'
+
+'Do? I rode off at five in the morning to talk to Master Jerry,
+with a new lash on my whip. Oh, I was furious! Witchmaster or no
+Witchmaster, I meant to -'
+
+Ah! what's a Witchmaster?'
+
+'A master of witches, of course. I don't believe there are
+witches; but people say every village has a few, and Jerry was the
+master of all ours at Marklake. He has been a smuggler, and a
+man-of-war's man, and now he pretends to be a carpenter and
+joiner - he can make almost anything - but he really is a white
+wizard. He cures people by herbs and charms. He can cure them
+after Doctor Break has given them up, and that's why Doctor
+Break hates him so. He used to make me toy carts, and charm off
+my warts when I was a child.' Philadelphia spread out her hands
+with the delicate shiny little nails. 'It isn't counted lucky to cross
+him. He has his ways of getting even with you, they say. But I
+wasn't afraid of Jerry! I saw him working in his garden, and I
+leaned out of my saddle and double-thonged him between the
+shoulders, over the hedge. Well, my dear, for the first time since
+Dad gave him to me, my Troubadour (I wish you could see the
+sweet creature!) shied across the road, and I spilled out into the
+hedge-top. Most undignified! Jerry pulled me through to his side
+and brushed the leaves off me. I was horribly pricked, but I didn't
+care. "Now, Jerry," I said, "I'm going to take the hide off you
+first, and send you to Lewes afterwards. You well know why."
+
+'"Oh!" he said, and he sat down among his bee-hives. "Then I
+reckon you've come about old Cissie's business, my dear." "I
+reckon I justabout have," I said. "Stand away from these hives. I
+can't get at you there." "That's why I be where I be," he said. "If
+you'll excuse me, Miss Phil, I don't hold with bein' flogged
+before breakfast, at my time o' life." He's a huge big man, but he
+looked so comical squatting among the hives that - I know I
+oughtn't to - I laughed, and he laughed. I always laugh at the
+wrong time. But I soon recovered my dignity, and I said, "Then
+give me back what you made poor Cissie steal!"
+
+'"Your pore Cissie," he said. "She's a hatful o' trouble. But
+you shall have 'em, Miss Phil. They're all ready put by for you."
+And, would you believe it, the old sinner pulled my three silver
+spoons out of his dirty pocket, and polished them on his cuff.
+"Here they be," he says, and he gave them to me, just as cool as
+though I'd come to have my warts charmed. That's the worst of
+people having known you when you were young. But I preserved
+my composure. "Jerry," I said, "what in the world are we to do?
+If you'd been caught with these things on you, you'd have been
+hanged."
+
+'"I know it," he said. "But they're yours now."
+
+'"But you made my Cissie steal them," I said.
+
+'"That I didn't," he said. "Your Cissie, she was pickin' at me
+an' tarrifyin' me all the long day an' every day for weeks, to put a
+charm on you, Miss Phil, an' take away your little spitty cough."
+
+'"Yes. I knew that, Jerry, and to make me flesh-up!" I said.
+"I'm much obliged to you, but I'm not one of your pigs!"
+
+'"Ah! I reckon she've been talking to you, then," he said.
+"Yes, she give me no peace, and bein' tarrified - for I don't hold
+with old women - I laid a task on her which I thought 'ud silence
+her. I never reckoned the old scrattle 'ud risk her neckbone at
+Lewes Assizes for your sake, Miss Phil. But she did. She up an'
+stole, I tell ye, as cheerful as a tinker. You might ha' knocked me
+down with any one of them liddle spoons when she brung 'em in
+her apron."
+
+'"Do you mean to say, then, that you did it to try my poor
+Cissie?" I screamed at him.
+
+'"What else for, dearie?" he said. "I don't stand in need of
+hedge-stealings. I'm a freeholder, with money in the bank; and
+now I won't trust women no more! Silly old besom! I do beleft
+she'd ha' stole the Squire's big fob-watch, if I'd required her."
+
+'"Then you're a wicked, wicked old man," I said, and I was so
+angry that I couldn't help crying, and of course that made me cough.
+
+'Jerry was in a fearful taking. He picked me up and carried me
+into his cottage - it's full of foreign curiosities - and he got me
+something to eat and drink, and he said he'd be hanged by the
+neck any day if it pleased me. He said he'd even tell old Cissie he
+was sorry. That's a great comedown for a Witchmaster, you
+know.
+
+'I was ashamed of myself for being so silly, and I dabbed my
+eyes and said, "The least you can do now is to give poor Ciss
+some sort of a charm for me."
+
+'"Yes, that's only fair dealings," he said. "You know the
+names of the Twelve Apostles, dearie? You say them names, one
+by one, before your open window, rain or storm, wet or shine,
+five times a day fasting. But mind you, 'twixt every name you
+draw in your breath through your nose, right down to your
+pretty liddle toes, as long and as deep as you can, and let it out
+slow through your pretty liddle mouth. There's virtue for your
+cough in those names spoke that way. And I'll give you something
+you can see, moreover. Here's a stick of maple, which is the
+warmest tree in the wood."'
+'That's true,' Una interrupted. 'You can feel it almost as warm
+as yourself when you touch it.'
+
+'"It's cut one inch long for your every year," Jerry said.
+"That's sixteen inches. You set it in your window so that it holds
+up the sash, and thus you keep it, rain or shine, or wet or fine, day
+and night. I've said words over it which will have virtue on your
+complaints."
+
+"I haven't any complaints, Jerry," I said. "It's only to please
+Cissie."
+
+'"I know that as well as you do, dearie," he said. And - and
+that was all that came of my going to give him a flogging. I
+wonder whether he made poor Troubadour shy when I lashed at
+him? Jerry has his ways of getting even with people.'
+
+'I wonder,' said Una. 'Well, did you try the charm? Did it work?'
+
+'What nonsense! I told Rene about it, of course, because he's a
+doctor. He's going to be a most famous doctor. That's why our
+doctor hates him. Rene said, "Oho! Your Master Gamm, he is
+worth knowing," and he put up his eyebrows -like this. He made
+joke of it all. He can see my window from the carpenter's shed,
+where he works, and if ever the maple stick fell down, he
+pretended to be in a fearful taking till I propped the window up
+again. He used to ask me whether I had said my Apostles
+properly, and how I took my deep breaths. Oh yes, and the next
+day, though he had been there ever so many times before, he put
+on his new hat and paid Jerry Gamm a visit of state - as a
+fellow-physician. Jerry never guessed Rene was making fun of
+him, and so he told Rene about the sick people in the village, and
+how he cured them with herbs after Doctor Break had given them
+up. Jerry could talk smugglers' French, of course, and I had
+taught Rene plenty of English, if only he wasn't so shy. They
+called each other Monsieur Gamm and Mosheur Lanark, just like
+gentlemen. I suppose it amused poor Rene. He hasn't much to do,
+except to fiddle about in the carpenter's shop. He's like all the
+French prisoners - always making knickknacks; and Jerry had a
+little lathe at his cottage, and so - and so - Rene took to being with
+Jerry much more than I approved of. The Hall is so big and empty
+when Dad's away, and I will not sit with old Amoore -she talks so
+horridly about every one - specially about Rene.
+
+'I was rude to Rene, I'm afraid; but I was properly served out
+for it. One always is. You see, Dad went down to Hastings to pay
+his respects to the General who commanded the brigade there,
+and to bring him to the Hall afterwards. Dad told me he was a
+very brave soldier from India - he was Colonel of Dad's Regiment,
+the Thirty-third Foot, after Dad left the Army, and then he
+changed his name from Wesley to Wellesley, or else the other way
+about; and Dad said I was to get out all the silver for him, and I
+knew that meant a big dinner. So I sent down to the sea for early
+mackerel, and had such a morning in the kitchen and the store-
+rooms. Old Amoore nearly cried.
+
+'However, my dear, I made all my preparations in ample time,
+but the fish didn't arrive - it never does - and I wanted Rene to
+ride to Pevensey and bring it himself. He had gone over to Jerry,
+of course, as he always used, unless I requested his presence
+beforehand. I can't send for Rene every time I want him. He
+should be there. Now, don't you ever do what I did, child,
+because it's in the highest degree unladylike; but - but one of our
+Woods runs up to Jerry's garden, and if you climb - it's ungenteel,
+but I can climb like a kitten -there's an old hollow oak just above
+the pigsty where you can hear and see everything below. Truthfully,
+I only went to tell Rene about the mackerel, but I saw him
+and Jerry sitting on the seat playing with wooden toy trumpets.
+So I slipped into the hollow, and choked down my cough, and
+listened. Rene had never shown me any of these trumpets.'
+
+'Trumpets? Aren't you too old for trumpets?' said Una.
+
+'They weren't real trumpets, because Jerry opened his short-
+collar, and Rene put one end of his trumpet against Jerry's chest,
+and put his ear to the other. Then Jerry put his trumpet against
+Rene's chest, and listened while Rene breathed and coughed. I
+was afraid I would cough too.
+
+'"This hollywood one is the best," said Jerry. "'Tis won'erful
+like hearin' a man's soul whisperin' in his innards; but unless I've a
+buzzin' in my ears, Mosheur Lanark, you make much about the
+same kind o' noises as old Gaffer Macklin - but not quite so loud
+as young Copper. It sounds like breakers on a reef - a long way
+off. Comprenny?"
+
+'"Perfectly," said Rene. "I drive on the breakers. But before I
+strike, I shall save hundreds, thousands, millions perhaps, by my
+little trumpets. Now tell me what sounds the old Gaffer Macklin
+have made in his chest, and what the young Copper also."
+
+'Jerry talked for nearly a quarter of an hour about sick people in
+the village, while Rene asked questions. Then he sighed, and said,
+"You explain very well, Monsieur Gamm, but if only I had your
+opportunities to listen for myself! Do you think these poor people
+would let me listen to them through my trumpet - for a little
+money? No?" - Rene's as poor as a church mouse.
+
+'"They'd kill you, Mosheur. It's all I can do to coax 'em to
+abide it, and I'm Jerry Gamm," said Jerry. He's very proud of his
+attainments.
+
+'"Then these poor people are alarmed - No?" said Rene.
+
+'"They've had it in at me for some time back because o' my
+tryin' your trumpets on their sick; and I reckon by the talk at the
+alehouse they won't stand much more. Tom Dunch an' some of
+his kidney was drinkin' themselves riot-ripe when I passed along
+after noon. Charms an' mutterin's an' bits o' red wool an' black
+hens is in the way o' nature to these fools, Mosheur; but anything
+likely to do 'em real service is devil's work by their estimation. If I
+was you, I'd go home before they come." Jerry spoke quite
+quietly, and Rene shrugged his shoulders.
+
+'"I am prisoner on parole, Monsieur Gamm," he said. "I have
+no home."
+
+'Now that was unkind of Rene. He's often told me that he
+looked on England as his home. I suppose it's French politeness.
+
+'"Then we'll talk o' something that matters," said Jerry. "Not
+to name no names, Mosheur Lanark, what might be your own
+opinion o' some one who ain't old Gaffer Macklin nor young
+Copper? Is that person better or worse?"
+
+'"Better - for time that is," said Rene. He meant for the time
+being, but I never could teach him some phrases.
+
+'"I thought so too," said Jerry. "But how about time to come?"
+
+Rene shook his head, and then he blew his nose. You don't
+know how odd a man looks blowing his nose when you are
+sitting directly above him.
+
+I've thought that too," said Jerry. He rumbled so deep I
+could scarcely catch. "It don't make much odds to me, because
+I'm old. But you're young, Mosheur- you're young," and he put
+his hand on Rene's knee, and Rene covered it with his hand. I
+didn't know they were such friends.
+
+'"Thank you, mon ami," said Rene. "I am much oblige. Let us
+return to our trumpet-making. But I forget" - he stood up - "it
+appears that you receive this afternoon!"
+
+'You can't see into Gamm's Lane from the oak, but the gate
+opened, and fat little Doctor Break stumped in, mopping his
+head, and half-a-dozen of our people following him, very drunk.
+
+'You ought to have seen Rene bow; he does it beautifully.
+
+'"A word with you, Laennec," said Doctor Break. "Jerry has
+been practising some devilry or other on these poor wretches, and
+they've asked me to be arbiter."
+
+'"Whatever that means, I reckon it's safer than asking you to
+be doctor," said Jerry, and Tom Dunch, one of our carters, laughed.
+
+'"That ain't right feeling of you, Tom," Jerry said, "seeing
+how clever Doctor Break put away your thorn in the flesh last
+winter." Tom's wife had died at Christmas, though Doctor
+Break bled her twice a week. Doctor Break danced with rage.
+
+'"This is all beside the mark," he said. "These good people are
+willing to testify that you've been impudently prying into God's
+secrets by means of some papistical contrivance which this
+person" - he pointed to poor Rene - "has furnished you with.
+Why, here are the things themselves!" Rene was holding a
+trumpet in his hand.
+
+'Then all the men talked at once. They said old Gaffer Macklin
+was dying from stitches in his side where Jerry had put the
+trumpet - they called it the devil's ear-piece; and they said it left
+round red witch-marks on people's skins, and dried up their
+lights, and made 'em spit blood, and threw 'em into sweats.
+Terrible things they said. You never heard such a noise. I took
+advantage of it to cough.
+
+'Rene and Jerry were standing with their backs to the pigsty.
+Jerry fumbled in his big flap pockets and fished up a pair of pistols.
+You ought to have seen the men give back when he cocked his.
+He passed one to Rene.
+
+'"Wait! Wait!" said Rene. "I will explain to the doctor if he
+permits." He waved a trumpet at him, and the men at the gate
+shouted, "Don't touch it, Doctor! Don't lay a hand to the thing."
+
+'"Come, come!" said Rene. "You are not so big fool as you
+pretend. No?"
+
+'Doctor Break backed toward the gate, watching Jerry's pistol,
+and Rene followed him with his trumpet, like a nurse trying to
+amuse a child, and put the ridiculous thing to his ear to show how
+it was used, and talked of la Gloire, and l'Humanite, and la Science,
+while Doctor Break watched jerry's pistol and swore. I nearly
+laughed aloud.
+
+'"Now listen! Now listen!" said Rene. "This will be moneys
+in your pockets, my dear confrere. You will become rich."
+
+'Then Doctor Break said something about adventurers who
+could not earn an honest living in their own country creeping into
+decent houses and taking advantage of gentlemen's confidence to
+enrich themselves by base intrigues.
+
+'Rene dropped his absurd trumpet and made one of his best
+bows. I knew he was angry from the way he rolled his "r's."
+
+'"Ver-r-ry good," said he. "For that I shall have much
+pleasure to kill you now and here. Monsieur Gamm," - another
+bow to Jerry - "you will please lend him your pistol, or he shall
+have mine. I give you my word I know not which is best; and if he
+will choose a second from his friends over there" - another bow
+to our drunken yokels at the gate - "we will commence."
+
+'"That's fair enough," said Jerry. "Tom Dunch, you owe it to
+the Doctor to be his second. Place your man."
+'"No," said Tom. "No mixin' in gentry's quarrels for me."
+And he shook his head and went out, and the others followed him.
+
+'"Hold on," said Jerry. "You've forgot what you set out to do
+up at the alehouse just now. You was goin' to search me for
+witch-marks; you was goin' to duck me in the pond; you was
+goin' to drag all my bits o' sticks out o' my little cottage here.
+What's the matter with you? Wouldn't you like to be with your
+old woman tonight, Tom?"
+
+'But they didn't even look back, much less come. They ran to
+the village alehouse like hares.
+
+'"No matter for these canaille," said Rene, buttoning up his
+coat so as not to show any linen. All gentlemen do that before a
+duel, Dad says - and he's been out five times. "You shall be his
+second, Monsieur Gamm. Give him the pistol."
+
+'Doctor Break took it as if it was red-hot, but he said that if
+Rene resigned his pretensions in certain quarters he would pass
+over the matter. Rene bowed deeper than ever.
+
+'"As for that," he said, "if you were not the ignorant which
+you are, you would have known long ago that the subject of your
+remarks is not for any living man."
+
+'I don't know what the subject of his remarks might have been,
+but he spoke in a simply dreadful voice, my dear, and Doctor
+Break turned quite white, and said Rene was a liar; and then Rene
+caught him by the throat, and choked him black.
+
+'Well, my dear, as if this wasn't deliciously exciting enough,
+just exactly at that minute I heard a strange voice on the other side
+of the hedge say, "What's this? What's this, Bucksteed?" and
+there was my father and Sir Arthur Wesley on horseback in the
+lane; and there was Rene kneeling on Doctor Break, and there was
+I up in the oak, listening with all my ears.
+
+'I must have leaned forward too much, and the voice gave me
+such a start that I slipped. I had only time to make one jump on to
+the pigsty roof - another, before the tiles broke, on to the pigsty
+wall - and then I bounced down into the garden, just behind Jerry,
+with my hair full of bark. Imagine the situation!'
+
+'Oh, I can!' Una laughed till she nearly fell off the stool.
+
+'Dad said, "Phil - a - del - phia!" and Sir Arthur Wesley said,
+"Good Ged" and Jerry put his foot on the pistol Rene had
+dropped. But Rene was splendid. He never even looked at me. He
+began to untwist Doctor Break's neckcloth as fast as he'd twisted
+it, and asked him if he felt better.
+
+'"What's happened? What's happened?" said Dad.
+
+'"A fit!" said Rene. "I fear my confrere has had a fit. Do not be
+alarmed. He recovers himself. Shall I bleed you a little, my dear
+Doctor?" Doctor Break was very good too. He said, "I am vastly
+obliged, Monsieur Laennec, but I am restored now." And as he
+went out of the gate he told Dad it was a syncope - I think. Then
+Sir Arthur said, "Quite right, Bucksteed. Not another word!
+They are both gentlemen." And he took off his cocked hat to
+Doctor Break and Rene.
+
+'But poor Dad wouldn't let well alone. He kept saying,
+"Philadelphia, what does all this mean?"
+
+'"Well, sir," I said, "I've only just come down. As far as I
+could see, it looked as though Doctor Break had had a sudden
+seizure." That was quite true - if you'd seen Rene seize him. Sir
+Arthur laughed. "Not much change there, Bucksteed," he said.
+"She's a lady - a thorough lady."
+
+'"Heaven knows she doesn't look like one," said poor Dad.
+"Go home, Philadelphia."
+
+'So I went home, my dear - don't laugh so! - right under Sir
+Arthur's nose - a most enormous nose - feeling as though I were
+twelve years old, going to be whipped. Oh, I beg your pardon, child!'
+
+'It's all right,' said Una. 'I'm getting on for thirteen. I've never
+been whipped, but I know how you felt. All the same, it must
+have been funny!'
+
+'Funny! If you'd heard Sir Arthur jerking out, "Good Ged,
+Bucksteed!" every minute as they rode behind me; and poor Dad
+saying, '"'Pon my honour, Arthur, I can't account for it!" Oh,
+how my cheeks tingled when I reached my room! But Cissie had
+laid out my very best evening dress, the white satin one,
+vandyked at the bottom with spots of morone foil, and the pearl
+knots, you know, catching up the drapery from the left shoulder.
+I had poor mother's lace tucker and her coronet comb.'
+
+'Oh, you lucky!' Una murmured. 'And gloves?'
+
+'French kid, my dear'- Philadelphia patted her shoulder - 'and
+morone satin shoes and a morone and gold crape fan. That
+restored my calm. Nice things always do. I wore my hair banded
+on my forehead with a little curl over the left ear. And when I
+descended the stairs, en grande tenue, old Amoore curtsied to me
+without my having to stop and look at her, which, alas! is too
+often the case. Sir Arthur highly approved of the dinner, my dear:
+the mackerel did come in time. We had all the Marklake silver out,
+and he toasted my health, and he asked me where my little
+bird's-nesting sister was. I know he did it to quiz me, so I looked
+him straight in the face, my dear, and I said, "I always send her to
+the nursery, Sir Arthur, when I receive guests at Marklake Hall."'
+
+'Oh, how chee - clever of you. What did he say?' Una cried.
+'He said, "Not much change there, Bucksteed. Ged, I deserved
+it," and he toasted me again. They talked about the French and
+what a shame it was that Sir Arthur only commanded a brigade at
+Hastings, and he told Dad of a battle in India at a place called
+Assaye. Dad said it was a terrible fight, but Sir Arthur described it
+as though it had been a whist-party - I suppose because a lady was
+present.'
+
+'Of course you were the lady. I wish I'd seen you,'said Una.
+
+'I wish you had, child. I had such a triumph after dinner. Rene
+and Doctor Break came in. They had quite made up their quarrel,
+and they told me they had the highest esteem for each other, and I
+laughed and said, "I heard every word of it up in the tree." You
+never saw two men so frightened in your life, and when I said,
+"What was 'the subject of your remarks,' Rene?" neither of them
+knew where to look. Oh, I quizzed them unmercifully. They'd
+seen me jump off the pigsty roof, remember.'
+
+'But what was the subject of their remarks?' said Una.
+
+'Oh, Doctor Break said it was a professional matter, so the
+laugh was turned on me. I was horribly afraid it might have been
+something unladylike and indelicate. But that wasn't my
+triumph. Dad asked me to play on the harp. Between just you and
+me, child, I had been practising a new song from London - I don't
+always live in trees - for weeks; and I gave it them for a surprise.'
+
+'What was it?'said Una. 'Sing it.'
+
+'"I have given my heart to a flower." Not very difficult
+fingering, but r-r-ravishing sentiment.'
+
+Philadelphia coughed and cleared her throat.
+
+'I've a deep voice for my age and size,' she explained.
+'Contralto, you know, but it ought to be stronger,' and she began, her
+face all dark against the last of the soft pink sunset:
+
+ 'I have given my heart to a flower,
+ Though I know it is fading away,
+ Though I know it will live but an hour
+ And leave me to mourn its decay!
+
+'Isn't that touchingly sweet? Then the last verse - I wish I had
+my harp, dear - goes as low as my register will reach.'She drew in
+her chin, and took a deep breath:
+
+ 'Ye desolate whirlwinds that rave,
+ I charge you be good to my dear!
+ She is all - she is all that I have,
+ And the time of our parting is near!'
+
+'Beautiful!' said Una. 'And did they like it?'
+'Like it? They were overwhelmed - accablEs, as Rene says. My
+dear, if I hadn't seen it, I shouldn't have believed that I could have
+drawn tears, genuine tears, to the eyes of four grown men. But I
+did! Rene simply couldn't endure it! He's all French sensibility.
+He hid his face and said, "Assez, Mademoiselle! C'est plus fort que
+moi! Assez!" And Sir Arthur blew his nose and said, "Good Ged!
+This is worse than Assaye!" While Dad sat with the tears simply
+running down his cheeks.'
+
+'And what did Doctor Break do?'
+
+'He got up and pretended to look out of the window, but I saw
+his little fat shoulders jerk as if he had the hiccoughs. That was a
+triumph. I never suspected him of sensibility.'
+
+'Oh, I wish I'd seen! I wish I'd been you,'said Una, clasping her
+hands. Puck rustled and rose from the fern, just as a big blundering
+cock-chafer flew smack against Una's cheek.
+
+When she had finished rubbing the place, Mrs Vincey called to
+her that Pansy had been fractious, or she would have come long
+before to help her strain and pour off.
+'It didn't matter,' said Una; 'I just waited. Is that old Pansy
+barging about the lower pasture now?'
+
+'No,' said Mrs Vincey, listening. 'It sounds more like a horse
+being galloped middlin' quick through the woods; but there's no
+road there. I reckon it's one of Gleason's colts loose. Shall I see
+you up to the house, Miss Una?'
+
+'Gracious, no! thank you. What's going to hurt me?' said Una,
+and she put her stool away behind the oak, and strolled home
+through the gaps that old Hobden kept open for her.
+
+
+
+Brookland Road
+
+
+I was very well pleased with what I knowed,
+I reckoned myself no fool -
+Till I met with a maid on the Brookland Road
+That turned me back to school.
+
+ Low down - low down!
+ Where the liddle green lanterns shine -
+ Oh! maids, I've done with 'ee all but one,
+ And she can never be mine!
+'Twas right in the middest of a hot June night,
+With thunder duntin' round,
+And I seed her face by the fairy light
+That beats from off the ground.
+
+She only smiled and she never spoke,
+She smiled and went away;
+But when she'd gone my heart was broke,
+And my wits was clean astray.
+
+Oh! Stop your ringing and let me be -
+Let be, O Brookland bells!
+You'll ring Old Goodman * out of the sea,
+Before I wed one else!
+
+Old Goodman's farm is rank sea sand,
+And was this thousand year;
+But it shall turn to rich plough land
+Before I change my dear!
+
+Oh! Fairfield Church is water-bound
+From Autumn to the Spring;
+But it shall turn to high hill ground
+Before my bells do ring!
+
+Oh! leave me walk on the Brookland Road,
+In the thunder and warm rain -
+Oh! leave me look where my love goed
+And p'raps I'll see her again!
+ Low down - low down!
+ Where the liddle green lanterns shine -
+ Oh! maids, I've done with 'ee all but one,
+ And she can never be mine!
+
+
+ *Earl Godwin of the Goodwin Sands(?)
+
+
+
+
+THE KNIFE AND THE NAKED CHALK
+
+
+
+The Run of the Downs
+
+
+The Weald is good, the Downs are best -
+I'll give you the run of 'em, East to West.
+Beachy Head and Winddoor Hill,
+They were once and they are still.
+Firle, Mount Caburn and Mount Harry
+Go back as far as sums'll carry.
+Ditchling Beacon and Chanctonbury Ring,
+They have looked on many a thing;
+And what those two have missed between 'em
+I reckon Truleigh Hill has seen 'em.
+Highden, Bignor and Duncton Down
+Knew Old England before the Crown.
+Linch Down, Treyford and Sunwood
+Knew Old England before the Flood.
+And when you end on the Hampshire side -
+Butser's old as Time and Tide.
+The Downs are sheep, the Weald is corn,
+You be glad you are Sussex born!
+
+
+
+The Knife and the Naked Chalk
+
+
+The children went to the seaside for a month, and lived in a flint
+village on the bare windy chalk Downs, quite thirty miles away
+from home. They made friends with an old shepherd, called Mr
+Dudeney, who had known their Father when their Father was
+little. He did not talk like their own people in the Weald of Sussex,
+and he used different names for farm things, but he understood
+how they felt, and let them go with him. He had a tiny cottage
+about half a mile from the village, where his wife made mead
+from thyme honey, and nursed sick lambs in front of a coal fire,
+while Old Jim, who was Mr Dudeney's sheep-dog's father, lay at
+the door. They brought up beef bones for Old Jim (you must
+never give a sheep-dog mutton bones), and if Mr Dudeney happened
+to be far in the Downs, Mrs Dudeney would tell the dog to
+take them to him, and he did.
+
+One August afternoon when the village water-cart had made
+the street smell specially townified, they went to look for their
+shepherd as usual, and, as usual, Old Jim crawled over the doorstep
+and took them in charge. The sun was hot, the dry grass was
+very slippery, and the distances were very distant.
+
+'It's Just like the sea,' said Una, when Old Jim halted in the
+shade of a lonely flint barn on a bare rise. 'You see where you're
+going, and - you go there, and there's nothing between.'
+
+Dan slipped off his shoes. 'When we get home I shall sit in the
+woods all day,' he said.
+
+'Whuff!' said Old Jim, to show he was ready, and struck across
+a long rolling stretch of turf. Presently he asked for his beefbone.
+
+'Not yet,' said Dan. 'Where's Mr Dudeney? Where's Master?'
+Old Jim looked as if he thought they were mad, and asked
+again.
+
+'Don't you give it him,' Una cried. 'I'm not going to be left
+howling in a desert.'
+
+'Show, boy! Show!' said Dan, for the Downs seemed as bare as
+the palm of your hand.
+
+Old Jim sighed, and trotted forward. Soon they spied the blob
+of Mr Dudeney's hat against the sky a long way off.
+
+'Right! All right!' said Dan. Old Jim wheeled round, took his
+bone carefully between his blunted teeth, and returned to the
+shadow of the old barn, looking just like a wolf. The children
+went on. Two kestrels hung bivvering and squealing above them.
+A gull flapped lazily along the white edge of the cliffs. The curves
+of the Downs shook a little in the heat, and so did Mr Dudeney's
+distant head.
+
+They walked toward it very slowly and found themselves
+staring into a horseshoe-shaped hollow a hundred feet deep,
+whose steep sides were laced with tangled sheep-tracks. The flock
+grazed on the flat at the bottom, under charge of Young Jim. Mr
+Dudeney sat comfortably knitting on the edge of the slope, his
+crook between his knees. They told him what Old Jim had done.
+
+'Ah, he thought you could see my head as soon as he did. The
+closeter you be to the turf the more you see things. You look
+warm-like,'said Mr Dudeney.
+
+'We be,' said Una, flopping down. 'And tired.'
+
+'Set beside o' me here. The shadow'll begin to stretch out in a
+little while, and a heat-shake o' wind will come up with it that'll
+overlay your eyes like so much wool.'
+
+'We don't want to sleep,' said Una indignantly; but she settled
+herself as she spoke, in the first strip of early afternoon shade.
+
+'O' course not. You come to talk with me same as your father
+used. He didn't need no dog to guide him to Norton Pit.'
+
+'Well, he belonged here,' said Dan, and laid himself down at
+length on the turf.
+
+'He did. And what beats me is why he went off to live among
+them messy trees in the Weald, when he might ha' stayed here and
+looked all about him. There's no profit to trees. They draw the
+lightning, and sheep shelter under 'em, and so, like as not, you'll
+lose a half-score ewes struck dead in one storm. Tck! Your father
+knew that.'
+
+'Trees aren't messy.' Una rose on her elbow. 'And what about
+firewood? I don't like coal.'
+
+'Eh? You lie a piece more uphill and you'll lie more natural,'
+said Mr Dudeney, with his provoking deaf smile. 'Now press
+your face down and smell to the turf. That's Southdown thyme
+which makes our Southdown mutton beyond compare, and, my
+mother told me, 'twill cure anything except broken necks, or
+hearts. I forget which.'
+
+They sniffed, and somehow forgot to lift their cheeks from the
+soft thymy cushions.
+
+'You don't get nothing like that in the Weald. Watercress,
+maybe?' said Mr Dudeney.
+
+'But we've water - brooks full of it - where you paddle in hot
+weather,' Una replied, watching a yellow-and-violet-banded
+snail-shell close to her eye.
+
+'Brooks flood. Then you must shift your sheep - let alone
+foot-rot afterward. I put more dependence on a dew-pond any day.'
+
+'How's a dew-pond made?' said Dan, and tilted his hat over his
+eyes. Mr Dudeney explained.
+
+The air trembled a little as though it could not make up its mind
+whether to slide into the Pit or move across the open. But it
+seemed easiest to go downhill, and the children felt one soft puff
+after another slip and sidle down the slope in fragrant breaths that
+baffed on their eyelids. The little whisper of the sea by the cliffs
+joined with the whisper of the wind over the grass, the hum of
+insects in the thyme, the ruffle and rustle of the flock below, and a
+thickish mutter deep in the very chalk beneath them. Mr
+Dudeney stopped explaining, and went on with his knitting.
+They were roused by voices. The shadow had crept halfway
+down the steep side of Norton Pit, and on the edge of it, his back
+to them, Puck sat beside a half-naked man who seemed busy at
+some work. The wind had dropped, and in that funnel of ground
+every least noise and movement reached them like whispers up a
+water-Pipe.
+
+'That is clever,' said Puck, leaning over. 'How truly you shape it!'
+
+'Yes, but what does The Beast care for a brittle flint tip? Bah!'
+The man flicked something contemptuously over his shoulder. It
+fell between Dan and Una - a beautiful dark-blue flint arrow-head
+still hot from the maker's hand.
+
+The man reached for another stone, and worked away like a
+thrush with a snail-shell.
+
+'Flint work is fool's work,' he said at last. 'One does it because
+one always did it; but when it comes to dealing with The Beast -
+no good!' He shook his shaggy head.
+'The Beast was dealt with long ago. He has gone,' said Puck.
+
+'He'll be back at lambing time. I know him.' He chipped very
+carefully, and the flints squeaked.
+
+'Not he. Children can lie out on the Chalk now all day through
+and go home safe.'
+
+'Can they? Well, call The Beast by his True Name, and I'll
+believe it,' the man replied.
+'Surely!' Puck leaped to his feet, curved his hands round his
+mouth and shouted: 'Wolf! Wolf!'
+
+Norton Pit threw back the echo from its dry sides - 'Wuff!'
+Wuff!' like Young jim's bark.
+
+'You see? You hear?' said Puck. 'Nobody answers. Grey
+Shepherd is gone. Feet-in-the-Night has run off. There are no
+more wolves.'
+
+'Wonderful!' The man wiped his forehead as though he were
+hot. 'Who drove him away? You?'
+
+'Many men through many years, each working in his own
+country. Were you one of them?' Puck answered.
+
+The man slid his sheepskin cloak to his waist, and without a
+word pointed to his side, which was all seamed and blotched with
+scars. His arms, too, were dimpled from shoulder to elbow with
+horrible white dimples.
+
+'I see,' said Puck. 'It is The Beast's mark. What did you use
+against him?'
+'Hand, hammer, and spear, as our fathers did before us.'
+
+'So? Then how' - Puck twitched aside the man's dark-brown
+cloak - 'how did a Flint-worker come by that? Show, man, show!'
+He held out his little hand.
+
+The man slipped a long dark iron knife, almost a short sword,
+from his belt, and after breathing on it, handed it hilt-first to
+Puck, who took it with his head on one side, as you should when
+you look at the works of a watch, squinted down the dark blade,
+and very delicately rubbed his forefinger from the point to the hilt.
+
+'Good!' said he, in a surprised tone.
+
+'It should be. The Children of the Night made it,' the man answered.
+
+'So I see by the iron. What might it have cost you?'
+
+'This!' The man raised his hand to his cheek. Puck whistled like
+a Weald starling.
+
+'By the Great Rings of the Chalk!' he cried. 'Was that your
+price? Turn sunward that I may see better, and shut your eye.'
+He slipped his hand beneath the man's chin and swung him till
+he faced the children up the slope. They saw that his right eye was
+gone, and the eyelid lay shrunk. Quickly Puck turned him round
+again, and the two sat down.
+
+'It was for the sheep. The sheep are the people,' said the man, in
+an ashamed voice. 'What else could I have done? You know, Old
+One.'
