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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Geste of Duke Jocelyn
+
+Author: Jeffery Farnol
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8165]
+This file was first posted on June 24, 2003
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN
+
+By Jeffery Farnol
+
+Illustrations in color by Eric Pape
+
+(Illustrations not included in this edition)
+
+
+Copyright, 1920,
+
+By Little, Brown, And Company.
+
+All rights reserved Published September, 1920
+
+Norwood Press
+
+Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co. Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+ My GILLIAN, thou child that budding woman art
+ For whom to-day and yesterday lie far apart
+ Already thou, my dear, dost longer dresses wear
+ And bobbest in most strange, new-fangled ways thy hair;
+ Thou lookest on the world with eyes grown serious
+ And rul'st thy father with a sway imperious
+ Particularly as regards his socks and ties
+ Insistent that each with the other harmonise.
+ Instead of simple fairy-tales that pleased of yore
+ Romantic verse thou read'st and novels by the score
+ And very oft I've known thee sigh and call them “stuff”
+ Vowing of love romantic they've not half enough.
+ Wherefore, like fond and doting parent, I
+ Will strive this want romantic to supply.
+ I'll write for thee a book of sighing lover
+ Crammed with ROMANCE from cover unto cover;
+ A book the like of which 't were hard to find
+ Filled with ROMANCE of every sort and kind.
+ I'll write it as the Gestours wrote of old,
+ In prose, blank-verse, and rhyme it shall be told.
+ And GILLIAN--
+ Some day perhaps, my dear, when you are grown
+ A portly dame with children of your own
+ You'll gather all your troop about your knee
+ And read to them this Geste I made for thee.
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+“Nobles of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande”
+
+They saw afar the town of Canalise
+
+“Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!” she sighed
+
+“Hush, poor Motley!” whispered the maid.
+
+With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came
+
+The long blades whirled and flashed
+
+
+
+
+PRELUDE
+
+ Long, long ago when castles grim did frown,
+ When massy wall and gate did 'fend each town;
+ When mighty lords in armour bright were seen,
+ And stealthy outlaws lurked amid the green
+ And oft were hanged for poaching of the deer,
+ Or, gasping, died upon a hunting spear;
+ When barons bold did on their rights insist
+ And hanged or burned all rogues who dared resist;
+ When humble folk on life had no freehold
+ And were in open market bought and sold;
+ When grisly witches (lean and bony hags)
+ Cast spells most dire yet, meantime, starved in rags;
+ When kings did lightly a-crusading fare
+ And left their kingdoms to the devil's care--
+ At such a time there lived a noble knight
+ Who sweet could sing and doughtily could fight,
+ Whose lance thrust strong, whose long sword bit
+ full deep
+ With darting point or mighty two-edged sweep.
+ A duke was he, rich, powerful--and yet
+ Fate had on him a heavy burden set,
+ For, while a youth, as he did hunt the boar,
+ The savage beast his goodly steed did gore,
+ And as the young duke thus defenceless lay,
+ With cruel tusk had reft his looks away,
+ Had marred his comely features and so mauled him
+ That, 'hind his back, “The ugly Duke” folk called
+ him--
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+GILL: An ugly hero?
+
+MYSELF: That is so.
+
+GILL: An ugly hero, father? O, absurd! Whoever of an “ugly” hero heard?
+
+MYSELF: I'll own, indeed, I've come across but few--
+
+GILL: But a duke--and ugly! Father, this from you?
+
+MYSELF: My duke is ugly, very, for good reason, As shall appear in due and
+proper season!
+
+GILL: I'm sure no one will want to read him then, For “heroes” all should
+be most handsome men. So make him handsome, please, or he won't do.
+
+MYSELF: By heaven, girl--no, plain heroes are too few!
+
+GILL: Then ev'ry one will leave him on the shelf!
+
+MYSELF: Why, then, I'll read the poor fellow myself.
+
+GILL: I won't!
+
+MYSELF: Then don't! Though, I might say, since you're set on it, child, My
+duke was not so ugly when he smiled--
+
+GILL: Then make him smile as often as you can.
+
+MYSELF: I might do that, 't is none so bad a plan.
+
+GILL: And the lady--she must be a lady fair.
+
+MYSELF: My dear, she's beautiful beyond compare.
+
+GILL: Why, then--
+
+MYSELF: My pen!
+
+ So here and now I do begin
+ The tale of young Duke Jocelyn,
+ For critics, schools,
+ And cramping rules,
+ Heedless and caring not a pin.
+
+ The title here behold
+ On this fair page enrolled,
+ In letters big and bold,
+ As seemeth fit--
+ To wit:--
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE I
+
+ Upon a day, but when it matters not,
+ Nor where, but mark! the sun was plaguy hot
+ Falling athwart a long and dusty road
+ In which same dust two dusty fellows strode.
+ One was a tall, broad-shouldered, goodly wight
+ In garb of motley like a jester dight,
+ Fool's cap on head with ass's ears a-swing,
+ While, with each stride, his bells did gaily ring;
+ But, 'neath his cock's-comb showed a face so marred
+ With cheek, with brow and lip so strangely scarred
+ As might scare tender maid or timid child
+ Unless, by chance, they saw him when he smiled,
+ For then his eyes, so deeply blue and bright,
+ Did hold in them such joyous, kindly light,
+ That sorrow was from heavy hearts beguiled--
+ This jester seemed less ugly when he smiled.
+
+ Here, O my Gill, right deftly, in a trice
+ I've made him smile and made him do it--twice.
+ That 't was the Duke of course you've guessed at once
+ Since you, I know, we nothing of a dunce.
+ But, what should bring a duke in cap and bells?
+ Read on and mark, while he the reason tells.
+
+ Now, 'spite of dust and heat, his lute he strummed,
+ And snatches of a merry song he hummed,
+ The while askance full merrily he eyed
+ The dusty knave who plodded at his side.
+ A bony fellow, this, and long of limb,
+
+ His habit poor, his aspect swart and grim;
+ His belt to bear a long broad-sword did serve,
+ His eye was bold, his nose did fiercely curve
+ Down which he snorted oft and (what is worse)
+ Beneath his breath gave vent to many a curse.
+ Whereat the Duke, sly laughing, plucked lutestring
+ And thus, in voice melodious did sing:
+
+
+ “Sir Pertinax, why curse ye so?
+ Since thus in humble guise we go
+ We merry chances oft may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene.”
+
+ “And chances woeful, lord, also!”
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ “To every fool that passeth by
+ These foolish bells shall testify
+ That very fool, forsooth, am I,
+ Good Pertinax of Shene!”
+
+ “And, lord, methinks they'll tell no lie!”
+ Growled Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Then spake the Knight in something of a pet,
+ “Par Dex, lord Duke--plague take it, how I sweat,
+ By Cock, messire, ye know I have small lust
+ Like hind or serf to tramp it i' the dust!
+ Per De, my lord, a parch-ed pea am I--
+ I'm all athirst! Athirst? I am so dry
+ My very bones do rattle to and fro
+ And jig about within me as I go!
+ Why tramp we thus, bereft of state and rank?
+ Why go ye, lord, like foolish mountebank?
+ And whither doth our madcap journey trend?
+ And wherefore? Why? And, prithee, to what end?”
+ Then quoth the Duke, “See yonder in the green
+ Doth run a cooling water-brook I ween,
+ Come, Pertinax, beneath yon shady trees,
+ And there whiles we do rest outstretched at ease
+ Thy 'wherefores' and thy 'whys' shall answered be,
+ And of our doings I will counsel thee.”
+
+ So turned they from the hot and dusty road
+ Where, 'mid green shade, a rill soft-bubbling flowed,
+ A brook that leapt and laughed in roguish wise,
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax with scowling eyes
+ Did frown upon the rippling water clear,
+ And sware sad oaths because it was not beer;
+ Sighful he knelt beside this murmurous rill,
+ Bent steel-clad head and bravely drank his fill.
+ Then sitting down, quoth he: “By Og and Gog,
+ I'll drink no more--nor horse am I nor dog
+ To gulp down water--pest, I hate the stuff!”
+
+ “Ah!” laughed the Duke, “'tis plain hast had enough,
+ And since well filled with water thou dost lie
+ To answer thee thy questions fain am I.
+ First then--thou art in lowly guise bedight,
+ For that thou art my trusty, most-loved knight,
+ Who at my side in many a bloody fray,
+ With thy good sword hath smit grim Death away--”
+ “Lord,” quoth the Knight, “what's done is past return,
+ 'Tis of our future doings I would learn.”
+
+ “Aye,” said the Duke, “list, Pertinax, and know
+ 'Tis on a pilgrimage of love we go:
+ Mayhap hast heard the beauty and the fame
+ Of fair Yolande, that young and peerless dame
+
+
+ “For whom so many noble lovers sigh
+ And with each other in the lists do vie?
+ Though much I've dreamed of sweet Yolanda's charms
+ My days have passed in wars and feats of arms,
+ For, Pertinax, this blemished face I bear,
+ Should fright, methinks, a lady young and fair.
+ And so it is that I have deemed it wiser
+ To hide it when I might 'neath casque and visor--”
+
+ Hereat Sir Pertinax smote hand to knee
+ And, frowning, shook his head. “Messire,” said he,
+ “Thou art a man, and young, of noble race,
+ And, being duke, what matter for thy face?
+ Rank, wealth, estate--these be the things I trow
+ Can make the fairest woman tender grow.
+ Ride unto her in thy rich armour dight,
+ With archer, man-at-arms, and many a knight
+ To swell thy train with pomp and majesty,
+ That she, and all, thy might and rank may see;
+ So shall all folk thy worthiness acclaim,
+ And her maid's heart, methinks, shall do the same.
+ Thy blemished face shall matter not one jot;
+ To mount thy throne she'll think a happy lot.
+ So woo her thus--”
+
+ “So will I woo her not!”
+ Quoth Jocelyn, “For than I'd win her so,
+ Alone and loveless all my days I'd go.
+ Ha, Pertinax, 'spite all thy noble parts,
+ 'Tis sooth ye little know of women's hearts!”
+
+ “Women?” quoth Pertinax, and scratched his jaw,
+ “'Tis true of dogs and horses I know more,
+ And dogs do bite, and steeds betimes will balk,
+ And fairest women, so they say, will talk.”
+
+
+
+ “And so dost thou, my Pertinax, and yet,
+ 'Spite all thy talk, my mind on this is set--
+ Thus, in all lowliness I'll e'en go to her
+ And 'neath this foolish motley I will woo her.
+ And if, despite this face, this humble guise,
+ I once may read love's message in her eyes,
+ Then Pertinax--by all the Saints, 'twill be
+ The hope of all poor lovers after me,
+ These foolish bells a deathless tale shall ring,
+ And of Love's triumph evermore shall sing.
+
+ “So, Pertinax, ne'er curse ye so
+ For that in lowly guise we go,
+ We many a merry chance may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene.”
+ “And chances evil, lord, also!”
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Now on a sudden, from the thorny brake,
+ E'en as Sir Pertinax thus doleful spake,
+ Leapt lusty loons and ragged rascals four,
+ Rusty their mail, yet bright the swords they bore.
+
+ Up sprang Sir Pertinax with gleeful shout,
+ Plucked forth his blade and fiercely laid about.
+ “Ha, rogues! Ha, knaves! Most scurvy dogs!” he cried.
+ While point and edge right lustily he plied
+ And smote to earth the foremost of the crew,
+ Then, laughing, pell-mell leapt on other two.
+ The fourth rogue's thrust, Duke Joc'lyn blithely parried
+ Right featly with the quarter-staff he carried.
+ Then 'neath the fellow's guard did nimbly slip
+ And caught him in a cunning wrestler's grip.
+ Now did they reel and stagger to and fro,
+ And on the ling each other strove to throw;
+
+ Arm locked with arm they heaved, they strove and panted,
+ With mighty shoulders bowed and feet firm-planted.
+ So on the sward, with golden sunlight dappled,
+ In silence grim they tussled, fiercely grappled.
+ Thus then Duke Jocelyn wrestled joyously,
+ For this tall rogue a lusty man was he,
+ But, 'spite his tricks and all his cunning play,
+ He in the Duke had met his match this day,
+ As, with a sudden heave and mighty swing,
+ Duke Jocelyn hurled him backwards on the ling,
+ And there he breathless lay and sore amazed,
+ While on the Duke with wonderment he gazed:
+ “A Fool?” he cried. “Nay, certes fool, per De,
+ Ne'er saw I fool, a fool the like o' thee!”
+
+ But now, e'en as the Duke did breathless stand,
+ Up strode Sir Pertinax, long sword in hand:
+ “Messire,” he growled, “my rogues have run away,
+ So, since you've felled this fellow, him I'll slay.”
+
+ “Not so,” the Duke, short-breathing, made reply,
+ “Methinks this rogue is too much man to die.”
+
+ “How?” cried the Knight; “not slay a knave--a thief?
+ Such clemency is strange and past belief!
+ Mean ye to let the dog all scathless go?”
+
+ “Nay,” said the Duke, square chin on fist, “not so,
+ For since the rogue is plainly in the wrong
+ The rogue shall win his freedom with a song,
+ And since forsooth a rogue ingrain is he,
+ So shall he sing a song of roguery.
+ Rise, roguish rogue, get thee thy wind and sing,
+ Pipe me thy best lest on a tree ye swing!”
+
+ Up to his feet the lusty outlaw sprang,
+ And thus, in clear melodious voice, he sang:
+
+ “I'll sing a song not over long,
+ A song of roguery.
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith, is he.
+ And we are rogues, and ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.
+
+ “As die we must and turn to dust,
+ Since each is Adam's son,
+ A rogue was he, so rogues are we,
+ And rascals every one.
+
+ “The Abbot sleek with visage meek,
+ With candle, book and bell,
+ Our souls may curse, we're none the worse,
+ Since he's a rogue as well.
+
+ “My lord aloft doth hang full oft
+ Poor rogues the like o' me,
+ But all men know where e'er he go
+ A greater rogue is he.
+
+ “The king abroad with knight and lord
+ Doth ride in majesty,
+ But strip him bare and then and there
+ A shivering rogue ye'll see,
+
+ “Sirs, if ye will my life to spill,
+ Then hang me on a tree,
+ Since rogue am I, a rogue I'll die,
+ A roguish death for me.
+
+ “But i' the wind the leaves shall find
+ Small voices for my dole,
+
+ “And when I'm dead sigh o'er my head
+ Prayers for my poor rogue soul;
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou 'rt a rogue,
+ And so in faith is he,
+ As we are rogues, so ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.”
+
+ The singing done, the Duke sat lost in thought,
+ What time Sir Pertinax did stamp and snort:
+ “Ha, by the Mass! Now, by the Holy Rood!
+ Ne'er heard I roguish rant so bold and lewd!
+ He should be whipped, hanged, quartered, flayed alive--”
+
+ “Then,” quoth the Duke, “pay him gold pieces five,”
+ “How--pay a rogue?” the Knight did fierce retort.
+ “A ribald's rant--give good, gold pieces for't?
+ A plague! A pest! The knave should surely die--”
+ But here he met Duke Joc'lyn's fierce blue eye,
+ And silent fell and in his poke did dive,
+ And slowly counted thence gold pieces five,
+ Though still he muttered fiercely 'neath his breath,
+ Such baleful words as: “'S blood!” and “'S bones!” and “'S death!”
+
+ Then laughed the Duke and from the greenwood strode;
+ But scarce was he upon the dusty road,
+ Than came the rogue who, louting to his knee:
+ “O Fool! Sir Fool! Most noble Fool!” said he.
+ “Either no fool, or fool forsooth thou art,
+ That dareth thus to take an outlaw's part.
+ Yet, since this day my rogue's life ye did spare,
+ So now by oak, by ash, by thorn I swear--
+
+ “And mark, Sir Fool, and to my saying heed--
+ Shouldst e'er lack friends to aid thee in thy need
+ Come by this stream where stands a mighty oak,
+ Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning stroke,
+ Hid in this cleft a hunting-horn ye'll see,
+ Take then this horn and sound thereon notes three.
+ So shall ye find the greenwood shall repay
+ The roguish life ye spared a rogue this day.”
+
+ So spake he; then, uprising from his knees,
+ Strode blithe away and vanished 'mid the trees.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax shook doleful head:
+ “There go our good gold pieces, lord!” he said.
+ “Would that yon rogue swung high upon a tree,
+ And in my poke our gold again might be.
+ Full much I marvel, lord, and fain would know
+ Wherefore and why unhanged didst let him go?”
+
+ Then answered the Duke singing on this wise:
+
+ “Good Pertinax, if on a tree
+ Yon rogue were swinging high
+ A deader rogue no man could see--
+ 'He's but a rogue!' says you to me,
+ 'But a living rogue!' says I.
+
+ “And since he now alive doth go
+ More honest he may die,
+ Yon rogue an honest man may grow,
+ If we but give him time, I trow,
+ Says I to you, says I.”
+
+ At this, Sir Pertinax growled in his beard--
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: A beard? O father--beard will never do!
+ No proper knight a beard ever grew.'
+ No knight could really romantic be
+ Who wore a beard! So, father, to please me,
+ No beard; they are, I think, such scrubby things--
+
+ MYSELF: Yet they are worn, sometimes, by poets and kings.
+
+ GILL: But your knight--
+
+ MYSELF: Oh, all right,
+ My Gill, from your disparagement to save him,
+ I, like a barber, will proceed to shave him.
+
+ Sir Pertinax, then, stroked his smooth-shaved chin,
+ And thus to curse he softly did begin,
+ “Par Dex, my lord--”
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+
+ GILL: Your knight, dear father, seems to love to curse.
+
+ MYSELF: He does. A difficult matter, child, in verse--
+
+ GILL: Of verse I feel a little tired--
+
+ MYSELF: Why, if you think a change desired,
+ A change we'll have, for, truth to tell,
+ This rhyming bothers me as well.
+ So here awhile we'll sink to prose.
+ Now, are you ready? Then here goes!
+
+
+“Par Dex, my lord!” growled Sir Pertinax. “A malison on't, says I, saving
+thy lordly grace, yet a rogue is a rogue and, being rogue, should die right
+roguishly as is the custom and the law. For if, messire, if--per De and by
+Our Sweet Lady of Shene Chapel within the Wood, if, I say, in thy new and
+sudden-put-on attitude o' folly, thou wilt save alive all rogues soever,
+then by Saint Cuthbert his curse, by sweet Saint Benedict his blessed
+bones, by--”
+
+“Hold now, Pertinax,” said the Duke, slipping his lute into leathern bag
+and slinging it behind wide shoulders, “list ye, Sir Knight of Shene, and
+mark this, to wit: If a rogue in roguery die then rogue is he forsooth;
+but, mark this again, if a rogue be spared his life he may perchance and
+peradventure forswear, that is, eschew or, vulgarly speaking, turn from his
+roguish ways, and die as honest as I, aye, or even--thou!”
+
+Here Sir Pertinax snorted as they strode on together, yet in a little they
+turned aside from the hot and dusty road and journeyed on beneath the trees
+that grew thereby.
+
+“By all the fiends, my lord, and speaking vulgarly in turn, this belly o'
+mine lacketh, these my bowels do yearn consumedly unto messes savoury and
+cates succulent--”
+
+Whereat the Duke, smiling merry-eyed, chanted roguishly:
+
+ “A haunch o' venison juicy from the spit now?”
+ “Aha!” groaned the Knight, “Lord, let us haste--”
+ “A larded capon to thee might seem fit now?”
+ “Saints!” sighed the Knight, “but for one little taste.”
+ “Or, Pertinax, a pasty plump and deep--”
+ “Ha--pasty, by the Mass!” the Knight did cry.
+ “Or pickled tongue of neat, Sir Knight, or sheep--”
+ “Oh, for a horse! For wings wherewith to fly--”
+ “Or breast of swan--”
+
+“Stay! nay, my lord, ha' mercy!” groaned Sir Pertinax, wiping moist brow.
+“Picture no more toothsome dainties to my soul lest for desire I swoon and
+languish by the way. I pray thee, let us haste, sire, so may we reach fair
+Canalise ere sunset--yet stay! Hearken, messire, hear ye aught? Sure, afar
+the tocsin soundeth?”
+
+ Now hearkening thus, they both became aware
+ Of distant bells that throbbed upon the air,
+ A faint, insistent sound that rose and fell,
+ A clamour vague that ominous did swell.
+ As thus they stood, well hidden from the road,
+ Footsteps they heard of feet that briskly strode.
+ And, through the leaves, a small man they espied,
+ Who came apace, a great sword by his side.
+ Large bascinet upon his head he bore,
+ 'Neath which his face a scowl portentous wore;
+ While after toiled a stout but reverend friar
+ Who, scant of breath, profusely did perspire
+ And, thus perspiring, panted sad complaints
+ Thus--on the heat, his comrade and the Saints.
+
+ “O Bax, O Bax! Saint Cuthbert aid me now!
+ O Bax, see how to sweat thou'st made me now!
+ Thy speed abate! O sweet Saint Dominic!
+ Why pliest thou thy puny shanks so quick;
+ O day! O Bax! O hot, sulphurous day,
+ My flesh betwixt ye melteth fast away.
+ Come, sit ye, Bax, in shade of yon sweet tree,
+ And, sitting soft, I'll sagely counsel thee.”
+
+ “Not so, in faith,” the small man, scowling, said,
+ “What use for counsel since the cause be fled?
+ And since she's fled--Saints succour us!” he cried;
+ As 'mid the leaves all suddenly he spied
+ Sir Pertinax in his unlovely trim,
+ His rusty mail, his aspect swart and grim--
+ “Ha!” gasped the little man, “we are beset!”
+ And starting back, off fell his bascinet.
+ Whereat he fiercely did but scowl the more,
+
+
+ And strove amain his ponderous sword to draw.
+ “Hence, dog!” he cried, “lest, with my swashing blow,
+ I make thee food for carrion kite and crow.”
+ But in swift hands Sir Pertinax fast caught him
+ And, bearing him on high, to Joc'lyn brought him,
+ Who, while the captive small strove vain aloft
+ Reproved him thus in accents sweet and soft:
+
+
+“Right puissant and potential sir, we do beseech thee check thy ferocity,
+quell now thy so great anger and swear not to give our flesh for fowls to
+tear, so shalt thou come down to earth and stand again upon thine own two
+legs. And thou, most reverend friar, invoke now thy bloody-minded comrade
+that he swear to harm us not!”
+
+The stout friar seated himself hard by beneath a tree, mopped moist brow,
+fetched his wind and smiled.
+
+“Sir Fool,” said he, “I am thy security that thou and thy brawny gossip
+need quake and tremble nothing by reason of this Bax, our valiant reeve--he
+shall harm ye no whit.” Here, meeting Jocelyn's eye, Sir Pertinax set
+down the small Reeve, who having taken up and put on his great bascinet,
+scowled, whereupon Duke Jocelyn questioned him full meek:
+
+“Good master Reeve, of your courtesy pray you tell us why yon bells do ring
+so wild alarm.”
+
+
+ The small Reeve viewed him with disdainful eye;
+ Sniffed haughty nose and proudly made reply:
+ 'Our bells we ring and clamour make, because
+ We've lost our lady fair of Tissingors.
+ Our Duchess Benedicta hath this day
+ From all her worthy guardians stole away.
+ Thus we for her do inquisition make,
+ Nor, 'till she's found, may hope our rest to take,
+ And thus we cause such outcry as we may,
+ Since we lose not our Duchess ev'ry day.
+ So then we'd have ye speak us--aye or no,
+ Saw ye our errant lady this way go?
+ And, that ye may her know for whom we seek,
+ Her just description fully I will speak:
+ Her hair night-black, her eyes the self-same hue,
+ Her habit brown, unless 't were red or blue,
+ And if not blue why then mayhap 'tis green,
+ Since she by turns of all such hues is seen--”
+
+ “Stay, sir,” quoth Jocelyn, “'tis plain to see
+ No maid but a chameleon is she,
+ For here we have her brown and green and blue,
+ And if not brown then rosy is her hue,
+ And, if not red, why then 'tis very plain
+ That brown she is or blue or green again.
+ Now fain, sir, would I ask and question whether
+ She e'er is seen these colours all together?
+
+ “O fain would I a lady spy,
+ By countryside or town,
+ Who may be seen all blue and green,
+ Unless she's red or brown.”
+
+ But now, while fierce the little man did scowl,
+ The rosy Friar, sly-smiling 'neath his cowl,
+ His visage meek, spake thus in dulcet tone:
+ “Sir Fool, our Reeve is something mixed, I'll own,
+ Though he by divers colours is bemused,
+ Learn ye this truth, so shall he stand excused:
+ Our Duchess Benedicta, be it known,
+ Hath this day from her several guardians flown.
+ Ten worthy men her several guardians be,
+ Of whom the chief and worthiest ye see,
+ As first--myself, a friar of some report,
+ Well-known, methinks, in country, town and court.
+ Who as all men can unto all men speak,
+ Well read beside in Latin and in Greek,
+ A humble soul albeit goodly preacher,
+ One apt to learn and therefore learned teacher,
+ One who can laugh betimes, betimes can pray,
+ Who'll colic cure or on the bagpipe play.
+ Who'll sing--”
+
+ “Stay!” cried the Reeve. “Friar, what o'me?”
+ “Patience, O Bax, too soon I'll come to thee!
+ Who'll sing ye then blithe as a bird on bough--”
+ “Friar!” growled the Reeve, “the time for me is now!”
+ “So be it, then,” the Friar did gently say,
+ “I'll speak of thee as truly as I may:
+ Here then behold our port-reeve, Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who, save for reason, naught in reason lacks,
+ Who, though he small and puny seems to shew,
+ In speech he is Goliath-like, I trow,
+ Chief Councillor of Tissingors is he,
+ And of the council second but--to me.
+ For with the townsfolk first of all come I--”
+
+ REEVE: Since thy fat finger is in every pie--
+ “Saving your reverend grace,” Duke Joc'lyn said,
+ “What of this maid that turneth green and red?”
+
+ REEVE: Fool, then learn this, ere that our lord duke died,
+ Ten guardians for his child he did provide,
+ The Friar and I, with men of lesser fame,
+ Co-guardians are of this right puissant dame.
+
+ JOCELYN: Beseech ye, sir, now tell us an' ye may,
+ Why hath thy youthful Duchess run away?
+
+“Fair Fool,” quoth the Friar, fanning himself with a frond of bracken,
+“'tis a hot day, a day reminiscent of the ultimate fate of graceless
+sinners, and I am like the day and languish for breath, yet, to thy so
+pertinent question I will, straightly and in few words, pronounce and
+answer thee, as followeth: Our Lady Benedicta hath run away firstly,
+brethren, for that being formed woman after Nature's goodly plan she hath
+the wherewithal to walk, to leap, to skip or eke to run, as viz.: item and
+to wit--legs. Secondly, inquisitorial brethren, she ran for an excellent
+good reason--as observe--there was none to let or stay her. And thirdly,
+gentle and eager hearers, she did flit or fly, leave, vacate, or depart
+our goodly town of Tissingors for that she had--mark me--no mind to stay,
+remain or abide therein. And this for the following express, rare and most
+curious reason as--mark now--in a word--”
+
+“Hold--hold, Friar John!” exclaimed the Reeve; “here sit ye here
+a-sermonising, venting words a-many what time our vanished Duchess fleeth.
+Knew I not the contrary I should say thou didst countenance her flight and
+spent thyself in wordy-wind wherewith to aid her!”
+
+Now here, chancing to meet Duke Jocelyn's shrewd gaze, Friar John slowly
+and ponderously winked one round, bright eye.
+
+Quoth he:
+
+ “Hark to our valiant port-reeve Greg'ry Bax
+ Who, save for reason, nought of reason lacks!”
+ “Howbeit,” fumed the Reeve, stamping in the dust, “here sit ye at thy
+full-bodied ease, fanning flies and animadverting--”
+
+“Animadverting!” nodded Friar John. “A good word, Reeve, a fair, sweet
+word; in verity a word full-bodied as I, wherefore it liketh me well. So
+sit I here animadverting whiles thou kicketh up a dust in fashion foolish
+and un-reeve-like.”
+
+“A plague o' words!” cried the Reeve. “A pest o' wind! Enough--enough,
+contain thy prolixities and rodomontade and let me to the point explain--”
+
+“Aha!” quoth the Friar. “Good sooth, here's a noble word! A word round
+i' the mouth, rolling upon the tongue. Ha, Reeve, I give thee joy of
+rodomontade!”
+
+“Thus then,” continued the Reeve, “I will, with use of no verbiage
+circumlocutory, explain.”
+
+“Ho-oho!” cried Friar John, rubbing plump hands ecstatic. “Good Bax, ne'er
+have I heard thee to so great advantage--verbiage circumlocutory--and
+thou--thou such small man to boot! O most excellent, puny Reeve!”
+
+Here the little man turned his back upon the Friar and continued hastily
+thus:
+
+ “A lord there is, a lord of lofty pride,
+ Who for our lady oft hath sued and sighed--”
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Whom she as oft hath scornfully denied!
+
+ THE REEVE: A mighty lord who seeketh her to wife--
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Though he, 'tis said, doth lead most evil life!
+ THE REEVE: To which fair lord our wilful maid we'd wed--
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Since this fair lord the council holds in dread!
+
+ THE REEVE: But she, defying us, this very day
+ Like wicked thief hath stole herself away.
+ Thus this poor lord such deeps of gloom is in
+ Vows he'll not wash, nor shave again his chin
+ Till found is she: He groaneth, sheddeth tears--
+
+ THE FRIAR: And swears her guardians ten shall lose their ears!
+
+ THE REEVE: Wherefore are we in mighty perturbation,
+ Amazed, distraught and filled with consternation.
+ Thus do our bells ring out their wild alarms,
+ Our civic bands do muster under arms;
+ Drums shall be drummed the countryside around,
+ Until our truant Duchess we have found,
+ And we have wed this most elusive dame
+ Unto Sir Agramore of Biename.
+
+ THE FRIAR: And yield her thus to woes and bitter shame!
+
+ THE REEVE: So speak me, fellows; as ye came this way
+ Saw ye aught of this wilful, errant may?
+
+ Answered JOCELYN: “Neither to-day nor any other day.”
+
+“Why then,” fumed the Reeve, “here have we been at great expense o' breath
+and time and all to no purpose. Come, Friar, beseech thee, let us haste to
+begone.”
+
+ So Friar John got slowly to his feet
+ Complaining loud of hurry and of heat,
+ But paused behind the hasteful Reeve to linger,
+ And to plump nose he slyly laid plump finger.