+
+Puck sighed a little fluttering sigh. 'Take the knife. I listen.'
+The man bowed his head, drove the knife into the turf, and
+while it still quivered said: 'This is witness between us that I speak
+the thing that has been. Before my Knife and the Naked Chalk I
+speak. Touch!'
+
+Puck laid a hand on the hilt. It stopped shaking. The children
+wriggled a little nearer.
+
+'I am of the People of the Worked Flint. I am the one son of the
+Priestess who sells the Winds to the Men of the Sea. I am the
+Buyer of the Knife - the Keeper of the People,' the man began, in
+a sort of singing shout. 'These are my names in this country of the
+Naked Chalk, between the Trees and the Sea.'
+
+'Yours was a great country. Your names are great too,' said Puck.
+
+'One cannot feed some things on names and songs.' The man
+hit himself on the chest. 'It is better - always better - to count
+one's children safe round the fire, their Mother among them.'
+
+'Ahai!' said Puck. 'I think this will be a very old tale.'
+'I warm myself and eat at any fire that I choose, but there is no
+one to light me a fire or cook my meat. I sold all that when I
+bought the Magic Knife for my people. it was not right that The
+Beast should master man. What else could I have done?'
+
+'I hear. I know. I listen,' said Puck.
+
+'When I was old enough to take my place in the Sheepguard,
+The Beast gnawed all our country like a bone between his teeth.
+He came in behind the flocks at watering-time, and watched them
+round the Dew-ponds; he leaped into the folds between our knees
+at the shearing; he walked out alongside the grazing flocks, and
+chose his meat on the hoof while our boys threw flints at him; he
+crept by night 'into the huts, and licked the babe from between the
+mother's hands; he called his companions and pulled down men
+in broad daylight on the Naked Chalk. No - not always did he do
+so! This was his cunning! He would go away for a while to let us
+forget him. A year - two years perhaps - we neither smelt, nor
+heard, nor saw him. When our flocks had increased; when our
+men did not always look behind them; when children strayed
+from the fenced places; when our women walked alone to draw
+water - back, back, back came the Curse of the Chalk, Grey
+Shepherd, Feet-in-the-Night - The Beast, The Beast, The Beast!
+
+'He laughed at our little brittle arrows and our poor blunt
+spears. He learned to run in under the stroke of the hammer. I
+think he knew when there was a flaw in the flint. Often it does not
+show till you bring it down on his snout. Then - Pouf! - the false
+flint falls all to flinders, and you are left with the hammer-handle
+in your fist, and his teeth in your flank! I have felt them. At
+evening, too, in the dew, or when it has misted and rained, your
+spear-head lashings slack off, though you have kept them beneath
+your cloak all day. You are alone - but so close to the home ponds
+that you stop to tighten the sinews with hands, teeth, and a piece
+of driftwood. You bend over and pull - so! That is the minute for
+which he has followed you since the stars went out. "Aarh!" he
+"Wurr-aarh!" he says.' (Norton Pit gave back the growl like
+a pack of real wolves.) 'Then he is on your right shoulder feeling
+for the vein in your neck, and - perhaps your sheep run on
+without you. To fight The Beast is nothing, but to be despised by
+The Beast when he fights you - that is like his teeth in the heart!
+Old One, why is it that men desire so greatly, and can do so little?'
+
+'I do not know. Did you desire so much?' said Puck.
+
+'I desired to master The Beast. It is not right that The Beast
+should master man. But my people were afraid. Even, my
+Mother, the Priestess, was afraid when I told her what I desired.
+We were accustomed to be afraid of The Beast. When I was made
+a man, and a maiden - she was a Priestess - waited for me at the
+Dew-ponds, The Beast flitted from off the Chalk. Perhaps it was
+a sickness; perhaps he had gone to his Gods to learn how to do us
+new harm. But he went, and we breathed more freely. The
+women sang again; the children were not so much guarded; our
+flocks grazed far out. I took mine yonder'- he pointed inland to
+the hazy line of the Weald -'where the new grass was best. They
+grazed north. I followed till we were close to the Trees' - he
+lowered his voice - 'close there where the Children of the Night
+live.' He pointed north again.
+
+'Ah, now I remember a thing,' said Puck. 'Tell me, why did
+your people fear the Trees so extremely?'
+
+'Because the Gods hate the Trees and strike them with lightning.
+We can see them burning for days all along the Chalk's
+edge. Besides, all the Chalk knows that the Children of the Night,
+though they worship our Gods, are magicians. When a man goes
+into their country, they change his spirit; they put words into his
+mouth; they make him like talking water. But a voice in my heart
+told me to go toward the north. While I watched my sheep there I
+saw three Beasts chasing a man, who ran toward the Trees. By
+this I knew he was a Child of the Night. We Flint-workers fear the
+Trees more than we fear The Beast. He had no hammer. He
+carried a knife like this one. A Beast leaped at him. He stretched
+out his knife. The Beast fell dead. The other Beasts ran away
+howling, which they would never have done from a Flint-
+worker. The man went in among the Trees. I looked for the dead
+Beast. He had been killed in a new way - by a single deep, clean
+cut, without bruise or tear, which had split his bad heart. Wonderful!
+So I saw that the man's knife was magic, and I thought
+how to get it, - thought strongly how to get it.
+
+'When I brought the flocks to the shearing, my Mother the
+Priestess asked me, "What is the new thing which you have seen
+and I see in your face?" I said, "It is a sorrow to me"; and she
+answered, "All new things are sorrow. Sit in my place, and eat
+sorrow." I sat down in her place by the fire, where she talks to the
+ghosts in winter, and two voices spoke in my heart. One voice
+said, "Ask the Children of the Night for the Magic Knife. It is not
+fit that The Beast should master man." I listened to that voice.
+
+,one voice said, "If you go among the Trees, the Children of
+the Night will change your spirit. Eat and sleep here." The other
+voice said, "Ask for the Knife." I listened to that voice.
+
+'I said to my Mother in the morning, "I go away to find a thing
+for the people, but I do not know whether I shall return in my
+own shape." She answered, "Whether you live or die, or are
+made different, I am your Mother."'
+
+'True,' said Puck. 'The Old Ones themselves cannot change
+men's mothers even if they would.'
+
+'Let us thank the Old Ones! I spoke to my Maiden, the Priestess
+who waited for me at the Dew-ponds. She promised fine things
+too.' The man laughed. 'I went away to that place where I had
+seen the magician with the knife. I lay out two days on the short
+grass before I ventured among the Trees. I felt my way before me
+with a stick. I was afraid of the terrible talking Trees. I was afraid
+of the ghosts in the branches; of the soft ground underfoot; of the
+red and black waters. I was afraid, above all, of the Change. It
+came!'
+
+They saw him wipe his forehead once again, and his strong
+back-muscles quivered till he laid his hand on the knife-hilt.
+
+'A fire without a flame burned in my head; an evil taste grew in
+my mouth; my eyelids shut hot over my eyes; my breath was hot
+between my teeth, and my hands were like the hands of a
+stranger. I was made to sing songs and to mock the Trees, though
+I was afraid of them. At the same time I saw myself laughing, and
+I was very sad for this fine young man, who was myself. Ah! The
+Children of the Night know magic.'
+
+'I think that is done by the Spirits of the Mist. They change a
+man, if he sleeps among them,' said Puck. 'Had you slept in any mists?'
+
+'Yes - but I know it was the Children of the Night. After three
+days I saw a red light behind the Trees, and I heard a heavy noise. I
+saw the Children of the Night dig red stones from a hole, and lay
+them in fires. The stones melted like tallow, and the men beat the
+soft stuff with hammers. I wished to speak to these men, but the
+words were changed in my mouth, and all I could say was, "Do
+not make that noise. It hurts my head." By this I knew that I was
+bewitched, and I clung to the Trees, and prayed the Children of
+the Night to take off their spells. They were cruel. They asked me
+many questions which they would never allow me to answer.
+They changed my words between my teeth till I wept. Then they
+led me into a hut and covered the floor with hot stones and dashed
+water on the stones, and sang charms till the sweat poured off me
+like water. I slept. When I waked, my own spirit -not the strange,
+shouting thing - was back in my body, and I was like a cool bright
+stone on the shingle between the sea and the sunshine. The
+magicians came to hear me - women and men - each wearing a
+Magic Knife. Their Priestess was their Ears and their Mouth.
+
+'I spoke. I spoke many words that went smoothly along like
+sheep in order when their shepherd, standing on a mound, can
+count those coming, and those far off getting ready to come. I
+asked for Magic Knives for my people. I said that my people
+would bring meat, and milk, and wool, and lay them in the short
+grass outside the Trees, if the Children of the Night would leave
+Magic Knives for our people to take away. They were pleased.
+Their Priestess said, "For whose sake have you come?" I
+answered, "The sheep are the people. If The Beast kills our sheep,
+our people die. So I come for a Magic Knife to kill The Beast."
+
+'She said, "We do not know if our God will let us trade with the
+people of the Naked Chalk. Wait till we have asked."
+
+'When they came back from the Question-place (their Gods are
+our Gods), their Priestess said, "The God needs a proof that your
+words are true." I said, "What is the proof?" She said, "The God
+says that if you have come for the sake of your people you will
+give him your right eye to be put out; but if you have come for
+any other reason you will not give it. This proof is between you
+and the God. We ourselves are sorry."
+
+'I said, "This is a hard proof. Is there no other road?"
+
+'She said, "Yes. You can go back to your people with your two
+eyes in your head if you choose. But then you will not get any
+Magic Knives for your people."
+
+'I said, "It would be easier if I knew that I were to be killed."
+
+'She said, "Perhaps the God knew this too. See! I have made my
+knife hot."
+
+'I said, "Be quick, then!" With her knife heated in the flame she
+put out my right eye. She herself did it. I am the son of a Priestess.
+She was a Priestess. It was not work for any common man.'
+
+'True! Most true,' said Puck. 'No common man's work that.
+And, afterwards?'
+
+'Afterwards I did not see out of that eye any more. I found also
+that a one eye does not tell you truly where things are. Try it!'
+
+At this Dan put his hand over one eye, and reached for the flint
+arrow-head on the grass. He missed it by inches. 'It's true,' he
+whispered to Una. 'You can't judge distances a bit with only one
+eye.'
+
+Puck was evidently making the same experiment, for the man
+laughed at him.
+
+'I know it is so,' said he. 'Even now I am not always sure of my
+blow. I stayed with the Children of the Night till my eye healed.
+They said I was the son of Tyr, the God who put his right hand in
+a Beast's mouth. They showed me how they melted their red
+stone and made the Magic Knives of it. They told me the charms
+they sang over the fires and at the beatings. I can sing many
+charms.' Then he began to laugh like a boy.
+
+'I was thinking of my journey home,' he said, 'and of the
+surprised Beast. He had come back to the Chalk. I saw him - I
+smelt his lairs as soon as ever I left the Trees. He did not know I
+had the Magic Knife - I hid it under my cloak - the Knife that the
+Priestess gave me. Ho! Ho! That happy day was too short! See! A
+Beast would wind me. "Wow!" he would say. "Here is my
+Flint-worker!" He would come leaping, tail in air; he would roll;
+he would lay his head between his paws out of merriness of heart
+at his warm, waiting meal. He would leap - and, oh, his eye in
+mid-leap when he saw - when he saw the knife held ready for
+him! It pierced his hide as a rush pierces curdled milk. Often he
+had no time to howl. I did not trouble to flay any beasts I killed.
+Sometimes I missed my blow. Then I took my little flint hammer
+and beat out his brains as he cowered. He made no fight. He knew
+the Knife! But The Beast is very cunning. Before evening all The
+Beasts had smelt the blood on my knife, and were running from
+me like hares. They knew! Then I walked as a man should - the
+Master of The Beast!
+
+'So came I back to my Mother's house. There was a lamb to be
+killed. I cut it in two halves with my knife, and I told her all my
+tale. She said, "This is the work of a God." I kissed her and
+laughed. I went to my Maiden who waited for me at the Dew-
+ponds. There was a lamb to be killed. I cut it in two halves with
+my knife, and told her all my tale. She said, "It is the work of a
+God." I laughed, but she pushed me away, and being on my blind
+side, ran off before I could kiss her. I went to the Men of the
+Sheepguard at watering-time. There was a sheep to be killed for
+their meat. I cut it in two halves with my knife, and told them all
+my tale. They said, "It is the work of a God." I said, "We talk too
+much about Gods. Let us eat and be happy, and tomorrow I will
+take you to the Children of the Night, and each man will find a
+Magic Knife. "
+
+'I was glad to smell our sheep again; to see the broad sky from
+edge to edge, and to hear the sea. I slept beneath the stars in my
+cloak. The men talked among themselves.
+
+'I led them, the next day, to the Trees, taking with me meat,
+wool, and curdled milk, as I had promised. We found the Magic
+Knives laid out on the grass, as the Children of the Night had
+promised. They watched us from among the Trees. Their Priestess
+called to me and said, "How is it with your people?" I said
+"Their hearts are changed. I cannot see their hearts as I used to."
+She said, "That is because you have only one eye. Come to me
+and I will be both your eyes." But I said, "I must show my people
+how to use their knives against The Beast, as you showed me how
+to use my knife." I said this because the Magic Knife does not
+balance like the flint. She said, "What you have done, you have
+done for the sake of a woman, and not for the sake of your
+people." I asked of her, "Then why did the God accept my right
+eye, and why are you so angry?" She answered, "Because any
+man can lie to a God, but no man can lie to a woman. And I am not
+angry with you. I am only very sorrowful for you. Wait a little,
+and you will see out of your one eye why I am sorry. So she hid herself.
+
+'I went back with my people, each one carrying his Knife, and
+making it sing in the air - tssee-sssse. The Flint never sings. It
+mutters - ump-ump. The Beast heard. The Beast saw. He knew!
+Everywhere he ran away from us. We all laughed. As we walked
+over the grass my Mother's brother - the Chief on the Men's Side
+- he took off his Chief's necklace of yellow sea-stones.'
+
+'How? Eh? Oh, I remember! Amber,' said Puck.
+
+'And would have put them on my neck. I said, "No, I am
+content. What does my one eye matter if my other eye sees fat
+sheep and fat children running about safely?" My Mother's
+brother said to them, "I told you he would never take such
+things." Then they began to sing a song in the Old Tongue - The
+Song of Tyr. I sang with them, but my Mother's brother said,
+"This is your song, O Buyer of the Knife. Let us sing it, Tyr."
+
+'Even then I did not understand, till I saw that - that no man
+stepped on my shadow; and I knew that they thought me to be a
+God, like the God Tyr, who gave his right hand to conquer a
+Great Beast.'
+
+'By the Fire in the Belly of the Flint was that so?' Puck
+rapped out.
+
+'By my Knife and the Naked Chalk, so it was! They made way
+for my shadow as though it had been a Priestess walking to the
+Barrows of the Dead. I was afraid. I said to myself, "My Mother
+and my Maiden will know I am not Tyr." But still I was afraid,
+with the fear of a man who falls into a steep flint-pit while he runs,
+and feels that it will be hard to climb out.
+
+'When we came to the Dew-ponds all our people were there.
+The men showed their knives and told their tale. The sheep guards
+also had seen The Beast flying from us. The Beast went west
+across the river in packs - howling! He knew the Knife had come
+to the Naked Chalk at last - at last! He knew! So my work was
+done. I looked for my Maiden among the Priestesses. She looked
+at me, but she did not smile. She made the sign to me that our
+Priestesses must make when they sacrifice to the Old Dead in the
+Barrows. I would have spoken, but my Mother's brother made
+himself my Mouth, as though I had been one of the Old Dead in
+the Barrows for whom our Priests speak to the people on
+Midsummer Mornings.'
+
+'I remember. Well I remember those Midsummer Mornings!'
+said Puck.
+
+'Then I went away angrily to my Mother's house. She would
+have knelt before me. Then I was more angry, but she said,
+"Only a God would have spoken to me thus, a Priestess. A man
+would have feared the punishment of the Gods." I looked at her
+and I laughed. I could not stop my unhappy laughing. They called
+me from the door by the name of Tyr himself. A young man with
+whom I had watched my first flocks, and chipped my first arrow,
+and fought my first Beast, called me by that name in the Old
+Tongue. He asked my leave to take my Maiden. His eyes were
+lowered, his hands were on his forehead. He was full of the fear of
+a God, but of me, a man, he had no fear when he asked. I did not
+kill him. I said, "Call the maiden." She came also without fear -
+this very one that had waited for me, that had talked with me, by
+our Dew-ponds. Being a Priestess, she lifted her eyes to me. As I
+look on a hill or a cloud, so she looked at me. She spoke in the Old
+Tongue which Priestesses use when they make prayers to the Old
+Dead in the Barrows. She asked leave that she might light the fire
+in my companion's house -and that I should bless their children. I
+did not kill her. I heard my own voice, little and cold, say, "Let it
+be as you desire," and they went away hand in hand. My heart
+grew little and cold; a wind shouted in my ears; my eye darkened.
+I said to my Mother, "Can a God die?" I heard her say, "What is
+it? What is it, my son?" and I fell into darkness full of hammer-
+noises. I was not.'
+
+'Oh, poor - poor God!' said Puck. 'And your wise Mother?'
+
+'She knew. As soon as I dropped she knew. When my spirit
+came back I heard her whisper in my ear, "Whether you live or
+die, or are made different, I am your Mother." That was good -
+better even than the water she gave me and the going away of the
+sickness. Though I was ashamed to have fallen down, yet I was
+very glad. She was glad too. Neither of us wished to lose the
+other. There is only the one Mother for the one son. I heaped the
+fire for her, and barred the doors, and sat at her feet as before I
+went away, and she combed my hair, and sang.
+
+'I said at last, "What is to be done to the people who say that I
+am Tyr?"
+
+'She said, "He who has done a God-like thing must bear
+himself like a God. I see no way out of it. The people are now your
+sheep till you die. You cannot drive them off."
+
+
+'I said, "This is a heavier sheep than I can lift." She said, "In
+time it will grow easy. In time perhaps you will not lay it down
+for any maiden anywhere. Be wise - be very wise, my son, for
+nothing is left you except the words, and the songs, and the
+worship of a God."
+
+'Oh, poor God!' said Puck. 'But those are not altogether
+bad things.'
+
+'I know they are not; but I would sell them all - all - all for one
+small child of my own, smearing himself with the ashes of our
+own house-fire.'
+
+He wrenched his knife from the turf, thrust it into his belt and
+stood up.
+
+'And yet, what else could I have done?' he said. 'The sheep are
+the people.'
+
+'It is a very old tale,' Puck answered. 'I have heard the like of it
+not only on the Naked Chalk, but also among the Trees - under
+Oak, and Ash, and Thorn.'
+
+The afternoon shadows filled all the quiet emptiness of Norton
+Pit. The children heard the sheep-bells and Young jim's busy
+bark above them, and they scrambled up the slope to the level.
+
+'We let you have your sleep out,' said Mr Dudeney, as the flock
+scattered before them. 'It's making for tea-time now.'
+
+'Look what I've found, said Dan, and held up a little blue flint
+arrow-head as fresh as though it had been chipped that very day.
+
+'Oh,' said Mr Dudeney, 'the closeter you be to the turf the
+more you're apt to see things. I've found 'em often. Some says the
+fairies made 'em, but I says they was made by folks like ourselves
+- only a goodish time back. They're lucky to keep. Now, you
+couldn't ever have slept - not to any profit - among your father's
+trees same as you've laid out on Naked Chalk - could you?'
+
+'One doesn't want to sleep in the woods,' said Una.
+
+'Then what's the good of 'em?' said Mr Dudeney. 'Might as
+well set in the barn all day. Fetch 'em 'long, Jim boy!'
+
+The Downs, that looked so bare and hot when they came, were
+full of delicious little shadow-dimples; the smell of the thyme and
+the salt mixed together on the south-west drift from the still sea;
+their eyes dazzled with the low sun, and the long grass under it
+looked golden. The sheep knew where their fold was, so Young
+Jim came back to his master, and they all four strolled home, the
+scabious-heads swishing about their ankles, and their shadows
+streaking behind them like the shadows of giants.
+
+
+
+Song of the Men's Side
+
+
+Once we feared The Beast - when he followed us we ran,
+Ran very fast though we knew
+It was not right that The Beast should master Man;
+But what could we Flint-workers do?
+The Beast only grinned at our spears round his ears -
+Grinned at the hammers that we made;
+But now we will hunt him for the life with the Knife -
+And this is the Buyer of the Blade!
+
+ Room for his shadow on the grass - let it pass!
+ To left and right - stand clear!
+ This is the Buyer of the Blade - be afraid!
+ This is the great God Tyr!
+
+Tyr thought hard till he hammered out a plan,
+For he knew it was not right
+(And it is not right) that The Beast should master Man;
+So he went to the Children of the Night.
+He begged a Magic Knife of their make for our sake.
+When he begged for the Knife they said:
+'The price of the Knife you would buy is an eye!'
+And that was the price he paid.
+
+ Tell it to the Barrows of the Dead - run ahead!
+ Shout it so the Women's Side can hear!
+ This is the Buyer of the Blade - be afraid!
+ This is the great God Tyr!
+
+Our women and our little ones may walk on the Chalk,
+As far as we can see them and beyond.
+We shall not be anxious for our sheep when we keep
+Tally at the shearing-pond.
+
+We can eat with both our elbows on our knees, if we please,
+We can sleep after meals in the sun;
+For Shepherd-of-the-Twilight is dismayed at the Blade,
+Feet-in-the-Night have run!
+Dog-without-a-Master goes away (Hai, Tyr aie!),
+Devil-in-the-Dusk has run!
+
+Then:
+ Room for his shadow on the grass - let it pass!
+ To left and right - stand clear!
+ This is the Buyer of the Blade - be afraid!
+ This is the great God Tyr!
+
+
+
+
+BROTHER SQUARE-TOES
+
+
+
+Philadelphia
+
+
+If you're off to Philadelphia in the morning,
+You mustn't take my stories for a guide.
+There's little left indeed of the city you will read of,
+And all the folk I write about have died.
+Now few will understand if you mention Talleyrand,
+Or remember what his cunning and his skill did.
+And the cabmen at the wharf do not know Count Zinnendorf,
+Nor the Church in Philadelphia he builded.
+
+ It is gone, gone, gone with lost Atlantis
+ (Never say I didn't give you warning).
+ In Seventeen Ninety-three 'twas there for all to see,
+ But it's not in Philadelphia this morning,
+
+If you're off to Philadelphia in the morning,
+You mustn't go by everything I've said.
+Bob Bicknell's Southern Stages have been laid aside for ages,
+But the Limited will take you there instead.
+Toby Hirte can't be seen at One Hundred and Eighteen,
+North Second Street - no matter when you call;
+And I fear you'll search in vain for the wash-house down the lane
+Where Pharaoh played the fiddle at the ball.
+
+ It is gone, gone, gone with Thebes the Golden
+ (Never say I didn't give you warning).
+ In Seventeen Ninety-four 'twas a famous dancing-floor -
+ But it's not in Philadelphia this morning.
+
+If you're off to Philadelphia in the morning,
+You must telegraph for rooms at some Hotel.
+You needn't try your luck at Epply's or the 'Buck,'
+Though the Father of his Country liked them well.
+It is not the slightest use to inquire for Adam Goos,
+Or to ask where Pastor Meder has removed - so
+You must treat as out-of-date the story I relate
+Of the Church in Philadelphia he loved so.
+
+ He is gone, gone, gone with Martin Luther
+ (Never say I didn't give you warning).
+ In Seventeen Ninety-five he was (rest his soul!) alive,
+ But he's not in Philadelphia this morning.
+If you're off to Philadelphia this morning,
+And wish to prove the truth of what I say,
+I pledge my word you'll find the pleasant land behind
+Unaltered since Red Jacket rode that way.
+Still the pine-woods scent the noon; still the cat-bird sings his tune;
+Still Autumn sets the maple-forest blazing.
+Still the grape-vine through the dusk flings her soul-compelling musk;
+Still the fire-flies in the corn make night amazing.
+ They are there, there, there with Earth immortal
+ (Citizens, I give you friendly warning).
+ The things that truly last when men and times have passed,
+ They are all in Pennsylvania this morning!
+
+
+
+Brother Square-Toes
+
+
+It was almost the end of their visit to the seaside. They had turned
+themselves out of doors while their trunks were being packed,
+and strolled over the Downs towards the dull evening sea. The
+tide was dead low under the chalk cliffs, and the little wrinkled
+waves grieved along the sands up the coast to Newhaven and
+down the coast to long, grey Brighton, whose smoke trailed out
+across the Channel.
+
+They walked to The Gap, where the cliff is only a few feet high.
+A windlass for hoisting shingle from the beach below stands at the
+edge of it. The Coastguard cottages are a little farther on, and an
+old ship's figurehead of a Turk in a turban stared at them over the wall.
+'This time tomorrow we shall be at home, thank goodness,'
+said Una. 'I hate the sea!'
+
+'I believe it's all right in the middle,' said Dan. 'The edges are
+the sorrowful parts.'
+
+Cordery, the coastguard, came out of the cottage, levelled his
+telescope at some fishing-boats, shut it with a click and walked
+away. He grew smaller and smaller along the edge of the cliff,
+where neat piles of white chalk every few yards show the path
+even on the darkest night.
+'Where's Cordery going?'said Una.
+
+'Half-way to Newhaven,'said Dan. 'Then he'll meet the
+Newhaven coastguard and turn back. He says if coastguards were done
+away with, smuggling would start up at once.'
+
+A voice on the beach under the cliff began to sing:
+
+ 'The moon she shined on Telscombe Tye -
+ On Telscombe Tye at night it was -
+ She saw the smugglers riding by,
+ A very pretty sight it was!'
+
+Feet scrabbled on the flinty path. A dark, thin-faced man in
+very neat brown clothes and broad-toed shoes came up, followed
+by Puck.
+
+ 'Three Dunkirk boats was standin' in!'
+
+the man went on.
+'Hssh!' said Puck. 'You'll shock these nice young people.'
+
+'Oh! Shall I? Mille pardons!' He shrugged his shoulders almost
+up to his ears - spread his hands abroad, and jabbered in French.
+'No comprenny?' he said. 'I'll give it you in Low German.' And
+he went off in another language, changing his voice and manner
+so completely that they hardly knew him for the same person.
+But his dark beady-brown eyes still twinkled merrily in his lean
+face, and the children felt that they did not suit the straight, plain,
+snuffy-brown coat, brown knee-breeches, and broad-brimmed
+hat. His hair was tied 'in a short pigtail which danced wickedly
+when he turned his head.
+
+'Ha' done!' said Puck, laughing. 'Be one thing or t'other,
+Pharaoh - French or English or German - no great odds which.'
+
+'Oh, but it is, though,' said Una quickly. 'We haven't begun
+German yet, and - and we're going back to our French next week.'
+
+'Aren't you English?' said Dan. 'We heard you singing just now.'
+
+'Aha! That was the Sussex side o' me. Dad he married a French
+girl out o' Boulogne, and French she stayed till her dyin' day. She
+was an Aurette, of course. We Lees mostly marry Aurettes.
+Haven't you ever come across the saying:
+
+ 'Aurettes and Lees,
+ Like as two peas.
+ What they can't smuggle,
+ They'll run over seas'?
+
+'Then, are you a smuggler?' Una cried; and, 'Have you
+smuggled much?'said Dan.
+
+Mr Lee nodded solemnly.
+
+'Mind you,' said he, 'I don't uphold smuggling for the generality
+o' mankind - mostly they can't make a do of it - but I was
+brought up to the trade, d'ye see, in a lawful line o' descent on' -
+he waved across the Channel -'on both sides the water. 'Twas all
+in the families, same as fiddling. The Aurettes used mostly to run
+the stuff across from Boulogne, and we Lees landed it here and ran
+it up to London Town, by the safest road.'
+
+'Then where did you live?' said Una.
+
+'You mustn't ever live too close to your business in our trade.
+We kept our little fishing smack at Shoreham, but otherwise we
+Lees was all honest cottager folk - at Warminghurst under Washington
+- Bramber way - on the old Penn estate.'
+
+'Ah!' said Puck, squatted by the windlass. 'I remember a piece
+about the Lees at Warminghurst, I do:
+
+ 'There was never a Lee to Warminghurst
+ That wasn't a gipsy last and first.
+
+I reckon that's truth, Pharaoh.'
+
+Pharaoh laughed. 'Admettin' that's true,' he said, 'my gipsy
+blood must be wore pretty thin, for I've made and kept a worldly
+fortune.'
+
+'By smuggling?' Dan asked.
+'No, in the tobacco trade.'
+
+'You don't mean to say you gave up smuggling just to go and
+be a tobacconist!' Dan looked so disappointed they all had to laugh.
+
+'I'm sorry; but there's all sorts of tobacconists,' Pharaoh
+replied. 'How far out, now, would you call that smack with the
+patch on her foresail?' He pointed to the fishing-boats.
+
+'A scant mile,' said Puck after a quick look.
+
+'Just about. It's seven fathom under her - clean sand. That was
+where Uncle Aurette used to sink his brandy kegs from
+Boulogne, and we fished 'em up and rowed 'em into The Gap
+here for the ponies to run inland. One thickish night in January of
+'Ninety-three, Dad and Uncle Lot and me came over from
+Shoreham in the smack, and we found Uncle Aurette and the
+L'Estranges, my cousins, waiting for us in their lugger with New
+Year's presents from Mother's folk in Boulogne. I remember
+Aunt Cecile she'd sent me a fine new red knitted cap, which I put
+on then and there, for the French was having their Revolution in
+those days, and red caps was all the fashion. Uncle Aurette tells us
+that they had cut off their King Louis' head, and, moreover, the
+Brest forts had fired on an English man-o'-war. The news wasn't
+a week old.
+
+'"That means war again, when we was only just getting used
+to the peace," says Dad. "Why can't King George's men and King
+Louis' men do on their uniforms and fight it out over our heads?"
+
+'"Me too, I wish that," says Uncle Aurette. "But they'll be
+pressing better men than themselves to fight for 'em. The press-
+gangs are out already on our side. You look out for yours. "
+
+'"I'll have to bide ashore and grow cabbages for a while, after
+I've run this cargo; but I do wish" - Dad says, going over the
+lugger's side with our New Year presents under his arm and
+young L'Estrange holding the lantern - "I just do wish that those
+folk which make war so easy had to run one cargo a month all this
+winter. It 'ud show 'em what honest work means."
+
+'"Well, I've warned ye," says Uncle Aurette. "I'll be slipping
+off now before your Revenue cutter comes. Give my love to
+Sister and take care o' the kegs. It's thicking to southward."
+'I remember him waving to us and young Stephen L'Estrange
+blowing out the lantern. By the time we'd fished up the kegs the
+fog came down so thick Dad judged it risky for me to row 'em
+ashore, even though we could hear the ponies stamping on the
+beach. So he and Uncle Lot took the dinghy and left me in the
+smack playing on my fiddle to guide 'em back.
+
+'Presently I heard guns. Two of 'em sounded mighty like
+Uncle Aurette's three-pounders. He didn't go naked about the
+seas after dark. Then come more, which I reckoned was Captain
+Giddens in the Revenue cutter. He was open-handed with his
+compliments, but he would lay his guns himself. I stopped fiddling
+to listen, and I heard a whole skyful o' French up in the fog -
+and a high bow come down on top o' the smack. I hadn't time to
+call or think. I remember the smack heeling over, and me
+standing on the gunwale pushing against the ship's side as if I
+hoped to bear her off. Then the square of an open port, with a
+lantern in it, slid by in front of my nose. I kicked back on our
+gunwale as it went under and slipped through that port into the
+French ship - me and my fiddle.'
+
+'Gracious!' said Una. 'What an adventure!'
+
+'Didn't anybody see you come in?' said Dan.
+
+'There wasn't any one there. I'd made use of an orlop-deck port
+- that's the next deck below the gun-deck, which by rights should
+not have been open at all. The crew was standing by their guns up
+above. I rolled on to a pile of dunnage in the dark and I went to
+sleep. When I woke, men was talking all round me, telling each
+other their names and sorrows just like Dad told me pressed men
+used to talk in the last war. Pretty soon I made out they'd all been
+hove aboard together by the press-gangs, and left to sort
+'emselves. The ship she was the Embuscade, a thirty-six-gun
+Republican frigate, Captain Jean Baptiste Bompard, two days out
+of Le Havre, going to the United States with a Republican French
+Ambassador of the name of Genet. They had been up all night
+clearing for action on account of hearing guns in the fog. Uncle
+Aurette and Captain Giddens must have been passing the time o'
+day with each other off Newhaven, and the frigate had drifted
+past 'em. She never knew she'd run down our smack. Seeing so
+many aboard was total strangers to each other, I thought one
+more mightn't be noticed; so I put Aunt Cecile's red cap on the
+back of my head, and my hands in my pockets like the rest, and, as
+we French say, I circulated till I found the galley.
+
+'"What! Here's one of 'em that isn't sick!" says a cook. "Take
+his breakfast to Citizen Bompard."
+
+'I carried the tray to the cabin, but I didn't call this Bompard
+"Citizen." Oh no! "Mon Capitaine" was my little word, same as
+Uncle Aurette used to answer in King Louis' Navy. Bompard, he
+liked it. He took me on for cabin servant, and after that no one
+asked questions; and thus I got good victuals and light work all
+the way across to America. He talked a heap of politics, and so did
+his officers, and when this Ambassador Genet got rid of his
+land-stomach and laid down the law after dinner, a rooks'
+parliament was nothing compared to their cabin. I learned to
+know most of the men which had worked the French Revolution,
+through waiting at table and hearing talk about 'em. One of our
+forecas'le six-pounders was called Danton and t'other Marat. I
+used to play the fiddle between 'em, sitting on the capstan. Day in
+and day out Bompard and Monsieur Genet talked o' what France
+had done, and how the United States was going to join her to
+finish off the English in this war. Monsieur Genet said he'd
+justabout make the United States fight for France. He was a rude
+common man. But I liked listening. I always helped drink any
+healths that was proposed - specially Citizen Danton's who'd cut
+off King Louis' head. An all-Englishman might have been
+shocked - but that's where my French blood saved me.
+
+'It didn't save me from getting a dose of ship's fever though, the
+week before we put Monsieur Genet ashore at Charleston; and
+what was left of me after bleeding and pills took the dumb horrors
+from living 'tween decks. The surgeon, Karaguen his name was,
+kept me down there to help him with his plasters - I was too weak
+to wait on Bompard. I don't remember much of any account for
+the next few weeks, till I smelled lilacs, and I looked out of the
+port, and we was moored to a wharf-edge and there was a town o'
+fine gardens and red-brick houses and all the green leaves o' God's
+world waiting for me outside.
+
+'"What's this?" I said to the sick-bay man - Old Pierre
+Tiphaigne he was. "Philadelphia," says Pierre. "You've missed it
+all. We're sailing next week. "
+
+'I just turned round and cried for longing to be amongst
+the laylocks.
+
+'"If that's your trouble," says old Pierre, "you go straight
+ashore. None'll hinder you. They're all gone mad on these coasts
+- French and American together. 'Tisn't my notion o' war."
+Pierre was an old King Louis man.
+
+'My legs was pretty tottly, but I made shift to go on deck,
+which it was like a fair. The frigate was crowded with fine
+gentlemen and ladies pouring in and out. They sung and they
+waved French flags, while Captain Bompard and his officers -
+yes, and some of the men - speechified to all and sundry about
+war with England. They shouted, "Down with England!" -
+"Down with Washington!" - "Hurrah for France and the
+Republic!" I couldn't make sense of it. I wanted to get out from
+that crunch of swords and petticoats and sit in a field. One of the
+gentlemen said to me, "Is that a genuine cap o' Liberty you're
+wearing?" 'Twas Aunt Cecile's red one, and pretty near wore
+out. "Oh yes!" I says, "straight from France." "I'll give you a
+shilling for it," he says, and with that money in my hand and my
+fiddle under my arm I squeezed past the entry-port and went
+ashore. It was like a dream - meadows, trees, flowers, birds,
+houses, and people all different! I sat me down in a meadow and
+fiddled a bit, and then I went in and out the streets, looking and
+smelling and touching, like a little dog at a fair. Fine folk was
+setting on the white stone doorsteps of their houses, and a girl
+threw me a handful of laylock sprays, and when I said "Merci"
+without thinking, she said she loved the French. They all was the
+fashion in the city. I saw more tricolour flags in Philadelphia than
+ever I'd seen in Boulogne, and every one was shouting for war
+with England. A crowd o' folk was cheering after our French
+Ambassador - that same Monsieur Genet which we'd left at
+Charleston. He was a-horseback behaving as if the place belonged
+to him - and commanding all and sundry to fight the British. But
+I'd heard that before. I got into a long straight street as wide as the
+Broyle, where gentlemen was racing horses. I'm fond o' horses.
+Nobody hindered 'em, and a man told me it was called Race
+Street o' purpose for that. Then I followed some black niggers,
+which I'd never seen close before; but I left them to run after a
+great, proud, copper-faced man with feathers in his hair and a red
+blanket trailing behind him. A man told me he was a real Red
+Indian called Red Jacket, and I followed him into an alley-way off
+Race Street by Second Street, where there was a fiddle playing.
+I'm fond o' fiddling. The Indian stopped at a baker's shop -
+Conrad Gerhard's it was - and bought some sugary cakes. Hearing
+what the price was I was going to have some too, but the
+Indian asked me in English if I was hungry. "Oh yes!" I says. I
+must have looked a sore scrattel. He opens a door on to a staircase
+and leads the way up. We walked into a dirty little room full of
+flutes and fiddles and a fat man fiddling by the window, in a smell
+of cheese and medicines fit to knock you down. I was knocked
+down too, for the fat man jumped up and hit me a smack in the
+face. I fell against an old spinet covered with pill-boxes and the
+pills rolled about the floor. The Indian never moved an eyelid.
+
+'"Pick up the pills! Pick up the pills!" the fat man screeches.
+
+'I started picking 'em up - hundreds of 'em - meaning to run
+out under the Indian's arm, but I came on giddy all over and I sat
+down. The fat man went back to his fiddling.
+
+'"Toby!" says the Indian after quite a while. "I brought the
+boy to be fed, not hit."
+
+'"What?" says Toby, "I thought it was Gert Schwankfelder."
+He put down his fiddle and took a good look at me. "Himmel!"
+he says. "I have hit the wrong boy. It is not the new boy. Why are
+you not the new boy? Why are you not Gert Schwankfelder?"
+
+'"I don't know," I said. "The gentleman in the pink blanket
+brought me."
+
+'Says the Indian, "He is hungry, Toby. Christians always feed
+the hungry. So I bring him."
+
+'"You should have said that first," said Toby. He pushed
+plates at me and the Indian put bread and pork on them, and a
+glass of Madeira wine. I told him I was off the French ship, which
+I had joined on account of my mother being French. That was
+true enough when you think of it, and besides I saw that the
+French was all the fashion in Philadelphia. Toby and the Indian
+whispered and I went on picking up the pills.
+
+'"You like pills - eh?" says Toby.
+'"No," I says. "I've seen our ship's doctor roll too many of
+em.'
+
+'"Ho!" he says, and he shoves two bottles at me. "What's
+those?"
+
+'"Calomel," I says. "And t'other's senna.
+
+'"Right," he says. "One week have I tried to teach Gert
+Schwankfelder the difference between them, yet he cannot tell.
+You like to fiddle?" he says. He'd just seen my kit on the floor.
+
+'"Oh yes!" says I,
+
+'"Oho!" he says. "What note is this?" drawing his bow across.
+
+'He meant it for A, so I told him it was.
+
+'"My brother," he says to the Indian. "I think this is the hand
+of Providence! I warned that Gert if he went to play upon the
+wharves any more he would hear from me. Now look at this boy
+and say what you think."
+
+'The Indian looked me over whole minutes - there was a
+musical clock on the wall and dolls came out and hopped while
+the hour struck. He looked me over all the while they did it.
+
+'"Good," he says at last. "This boy is good."
+
+'"Good, then," says Toby. "Now I shall play my fiddle and
+you shall sing your hymn, brother. Boy, go down to the bakery
+and tell them you are young Gert Schwankfelder that was. The
+horses are in Davy jones's locker. If you ask any questions you
+shall hear from me."
+
+'I left 'em singing hymns and I went down to old Conrad
+Gerhard. He wasn't at all surprised when I told him I was young
+Gert Schwankfelder that was. He knew Toby. His wife she
+walked me into the back-yard without a word, and she washed
+me and she cut my hair to the edge of a basin, and she put me to
+bed, and oh! how I slept - how I slept in that little room behind the
+oven looking on the flower garden! I didn't know Toby went to
+the Embuscade that night and bought me off Dr Karaguen for
+twelve dollars and a dozen bottles of Seneca Oil. Karaguen
+wanted a new lace to his coat, and he reckoned I hadn't long to
+live; so he put me down as "discharged sick."
+
+'I like Toby,' said Una.
+
+'Who was he?' said Puck.
+
+'Apothecary Tobias Hirte,' Pharaoh replied. 'One Hundred
+and Eighteen, Second Street - the famous Seneca Oil man, that
+lived half of every year among the Indians. But let me tell my tale
+my own way, same as his brown mare used to go to Lebanon.'
+
+'Then why did he keep her in Davy Jones's locker?' Dan asked.
+'That was his joke. He kept her under David Jones's hat shop in
+the "Buck" tavern yard, and his Indian friends kept their ponies
+there when they visited him. I looked after the horses when I
+wasn't rolling pills on top of the old spinet, while he played his
+fiddle and Red Jacket sang hymns. I liked it. I had good victuals,
+light work, a suit o' clean clothes, a plenty music, and quiet,
+smiling German folk all around that let me sit in their gardens.
+My first Sunday, Toby took me to his church in Moravian Alley;
+and that was in a garden too. The women wore long-eared caps
+and handkerchiefs. They came in at one door and the men at
+another, and there was a brass chandelier you could see your face
+in, and a nigger-boy to blow the organ bellows. I carried Toby's
+fiddle, and he played pretty much as he chose all against the organ
+and the singing. He was the only one they let do it, for they was a
+simple-minded folk. They used to wash each other's feet up in the
+attic to keep 'emselves humble: which Lord knows they didn't need.'
+
+'How very queer!' said Una.
+
+Pharaoh's eyes twinkled. 'I've met many and seen much,' he
+said; 'but I haven't yet found any better or quieter or forbearinger
+people than the Brethren and Sistern of the Moravian Church in
+Philadelphia. Nor will I ever forget my first Sunday - the service
+was in English that week - with the smell of the flowers coming in
+from Pastor Meder's garden where the big peach tree is, and me
+looking at all the clean strangeness and thinking of 'tween decks
+on the Embuscade only six days ago. Being a boy, it seemed to me
+it had lasted for ever, and was going on for ever. But I didn't
+know Toby then. As soon as the dancing clock struck midnight
+that Sunday - I was lying under the spinet - I heard Toby's fiddle.
+He'd just done his supper, which he always took late and heavy.
+"Gert," says he, "get the horses. Liberty and Independence for
+Ever! The flowers appear upon the earth, and the time of the
+singing of birds is come. We are going to my country seat in
+Lebanon."
+
+'I rubbed my eyes, and fetched 'em out of the "Buck" stables.
+Red Jacket was there saddling his, and when I'd packed the
+saddle-bags we three rode up Race Street to the Ferry by starlight.
+So we went travelling. It's a kindly, softly country there, back of
+Philadelphia among the German towns, Lancaster way. Little
+houses and bursting big barns, fat cattle, fat women, and all as
+peaceful as Heaven might be if they farmed there. Toby sold
+medicines out of his saddlebags, and gave the French war-news to
+folk along the roads. Him and his long-hilted umberell was as
+well known as the stage-coaches. He took orders for that famous
+Seneca Oil which he had the secret of from Red Jacket's Indians,
+and he slept in friends' farmhouses, but he would shut all the
+windows; so Red Jacket and me slept outside. There's nothing to
+hurt except snakes - and they slip away quick enough if you
+thrash in the bushes.'
+
+'I'd have liked that!' said Dan.
+
+'I'd no fault to find with those days. In the cool o' the morning
+the cat-bird sings. He's something to listen to. And there's a smell
+of wild grape-vine growing in damp hollows which you drop
+into, after long rides in the heat, which is beyond compare for
+sweetness. So's the puffs out of the pine woods of afternoons.
+Come sundown, the frogs strike up, and later on the fireflies
+dance in the corn. Oh me, the fireflies in the corn! We were a week
+or ten days on the road, tacking from one place to another - such
+as Lancaster, Bethlehem-Ephrata - "thou Bethlehem-Ephrata."
+No odds - I loved the going about. And so we jogged 'into dozy
+little Lebanon by the Blue Mountains, where Toby had a cottage
+and a garden of all fruits. He come north every year for this
+wonderful Seneca Oil the Seneca Indians made for him. They'd
+never sell to any one else, and he doctored 'em with von Swieten
+pills, which they valued more than their own oil. He could do
+what he chose with them, and, of course, he tried to make them
+Moravians. The Senecas are a seemly, quiet people, and they'd
+had trouble enough from white men - American and English -
+during the wars, to keep 'em in that walk. They lived on a
+Reservation by themselves away off by their lake. Toby took me
+up there, and they treated me as if I was their own blood brother.
+Red Jacket said the mark of my bare feet in the dust was just like an
+Indian's and my style of walking was similar. I know I took to
+their ways all over.'
+
+'Maybe the gipsy drop in your blood helped you?' said Puck.
+
+'Sometimes I think it did,' Pharaoh went on. 'Anyhow, Red
+Jacket and Cornplanter, the other Seneca chief, they let me be
+adopted into the tribe. It's only a compliment, of course, but
+Toby was angry when I showed up with my face painted. They
+gave me a side-name which means "Two Tongues," because,
+d'ye see, I talked French and English.
+
+'They had their own opinions (I've heard 'em) about the French
+and the English, and the Americans. They'd suffered from all of
+'em during the wars, and they only wished to be left alone. But
+they thought a heap of the President of the United States. Cornplanter
+had had dealings with him in some French wars out West
+when General Washington was only a lad. His being President
+afterwards made no odds to 'em. They always called him Big
+Hand, for he was a large-fisted man, and he was all of their notion
+of a white chief. Cornplanter 'ud sweep his blanket round him,
+and after I'd filled his pipe he'd begin - "In the old days, long ago,
+when braves were many and blankets were few, Big Hand said-"
+If Red Jacket agreed to the say-so he'd trickle a little smoke out of
+the corners of his mouth. If he didn't, he'd blow through his
+nostrils. Then Cornplanter 'ud stop and Red Jacket 'ud take on.
+Red Jacket was the better talker of the two. I've laid and listened to
+'em for hours. Oh! they knew General Washington well. Cornplanter
+used to meet him at Epply's - the great dancing-place in
+the city before District Marshal William Nichols bought it. They
+told me he was always glad to see 'em, and he'd hear 'em out to
+the end if they had anything on their minds. They had a good deal
+in those days. I came at it by degrees, after I was adopted into the
+tribe. The talk up in Lebanon and everywhere else that summer
+was about the French war with England and whether the United
+States 'ud join in with France or make a peace treaty with
+England. Toby wanted peace so as he could go about the Reservation
+buying his oils. But most of the white men wished for war,
+and they was angry because the President wouldn't give the sign
+for it. The newspaper said men was burning Guy Fawkes images
+of General Washington and yelling after him in the streets of
+Philadelphia. You'd have been astonished what those two fine old
+chiefs knew of the ins and outs of such matters. The little I've
+learned of politics I picked up from Cornplanter and Red Jacket
+on the Reservation. Toby used to read the Aurora newspaper. He
+was what they call a "Democrat," though our Church is against
+the Brethren concerning themselves with politics.'
+
+'I hate politics, too,' said Una, and Pharaoh laughed.
+
+'I might ha' guessed it,' he said. 'But here's something that isn't
+politics. One hot evening late in August, Toby was reading the
+newspaper on the stoop and Red Jacket was smoking under a
+peach tree and I was fiddling. Of a sudden Toby drops his Aurora.
+
+'"I am an oldish man, too fond of my own comforts," he says.
+"I will go to the Church which is in Philadelphia. My brother,
+lend me a spare pony. I must be there tomorrow night."
+
+'"Good!" says Red Jacket, looking at the sun. "My brother
+shall be there. I will ride with him and bring back the ponies.
+
+'I went to pack the saddle-bags. Toby had cured me of asking
+questions. He stopped my fiddling if I did. Besides, Indians don't
+ask questions much and I wanted to be like 'em.
+
+'When the horses were ready I jumped up.
+
+'"Get off," says Toby. "Stay and mind the cottage till I come
+back. The Lord has laid this on me, not on you. I wish He
+hadn't."
+
+'He powders off down the Lancaster road, and I sat on the
+doorstep wondering after him. When I picked up the paper to
+wrap his fiddle-strings in, I spelled out a piece about the yellow
+fever being in Philadelphia so dreadful every one was running
+away. I was scared, for I was fond of Toby. We never said much
+to each other, but we fiddled together, and music's as good as
+talking to them that understand.'
+
+'Did Toby die of yellow fever?'Una asked.
+
+'Not him! There's justice left in the world still. He went down
+to the City and bled 'em well again in heaps. He sent back word
+by Red Jacket that, if there was war or he died, I was to bring the
+oils along to the City, but till then I was to go on working in the
+garden and Red Jacket was to see me do it. Down at heart all
+Indians reckon digging a squaw's business, and neither him nor
+Cornplanter, when he relieved watch, was a hard task-Master.
+We hired a nigger-boy to do our work, and a lazy grinning
+runagate he was. When I found Toby didn't die the minute he
+reached town, why, boylike, I took him off my mind and went
+with my Indians again. Oh! those days up north at Canasedago,
+running races and gambling with the Senecas, or bee-hunting 'in
+the woods, or fishing in the lake.' Pharaoh sighed and looked
+across the water. 'But it's best,' he went on suddenly, 'after the
+first frosts. You roll out o' your blanket and find every leaf left
+green over night turned red and yellow, not by trees at a time, but
+hundreds and hundreds of miles of 'em, like sunsets splattered
+upside down. On one of such days - the maples was flaming
+scarlet and gold, and the sumach bushes were redder - Cornplanter
+and Red Jacket came out in full war-dress, making the
+very leaves look silly: feathered war-bonnets, yellow doeskin
+leggings, fringed and tasselled, red horse-blankets, and their
+bridles feathered and shelled and beaded no bounds. I thought it
+was war against the British till I saw their faces weren't painted,
+and they only carried wrist-whips. Then I hummed "Yankee
+Doodle" at 'em. They told me they was going to visit Big Hand
+and find out for sure whether he meant to join the French in
+fighting the English or make a peace treaty with England. I
+reckon those two would ha' gone out on the war-path at a nod
+from Big Hand, but they knew well, if there was war 'twixt
+England and the United States, their tribe 'ud catch it from both
+parties same as in all the other wars. They asked me to come along
+and hold the ponies. That puzzled me, because they always put
+their ponies up at the "Buck" or Epply's when they went to see
+General Washington in the city, and horse-holding is a nigger's
+job. Besides, I wasn't exactly dressed for it.'
+
+'D'you mean you were dressed like an Indian?'Dan demanded.
+
+Pharaoh looked a little abashed. 'This didn't happen at
+Lebanon,' he said, 'but a bit farther north, on the Reservation; and
+at that particular moment of time, so far as blanket, hair-band,
+moccasins, and sunburn went, there wasn't much odds 'twix' me
+and a young Seneca buck. You may laugh'- he smoothed down
+his long-skirted brown coat -'but I told you I took to their ways
+all over. I said nothing, though I was bursting to let out the
+war-whoop like the young men had taught me.'
+
+'No, and you don't let out one here, either,' said Puck before
+Dan could ask. 'Go on, Brother Square-toes.'
+
+'We went on.' Pharaoh's narrow dark eyes gleamed and
+danced. 'We went on - forty, fifty miles a day, for days on end -
+we three braves. And how a great tall Indian a-horse-back can
+carry his war-bonnet at a canter through thick timber without
+brushing a feather beats me! My silly head was banged often
+enough by low branches, but they slipped through like running
+elk. We had evening hymn-singing every night after they'd
+blown their pipe-smoke to the quarters of heaven. Where did we
+go? I'll tell you, but don't blame me if you're no wiser. We took
+the old war-trail from the end of the Lake along the East
+Susquehanna through the Nantego country, right down to Fort
+Shamokin on the Senachse river. We crossed the Juniata by Fort
+Granville, got into Shippensberg over the hills by the Ochwick
+trail, and then to Williams Ferry (it's a bad one). From Williams
+Ferry, across the Shanedore, over the Blue Mountains, through
+Ashby's Gap, and so south-east by south from there, till we found
+the President at the back of his own plantations. I'd hate to be
+trailed by Indians in earnest. They caught him like a partridge on a
+stump. After we'd left our ponies, we scouted forward through a
+woody piece, and, creeping slower and slower, at last if my
+moccasins even slipped Red Jacket 'ud turn and frown. I heard
+voices - Monsieur Genet's for choice - long before I saw anything,
+and we pulled up at the edge of a clearing where some
+niggers in grey-and-red liveries were holding horses, and half-a-
+dozen gentlemen - but one was Genet - were talking among felled
+timber. I fancy they'd come to see Genet a piece on his road, for
+his portmantle was with him. I hid in between two logs as near to
+the company as I be to that old windlass there. I didn't need
+anybody to show me Big Hand. He stood up, very still, his legs a
+little apart, listening to Genet, that French Ambassador, which
+never had more manners than a Bosham tinker. Genet was as
+good as ordering him to declare war on England at once. I had
+heard that clack before on the Embuscade. He said he'd stir up the
+whole United States to have war with England, whether Big
+Hand liked it or not.
+
+'Big Hand heard him out to the last end. I looked behind me,
+and my two chiefs had vanished like smoke. Says Big Hand,
+"That is very forcibly put, Monsieur Genet -"
+
+'"Citizen - citizen!" the fellow spits in. "I, at least, am
+a Republican!"
+
+"Citizen Genet," he says, "you may be sure it will receive my
+fullest consideration." This seemed to take Citizen Genet back a
+piece. He rode off grumbling, and never gave his nigger a penny.
+No gentleman!
+
+'The others all assembled round Big Hand then, and, in their
+way, they said pretty much what Genet had said. They put it to
+him, here was France and England at war, in a manner of speaking,
+right across the United States' stomach, and paying no
+regards to any one. The French was searching American ships on
+pretence they was helping England, but really for to steal the
+goods. The English was doing the same, only t'other way round,
+and besides searching, they was pressing American citizens into
+their Navy to help them fight France, on pretence that those
+Americans was lawful British subjects. His gentlemen put this
+very clear to Big Hand. It didn't look to them, they said, as though
+the United States trying to keep out of the fight was any advantage
+to her, because she only catched it from both French and
+English. They said that nine out of ten good Americans was crazy
+to fight the English then and there. They wouldn't say whether
+that was right or wrong; they only wanted Big Hand to turn it
+over in his mind. He did - for a while. I saw Red Jacket and
+Cornplanter watching him from the far side of the clearing, and
+how they had slipped round there was another mystery. Then Big
+Hand drew himself up, and he let his gentlemen have it.'
+
+'Hit 'em?' Dan asked.
+
+'No, nor yet was it what you might call swearing. He - he
+blasted 'em with his natural speech. He asked them half-a-dozen
+times over whether the United States had enough armed ships for
+any shape or sort of war with any one. He asked 'em, if they
+thought she had those ships, to give him those ships, and they
+looked on the ground, as if they expected to find 'em there. He put
+it to 'em whether, setting ships aside, their country - I reckon he
+gave 'em good reasons - whether the United States was ready or
+able to face a new big war; she having but so few years back
+wound up one against England, and being all holds full of her
+own troubles. As I said, the strong way he laid it all before 'em
+blasted 'em, and when he'd done it was like a still in the woods
+after a storm. A little man - but they all looked little - pipes up like
+a young rook in a blowed-down nest, "Nevertheless, General, it
+seems you will be compelled to fight England." Quick Big Hand
+wheeled on him, "And is there anything in my past which makes
+you think I am averse to fighting Great Britain?"
+
+'Everybody laughed except him. "Oh, General, you mistake
+us entirely!" they says. "I trust so," he says. "But I know my
+duty. We must have peace with England."
+
+'"At any price?" says the man with the rook's voice.
+
+'"At any price," says he, word by word. "Our ships will be
+searched - our citizens will be pressed, but -"
+
+'"Then what about the Declaration of Independence?" says one.
+
+'"Deal with facts, not fancies," says Big Hand. "The United
+States are in no position to fight England."
+
+'"But think of public opinion," another one starts up. "The
+feeling in Philadelphia alone is at fever heat."
+
+'He held up one of his big hands. "Gentlemen," he says - slow
+he spoke, but his voice carried far - "I have to think of our
+country. Let me assure you that the treaty with Great Britain will
+be made though every city in the Union burn me in effigy."
+
+'"At any price?" the actor-like chap keeps on croaking.
+
+'"The treaty must be made on Great Britain's own terms.
+What else can I do?"
+'He turns his back on 'em and they looked at each other and
+slinked off to the horses, leaving him alone: and then I saw he was
+an old man. Then Red Jacket and Cornplanter rode down the
+clearing from the far end as though they had just chanced along.
+Back went Big Hand's shoulders, up went his head, and he
+stepped forward one single pace with a great deep Hough! so
+pleased he was. That was a statelified meeting to behold - three
+big men, and two of 'em looking like jewelled images among the
+spattle of gay-coloured leaves. I saw my chiefs' war-bonnets
+sinking together, down and down. Then they made the sign
+which no Indian makes outside of the Medicine Lodges - a sweep
+of the right hand just clear of the dust and an inbend of the left
+knee at the same time, and those proud eagle feathers almost
+touched his boot-top.'
+
+'What did it mean?' said Dan.
+
+'Mean!' Pharaoh cried. 'Why it's what you - what we - it's the
+Sachems' way of sprinkling the sacred corn-meal in front of - oh!
+it's a piece of Indian compliment really, and it signifies that you
+are a very big chief.
+
+'Big Hand looked down on 'em. First he says quite softly, "My
+brothers know it is not easy to be a chief." Then his voice grew.
+"My children," says he, "what is in your minds?"
+
+'Says Cornplanter, "We came to ask whether there will be war
+with King George's men, but we have heard what our Father has
+said to his chiefs. We will carry away that talk in our hearts to tell
+to our people."
+
+'"No," says Big Hand. "Leave all that talk behind - it was
+between white men only - but take this message from me to your
+people - 'There will be no war.'"
+
+'His gentlemen were waiting, so they didn't delay him-, only
+Cornplanter says, using his old side-name, "Big Hand, did you
+see us among the timber just now?"
+
+'"Surely," says he. "You taught me to look behind trees when
+we were both young." And with that he cantered off.
+
+'Neither of my chiefs spoke till we were back on our ponies
+again and a half-hour along the home-trail. Then Cornplanter
+says to Red Jacket, "We will have the Corn-dance this year. There
+will be no war." And that was all there was to it.'
+
+Pharaoh stood up as though he had finished.
+
+'Yes,' said Puck, rising too. 'And what came out of it in the
+long run?'
+
+'Let me get at my story my own way,'was the answer. 'Look!
+it's later than I thought. That Shoreham smack's thinking of her supper.'
+The children looked across the darkening Channel. A smack
+had hoisted a lantern and slowly moved west where Brighton pier
+lights ran out in a twinkling line. When they turned round The
+Gap was empty behind them.
+
+'I expect they've packed our trunks by now,' said Dan. 'This
+time tomorrow we'll be home.'
+
+
+
+If -
+
+If you can keep your head when all about you
+Are losing theirs and blaming it on you;
+If you can trust yourself when all men doubt you,
+But make allowance for their doubting too;
+If you can wait and not be tired by waiting,
+Or being lied about, don't deal in lies,
+Or being hated, don't give way to hating,
+And yet don't look too good, nor talk too wise;
+
+If you can dream - and not make dreams your master;
+If you can think - and not make thoughts your aim,
+If you can meet with Triumph and Disaster
+And treat those two impostors just the same;
+If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
+Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
+Or watch the things you gave your life to, broken,
+And stoop and build 'em up with worn-out tools;
+
+If you can make one heap of all your winnings
+And risk it on one turn of pitch-and-toss,
+And lose, and start again at your beginnings
+And never breathe a word about your loss;
+If you can force your heart and nerve and sinew
+To serve your turn long after they are gone,
+And so hold on when there is nothing in you
+Except the Will which says to them: 'Hold on!'
+
+If you can talk with crowds and keep your virtue,
+Or walk with Kings - nor lose the common touch,
+If neither foes nor loving friends can hurt you,
+If all men count with you, but none too much;
+If you can fill the unforgiving minute
+With sixty seconds' worth of distance run,
+Yours is the Earth and everything that's in it,
+And - which is more - you'll be a Man, my son!
+
+
+
+
+'A PRIEST IN SPITE OF HIMSELF'
+
+
+
+A St Helena Lullaby
+
+
+How far is St Helena from a little child at play?
+ What makes you want to wander there with all the world between?
+Oh, Mother, call your son again or else he'll run away.
+ (No one thinks of winter when the grass is green!)
+
+How far is St Helena from a fight in Paris street?
+ I haven't time to answer now - the men are falling fast.
+The guns begin to thunder, and the drums begin to beat
+ (If you take the first step you will take the last!)
+
+How far is St Helena from the field at Austerlitz?
+ You couldn't hear me if I told - so loud the cannons roar.
+But not so far for people who are living by their wits.
+ ('Gay go up' means 'gay go down' the wide world o'er!)
+
+How far is St Helena from an Emperor of France?
+ I cannot see - I cannot tell - the crowns they dazzle so.
+The Kings sit down to dinner, and the Queens stand up to dance.
+ (After open weather you may look for snow!)
+
+How far is St Helena from the Capes of Trafalgar?
+ A longish way - a longish way - with ten year more to run.
+It's South across the water underneath a setting star.
+ (What you cannot finish you must leave undone!)
+
+How far is St Helena from the Beresina ice?
+ An ill way - a chill way - the ice begins to crack.
+But not so far for gentlemen who never took advice.
+ (When you can't go forward you must e'en come back!)
+
+How far is St Helena from the field of Waterloo?
+ A near way - a clear way - the ship will take you soon.
+A pleasant place for gentlemen with little left to do.
+ (Morning never tries you till the afternoon!)
+
+How far from St Helena to the Gate of Heaven's Grace?
+ That no one knows - that no one knows - and no one ever will.
+But fold your hands across your heart and cover up your face,
+ And after all your trapesings, child, lie still!
+
+
+
+'A Priest in Spite of Himself'
+
+
+The day after they came home from the sea-side they set out on a
+tour of inspection to make sure everything was as they had left it.
+Soon they discovered that old Hobden had blocked their best
+hedge-gaps with stakes and thorn-bundles, and had trimmed up
+the hedges where the blackberries were setting.
+
+'it can't be time for the gipsies to come along,' said Una. 'Why,
+it was summer only the other day!'
+
+'There's smoke in Low Shaw!' said Dan, sniffing. 'Let's make sure!'
+
+They crossed the fields towards the thin line of blue smoke that
+leaned above the hollow of Low Shaw which lies beside the
+King's Hill road. It used to be an old quarry till somebody planted
+it, and you can look straight down into it from the edge of Banky Meadow.
+
+'I thought so,' Dan whispered, as they came up to the fence at
+the edge of the larches. A gipsy-van - not the show-man's sort,
+but the old black kind, with little windows high up and a baby-
+gate across the door - was getting ready to leave. A man was
+harnessing the horses; an old woman crouched over the ashes of a
+fire made out of broken fence-rails; and a girl sat on the van-steps
+singing to a baby on her lap. A wise-looking, thin dog snuffed at a
+patch of fur on the ground till the old woman put it carefully in the
+middle of the fire. The girl reached back inside the van and tossed
+her a paper parcel. This was laid on the fire too, and they smelt
+singed feathers.
+
+'Chicken feathers!' said Dan. 'I wonder if they are old Hobden's.'
+
+Una sneezed. The dog growled and crawled to the girl's feet,
+the old woman fanned the fire with her hat, while the man led the
+horses up to the shafts, They all moved as quickly and quietly as
+snakes over moss.
+
+'Ah!' said the girl. 'I'll teach you!' She beat the dog, who
+seemed to expect it.
+
+'Don't do that,' Una called down. 'It wasn't his fault.'
+
+'How do you know what I'm beating him for?' she answered.
+
+'For not seeing us,' said Dan. 'He was standing right in the
+smoke, and the wind was wrong for his nose, anyhow.'
+
+The girl stopped beating the dog, and the old woman fanned
+faster than ever.
+
+'You've fanned some of your feathers out of the fire,' said Una.
+'There's a tail-feather by that chestnut-tot.'
+
+'What of it?' said the old woman, as she grabbed it.
+
+'Oh, nothing!' said Dan. 'Only I've heard say that tail-feathers
+are as bad as the whole bird, sometimes.'
+
+That was a saying of Hobden's about pheasants. Old Hobden
+always burned all feather and fur before he sat down to eat.
+
+'Come on, mother,' the man whispered. The old woman
+climbed into the van, and the horses drew it out of the deep-rutted
+shaw on to the hard road.
+
+The girl waved her hands and shouted something they could
+not catch.
+
+'That was gipsy for "Thank you kindly, Brother and Sister,"'
+said Pharaoh Lee.
+
+He was standing behind them, his fiddle under his arm.
+'Gracious, you startled me!' said Una.
+
+'You startled old Priscilla Savile,' Puck called from below them.
+'Come and sit by their fire. She ought to have put it out before
+they left.'
+
+They dropped down the ferny side of the shaw. Una raked the
+ashes together, Dan found a dead wormy oak branch that burns
+without flame, and they watched the smoke while Pharaoh
+played a curious wavery air.
+
+'That's what the girl was humming to the baby,' said Una.
+
+'I know it,'he nodded, and went on:
+
+ 'Ai Lumai, Lumai, Lumai! Luludia!
+ Ai Luludia!'
+
+
+He passed from one odd tune to another, and quite forgot the
+children. At last Puck asked him to go on with his adventures in
+Philadelphia and among the Seneca Indians.
+
+'I'm telling it,' he said, staring straight in front of him as he
+played. 'Can't you hear?'
+
+'Maybe, but they can't. Tell it aloud,' said Puck.
+
+Pharaoh shook himself, laid his fiddle beside him, and began:
+
+'I'd left Red Jacket and Cornplanter riding home with me after
+Big Hand had said that there wouldn't be any war. That's all there
+was to it. We believed Big Hand and we went home again - we
+three braves. When we reached Lebanon we found Toby at the
+cottage with his waistcoat a foot too big for him - so hard he had
+worked amongst the yellow-fever people. He beat me for running
+off with the Indians, but 'twas worth it - I was glad to see
+him, - and when we went back to Philadelphia for the winter, and
+I was told how he'd sacrificed himself over sick people in the
+yellow fever, I thought the world and all of him. No, I didn't
+neither. I'd thought that all along. That yellow fever must have
+been something dreadful. Even in December people had no more
+than begun to trinkle back to town. Whole houses stood empty
+and the niggers was robbing them out. But I can't call to mind
+that any of the Moravian Brethren had died. It seemed like they
+had just kept on with their own concerns, and the good Lord He'd
+just looked after 'em. That was the winter - yes, winter of
+'Ninety-three - the Brethren bought a stove for the church. Toby
+spoke in favour of it because the cold spoiled his fiddle hand, but
+many thought stove-heat not in the Bible, and there was yet a
+third party which always brought hickory coal foot-warmers to
+service and wouldn't speak either way. They ended by casting the
+Lot for it, which is like pitch-and-toss. After my summer with the
+Senecas, church-stoves didn't highly interest me, so I took to
+haunting round among the French emigres which Philadelphia was
+full of. My French and my fiddling helped me there, d'ye see.
+They come over in shiploads from France, where, by what I made
+out, every one was killing every one else by any means, and they
+spread 'emselves about the city - mostly in Drinker's Alley and
+Elfrith's Alley - and they did odd jobs till times should mend. But
+whatever they stooped to, they were gentry and kept a cheerful
+countenance, and after an evening's fiddling at one of their poor
+little proud parties, the Brethren seemed old-fashioned. Pastor
+Meder and Brother Adam Goos didn't like my fiddling for hire,
+but Toby said it was lawful in me to earn my living by exercising
+my talents. He never let me be put upon.