+
+Now stood Sir Pertinax thoughtful, chin on fist, insomuch that Jocelyn,
+thrumming his lute, questioned him:
+
+ “Good Pertinax, how now
+ What pond'rest thou
+ With furrowed brow?
+ Thy care, Sir Knight, avow!”
+
+Saith Pertinax: “I meditate the way wondrous of woman, the frowardness of
+creatures feminine. For mark me, sir, here is one hath guardians ten, yet
+despite them she is fled away and they ten!”
+
+“Why truly, Pertinax, they are ten, so is she fled.”
+
+“Aye, but if they be ten that ward her and she one that would flee, how
+shall this one flee these ten?”
+
+“For that they be ten.”
+
+“Nay, lord, here be twenty eyes to watch one young maid and twenty legs to
+pursue the same, yet doth she evade them one and all, and here's the wonder
+on't--she's but one maid.”
+
+“Nay, there's the reason on't, Pertinax--she is a maid.”
+
+“The which is great matter for wonder, lord!”
+
+“Spoke like a very Pertinax, my Pertinax, for here's no wonder at all. For
+perceive, the lady is young, her wardens ten grave seniors, worthy wights
+--solemn, sober and sedate, Pertinax, wise and wearisome, grave yet
+garrulous, and therefore they suffice not.”
+
+“Aye, prithee and wherefore not?”
+
+“For their divers worthy attributes and because they be--ten. Now had these
+ten been one and this one a very man--_the_ man--here had been no running
+away on part of the lady, I 'll warrant me?”
+
+“Stay, my lord,” said Pertinax, in deep perplexity, “how judge ye so--and
+wherefore--why and by what manner o' reasoning?”
+
+“Ha, Pertinax!” laughed the Duke, “my lovely, loveless numskull!” So
+saying, he kicked the good Knight full joyously and so they trudged on
+again.
+
+ Till presently, beyond the green of trees,
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise,
+ A city fair, couched on a gentle height,
+ With walls embattled and strong towers bedight.
+ Now seeing that the sun was getting low,
+ Our travellers at quicker pace did go.
+ Thus as in haste near to the gate they came,
+ Before them limped a bent and hag-like dame,
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It beak-like wished to peck sharp chin below.
+ Humbly she crept in cloak all torn and rent,
+ And o'er a staff her tottering limbs were bent.
+ So came she to the gate, then cried in fear,
+ And started back from sudden-levelled spear;
+ For 'neath the gate lounged lusty fellows three
+ Who seldom spake yet spat right frequently.
+
+ “Kind sirs, good sirs,” the ancient dame did cry,
+ “In mercy's name I pray ye let me by--”
+ But, as she spoke, a black-jowled fellow laughed,
+ And, spitting, tripped her with out-thrust pike-shaft,
+
+
+ That down she fell and wailed most piteously,
+ Whereat the brawny fellows laughed all three.
+ “Ha, witch!” they cried, as thus she helpless lay,
+ “Shalt know the fire and roasted be one day!”
+ Now as the aged creature wailed and wept,
+ Forth to her side Duke Joc'lyn lightly stepped,
+ With quarter-staff a-twirl he blithely came.
+ Quoth he: “Messires, harm not this ancient dame,
+ Bethink ye how e'en old and weak as she,
+ Your wives and mothers all must one day be.
+ So here then lies your mother, and 't were meeter
+ As ye are sons that as sons ye entreat her.
+ Come, let her by and, fool-like to requite ye,
+ With merry jape and quip I will delight ye,
+ Or with sweet song I 'll charm those ass's ears,
+ And melt, belike, those bullish hearts to tears--”
+
+ Now the chief warder, big and black of jowl,
+ Upon the Duke most scurvily did scowl.
+ “How now,” quoth he, “we want no fool's-heads here--”
+ “Sooth,” laughed the Duke, “you're fools enow 't is clear,
+ Yet there be fools and fools, ye must allow,
+ Gay fools as I and surly fools--as thou.”
+
+ “Ha, look 'ee, Fool, Black Lewin e'en am I,
+ And, by my head, an ill man to defy.
+ Now, motley rogue, wilt call me fool?” he roared,
+ And roaring fierce, clapped hairy fist on sword.
+
+ “Aye, that will I,” Duke Joc'lyn soft replied,
+ And black-avised, swart, knavish rogue beside.”
+
+ But now, while thus our ducal jester spoke,
+ Black Lewin sprang and fetched him such a stroke
+
+
+ That Jocelyn saw flash before his eyes,
+ More stars that e'er he'd noticed in the skies.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax did gaping stare,
+ Then ground his teeth and mighty oaths did swear,
+ And in an instant bared his trusty blade,
+ But then the Duke his fiery onslaught stayed.
+
+ “Ha!” cried the Knight, “and wilt thou smitten be
+ By such base knave, such filthy rogue as he?”
+
+ “Nay,” smiled the Duke, “stand back and watch, good brother,
+ A Rogue and Fool at buffets with each other.”
+
+ And speaking thus, he leapt on Black Lewin,
+ And smote him twice full hard upon the chin,
+ Two goodly blows upon that big, black jowl,
+ Whereat Black Lewin lustily did howl
+ And falling back, his polished bascinet
+ With ringing clash the cold, hard flagstones met.
+ Whereat his fellows, shouting fierce alarms,
+ Incontinent betook them to their arms;
+ And thus it seemed a fight there must have been
+ But that a horseman sudden spurred between--
+ A blue-eyed youth with yellow, curling hair,
+ Of slender shape, of face and feature fair,
+ A dainty knight was he in very truth,
+ A blue-eyed, merry, laughter-loving youth.
+
+ “Ha, knaves, what do ye with the Fool?” lisped he,
+ “Wilt strike a motley, dogs--a Fool? Let be!
+ Though faith, 't would seem, Sir Fool, thou hast a fist
+ That surly Lewin to his dole hath kissed.
+ If it can strum thy lute but half as well,
+ Then gestours all methinks thou should'st excel--
+
+
+ Ye rogues, pass Folly in, no man shall say
+ That from our town we folly turned away.
+ Come, follow, Fool, into the market-square,
+ And give us earnest of thy foolish ware.”
+
+Now it was market day, and within the goodly square were people come from
+near and far, a notable concourse, country folk and folk of the town,
+farmers and merchants, rustic maids, fair ladies, knights and esquires on
+horseback or a-foot, but who, hearing the jingle of the Duke's tinkling
+bells, seeing his flaunting cock's-comb, with one accord gathered to him
+from every quarter:
+
+ For when this long-legged gestour they espied,
+ They, laughing, hemmed him in on every side,
+ And, “See, a Fool! A Fool! The Fool must sing,”
+ And “Fool! A Fool!” upon the air did ring,
+ Wherefore the Duke betook him to his lute,
+ And strummed until the chattering crowd was mute.
+ Then while all folk did hold their peace to hear,
+ In golden voice he sang, full rich and clear:
+
+ “'A fool! A fool!' ye cry,
+ A fool forsooth am I.
+ But tell me, wise ones, if ye can,
+ Where shall ye find a happy man?
+ Lived there one since the world began?
+ Come, answer ye
+ To me!
+
+ “'What of the king?' says you.
+ Says I to you--'Go to!
+ A king despite his crown and throne,
+ Hath divers troubles all his own.
+ Such woes, methinks, as are unknown
+ To such as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ “'Ha, then--the rich!' ye cry,
+ 'Not so in truth,' says I.
+ 'The rich man's gold is load of care,
+ That day and night he needs must bear;
+ Less care he'd know if poor he were,
+ As poor as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ “For, sirs, as I do guess
+ This thing called 'Happiness'
+ Man leaveth with his youth behind;
+ So keep ye all a youthful mind,
+ Thus happiness ye all shall find
+ If wit have ye,
+ Like me!
+
+ “O list ye, great and small,
+ Proud knight, free man and thrall,
+ True happiness, since life began,
+ The birthright is of every man;
+ Seize then your birthright if ye can,
+ Since men are ye--
+ Like me!
+
+ “Thus I forsooth, a Fool,
+ Do now ye wise ones school;
+ Since of my folly, full and free,
+ I wisely thus admonish ye,
+ Be wise--or eke fools learn to be
+ In verity--
+ Like me!”
+
+Now when the song was ended some there were who laughed and some looked
+grave, some talked amain and some wagged solemn heads, while many a good
+coin rang heartily at Duke Jocelyn's feet; smiling, he bade Sir Pertinax
+take them up, joying to see the proud Knight stooping thus to pouch the
+money like any beggar. But now, when he would fain have gone his way into
+the town, the people would by no means suffer it and clamoured amain on
+all sides, insistent for more; wherefore, lifting his scarred face to the
+sunset sky, Duke Jocelyn sang as here followeth:
+
+ “When man is born he doth begin
+ With right good will, to daily sin,
+ And little careth.
+ But when his grave he thinketh near,
+ Then grave he groweth in his fear
+ And sin forsweareth.
+
+ “This life that man doth cherish so,
+ Is wondrous frail and quick to go,
+ Nor will it stay.
+ Yet where's the man that will not give
+ All that he hath so he might live
+ Another day.
+
+ “Fain would I know the reason why
+ All men so fearful are to die
+ And upward go?
+ Since Death all woes and ills doth end,
+ Sure Death, methinks, should be a friend,
+ Not hated foe.
+
+ “So when Death come, as come he must,
+ Grieve not that we this sorry dust
+ Do leave behind.
+ For when this fleeting life be run,
+
+
+ By Death we all of us--each one,
+ True life shall find.”
+
+ Now while he sang melodious and clear
+ Amid the throng that closer pressed to hear,
+ Duke Joc'lyn of a sudden did espy
+ The “wherefore” of his coming and the “why.”
+ Yolande herself he, singing, did behold,
+ Her eyes, red lips, her hair of ruddy gold;
+ And all her warm and glowing loveliness
+ Did sudden thus his raptured vision bless;
+ While she, in gracious ease, her horse did sit
+ That pawed round hoof and champed upon his bit,
+ Arching proud neck as if indeed he were
+ Proud of the lovely burden he did bear.
+ As Joc'lyn gazed upon her thus, she seemed
+ A thousand times more fair than he had dreamed.
+ Now while he sang, she viewed him, gentle-eyed,
+ And quite forgot the gallant by her side,
+ A tall, dark-featured, comely lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ Who, when the Duke made of his song an end
+ Did from his saddle o'er Yolanda bend.
+ With eyes on her warm beauty he stooped near
+ To touch white hand and whisper in her ear;
+ Whereat she laughed and frowned with cheek flushed red
+ Then, frowning still, she turned her horse's head,
+ And rode away with dame and squire and knight,
+ Till lost she was to Joc'lyn's ravished sight.
+
+“Ha, lord!” quoth Sir Pertinax, as they came within a quiet thoroughfare,
+“this lady is grown more fair since last we saw her Queen of Beauty at
+Melloc joust, concerning whom Fame, in troth, doth breed a just report for
+once. But, messire, didst mark him beside her--with touch o' hand, lord,
+whispers i' the ear--didst mark this wolf, this Seneschal, this thrice
+accurst Sir Gui?”
+
+“Aye, forsooth,” answered the Duke, “but thou'rt an hungered, methinks?”
+
+“To touch her hand, lord--aha! To whisper in her ear, lord--oho! A right
+puissant lord, Seneschal of Raddemore, Lord of Thorn and Knight of Ells! A
+lord of puissance and power potential.”
+
+“And thou, my Pertinax, art but a hungry Knight, that trampeth with a
+hungry Fool, wherefore let us forthwith--”
+
+“Aye, but mark me, lord, if this puissant lord with pomp and high estate
+doth woo the lady--”
+
+“So then, my Pertinax, will I woo this lady also.”
+
+“How, in this thy foolish guise?”
+
+“Aye, forsooth.”
+
+“Why, then, thou art like to be whipped for froward Fool and I for ragged
+rogue, and this our adventure brought to ill and woeful end--so here now is
+folly, lord, indeed!”
+
+“Aye, forsooth!” smiled the Duke,
+
+ “Whereto these bells give heed.
+ But come, amend thy speed,
+ Methinks thy fasting-need
+ These gloomy vapours breed.
+ Thy inner man doth plead
+ Good beef with ale or mead
+ Wherein, thou Fool decreed,
+ I am right well agreed
+ 'T were goodly thing to feed,
+ Nor will I thee impede,
+ So follow Folly's lead
+ And food-wards we'll proceed.”
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 2
+
+ How Pertinax mine host's large ears did wring,
+ And Jocelyn of these same ears did sing.
+
+
+Now the town was full, and every inn a-throng with company--lords, both
+great and small, knights and esquires and their several followings, as
+archers, men-at-arms, and the like, all thither come from far and near
+to joust at the great tournament soon to be, to honour the birthday of
+Benedicta, Duchess of Tissingors, Ambremont, and divers other fair cities,
+towns and villages. Thus our travellers sought lodgment in vain, whereat
+Sir Pertinax cursed beneath his breath, and Duke Jocelyn hummed, as was
+each his wont and custom; and ever the grim Knight's anger grew.
+
+ Until, at last, an humble inn they saw--
+ A sorry place, with bush above the door.
+ This evil place they straightway entered in,
+ Where riot reigned, the wild, unlovely din
+ Of archers, men-at-arms, and rogues yet worse,
+ Who drank and sang, whiles some did fight and curse.
+ An evil place indeed, a lawless crew,
+ And landlord, like his inn, looked evil too:
+ Small was his nose, small were his pig-like eyes,
+ But ears had he of most prodigious size,
+ A brawny rogue, thick-jowled and beetle-browed,
+ Who, spying out our strangers 'mid the crowd,
+
+ Beholding them in humble, mean array,
+ With gestures fierce did order them away.
+ “Nay,” quoth Sir Pertinax, “here will we bide,
+ Here will we eat and drink and sleep beside.
+ Go, bring us beef, dost hear? And therewith mead,
+ And, when we've ate, good beds and clean we 'll need.”
+ “Ho!” cried the host. “Naught unto ye I'll bring
+ Until yon Fool shall caper first and sing!”
+ Said Jocelyn: “I'll sing when I have fed!”
+ “And then,” quoth Pertinax, “we will to bed!”
+ “And wilt thou so?” the surly host replied;
+ “No beds for likes o' ye do I provide.
+ An' ye will sleep, knave, to the stable go,
+ The straw is good enough for ye, I trow.”
+
+ “Ha!” roared Sir Pertinax. “A stable? Straw?
+ This to me, thou filthy clapper-claw,
+ Thou fly-blown cod's-head, thou pestiferous thing!”
+ And, roaring, on the brawny host did spring;
+
+ By his large ears Sir Pertinax did take him,
+ And to and fro, and up and down, did shake him;
+ He shook him quick and slow, from side to side,
+ While loud for aid the shaken landlord cried.
+ Whereat the vicious crowd, in sudden wrath,
+ Shouted and cursed and plucked their daggers forth.
+ But, ere to harm our bold Knight they were able,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lightly sprang on massy table;
+ Cock's-comb a-flaunt and silver bells a-ring,
+ He laughing stood and gaily plucked lute-string,
+ And cut an antic with such merry grace
+ That angry shouts to laughter loud gave place.
+
+ Thereafter he sang as followeth:
+
+ “Bold bawcocks, brave, bibulous, babbling boys,
+ Tall tosspots, come, temper this tumult and noise;
+ So shall I sing sweetly such songs as shall sure
+ Constrain carking care and contumacy cure.