+
+'In February of 'Ninety-four - No, March it must have been,
+because a new Ambassador called Faucher had come from France,
+with no more manners than Genet the old one - in March, Red
+Jacket came in from the Reservation bringing news of all kind
+friends there. I showed him round the city, and we saw General
+Washington riding through a crowd of folk that shouted for war
+with England. They gave him quite rough music, but he looked
+'twixt his horse's ears and made out not to notice. His stirrup
+brished Red Jacket's elbow, and Red Jacket whispered up, "My
+brother knows it is not easy to be a chief." Big Hand shot just one
+look at him and nodded. Then there was a scuffle behind us over
+some one who wasn't hooting at Washington loud enough to
+please the people. We went away to be out of the fight. Indians
+won't risk being hit.'
+
+'What do they do if they are?' Dan asked.
+
+'Kill, of course. That's why they have such proper manners.
+Well, then, coming home by Drinker's Alley to get a new shirt
+which a French Vicomte's lady was washing to take the stiff out of
+(I'm always choice in my body-linen) a lame Frenchman pushes a
+paper of buttons at us. He hadn't long landed in the United States,
+and please would we buy. He sure-ly was a pitiful scrattel - his
+coat half torn off, his face cut, but his hands steady; so I knew
+it wasn't drink. He said his name was Peringuey, and he'd been
+knocked about in the crowd round the Stadt - Independence Hall.
+One thing leading to another we took him up to Toby's rooms,
+same as Red Jacket had taken me the year before. The compliments
+he paid to Toby's Madeira wine fairly conquered the old
+man, for he opened a second bottle and he told this Monsieur
+Peringuey all about our great stove dispute in the church. I
+remember Pastor Meder and Brother Adam Goos dropped 'in,
+and although they and Toby were direct opposite sides regarding
+stoves, yet this Monsieur Peringuey he made 'em feel as if he
+thought each one was in the right of it. He said he had been a
+clergyman before he had to leave France. He admired at Toby's
+fiddling, and he asked if Red Jacket, sitting by the spinet, was a
+simple Huron. Senecas aren't Hurons, they're Iroquois, of
+course, and Toby told him so. Well, then, in due time he arose
+and left in a style which made us feel he'd been favouring us,
+instead of us feeding him. I've never seen that so strong before - in
+a man. We all talked him over but couldn't make head or tail of
+him, and Red Jacket come out to walk with me to the French
+quarter where I was due to fiddle at a party. Passing Drinker's
+Alley again we saw a naked window with a light in it, and there
+sat our button-selling Monsieur Peringuey throwing dice all
+alone, right hand against left.
+
+'Says Red Jacket, keeping back in the dark, "Look at his face!"
+
+'I was looking. I protest to you I wasn't frightened like I was
+when Big Hand talked to his gentlemen. I - I only looked, and I
+wondered that even those dead dumb dice 'ud dare to fall different
+from what that face wished. It - it was a face!
+
+'"He is bad," says Red Jacket. "But he is a great chief. The
+French have sent away a great chief. I thought so when he told us
+his lies. Now I know."
+
+'i had to go on to the party, so I asked him to call round for me
+afterwards and we'd have hymn-singing at Toby's as usual.
+"No," he says. "Tell Toby I am not Christian tonight. All
+Indian." He had those fits sometimes. I wanted to know more
+about Monsieur Peringuey, and the emigre party was the very
+place to find out. It's neither here nor there, of course, but those
+French emigre parties they almost make you cry. The men that
+you bought fruit of in Market Street, the hairdressers and fencing-
+masters and French teachers, they turn back again by candlelight
+to what they used to be at home, and you catch their real names.
+There wasn't much room in the washhouse, so I sat on top of the
+copper and played 'em the tunes they called for - "Si le Roi m'avait
+donne," and such nursery stuff. They cried sometimes. It hurt me
+to take their money afterwards, indeed it did. And there I found
+out about Monsieur Peringuey. He was a proper rogue too! None
+of 'em had a good word for him except the Marquise that kept the
+French boarding-house on Fourth Street. I made out that his real
+name was the Count Talleyrand de Perigord - a priest right
+enough, but sorely come down in the world. He'd been King
+Louis' Ambassador to England a year or two back, before the
+French had cut off King Louis' head; and, by what I heard, that
+head wasn't hardly more than hanging loose before he'd run back
+to Paris and prevailed on Danton, the very man which did the
+murder, to send him back to England again as Ambassador of the
+French Republic! That was too much for the English, so they
+kicked him out by Act of Parliament, and he'd fled to the
+Americas without money or friends or prospects. I'm telling you
+the talk in the washhouse. Some of 'em was laughing over it. Says
+the French Marquise, "My friends, you laugh too soon. That man
+'ll be on the winning side before any of us."
+
+'"I did not know you were so fond of priests, Marquise," says
+the Vicomte. His lady did my washing, as I've told you.
+
+'"I have my reasons," says the Marquise. "He sent my uncle
+and my two brothers to Heaven by the little door," - that was one
+of the emigre names for the guillotine. "He will be on the winning
+side if it costs him the blood of every friend he has in the world."
+
+'"Then what does he want here?" says one of 'em. "We have
+all lost our game."
+
+'"My faith!" says the Marquise. "He will find out, if any one
+can, whether this canaille of a Washington means to help us to
+fight England. Genet" (that was my Ambassador in the Embuscade)
+"has failed and gone off disgraced; Faucher" (he was the new man)
+"hasn't done any better, but our Abbe will find out, and he will
+make his profit out of the news. Such a man does not fall."
+
+'"He begins unluckily," says the Vicomte. "He was set upon
+today in the street for not hooting your Washington." They all
+laughed again, and one remarks, "How does the poor devil keep
+himself?"
+
+'He must have slipped in through the washhouse door, for he
+flits past me and joins 'em, cold as ice.
+
+'"One does what one can," he says. "I sell buttons. And
+you, Marquise?"
+
+'"I?" - she waves her poor white hands all burned - "I am a
+cook - a very bad one - at your service, Abbe. We were just
+talking about you."
+
+They didn't treat him like they talked of him. They backed off
+and stood still.
+
+'"I have missed something, then," he says. "But I spent this
+last hour playing - only for buttons, Marquise - against a noble
+savage, the veritable Huron himself."
+
+'"You had your usual luck, I hope?" she says.
+
+'"Certainly," he says. "I cannot afford to lose even buttons in
+these days."
+
+'"Then I suppose the child of nature does not know that your
+dice are usually loaded, Father Tout-a-tous," she continues. I
+don't know whether she meant to accuse him of cheating. He
+only bows.
+'"Not yet, Mademoiselle Cunegonde," he says, and goes on
+to make himself agreeable to the rest of the company. And that
+was how I found out our Monsieur Peringuey was Count Charles
+Maurice Talleyrand de Perigord.'
+
+Pharaoh stopped, but the children said nothing.
+
+'You've heard of him?' said Pharaoh.
+
+Una shook her head.
+'Was Red Jacket the Indian he played dice with?' Dan asked.
+
+'He was. Red Jacket told me the next time we met. I asked if the
+lame man had cheated. Red Jacket said no - he had played quite
+fair and was a master player. I allow Red Jacket knew. I've seen
+him, on the Reservation, play himself out of everything he had
+and in again. Then I told Red Jacket all I'd heard at the party
+concerning Talleyrand.
+
+'"I was right," he says. "I saw the man's war-face when he
+thought he was alone. That's why I played him. I played him face
+to face. He's a great chief. Do they say why he comes here?"
+
+'"They say he comes to find out if Big Hand makes war against
+the English," I said.
+
+'Red Jacket grunted. "Yes," he says. "He asked me that too. If
+he had been a small chief I should have lied. But he is a great chief.
+He knew I was a chief, so I told him the truth. I told him what Big
+Hand said to Cornplanter and me in the clearing - 'There will be
+no war.' I could not see what he thought. I could not see behind
+his face. But he is a great chief. He will believe."
+
+'"Will he believe that Big Hand can keep his people back from
+war?" I said, thinking of the crowds that hooted Big Hand
+whenever he rode out.
+
+'"He is as bad as Big Hand is good, but he is not as strong as
+Big Hand," says Red Jacket. "When he talks with Big Hand he
+will feel this in his heart. The French have sent away a great chief.
+Presently he will go back and make them afraid."
+
+'Now wasn't that comical? The French woman that knew him
+and owed all her losses to him; the Indian that picked him up, cut
+and muddy on the street, and played dice with him; they neither
+of 'em doubted that Talleyrand was something by himself -
+appearances notwithstanding.'
+
+'And was he something by himself?' asked Una.
+
+Pharaoh began to laugh, but stopped. 'The way I look at it,'he
+said, 'Talleyrand was one of just three men in this world who are
+quite by themselves. Big Hand I put first, because I've seen him.'
+'Ay,' said Puck. 'I'm sorry we lost him out of Old England.
+Who d'you put second?'
+
+'Talleyrand: maybe because I've seen him too,' said Pharaoh.
+
+'Who's third?'said Puck.
+
+'Boney - even though I've seen him.'
+
+'Whew!' said Puck. 'Every man has his own weights and
+measures, but that's queer reckoning.'
+'Boney?' said Una. 'You don't mean you've ever met
+Napoleon Bonaparte?'
+
+'There, I knew you wouldn't have patience with the rest of my
+tale after hearing that! But wait a minute. Talleyrand he come
+round to Hundred and Eighteen in a day or two to thank Toby for
+his kindness. I didn't mention the dice-playing, but I could see
+that Red Jacket's doings had made Talleyrand highly curious
+about Indians - though he would call him the Huron. Toby, as you
+may believe, was all holds full of knowledge concerning their
+manners and habits. He only needed a listener. The Brethren
+don't study Indians much till they join the Church, but Toby
+knew 'em wild. So evening after evening Talleyrand crossed his
+sound leg over his game one and Toby poured forth. Having been
+adopted into the Senecas I, naturally, kept still, but Toby 'ud call
+on me to back up some of his remarks, and by that means, and a
+habit he had of drawing you on in talk, Talleyrand saw I knew
+something of his noble savages too. Then he tried a trick. Coming
+back from an emigre party he turns into his little shop and puts it to
+me, laughing like, that I'd gone with the two chiefs on their visit
+to Big Hand. I hadn't told. Red Jacket hadn't told, and Toby, of
+course, didn't know. 'Twas just Talleyrand's guess. "Now," he
+says, my English and Red Jacket's French was so bad that I am
+not sure I got the rights of what the President really said to the
+unsophisticated Huron. Do me the favour of telling it again." I
+told him every word Red Jacket had told him and not one word
+more. I had my suspicions, having just come from an emigre party
+where the Marquise was hating and praising him as usual.
+
+'"Much obliged," he said. "But I couldn't gather from Red
+Jacket exactly what the President said to Monsieur Genet, or to
+his American gentlemen after Monsieur Genet had ridden away.
+
+'I saw Talleyrand was guessing again, for Red Jacket hadn't
+told him a word about the white men's pow-wow.'
+
+'Why hadn't he?' Puck asked.
+
+'Because Red Jacket was a chief. He told Talleyrand what the
+President had said to him and Cornplanter; but he didn't repeat
+the talk, between the white men, that Big Hand ordered him to
+leave behind.
+'Oh!' said Puck. 'I see. What did you do?'
+
+'First I was going to make some sort of tale round it, but
+Talleyrand was a chief too. So I said, "As soon as I get Red
+Jacket's permission to tell that part of the tale, I'll be delighted to
+refresh your memory, Abbe." What else could I have done?
+
+'"Is that all?" he says, laughing. "Let me refresh your
+memory. In a month from now I can give you a hundred dollars
+for your account of the conversation."
+
+'"Make it five hundred, Abbe," I says.
+'"Five, then," says he.
+
+'"That will suit me admirably," I says. "Red Jacket will be in
+town again by then, and the moment he gives me leave I'll claim
+the money."
+
+'He had a hard fight to be civil, but he come out smiling.
+
+'"Monsieur," he says, "I beg your pardon as sincerely as I
+envy the noble Huron your loyalty. Do me the honour to sit
+down while I explain."
+
+'There wasn't another chair, so I sat on the button-box.
+
+'He was a clever man. He had got hold of the gossip that the
+President meant to make a peace treaty with England at any cost.
+He had found out - from Genet, I reckon, who was with the
+President on the day the two chiefs met him. He'd heard that
+Genet had had a huff with the President and had ridden off leaving
+his business at loose ends. What he wanted - what he begged and
+blustered to know - was just the very words which the President
+had said to his gentlemen after Genet had left, concerning the
+peace treaty with England. He put it to me that in helping him to
+those very words I'd be helping three great countries as well as
+mankind. The room was as bare as the palm of your hand, but I
+couldn't laugh at him.
+
+'"I'm sorry," I says, when he wiped his forehead. "As soon as
+Red Jacket gives permission -"
+
+'"You don't believe me, then?" he cuts in.
+'"Not one little, little word, Abbe," I says; "except that you
+mean to be on the winning side. Remember, I've been fiddling to
+all your old friends for months."
+
+'Well, then his temper fled him and he called me names.
+
+'"Wait a minute, ci-devant," I says at last. "I am half English
+and half French, but I am not the half of a man. I will tell thee
+something the Indian told me. Has thee seen the President?"
+
+'"Oh yes!" he sneers. "I had letters from the Lord Lansdowne
+to that estimable old man."
+
+'"Then," I says, "thee will understand. The Red Skin said that
+when thee has met the President thee will feel in thy heart he is a
+stronger man than thee."
+
+'"Go!" he whispers. "Before I kill thee, go."
+
+'He looked like it. So I left him.'
+
+'Why did he want to know so badly?' said Dan.
+
+'The way I look at it is that if he had known for certain that
+Washington meant to make the peace treaty with England at any
+price, he'd ha' left old Faucher fumbling about in Philadelphia
+while he went straight back to France and told old Danton - "It's
+no good your wasting time and hopes on the United States,
+because she won't fight on our side - that I've proof of!" Then
+Danton might have been grateful and given Talleyrand a job,
+because a whole mass of things hang on knowing for sure who's
+your friend and who's your enemy. just think of us poor shop-
+keepers, for instance.'
+
+'Did Red Jacket let you tell, when he came back?' Una asked.
+
+'Of course not. He said, "When Cornplanter and I ask you
+what Big Hand said to the whites you can tell the Lame Chief. All
+that talk was left behind in the timber, as Big Hand ordered. Tell
+the Lame Chief there will be no war. He can go back to France
+with that word."
+
+'Talleyrand and me hadn't met for a long time except at emigre
+parties. When I give him the message he just shook his head. He
+was sorting buttons in the shop.
+
+'I cannot return to France with nothing better than the word
+of an unsophisticated savage," he says.
+
+'"Hasn't the President said anything to you?" I asked him.
+
+'"He has said everything that one in his position ought to say,
+but - but if only I had what he said to his Cabinet after Genet rode
+off I believe I could change Europe - the world, maybe."
+'"I'm sorry," I says. "Maybe you'll do that without my help."
+
+'He looked at me hard. "Either you have unusual observation
+for one so young, or you choose to be insolent," he says.
+
+'"It was intended for a compliment," I says. "But no odds.
+We're off in a few days for our summer trip, and I've come to
+make my good-byes."
+
+'"I go on my travels too," he says. "If ever we meet again you
+may be sure I will do my best to repay what I owe you."
+
+'"Without malice, Abbe, I hope," I says.
+
+'"None whatever," says he. "Give my respects to your
+adorable Dr Pangloss" (that was one of his side-names for Toby)
+"and the Huron." I never could teach him the difference betwixt
+Hurons and Senecas.
+
+'Then Sister Haga came in for a paper of what we call "pilly
+buttons," and that was the last I saw of Talleyrand in those parts.'
+
+'But after that you met Napoleon, didn't you?' said Una.
+'Wait Just a little, dearie. After that, Toby and I went to
+Lebanon and the Reservation, and, being older and knowing
+better how to manage him, I enjoyed myself well that summer
+with fiddling and fun. When we came back, the Brethren got after
+Toby because I wasn't learning any lawful trade, and he had hard
+work to save me from being apprenticed to Helmbold and Geyer
+the printers. 'Twould have ruined our music together, indeed it
+would. And when we escaped that, old Mattes Roush, the
+leather-breeches maker round the corner, took a notion I was cut
+out for skin-dressing. But we were rescued. Along towards
+Christmas there comes a big sealed letter from the Bank saying
+that a Monsieur Talleyrand had put five hundred dollars - a
+hundred pounds - to my credit there to use as I pleased. There was
+a little note from him inside - he didn't give any address - to thank
+me for past kindnesses and my believing in his future, which he
+said was pretty cloudy at the time of writing. I wished Toby to
+share the money. I hadn't done more than bring Talleyrand up to
+Hundred and Eighteen. The kindnesses were Toby's. But Toby
+said, "No! Liberty and Independence for ever. I have all my
+wants, my son." So I gave him a set of new fiddle-strings, and the
+Brethren didn't advise us any more. Only Pastor Meder he
+preached about the deceitfulness of riches, and Brother Adam
+Goos said if there was war the English 'ud surely shoot down the
+Bank. I knew there wasn't going to be any war, but I drew the
+money out and on Red Jacket's advice I put it into horse-flesh,
+which I sold to Bob Bicknell for the Baltimore stage-coaches.
+That way, I doubled my money inside the twelvemonth.'
+'You gipsy! You proper gipsy!' Puck shouted.
+
+'Why not? 'Twas fair buying and selling. Well, one thing
+leading to another, in a few years I had made the beginning of a
+worldly fortune and was in the tobacco trade.'
+
+'Ah!' said Puck, suddenly. 'Might I inquire if you'd ever sent
+any news to your people in England - or in France?'
+
+'O' course I had. I wrote regular every three months after I'd
+made money in the horse trade. We Lees don't like coming home
+empty-handed. If it's only a turnip or an egg, it's something. Oh
+yes, I wrote good and plenty to Uncle Aurette, and - Dad don't
+read very quickly - Uncle used to slip over Newhaven way and
+tell Dad what was going on in the tobacco trade.'
+
+'I see -
+
+ Aurettes and Lees -
+ Like as two peas.
+
+Go on, Brother Square-toes,' said Puck. Pharaoh laughed and went on.
+
+'Talleyrand he'd gone up in the world same as me. He'd sailed
+to France again, and was a great man in the Government there
+awhile, but they had to turn him out on account of some story
+about bribes from American shippers. All our poor emigres said he
+was surely finished this time, but Red Jacket and me we didn't
+think it likely, not unless he was quite dead. Big Hand had made
+his peace treaty with Great Britain, just as he said he would, and
+there was a roaring trade 'twixt England and the United States for
+such as 'ud take the risk of being searched by British and French
+men-o'-war. Those two was fighting, and just as his gentlemen
+told Big Hand 'ud happen - the United States was catching it
+from both. If an English man-o'-war met an American ship he'd
+press half the best men out of her, and swear they was British
+subjects. Most of 'em was! If a Frenchman met her he'd, likely,
+have the cargo out of her, swearing it was meant to aid and
+comfort the English; and if a Spaniard or a Dutchman met her -
+they was hanging on to England's coat-tails too - Lord only
+knows what they wouldn't do! It came over me that what I wanted
+in my tobacco trade was a fast-sailing ship and a man who could
+be French, English, or American at a pinch. Luckily I could lay
+my hands on both articles. So along towards the end of
+September in the year 'Ninety-nine I sailed from Philadelphia
+with a hundred and eleven hogshead o' good Virginia tobacco, in
+the brig BERTHE AURETTE, named after Mother's maiden name,
+hoping 'twould bring me luck, which she didn't - and yet she did.'
+
+'Where was you bound for?' Puck asked.
+
+'Er - any port I found handiest. I didn't tell Toby or the
+Brethren. They don't understand the ins and outs of the tobacco trade.'
+
+Puck coughed a small cough as he shifted a piece of wood with
+his bare foot.
+
+'It's easy for you to sit and judge,' Pharaoh cried. 'But think o'
+what we had to put up with! We spread our wings and run across
+the broad Atlantic like a hen through a horse-fair. Even so, we
+was stopped by an English frigate, three days out. He sent a boat
+alongside and pressed seven able seamen. I remarked it was hard
+on honest traders, but the officer said they was fighting all
+creation and hadn't time to argue. The next English frigate we
+escaped with no more than a shot in our quarter. Then we was
+chased two days and a night by a French privateer, firing between
+squalls, and the dirty little English ten-gun brig which made him
+sheer off had the impudence to press another five of our men.
+That's how we reached to the chops of the Channel. Twelve good
+men pressed out of thirty-five; an eighteen-pound shot-hole close
+beside our rudder; our mainsail looking like spectacles where the
+Frenchman had hit us - and the Channel crawling with short-
+handed British cruisers. Put that in your pipe and smoke it next
+time you grumble at the price of tobacco!
+
+'Well, then, to top it off, while we was trying to get at our
+leaks, a French lugger come swooping at us out o' the dusk. We
+warned him to keep away, but he fell aboard us, and up climbed
+his Jabbering red-caps. We couldn't endure any more - indeed we
+couldn't. We went at 'em with all we could lay hands on. It didn't
+last long. They was fifty odd to our twenty-three. Pretty soon I
+heard the cutlasses thrown down and some one bellowed for the
+sacri captain.
+
+'"Here I am!" I says. "I don't suppose it makes any odds to you
+thieves, but this is the United States brig BERTHE AURETTE."
+
+'"My aunt!" the man says, laughing. "Why is she named that?"
+
+'"Who's speaking?" I said. 'Twas too dark to see, but I
+thought I knew the voice.
+
+'"Enseigne de Vaisseau Estephe L'Estrange," he sings out, and
+then I was sure.
+
+'"Oh!" I says. "It's all in the family, I suppose, but you have
+done a fine day's work, Stephen."
+
+'He whips out the binnacle-light and holds it to my face. He
+was young L'Estrange, my full cousin, that I hadn't seen since the
+night the smack sank off Telscombe Tye - six years before.
+
+'"Whew!" he says. "That's why she was named for Aunt
+Berthe, is it? What's your share in her, Pharaoh?"
+
+'"Only half owner, but the cargo's mine."
+
+'"That's bad," he says. "I'll do what I can, but you shouldn't
+have fought us."
+'"Steve," I says, "you aren't ever going to report our little
+fall-out as a fight! Why, a Revenue cutter 'ud laugh at it!"
+
+'"So'd I if I wasn't in the Republican Navy," he says. "But two
+of our men are dead, d'ye see, and I'm afraid I'll have to take you
+
+to the Prize Court at Le Havre."
+
+'"Will they condemn my 'baccy?" I asks.
+
+'"To the last ounce. But I was thinking more of the ship. She'd
+make a sweet little craft for the Navy if the Prize Court 'ud let me
+have her," he says.
+
+'Then I knew there was no hope. I don't blame him - a man
+must consider his own interests, but nigh every dollar I had was
+in ship or cargo, and Steve kept on saying, "You shouldn't have
+fought us."
+
+'Well, then, the lugger took us to Le Havre, and that being the
+one time we did want a British ship to rescue us, why, o' course
+we never saw one. My cousin spoke his best for us at the Prize
+Court. He owned he'd no right to rush alongside in the face o' the
+United States flag, but we couldn't get over those two men killed,
+d'ye see, and the Court condemned both ship and cargo. They
+was kind enough not to make us prisoners - only beggars - and
+young L'Estrange was given the BERTHE AURETTE to re-arm into the
+French Navy.
+
+'"I'll take you round to Boulogne," he says. "Mother and the
+rest'll be glad to see you, and you can slip over to Newhaven with
+Uncle Aurette. Or you can ship with me, like most o' your men,
+and take a turn at King George's loose trade. There's plenty
+pickings," he says.
+
+'Crazy as I was, I couldn't help laughing.
+
+'"I've had my allowance of pickings and stealings," I says.
+"Where are they taking my tobacco?" 'Twas being loaded on to a barge.
+
+'"Up the Seine to be sold in Paris," he says. "Neither you nor I
+will ever touch a penny of that money."
+
+'"Get me leave to go with it," I says. "I'll see if there's justice to
+be gotten out of our American Ambassador."
+
+'"There's not much justice in this world," he says, "without a
+Navy." But he got me leave to go with the barge and he gave me
+some money. That tobacco was all I had, and I followed it like a
+hound follows a snatched bone. Going up the river I fiddled a little
+to keep my spirits up, as well as to make friends with the guard.
+They was only doing their duty. Outside o' that they were the
+reasonablest o' God's creatures. They never even laughed at me.
+So we come to Paris, by river, along in November, which the
+French had christened Brumaire. They'd given new names to all
+the months, and after such an outrageous silly piece o' business as
+that, they wasn't likely to trouble 'emselves with my rights and
+wrongs. They didn't. The barge was laid up below Notre Dame
+church in charge of a caretaker, and he let me sleep aboard after I'd
+run about all day from office to office, seeking justice and fair
+dealing, and getting speeches concerning liberty. None heeded
+me. Looking back on it I can't rightly blame 'em. I'd no money,
+my clothes was filthy mucked; I hadn't changed my linen in
+weeks, and I'd no proof of my claims except the ship's papers,
+which, they said, I might have stolen. The thieves! The door-
+keeper to the American Ambassador - for I never saw even the
+Secretary - he swore I spoke French a sight too well for an
+American citizen. Worse than that - I had spent my money, d'ye
+see, and I - I took to fiddling in the streets for my keep; and - and,
+a ship's captain with a fiddle under his arm - well, I don't blame
+'em that they didn't believe me.
+
+'I come back to the barge one day - late in this month Brumaire
+it was - fair beazled out. Old Maingon, the caretaker, he'd lit a fire
+in a bucket and was grilling a herring.
+
+'"Courage, mon ami," he says. "Dinner is served."
+
+'"I can't eat," I says. "I can't do any more. It's stronger
+than I am."
+'"Bah!" he says. "Nothing's stronger than a man. Me, for
+example! Less than two years ago I was blown up in the Orient in
+Aboukir Bay, but I descended again and hit the water like a fairy.
+Look at me now," he says. He wasn't much to look at, for he'd
+only one leg and one eye, but the cheerfullest soul that ever trod
+shoe-leather. "That's worse than a hundred and eleven hogshead
+of 'baccy," he goes on. "You're young, too! What wouldn't I give
+to be young in France at this hour! There's nothing you couldn't
+do," he says. "The ball's at your feet - kick it!" he says. He kicks
+the old fire-bucket with his peg-leg. "General Buonaparte, for
+example!" he goes on. "That man's a babe compared to me, and
+see what he's done already. He's conquered Egypt and Austria
+and Italy - oh! half Europe!" he says, "and now he sails back to
+Paris, and he sails out to St Cloud down the river here -don't stare
+at the river, you young fool! - and all in front of these pig-jobbing
+lawyers and citizens he makes himself Consul, which is as good as
+a King. He'll be King, too, in the next three turns of the capstan -
+King of France, England, and the world! Think o' that!" he
+shouts, "and eat your herring."
+
+'I says something about Boney. If he hadn't been fighting
+England I shouldn't have lost my 'baccy - should I?
+
+'"Young fellow," says Maingon, "you don't understand."
+
+'We heard cheering. A carriage passed over the bridge with two
+in it.
+'"That's the man himself," says Maingon. "He'll give 'em
+something to cheer for soon." He stands at the salute.
+
+'"Who's t'other in black beside him?" I asks, fairly shaking
+all over.
+
+'"Ah! he's the clever one. You'll hear of him before long. He's
+that scoundrel-bishop, Talleyrand."
+
+'"It is!" I said, and up the steps I went with my fiddle, and run
+after the carriage calling, "Abbe, Abbe!"
+
+'A soldier knocked the wind out of me with the back of his
+sword, but I had sense to keep on following till the carriage
+stopped - and there just was a crowd round the house-door! I
+must have been half-crazy else I wouldn't have struck up "Si le
+Roi m'avait donne Paris la grande ville!" I thought it might remind him.
+
+'"That is a good omen!" he says to Boney sitting all hunched
+up; and he looks straight at me.
+
+'"Abbe - oh, Abbe!" I says. "Don't you remember Toby and
+Hundred and Eighteen Second Street?"
+
+'He said not a word. He just crooked his long white finger to
+the guard at the door while the carriage steps were let down, and I
+skipped into the house, and they slammed the door in the crowd's face.
+'"You go there," says a soldier, and shoves me into an empty
+room, where I catched my first breath since I'd left the barge.
+Presently I heard plates rattling next door - there were only
+
+folding doors between - and a cork drawn. "I tell you," some one
+shouts with his mouth full, "it was all that sulky ass Sieyes' fault.
+Only my speech to the Five Hundred saved the situation."
+
+'"Did it save your coat?" says Talleyrand. "I hear they tore it
+when they threw you out. Don't gasconade to me. You may be in
+the road of victory, but you aren't there yet."
+
+'Then I guessed t'other man was Boney. He stamped about and
+swore at Talleyrand.
+
+'"You forget yourself, Consul," says Talleyrand, "or rather
+you remember yourself- Corsican."
+
+'"Pig!" says Boney, and worse.
+
+'"Emperor!" says Talleyrand, but, the way he spoke, it
+sounded worst of all. Some one must have backed against the
+folding doors, for they flew open and showed me in the middle of
+the room. Boney whipped out his pistol before I could stand up.
+
+"General," says Talleyrand to him, "this gentleman has a habit of
+catching us canaille en deshabille. Put that thing down."
+
+'Boney laid it on the table, so I guessed which was master.
+Talleyrand takes my hand - "Charmed to see you again,
+Candide," he says. "How is the adorable Dr Pangloss and the
+noble Huron?"
+
+'"They were doing very well when I left," I said. "But I'm
+not."
+
+'"Do you sell buttons now?" he says, and fills me a glass of
+wine off the table.
+
+'"Madeira," says he. "Not so good as some I have drunk."
+
+'"You mountebank!" Boney roars. "Turn that out." (He
+didn't even say "man," but Talleyrand, being gentle born, just
+went on.)
+
+'"Pheasant is not so good as pork," he says. "You will find
+some at that table if you will do me the honour to sit down. Pass
+him a clean plate, General." And, as true as I'm here, Boney slid a
+plate along just like a sulky child. He was a lanky-haired, yellow-
+skinned little man, as nervous as a cat - and as dangerous. I could
+feel that.
+
+'"And now," said Talleyrand, crossing his game leg over his
+sound one, "will you tell me your story?"
+'I was in a fluster, but I told him nearly everything from the
+time he left me the five hundred dollars in Philadelphia, up to my
+losing ship and cargo at Le Havre. Boney began by listening, but
+after a bit he dropped into his own thoughts and looked at the
+crowd sideways through the front-room curtains. Talleyrand
+called to him when I'd done.
+
+'"Eh? What we need now," says Boney, "is peace for the next
+three or four years."
+
+'"Quite so," says Talleyrand. "Meantime I want the Consul's
+order to the Prize Court at Le Havre to restore my friend here his
+ship."
+
+'"Nonsense!" says Boney. "Give away an oak-built brig of
+two hundred and seven tons for sentiment? Certainly not! She
+must be armed into my Navy with ten - no, fourteen twelve-
+pounders and two long fours. Is she strong enough to bear a long
+twelve forward?"
+
+'Now I could ha' sworn he'd paid no heed to my talk, but that
+wonderful head-piece of his seemingly skimmed off every word
+of it that was useful to him.
+
+'"Ah, General!" says Talleyrand. "You are a magician - a
+magician without morals. But the brig is undoubtedly American,
+and we don't want to offend them more than we have. "
+
+'"Need anybody talk about the affair?" he says. He didn't look
+at me, but I knew what was in his mind -just cold murder because
+I worried him; and he'd order it as easy as ordering his carriage.
+
+'"You can't stop 'em," I said. "There's twenty-two other men
+besides me." I felt a little more 'ud set me screaming like a wired hare.
+
+'"Undoubtedly American," Talleyrand goes on. "You would
+gain something if you returned the ship - with a message of
+fraternal good-will - published in the MONITEUR" (that's a French
+paper like the Philadelphia AURORA).
+
+'"A good idea!" Boney answers. "One could say much in a
+message."
+
+'"It might be useful," says Talleyrand. "Shall I have the
+message prepared?" He wrote something in a little pocket ledger.
+
+'"Yes - for me to embellish this evening. The MONITEUR will
+publish it tonight."
+
+'"Certainly. Sign, please," says Talleyrand, tearing the leaf out.
+
+'"But that's the order to return the brig," says Boney. "Is that
+necessary? Why should I lose a good ship? Haven't I lost enough
+ships already?"
+'Talleyrand didn't answer any of those questions. Then Boney
+sidled up to the table and jabs his pen into the ink. Then he shies at
+the paper again: "My signature alone is useless," he says. "You
+must have the other two Consuls as well. Sieyes and Roger Ducos
+must sign. We must preserve the Laws."
+
+'"By the time my friend presents it," says Talleyrand, still
+looking out of window, "only one signature will be necessary."
+
+'Boney smiles. "It's a swindle," says he, but he signed and
+pushed the paper across.
+
+'"Give that to the President of the Prize Court at Le Havre,"
+says Talleyrand, "and he will give you back your ship. I will settle
+for the cargo myself. You have told me how much it cost. What
+profit did you expect to make on it?"
+
+'Well, then, as man to man, I was bound to warn him that I'd
+set out to run it into England without troubling the Revenue, and
+so I couldn't rightly set bounds to my profits.'
+
+'I guessed that all along,' said Puck.
+
+ 'There was never a Lee to Warminghurst -
+ That wasn't a smuggler last and first.'
+
+The children laughed.
+
+'It's comical enough now,' said Pharaoh. 'But I didn't laugh
+then. Says Talleyrand after a minute, "I am a bad accountant and I
+have several calculations on hand at present. Shall we say twice
+the cost of the cargo?"
+
+'Say? I couldn't say a word. I sat choking and nodding like a
+China image while he wrote an order to his secretary to pay me, I
+won't say how much, because you wouldn't believe it.
+
+'"Oh! Bless you, Abbe! God bless you!" I got it out at last.
+
+'"Yes," he says, "I am a priest in spite of myself, but they call
+me Bishop now. Take this for my episcopal blessing," and he
+hands me the paper.
+
+'"He stole all that money from me," says Boney over my
+shoulder. "A Bank of France is another of the things we must
+make. Are you mad?" he shouts at Talleyrand.
+
+'"Quite," says Talleyrand, getting up. "But be calm. The
+disease will never attack you. It is called gratitude. This gentleman
+found me in the street and fed me when I was hungry."
+
+'"I see; and he has made a fine scene of it, and you have paid
+him, I suppose. Meantime, France waits. "
+
+'"Oh! poor France!" says Talleyrand. "Good-bye, Candide,"
+he says to me. "By the way," he says, "have you yet got Red
+Jacket's permission to tell me what the President said to his
+Cabinet after Monsieur Genet rode away?"
+
+'I couldn't speak, I could only shake my head, and Boney - so
+impatient he was to go on with his doings - he ran at me and fair
+pushed me out of the room. And that was all there was to it.'
+Pharaoh stood up and slid his fiddle into one of his big skirt-
+pockets as though it were a dead hare.
+
+'Oh! but we want to know lots and lots more,'said Dan. 'How
+you got home - and what old Maingon said on the barge - and
+wasn't your cousin surprised when he had to give back the BERTHE
+AURETTE, and -'
+
+'Tell us more about Toby!' cried Una.
+
+'Yes, and Red Jacket,' said Dan.
+
+'Won't you tell us any more?' they both pleaded.
+
+Puck kicked the oak branch on the fire, till it sent up a column
+of smoke that made them sneeze. When they had finished the
+Shaw was empty except for old Hobden stamping through the
+larches.
+
+
+'They gipsies have took two,'he said. "My black pullet and my
+liddle gingy-speckled cockrel.'
+
+'I thought so,' said Dan, picking up one tail-feather that the old
+woman had overlooked.
+
+'Which way did they go? Which way did the runagates go?'
+said Hobden.
+
+'Hobby!' said Una. 'Would you like it if we told Keeper Ridley
+all your goings and comings?'
+
+
+
+'Poor Honest Men'
+
+
+Your jar of Virginny
+Will cost you a guinea,
+Which you reckon too much by five shilling or ten;
+But light your churchwarden
+And judge it accordin'
+When I've told you the troubles of poor honest men.
+
+From the Capes of the Delaware,
+As you are well aware,
+We sail with tobacco for England - but then
+Our own British cruisers,
+They watch us come through, sirs,
+And they press half a score of us poor honest men.
+
+Or if by quick sailing
+(Thick weather prevailing)
+We leave them behind (as we do now and then)
+We are sure of a gun from
+Each frigate we run from,
+Which is often destruction to poor honest men!
+
+Broadsides the Atlantic
+We tumble short-handed,
+With shot-holes to plug and new canvas to bend,
+And off the Azores,
+Dutch, Dons and Monsieurs
+Are waiting to terrify poor honest men!
+
+Napoleon's embargo
+Is laid on all cargo
+Which comfort or aid to King George may intend;
+And since roll, twist and leaf,
+Of all comforts is chief,
+They try for to steal it from poor honest men!
+
+With no heart for fight,
+We take refuge in flight,
+But fire as we run, our retreat to defend,
+Until our stern-chasers
+Cut up her fore-braces,
+And she flies off the wind from us poor honest men!
+
+Twix' the Forties and Fifties,
+South-eastward the drift is,
+And so, when we think we are making Land's End,
+Alas, it is Ushant
+With half the King's Navy,
+Blockading French ports against poor honest men!
+
+But they may not quit station
+(Which is our salvation),
+So swiftly we stand to the Nor'ard again;
+And finding the tail of
+A homeward-bound convoy,
+We slip past the Scillies like poor honest men.
+
+'Twix' the Lizard and Dover,
+We hand our stuff over,
+Though I may not inform how we do it, nor when;
+But a light on each quarter
+Low down on the water
+Is well understanded by poor honest men.
+Even then we have dangers
+From meddlesome strangers,
+Who spy on our business and are not content
+To take a smooth answer,
+Except with a handspike ...
+And they say they are murdered by poor honest men!
+
+To be drowned or be shot
+Is our natural lot,
+Why should we, moreover, be hanged in the end -
+After all our great pains
+For to dangle in chains,
+As though we were smugglers, not poor honest men?
+
+
+
+
+THE CONVERSION OF ST WILFRID
+
+
+
+Eddi's Service
+
+
+Eddi, priest of St Wilfrid
+In the chapel at Manhood End,
+Ordered a midnight service
+For such as cared to attend.
+But the Saxons were keeping Christmas,
+And the night was stormy as well.
+Nobody came to service
+Though Eddi rang the bell.
+
+'Wicked weather for walking,'
+Said Eddi of Manhood End.
+'But I must go on with the service
+For such as care to attend.'
+The altar candles were lighted, -
+An old marsh donkey came,
+Bold as a guest invited,
+And stared at the guttering flame.
+
+The storm beat on at the windows,
+The water splashed on the floor,
+And a wet yoke-weary bullock
+Pushed in through the open door.
+'How do I know what is greatest,
+How do I know what is least?
+That is My Father's business,'
+Said Eddi, Wilfrid's priest.
+
+'But, three are gathered together -
+Listen to me and attend.
+I bring good news, my brethren!'
+Said Eddi, of Manhood End.
+And he told the Ox of a manger
+And a stall in Bethlehem,
+And he spoke to the Ass of a Rider
+That rode to jerusalem.
+
+They steamed and dripped in the chancel,
+They listened and never stirred,
+While, just as though they were Bishops,
+Eddi preached them The Word.
+
+Till the gale blew off on the marshes
+And the windows showed the day,
+And the Ox and the Ass together
+Wheeled and clattered away.
+
+And when the Saxons mocked him,
+Said Eddi of Manhood End,
+'I dare not shut His chapel
+On such as care to attend.'
+
+
+
+The Conversion of St Wilfrid
+
+
+They had bought peppermints up at the village, and were coming
+home past little St Barnabas' Church, when they saw Jimmy
+Kidbrooke, the carpenter's baby, kicking at the churchyard gate,
+with a shaving in his mouth and the tears running down his cheeks.
+
+Una pulled out the shaving and put in a peppermint. Jimmy
+said he was looking for his grand-daddy - he never seemed to take
+much notice of his father - so they went up between the old
+graves, under the leaf-dropping limes, to the porch, where Jim
+trotted in, looked about the empty Church, and screamed like a
+gate-hinge.
+
+Young Sam Kidbrooke's voice came from the bell-tower and
+made them jump.
+
+'Why, jimmy,'he called, 'what are you doin' here? Fetch
+him, Father!'
+
+Old Mr Kidbrooke stumped downstairs, jerked Jimmy on to
+his shoulder, stared at the children beneath his brass spectacles,
+and stumped back again. They laughed: it was so exactly like
+Mr Kidbrooke.
+
+'It's all right,' Una called up the stairs. 'We found him, Sam.
+Does his mother know?'
+
+'He's come off by himself. She'll be justabout crazy,'
+Sam answered.
+
+'Then I'll run down street and tell her.' Una darted off.
+
+'Thank you, Miss Una. Would you like to see how we're
+mendin' the bell-beams, Mus' Dan?'
+
+Dan hopped up, and saw young Sam lying on his stomach in a
+most delightful place among beams and ropes, close to the five
+great bells. Old Mr Kidbrooke on the floor beneath was planing a
+piece of wood, and Jimmy was eating the shavings as fast as they
+came away. He never looked at Jimmy; Jimmy never stopped
+eating; and the broad gilt-bobbed pendulum of the church clock
+never stopped swinging across the white-washed wall of the
+tower.
+
+Dan winked through the sawdust that fell on his upturned face.
+'Ring a bell,' he called.
+
+, I mustn't do that, but I'll buzz one of 'em a bit for you,' said
+Sam. He pounded on the sound-bow of the biggest bell, and
+waked a hollow groaning boom that ran up and down the tower
+like creepy feelings down your back. just when it almost began to
+hurt, it died away in a hurry of beautiful sorrowful cries, like a
+wine-glass rubbed with a wet finger. The pendulum clanked -
+one loud clank to each silent swing.
+
+Dan heard Una return from Mrs Kidbrooke's, and ran down to
+fetch her. She was standing by the font staring at some one who
+kneeled at the Altar-rail.
+
+'Is that the Lady who practises the organ?' she whispered.
+
+'No. She's gone into the organ-place. Besides, she wears
+black,' Dan replied.
+
+The figure rose and came down the nave. It was a white-haired
+man in a long white gown with a sort of scarf looped low on the
+neck, one end hanging over his shoulder. His loose long sleeves
+were embroidered with gold, and a deep strip of gold embroidery
+waved and sparkled round the hem of his gown.
+
+'Go and meet him,' said Puck's voice behind the font. 'It's
+only Wilfrid.'
+
+'Wilfrid who?' said Dan. 'You come along too.'
+
+'Wilfrid - Saint of Sussex, and Archbishop of York. I shall wait
+till he asks me.' He waved them forward. Their feet squeaked on
+the old grave-slabs in the centre aisle. The Archbishop raised one
+hand with a pink ring on it, and said something in Latin. He was
+very handsome, and his thin face looked almost as silvery as his
+thin circle of hair.
+
+'Are you alone?' he asked.
+
+'Puck's here, of course,' said Una. 'Do you know him?'
+
+'I know him better now than I used to.' He beckoned over
+Dan's shoulder, and spoke again in Latin. Puck pattered forward,
+holding himself as straight as an arrow. The Archbishop smiled.
+
+'Be welcome,' said he. 'Be very welcome.'
+
+'Welcome to you also, O Prince of the church,' Puck replied.
+
+The Archbishop bowed his head and passed on, till he glimmered
+like a white moth in the shadow by the font.
+
+'He does look awfully princely,' said Una. 'Isn't he coming
+back?'
+
+'Oh yes. He's only looking over the church. He's very fond of
+churches,' said Puck. 'What's that?'
+
+The Lady who practices the organ was speaking to the blower-
+boy behind the organ-screen. 'We can't very well talk here,' Puck
+whispered. 'Let's go to Panama Corner.'
+
+He led them to the end of the south aisle, where there is a slab of
+iron which says in queer, long-tailed letters: ORATE P. ANNEMA JHONE COLINE.
+The children always called it Panama Corner.
+
+The Archbishop moved slowly about the little church, peering
+at the old memorial tablets and the new glass windows. The Lady
+who practises the organ began to pull out stops and rustle hymn-
+books behind the screen.
+
+'I hope she'll do all the soft lacey tunes - like treacle on
+porridge,' said Una.
+
+'I like the trumpety ones best,' said Dan. 'Oh, look at Wilfrid!
+He's trying to shut the Altar-gates!'
+
+'Tell him he mustn't,' said Puck, quite seriously.
+
+He can't, anyhow,' Dan muttered, and tiptoed out of Panama
+Corner while the Archbishop patted and patted at the carved gates
+that always sprang open again beneath his hand.
+
+'That's no use, sir,' Dan whispered. 'Old Mr Kidbrooke says
+Altar-gates are just the one pair of gates which no man can shut.
+He made 'em so himself.'
+
+The Archbishop's blue eyes twinkled. Dan saw that he knew all
+about it.
+
+'I beg your pardon,' Dan stammered - very angry with Puck.
+
+'Yes, I know! He made them so Himself.' The Archbishop
+smiled, and crossed to Panama Corner, where Una dragged up a
+certain padded arm-chair for him to sit on.
+
+The organ played softly. 'What does that music say?'he asked.
+
+Una dropped into the chant without thinking: '"O all ye
+works of the Lord, bless ye the Lord; praise him and magnify him
+for ever." We call it the Noah's Ark, because it's all lists of things
+- beasts and birds and whales, you know.'
+
+'Whales?' said the Archbishop quickly.
+
+'Yes - "O ye whales, and all that move in the waters,"' Una
+hummed - '"Bless ye the Lord." It sounds like a wave turning
+over, doesn't it?'
+
+'Holy Father,' said Puck with a demure face, 'is a little seal also
+"one who moves in the water"?'
+
+'Eh? Oh yes - yess!' he laughed. 'A seal moves wonderfully in
+the waters. Do the seal come to my island still?'
+
+Puck shook his head. 'All those little islands have been
+swept away.'
+
+'Very possible. The tides ran fiercely down there. Do you
+know the land of the Sea-calf, maiden?'
+
+'No - but we've seen seals - at Brighton.'
+
+'The Archbishop is thinking of a little farther down the coast.
+He means Seal's Eye - Selsey - down Chichester way - where he
+converted the South Saxons,' Puck explained.
+
+'Yes - yess; if the South Saxons did not convert me,' said the
+Archbishop, smiling. 'The first time I was wrecked was on that
+coast. As our ship took ground and we tried to push her off, an old
+fat fellow of a seal, I remember, reared breast-high out of the
+water, and scratched his head with his flipper as if he were saying:
+"What does that excited person with the pole think he is doing'"I
+was very wet and miserable, but I could not help laughing, till the
+natives came down and attacked us.'
+
+'What did you do?' Dan asked.
+
+'One couldn't very well go back to France, so one tried to make
+them go back to the shore. All the South Saxons are born
+wreckers, like my own Northumbrian folk. I was bringing over a
+few things for my old church at York, and some of the natives laid
+hands on them, and - and I'm afraid I lost my temper.'
+
+'it is said -' Puck's voice was wickedly meek -'that there was a
+great fight.'
+
+Eh, but I must ha' been a silly lad.' Wilfrid spoke with a sudden
+thick burr in his voice. He coughed, and took up his silvery tones
+again. 'There was no fight really. My men thumped a few of
+them, but the tide rose half an hour before its time, with a strong
+wind, and we backed off. What I wanted to say, though, was, that
+the seas about us were full of sleek seals watching the scuffle. My
+good Eddi - my chaplain - insisted that they were demons. Yes -
+yess! That was my first acquaintance with the South Saxons and
+their seals.'
+
+'But not the only time you were wrecked, was it?' said Dan.
+
+'Alas, no! On sea and land my life seems to have been one long
+shipwreck.' He looked at the Jhone Coline slab as old Hobden
+sometimes looks into the fire. 'Ah, well!'
+
+'But did you ever have any more adventures among the seals?"
+said Una, after a little.
+
+'Oh, the seals! I beg your pardon. They are the important
+things. Yes - yess! I went back to the South Saxons after twelve -
+fifteen - years. No, I did not come by water, but overland from
+my own Northumbria, to see what I could do. It's little one can do
+with that class of native except make them stop killing each other
+and themselves -'
+'Why did they kill themselves?' Una asked, her chin in her hand.
+
+'Because they were heathen. When they grew tired of life (as if
+they were the only people!) they would jump into the sea . They
+called it going to Wotan. It wasn't want of food always - by any
+means. A man would tell you that he felt grey in the heart, or a
+woman would say that she saw nothing but long days in front of
+her; and they'd saunter away to the mud-flats and - that would be
+the end of them, poor souls, unless one headed them off. One had
+to run quick, but one can't allow people to lay hands on themselves
+because they happen to feel grey. Yes - yess - Extraordinary
+people, the South Saxons. Disheartening, sometimes. ... What does
+that say now?' The organ had changed tune again.
+
+'Only a hymn for next Sunday,' said Una. '"The Church's
+One Foundation." Go on, please, about running over the mud. I
+should like to have seen you.'
+
+'I dare say you would, and I really could run in those days.
+Ethelwalch the King gave me some five or six muddy parishes by
+the sea, and the first time my good Eddi and I rode there we saw a
+man slouching along the slob, among the seals at Manhood End.
+My good Eddi disliked seals - but he swallowed his objections
+and ran like a hare.'
+
+'Why?'said Dan.
+
+'For the same reason that I did. We thought it was one of our
+people going to drown himself. As a matter of fact, Eddi and I
+were nearly drowned in the pools before we overtook him. To
+cut a long story short, we found ourselves very muddy, very
+breathless, being quietly made fun of in good Latin by a very
+well-spoken person. No - he'd no idea of going to Wotan. He was
+fishing on his own beaches, and he showed us the beacons and
+turf-heaps that divided his land from the church property. He
+took us to his own house, gave us a good dinner, some more than
+good wine, sent a guide with us into Chichester, and became one
+of my best and most refreshing friends. He was a Meon by
+descent, from the west edge of the kingdom; a scholar educated,
+curiously enough, at Lyons, my old school; had travelled the
+world over, even to Rome, and was a brilliant talker. We found
+we had scores of acquaintances in common. It seemed he was a
+small chief under King Ethelwalch, and I fancy the King was
+somewhat afraid of him. The South Saxons mistrust a man who
+talks too well. Ah! Now, I've left out the very point of my story.
+He kept a great grey-muzzled old dog-seal that he had brought up
+from a pup. He called it Padda - after one of my clergy. It was
+rather like fat, honest old Padda. The creature followed him
+everywhere, and nearly knocked down my good Eddi when we
+first met him. Eddi loathed it. It used to sniff at his thin legs and
+cough at him. I can't say I ever took much notice of it (I was not
+fond of animals), till one day Eddi came to me with a circumstantial
+account of some witchcraft that Meon worked. He would
+tell the seal to go down to the beach the last thing at night, and
+bring him word of the weather. When it came back, Meon might
+say to his slaves, "Padda thinks we shall have wind tomorrow.
+Haul up the boats!" I spoke to Meon casually about the story, and
+he laughed.
+
+'He told me he could judge by the look of the creature's coat
+and the way it sniffed what weather was brewing. Quite possible.
+One need not put down everything one does not understand to
+the work of bad spirits - or good ones, for that matter.' He
+nodded towards Puck, who nodded gaily in return.
+
+'I say so,' he went on, 'because to a certain extent I have been
+made a victim of that habit of mind. Some while after I was settled
+at Selsey, King Ethelwalch and Queen Ebba ordered their people
+to be baptized. I fear I'm too old to believe that a whole nation can
+change its heart at the King's command, and I had a shrewd
+suspicion that their real motive was to get a good harvest. No rain
+had fallen for two or three years, but as soon as we had finished
+baptizing, it fell heavily, and they all said it was a miracle.'
+
+'And was it?' Dan asked.
+
+'Everything in life is a miracle, but' - the Archbishop twisted
+the heavy ring on his finger - 'I should be slow - ve-ry slow
+should I be - to assume that a certain sort of miracle happens
+whenever lazy and improvident people say they are going to turn
+over a new leaf if they are paid for it. My friend Meon had sent his
+slaves to the font, but he had not come himself, so the next time I
+rode over - to return a manuscript - I took the liberty of asking
+why. He was perfectly open about it. He looked on the King's
+action as a heathen attempt to curry favour with the Christians'
+God through me the Archbishop, and he would have none of it.
+
+'"My dear man," I said, "admitting that that is the case, surely
+you, as an educated person, don't believe in Wotan and all the
+other hobgoblins any more than Padda here?" The old seal was
+hunched up on his ox-hide behind his master's chair.
+
+'"Even if I don't," he said, "why should I insult the memory of
+my fathers' Gods? I have sent you a hundred and three of my
+rascals to christen. Isn't that enough?"
+
+'"By no means," I answered. "I want you."
+
+'"He wants us! What do you think of that, Padda?" He pulled
+the seal's whiskers till it threw back its head and roared, and he
+pretended to interpret. "No! Padda says he won't be baptized yet
+awhile. He says you'll stay to dinner and come fishing with me
+tomorrow, because you're over-worked and need a rest."
+
+'"I wish you'd keep yon brute in its proper place," I said, and
+Eddi, my chaplain, agreed.
+
+'"I do," said Meon. "I keep him just next my heart. He can't
+tell a lie, and he doesn't know how to love any one except me. It
+'ud be the same if I were dying on a mud-bank, wouldn't it,
+Padda?"
+
+'"Augh! Augh!" said Padda, and put up his head to be scratched.
+
+'Then Meon began to tease Eddi: "Padda says, if Eddi saw his
+Archbishop dying on a mud-bank Eddi would tuck up his gown
+and run. Padda knows Eddi can run too! Padda came into Wittering
+Church last Sunday - all wet - to hear the music, and Eddi ran out."
+
+'My good Eddi rubbed his hands and his shins together, and
+flushed. "Padda is a child of the Devil, who is the father of lies!"
+he cried, and begged my pardon for having spoken. I forgave him.
+
+'"Yes. You are just about stupid enough for a musician," said
+Meon. "But here he is. Sing a hymn to him, and see if he can stand
+it. You'll find my small harp beside the fireplace."
+
+'Eddi, who is really an excellent musician, played and sang for
+quite half an hour. Padda shuffled off his ox-hide, hunched
+himself on his flippers before him, and listened with his head
+thrown back. Yes - yess! A rather funny sight! Meon tried not to
+laugh, and asked Eddi if he were satisfied.
+
+'It takes some time to get an idea out of my good Eddi's head.
+He looked at me.
+
+'"Do you want to sprinkle him with holy water, and see if he
+flies up the chimney? Why not baptize him?" said Meon.
+
+'Eddi was really shocked. I thought it was bad taste myself.
+
+'"That's not fair," said Meon. "You call him a demon and a
+familiar spirit because he loves his master and likes music, and
+when I offer you a chance to prove it you won't take it. Look here!
+I'll make a bargain. I'll be baptized if you'll baptize Padda too.
+He's more of a man than most of my slaves."
+
+'"One doesn't bargain - or joke - about these matters," I said.
+He was going altogether too far.
+
+'"Quite right," said Meon; "I shouldn't like any one to joke
+about Padda. Padda, go down to the beach and bring us
+tomorrow's weather!"
+
+'My good Eddi must have been a little over-tired with his day's
+work. "I am a servant of the church," he cried. "My business is to
+save souls, not to enter into fellowships and understandings with
+accursed beasts."
+
+'"Have it your own narrow way," said Meon. "Padda, you
+needn't go." The old fellow flounced back to his ox-hide at once.
+
+'"Man could learn obedience at least from that creature," said
+Eddi, a little ashamed of himself. Christians should not curse.
+'"Don't begin to apologise Just when I am beginning to like
+you," said Meon. "We'll leave Padda behind tomorrow - out of
+respect to your feelings. Now let's go to supper. We must be up
+early tomorrow for the whiting."
+
+'The next was a beautiful crisp autumn morning - a weather-
+breeder, if I had taken the trouble to think; but it's refreshing to
+escape from kings and converts for half a day. We three went by
+ourselves in Meon's smallest boat, and we got on the whiting near
+an old wreck, a mile or so off shore. Meon knew the marks to a
+yard, and the fish were keen. Yes - yess! A perfect morning's
+fishing! If a Bishop can't be a fisherman, who can?' He twiddled
+his ring again. 'We stayed there a little too long, and while we
+were getting up our stone, down came the fog. After some
+discussion, we decided to row for the land. The ebb was just
+beginning to make round the point, and sent us all ways at once
+like a coracle.'
+
+'Selsey Bill,' said Puck under his breath. 'The tides run
+something furious there.'
+
+'I believe you,' said the Archbishop. 'Meon and I have spent a
+good many evenings arguing as to where exactly we drifted. All I
+know is we found ourselves in a little rocky cove that had sprung
+up round us out of the fog, and a swell lifted the boat on to a ledge,
+and she broke up beneath our feet. We had just time to shuffle
+through the weed before the next wave. The sea was rising.
+'"It's rather a pity we didn't let Padda go down to the beach
+last night," said Meon. "He might have warned us this was coming."
+
+'"Better fall into the hands of God than the hands of demons,"
+said Eddi, and his teeth chattered as he prayed. A nor'-west breeze
+had just got up - distinctly cool.
+
+'"Save what you can of the boat," said Meon; "we may need
+it," and we had to drench ourselves again, fishing out stray
+planks.'
+
+'What for?' said Dan.
+
+'For firewood. We did not know when we should get off. Eddi
+had flint and steel, and we found dry fuel in the old gulls' nests and
+lit a fire. It smoked abominably, and we guarded it with boat-
+planks up-ended between the rocks. One gets used to that sort of
+thing if one travels. Unluckily I'm not so strong as I was. I fear I
+must have been a trouble to my friends. It was blowing a full gale
+before midnight. Eddi wrung out his cloak, and tried to wrap me
+in it, but I ordered him on his obedience to keep it. However, he
+held me in his arms all the first night, and Meon begged his
+pardon for what he'd said the night before - about Eddi, running
+away if he found me on a sandbank, you remember.
+'"You are right in half your prophecy," said Eddi. "I have
+tucked up my gown, at any rate." (The wind had blown it over
+his head.) "Now let us thank God for His mercies."
+
+'"Hum!" said Meon. "If this gale lasts, we stand a very fair
+chance of dying of starvation."
+
+'"If it be God's will that we survive, God will provide," said Eddi.
+"At least help me to sing to Him." The wind almost whipped the
+words out of his mouth, but he braced himself against a rock and
+sang psalms.
+
+'I'm glad I never concealed my opinion - from myself - that
+Eddi was a better man than I. Yet I have worked hard in my time -
+very hard! Yes - yess! So the morning and the evening were our
+second day on that islet. There was rain-water in the rock-pools,
+and, as a churchman, I knew how to fast, but I admit we were
+hungry. Meon fed our fire chip by chip to eke it out, and they
+made me sit over it, the dear fellows, when I was too weak to
+object. Meon held me in his arms the second night, just like a
+child. My good Eddi was a little out of his senses, and imagined
+himself teaching a York choir to sing. Even so, he was beautifully
+patient with them.
+
+'I heard Meon whisper, "If this keeps up we shall go to our
+Gods. I wonder what Wotan will say to me. He must know I
+don't believe in him. On the other hand, I can't do what Ethelwalch
+finds so easy - curry favour with your God at the last
+minute, in the hope of being saved - as you call it. How do you
+advise, Bishop?"
+'"My dear man," I said, "if that is your honest belief, I take it
+upon myself to say you had far better not curry favour with any
+God. But if it's only your Jutish pride that holds you back, lift me
+up, and I'll baptize you even now."
+
+'"Lie still," said Meon. "I could judge better if I were in my
+own hall. But to desert one's fathers' Gods - even if one doesn't
+believe in them - in the middle of a gale, isn't quite - What would
+you do yourself?"
+
+'I was lying in his arms, kept alive by the warmth of his big,
+steady heart. It did not seem to me the time or the place for subtle
+arguments, so I answered, "No, I certainly should not desert my
+God." I don't see even now what else I could have said.
+
+'"Thank you. I'll remember that, if I live," said Meon, and I
+must have drifted back to my dreams about Northumbria and
+beautiful France, for it was broad daylight when I heard him
+calling on Wotan in that high, shaking heathen yell that I detest so.
+
+'"Lie quiet. I'm giving Wotan his chance," he said. Our dear
+Eddi ambled up, still beating time to his imaginary choir.
+
+'"Yes. Call on your Gods," he cried, "and see what gifts they
+will send you. They are gone on a journey, or they are hunting."
+
+'I assure you the words were not out of his mouth when old
+Padda shot from the top of a cold wrinkled swell, drove himself
+over the weedy ledge, and landed fair in our laps with a rock-cod
+between his teeth. I could not help smiling at Eddi's face. "A
+miracle! A miracle!" he cried, and kneeled down to clean the cod.
+
+'"You've been a long time finding us, my son," said Meon.
+"Now fish - fish for all our lives. We're starving, Padda."
+
+'The old fellow flung himself quivering like a salmon backward
+into the boil of the currents round the rocks, and Meon said,
+"We're safe. I'll send him to fetch help when this wind drops. Eat
+and be thankful."
+
+'I never tasted anything so good as those rock-codlings we took
+from Padda's mouth and half roasted over the fire. Between his
+plunges Padda would hunch up and purr over Meon with the
+tears running down his face. I never knew before that seals could
+weep for joy - as I have wept.
+
+'"Surely," said Eddi, with his mouth full, "God has made the
+seal the loveliest of His creatures in the water. Look how Padda
+breasts the current! He stands up against it like a rock; now watch
+the chain of bubbles where he dives; and now - there is his wise
+head under that rock-ledge! Oh, a blessing be on thee, my little
+brother Padda!"
+
+'"You said he was a child of the Devil!" Meon laughed.
+'"There I sinned," poor Eddi answered. "Call him here, and I
+will ask his pardon. God sent him out of the storm to humble me,
+a fool."
+
+'"I won't ask you to enter into fellowships and understandings
+with any accursed brute," said Meon, rather unkindly. "Shall we
+say he was sent to our Bishop as the ravens were sent to your
+prophet Elijah?"
+
+'"Doubtless that is so," said Eddi. "I will write it so if I live to
+get home."
+
+'"No - no!" I said. "Let us three poor men kneel and thank
+God for His mercies."
+
+'We kneeled, and old Padda shuffled up and thrust his head
+under Meon's elbows. I laid my hand upon it and blessed him. So
+did Eddi.
+
+'"And now, my son," I said to Meon, "shall I baptize thee?"
+
+'"Not yet," said he. "Wait till we are well ashore and at home.
+No God in any Heaven shall say that I came to him or left him
+because I was wet and cold. I will send Padda to my people for a
+boat. Is that witchcraft, Eddi?"
+
+'"Why, no. Surely Padda will go and pull them to the beach by
+the skirts of their gowns as he pulled me in Wittering Church to
+ask me to sing. Only then I was afraid, and did not understand,"
+said Eddi.
+
+'"You are understanding now," said Meon, and at a wave of
+his arm off went Padda to the mainland, making a wake like a
+war-boat till we lost him in the rain. Meon's people could not
+bring a boat across for some hours; even so it was ticklish work
+among the rocks in that tideway. But they hoisted me aboard, too
+stiff to move, and Padda swam behind us, barking and turning
+somersaults all the way to Manhood End!'
+
+'Good old Padda!' murmured Dan.
+
+'When we were quite rested and re-clothed, and his people had
+been summoned - not an hour before - Meon offered himself to
+be baptized.'
+
+'Was Padda baptized too?' Una asked.
+
+'No, that was only Meon's joke. But he sat blinking on his
+ox-hide in the middle of the hall. When Eddi (who thought I
+wasn't looking) made a little cross in holy water on his wet
+muzzle, he kissed Eddi's hand. A week before Eddi wouldn't
+have touched him. That was a miracle, if you like! But seriously, I
+was more glad than I can tell you to get Meon. A rare and splendid
+soul that never looked back - never looked back!' The Arch-
+bishop half closed his eyes.
+
+'But, sir,' said Puck, most respectfully, 'haven't you left out
+what Meon said afterwards?' Before the Bishop could speak he
+turned to the children and went on: 'Meon called all his fishers and
+ploughmen and herdsmen into the hall and he said: "Listen, men!
+Two days ago I asked our Bishop whether it was fair for a man to
+desert his fathers' Gods in a time of danger. Our Bishop said it
+was not fair. You needn't shout like that, because you are all
+Christians now. My red war-boat's crew will remember how
+near we all were to death when Padda fetched them over to the
+Bishop's islet. You can tell your mates that even in that place, at
+that time, hanging on the wet, weedy edge of death, our Bishop, a
+Christian, counselled me, a heathen, to stand by my fathers'
+Gods. I tell you now that a faith which takes care that every man
+shall keep faith, even though he may save his soul by breaking
+faith, is the faith for a man to believe in. So I believe in the
+Christian God, and in Wilfrid His Bishop, and in the Church that
+Wilfrid rules. You have been baptized once by the King's orders. I
+shall not have you baptized again; but if I find any more old
+women being sent to Wotan, or any girls dancing on the sly
+before Balder, or any men talking about Thun or Lok or the rest, I
+will teach you with my own hands how to keep faith with the
+Christian God. Go out quietly; you'll find a couple of beefs on the
+beach." Then of course they shouted "Hurrah!" which meant
+"Thor help us!" and - I think you laughed, sir?'
+
+'I think you remember it all too well,' said the Archbishop,
+smiling. 'It was a joyful day for me. I had learned a great deal on
+that rock where Padda found us. Yes - yess! One should deal
+kindly with all the creatures of God, and gently with their
+masters. But one learns late.'
+
+He rose, and his gold-embroidered sleeves rustled thickly.
+
+The organ cracked and took deep breaths.
+
+'Wait a minute,' Dan whispered. 'She's going to do the
+trumpety one. It takes all the wind you can pump. It's in Latin, sir.'
+
+'There is no other tongue,' the Archbishop answered.
+
+'It's not a real hymn,' Una explained. 'She does it as a treat after
+her exercises. She isn't a real organist, you know. She just comes
+down here sometimes, from the Albert Hall.'
+
+'Oh, what a miracle of a voice!' said the Archbishop.
+
+It rang out suddenly from a dark arch of lonely noises - every
+word spoken to the very end:
+
+ 'Dies Irae, dies illa,
+ Solvet saeclum in favilla,
+ Teste David cum Sibylla.'
+The Archbishop caught his breath and moved forward.
+The music carried on by itself a while.
+
+'Now it's calling all the light out of the windows,' Una whispered
+to Dan.
+
+'I think it's more like a horse neighing in battle,' he whispered
+back. The voice continued:
+
+ 'Tuba mirum spargens sonum
+ Per sepulchre regionum.'
+
+Deeper and deeper the organ dived down, but far below its
+deepest note they heard Puck's voice joining in the last line:
+
+ 'Coget omnes ante thronum.'
+
+As they looked in wonder, for it sounded like the dull jar of one
+of the very pillars shifting, the little fellow turned and went out
+through the south door.
+
+'Now's the sorrowful part, but it's very beautiful.' Una found
+herself speaking to the empty chair in front of her.
+
+'What are you doing that for?' Dan said behind her. 'You spoke
+so politely too.'
+
+'I don't know ... I thought -' said Una. 'Funny!'
+
+''Tisn't. It's the part you like best,' Dan grunted.
+
+The music had turned soft - full of little sounds that chased each
+other on wings across the broad gentle flood of the main tune. But
+the voice was ten times lovelier than the music.
+
+ 'Recordare Jesu pie,
+ Quod sum causa Tuae viae,
+ Ne me perdas illi die!'
+
+There was no more. They moved out into the centre aisle.
+
+'That you?' the Lady called as she shut the lid. 'I thought I
+heard you, and I played it on purpose.'
+
+'Thank you awfully,' said Dan. 'We hoped you would, so we
+waited. Come on, Una, it's pretty nearly dinner-time.'
+
+
+
+Song of the Red War-Boat
+
+
+Shove off from the wharf-edge! Steady!
+Watch for a smooth! Give way!
+If she feels the lop already
+She'll stand on her head in the bay.
+It's ebb - it's dusk - it's blowing,
+The shoals are a mile of white,
+But (snatch her along!) we're going
+To find our master tonight.
+
+ For we hold that in all disaster
+ Of shipwreck, storm, or sword,
+ A man must stand by his master
+ When once he had pledged his word!