+ Thus, therefore--”
+
+But here the surly landlord raised much clamour and outcry, whiles he
+touched and caressed his great ears with rare gentleness.
+
+“Oho, my yeres!” roared he. “My yeres do be in woeful estate. Oho, what o'
+yon fierce-fingered rogue, good fellows, what o' yon knave--'a did twist my
+yeres plaguily and wring 'em roguishly, 'a did! Shall 'a not be beaten and
+drubbed out into the kennel, ha? What o' poor Nykins' yeres, says I--my
+yeres, oho!”
+
+“Thine ears, unsavoury scullion,” laughed Jocelyn; “thine ears, forsooth?
+Hark ye, of thy so great, so fair, so fine ears I'll incontinent make a
+song. List ye, one and all, so shall all here now hear my song of ears!”
+ Forthwith Duke Jocelyn struck his lute and sang:
+
+ “Thine ears, in sooth, are long ears,
+ Stout ears, in truth, and strong ears,
+ Full ears, I trow, and fair ears,
+ Round ears also and rare ears.
+ So here's an ear that all eyes here
+ Shall see no beauty in, 'tis clear.
+ For these o' thine be such ears,
+ Large, loose, and over-much ears,
+ Ears that do make fingers itch,
+ Ears to twist and ears to twitch.
+
+
+ If thine ears had gone unseen,
+ Pulled forsooth they had not been;
+ Yet, since pulled indeed they were,
+ Thine ears plain the blame must bear.
+ So of thine ears no more complain,
+ Lest that thine ears be pulled again.
+ So hide thine ears as best ye may,
+ Of which same ears, to end, I say
+ Thine ears indeed be like my song,
+ Of none account, yet over long!”
+
+Now hereupon was huge laughter and merriment, insomuch that the
+thick-jowled landlord betook himself otherwhere, and all men thronged upon
+our jester, vociferous for more.
+
+“Aye, but, bold tosspots,” laughed Jocelyn, “how now, sit ye without wine
+in very truth?”
+
+“Not so, good Fool,” they cried. “Here be wine a-plenty for us and for
+thee!”
+
+“Go to, tall topers,” quoth the Duke, “ye are witless, in faith, for there
+is no man here but is without wine, as in song will I shew--mark now:
+
+ “'Tis plain that ye are wine without,
+ Since wine's within ye, topers stout.
+ Without your wine, ye whineful show,
+ Thus wine-full, wine without ye go.
+ Being then without your wine, 'tis true,
+ Wine-less, ye still are wine-full too.
+ But, mark! As thus ye wine-full sit,
+ Since wine's within, out goeth wit.
+ Thus, truth to tell, tall topers stout,
+ Both wine and wit ye go without!”
+
+By such tricks of rhyme, jugglery of words, and the like, Duke Jocelyn won
+this fierce company to great good humour and delight; insomuch that divers
+of these roysterers pressed wine upon him and money galore. But, the hour
+growing late, he contrived at last to steal away with Sir Pertinax, which
+last, having fed copiously, now yawned consumedly, eager for bed. Howbeit,
+despite the Knight's fierce threats, they found no bed was to be had in
+all the inn, and so, perforce, betook them at last to the stable.
+
+ There, while our Knight cursed softly, though full deep,
+ Soon in the straw our Duke fell fast asleep.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, dear, I greatly fear
+ You 'll never be a poet!
+ MYSELF: Don't be too hard upon the bard,
+ I know it, girl, I know it!
+ These last two lines, I quite agree,
+ Might easily much better be.
+ Though, on the whole, I think my verse,
+ When all is said, might be much worse.
+ GILL: Worse, father? Yes, perhaps you're right,
+ Upon the whole--perhaps, it might.
+ MYSELF: But hark now, miss! Attend to this!
+ Poetic flights I do not fly;
+ When I begin, like poor Lobkyn,
+ I merely rhyme and versify.
+ Since my shortcomings I avow,
+ The story now, you must allow,
+ Trips lightly and in happy vein?
+ GILL: O, yes, father, though it is rather
+ Like some parts of your “Beltane.”
+ MYSELF: How, child! Dare you accuse your sire
+ Of plagiary--that sin most dire?
+ And if I do, small blame there lies;
+ It is myself I plagiarise.
+
+ GILL: Why, yes, of course! And, as you know.
+ I always loved your “Beltane” so.
+
+ MYSELF: But don't you like the “geste” I'm writing?
+
+ GILL: Of course! It's getting most exciting,
+ In spite of all the rhymes and stuff--
+
+ MYSELF: Stuff?
+ Enough!
+ My daughter, you're so sweetly frank.
+ Henceforth my verses shall be blank.
+ No other rhyme I'll rhyme for you
+ Till you politely beg me to.
+ Now then, your blank-verse doom you know,
+ Hey, presto, and away we go!
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 3
+
+ Tell'th how Duke Jocelyn of love did sing,
+ And haughty knight in lily-pool did fling.
+
+
+ Upon a morn, when dewy flowers fresh-waked
+ Filled the glad air with perfume languorous,
+ And piping birds a pretty tumult made,
+ Thrilling the day with blended ecstasy;
+ When dew in grass did light a thousand fires,
+ And gemmed the green in flashing bravery--
+ Forth of her bower the fair Yolanda came,
+ Fresh as the morn and, like the morning, young,
+ Who, as she breathed the soft and fragrant air,
+ Felt her white flesh a-thrill with joyous life,
+ And heart that leapt responsive to the joy.
+ Vivid with life she trod the flowery ways,
+ Dreaming awhile of love and love and love;
+ Unknowing all of eyes that watched unseen,
+ Viewing her body's gracious loveliness:
+ Her scarlet mouth, her deep and dreamful eyes,
+ The glowing splendour of her sun-kissed hair,
+ Which in thick braids o'er rounded bosom fell
+ Past slender waist by jewelled girdle bound.
+
+ So stood Duke Jocelyn amid the leaves,
+ And marked how, as she walked, her silken gown
+ Did cling her round in soft embrace, as though
+ Itself had sense and wit enough to love her.
+ Entranced he stood, bound by her beauty's spell,
+ Whereby it seemed he did in her behold
+ The beauty of all fair and beauteous things.
+
+
+ Now leaned she o'er a pool where lilies pale
+ Oped their shy beauties to the gladsome day,
+ Yet in their beauty none of them so fair
+ As that fair face the swooning waters held.
+ And as, glad-eyed, she viewed her loveliness,
+ She fell to singing, soft and low and sweet,
+ Clear and full-throated as a piping merle,
+ And this the manner of her singing was:
+
+ “What is love? Ah, who shall say?
+ Flower to languish in a day,
+ Bird on wing that will away.
+ Love, I do defy thee!
+
+ “What is love? A toy so vain
+ 'T is but found to lose again,
+ Painful sweet and sweetest pain;
+ Ah, love, come not nigh me.
+
+ “But, love, an thou com'st to me,
+ Wert thou as I'd have thee be,
+ Welcome sweet I'd make for thee,
+ And weary of thee never.
+
+ “If with thy heart thou could'st endure,
+ If thou wert strong and thou wert sure,
+ A master now, and now a wooer,
+ Thy slave I'd be for ever.”
+
+ Thus sang she sweet beside the lily-pool,
+ Unknowing any might her singing hear,
+ When rose another voice, so rich, so full
+ As thrilled her into rapt and pleasing wonder;
+ And as she hearkened to these deep-sung words,
+ She flushed anon and dimpled to a smile:
+
+ “What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Bird of joy to sing alway,
+ Deep in the heart of me.
+
+ “What is love? A joyous pain
+ That I ne'er may lose again,
+ Since for ever I am fain
+ To think and dream of thee.”
+
+ Now hasted she to part the leafy screen,
+ And one in motley habit thus beheld.
+ But when 'neath flaunting cock's-comb she did mark
+ His blemished face, she backward from him drew
+ And caught her breath, and yet upon him gazed
+ 'Neath wrinkled brow, the while Duke Jocelyn
+ Read the expected horror in her eyes:
+ Wherefore he bowed his head upon his breast
+ And plucked at belt with sudden, nervous hand
+ As, cold and proud and high, she questioned him:
+ “What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show
+ A visage that might shame the gladsome day?”
+
+ Whereto he answered, low and humble-wise:
+ “A Fool! The very fool of fools am I--
+ A Fool that fain would pluck the sun from heaven.”
+
+ “Begone!” she sighed. “Thy look doth make me cold,
+ E'en as I stand thus i' the kindly sun.
+ Yet, an thou 'rt poor as thy mean habit speaks thee,
+ Take first this dole for tender Jesu's sake.”
+
+ Then answered Jocelyn on lowly knee:
+ “For thy sweet bounty I do thank thee well,
+ But, in good sooth, so great a fool am I,
+ 'Stead of thy gold I rather would possess
+
+ Yon happy flower that in thy bosom bloometh.
+ Give me but this and richer fool am I
+ Than any knight-like fool that coucheth lance--
+ Greater I than any lord soever,
+ Aye--e'en Duke Jocelyn of Brocelaunde.”
+
+ Smiled now Yolande with rosy lip up-curving,
+ While in soft cheek a roguish dimple played.
+ Quoth she: “Duke Jocelyn, I've heard it said,
+ Is great and rich, a mighty man-at-arms,
+ And thou but sorry Fool in mean array,
+ Yet”--from white fingers she let fall the flower--
+ “Be thou, Fool, greater than this mighty Duke!
+ And now, since mighty Fool and rich I've made thee,
+ In quittance I would win of thee a song.”
+
+ Now sat Yolande, white chin on dimpled fist,
+ Viewing him o'er with cruel, maiden-eyes,
+ So swift to heed each outward mark and blemish
+ (Since maids be apt to sly disparagement,
+ And scorn of all that seems un-beautiful)
+ While he did lean him by the marble rim,
+ His wistful gaze down-bent upon the pool,
+ Feeling her look and knowing while she looked:
+ What time he touched his lute with fingers skilled,
+ And so fell singing, wonder-low and sweet:
+
+ “Though foul and harsh of face am I,
+ Lady fair--O lady!
+ Fair thoughts within my heart may lie,
+ As flowers that bloom unseen to die,
+ Lady fair--O lady!
+
+ “Though this my hateful face may fright thee,
+ Lady fair--O list!
+ My folly mayhap shall delight thee,
+ A song of fools I will recite thee,
+ Lady fair--O list!”
+
+ Herewith he sighed amain, but smiled anon,
+ And fell anon to blither, louder note:
+
+ “Sing hey, Folly--Folly ho,
+ And here's a song of Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun,
+ Will gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.
+
+ “And Fool, forsooth, a Fool am I,
+ Well learned in foolish lore:
+ For I can sing ye, laugh or sigh:
+ Can any man do more?
+ Hey, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ 'Gainst sadness bar the door.
+
+ “A Fool am I, yet by fair leave,
+ Poor Fools have hearts to feel.
+ Poor Fools, like other fools, may grieve
+ If they their woes conceal.
+ Hither, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ All Fools to Folly kneel.
+
+ “What though a Fool be melancholy,
+ Sick, sick at heart--heigho!
+ Pain must he hide 'neath laughing Folly,
+ What Fool should heed his woe!
+ Hither, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Fool must unpitied go.
+
+ “E'en though a Fool should fondly woo,
+ E'en though his love be high,
+ Poor Folly's fool must wear the rue,
+ Proud love doth pass him by.
+ Heigho, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Poor Fool may love--and die.
+
+ “Though Wisdom should in motley go,
+ And fools the wise man ape;
+ Who is there that shall Wisdom know
+ Beneath a 'scalloped cape?
+ Heigho, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Life is but sorry jape.
+
+ “So, hey, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ And here's a song o' Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun
+ Do gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.”
+
+ The singing done, she viewed him kinder-eyed,
+ Till eyes met eyes--when she did pout and frown,
+ And chid him that his song was something sad,
+ And vowed so strange a Fool was never seen.
+ Then did she question him in idle wise
+ As, who he was and whence he came and why?
+ Whereto the Duke--
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ Dear father, if you're in the vein,
+ I'd like a little rhyme again;
+ For blank verse is so hard to read,
+ And yours is very blank indeed!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ Girl, when blank verse I write for thee,
+ I write it blank as blank can be.
+ Stay, I'll declare (no poet franker)
+ No blank verse, Gill, was ever blanker.
+ But:
+ Since, with your sex's sweet inconstancy,
+ Rhymes now you wish, rhymes now I'll
+ rhyme for thee:
+ As thus, my dear--
+ Give ear:
+
+Whereto the Duke did instant make reply:
+
+ “Sweet lady, since you question me,
+ Full blithely I will answer thee;
+ And, since you fain would merry be,
+ I'll sing and rhyme it merrily:
+
+ “Since Mirth's my trade and follies fond,
+ Methinks a fair name were Joconde;
+ And for thy sake
+ I travail make
+ Through briar and brake,
+ O'er fen and lake,
+ The Southward March beyond.
+
+ “For I an embassage do bear,
+ Now unto thee, Yolande the fair,
+ Which embassy,
+ Now unto thee,
+ Right soothfully,
+ And truthfully,
+ Most full, most free,
+ Explicit I 'll declare.
+
+ “Thus: videlicit and to wit,
+ Sith now thou art to wedlock fit--
+ Both day and night
+ In dark, in light
+ A worthy knight,
+ A lord of might,
+ In his own right,
+ Duke Joc'lyn hight
+ To thine his heart would knit.
+
+ “But, since the Duke may not come to thee,
+ I, in his stead, will humbly sue thee;
+ His love each day
+ I will portray
+ As best I may;
+ I'll sue, I'll pray,
+ I'll sing, I'll play,
+ Now grave, now gay,
+ And in this way,
+ I for the Duke will woo thee.”
+
+ Now, fair Yolanda gazed with wide-oped eyes,
+ And checked sweet breath for wonder and surprise;
+ Then laughed full blithe and yet, anon, did frown,
+ And with slim fingers plucked at purfled gown:
+
+ “And is it thou--a sorry Fool,” she cried.
+ “Art sent to win this mighty Duke a bride?”
+
+ “E'en so!” quoth he. “Whereof I token bring;
+ Behold, fair maid, Duke Joc'lyn's signet ring.”
+ “Heaven's love!” she cried. “And can it truly be
+ The Duke doth send a mountebank like thee,
+ A Fool that hath nor likelihood nor grace
+ From worn-out shoon unto thy blemished face--
+ A face so scarred--so hateful that meseems
+ At night 't will haunt and fright me with ill dreams;
+ A slave so base--”
+
+ “E'en so!” Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ And his marred visage 'neath his hood did hide.
+ “But, though my motley hath thy pride distressed,
+ I am the Fool Duke Joc'lyn loveth best.
+ And--ah, my lady, thou shalt never see
+ In all this world a Fool the like of me!”
+
+ Thus spake the Duke, and then awhile stood mute,
+ And idly struck sweet chords upon his lute,
+ Watching Yolande's fair, frowning face the while,
+ With eyes that held a roguish, wistful smile.
+ She, meeting now these eyes of laughing blue,
+ Felt her cheeks burn, and sudden angry grew.
+
+ So up she rose in proud and stately fashion,
+ And stamped slim foot at him in sudden passion;
+ And vowed that of Duke Joc'lyn she cared naught;
+ That if he'd woo, by him she must be sought;
+ Vowed if he wooed his wooing should be vain,
+ And, as he came, he back should go again.