+
+Raging seas have we rowed in,
+But we seldom saw them thus;
+Our master is angry with Odin -
+Odin is angry with us!
+Heavy odds have we taken,
+But never before such odds.
+The Gods know they are forsaken,
+We must risk the wrath of the Gods!
+
+Over the crest she flies from,
+Into its hollow she drops,
+Crouches and clears her eyes from
+The wind-torn breaker-tops,
+Ere out on the shrieking shoulder
+Of a hill-high surge she drives.
+Meet her! Meet her and hold her!
+Pull for your scoundrel lives!
+
+The thunder bellow and clamour
+The harm that they mean to do;
+There goes Thor's Own Hammer
+Cracking the dark in two!
+
+Close! But the blow has missed her,
+Here comes the wind of the blow!
+Row or the squall'll twist her
+Broadside on to it! - Row!
+
+Hearken, Thor of the Thunder!
+We are not here for a jest -
+For wager, warfare, or plunder,
+Or to put your power to test.
+This work is none of our wishing -
+We would stay at home if we might -
+But our master is wrecked out fishing,
+We go to find him tonight.
+
+ For we hold that in all disaster -
+ As the Gods Themselves have said -
+ A man must stand by his master
+ Till one of the two is dead.
+
+That is our way of thinking,
+Now you can do as you will,
+While we try to save her from sinking,
+And hold her head to it still.
+Bale her and keep her moving,
+Or she'll break her back in the trough ...
+Who said the weather's improving,
+And the swells are taking off?
+
+Sodden, and chafed and aching,
+Gone in the loins and knees -
+No matter - the day is breaking,
+And there's far less weight to the seas!
+Up mast, and finish baling -
+In oars, and out with the mead -
+The rest will be two-reef sailing ...
+That was a night indeed!
+ But we hold that in all disaster
+ (And faith, we have found it true!)
+ If only you stand by your master,
+ The Gods will stand by you!
+
+
+
+
+
+A DOCTOR OF MEDICINE
+
+
+
+An Astrologer's Song
+
+
+To the Heavens above us
+Oh, look and behold
+The planets that love us
+All harnessed in gold!
+What chariots, what horses,
+Against us shall bide
+While the Stars in their courses
+Do fight on our side?
+
+All thought, all desires,
+That are under the sun,
+Are one with their fires,
+As we also are one;
+All matter, all spirit,
+All fashion, all frame,
+Receive and inherit
+Their strength from the same.
+
+(Oh, man that deniest
+All power save thine own,
+Their power in the highest
+Is mightily shown.
+Not less in the lowest
+That power is made clear.
+Oh, man, if thou knowest,
+What treasure is here!)
+
+Earth quakes in her throes
+And we wonder for why!
+But the blind planet knows
+When her ruler is nigh;
+And, attuned since Creation,
+To perfect accord,
+She thrills in her station
+And yearns to her Lord.
+
+The waters have risen,
+The springs are unbound -
+The floods break their prison,
+And ravin around.
+No rampart withstands 'em,
+Their fury will last,
+Till the Sign that commands 'em
+Sinks low or swings past.
+
+Through abysses unproven,
+And gulfs beyond thought,
+Our portion is woven,
+Our burden is brought.
+Yet They that prepare it,
+Whose Nature we share,
+Make us who must bear it
+Well able to bear.
+
+Though terrors o'ertake us
+We'll not be afraid,
+No Power can unmake us
+Save that which has made.
+Nor yet beyond reason
+Nor hope shall we fall -
+All things have their season,
+And Mercy crowns all.
+
+Then, doubt not, ye fearful -
+The Eternal is King -
+Up, heart, and be cheerful,
+And lustily sing:
+What chariots, what horses,
+Against us shall bide
+While the Stars in their courses
+Do fight on our side?
+
+
+
+A Doctor of Medicine
+
+They were playing hide-and-seek with bicycle lamps after tea.
+Dan had hung his lamp on the apple tree at the end of the hellebore
+bed in the walled garden, and was crouched by the gooseberry
+bushes ready to dash off when Una should spy him. He saw her
+lamp come into the garden and disappear as she hid it under her
+cloak. While he listened for her footsteps, somebody (they both
+thought it was Phillips the gardener) coughed in the corner of the
+herb-beds.
+
+'All right,' Una shouted across the asparagus; 'we aren't
+hurting your old beds, Phippsey!'
+
+She flashed her lantern towards the spot, and in its circle of light
+they saw a Guy Fawkes-looking man in a black cloak and a
+steeple-crowned hat, walking down the path beside Puck. They
+ran to meet him, and the man said something to them about rooms
+in their head. After a time they understood he was warning them
+not to catch colds.
+
+'You've a bit of a cold yourself, haven't you?' said Una, for he
+ended all his sentences with a consequential cough. Puck laughed.
+
+'Child,' the man answered, 'if it hath pleased Heaven to afflict
+me with an infirmity -'
+
+'Nay, nay,' Puck struck In, 'the maid spoke out of kindness. I
+know that half your cough is but a catch to trick the vulgar; and
+that's a pity. There's honesty enough in you, Nick, without
+rasping and hawking.'
+
+'Good people' - the man shrugged his lean shoulders - 'the
+vulgar crowd love not truth unadorned. Wherefore we philosophers
+must needs dress her to catch their eye or - ahem! - their ear.'
+
+'And what d'you think of that?' said Puck solemnly to Dan.
+
+'I don't know,' he answered. 'It sounds like lessons.'
+
+'Ah - well! There have been worse men than Nick Culpeper to
+take lessons from. Now, where can we sit that's not indoors?'
+
+'In the hay-mow, next to old Middenboro,' Dan suggested.
+'He doesn't mind.'
+
+'Eh?' Mr Culpeper was stooping over the pale hellebore
+blooms by the light of Una's lamp. 'Does Master Middenboro
+need my poor services, then?'
+
+'Save him, no!' said Puck. 'He is but a horse - next door to an
+ass, as you'll see presently. Come!'
+
+Their shadows jumped and slid on the fruit-tree walls. They
+filed out of the garden by the snoring pig-pound and the crooning
+hen-house, to the shed where Middenboro the old lawn-mower
+pony lives. His friendly eyes showed green in the light as they set
+their lamps down on the chickens' drinking-trough outside, and
+pushed past to the hay-mow. Mr Culpeper stooped at the door.
+
+'Mind where you lie,' said Dan. 'This hay's full of hedge-
+brishings.
+
+'In! in!' said Puck. 'You've lain in fouler places than this, Nick.
+Ah! Let us keep touch with the stars!' He kicked open the top of
+the half-door, and pointed to the clear sky. 'There be the planets
+you conjure with! What does your wisdom make of that wandering
+and variable star behind those apple boughs?'
+
+The children smiled. A bicycle that they knew well was being
+walked down the steep lane.
+'Where?' Mr Culpeper leaned forward quickly. 'That? Some
+countryman's lantern.'
+
+'Wrong, Nick,' said Puck. ''Tis a singular bright star in Virgo,
+declining towards the house of Aquarius the water-carrier, who
+hath lately been afflicted by Gemini. Aren't I right, Una?'
+Mr Culpeper snorted contemptuously.
+
+'No. It's the village nurse going down to the Mill about some
+fresh twins that came there last week. Nurse,' Una called, as
+the light stopped on the flat, 'when can I see the Morris twins? And
+how are they?'
+
+'Next Sunday, perhaps. Doing beautifully,' the Nurse called
+back, and with a ping-ping-ping of the bell brushed round the corner.
+
+'Her uncle's a vetinary surgeon near Banbury,' Una explained,
+and if you ring her bell at night, it rings right beside her bed -not
+downstairs at all. Then she 'umps up - she always keeps a pair of
+dry boots in the fender, you know - and goes anywhere she's
+wanted. We help her bicycle through gaps sometimes. Most of
+her babies do beautifully. She told us so herself.'
+
+'I doubt not, then, that she reads in my books,' said Mr
+Culpeper quietly. 'Twins at the Mill!' he muttered half aloud.
+"And again He sayeth, Return, ye children of men." '
+
+'Are you a doctor or a rector?' Una asked, and Puck with a
+shout turned head over heels in the hay. But Mr Culpeper was
+quite serious. He told them that he was a physician-astrologer -a
+doctor who knew all about the stars as well as all about herbs for
+medicine. He said that the sun, the moon, and five Planets, called
+Jupiter, Mars, Mercury, Saturn, and Venus, governed everybody
+and everything in the world. They all lived in Houses - he
+mapped out some of them against the dark with a busy forefinger -
+and they moved from House to House like pieces at draughts;
+and they went loving and hating each other all over the skies. If
+you knew their likes and dislikes, he said, you could make them
+cure your patient and hurt your enemy, and find out the secret
+causes of things. He talked of these five Planets as though they
+belonged to him, or as though he were playing long games
+against them. The children burrowed in the hay up to their chins,
+and looked out over the half-door at the solemn, star-powdered
+sky till they seemed to be falling upside down into it, while Mr
+Culpeper talked about 'trines' and 'oppositions' and 'conjunctions'
+and 'sympathies' and 'antipathies' in a tone that just
+matched things.
+
+A rat ran between Middenboro's feet, and the old pony stamped.
+
+'Mid hates rats,' said Dan, and passed him over a lock of hay. 'I
+wonder why.'
+
+'Divine Astrology tells us,' said Mr Culpeper. 'The horse,
+being a martial beast that beareth man to battle, belongs naturally
+to the red planet Mars - the Lord of War. I would show you him,
+but he's too near his setting. Rats and mice, doing their businesses
+by night, come under the dominion of our Lady the Moon. Now
+between Mars and Luna, the one red, t'other white, the one hot
+t'other cold and so forth, stands, as I have told you, a natural
+antipathy, or, as you say, hatred. Which antipathy their creatures
+do inherit. Whence, good people, you may both see and hear your
+cattle stamp in their stalls for the self-same causes as decree the
+passages of the stars across the unalterable face of Heaven! Ahem!'
+Puck lay along chewing a leaf. They felt him shake with
+laughter, and Mr Culpeper sat up stiffly.
+
+'I myself" said he, 'have saved men's lives, and not a few
+neither, by observing at the proper time - there is a time, mark
+you, for all things under the sun - by observing, I say, so small a
+beast as a rat in conjunction with so great a matter as this dread
+arch above us.' He swept his hand across the sky. 'Yet there are
+those,' he went on sourly, 'who have years without knowledge.'
+
+'Right,' said Puck. 'No fool like an old fool.'
+
+Mr Culpeper wrapped his cloak round him and sat still while
+the children stared at the Great Bear on the hilltop.
+
+'Give him time,' Puck whispered behind his hand. 'He turns
+like a timber-tug - all of a piece.'
+
+'Ahem!' Mr Culpeper said suddenly. 'I'll prove it to you. When
+I was physician to Saye's Horse, and fought the King - or rather
+the man Charles Stuart - in Oxfordshire (I had my learning at
+Cambridge), the plague was very hot all around us. I saw it at
+close hands. He who says I am ignorant of the plague, for
+example, is altogether beside the bridge.'
+
+'We grant it,' said Puck solemnly. 'But why talk of the plague
+this rare night?'
+
+'To prove my argument. This Oxfordshire plague, good
+people, being generated among rivers and ditches, was of a
+werish, watery nature. Therefore it was curable by drenching the
+patient in cold water, and laying him in wet cloths; or at least, so I
+cured some of them. Mark this. It bears on what shall come after.'
+
+'Mark also, Nick,' said Puck, that we are not your College of
+Physicians, but only a lad and a lass and a poor lubberkin. Therefore
+be plain, old Hyssop on the Wall!'
+
+'To be plain and in order with you, I was shot in the chest while
+gathering of betony from a brookside near Thame, and was took
+by the King's men before their Colonel, one Blagg or Bragge,
+whom I warned honestly that I had spent the week past among
+our plague-stricken. He flung me off into a cowshed, much like
+this here, to die, as I supposed; but one of their priests crept in by
+night and dressed my wound. He was a Sussex man like myself.'
+
+'Who was that?' said Puck suddenly. 'Zack Tutshom?'
+
+'No, Jack Marget,' said Mr Culpeper.
+
+'Jack Marget of New College? The little merry man that stammered
+so? Why a plague was stuttering Jack at Oxford then?' said Puck.
+
+'He had come out of Sussex in hope of being made a Bishop
+when the King should have conquered the rebels, as he styled us
+Parliament men. His College had lent the King some monies too,
+which they never got again, no more than simple Jack got his
+bishopric. When we met he had had a bitter bellyful of King's
+promises, and wished to return to his wife and babes. This came
+about beyond expectation, for, so soon as I could stand of my
+wound, the man Blagge made excuse that I had been among the
+plague, and Jack had been tending me, to thrust us both out from
+their camp. The King had done with Jack now that Jack's College
+had lent the money, and Blagge's physician could not abide me
+because I would not sit silent and see him butcher the sick. (He
+was a College of Physicians man!) So Blagge, I say, thrust us both
+out, with many vile words, for a pair of pestilent, prating,
+pragmatical rascals.'
+
+'Ha! Called you pragmatical, Nick?' Puck started up. 'High
+time Oliver came to purge the land! How did you and honest Jack
+fare next?'
+
+'We were in some sort constrained to each other's company. I
+was for going to my house in Spitalfields, he would go to his
+parish in Sussex; but the plague was broke out and spreading
+through Wiltshire, Berkshire, and Hampshire, and he was so mad
+distracted to think that it might even then be among his folk at
+home that I bore him company. He had comforted me in my
+distress. I could not have done less; and I remembered that I had a
+cousin at Great Wigsell, near by Jack's parish. Thus we footed it
+from Oxford, cassock and buff coat together, resolute to leave
+wars on the left side henceforth; and either through our mean
+appearances, or the plague making men less cruel, we were not
+hindered. To be sure, they put us in the stocks one half-day for
+rogues and vagabonds at a village under St Leonard's forest,
+where, as I have heard, nightingales never sing; but the constable
+very honestly gave me back my Astrological Almanac, which I
+carry with me.' Mr Culpeper tapped his thin chest. 'I dressed a
+whitlow on his thumb. So we went forward.
+
+'Not to trouble you with impertinences, we fetched over
+against Jack Marget's parish in a storm of rain about the day's end.
+Here our roads divided, for I would have gone on to my cousin at
+Great Wigsell, but while Jack was pointing me out his steeple, we
+saw a man lying drunk, as he conceived, athwart the road. He said
+it would be one Hebden, a parishioner, and till then a man of good
+life; and he accused himself bitterly for an unfaithful shepherd,
+that had left his flock to follow princes. But I saw it was the
+plague, and not the beginnings of it neither. They had set out the
+plague-stone, and the man's head lay on it.'
+
+'What's a plague-stone?' Dan whispered.
+
+'When the plague is so hot in a village that the neighbours shut
+the roads against 'em, people set a hollowed stone, pot, or pan,
+where such as would purchase victual from outside may lay
+money and the paper of their wants, and depart. Those that
+would sell come later - what will a man not do for gain? - snatch
+the money forth, and leave in exchange such goods as their
+conscience reckons fair value. I saw a silver groat in the water, and
+the man's list of what he would buy was rain-pulped in his wet hand.
+
+'"My wife! Oh, my wife and babes!" says Jack of a sudden,
+and makes uphill - I with him.
+
+'A woman peers out from behind a barn, crying out that the
+village is stricken with the plague, and that for our lives' sake we
+must avoid it.
+
+'"Sweetheart!" says Jack. "Must I avoid thee?" and she leaps at
+him and says the babes are safe. She was his wife.
+
+'When he had thanked God, even to tears, he tells me this was
+not the welcome he had intended, and presses me to flee the place
+while I was clean.
+
+'"Nay! The Lord do so to me and more also if I desert thee now,"
+I said. "These affairs are, under God's leave, in some
+fashion my strength."
+
+'"Oh, sir," she says, "are you a physician? We have none."
+
+'"Then, good people," said I, "I must e'en justify myself to
+you by my works."
+
+'"Look - look ye," stammers Jack, "I took you all this time for
+a crazy Roundhead preacher." He laughs, and she, and then I - all
+three together in the rain are overtook by an unreasonable gust or
+clap of laughter, which none the less eased us. We call it in
+medicine the Hysterical Passion. So I went home with 'em.'
+
+'Why did you not go on to your cousin at Great Wigsell, Nick?'
+Puck suggested. ''tis barely seven mile up the road.'
+
+'But the plague was here,' Mr Culpeper answered, and pointed
+up the hill. 'What else could I have done?'
+
+'What were the parson's children called?' said Una.
+
+'Elizabeth, Alison, Stephen, and Charles - a babe. I scarce saw
+them at first, for I separated to live with their father in a cart-
+lodge. The mother we put - forced - into the house with her
+babes. She had done enough.
+
+'And now, good people, give me leave to be particular in this
+case. The plague was worst on the north side of the street, for
+lack, as I showed 'em, of sunshine; which, proceeding from the
+PRIME MOBILE, or source of life (I speak astrologically), is cleansing
+and purifying in the highest degree. The plague was hot too
+by the corn-chandler's, where they sell forage to the carters,
+extreme hot in both Mills, along the river, and scatteringly in
+other places, except, mark you, at the smithy. Mark here, that all
+forges and smith shops belong to Mars, even as corn and meat and
+wine shops acknowledge Venus for their mistress. There was no
+plague in the smithy at Munday's Lane -'
+
+'Munday's Lane? You mean our village? I thought so when you
+talked about the two Mills,' cried Dan. 'Where did we put the
+plague-stone? I'd like to have seen it.'
+
+'Then look at it now,' said Puck, and pointed to the chickens'
+drinking-trough where they had set their bicycle lamps. It was a
+rough, oblong stone pan, rather like a small kitchen sink, which
+Phillips, who never wastes anything, had found in a ditch and had
+used for his precious hens.
+
+'That?' said Dan and Una, and stared, and stared, and stared.
+Mr Culpeper made impatient noises in his throat and went on.
+
+'I am at these pains to be particular, good people, because I
+would have you follow, so far as you may, the operations of my
+mind. That plague which I told you I had handled outside Wallingford
+in Oxfordshire was of a watery nature, conformable to
+the brookish riverine country it bred in, and curable, as I have
+said, by drenching in water. This plague of ours here, for all that it
+flourished along watercourses - every soul at both Mills died of it, -
+could not be so handled. Which brought me to a stand. Ahem!'
+
+'And your sick people in the meantime?'Puck demanded.
+'We persuaded them on the north side of the street to lie out in
+Hitheram's field. Where the plague had taken one, or at most
+two, in a house, folk would not shift for fear of thieves in their
+absence. They cast away their lives to die among their goods.'
+
+'Human nature,' said Puck. 'I've seen it time and again. How
+did your sick do in the fields?'
+
+'They died not near so thick as those that kept within doors,
+and even then they died more out of distraction and melancholy
+than plague. But I confess, good people, I could not in any sort
+master the sickness, or come at a glimmer of its nature or
+governance. To be brief, I was flat bewildered at the brute
+malignity of the disease, and so - did what I should have done
+before - dismissed all conjectures and apprehensions that had
+grown up within me, chose a good hour by my Almanac, clapped my
+vinegar-cloth to my face, and entered some empty houses,
+resigned to wait upon the stars for guidance.'
+
+'At night? Were you not horribly frightened?' said Puck.
+
+'I dared to hope that the God who hath made man so nobly
+curious to search out His mysteries might not destroy a devout
+seeker. In due time - there's a time, as I have said, for everything
+under the sun - I spied a whitish rat, very puffed and scabby,
+which sat beneath the dormer of an attic through which shined
+our Lady the Moon. Whilst I looked on him - and her - she was
+moving towards old cold Saturn, her ancient ally - the rat creeped
+languishingly into her light, and there, before my eyes, died.
+Presently his mate or companion came out, laid him down beside
+there, and in like fashion died too. Later - an hour or less to
+midnight - a third rat did e'en the same; always choosing the
+moonlight to die in. This threw me into an amaze, since, as we
+know, the moonlight is favourable, not hurtful, to the creatures
+of the Moon; and Saturn, being friends with her, as you would
+say, was hourly strengthening her evil influence. Yet these three
+rats had been stricken dead in very moonlight. I leaned out of the
+window to see which of Heaven's host might be on our side, and
+there beheld I good trusty Mars, very red and heated, bustling
+about his setting. I straddled the roof to see better.
+
+'Jack Marget came up street going to comfort our sick in
+Hitheram's field. A tile slipped under my foot.
+
+Says he, heavily enough, "Watchman, what of the night?"
+
+'"Heart up, Jack," says I. "Methinks there's one fighting for us
+that, like a fool, I've forgot all this summer." My meaning was
+naturally the planet Mars.
+
+'"Pray to Him then," says he. "I forgot Him too this summer."
+
+'He meant God, whom he always bitterly accused himself of
+having forgotten up in Oxfordshire, among the King's men. I
+called down that he had made amends enough for his sin by his
+work among the sick, but he said he would not believe so till the
+plague was lifted from 'em. He was at his strength's end - more
+from melancholy than any just cause. I have seen this before
+among priests and overcheerful men. I drenched him then and
+there with a half-cup of waters, which I do not say cure the
+plague, but are excellent against heaviness of the spirits.'
+
+'What were they?' said Dan.
+
+'White brandy rectified, camphor, cardamoms, ginger, two
+sorts of pepper, and aniseed.'
+'Whew!' said Puck. 'Waters you call 'em!'
+
+'Jack coughed on it valiantly, and went downhill with me. I
+was for the Lower Mill in the valley, to note the aspect of the
+Heavens. My mind had already shadowed forth the reason, if not
+the remedy, for our troubles, but I would not impart it to the
+vulgar till I was satisfied. That practice may be perfect, judgment
+ought to be sound, and to make judgment sound is required an
+exquisite knowledge. Ahem! I left Jack and his lantern among the
+sick in Hitheram's field. He still maintained the prayers of the
+so-called Church, which were rightly forbidden by Cromwell.'
+
+'You should have told your cousin at Wigsell,' said Puck, 'and
+Jack would have been fined for it, and you'd have had half the
+money. How did you come so to fail in your duty, Nick?'
+
+Mr Culpeper laughed - his only laugh that evening - and the
+children jumped at the loud neigh of it.
+
+'We were not fearful of men's judgment in those days,' he
+answered. 'Now mark me closely, good people, for what follows
+will be to you, though not to me, remarkable. When I reached the
+empty Mill, old Saturn, low down in the House of the Fishes,
+threatened the Sun's rising-place. Our Lady the Moon was
+moving towards the help of him (understand, I speak
+astrologically). I looked abroad upon the high Heavens, and I
+prayed the Maker of 'em for guidance. Now Mars sparkingly withdrew
+himself below the sky. On the instant of his departure, which I
+noted, a bright star or vapour leaped forth above his head (as
+though he had heaved up his sword), and broke all about in fire.
+The cocks crowed midnight through the valley, and I sat me
+down by the mill-wheel, chewing spearmint (though that's an
+herb of Venus), and calling myself all the asses' heads in the
+world! 'Twas plain enough now!'
+
+'What was plain?' said Una.
+
+'The true cause and cure of the plague. Mars, good fellow, had
+fought for us to the uttermost. Faint though he had been in the
+Heavens, and this had made me overlook him in my computations,
+he more than any of the other planets had kept the Heavens
+- which is to say, had been visible some part of each night
+wellnigh throughout the year. Therefore his fierce and cleansing
+influence, warring against the Moon, had stretched out to kill
+those three rats under my nose, and under the nose of their natural
+mistress, the Moon. I had known Mars lean half across Heaven to
+deal our Lady the Moon some shrewd blow from under his
+shield, but I had never before seen his strength displayed so
+effectual.'
+
+'I don't understand a bit. Do you mean Mars killed the rats
+because he hated the Moon?' said Una.
+
+'That is as plain as the pikestaff with which Blagge's men
+pushed me forth,'Mr Culpeper answered. 'I'll prove it. Why had
+the plague not broken out at the blacksmith's shop in Munday's
+Lane? Because, as I've shown you, forges and smithies belong
+naturally to Mars, and, for his honour's sake, Mars 'ud keep 'em
+clean from the creatures of the Moon. But was it like, think you,
+that he'd come down and rat-catch in general for lazy, ungrateful
+mankind? That were working a willing horse to death. So, then,
+you can see that the meaning of the blazing star above him when
+he set was simply this: "Destroy and burn the creatures Of the
+moon, for they are the root of your trouble. And thus, having
+shown you a taste of my power, good people, adieu."'
+
+'Did Mars really say all that?' Una whispered.
+
+'Yes, and twice so much as that to any one who had ears to hear.
+Briefly, he enlightened me that the plague was spread by the
+creatures of the Moon. The Moon, our Lady of ill-aspect, was the
+offender. My own poor wits showed me that I, Nick Culpeper,
+had the people in my charge, God's good providence aiding me,
+and no time to lose neither.
+
+'I posted up the hill, and broke into Hitheram's field amongst
+'em all at prayers.
+
+'"Eureka, good people!" I cried, and cast down a dead mill-rat
+which I'd found. "Here's your true enemy, revealed at last
+by the stars."
+
+'"Nay, but I'm praying," says Jack. His face was as white as
+washed silver.
+
+'"There's a time for everything under the sun," says I. "If you
+would stay the plague, take and kill your rats."
+
+'"Oh, mad, stark mad!" says he, and wrings his hands.
+
+'A fellow lay in the ditch beside him, who bellows that he'd as
+soon die mad hunting rats as be preached to death on a cold
+fallow. They laughed round him at this, but Jack Marget falls on
+his knees, and very presumptuously petitions that he may be
+appointed to die to save the rest of his people. This was enough to
+thrust 'em back into their melancholy.
+'"You are an unfaithful shepherd, jack," I says. "Take a bat"
+(which we call a stick in Sussex) "and kill a rat if you die before
+sunrise. 'Twill save your people."
+
+'"Aye, aye. Take a bat and kill a rat," he says ten times over,
+like a child, which moved 'em to ungovernable motions of that
+hysterical passion before mentioned, so that they laughed all, and
+at least warmed their chill bloods at that very hour - one o'clock
+or a little after - when the fires of life burn lowest. Truly there is a
+time for everything; and the physician must work with it - ahem!
+- or miss his cure. To be brief with you, I persuaded 'em, sick or
+sound, to have at the whole generation of rats throughout the
+village. And there's a reason for all things too, though the wise
+physician need not blab 'em all. Imprimis, or firstly, the mere sport
+of it, which lasted ten days, drew 'em most markedly out of their
+melancholy. I'd defy sorrowful job himself to lament or scratch
+while he's routing rats from a rick. Secundo, or secondly, the
+vehement act and operation of this chase or war opened their skins
+to generous transpiration - more vulgarly, sweated 'em handsomely;
+and this further drew off their black bile - the mother of
+sickness. Thirdly, when we came to burn the bodies of the rats, I
+sprinkled sulphur on the faggots, whereby the onlookers were as
+handsomely suffumigated. This I could not have compassed if I
+had made it a mere physician's business; they'd have thought it
+some conjuration. Yet more, we cleansed, limed, and burned out
+a hundred foul poke-holes, sinks, slews, and corners of unvisited
+filth in and about the houses in the village, and by good fortune
+(mark here that Mars was in opposition to Venus) burned the
+corn-handler's shop to the ground. Mars loves not Venus. Will
+Noakes the saddler dropped his lantern on a truss of straw while
+he was rat-hunting there.'
+
+'Had ye given Will any of that gentle cordial of yours, Nick, by
+any chance?' said Puck.
+
+'A glass - or two glasses - not more. But as I would say, in fine,
+when we had killed the rats, I took ash, slag, and charcoal from
+the smithy, and burnt earth from the brickyard (I reason that a
+brickyard belongs to Mars), and rammed it with iron crowbars
+into the rat-runs and buries, and beneath all the house floors. The
+Creatures of the Moon hate all that Mars hath used for his own
+clean ends. For example - rats bite not iron.'
+
+'And how did poor stuttering Jack endure it?' said Puck.
+
+'He sweated out his melancholy through his skin, and catched
+a loose cough, which I cured with electuaries, according to art. It is
+noteworthy, were I speaking among my equals, that the venom
+of the plague translated, or turned itself into, and evaporated, or
+went away as, a very heavy hoarseness and thickness of the head,
+throat, and chest. (Observe from my books which planets govern
+these portions of man's body, and your darkness, good people,
+shall be illuminated - ahem!) None the less, the plague, qua
+plague, ceased and took off (for we only lost three more, and two
+of 'em had it already on 'em) from the morning of the day that
+Mars enlightened me by the Lower Mill.' He coughed - almost
+trumpeted - triumphantly.
+
+'It is proved,' he jerked out. 'I say I have proved my contention,
+which is, that by Divine Astrology and humble search into the
+veritable causes of things - at the proper time - the sons of
+wisdom may combat even the plague.'
+
+H'm!' Puck replied. 'For my own part I hold that a simple soul -'
+
+'Mine? Simple, forsooth?' said Mr Culpeper.
+
+'A very simple soul, a high courage tempered with sound and
+stubborn conceit, is stronger than all the stars in their courses.
+So I confess truly that you saved the village, Nick.'
+
+'I stubborn? I stiff-necked? I ascribed all my poor success,
+under God's good providence, to Divine Astrology. Not to me the
+glory! You talk as that dear weeping ass Jack Marget preached
+before I went back to my work in Red Lion House, Spitalfields.'
+
+'Oh! Stammering Jack preached, did he? They say he loses his
+stammer in the pulpit.'
+
+'And his wits with it. He delivered a most idolatrous discourse
+when the plague was stayed. He took for his text: "The wise man
+that delivered the city." I could have given him a better, such as:
+"There is a time for-" '
+
+'But what made you go to church to hear him?' Puck
+interrupted. 'Wail Attersole was your lawfully appointed preacher,
+and a dull dog he was!'
+
+Mr Culpeper wriggled uneasily.
+
+'The vulgar,' said he, 'the old crones and - ahem! - the children,
+Alison and the others, they dragged me to the House of Rimmon
+by the hand. I was in two minds to inform on Jack for maintaining
+the mummeries of the falsely-called Church, which, I'll prove to
+you, are founded merely on ancient fables -'
+
+'Stick to your herbs and planets,' said Puck, laughing. 'You
+should have told the magistrates, Nick, and had Jack fined.
+Again, why did you neglect your plain duty?'
+
+'Because - because I was kneeling, and praying, and weeping
+with the rest of 'em at the Altar-rails. In medicine this is called the
+Hysterical Passion. It may be - it may be.'
+
+'That's as may be,' said Puck. They heard him turn the hay.
+'Why, your hay is half hedge-brishings,' he said. 'You don't
+expect a horse to thrive on oak and ash and thorn leaves, do you?'
+
+Ping-ping-ping went the bicycle bell round the corner. Nurse
+was coming back from the mill.
+
+'Is it all right?' Una called.
+
+'All quite right,' Nurse called back. 'They're to be christened
+next Sunday.'
+
+'What? What?' They both leaned forward across the half-door.
+it could not have been properly fastened, for it opened, and tilted
+them out with hay and leaves sticking all over them.
+
+'Come on! We must get those two twins' names,' said Una, and
+they charged uphill shouting over the hedge, till Nurse slowed up
+and told them.
+When they returned, old Middenboro had got out of his stall,
+and they spent a lively ten minutes chasing him in again
+by starlight.
+
+
+
+'Our Fathers of Old'
+
+
+Excellent herbs had our fathers of old -
+Excellent herbs to ease their pain -
+Alexanders and Marigold,
+Eyebright, Orris, and Elecampane,
+Basil, Rocket, Valerian, Rue,
+(Almost singing themselves they run)
+Vervain, Dittany, Call-me-to-you -
+Cowslip, Melilot, Rose of the Sun.
+Anything green that grew out of the mould
+Was an excellent herb to our fathers of old.
+
+Wonderful tales had our fathers of old -
+Wonderful tales of the herbs and the stars -
+The Sun was Lord of the Marigold,
+Basil and Rocket belonged to Mars.
+Pat as a sum in division it goes -
+(Every plant had a star bespoke) -
+Who but Venus should govern the Rose?
+Who but Jupiter own the Oak?
+Simply and gravely the facts are told
+In the wonderful books of our fathers of old.
+
+Wonderful little, when all is said,
+Wonderful little our fathers knew.
+Half their remedies cured you dead -
+Most of their teaching was quite untrue -
+'Look at the stars when a patient is ill,
+(Dirt has nothing to do with disease,)
+Bleed and blister as much as you will,
+Blister and bleed him as oft as you please.'
+Whence enormous and manifold
+Errors were made by our fathers of old.
+
+Yet when the sickness was sore in the land,
+And neither planet nor herb assuaged,
+They took their lives in their lancet-hand
+And, oh, what a wonderful war they waged!
+Yes, when the crosses were chalked on the door -
+Yes, when the terrible dead-cart rolled,
+Excellent courage our fathers bore -
+Excellent heart had our fathers of old.
+Not too learned, but nobly bold,
+Into the fight went our fathers of old.
+
+If it be certain, as Galen says,
+And sage Hippocrates holds as much -
+'That those afflicted by doubts and dismays
+Are mightily helped by a dead man's touch,'
+Then, be good to us, stars above!
+Then, be good to us, herbs below!
+We are afflicted by what we can prove;
+We are distracted by what we know -
+So - ah, so!
+Down from your Heaven or up from your mould,
+Send us the hearts of our fathers of old!
+
+
+
+
+SIMPLE SIMON
+
+
+
+The Thousandth Man
+
+
+One man in a thousand, Solomon says,
+ Will stick more close than a brother.
+And it's worth while seeking him half your days
+ If you find him before the other.
+Nine hundred and ninety-nine depend
+ on what the world sees in you,
+But the Thousandth Man will stand your friend
+ With the whole round world agin you.
+
+'Tis neither promise nor prayer nor show
+ Will settle the finding for 'ee.
+Nine hundred and ninety-nine of 'em go
+ By your looks or your acts or your glory.
+But if he finds you and you find him,
+ The rest of the world don't matter;
+For the Thousandth Man will sink or swim
+ With you in any water.
+
+You can use his purse with no more shame
+ Than he uses yours for his spendings;
+And laugh and mention it just the same
+ As though there had been no lendings.
+Nine hundred and ninety-nine of 'em call
+ For silver and gold in their dealings;
+But the Thousandth Man he's worth 'em all,
+ Because you can show him your feelings!