+ “For, since the Duke,” she cried, “dare send to me
+ A sorry wight, a very Fool like thee,
+ By thy Fool's mouth I bid thee to him say,
+ He ne'er shall win me, woo he as he may;
+ Say that I know him not--”
+
+ “Yet,” spake Duke Joc'lyn soft,
+ “E'er this, methinks, thou'st seen my lord full oft.
+ When at the joust thou wert fair Beauty's queen
+ Duke Joc'lyn by thy hand oft crowned hath been.”
+ “True, Fool,” she answered, 'twixt a smile and frown,
+ “I've seen him oft, but with his vizor down.
+ And verily he is a doughty knight,
+ But wherefore doth he hide his face from sight?”
+
+ “His face?” quoth Joc'lyn with a gloomy look,
+ “His face, alack!” And here his head he shook;
+ “His face, ah me!” And here Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ “His face--” “What of his face?” Yolanda cried.
+ “A mercy's name, speak--speak and do not fail.”
+ “Lady,” sighed Joc'lyn, “thereby hangs a tale,
+ The which, though strange it sound, is verity,
+ That here and now I will relate to thee--
+ 'T is ditty dire of dismal doating dames,
+ A lay of love-lorn, loveless languishment,
+ And ardent, amorous, anxious anguishment,
+ Full-fed forsooth of fierce and fiery flames;
+ So hark,
+ And mark:
+ In Brocelaunde not long ago,
+ Was born Duke Jocelyn. I trow
+ Not all the world a babe could show,
+ A babe so near divine:
+ For, truth to tell,
+ He waxed so well,
+ So fair o' face,
+ So gay o' grace,
+ That people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Where'er he went,
+ In wonderment
+ Would stare and stare
+ To see how fair
+ A lad was Jocelyn.
+
+ And when to man's estate he came,
+ Alack, fair lady, 't was the same!
+ And many a lovely, love-lorn dame
+ Would pitiful pant and pine.
+ These doleful dames
+ Felt forceful flames,
+ The old, the grey,
+ The young and gay,
+ Both dark and fair
+ Would rend their hair,
+ And sigh and weep
+ And seldom sleep;
+ And dames long wed
+ From spouses fled
+ For love of Jocelyn.
+
+ Therefore the Duke an oath did take
+ By one, by two, by three,
+ That for these love-lorn ladies' sake
+ No maid his face should see.
+ And thus it is, where'er he rideth
+ His love-begetting face he hideth.”
+
+ Now laughed Yolande, her scorn forgotten quite,
+ “Alas!” she cried. “Poor Duke! O woeful plight!
+ And yet, O Fool, good Fool, full fain am I,
+ This ducal, love-begetting face to spy--”
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: “Then, my lady, prithee, look!”
+ And from his bosom he a picture took.
+
+ “Since this poor face of mine doth so affright thee
+ Here's one of paint that mayhap shall delight thee.
+ Take it, Yolande, for thee the craftsmen wrought it,
+ For thee I from Duke Jocelyn have brought it.
+ If day and night thou 'lt wear it, fair Yolande,”
+ And speaking thus, he gave it to her hand.
+ Its golden frame full many a jewel bore,
+ But 't was the face, the face alone she saw.
+ And viewing it, Yolanda did behold
+ A manly face, yet of a god-like mould.
+ Breathless she sate, nor moved she for a space,
+ Held by the beauty of this painted face;
+ 'Neath drooping lash she viewed it o'er and o'er,
+ And ever as she gazed new charms she saw.
+ Then, gazing yet, “Who--what is this?” she sighed.
+ “Paint, lady, paint!” Duke Joc'lyn straight replied,
+ “The painted visage of my lord it shows--
+ Item: one mouth, two eyes and eke a nose--”
+ “Nay, Fool,” she murmured, “here's a face, meseems,
+ I oft have seen ere now within my dreams;
+ These dove-soft eyes in dreams have looked on me!”
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: “Yet these eyes can nothing see!”
+
+ “These tender lips in accents sweet I've heard!”
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: “Yet--they ne'er have spoke a word!
+ But here's a face at last doth please thee well
+ Yet hath no power to speak, see, sigh or smell,
+ Since tongueless, sightless, breathless 't is--thus I
+ A sorry Fool its needs must e'en supply.
+ And whiles thou doatest on yon painted head
+ My tongue I'll lend to woo thee in its stead.
+ I'll woo with wit
+ As seemeth fit,
+ Whiles there thou sit
+ And gaze on it.
+ Whiles it ye see
+ Its voice I'll be
+ And plead with thee,
+ So hark to me:
+ Yolande, I love thee in true loving way;
+ That is, I'll learn to love thee more each day,
+ Until so great my growing love shall grow,
+ This puny world in time 't will overflow.
+ To-day I love, and yet my love is such
+ That I to-morrow shall have twice as much.
+ Thus lovingly to love thee I will learn
+ Till thou shalt learn Love's lesson in thy turn,
+ And find therein how sweet this world can be
+ When as I love, thou, love, shall so love me.”
+
+ “Hush, hush!” she sighed, and to her ruddy lip
+ She sudden pressed one rosy finger-tip.
+ And then, O happy picture! Swift from sight
+ She hid it in her fragrant bosom white.
+ “O Fool,” she cried, “get thee behind yon tree,
+ And thou a very Fool indeed shall see,
+ A knightly fool who sighs and groans in verse
+ And oft-times woos in song, the which is worse.”
+ For now they heard a voice that sung most harsh,
+ That shrilled and croaked like piping frog in marsh,
+ A voice that near and ever nearer drew
+ Until the lordly singer strode in view.
+ A noble singer he, both tall and slender,
+
+ With locks be-curled and clad in pompous splendour;
+ His mantle of rich velvet loose did flow,
+ As if his gorgeous habit he would show;
+ A jewelled bonnet on his curls he bore,
+ With nodding feather bravely decked before;
+ He was a lover very _point de vice_,
+ And all about him, save his voice, was nice.
+ Thus loudly sang, with lungs both sound and strong
+ This worthy knight, Sir Palamon of Tong.
+
+ “O must I groan
+ And make my moan
+ And live alone alway?
+ Yea, I must sigh
+ And droop and die,
+ If she reply, nay, nay!
+
+ “I groan for thee,
+ I moan for thee,
+ Alone for thee I pine.
+ All's ill for me
+ Until for me
+ She will for me be mine.”
+
+But now, beholding Yolande amid her flowers, herself as sweet and fresh as
+they, he made an end of his singing and betook him, straightway, to amorous
+looks and deep-fetched sighs together with many supple bendings of
+the back, elegant posturings and motitions of slim legs, fannings and
+flauntings of be-feathered cap, and the like gallantries; and thereafter
+fell to his wooing on this fashion:
+
+“Lady, O lady of lovely ladies most loved! Fair lady of hearts, sweet dame
+of tenderness, tender me thine ears, suffer one, hath sighed and suffered
+for sake of thee, to sightful sue. Lovely thou art and therefore to be
+loved, and day and night thou and Love the sum of my excogitations art,
+wherefore I, with loving art, am hither come to woo thee, since, lady, I
+do love thee.”
+
+“Alack, Sir Palamon!” she sighed, “and is it so?”
+
+“Alack!” he answered, “so it is. Yest're'en I did proclaim thee fairer than
+all fair ladies; to-day thou art yet fairer, thus this day thou art fairer
+than thyself; the which, though a paradox, is yet wittily true and truly
+witty, methinks. But as for me--for me, alas for me! I am forsooth the very
+slave of love, fettered fast by Dan Cupid, a slave grievous and woeful,
+yet, being thy slave, joying in my slavery and happy in my grievous woe.
+Thus it is I groan and moan, lady; I pine, repine and pine again most
+consumedly. I sleep little and eat less, I am, in fine and in all ways,
+'haviours, manners, customs, feints and fashions soever, thy lover
+manifest, confessed, subject, abject, in season and out of season, yearly,
+monthly, daily, hourly, and by the minute. Moreover--”
+
+“Beseech thee!” she cried, “Oh, beseech thee, take thy breath.”
+
+“Gramercy, 'tis done, lady, 'tis done, and now forthwith resolved am I to
+sing thee--”
+
+“Nay, I pray you, sir, sing no more, but resolve me this mystery. What is
+love?”
+
+“Love, lady? Verily that will I in truth!” And herewith Sir Palamon fell
+to an attitude of thought with eyes ecstatic, with knitted brows and sage
+nodding of the head. “Love, my lady--ha! Love, lady is--hum! Love, then,
+perceive me, is of its nature elemental, being of the elements, as 'twere,
+composed and composite, as water, air and fire. For, remark me, there is no
+love but begetteth first water, which is tears; air, which is sighings and
+groanings; and fire, which is heart-burnings and the like. Thus is love a
+passion elemental. But yet, and heed me, lady, love is also metaphysical,
+being a motition of the soul and e'en the spirit, and being of the spirit
+'tis ghostly, and being ghostly 'tis--ha! Who comes hither to shatter the
+placid mirror of my thoughts?”
+
+So saying, the noble knight of Tong turned to behold one who strode towards
+them in haste, a tall man this whose black brows scowled fierce upon the
+day, and who spurned the tender flowers with foot ungentle as he came.
+
+ A tall, broad-shouldered, haughty lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ At sight of whom, Yolanda's laughter failed,
+ And in her cheek the rosy colour paled.
+
+ Quoth he: “Sir Palamon, now of thy grace,
+ And of thy courteous friendship yield me place,
+ To this fair lady I a word would say.
+ Thus do I for thy courteous-absence pray,
+ I am thy friend, Sir Knight, as thou dost know,
+ But--”
+
+ “My lord,” quoth Sir Palamon, “I go--
+ Friendship methinks is a most holy bond,
+ A bond I hold all binding bonds beyond,
+ And thou 'rt a friend right potent, my lord Gui,
+ So to thy will I willingly comply.
+ Thus, since thy friendship I hold passing dear,
+ Thou need but ask--and lo! I am not here.”
+ Thus having said, low bowed this courtly knight,
+ Then turned about and hasted out of sight.
+
+“And now, my lady,” quoth Sir Gui, frowning upon her loveliness, “and now
+having discharged yon gaudy wind-bag, what of this letter I did receive
+but now--behold it!” and speaking, he snatched a crumpled missive from his
+bosom. “Behold it, I say!”
+
+“Indeed, my lord, I do,” she answered, proud and disdainful; “it is,
+methinks, my answer to thy loathèd suit--”
+
+ “Loathèd!” he cried, and caught her slender wrist,
+ And held it so, crushed in his cruel fist;
+ But proud she faced him, shapely head raised high.
+ “Most loathèd, my lord!” she, scornful, made reply.
+ “For rather than I'd wed myself with thee,
+ The wife of poorest, humblest slave I'd be,
+ Or sorriest fool that tramps the dusty way--”
+ “Ha! Dare thou scorn me so?” Sir Gui did say,
+ “Then I by force--by force will sudden take thee,
+ And slave of love, my very slave I 'll make thee--”
+
+ Out from the leaves Duke Joc'lyn thrust his head,
+ “O fie! Thou naughty, knavish knight!” he said.
+ “O tush! O tush! O tush again--go to!
+ 'T is windy, whining, wanton way to woo.
+ What tushful talk is this of 'force' and 'slaves',
+ Thou naughty, knavish, knightly knave of knaves?
+ Unhand the maid--loose thy offensive paw!”
+ Round sprang Sir Gui, and, all astonished, saw
+ A long-legged jester who behind him stood
+ With head out-thrust, grim-smiling 'neath his hood.
+
+ “Plague take thee, Fool! Out o' my sight!” growled he,
+ “Or cropped thine ugly nose and ears shall be.
+ Begone, base rogue! Haste, dog, and get thee hence,
+ Thy folly pleadeth this thy Fool's offence--
+
+ Yet go, or of thy motley shalt be stripped,
+ And from the town I 'll have thee shrewdly whipped,
+ For Lord of Ells and Raddemore am I,
+ Though folk, I've heard, do call me 'Red Sir Gui,'
+ Since blood is red and--I am Gui the Red.”
+ “Red Gui?” quoth Joc'lyn. “Art thou Gui the dread--
+ Red Gui--in faith? Of him Dame Rumour saith,
+ His ways be vile but viler still--his breath.
+ Now though a life vile lived is thing most ill,
+ Yet some do think a vile breath viler still.”
+
+ Swift, swift as lightning from a summer sky,
+ Out flashed the vengeful dagger of Sir Gui,
+ And darting with a deadly stroke and fierce,
+ Did Joc'lyn's motley habit rend and pierce,
+ Whereat with fearful cry up sprang Yolande,
+ But this strange jester did grim-smiling stand.
+ Quoth he: “Messire, a fool in very truth,
+ The fool of foolish fools he'd be, in sooth,
+ Who'd play a quip or so, my lord, with thee
+ Unless in triple armour dight were he;
+ And so it is this jester doth not fail
+ With such as thou to jest in shirt of mail.
+ Now since my heart thy foolish point hath missed
+ Thy dagger--thus I answer--with my fist!”
+ Then swift he leapt and, even as he spoke,
+ He fetched the knight so fierce and fell a stroke
+ That, reeling, on the greensward sank Sir Gui,
+ And stared, wide-eyed, unseeing, at the sky.
+ Right firmly then upon his knightly breast
+ Duke Joc'lyn's worn and dusty shoe did rest,
+ And while Yolande stood white and dumb with fear,
+ Thus sang the Duke full blithely and full clear:
+
+ “Dirt thou art since thou art dust,
+ And shalt to dust return;
+ Meanwhile Folly as he lust
+ Now thy base dust doth spurn.
+
+ “Yea, lord, though thy rank be high,
+ One day, since e'en lords must die,
+ Under all men's feet thou'lt lie.”
+
+ Now, fierce, Sir Gui did curse the Fool amain,
+ And, cursing, strove his dagger to regain.
+ But Joc'lyn stooped, in mighty arms he swung him,
+ And down into the lily-pool he flung him.
+
+ With splash resounding fell the noble knight,
+ Then gurgling rose in damp and sorry plight,
+ Whiles Joc'lyn, leaning o'er the marble rim,
+ With lifted finger thus admonished him:
+
+ “Red Gui,
+ Dread Gui,
+ Lest a dead Gui,
+ Gui, I make of thee,
+ Understand, Gui,
+ Fair Yolande, Gui,
+ Humbly wooed must be.
+
+ “So, Gui,
+ Know, Gui,
+ Ere thou go, Gui,
+ Gui they call the Red;
+ And thou'lt woo, Gui,
+ Humbly sue, Gui,
+ Lest Love strike thee dead.
+
+ “Now while thou flound'rest in yon pool,
+ Learn thou this wisdom of a Fool;
+ Cold water oft can passion cool
+ And fiery ardours slake;
+ Thus, sir, since water quencheth fire,
+ So let it soothe away thine ire.
+ Then--go seek thee garments drier
+ Lest a rheum thou take.”
+
+ Sir Gui did gasp, and gasping, strove to curse,
+ Whereat he, gasping, did but gasp the worse,
+ Till, finding he could gasp, but nothing say,
+ He shook clenched fist and, gasping, strode away.
+ Then Joc'lyn turned and thus beheld Yolande,
+ Who trembling all and pale of cheek did stand.