+
+His wrong's your wrong, and his right's your right,
+ In season or out of season.
+Stand up and back it in all men's sight -
+ With that for your only reason!
+Nine hundred and ninety-nine can't bide
+ The shame or mocking or laughter,
+But the Thousandth Man will stand by your side
+ To the gallows-foot - and after!
+
+
+
+Simple Simon
+
+
+Cattiwow came down the steep lane with his five-horse timber-
+tug. He stopped by the wood-lump at the back gate to take off the
+brakes. His real name was Brabon, but the first time the children
+met him, years and years ago, he told them he was 'carting
+wood,' and it sounded so exactly like 'cattiwow' that they never
+called him anything else.
+
+'HI!' Una shouted from the top of the wood-lump, where they
+had been watching the lane. 'What are you doing? Why weren't
+we told?'
+
+'They've just sent for me,' Cattiwow answered. 'There's a
+middlin' big log stacked in the dirt at Rabbit Shaw, and' - he
+flicked his whip back along the line - 'so they've sent for us all.'
+
+Dan and Una threw themselves off the wood-lump almost
+under black Sailor's nose. Cattiwow never let them ride the big
+beam that makes the body of the timber-tug, but they hung on
+behind while their teeth thuttered.
+
+The Wood road beyond the brook climbs at once into the
+woods, and you see all the horses' backs rising, one above
+another, like moving stairs. Cattiwow strode ahead in his
+sackcloth woodman's petticoat, belted at the waist with a leather
+strap; and when he turned and grinned, his red lips showed under
+his sackcloth-coloured beard. His cap was sackcloth too, with a
+flap behind, to keep twigs and bark out of his neck. He navigated
+the tug among pools of heather-water that splashed in their faces,
+and through clumps of young birches that slashed at their legs,
+and when they hit an old toadstooled stump, they never knew
+whether it would give way in showers of rotten wood, or jar
+them back again.
+
+At the top of Rabbit Shaw half-a-dozen men and a team of
+horses stood round a forty-foot oak log in a muddy hollow. The
+ground about was poached and stoached with sliding hoofmarks,
+and a wave of dirt was driven up in front of the butt.
+
+'What did you want to bury her for this way?' said Cattiwow.
+He took his broad-axe and went up the log tapping it.
+
+'She's sticked fast,' said 'Bunny' Lewknor, who managed the
+other team.
+
+Cattiwow unfastened the five wise horses from the tug. They
+cocked their ears forward, looked, and shook themselves.
+
+'I believe Sailor knows,' Dan whispered to Una.
+
+'He do,' said a man behind them. He was dressed in flour sacks
+like the others, and he leaned on his broad-axe, but the children,
+who knew all the wood-gangs, knew he was a stranger. In his size
+and oily hairiness he might have been Bunny Lewknor's brother,
+except that his brown eyes were as soft as a spaniel's, and his
+rounded black beard, beginning close up under them, reminded
+Una of the walrus in 'The Walrus and the Carpenter.'
+
+'Don't he justabout know?' he said shyly, and shifted from one
+foot to the other.
+
+'Yes. "What Cattiwow can't get out of the woods must have
+roots growing to her."' Dan had heard old Hobden say this a
+few days before.
+
+At that minute Puck pranced up, picking his way through the
+pools of black water in the ling.
+
+'Look out!' cried Una, jumping forward. 'He'll see you, Puck!'
+
+'Me and Mus' Robin are pretty middlin' well acquainted,' the
+man answered with a smile that made them forget all about walruses.
+
+'This is Simon Cheyneys,' Puck began, and cleared his throat.
+'Shipbuilder of Rye Port; burgess of the said town, and the only -'
+
+'Oh, look! Look ye! That's a knowing one,' said the man.
+
+Cattiwow had fastened his team to the thin end of the log, and
+was moving them about with his whip till they stood at right
+angles to it, heading downhill. Then he grunted. The horses took
+the strain, beginning with Sailor next the log, like a tug-of-war
+team, and dropped almost to their knees. The log shifted a nail's
+breadth in the clinging dirt, with the noise of a giant's kiss.
+
+'You're getting her!' Simon Cheyneys slapped his knee. 'Hing
+on! Hing on, lads, or she'll master ye! Ah!'
+
+Sailor's left hind hoof had slipped on a heather-tuft. One of the
+men whipped off his sack apron and spread it down. They saw
+Sailor feel for it, and recover. Still the log hung, and the team
+grunted in despair.
+
+'Hai!' shouted Cattiwow, and brought his dreadful whip twice
+across Sailor's loins with the crack of a shot-gun. The horse
+almost screamed as he pulled that extra last ounce which he did
+not know was in him. The thin end of the log left the dirt and
+rasped on dry gravel. The butt ground round like a buffalo in his
+wallow. Quick as an axe-cut, Lewknor snapped on his five
+horses, and sliding, trampling, jingling, and snorting, they had
+the whole thing out on the heather.
+
+'Dat's the very first time I've knowed you lay into Sailor - to
+hurt him,' said Lewknor.
+
+'It is,' said Cattiwow, and passed his hand over the two wheals.
+'But I'd ha' laid my own brother open at that pinch. Now we'll
+twitch her down the hill a piece - she lies just about right - and get
+her home by the low road. My team'll do it, Bunny; you bring the
+tug along. Mind out!'
+
+He spoke to the horses, who tightened the chains. The great log
+half rolled over, and slowly drew itself out of sight downhill,
+followed by the wood-gang and the timber-tug. In half a minute
+there was nothing to see but the deserted hollow of the torn-up
+dirt, the birch undergrowth still shaking, and the water draining
+back into the hoof-prints.
+
+'Ye heard him?' Simon Cheyneys asked. 'He cherished his
+horse, but he'd ha' laid him open in that pinch.'
+
+'Not for his own advantage,' said Puck quickly. ''Twas only
+to shift the log.'
+
+'I reckon every man born of woman has his log to shift in the
+world - if so be you're hintin' at any o' Frankie's doings. He never
+hit beyond reason or without reason,' said Simon.
+
+'I never said a word against Frankie,' Puck retorted, with a
+wink at the children. 'An' if I did, do it lie in your mouth to
+contest my say-so, seeing how you -'
+
+'Why don't it lie in my mouth, seeing I was the first which
+knowed Frankie for all he was?' The burly sack-clad man puffed
+down at cool little Puck.
+
+'Yes, and the first which set out to poison him - Frankie - on
+the high seas -'
+
+Simon's angry face changed to a sheepish grin. He waggled his
+immense hands, but Puck stood off and laughed mercilessly.
+
+'But let me tell you, Mus' Robin,'he pleaded.
+
+'I've heard the tale. Tell the children here. Look, Dan! Look,
+Una!' - Puck's straight brown finger levelled like an arrow.
+'There's the only man that ever tried to poison Sir Francis Drake!'
+
+'Oh, Mus' Robin! 'Tidn't fair. You've the 'vantage of us all in
+your upbringin's by hundreds o' years. Stands to nature you
+know all the tales against every one.'
+
+He turned his soft eyes so helplessly on Una that she cried,
+'Stop ragging him, Puck! You know he didn't really.'
+
+'I do. But why are you so sure, little maid?'
+'Because - because he doesn't look like it,' said Una stoutly.
+
+'I thank you,' said Simon to Una. 'I - I was always trustable-
+like with children if you let me alone, you double handful o'
+mischief.' He pretended to heave up his axe on Puck; and then his
+shyness overtook him afresh.
+
+'Where did you know Sir Francis Drake?' said Dan, not liking
+being called a child.
+
+'At Rye Port, to be sure,' said Simon, and seeing Dan's
+bewilderment, repeated it.
+
+'Yes, but look here,'said Dan. '"Drake he was a Devon man."
+The song says so.'
+
+'"And ruled the Devon seas,"' Una went on. 'That's what I
+was thinking - if you don't mind.'
+
+Simon Cheyneys seemed to mind very much indeed, for he
+swelled in silence while Puck laughed.
+
+'Hutt!' he burst out at last, 'I've heard that talk too. If you listen
+to them West Country folk, you'll listen to a pack o' lies. I believe
+Frankie was born somewhere out west among the Shires, but his
+father had to run for it when Frankie was a baby, because the
+neighbours was wishful to kill him, d'ye see? He run to Chatham,
+old Parson Drake did, an' Frankie was brought up in a old hulks of
+a ship moored in the Medway river, same as it might ha' been the
+Rother. Brought up at sea, you might say, before he could walk
+on land - nigh Chatham in Kent. And ain't Kent back-door to
+Sussex? And don't that make Frankie Sussex? O' course it do.
+Devon man! Bah! Those West Country boats they're always
+fishin' in other folks' water.'
+
+'I beg your pardon,' said Dan. 'I'm sorry .
+
+'No call to be sorry. You've been misled. I met Frankie at Rye
+Port when my Uncle, that was the shipbuilder there, pushed me
+off his wharf-edge on to Frankie's ship. Frankie had put in from
+Chatham with his rudder splutted, and a man's arm - Moon's that
+'ud be - broken at the tiller. "Take this boy aboard an' drown
+him," says my Uncle, "and I'll mend your rudder-piece for love."
+
+'What did your Uncle want you drowned for?'said Una.
+
+'That was only his fashion of say-so, same as Mus' Robin. I'd a
+foolishness in my head that ships could be builded out of iron. Yes
+- iron ships! I'd made me a liddle toy one of iron plates beat out
+thin - and she floated a wonder! But my Uncle, bein' a burgess of
+Rye, and a shipbuilder, he 'prenticed me to Frankie in the fetchin'
+trade, to cure this foolishness.'
+
+'What was the fetchin' trade?' Dan interrupted.
+
+'Fetchin' poor Flemishers and Dutchmen out o' the Low
+Countries into England. The King o' Spain, d'ye see, he was burnin'
+'em in those parts, for to make 'em Papishers, so Frankie he
+fetched 'em away to our parts, and a risky trade it was. His master
+wouldn't never touch it while he lived, but he left his ship to
+Frankie when he died, and Frankie turned her into this fetchin'
+trade. Outrageous cruel hard work - on besom-black nights
+bulting back and forth off they Dutch roads with shoals on all
+sides, and having to hark out for the frish-frish-frish-like of a
+Spanish galliwopses' oars creepin' up on ye. Frankie 'ud have the
+tiller and Moon he'd peer forth at the bows, our lantern under his
+skirts, till the boat we was lookin' for 'ud blurt up out o' the dark,
+and we'd lay hold and haul aboard whoever 'twas - man, woman,
+or babe - an' round we'd go again, the wind bewling like a kite in
+our riggin's, and they'd drop into the hold and praise God for
+happy deliverance till they was all sick.
+
+'I had nigh a year at it, an' we must have fetched off - oh, a
+hundred pore folk, I reckon. Outrageous bold, too, Frankie
+growed to be. Outrageous cunnin' he was. Once we was as near
+as nothin' nipped by a tall ship off Tergoes Sands in a snowstorm.
+She had the wind of us, and spooned straight before it, shootin' all
+bow guns. Frankie fled inshore smack for the beach, till he was
+atop of the first breakers. Then he hove his anchor out, which
+nigh tore our bows off, but it twitched us round end-for-end into
+the wind, d'ye see, an' we clawed off them sands like a drunk man
+rubbin' along a tavern bench. When we could see, the Spanisher
+was laid flat along in the breakers with the snows whitening on his
+wet belly. He thought he could go where Frankie went.'
+
+'What happened to the crew?' said Una.
+
+'We didn't stop,' Simon answered. 'There was a very liddle
+new baby in our hold, and the mother she wanted to get to some
+dry bed middlin' quick. We runned into Dover, and said nothing.'
+
+'Was Sir Francis Drake very much pleased?'
+'Heart alive, maid, he'd no head to his name in those days. He
+was just a outrageous, valiant, crop-haired, tutt-mouthed boy,
+roarin' up an' down the narrer seas, with his beard not yet quilted
+out. He made a laughing-stock of everything all day, and he'd
+hold our lives in the bight of his arm all the besom-black night
+among they Dutch sands; and we'd ha' jumped overside to
+behove him any one time, all of us.'
+
+'Then why did you try to poison him?' Una asked wickedly,
+and Simon hung his head like a shy child.
+
+'Oh, that was when he set me to make a pudden, for because
+our cook was hurted. I done my uttermost, but she all fetched
+adrift like in the bag, an' the more I biled the bits of her, the less
+she favoured any fashion o' pudden. Moon he chawed and
+chammed his piece, and Frankie chawed and chammed his'n, and
+- no words to it - he took me by the ear an' walked me out over
+the bow-end, an' him an' Moon hove the pudden at me on the
+bowsprit gub by gub, something cruel hard!' Simon rubbed his
+hairy cheek.
+
+'"Nex' time you bring me anything," says Frankie, "you
+bring me cannon-shot an' I'll know what I'm getting." But as for
+poisonin' -' He stopped, the children laughed so.
+
+'Of course you didn't,' said Una. 'Oh, Simon, we do like you!'
+
+'I was always likeable with children.' His smile crinkled up
+through the hair round his eyes. 'Simple Simon they used to call
+me through our yard gates.'
+
+'Did Sir Francis mock you?' Dan asked.
+
+'Ah, no. He was gentle-born. Laugh he did - he was always
+laughing - but not so as to hurt a feather. An' I loved 'en. I loved
+'en before England knew 'en, or Queen Bess she broke his heart.'
+
+'But he hadn't really done anything when you knew him, had
+he?' Una insisted. 'Armadas and those things, I mean.'
+
+Simon pointed to the scars and scrapes left by Cattiwow's great
+log. 'You tell me that that good ship's timber never done nothing
+against winds and weathers since her up-springing, and I'll
+confess ye that young Frankie never done nothing neither.
+Nothing? He adventured and suffered and made shift on they
+Dutch sands as much in any one month as ever he had occasion for
+to do in a half-year on the high seas afterwards. An' what was his
+tools? A coaster boat - a liddle box o' walty plankin' an' some few
+fathom feeble rope held together an' made able by him sole. He
+drawed our spirits up In our bodies same as a chimney-towel
+draws a fire. 'Twas in him, and it comed out all times and shapes.'
+'I wonder did he ever 'magine what he was going to be? Tell
+himself stories about it?' said Dan with a flush.
+
+'I expect so. We mostly do - even when we're grown. But bein'
+Frankie, he took good care to find out beforehand what his
+fortune might be. Had I rightly ought to tell 'em this piece?'
+Simon turned to Puck, who nodded.
+
+'My Mother, she was just a fair woman, but my Aunt, her
+sister, she had gifts by inheritance laid up in her,' Simon began.
+
+'Oh, that'll never do,' cried Puck, for the children stared
+blankly. 'Do you remember what Robin promised to the Widow
+Whitgift so long as her blood and get lasted?" [See 'Dymchurch
+Flit' in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.]
+'Yes. There was always to be one of them that could see farther
+through a millstone than most,' Dan answered promptly.
+
+'Well, Simon's Aunt's mother,' said Puck slowly, 'married the
+Widow's blind son on the Marsh, and Simon's Aunt was the one
+chosen to see farthest through millstones. Do you understand?'
+
+'That was what I was gettin' at,' said Simon, 'but you're so
+desperate quick. My Aunt she knew what was comin' to people.
+My Uncle being a burgess of Rye, he counted all such things
+odious, and my Aunt she couldn't be got to practise her gifts
+hardly at all, because it hurted her head for a week after-wards; but
+when Frankie heard she had 'em, he was all for nothin' till she
+foretold on him - till she looked in his hand to tell his fortune, d'ye
+see? One time we was at Rye she come aboard with my other shirt
+and some apples, and he fair beazled the life out of her about it.
+
+'"Oh, you'll be twice wed, and die childless," she says, and
+pushes his hand away.
+
+'"That's the woman's part," he says. "What'll come to me-to
+me?" an' he thrusts it back under her nose.
+
+'"Gold - gold, past belief or counting," she says. "Let go o'
+me, lad."
+
+'"Sink the gold!" he says. "What'll I do, mother?" He coaxed
+her like no woman could well withstand. I've seen him with 'em -
+even when they were sea-sick.
+
+'"If you will have it," she says at last, you shall have it. You'll
+do a many things, and eating and drinking with a dead man
+beyond the world's end will be the least of them. For you'll open a
+road from the East unto the West, and back again, and you'll bury
+your heart with your best friend by that road-side, and the road
+you open none shall shut so long as you're let lie quiet in your
+grave."
+
+
+[The old lady's prophecy is in a fair way to come true, for
+now the Panama Canal is finished, one end of it opens into the
+very bay where Sir Francis Drake was buried. So ships are taken
+through the Canal, and the road round Cape Horn which Sir Francis
+opened is very little used.]
+
+
+'"And if I'm not?" he says.
+
+'"Why, then," she says, "Sim's iron ships will be sailing on
+dry land. Now ha' done with this foolishness. Where's Sim's shirt?"
+
+'He couldn't fetch no more out of her, and when we come up
+from the cabin, he stood mazed-like by the tiller, playing
+with a apple.
+'"My Sorrow!" says my Aunt; "d'ye see that? The great world
+lying in his hand, liddle and round like a apple."
+
+'"Why, 'tis one you gived him," I says.
+
+'"To be sure," she says. "'Tis just a apple," and she went
+ashore with her hand to her head. It always hurted her to show
+her gifts.
+
+Him and me puzzled over that talk plenty. It sticked in his
+mind quite extravagant. The very next time we slipped out for
+some fetchin' trade, we met Mus' Stenning's boat over by Calais
+sands; and he warned us that the Spanishers had shut down all
+their Dutch ports against us English, and their galliwopses was
+out picking up our boats like flies off hogs' backs. Mus' Stenning
+he runs for Shoreham, but Frankie held on a piece, knowin' that
+Mus Stenning was jealous of our good trade. Over by Dunkirk a
+great gor-bellied Spanisher, with the Cross on his sails, came
+rampin' at us. We left him. We left him all they bare seas to
+conquest in.
+
+'"Looks like this road was going to be shut pretty soon," says
+Frankie, humourin' her at the tiller. "I'll have to open that other
+one your Aunt foretold of."
+
+'"The Spanisher's crowdin' down on us middlin' quick," I says.
+No odds," says Frankie, "he'll have the inshore tide against
+him. Did your Aunt say I was to be quiet in my grave for ever?"
+
+'"Till my iron ships sailed dry land," I says.
+
+'"That's foolishness," he says. "Who cares where Frankie
+Drake makes a hole in the water now or twenty years from now?"
+
+'The Spanisher kept muckin' on more and more canvas. I told
+him so.
+
+'"He's feelin' the tide," was all he says. "If he was among
+Tergoes Sands with this wind, we'd be picking his bones proper.
+I'd give my heart to have all their tall ships there some night
+before a north gale, and me to windward. There'd be gold in My
+hands then. Did your Aunt say she saw the world settin' in my
+hand, Sim?"
+
+Yes, but 'twas a apple," says I, and he laughed like he always
+did at me. "Do you ever feel minded to jump overside and be
+done with everything?" he asks after a while.
+
+'"No. What water comes aboard is too wet as 'tis," I says.
+"The Spanisher's going about."
+
+'"I told you," says he, never looking back. "He'll give us the
+Pope's Blessing as he swings. Come down off that rail. There's no
+knowin' where stray shots may hit." So I came down off the rail,
+and leaned against it, and the Spanisher he ruffled round in the
+wind, and his port-lids opened all red inside.
+
+'"Now what'll happen to my road if they don't let me lie quiet
+in my grave?" he says. "Does your Aunt mean there's two roads
+to be found and kept open - or what does she mean? I don't like
+that talk about t'other road. D'you believe in your iron
+ships, Sim?"
+
+'He knowed I did, so I only nodded, and he nodded back again.
+'"Anybody but me 'ud call you a fool, Sim," he says. "Lie
+down. Here comes the Pope's Blessing!"
+
+'The Spanisher gave us his broadside as he went about. They all
+fell short except one that smack-smooth hit the rail behind my
+back, an' I felt most won'erful cold.
+
+'"Be you hit anywhere to signify?" he says. "Come over to me."
+
+'"O Lord, Mus' Drake," I says, "my legs won't move," and
+that was the last I spoke for months.'
+
+'Why? What had happened?' cried Dan and Una together.
+
+'The rail had jarred me in here like.' Simon reached behind him
+clumsily. 'From my shoulders down I didn't act no shape. Frankie
+carried me piggyback to my Aunt's house, and I lay bed-rid and
+tongue-tied while she rubbed me day and night, month in and
+month out. She had faith in rubbing with the hands. P'raps she
+put some of her gifts into it, too. Last of all, something loosed
+itself in my pore back, and lo! I was whole restored again, but
+kitten-feeble.
+
+'"Where's Frankie?" I says, thinking I'd been a longish
+while abed.
+
+'"Down-wind amongst the Dons - months ago," says my Aunt.
+
+'"When can I go after 'en?" I says.
+
+'"Your duty's to your town and trade now," says she. "Your
+Uncle he died last Michaelmas and he've left you and me the yard.
+So no more iron ships, mind ye."
+
+'"What?" I says. "And you the only one that beleft in 'em!"
+
+
+'"Maybe I do still," she says, "but I'm a woman before I'm a
+Whitgift, and wooden ships is what England needs us to build. I
+lay on ye to do so."
+
+'That's why I've never teched iron since that day - not to build a
+toy ship of. I've never even drawed a draft of one for my pleasure
+of evenings.' Simon smiled down on them all.
+'Whitgift blood is terrible resolute - on the she-side,'said Puck.
+
+'Didn't You ever see Sir Francis Drake again?'Dan asked.
+
+'With one thing and another, and my being made a burgess of
+Rye, I never clapped eyes on him for the next twenty years. Oh, I
+had the news of his mighty doings the world over. They was the
+very same bold, cunning shifts and passes he'd worked with
+beforetimes off they Dutch sands, but, naturally, folk took more
+note of them. When Queen Bess made him knight, he sent my
+Aunt a dried orange stuffed with spiceries to smell to. She cried
+outrageous on it. She blamed herself for her foretellings, having
+set him on his won'erful road; but I reckon he'd ha' gone that way
+all withstanding. Curious how close she foretelled it! The world
+in his hand like an apple, an' he burying his best friend, Mus'
+Doughty -'
+
+'Never mind for Mus' Doughty,' Puck interrupted. 'Tell us
+where you met Sir Francis next.'
+
+'Oh, ha! That was the year I was made a burgess of Rye - the
+same year which King Philip sent his ships to take England
+without Frankie's leave.'
+
+'The Armada!' said Dan contentedly. 'I was hoping that
+would come.'
+
+'I knowed Frankie would never let 'em smell London smoke,
+but plenty good men in Rye was two-three minded about the
+upshot. 'Twas the noise of the gun-fire tarrified us. The wind
+favoured it our way from off behind the Isle of Wight. It made a
+mutter like, which growed and growed, and by the end of a week
+women was shruckin' in the streets. Then they come slidderin'
+past Fairlight in a great smoky pat vambrished with red gun-fire,
+and our ships flyin' forth and duckin' in again. The smoke-pat
+sliddered over to the French shore, so I knowed Frankie was
+edgin' the Spanishers toward they Dutch sands where he was
+master. I says to my Aunt, "The smoke's thinnin' out. I lay
+Frankie's just about scrapin' his hold for a few last rounds shot.
+'Tis time for me to go."
+
+'"Never in them clothes," she says. "Do on the doublet I
+bought you to be made burgess in, and don't you shame this
+day."
+
+'So I mucked it on, and my chain, and my stiffed Dutch
+breeches and all.
+
+'"I be comin', too," she says from her chamber, and forth she
+come pavisandin' like a peacock - stuff, ruff, stomacher and all.
+She was a notable woman.'
+
+'But how did you go? You haven't told us,' said Una.
+
+'In my own ship - but half-share was my Aunt's. In the ANTONY
+OF RYE, to be sure; and not empty-handed. I'd been loadin' her for
+three days with the pick of our yard. We was ballasted on cannon-
+shot of all three sizes; and iron rods and straps for his carpenters;
+and a nice passel of clean three-inch oak planking and hide breech-
+ropes for his cannon, and gubs of good oakum, and bolts o'
+canvas, and all the sound rope in the yard. What else could I ha'
+done? I knowed what he'd need most after a week's such work.
+I'm a shipbuilder, little maid.
+
+'We'd a fair slant o' wind off Dungeness, and we crept on till it
+fell light airs and puffed out. The Spanishers was all in a huddle
+over by Calais, and our ships was strawed about mending
+'emselves like dogs lickin' bites. Now and then a Spanisher would
+fire from a low port, and the ball 'ud troll across the flat swells,
+but both sides was finished fightin' for that tide.
+
+'The first ship we foreslowed on, her breastworks was crushed
+in, an' men was shorin' 'em up. She said nothing. The next was a
+black pinnace, his pumps clackin' middling quick, and he said
+nothing. But the third, mending shot-holes, he spoke out plenty .
+I asked him where Mus' Drake might be, and a shiny-suited man
+on the poop looked down into us, and saw what we carried.
+
+'"Lay alongside you!" he says. "We'll take that all."
+
+'"'Tis for Mus' Drake," I says, keeping away lest his size
+should lee the wind out of my sails.
+
+'"Hi! Ho! Hither! We're Lord High Admiral of England!
+Come alongside, or we'll hang ye," he says.
+
+''Twas none of my affairs who he was if he wasn't Frankie, and
+while he talked so hot I slipped behind a green-painted ship with
+her top-sides splintered. We was all in the middest of 'em then.
+
+'"Hi! Hoi!" the green ship says. "Come alongside, honest
+man, and I'll buy your load. I'm Fenner that fought the seven
+Portugals - clean out of shot or bullets. Frankie knows me."
+
+'"Ay, but I don't," I says, and I slacked nothing.
+
+'He was a masterpiece. Seein' I was for goin' on, he hails a
+Bridport hoy beyond us and shouts, "George! Oh, George! Wing
+that duck. He's fat!" An' true as we're all here, that squatty
+Bridport boat rounds to acrost our bows, intendin' to stop us by
+means o' shooting.
+
+'my Aunt looks over our rail. "George," she says, "you finish
+with your enemies afore you begin on your friends."
+
+'Him that was laying the liddle swivel-gun at us sweeps off his
+hat an' calls her Queen Bess, and asks if she was selling liquor to
+pore dry sailors. My Aunt answered him quite a piece. She was a
+notable woman.
+
+'Then he come up - his long pennant trailing overside - his
+waistcloths and netting tore all to pieces where the Spanishers had
+grappled, and his sides black-smeared with their gun-blasts like
+candle-smoke in a bottle. We hooked on to a lower port and hung.
+
+'"Oh, Mus' Drake! Mus' Drake!" I calls up.
+
+'He stood on the great anchor cathead, his shirt open to the
+middle, and his face shining like the sun.
+
+'"Why, Sim!" he says. just like that - after twenty year!
+"Sim," he says, "what brings you?"
+
+'"Pudden," I says, not knowing whether to laugh or cry.
+
+'"You told me to bring cannon-shot next time, an' I've
+brought 'em. "
+
+'He saw we had. He ripped out a fathom and a half o' brimstone
+Spanish, and he swung down on our rail, and he kissed me before
+all his fine young captains. His men was swarming out of the
+lower ports ready to unload us. When he saw how I'd considered
+all his likely wants, he kissed me again.
+
+'"Here's a friend that sticketh closer than a brother!" he says.
+"Mistress," he says to my Aunt, "all you foretold on me was true.
+I've opened that road from the East to the West, and I've buried
+my heart beside it. "
+
+'"I know," she says. "That's why I be come."
+
+'"But ye never foretold this"; he points to both they
+great fleets.
+
+'"This don't seem to me to make much odds compared to
+what happens to a man," she says. "Do it?"
+
+'"Certain sure a man forgets to remember when he's proper
+mucked up with work. Sim," he says to me, "we must shift every
+living Spanisher round Dunkirk corner on to our Dutch sands
+before morning. The wind'll come out of the North after this
+calm - same as it used - and then they're our meat."
+
+'"Amen," says I. "I've brought you what I could scutchel up
+of odds and ends. Be you hit anywhere to signify?"
+
+'"Oh, our folk'll attend to all that when we've time," he says.
+He turns to talk to my Aunt, while his men flew the stuff out of
+our hold. I think I saw old Moon amongst 'em, but he was too
+busy to more than nod like. Yet the Spanishers was going to
+prayers with their bells and candles before we'd cleaned out the
+ANTONY. Twenty-two ton o' useful stuff I'd fetched him.
+'"Now, Sim," says my Aunt, "no more devouring of Mus'
+Drake's time. He's sending us home in the Bridport hoy. I want
+to speak to them young springalds again."
+
+'"But here's our ship all ready and swept," I says.
+
+'"Swep' an' garnished," says Frankie. "I'm going to fill her
+with devils in the likeness o' pitch and sulphur. We must shift the
+Dons round Dunkirk comer, and if shot can't do it, we'll send
+down fireships."
+
+'"I've given him my share of the ANTONY," says my Aunt.
+"What do you reckon to do about yours?"
+
+'"She offered it," said Frankie, laughing.
+
+'"She wouldn't have if I'd overheard her," I says; "because I'd
+have offered my share first." Then I told him how the ANTONY's
+sails was best trimmed to drive before the wind, and seeing he was
+
+full of occupations we went acrost to that Bridport hoy, and
+left him.
+
+'But Frankie was gentle-born, d'ye see, and that sort they never
+overlook any folks' dues.
+
+'When the hoy passed under his stern, he stood bare-headed on
+the poop same as if my Aunt had been his Queen, and his
+musicianers played "Mary Ambree" on their silver trumpets
+quite a long while. Heart alive, little maid! I never meaned to
+make you look sorrowful!"
+
+Bunny Lewknor in his sackcloth petticoats burst through the
+birch scrub wiping his forehead.
+
+'We've got the stick to rights now! She've been a whole hatful
+o' trouble. You come an' ride her home, Mus' Dan and Miss Una!'
+
+They found the proud wood-gang at the foot of the slope, with
+the log double-chained on the tug.
+
+'Cattiwow, what are you going to do with it?'said Dan, as they
+straddled the thin part.
+
+'She's going down to Rye to make a keel for a Lowestoft
+fishin'-boat, I've heard. Hold tight!'
+
+Cattiwow cracked his whip, and the great log dipped and
+tilted, and leaned and dipped again, exactly like a stately ship
+upon the high seas.
+
+
+
+Frankie's Trade
+
+
+Old Horn to All Atlantic said:
+ (A-hay O! To me O!)
+'Now where did Frankie learn his trade?
+For he ran me down with a three-reef mains'le.'
+(All round the Horn!)
+
+Atlantic answered: 'Not from me!
+You'd better ask the cold North Sea,
+For he ran me down under all plain canvas.'
+(All round the Horn!)
+
+The North Sea answered: 'He's my man,
+For he came to me when he began -
+Frankie Drake in an open coaster.
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'I caught him young and I used him sore,
+So you never shall startle Frankie more,
+Without capsizing Earth and her waters.
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'I did not favour him at all,
+I made him pull and I made him haul -
+And stand his trick with the common sailors.
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'I froze him stiff and I fogged him blind,
+And kicked him home with his road to find
+By what he could see of a three-day snow-storm.
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'I learned him his trade o' winter nights,
+'Twixt Mardyk Fort and Dunkirk lights
+On a five-knot tide with the forts a-firing.
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'Before his beard began to shoot,
+I showed him the length of the Spaniard's foot -
+And I reckon he clapped the boot on it later.
+(All round the Sands!)
+'If there's a risk which you can make
+That's worse than he was used to take
+Nigh every week in the way of his business;
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'If there's a trick that you can try
+Which he hasn't met in time gone by,
+Not once or twice, but ten times over;
+(All round the Sands!)
+
+'If you can teach him aught that's new,
+ (A-hay O! To me O!)
+I'll give you Bruges and Niewport too,
+And the ten tall churches that stand between 'em.'
+Storm along, my gallant Captains!
+ (All round the Horn!)
+
+
+
+THE TREE OF JUSTICE
+
+
+
+The Ballad of Minepit Shaw
+
+
+About the time that taverns shut
+ And men can buy no beer,
+Two lads went up by the keepers' hut
+ To steal Lord Pelham's deer.
+
+Night and the liquor was in their heads -
+ They laughed and talked no bounds,
+Till they waked the keepers on their beds,
+ And the keepers loosed the hounds.
+
+They had killed a hart, they had killed a hind,
+ Ready to carry away,
+When they heard a whimper down the wind
+ And they heard a bloodhound bay.
+
+They took and ran across the fern,
+ Their crossbows in their hand,
+Till they met a man with a green lantern
+ That called and bade 'em stand.
+
+'What are you doing, O Flesh and Blood,
+ And what's your foolish will,
+That you must break into Minepit Wood
+ And wake the Folk of the Hill?'
+
+'Oh, we've broke into Lord Pelham's park,
+ And killed Lord Pelham's deer,
+And if ever you heard a little dog bark
+ You'll know why we come here!'
+
+'We ask you let us go our way,
+ As fast as we can flee,
+For if ever you heard a bloodhound bay,
+ You'll know how pressed we be.'
+
+'Oh, lay your crossbows on the bank
+ And drop the knife from your hand,
+And though the hounds are at your flank
+ I'll save you where you stand!'
+They laid their crossbows on the bank,
+ They threw their knives in the wood,
+And the ground before them opened and sank
+ And saved 'em where they stood.
+'Oh, what's the roaring in our ears
+ That strikes us well-nigh dumb?'
+'Oh, that is just how things appears
+ According as they come.'
+
+'What are the stars before our eyes
+ That strike us well-nigh blind?'
+'Oh, that is just how things arise
+ According as you find.'
+
+'And why's our bed so hard to the bones
+ Excepting where it's cold?'
+'Oh, that's because it is precious stones
+ Excepting where 'tis gold.
+
+'Think it over as you stand
+ For I tell you without fail,
+If you haven't got into Fairyland
+ You're not in Lewes Gaol.'
+
+All night long they thought of it,
+ And, come the dawn, they saw
+They'd tumbled into a great old pit,
+ At the bottom of Minepit Shaw.
+
+And the keepers' hound had followed 'em close
+ And broke her neck in the fall;
+So they picked up their knives and their cross-bows
+ And buried the dog. That's all.
+
+But whether the man was a poacher too
+ Or a Pharisee so bold -
+I reckon there's more things told than are true,
+ And more things true than are told.