+
+ “O Fool!” she sighed. “Poor Fool, what hast
+ thou done?”
+
+ Quoth he: “Yolande, to woo thee I've begun,
+ I better might have wooed, it is most true,
+ If other wooers had not wooed thee too.”
+
+ “Nay, Fool!” she whispered. “O beware--beware!
+ Death--death for thee is in the very air.
+ From Canalise, in haste, I bid thee fly,
+ For 'vengeful lord and cruel is Sir Gui.
+ Take now this gold to aid thee on thy way,
+ And for thy life upon my knees I'll pray,
+ And with the holy angels intercede
+ To comfort thee and aid thee in thy need.
+ And so--farewell! “Thus, speaking, turned Yolande.
+ But Joc'lyn stayed her there with gentle hand,
+ Whereat she viewed him o'er in mute surprise,
+ To see the radiant gladness of his eyes.
+
+ Quoth he: “Yolande, since thou wilt pray for me,
+ Of thy sweet prayers fain would I worthy be.
+ This I do know--let Death come when he may,
+ The love I bear thee shall live on alway.
+
+ Nor will I strive to leave grim Death behind me,
+ Since when Death wills methinks he sure will find me;
+ As in the world Death roameth everywhere,
+ Who flees him here perchance shall meet him there.
+ Here, then, I'll bide--let what so will betide me,
+ Thy prayers like holy angels, watch beside me.
+ So all day long and in thy pretty sleeping
+ 'Till next we meet the Saints have thee in keeping.”
+
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: The last part seems to me much better.
+ I like Yolande, I hope he'll get her.
+
+ MYSELF: Patience, my dear, he's hardly met her.
+
+ GILL: I think it would be rather nice
+ To make him kiss her once or twice.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll make him kiss her well, my dear,
+ When he begins--but not just here.
+ I'll later see what I can do
+ In this matter to please you.
+
+ GILL: And then I hope, that by and by
+ He kills that frightful beast, Sir Gui.
+
+ MYSELF: Yes, I suppose, we ought to slay him,
+ For all his wickedness to pay him.
+
+ GILL: And Pertinax, I think--don't you?
+ Should have a lady fair to woo.
+ To see him in love would be perfectly clipping.
+ It's a corking idea, and quite awfully ripping--
+
+ MYSELF: If you use such vile slang, miss, I vow I will not--
+
+ GILL: O, Pax, father! I'm sorry; I almost forgot.
+
+ MYSELF: Very well, if my warning you'll bear well
+ in mind,
+ A fair damsel for Pertinax I 'll try to find.
+
+ GILL: Then make her, father, make her quick,
+ I always knew you were a brick.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 4
+
+ How Pertinax plied angle to his sport
+ And, catching him no fish, fish-like was caught.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By sleepy stream where bending willows swayed,
+ And, from the sun, a greeny twilight made,
+ Sir Pertinax, broad back against a tree,
+ Lolled at his ease and yawned right lustily.
+ In brawny fist he grasped a rod or angle,
+ With hook wherefrom sad worm did, writhing, dangle.
+ Full well he loved the piscatorial sport,
+ Though he as yet no single fish had caught.
+ Hard by, in easy reach upon the sward,
+ Lay rusty bascinet and good broadsword.
+ Thus patiently the good Knight sat and fished,
+ Yet in his heart most heartily he wished
+ That he, instead of fishing, snug had been
+ Seated within his goodly tower of Shene.
+ And thinking thus, he needs must cast his eye
+ On rusty mail, on battered shoon, and sigh,
+ And murmur fitful curses and lament
+ That in such base, unknightly garb he went--
+ A lord of might whose broad shield bravely bore
+ Of proud and noble quarterings a score.
+ “And 't was forsooth for foolish ducal whim
+ That he must plod abroad in such vile trim!”
+ Revolving thus, his anger sudden woke,
+ And, scowling, to the unseen fish he spoke:
+
+ “A Duke! A Fool! A fool-duke, by my head!
+ Who, clad like Fool, like Fool will fain be wed,
+
+ For ass and dolt and fool of fools is he
+ Who'll live in bondage to some talk-full she.
+ Yet, if he'll wed, why i' the foul fiend's name,
+ Must he in motley seek the haughty dame?”
+
+ But now, while he did on this problem dwell,
+ Two unexpected happenings befell:
+ A fish to nibble on the worm began,
+ And to him through the green a fair maid ran.
+ Fast, fast amid the tangled brake she fled,
+ Her cheeks all pale, her dark eyes wide with dread;
+ But Pertinax her beauty nothing heeded,
+ Since both his eyes to watch his fish were needed;
+ But started round with sudden, peevish snort
+ As in slim hands his brawny fist she caught;
+ “Ha, maid!” he cried, “Why must thou come this way
+ To spoil my sport and fright mine fish away?”
+ “O man--O man, if man thou art,” she gasped,
+ “Save me!” And here his hand she closer grasped,
+ But even now, as thus she breathless spake,
+ Forth of the wood three lusty fellows brake;
+ Goodly their dress and bright the mail they wore,
+ While on their breasts a falcon-badge they bore.
+ “Oho!” cried one. “Yon dirty knave she's met!”
+ Sir Pertinax here donned his bascinet.
+ “But one poor rogue shan't let us!” t' other roared.
+ Sir Pertinax here reached and drew his sword.
+ “Then,” cried the third, “let's at him now all three!”
+ Quoth Pertinax: “Maid, get thee 'hind yon tree,
+ For now, methinks, hast found me better sport
+ Than if, forsooth, yon plaguy fish I'd caught.”
+ So saying, up he rose and, eyes a-dance
+ He 'gainst the three did joyously advance,
+ With sword that flashed full bright, but brighter yet
+ The eyes beneath his rusty bascinet;
+
+ While aspect bold and carriage proud and high,
+ Did plainly give his mean array the lie.
+ Thus, as he gaily strode to meet the three,
+ In look and gesture all proud knight was he;
+ Beholding which, the maid forgot her dread,
+ And, 'stead of pale, her cheek glowed softly red.
+
+ Now at the three Sir Pertinax did spring,
+ And clashing steel on steel did loudly ring,
+ Yet Pertinax was one and they were three,
+ And once was, swearing, smitten to his knee,
+ Whereat the maid hid face in sudden fear,
+ And, kneeling so, fierce cries and shouts did hear,
+ The sounds of combat dire, and deadly riot
+ Lost all at once and hushed to sudden quiet,
+ And glancing up she saw to her amaze
+ Three rogues who fleetly ran three several ways,
+ Three beaten rogues who fled with one accord,
+ While Pertinax, despondent, sheathed his sword.
+ “Par Dex!” he growled, “'Tis shame that they should run
+ Ere that to fight the rogues had scarce begun!”
+ So back he came, his rod and line he took,
+ And gloomed to find no worm upon his hook.
+ But now the maiden viewed him gentle-eyed;
+ “Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!” she sighed,
+ “Thou, like true knight, hast fought for me today--”
+ “And the fish,” sighed he, “have stole my worm away,
+ Which is great pity, since my worms be few!”
+ And here the Knight's despond but deeper grew.
+ “Yon rogues,” he sighed, “no stomach had for fight,
+ Yet scared the fish that had a mind to bite!”
+ “But thou hast saved me, noble man!” said she.
+ “So must I use another worm!” sighed he.
+
+ And straightway with his fishing he proceeded
+ While sat the maid beside him all unheeded;
+ Whereat she frowned and, scornful, thus did speak
+ With angry colour flaming in her cheek:
+ “What man art thou that canst but fight and fish?
+ Hast thou no higher thought, no better wish?”
+ “Certes,” quoth he, “I would I had indeed
+ A goodly pot of foaming ale or mead.”
+ “O base, most base!” the maid did scornful cry,
+ And viewed him o'er with proud, disdainful eye.
+ “That I should owe my life to man like thee!
+ That one so base could fight and master three!
+ Who art thou, man, and what? Speak me thy name,
+ Whither ye go and why, and whence ye came,
+ Thy rank, thy state, thy worth to me impart,
+ If soldier, serf, or outlawed man thou art;
+ And why 'neath ragged habit thou dost wear
+ A chain of gold such as but knights do bear,
+ Why thou canst front three armed rogues unafraid,
+ Yet fear methinks to look upon a maid?”
+
+ But to these questions Pertinax sat dumb--
+ That is, he rubbed his chin and murmured, “Hum!”
+ Whereat she, frowning, set determined chin
+ And thus again to question did begin:
+
+SHE: What manner of man art thou?
+
+HE: A man.
+
+SHE: A soldier?
+
+HE: Thou sayest.
+
+SHE: Art in service?
+
+HE: Truly.
+
+SHE: Whom serve ye?
+
+HE: A greater than I.
+
+SHE: Art thou wed?
+
+HE: The Saints forfend!
+
+SHE: Then art a poor soldier and solitary.
+
+HE: I might be richer.
+
+SHE: What dost thou fishing here?
+
+HE: I fish.
+
+SHE: And why didst fight three men for me--a maid unknown?
+
+HE: For lack of better employ.
+
+SHE: Rude soldier--whence comest thou?
+
+HE: Fair maiden, from beyond.
+
+SHE: Gross Knight, whither goest thou?
+
+HE: Dainty damosel, back again.
+
+SHE: Dost lack aught?
+
+HE: Quiet!
+
+SHE: How, would'st have me hold my peace, ill fellow?
+
+HE: 'T would be a marvel.
+
+SHE: Wherefore?
+
+HE: Thou'rt a woman.
+
+SHE: And thou a man, ill-tongued, ill-beseen, ill-mannered, unlovely,
+and I like thee not!
+
+HE: And what is worse, the fish bite not.
+
+Now here, and very suddenly, she fell a-weeping, to the Knight's no small
+discomfiture, though she wept in fashion wondrous apt and pretty; wherefore
+Sir Pertinax glanced at her once, looked twice and, looking, scratched his
+ear, rubbed his chin and finally questioned her in turn:
+
+HE: Distressful damosel, wherefore this dole? SHE: For that I am weary,
+woeful and solitary. And thou--thou'rt harsh of look, rough of tongue,
+ungentle of--HE: Misfortunate maiden, thy loneliness is soon amended, get
+thee to thy friends--thy gossips, thy--
+
+SHE: I have none. And thou'rt fierce and ungentle of face.
+
+Here she wept the more piteously and Sir Pertinax, viewing her distress,
+forgot his hook and worm, wherefore a fish nibbled it slyly, while the
+Knight questioned her further:
+
+HE: Woeful virgin, whence comest thou?
+
+SHE: From afar. And thou art ofeatures grim and--
+
+HE: And whither would'st journey?
+
+SHE: No where! And thou art--
+
+HE: Nay, here is thing impossible, since being here thou art somewhere and
+that within three bowshots of the goodly town of Canalise wherein thou
+shalt doubtless come by comfort and succour.
+
+SHE: Never! Never! Here will I weep and moan and perish. And thou--
+
+HE: And wherefore moan and perish?
+
+SHE: For that I am so minded, being a maid forlorn and desolate, a poor
+wanderer destitute of kith, of kin, of hope, of love, and all that maketh
+life sweet. And thou art sour-faced and--
+
+HE: Grievous maid, is, among thy many wants, a lack of money?
+
+SHE: That also. And thou art cold of eye, fierce of mouth, hooked of nose,
+flinty of heart, stony of soul, and I a perishing maid.
+
+At this Sir Pertinax blinked and caught his breath; thereafter he laid down
+his rod, whereupon the fish incontinent filched his worm all unnoticed
+while the Knight opened the wallet at his girdle and took thence certain
+monies.
+
+HE: Dolorous damsel, behold six good, gold pieces! Take them and go, get
+thee to eat--eat much, so shall thy dolour wax less, eat beef--since beef
+is a rare lightener of sorrow, by beef shall thy woes be comforted.
+
+SHE: Alas! I love not beef.
+
+Now here Sir Pertinax was dumb a space for wonder at her saying, while she
+stole a glance at him betwixt slender fingers.
+
+HE (_after some while_): Maid, I tell thee beef, fairly cooked and aptly
+seasoned, is of itself a virtue whereby the body is strengthened and
+nourished, whereby cometh content, and with content kindliness, and with
+kindliness charity, and therewith all other virtues small and eke great;
+therefore eat beef, maiden, for the good of thy soul.
+
+“How?” said she, viewing him bright-eyed 'twixt her fingers again. “Dost
+think by beef one may attain to paradise?”
+
+HE: Peradventure.
+
+SHE: Then no beef, for I would not live a saint yet awhile.
+
+HE: Nathless, take thou these monies and go buy what thou wilt.
+
+So saying, Sir Pertinax set the coins beside her shapely foot and took up
+his neglected rod.
+
+SHE: And is this gold truly mine?
+
+HE: Verily.
+
+SHE: Then I pray thee keep it for me lest I lose it by the way and so--let
+us begone.
+
+Here Sir Pertinax started.
+
+“Begone?” quoth he. “Begone--in truth? Thou and I in faith? Go whither?”
+
+SHE: Any whither.
+
+HE: Alone? Thou and I?
+
+“Nay, not alone,” she sighed; “let us go together.”
+
+Sir Pertinax dropped his fishing-rod and watched it idly float away down
+the stream:
+
+“Together, maiden?” said he at last.
+
+“Truly!” she sighed. “For thou art lonely even as I am lonely, and thou
+art, methinks, one a lonely maid may trust.”
+
+“Ha--trust!” quoth he. “And wherefore would'st trust me, maiden?”
+
+SHE: For two reasons--thou art of age mature and something ill-favoured.
+
+Now, at this Sir Pertinax grew angered, grew thoughtful, grew sad and,
+beholding his image mirrored in the waters, sighed for his grim, unlovely
+look and, in his heart, cursed his vile garb anew. At last he spoke:
+
+HE: Truly thou may'st trust me, maiden.
+
+SHE: And wherefore sighest thou, sad soldier?
+
+HE: Verily for thy two reasons. Though, for mine age, I am not forty
+turned.
+
+Saying which, he sighed again, and stared gloomily into the murmurous
+waters. But presently, chancing to look aside, he beheld a head low down
+amid the underwood, a head huge and hairy with small, fierce eyes that
+watched him right bodefully, and a great mouth that grinned evilly; and now
+as he stared, amazed by this monstrous head, it nodded grimly, speaking
+thus:
+
+ “Lob, Lobkyn he
+ Commandeth thee
+ To let her be
+ And set her free,
+ Thou scurvy, cutpurse, outlaw knave,
+ Lest hanged thou be
+ Upon a tree
+ For roguery
+ And villainy,
+ Thou knavish, misbegotten slave;
+ For proud is she
+ Of high degree,
+ As unto ye
+ Explicitly--”
+
+“Ha!” quoth Sir Pertinax, rising and drawing sword. “Now, be thou imp of
+Satan, fiend accursed, or goblin fell, come forth, and I with steel will
+try thee, Thing!”
+
+Out from the leaves forthwith crawled a dwarf bowed of leg, mighty of
+shoulder, humped of back, and with arms very long and thick and hairy. In
+one great fist he grasped a ponderous club shod with iron spikes, and now,
+resting his hands on this and his chin on his hands, he scowled at the
+Knight, yet grinned also.
+
+“Ho!” he cried, rolling big head in threatening fashion:
+
+“Vile dog, thy rogue's sconce cracked shall be, Thy base-born bones
+be-thwacked shall be. I'll deal thee many a dour ding For that thou darest
+name me--Thing!”
+
+“Now, as I live!” said Sir Pertinax, scowling also. “Here will I, and with
+great joyance, cleave me thine impish mazzard and split thee to thy beastly
+chine. And for thy ill rhyming:
+
+ “I with this goodly steel will halve thee
+ And into clammy goblets carve thee.
+ So stand, Thing, to thy club betake thee,
+ And soon, Thing, I will no-thing make thee.”
+
+But, as they closed on each other with eager and deadly intent, the maid
+stepped lightly betwixt.
+
+“Stay, soldier--hold!” she commanded. “Here is none but Lobkyn Lollo--poor,
+brave Lob, nor will I suffer him to harm thee.”
+
+“How, maiden?” snorted the good Knight fiercely. “Harm me, say'st thou--yon
+puny Thing?”
+
+“Truly, soldier!” said she, roguish-eyed. “For though thou art very
+ungentle, harsh of tongue, of visage grim and manners rude--I would not
+have Lob harm thee--yet!”
+
+ Now hereupon our bold Sir Pertinax
+ With indignation red of face did wax.
+ The needful word his tongue was vainly seeking,
+ Since what he felt was quite beyond the speaking.
+ Though quick his hand to ward or give a blow,
+ His tongue all times unready was and slow,
+ Therefore he speechless looked upon the maid,
+ Who viewed him 'neath her lashes' dusky shade,
+ Whence Eros launched a sudden beamy dart
+ That 'spite chain-mail did reach and pierce his heart.
+ And in that instant Pertinax grew wise,
+ And trembled 'neath this forest-maiden's eyes;
+ And trembling, knew full well, seek where he might,
+ No eyes might hold for him such magic light,
+ No lips might hold for him such sweet allure,
+ No other hand might his distresses cure,
+ No other voice might so console and cheer,
+ No foot, light-treading, be so sweet to hear
+ As the eyes, lips, hand, voice, foot of her who stood
+ Before him now, cheek flushing 'neath her hood.
+ All this Sir Pertinax had in his thought,
+ And, wishing much to say to her, said nought,
+ By reason that his tongue was something slow,
+ And of smooth phrases he did little know.
+ But yet 't is likely, though he nothing said,
+ She, maid-like, what he spake not, guessed or read
+ In his flushed brow, his sudden-gentle eyes,
+ Since in such things all maids are wondrous wise.
+
+ Now suddenly the brawny Dwarf did cry:
+ “Beware, my old great-grand-dam creepeth nigh!”
+ Thus speaking, 'mid the bushes pointed he,
+ Where crook'd old woman crouched beneath a tree
+ Whence, bowed upon a staff, she towards them came,
+ An ancient, wrinkled, ragged, hag-like dame
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below.
+ Mutt'ring she came and mowing she drew near,
+ And straightway seized the Dwarf by hairy ear:
+ Fast by the ear this ancient dame did tweak him,
+ And cuffed his head and, cuffing, thus did speak him:
+
+ “Ha, dolt! Bad elf, and wilt thou slay, indeed,
+ This goodly man did aid me in my need?
+ For this was one that fought within the gate
+ And from Black Lewin saved thy grannam's pate!
+ Down, down, fool-lad, upon thy knees, I say,
+ And full forgiveness of this soldier pray.”
+
+ But Sir Pertinax, perceiving how the old dame
+ did thus tweak and wring at the Dwarf's great,
+ hairy ear even until his eyes watered, interceded,
+ saying:
+
+ “Good, ancient soul, humble not the sturdy, unlovely,
+ mis-shapen, rascally imp for such small
+ matter.”
+
+ “Nay, but,” croaked the old woman, tightening
+ claw-like fingers, “kind master, he would doubtless
+ have slain thee.” At this, Sir Pertinax scowled,
+ and would have sworn great oath but, meeting the
+ maid's bright eyes, checked himself, though with
+ much ado:
+
+ “Art so sure,” he questioned, “so sure man of
+ my inches may be slain by thing so small?”
+
+ At this the maid laughed, and the old woman,
+ sighing, loosed the ear she clutched:
+
+ “Shew thy strength, Lob,” she commanded and,
+ drawing the maiden out of ear-shot, sat down beside
+ her on the sward and fell to eager, whispered talk.
+ Meantime the Dwarf, having cherished his ear,
+ sulkily though tenderly, seized hold upon his great
+ club with both hairy hands:
+
+ And whirling it aloft, with sudden might
+ A fair, young tree in sunder he did smite,
+ That 'neath the blow it swayed and crashing fell.
+ Quoth Pertinax: “Good Thing, 't is very well.
+ Par Dex, and by the Holy Rood,” quoth he,
+ “'T is just as well that I was not yon tree!”
+ And whirling his long sword as thus he spoke,
+ Shore through another at a single stroke.
+ “Here's tree for tree, stout manling!” he did say.
+ “What other trick canst show to me, I pray?”
+ Then Lobkyn stooped the broken stump to seize,
+ Bowed brawny back and with a wondrous ease
+
+ Up by the roots the rugged bole he tore
+ And tossed it far as it had been a straw.
+ Sad grew our knight this mighty feat perceiving,
+ Since well he knew't was past his own achieving.
+
+But anon he smiled and clapped the mighty Dwarf on shoulder, saying:
+
+“Greeting to thee, lusty Lob, for by Our Holy Lady of Shene Chapel within
+the Wood, ne'er saw I thine equal, since thou, being man so small, may do
+what man o' my goodly inches may nowise perform. Thou should'st make a
+right doughty man-at-arms!”
+
+Hereupon the Dwarf cut a caper but sighed thereafter: quoth he:
+
+ “Aha, good master, and Oho,
+ As man-at-arms fain would I go;
+ Aye, verily, I would be so,
+ But that my grannam sayeth 'No!'
+
+ “And, sir, my grand-dam I obey
+ Since she's a potent witch, they say;
+ Can cast ye spells by night or day
+ And charmeth warts and such away.
+
+ “Love philtres too she can supply
+ For fools that fond and foolish sigh,
+ That wert thou foul as hog in sty
+ Fair women must unto thee fly.
+
+ “Then deadly potions she can make,
+ Will turn a man to wriggling snake,
+ Or slimy worm, or duck, or drake,
+ Or loathly frog that croaks in lake.
+
+ “And she can curse beyond compare,
+ Can curse ye here, or curse ye there;
+ She'll curse ye clad or curse ye bare,
+ In fine, can curse ye anywhere.
+
+ “And she can summon, so 't is said,
+ From fire and water, spirits dread,
+ Strong charms she hath can wake the dead
+ And set the living in their stead.
+
+ “So thus it is, whate'er she say,
+ My grand-dam, master, I obey.”
+
+“Now by my head,” quoth Sir Pertinax, “an thy grand-dam hath a potency in
+spells and such black arts--the which is an ill thing--thou hast a powerful
+gift of versification the which, methinks, is worse. How cometh this
+distemper o' the tongue, Lobkyn?”
+
+ “O master,” spake the sighful Dwarf forlorn,
+ “Like many such diseases, 't is inborn.
+ For even as a baby, I
+ Did pule in rhyme and versify;
+ And the stronger that I grew,
+ My rhyming habit strengthened too,
+ Until my sad sire in despair
+ Put me beneath the Church's care.
+ The holy fathers, 't is confessed,
+ With belt and sandal did their best,
+ But, though they often whipped me sore,
+ I, weeping, did but rhyme the more,
+ Till, finding all their efforts vain,
+ They sadly sent me home again.”
+
+“A parlous case, methinks!” said Sir Pertinax, staring at the Dwarf's
+rueful visage. “Learned ye aught of the holy fathers?”
+
+ “Aye, sir, they taught me truth to tell,
+ To cipher and to read right well;
+ They taught me Latin, sir, and Greek,
+ Though even then in rhyme I'd speak.”
+
+“And thou canst read and write!” exclaimed Sir Pertinax. “So can not I!”
+
+Cried LOB:
+
+ “What matter that? Heaven save the mark,
+ Far better be a soldier than a clerk,
+ Far rather had I be a fighter
+ Than learned reader or a writer,
+ Since they who'd read must mope in schools,
+ And they that write be mostly fools.
+ So 'stead of pen give me a sword,
+ And set me where the battle's toward,
+ Where blood--”
+
+But the ancient dame who had risen and approached silently, now very
+suddenly took Lobkyn by the ear again.
+
+“Talk not of blood and battles, naughty one!” she cried. “Think not to
+leave thy old grannam lone and lorn and helpless--nor this our fair maid.
+Shame on thee, Lob, O shame!” saying the which she cuffed him again and
+soundly.
+
+ “Master,” he sighed, “thou seest I may not go,
+ Since that my grand-dam will not have it so.”
+
+“Good mother, wise mother,” said the maid, viewing Sir Pertinax smilingly
+askance, “why doth poor soldier go bedight in fine linen 'neath rusty
+hauberk? Why doth poor soldier wear knightly chain about his neck and swear
+by knightly oath? Good mother, wise mother, rede me this.”
+
+The old woman viewed Pertinax with her bright, quick eyes, but, ere she
+could answer, he sheathed sword, drew ragged mantle about him, and made to
+go, but, turning to the maid, bent steel-clad head.
+
+“Most fair damosel,” said he gently, “evening cometh on, and now, since
+thou art no longer forlorn, I will away.”
+
+“Nay, first, I pray thee, what is thy name?”
+
+“Pertinax, madam.”
+
+“So then doth Melissa thank Pertinax. And now--out alas! Will Pertinax
+leave Melissa, having but found her?”
+
+Sir Pertinax looked up, looked down, fidgeted with his cloak, and knew not
+how to answer; wherefore she sighed again, though with eyes full merry
+'neath drooping lashes and reached out to him her slender hand. “Aye me,
+and shall we meet no more, poor soldier?” she questioned softly.
+
+“This I know not,” he answered.
+
+“For thy brave rescue I do give thee my humble thanks, poor soldier.”
+
+“Thy rescue, child?” cried the old woman. “Alack and wert thou seen? Thy
+rescue, say'st thou?”
+
+“Indeed, good mother, from Sir Agramore's rough foresters. But for thee,
+thou needy soldier, my gratitude is thine henceforth. Had I aught else to
+give thee, that were thine also. Is there aught I may? Speak.”
+
+Now Sir Pertinax could not but heed all the rich, warm beauty of her--these
+eyes so sombrely sweet, her delicate nose, the temptation of her vivid
+lips--and so spake hot with impulse:
+
+“Aye, truly, sweet maid, truly I would have of thee a--” Her eyes grew
+bright with laughter, a dimple played wanton in her cheek, and Sir
+Pertinax was all suddenly abashed, faint-hearted and unsure; thus, looking
+down, he chanced to espy a strange jewel that hung tremulous upon her
+moving bosom: a crowned heart within a heart of crystal.
+
+“Well, thou staid and sorry soldier, what would'st have of me?” she
+questioned.
+
+“Verily,” he muttered, “I would have of thee yon trinket from thy bosom.”
+ Now at his words she started, caught her breath and stared at him
+wide-eyed; but, seeing his abashment, laughed and loosed off the jewel with
+quick, small fingers.
+
+“Be it so!” said she. But hereupon the old woman reached out sudden hand.
+
+“Child!” she croaked, “Art mad? Mind ye not the prophecy? Beware the
+prophecy--beware!
+
+ 'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'
+
+Beware, I say, Oh, beware!”
+
+“Nay, good mother, have I not promised? And for this crystal it hath
+brought me nought but unease hitherto. Take it, soldier, and for the sake
+of this poor maid that giveth, break it not, dishonour it not, and give it
+to none but can define for thee the secret thereof--and so, poor, brave,
+fearful soldier--fare thee well!”
+
+Saying which this fair maiden turned, and clasping the Witch's bony arm
+about her slender loveliness, passed away into the denser wood with Lobkyn
+Lollo marching grimly behind, his mighty club across his shoulder.
+
+Long stood Sir Pertinax, staring down at the strange jewel in his hand yet
+seeing it not, for, lost in his dreams, he beheld again two eyes,
+dusky-lashed and softly bright, a slender hand, a shapelyfoot, while in
+his ears was again the soft murmur of a maid's voice, a trill of girlish
+laughter. So lost in meditation was he that becoming aware of a shadow
+athwart the level sunset-glory, he started, glanced up and into the face
+of a horseman who had ridden up unheard upon the velvet ling; and this
+man was tall and armed at points like a knight; the vizor of his plumed
+casque was lifted, and Sir Pertinax saw a ruddy face, keen-eyed,
+hawk-nosed, thin-lipped.
+
+“Fellow,” questioned the haughty knight, “what hold ye there?”
+
+“Fellow,” quoth Sir Pertinax, haughty and gruff also, “'t is no matter to
+thee!” And speaking, he buttoned the jewel into the wallet at his belt.
+
+“Fool!” exclaimed the Knight, staring in amaze, “wilt dare name me
+'fellow'? Tell me, didst see three foresters hereabout?”
+
+“Poltroon, I did.”
+
+“Knave, wilt defy me?”
+
+“Rogue, I do!”
+
+“Slave, what did these foresters?”
+
+“Villain, they ran away!”
+
+“Ha, varlet! and wherefore?”
+
+“Caitiff, I drubbed them shrewdly.”
+
+“Dared ye withstand them, dog?”
+
+“Minion, I did.”
+
+“Saw ye not the badge they bore?” demanded the fierce stranger-knight.
+
+“'T was the like of that upon thy shield!” nodded Sir Pertinax grimly.
+
+“Know ye who and what I am, dunghill rogue?”
+
+“No, dog's-breakfast--nor care!” growled Sir Pertinax, whereat the
+stranger-knight grew sudden red and clenched mailed fist.
+
+“Know then, thou kennel-scourer, that I am Sir
+
+Agramore of Biename, Lord of Swanscote and Hoccom, Lord Seneschal of
+Tissingors and the March.”
+
+“Ha!” quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. “So do I know thee for a very rogue
+ingrain and villain manifest.”
+
+“How!” roared Sir Agramore. “This to my face, thou vile creeper of ditches,
+thou unsavoury tavern-haunter--this in my teeth!”
+
+“Heartily, heartily!” nodded Sir Pertinax. “And may it choke thee for the
+knavish carcass thou art.”
+
+At this, and very suddenly, the Knight loosed mace from saddle-bow, and
+therewith smote Sir Pertinax on rusty bascinet, and tumbled him backward
+among the bracken. Which done, Sir Agramore laughed full loud and, spurring
+his charger, galloped furiously away. And after some while Sir Pertinax
+arose, albeit unsteadily, but finding his legs weak, sat him down again;
+thereafter with fumbling hands he did off dinted bascinet and viewed it
+thoughtfully, felt his head tenderly and, crawling to the stream, bathed it
+solicitously; then, being greatly heartened, he arose and drawing sword,
+set it upright in the ling and, kneeling, clasped his hands and spake as
+follows:
+
+“Here and now, upon my good cross-hilt I swear I will with joy and
+zeal unremitting, seek me out one Sir Agramore of Biename. Then will I
+incontinent with any, all, or whatsoever weapon he chooseth fall upon him
+and, for this felon stroke, for his ungentle dealing with the maid, I will
+forthwith gore, rend, tear, pierce, batter, bruise and otherwise use the
+body of the said Sir Agramore until, growing aweary of its vile tenement,
+his viler soul shall flee hence to consume evermore with such unholy knaves
+as he. And this is the oath of me, Sir Pertinax,
+
+“Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling, Bracton and Deepdene, to the
+which oath may the Saints bend gracious ear, in especial Our Holy Lady of
+Shene Chapel within the Wood--Amen!”