+
+
+
+The Tree of Justice
+
+It was a warm, dark winter day with the Sou'-West wind singing
+through Dallington Forest, and the woods below the Beacon.
+The children set out after dinner to find old Hobden, who had a
+three months' job in the Rough at the back of Pound's Wood. He
+had promised to get them a dormouse in its nest. The bright leaf
+Still clung to the beech coppice; the long chestnut leaves lay
+orange on the ground, and the rides were speckled with scarlet-
+lipped sprouting acorns. They worked their way by their own
+short cuts to the edge of Pound's Wood, and heard a horse's feet
+just as they came to the beech where Ridley the keeper hangs up
+the vermin. The poor little fluffy bodies dangled from the
+branches - some perfectly good, but most of them dried to
+twisted strips.
+
+'Three more owls,' said Dan, counting. 'Two stoats, four jays,
+and a kestrel. That's ten since last week. Ridley's a beast.'
+
+'In my time this sort of tree bore heavier fruit.' Sir Richard
+Dalyngridge reined up his grey horse, Swallow, in the ride
+behind them. [This is the Norman knight they met the year before
+in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL. See 'Young Men at the Manor,' 'The Knights
+of the Joyous Venture,' and 'Old Men at Pevensey,' in that book.]
+'What play do you make?'he asked.
+
+'Nothing, Sir. We're looking for old Hobden,'Dan replied.'He
+promised to get us a sleeper.'
+
+'Sleeper? A DORMEUSE, do you say?'
+
+'Yes, a dormouse, Sir.'
+'I understand. I passed a woodman on the low grounds. Come!'
+He wheeled up the ride again, and pointed through an opening
+to the patch of beech-stubs, chestnut, hazel, and birch that old
+Hobden would turn into firewood, hop-poles, pea-boughs, and
+house-faggots before spring. The old man was as busy as a beaver.
+
+Something laughed beneath a thorn, and Puck stole out, his
+finger on his lip.
+
+'Look!' he whispered. 'Along between the spindle-trees.
+Ridley has been there this half-hour.'
+
+The children followed his point, and saw Ridley the keeper in
+an old dry ditch, watching Hobden as a cat watches a mouse.
+
+'Huhh!' cried Una. 'Hobden always 'tends to his wires before
+breakfast. He puts his rabbits into the faggots he's allowed to take
+home. He'll tell us about 'em tomorrow.'
+
+'We had the same breed in my day,' Sir Richard replied, and
+moved off quietly, Puck at his bridle, the children on either side
+between the close-trimmed beech stuff.
+
+'What did you do to them?' said Dan, as they repassed Ridley's
+terrible tree.
+
+'That!' Sir Richard jerked his head toward the dangling owls.
+
+'Not he!' said Puck. 'There was never enough brute Norman in
+you to hang a man for taking a buck.'
+
+'I - I cannot abide to hear their widows screech. But why am I
+on horseback while you are afoot?' He dismounted lightly,
+tapped Swallow on the chest, so that the wise thing backed
+instead of turning in the narrow ride, and put himself at the head
+of the little procession. He walked as though all the woods
+belonged to him. 'I have often told my friends,' he went on, 'that
+Red William the King was not the only Norman found dead in a
+forest while he hunted.'
+
+'D'you mean William Rufus?'said Dan.
+
+'Yes,' said Puck, kicking a clump of red toad-stools off a
+dead log.
+
+'For example, there was a knight new from Normandy,' Sir
+Richard went on, 'to whom Henry our King granted a manor in
+Kent near by. He chose to hang his forester's son the day before a
+deer-hunt that he gave to pleasure the King.'
+
+'Now when would that be?' said Puck, and scratched an ear
+thoughtfully.
+
+'The summer of the year King Henry broke his brother Robert
+of Normandy at Tenchebrai fight. Our ships were even then at
+Pevensey loading for the war.'
+
+'What happened to the knight?'Dan asked.
+
+'They found him pinned to an ash, three arrows through his
+leather coat. I should have worn mail that day.'
+
+'And did you see him all bloody?'Dan continued.
+
+'Nay, I was with De Aquila at Pevensey, counting horseshoes,
+and arrow-sheaves, and ale-barrels into the holds of the ships.
+The army only waited for our King to lead them against Robert in
+Normandy, but he sent word to De Aquila that he would hunt
+with him here before he set out for France.'
+
+'Why did the King want to hunt so particularly?' Una demanded.
+
+'If he had gone straight to France after the Kentish knight
+was killed, men would have said he feared being slain like the
+knight. It was his duty to show himself debonair to his English
+people as it was De Aquila's duty to see that he took no harm
+while he did it, But it was a great burden! De Aquila, Hugh, and I
+ceased work on the ships, and scoured all the Honour of the Eagle -
+all De
+Aquila's lands - to make a fit, and, above all, a safe sport for
+our King. Look!'
+
+The ride twisted, and came out on the top of Pound's Hill
+Wood. Sir Richard pointed to the swells of beautiful, dappled
+Dallington, that showed like a woodcock's breast up the valley.
+'Ye know the forest?' said he.
+
+'You ought to see the bluebells there in Spring!' said Una.
+'I have seen,' said Sir Richard, gazing, and stretched out his
+hand. 'Hugh's work and mine was first to move the deer gently
+from all parts into Dallington yonder, and there to hold them till
+the King came. Next, we must choose some three hundred
+beaters to drive the deer to the stands within bowshot of the King.
+Here was our trouble! In the mellay of a deer-drive a Saxon
+peasant and a Norman King may come over-close to each other.
+The conquered do not love their conquerors all at once. So we
+needed sure men, for whom their village or kindred would
+answer in life, cattle, and land if any harm come to the King. Ye
+see?'
+
+'If one of the beaters shot the King,' said Puck, 'Sir Richard
+wanted to be able to punish that man's village. Then the village
+would take care to send a good man.'
+
+'So! So it was. But, lest our work should be too easy, the King
+had done such a dread justice over at Salehurst, for the killing of
+the Kentish knight (twenty-six men he hanged, as I heard), that
+our folk were half mad with fear before we began. It is easier to
+dig out a badger gone to earth than a Saxon gone dumb-sullen.
+And atop of their misery the old rumour waked that Harold the
+Saxon was alive and would bring them deliverance from us
+Normans. This has happened every autumn since Santlache fight.'
+
+'But King Harold was killed at Hastings,'said Una.
+
+'So it was said, and so it was believed by us Normans, but our
+Saxons always believed he would come again. That rumour did
+not make our work any more easy.'
+
+Sir Richard strode on down the far slope of the wood, where
+the trees thin out. It was fascinating to watch how he managed his
+long spurs among the lumps of blackened ling.
+
+'But we did it!' he said. 'After all, a woman is as good as a man
+to beat the woods, and the mere word that deer are afoot makes
+cripples and crones young again. De Aquila laughed when Hugh
+told him over the list of beaters. Half were women; and many of
+the rest were clerks - Saxon and Norman priests.
+
+'Hugh and I had not time to laugh for eight days, till De Aquila,
+as Lord of Pevensey, met our King and led him to the first
+shooting-stand - by the Mill on the edge of the forest. Hugh and I
+- it was no work for hot heads or heavy hands - lay with our
+beaters on the skirts of Dallington to watch both them and the
+deer. When De Aquila's great horn blew we went forward, a line
+half a league long. Oh, to see the fat clerks, their gowns tucked
+up, puffing and roaring, and the sober millers dusting the under-
+growth with their staves; and, like as not, between them a Saxon
+wench, hand in hand with her man, shrilling like a kite as she ran,
+and leaping high through the fern, all for joy of the sport.'
+'Ah! How! Ah! How! How-ah! Sa-how-ah!' Puck bellowed
+without warning, and Swallow bounded forward, ears cocked,
+and nostrils cracking.
+
+'Hal-lal-lal-lal-la-hai-ie!' Sir Richard answered in a high clear
+shout.
+
+The two voices joined in swooping circles of sound, and a
+heron rose out of a red osier-bed below them, circling as though
+he kept time to the outcry. Swallow quivered and swished his
+glorious tail. They stopped together on the same note.
+
+A hoarse shout answered them across the bare woods.
+
+'That's old Hobden,'said Una.
+
+'Small blame to him. It is in his blood,' said Puck. 'Did your
+beaters cry so, Sir Richard?'
+
+'My faith, they forgot all else. (Steady, Swallow, steady!) They
+forgot where the King and his people waited to shoot. They
+followed the deer to the very edge of the open till the first flight of
+wild arrows from the stands flew fair over them.
+
+'I cried, "'Ware shot! 'Ware shot!" and a knot of young knights
+new from Normandy, that had strayed away from the Grand
+Stand, turned about, and in mere sport loosed off at our line
+shouting: "'Ware Santlache arrows! 'Ware Santlache arrows!" A
+jest, I grant you, but too sharp. One of our beaters answered in
+Saxon: "'Ware New Forest arrows! 'Ware Red William's
+arrow!" so I judged it time to end the jests, and when the boys saw
+my old mail gown (for, to shoot with strangers I count the same
+as war), they ceased shooting. So that was smoothed over, and we
+gave our beaters ale to wash down their anger. They were
+excusable! We - they had sweated to show our guests good sport,
+and our reward was a flight of hunting-arrows which no man
+loves, and worse, a churl's jibe over hard-fought, fair-lost
+Hastings fight. So, before the next beat, Hugh and I assembled and
+called the beaters over by name, to steady them. The greater part
+we knew, but among the Netherfield men I saw an old, old man,
+in the dress of a pilgrim.
+
+'The Clerk of Netherfield said he was well known by repute for
+twenty years as a witless man that journeyed without rest to all
+the shrines of England. The old man sits, Saxon fashion, head
+between fists. We Normans rest the chin on the left palm.
+'"Who answers for him?" said I. "If he fails in his duty, who
+will pay his fine?"
+
+'"Who will pay my fine?" the pilgrim said. "I have asked that
+of all the Saints in England these forty years, less three months
+and nine days! They have not answered!" When he lifted his thin
+face I saw he was one-eyed, and frail as a rush.
+'"Nay, but, Father," I said, "to whom hast thou commended
+thyself-?" He shook his head, so I spoke in Saxon: "Whose man
+art thou?"
+
+'"I think I have a writing from Rahere, the King's jester," said
+he after a while. "I am, as I suppose, Rahere's man."
+
+'He pulled a writing from his scrip, and Hugh, coming up,
+read it.
+
+'It set out that the pilgrim was Rahere's man, and that Rahere
+was the King's jester. There was Latin writ at the back.
+
+'"What a plague conjuration's here?" said Hugh, turning it
+over. "Pum-quum-sum oc-occ. Magic?"
+
+'"Black Magic," said the Clerk of Netherfield (he had been a
+monk at Battle). "They say Rahere is more of a priest than a fool
+and more of a wizard than either. Here's Rahere's name writ, and
+there's Rahere's red cockscomb mark drawn below for such as
+cannot read." He looked slyly at me.
+
+'"Then read it," said I, "and show thy learning." He was a
+vain little man, and he gave it us after much mouthing.
+
+'"The charm, which I think is from Virgilius the Sorcerer,
+says: 'When thou art once dead, and Minos' (which is a heathen
+judge) 'has doomed thee, neither cunning, nor speechcraft, nor
+good works will restore thee!' A terrible thing! It denies any
+mercy to a man's soul!"
+
+'"Does it serve?" said the pilgrim, plucking at Hugh's cloak.
+"Oh, man of the King's blood, does it cover me?"
+
+'Hugh was of Earl Godwin's blood, and all Sussex knew it,
+though no Saxon dared call him kingly in a Norman's hearing.
+There can be but one King.
+
+'"It serves," said Hugh. "But the day will be long and hot.
+Better rest here. We go forward now."
+
+'"No, I will keep with thee, my kinsman," he answered like a
+child. He was indeed childish through great age.
+
+'The line had not moved a bowshot when De Aquila's great
+horn blew for a halt, and soon young Fulke - our false Fulke's son
+- yes, the imp that lit the straw in Pevensey Castle [See 'Old Men
+at Pevensey' in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.] - came thundering up
+a woodway.
+
+'"Uncle," said he (though he was a man grown, he called me
+Uncle), "those young Norman fools who shot at you this morn
+are saying that your beaters cried treason against the King. It has
+come to Harry's long ears, and he bids you give account of it.
+There are heavy fines in his eye, but I am with you to the hilt,
+Uncle!"
+'When the boy had fled back, Hugh said to me: "It was Rahere's
+witless man that cried, ''Ware Red William's arrow!' I heard him,
+and so did the Clerk of Netherfield."
+
+'"Then Rahere must answer to the King for his man," said I.
+"Keep him by you till I send," and I hastened down.
+
+'The King was with De Aquila in the Grand Stand above
+Welansford down in the valley yonder. His Court - knights and
+dames - lay glittering on the edge of the glade. I made my
+homage, and Henry took it coldly.
+'"How came your beaters to shout threats against me?"
+said he.
+
+'"The tale has grown," I answered. "One old witless man
+cried out, ''Ware Red William's arrow,' when the young knights
+shot at our line. We had two beaters hit."
+
+'"I will do justice on that man," he answered. "Who is his
+master?"
+
+'"He's Rahere's man," said I.
+
+'"Rahere's?" said Henry. "Has my fool a fool?"
+
+'I heard the bells jingle at the back of the stand, and a red leg
+waved over it; then a black one. So, very slowly, Rahere the
+King's jester straddled the edge of the planks, and looked down
+on us, rubbing his chin. Loose-knit, with cropped hair, and a sad
+priest's face, under his cockscomb cap, that he could twist like a
+strip of wet leather. His eyes were hollow-set.
+
+'"Nay, nay, Brother," said he. "If I suffer you to keep your
+fool, you must e'en suffer me to keep mine."
+
+'This he delivered slowly into the King's angry face! My faith, a
+King's jester must be bolder than lions!
+
+'"Now we will judge the matter," said Rahere. "Let these two
+brave knights go hang my fool because he warned King Henry
+against running after Saxon deer through woods full of Saxons.
+'Faith, Brother, if thy Brother, Red William, now among the
+Saints as we hope, had been timely warned against a certain arrow
+in New Forest, one fool of us four would not be crowned fool of
+England this morning. Therefore, hang the fool's fool, knights!"
+'Mark the fool's cunning! Rahere had himself given us order to
+hang the man. No King dare confirm a fool's command to such a
+great baron as De Aquila; and the helpless King knew it.
+
+'"What? No hanging?" said Rahere, after a silence. "A' God's
+Gracious Name, kill something, then! Go forward with the
+hunt!"
+
+'He splits his face ear to ear in a yawn like a fish-pond.
+"Henry," says he, "the next time I sleep, do not pester me with
+thy fooleries." Then he throws himself out of sight behind the
+back of the stand.
+
+'I have seen courage with mirth in De Aquila and Hugh, but
+stark mad courage of Rahere's sort I had never even guessed at.'
+
+'What did the King say?' cried Dan.
+
+'He had opened his mouth to speak, when young Fulke, who
+had come into the stand with us, laughed, and, boy-like, once
+begun, could not check himself. He kneeled on the instant for
+pardon, but fell sideways, crying: "His legs! Oh, his long,
+waving red legs as he went backward!"
+
+'Like a storm breaking, our grave King laughed, - stamped and
+reeled with laughter till the stand shook. So, like a storm, this
+strange thing passed!
+
+'He wiped his eyes, and signed to De Aquila to let the drive
+come on.
+
+'When the deer broke, we were pleased that the King shot from
+the shelter of the stand, and did not ride out after the hurt beasts as
+Red William would have done. Most vilely his knights and
+barons shot!
+
+De Aquila kept me beside him, and I saw no more of Hugh till
+evening. We two had a little hut of boughs by the camp, where I
+went to wash me before the great supper, and in the dusk I heard
+Hugh on the couch.
+
+'"Wearied, Hugh?" said I.
+
+'"A little," he says. "I have driven Saxon deer all day for a
+Norman King, and there is enough of Earl Godwin's blood left in
+me to sicken at the work. Wait awhile with the torch."
+
+'I waited then, and I thought I heard him sob.'
+
+'Poor Hugh! Was he so tired?' said Una. 'Hobden says beating
+is hard work sometimes.'
+
+'I think this tale is getting like the woods,' said Dan, 'darker and
+twistier every minute.'
+Sir Richard had walked as he talked, and though the children
+thought they knew the woods well enough, they felt a little lost.
+
+'A dark tale enough,' says Sir Richard, 'but the end was not all
+black. When we had washed, we went to wait on the King at meat
+in the great pavilion. just before the trumpets blew for the Entry -
+all the guests upstanding - long Rahere comes posturing up to
+Hugh, and strikes him with his bauble-bladder.
+
+'"Here's a heavy heart for a joyous meal!" he says. "But each
+man must have his black hour or where would be the merit of
+laughing? Take a fool's advice, and sit it out with my man. I'll
+make a jest to excuse you to the King if he remember to ask for
+you. That's more than I would do for Archbishop Anselm."
+
+'Hugh looked at him heavy-eyed. "Rahere?" said he. "The
+King's jester? Oh, Saints, what punishment for my King!" and
+smites his hands together.
+'"Go - go fight it out in the dark," says Rahere, "and thy
+Saxon Saints reward thee for thy pity to my fool." He pushed him
+from the pavilion, and Hugh lurched away like one drunk.'
+
+'But why?' said Una. 'I don't understand.'
+
+'Ah, why indeed? Live you long enough, maiden, and you shall
+know the meaning of many whys.' Sir Richard smiled. 'I wondered
+too, but it was my duty to wait on the King at the High
+Table in all that glitter and stir.
+
+'He spoke me his thanks for the sport I had helped show him,
+and he had learned from De Aquila enough of my folk and my
+castle in Normandy to graciously feign that he knew and had
+loved my brother there. (This, also, is part of a king's work.)
+Many great men sat at the High Table - chosen by the King for
+their wits, not for their birth. I have forgotten their names, and
+their faces I only saw that one night. But' - Sir Richard turned in
+his stride - 'but Rahere, flaming in black and scarlet among our
+guests, the hollow of his dark cheek flushed with wine - long,
+laughing Rahere, and the stricken sadness of his face when he was
+not twisting it about - Rahere I shall never forget.
+
+'At the King's outgoing De Aquila bade me follow him, with
+his great bishops and two great barons, to the little pavilion. We
+had devised jugglers and dances for the Court's sport; but Henry
+loved to talk gravely to grave men, and De Aquila had told him of
+my travels to the world's end. We had a fire of apple-wood, sweet
+as incense, - and the curtains at the door being looped up, we
+could hear the music and see the lights shining on mail and
+dresses.
+
+'Rahere lay behind the King's chair. The questions he darted
+forth at me were as shrewd as the flames. I was telling of our fight
+with the apes, as ye called them, at the world's end. [See 'The
+Knights of the Joyous Venture' in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.]
+'"But where is the Saxon knight that went with you?" said
+Henry. "He must confirm these miracles."
+
+'"He is busy," said Rahere, "confirming a new miracle."
+
+'"Enough miracles for today," said the King. "Rahere, you
+have saved your long neck. Fetch the Saxon knight."
+
+'"Pest on it," said Rahere. "Who would be a King's jester? I'll
+bring him, Brother, if you'll see that none of your home-brewed
+bishops taste my wine while I am away." So he jingled forth
+between the men-at-arms at the door.
+
+'Henry had made many bishops in England without the Pope's
+leave. I know not the rights of the matter, but only Rahere dared
+jest about it. We waited on the King's next word.
+
+'"I think Rahere is jealous of you," said he, smiling, to Nigel
+of Ely. He was one bishop; and William of Exeter, the other -
+Wal-wist the Saxons called him - laughed long. "Rahere is a priest
+at heart. Shall I make him a bishop, De Aquila?" says the King.
+
+'"There might be worse," said our Lord of Pevensey. "Rahere
+would never do what Anselm has done."
+
+'This Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury, had gone off raging
+to the Pope at Rome, because Henry would make bishops
+without his leave either. I knew not the rights of it, but De Aquila
+did, and the King laughed.
+
+'"Anselm means no harm. He should have been a monk, not a
+bishop," said the King. "I'll never quarrel with Anselm or his
+Pope till they quarrel with my England. If we can keep the King's
+peace till my son comes to rule, no man will lightly quarrel with
+our England."
+
+'"Amen," said De Aquila. "But the King's peace ends when
+the King dies."
+
+'That is true. The King's peace dies with the King. The custom
+then is that all laws are outlaw, and men do what they will till the
+new King is chosen.
+
+'"I will amend that," said the King hotly. "I will have it so that
+though King, son, and grandson were all slain in one day, still the
+King's peace should hold over all England! What is a man that his
+mere death must upheave a people? We must have the Law."
+
+'"Truth," said William of Exeter; but that he would have said
+to any word of the King.
+
+'The two great barons behind said nothing. This teaching was
+clean against their stomachs, for when the King's peace ends, the
+great barons go to war and increase their lands. At that instant we
+heard Rahere's voice returning, in a scurril Saxon rhyme against
+William of Exeter:
+
+ '"Well wist Wal-wist where lay his fortune
+ When that he fawned on the King for his crozier,"
+
+and amid our laughter he burst in, with one arm round Hugh, and
+one round the old pilgrim of Netherfield.
+
+'"Here is your knight, Brother," said he, "and for the better
+disport of the company, here is my fool. Hold up, Saxon Samson,
+the gates of Gaza are clean carried away!"
+
+'Hugh broke loose, white and sick, and staggered to my side;
+the old man blinked upon the company.
+
+'We looked at the King, but he smiled.
+
+'"Rahere promised he would show me some sport after supper
+to cover his morning's offence," said he to De Aquila. "So this is
+thy man, Rahere?"
+
+'"Even so," said Rahere. "My man he has been, and my
+protection he has taken, ever since I found him under the gallows
+at Stamford Bridge telling the kites atop of it that he was - Harold
+of England!"
+
+'There was a great silence upon these last strange words, and
+Hugh hid his face on my shoulder, woman-fashion.
+
+'"It is most cruel true," he whispered to me. "The old man
+proved it to me at the beat after you left, and again in our hut even
+now. It is Harold, my King!"
+
+'De Aquila crept forward. He walked about the man and swallowed.
+
+'"Bones of the Saints!" said he, staring.
+
+'"Many a stray shot goes too well home," said Rahere.
+
+The old man flinched as at an arrow. "Why do you hurt me
+still?" he said in Saxon. "It was on some bones of some Saints that
+I promised I would give my England to the Great Duke." He
+turns on us all crying, shrilly: "Thanes, he had caught me at
+Rouen - a lifetime ago. If I had not promised, I should have lain
+there all my life. What else could I have done? I have lain in a strait
+prison all my life none the less. There is no need to throw stones at
+me. " He guarded his face with his arms, and shivered.
+"Now his madness will strike him down," said Rahere. "Cast
+out the evil spirit, one of you new bishops."
+
+'Said William of Exeter: "Harold was slain at Santlache fight.
+All the world knows it."
+
+'"I think this man must have forgotten," said Rahere. "Be
+comforted, Father. Thou wast well slain at Hastings forty years
+gone, less three months and nine days. Tell the King."
+
+'The man uncovered his face. "I thought they would stone
+me," he said. "I did not know I spoke before a King." He came to
+his full towering height - no mean man, but frail beyond belief.
+
+'The King turned to the tables, and held him out his own cup of
+wine. The old man drank, and beckoned behind him, and, before
+all the Normans, my Hugh bore away the empty cup, Saxon-
+fashion, upon the knee.
+
+"It is Harold!" said De Aquila. "His own stiff-necked blood
+kneels to serve him.
+
+"Be it so," said Henry. "Sit, then, thou that hast been Harold
+of England."
+
+'The madman sat, and hard, dark Henry looked at him between
+half-shut eyes. We others stared like oxen, all but De Aquila, who
+watched Rahere as I have seen him watch a far sail on the sea.
+
+'The wine and the warmth cast the old man into a dream. His
+white head bowed; his hands hung. His eye indeed was opened,
+but the mind was shut. When he stretched his feet, they were
+scurfed and road-cut like a slave's.
+
+'"Ah, Rahere," cried Hugh, "why hast thou shown him thus?
+Better have let him die than shame him - and me!"
+
+'"Shame thee?" said the King. "Would any baron of mine
+kneel to me if I were witless, discrowned, and alone, and Harold
+had my throne?"
+
+'"No," said Rahere. "I am the sole fool that might do it,
+Brother, unless" - he pointed at De Aquila, whom he had only
+met that day - "yonder tough Norman crab kept me company.
+But, Sir Hugh, I did not mean to shame him. He hath been
+somewhat punished through, maybe, little fault of his own."
+
+, "Yet he lied to my Father, the Conqueror, " said the King, and
+the old man flinched in his sleep.
+
+'"Maybe," said Rahere, "but thy Brother Robert, whose
+throat we purpose soon to slit with our own hands -"
+
+'"Hutt!" said the King, laughing. "I'll keep Robert at my table
+for a life's guest when I catch him. Robert means no harm. It is all
+his cursed barons."
+
+'"None the less," said Rahere, "Robert may say that thou hast
+not always spoken the stark truth to him about England. I should
+not hang too many men on that bough, Brother."
+'"And it is certain," said Hugh, "that" - he pointed to the old
+man - "Harold was forced to make his promise to the Great Duke."
+
+'"Very strongly, forced," said De Aquila. He had never any
+pride in the Duke William's dealings with Harold before Hastings.
+Yet, as he said, one cannot build a house all of straight sticks.
+
+'"No matter how he was forced," said Henry, "England was
+promised to my Father William by Edward the Confessor. Is it
+not so?" William of Exeter nodded. "Harold confirmed that
+promise to my Father on the bones of the Saints. Afterwards he
+broke his oath and would have taken England by the strong hand. "
+'"Oh! La! La!" Rahere rolled up his eyes like a girl. "That ever
+England should be taken by the strong hand!"
+
+'Seeing that Red William and Henry after him had each in just
+that fashion snatched England from Robert of Normandy, we
+others knew not where to look. But De Aquila saved us quickly.
+'"Promise kept or promise broken," he said, "Harold came
+near enough to breaking us Normans at Santlache. "
+
+"Was it so close a fight, then?" said Henry.
+
+"A hair would have turned it either way," De Aquila
+answered. "His house-carles stood like rocks against rain. Where
+wast thou, Hugh, in it?"
+
+'"Among Godwin's folk beneath the Golden Dragon till your
+front gave back, and we broke our ranks to follow," said Hugh.
+
+"But I bade you stand! I bade you stand! I knew it was all a
+deceit!" Harold had waked, and leaned forward as one crying
+from the grave.
+
+'"Ah, now we see how the traitor himself was betrayed!" said
+William of Exeter, and looked for a smile from the King.
+
+'"I made thee Bishop to preach at my bidding," said Henry;
+and turning to Harold, "Tell us here how thy people fought us?"
+said he. "Their sons serve me now against my Brother Robert!"
+
+'The old man shook his head cunningly. "Na - Na - Na!" he
+cried. "I know better. Every time I tell my tale men stone me.
+But, Thanes, I will tell you a greater thing. Listen!" He told us
+how many paces it was from some Saxon Saint's shrine to another
+shrine, and how many more back to the Abbey of the Battle.
+
+'"Ay," said he. "I have trodden it too often to be out even ten
+paces. I move very swiftly. Harold of Norway knows that, and so
+does Tostig my brother. They lie at ease at Stamford Bridge, and
+from Stamford Bridge to the Battle Abbey it is -" he muttered
+over many numbers and forgot us.
+
+'"Ay, " said De Aquila, all in a muse. "That man broke Harold
+of Norway at Stamford Bridge, and came near to breaking us at
+Santlache - all within one month."
+
+'"But how did he come alive from Santlache fight?" asked the
+King. "Ask him! Hast thou heard it, Rahere?"
+"Never. He says he has been stoned too often for telling the
+tale. But he can count you off Saxon and Norman shrines till
+daylight," said Rahere and the old man nodded proudly.
+
+'"My faith!" said Henry after a while. "I think even my Father
+the Great Duke would pity if he could see him.
+
+'"How if he does see?" said Rahere.
+
+'Hugh covered his face with his sound hand. "Ah, why hast
+thou shamed him?" he cried again to Rahere.
+
+'"No - no," says the old man, reaching to pluck at Rahere's
+cape. "I am Rahere's man. None stone me now," and he played
+with the bells on the scollops of it.
+
+'"How if he had been brought to me when you found him?"
+said the King to Rahere.
+
+You would have held him prisoner again - as the Great Duke
+did," Rahere answered.
+
+'"True," said our King. "He is nothing except his name. Yet
+that name might have been used by stronger men to trouble my
+England. Yes. I must have made him my life's guest - as I shall
+make Robert."
+
+'"I knew it," said Rahere. "But while this man wandered mad
+by the wayside, none cared what he called himself."
+
+'"I learned to cease talking before the stones flew," says the old
+man, and Hugh groaned.
+
+'"Ye have heard!" said Rahere. "Witless, landless, nameless,
+and, but for my protection, masterless, he can still make shift to
+bide his doom under the open sky.
+'"Then wherefore didst thou bring him here for a mock and a
+shame?" cried Hugh, beside himself with woe.
+
+'"A right mock and a just shame!" said William of Exeter.
+
+'"Not to me," said Nigel of Ely. "I see and I tremble, but I
+neither mock nor judge."
+Well spoken, Ely." Rahere falls into the pure fool again. "I'll
+pray for thee when I turn monk. Thou hast given thy blessing on a
+war between two most Christian brothers." He meant the war
+forward 'twixt Henry and Robert of Normandy. "I charge you,
+Brother," he says, wheeling on the King, "dost thou mock my
+fool?"
+The King shook his head, and so then did smooth William
+of Exeter.
+
+'"De Aquila, does thou mock him?" Rahere jingled from one
+to another, and the old man smiled.
+
+'"By the Bones of the Saints, not I," said our Lord of Pevensey.
+"I know how dooms near he broke us at Santlache.
+
+'"Sir Hugh, you are excused the question. But you, valiant,
+loyal, honourable, and devout barons, Lords of Man's justice in
+your own bounds, do you mock my fool?"
+
+'He shook his bauble in the very faces of those two barons
+whose names I have forgotten. "Na - Na!" they said, and waved
+him back foolishly enough.
+
+'He hies him across to staring, nodding Harold, and speaks
+from behind his chair.
+
+'"No man mocks thee, Who here judges this man? Henry of
+England - Nigel - De Aquila! On your souls, swift with the
+answer!" he cried.
+
+'None answered. We were all - the King not least - over-borne
+by that terrible scarlet-and-black wizard-jester.
+
+'"Well for your souls," he said, wiping his brow. Next, shrill
+like a woman: "Oh, come to me!" and Hugh ran forward to hold
+Harold, that had slidden down in the chair.
+
+'"Hearken," said Rahere, his arm round Harold's neck. "The
+King - his bishops - the knights - all the world's crazy chessboard
+neither mock nor judge thee. Take that comfort with thee,
+Harold of England!"
+
+'Hugh heaved the old man up and he smiled.
+
+'"Good comfort," said Harold. "Tell me again! I have been
+somewhat punished."
+'Rahere hallooed it once more into his ear as the head rolled. We
+heard him sigh, and Nigel of Ely stood forth, praying aloud.
+
+'"Out! I will have no Norman!" Harold said as clearly as I
+speak now, and he refuged himself on Hugh's sound shoulder,
+and stretched out, and lay all still.'
+
+'Dead?' said Una, turning up a white face in the dusk.
+
+'That was his good fortune. To die in the King's presence, and
+on the breast of the most gentlest, truest knight of his own house.
+Some of us envied him,' said Sir Richard, and fell back to take
+Swallow's bridle.
+
+'Turn left here,' Puck called ahead of them from under an oak.
+They ducked down a narrow path through close ash plantation.
+
+The children hurried forward, but cutting a corner charged
+full-abreast into the thorn-faggot that old Hobden was carrying
+home on his back.
+'My! My!' said he. 'Have you scratted your face, Miss Una?'
+
+'Sorry! It's all right,' said Una, rubbing her nose. 'How many
+rabbits did you get today?'
+
+'That's tellin'!' the old man grinned as he re-hoisted his faggot.
+'I reckon Mus' Ridley he've got rheumatism along o' lyin' in the
+dik to see I didn't snap up any. Think o' that now!'
+
+They laughed a good deal while he told them the tale.
+
+'An' just as he crawled away I heard some one hollerin' to the
+hounds in our woods,' said he. 'Didn't you hear? You must ha'
+been asleep sure-ly.'
+
+'Oh, what about the sleeper you promised to show us?'
+Dan cried.
+
+''Ere he be - house an' all!' Hobden dived into the prickly heart
+of the faggot and took out a dormouse's wonderfully woven nest
+of grass and leaves. His blunt fingers parted it as if it had been
+precious lace, and tilting it toward the last of the light he showed
+the little, red, furry chap curled up inside, his tail between his eyes
+that were shut for their winter sleep.
+
+'Let's take him home. Don't breathe on him,' said Una. 'It'll
+make him warm and he'll wake up and die straight off. Won't he,
+Hobby?'
+
+'Dat's a heap better by my reckonin' than wakin' up and findin'
+himself in a cage for life. No! We'll lay him into the bottom o' this
+hedge. Dat's jus' right! No more trouble for him till come Spring.
+An' now we'll go home.'
+
+
+
+A Carol
+
+
+Our Lord Who did the Ox command
+To kneel to Judah's King,
+He binds His frost upon the land
+To ripen it for Spring -
+To ripen it for Spring, good sirs,
+According to His word;
+Which well must be as ye can see -
+And who shall judge the Lord?
+
+When we poor fenmen skate the ice
+Or shiver on the wold,
+We hear the cry of a single tree
+That breaks her heart in the cold -
+That breaks her heart in the cold, good sirs,
+And rendeth by the board;
+Which well must be as ye can see -
+And who shall judge the Lord?
+
+Her wood is crazed and little worth
+Excepting as to burn
+That we may warm and make our mirth
+Until the Spring return -
+Until the Spring return, good sirs,
+When people walk abroad;
+Which well must be as ye can see -
+And who shall judge the Lord?
+
+God bless the master of this house,
+And all that sleep therein!
+And guard the fens from pirate folk,
+And keep us all from sin,
+To walk in honesty, good sirs,
+Of thought and deed and word!
+Which shall befriend our latter end -
+And who shall judge the Lord?
+
+
+
+****End of the Project Gutenberg Etext of Rewards and Fairies****
+
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