+
+Having registered the which most solemn oath, Sir Pertinax arose, sheathed
+his sword, and strode blithely towards the fair and prosperous town of
+Canalise. But, being come within the gate, he was aware of much riot and
+confusion in the square and streets beyond, and hasting forward, beheld a
+wild concourse, a pushing, jostling throng of people making great clamour
+and outcry, above which hubbub ever and anon rose such shouts, as:
+“Murderer! Thief! Away with him! Death to him!”
+
+By dint of sharp elbow and brawny shoulder our good knight forced himself a
+way until--surrounded by men-at-arms, his limbs fast bound, his motley torn
+and bloody, his battered fool's-cap all awry--he beheld Duke Jocelyn haled
+and dragged along by fierce hands. For a moment Sir Pertinax stood dumb
+with horror and amaze, then, roaring, clapped hand to sword. Now, hearing
+this fierce and well-known battle shout, Duke Jocelyn turned and, beholding
+the Knight, shook bloody head in warning and slowly closed one bright, blue
+eye; and so, while Sir Pertinax stood rigid and dumb, was dragged away and
+lost in the fierce, jostling throng.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, when you began this Geste, I thought
+ It was a poem of a sort.
+
+ MYSELF: A sort, Miss Pert! A sort, indeed?
+
+ GILL: Of course--the sort folks love to read.
+ But in the last part we have heard
+ Of poetry there's scarce a word.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, if you the early Geste-books read,
+ You'll find that, oft as not, indeed,
+ The wearied Gestours, when by rhyming stumped,
+ Into plain prose quite often jumped.
+
+ GILL: But, father, dear, the last part seems to me
+ All prose--as prosy as can be--
+
+ MYSELF: Ha, prosy, miss! How, do you then suggest
+ Our Geste for you lacks interest?
+
+ GILL: Not for a moment, father, though
+ Sir Pertinax was much too slow.
+ When fair Melissa “laughing stood,”
+ He should have kissed--you know he
+ should--Because, of course, she wished him to.
+
+ MYSELF: Hum! Girl, I wonder if that's true?
+
+ GILL: O father, yes! Of course I'm right,
+ And you're as slow as your slow knight.
+ Were you as slow when you were young?
+
+ MYSELF: Hush, madam! Hold that saucy tongue.
+ You may be sure, in my young days,
+ I was most dutiful always.
+ Grown up, I was, it seems to me,
+ No slower than I ought to be.
+ And now, miss, since you pine for verse,
+ Rhyme with my prose I'll intersperse;
+ And, like a doting father, I
+ To hold your interest will try.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 5
+
+
+ Which of Duke Joc'lyn's woeful plight doth tell,
+ And all that chanced him pent in dungeon cell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In gloomy dungeon, scant of air and light,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lay in sad and woeful plight;
+ His hands and feet with massy fetters bound,
+ That clashed, whene'er he moved, with dismal sound;
+ His back against the clammy wall did rest,
+ His heavy head was bowed upon his breast,
+ But, 'neath drawn brows, he watched with wary eye
+ Three ragged 'wights who, shackled, lay hard by,
+ Three brawny rogues who, scowling, fiercely eyed him,
+ And with lewd gibes and mocking gestures plied him.
+ But Joc'lyn, huddled thus against the wall,
+ Seemed verily to heed them none at all,
+ Wherefore a red-haired rogue who thought he slept
+ With full intent upon him furtive crept.
+ But, ere he knew, right suddenly he felt
+ Duke Joc'lyn's battered shoe beneath his belt;
+ And falling back with sudden strangled cry,
+ Flat on his back awhile did breathless lie,
+ Whereat to rage his comrades did begin,
+ And clashed their fetters with such doleful din
+ That from a corner dim a fourth man sprang,
+ And laughed and laughed, until their prison rang.
+ “Well kicked, Sir Fool! Forsooth, well done!” laughed he,
+ “Ne'er saw I, Fool, a fool the like o' thee!”
+
+ Now beholding this tall fellow, Jocelyn knew him
+ for that same forest-rogue had wrestled with him
+ in the green, and sung for his life the “Song of
+ Roguery.” Wherefore he smiled on the fellow and
+ the fellow on him:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: I grieve to see
+ A man like thee
+ In such a woeful plight--
+
+ Quoth the ROGUE: A Fool in fetters,
+ Like his betters,
+ Is yet a rarer sight.
+
+“Ha i' the clout, good fellow, for Folly in fetters is Folly in need, and
+Folly in need is Folly indeed! But, leaving folly awhile, who art thou and
+what thy name?”
+
+ Saith the ROGUE: Robin I'm named, Sir Fool,
+ Rob by the few,
+ Which few are right, methinks, for
+ so I do.
+
+“Then, Rob, if dost rob thou'rt a robber, and being robber thou'rt
+perchance in bonds for robbing, Robin?”
+
+“Aye, Fool, I, Rob, do rob and have robbed greater robbers that I might
+by robbery live to rob like robbers again, as thou, by thy foolish folly,
+fooleries make, befooling fools lesser than thou, that thou, Fool, by such
+fool-like fooleries may live to fool like fools again!”
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Thou robber Rob,
+ By Hob and Gob,
+ Though robber-rogue, I swear
+ That 't is great pity
+ Rogue so pretty
+ Must dance upon thin air.
+
+ Quoth ROBIN: Since I must die
+ On gallows high
+ And wriggle in a noose,
+ I'll none repine
+ Nor weep nor whine,
+ For where would be the use?
+ Yet sad am I
+ That I must die
+ With rogues so base and small,
+ Sly coney-catchers,
+ Poor girdle-snatchers,
+ That do in kennel crawl.
+
+“And yet,” said Jocelyn, “thou thyself art rogue and thief confessed. How
+then art better than these thy fellows?”
+
+“By degree, Sir Fool. Even as thou'rt Fool o' folly uncommon, so am I no
+ordinary rogue, being rogue o' rare parts with power of rogues i' the wild
+wood, while these be but puny rogues of no parts soever.”
+
+“No rogues are we!” the three did loudly cry,
+
+“But sad, poor souls, that perishing do lie!”
+
+ “In me,” quoth one, “behold a man of worth,
+ By trade a dyer and yclepen Gurth;
+ In all this world no man, howe'er he try,
+ Could live a life so innocent as I!”
+
+ The second spake: “I am the ploughman Rick,
+ That ne'er harmed man or woman, maid or chick!
+ But here in direful dungeon doomed be I,
+ Yet cannot tell the wherefore nor the why.”
+
+ Then spake Red-head, albeit gasping still:
+ “An honest tanner I, my name is Will;
+ 'T was me thou kickedst, Fool, in such ill manner,
+ Of crimes unjust accused--and I, a tanner!”
+ Here Joc'lyn smiled. “Most saintly rogues,” said he;
+ “The Saints, methinks, were rogues compared with ye,
+ And one must needs in prison come who'd find
+ The noblest, worthiest, best of all mankind.
+ Poor, ill-used knaves, to lie in dungeon pent,
+ Rogues sin-less quite, and eke so innocent,
+ What though your looks another tale do tell,
+ Since I'm your fellow, fellows let us dwell,
+ For if ye're rogues that thus in bonds do lie,
+ So I'm a rogue since here in bonds am I,
+ Thus I, a rogue, do hail ye each a brother,
+ Like brethren, then, we 'll comfort one another.”
+
+Thus spake Jocelyn, whereafter these “saintly rogues” all three grew
+mightily peevish and, withal, gloomy, while Robin laughed and laughed at
+them, nodding head and wagging finger.
+
+“Prithee, good Motley,” he questioned, “what should bring so rare a Fool
+to lie in dungeon fettered and gyved along of innocent rogues and roguish
+robber?”
+
+ Whereto Duke Jocelyn answered on this wise:
+ “Hast heard, belike, of Gui the Red?”
+ (Here went there up a howl)
+ “A mighty lord of whom't is said,
+ That few do love and many dread.”
+ (Here went there up a growl)
+
+ “This potent lord I chanced to view,
+ Behaving as no lord should do,
+ And thereupon, this lord I threw
+ In pretty, plashing pool!
+
+ “Whereon this dreadful lord did get
+ Exceeding wroth and very wet;
+ Wherefore in dungeon here I'm set,
+ For fierce and froward Fool.”
+
+ Here went there up a shout of glee.
+ Cried Robin: “O sweet Fool,
+ I would I had been there to see
+ This haughty lord of high degree
+ In pretty, plashing pool.”
+
+ Here shout of glee became a roar,
+ That made the dungeon ring;
+ They laughed, they rolled upon the floor,
+ Till suddenly the massy door
+ On creaking hinge did swing;
+ And to them the head jailer now appeared,
+ A sombre man who sighed through tangled beard.
+
+“How now, rogue-lads,” said he, “grow ye merry in sooth by reason o' this
+Fool! Aye me, all men do grow merry save only I, Ranulph, Chief Torturer,
+Ranulph o' the Keys, o' the Gibbet, o' the City Axe--poor Ranulph the
+Headsman. Good lack! I've cut off the head o' many a man merrier than I--
+aye, that have I, and more's the pity! And now, ye that are to die so soon
+can wax joyous along o' this motley Fool! Why, 't is a manifest good Fool,
+and rare singer o' songs, 't is said, though malapert, with no respect for
+his betters and over-quick at dagger-play. So 't is a Fool must die and
+sing no more, and there's the pity on't for I do love a song, I--being a
+companionable soul and jovial withal, aye, a very bawcock of a boy, I.
+To-morrow Red Gui doth hale ye to his Castle o' the Rock, there to die all
+five for his good pleasure, as is very fitting and proper, so be merry
+whiles ye may. Meantime, behold here another rogue, a youngling imp. So is
+five become six, and six may laugh louder than five, methinks, so laugh
+your best.”
+
+Then Ranulph o' the Keys sighed, closed the great door and went his way,
+leaving the new captive to their mercies. Fair he was and slender, and of
+a timid seeming, for now he crouched against the wall, his face hid 'neath
+the hood of ragged mantle; wherefore the “saintly” three incontinent
+scowled upon him, roared at him and made a horrid clashing with their
+fetters:
+
+“Ha, blood and bones!” cried Rick the Ploughman. “What murderous babe art
+thou to go unshackled in presence o' thy betters?”
+
+“Aye, forsooth,” growled Will the Tanner, “who 'rt thou to come hither
+distressing the last hours o' we poor, perishing mortals? Discourse, lest I
+bite the heart o' thee!”
+
+“Pronounce, imp!” roared Gurth the Dyer, “lest I tear thy liver!”
+
+“Sit ye, here beside me, youth,” said Jocelyn, “and presently thou shalt
+know these tearers of livers and biters of hearts for lambs of innocence
+and doves of gentleness--by their own confessions. For, remark now, gentle
+boy, all we are prisoners and therefore guiltless of every offence--indeed,
+where is the prisoner, but who, according to himself, is not more sinned
+against than sinner, and where the convicted rogue but, with his tongue,
+shall disprove all men's testimony? So here sit three guileless men,
+spotless of soul and beyond all thought innocent of every sin soever.
+Yonder is Rob, a robber, and here sit I, a Fool.”
+
+“Ha!” cried Rick. “Yet murderous Fool art thou and apt to dagger-play!
+Belike hast slain a man this day in way o' folly--ha?”
+
+“Two!” answered Jocelyn, nodding. “These two had been more but that my
+dagger brake.”
+
+Here was silence awhile what time Jocelyn hummed the line of a song and his
+companions eyed him with looks askance.
+
+“Why then, good Folly,” said Rick at last, “'t is for a little spilling o'
+blood art here, a little, pretty business o' murder--ha?”
+
+“'T is so they name it,” answered Jocelyn.
+
+“Bones o' me!” growled Will, “I do begin to love this Fool.”
+
+“And didst pronounce thyself our brother, Fool?” questioned Gurth.
+
+“Aye, verily!”
+
+“Then brethren let us be henceforth, and comrades to boot!” cried Rick.
+“Jolly Clerks o' Saint Nicholas to share and share alike--ha? So then 't is
+accorded. And now what o' yon lily-livered imp? 'T is a sickly youth and
+I love him not. But he hath a cloak, look'ee--a cloak forsooth and poor
+Rick's a-cold! Ho, lad--throw me thy cloak!”
+
+“Beshrew me!” roared Gurth. “But he beareth belt and wallet! Ha, boy, give
+thy wallet and girdle--bestow!”
+
+“And by sweet Saint Nick,” growled Will, “the dainty youngling disporteth
+himself to mine eyes in a gold finger-ring! Aha, boy! Give now thy trinket
+unto an honest tanner.”
+
+Hereupon and with one accord up started the three, fierce-eyed; but
+Jocelyn, laughing, rose up also.
+
+“Back, corpses!” quoth he, swinging the heavy fetters to and fro between
+shackled wrists. “Stand, good Masters Dry-bones; of what avail cloak, or
+wallet, or ring to ye that are dead men? Now, since corpses ye are
+insomuch as concerneth this world, be ye reasonable and kindly corpses.
+Sit ye then, Masters Dust-and-Ashes, and I will incontinent sing ye, chant
+or intone ye a little song of organs and graves and the gallows-tree
+whereon we must dance anon; as, hearken:
+
+ “Sing a song of corpses three
+ That ere long shall dancing be,
+ On the merry gallows-tree--
+ High and low,
+ To and fro,
+ Leaping, skipping,
+ Turning, tripping,
+ Wriggling, whirling,
+ Twisting, twirling:
+ Sing hey for the gallows-tree.”
+
+“Stint--stint thy beastly song now!” cried Will, pale of cheek. But Jocelyn
+sang the louder:
+
+ “Sing a song of dying groans,
+ Sing a song of cries and moans,
+ Sing a song of dead men's bones,
+ That shall rest,
+ All unblest,
+ To rot and rot,
+ Remembered not,
+ For dogs to gnaw
+ And battle for,
+ Sing hey for the dead rogue's bones.”
+
+“Abate--ha--abate thy fiendish rant!” cried Rick, glancing fearfully over
+shoulder.
+
+“Aye, Fool--beseech thee! Fair flesh may not abide it!” cried Gurth,
+shivering, while Robin grinned no more and the fearful youth leaned
+wide-eyed to behold the singer, this strange, scarred face beneath its
+battered cock's-comb, these joyous eyes, these smiling lips as Jocelyn
+continued:
+
+ “Now ends my song with ghosts forlorn,
+ Three gibbering ghosts that mope and mourn,
+ Then shrieking, flee at breath of dawn,
+ Where creatures fell
+ In torment dwell,
+ Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl,
+ That rend and bite
+ And claw and fight.
+ Where fires red-hot
+ Consume them not,
+ And they in anguish
+ Writhe and languish
+ And groan in pain
+ For night again.
+ Sing hey for pale ghosts forlorn.”
+
+Now when the song was ended, the three looked dismally on one another and,
+bethinking them of their cruel end, they groaned and sighed lamentably:
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, I like that song, it's fine;
+ But let me ask about this line:
+ “Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl.”
+ Now tell me, please, if you don't mind,
+ Why were the little horrors blind?
+
+ MYSELF: The beastly things, as I surmise,
+ Had scratched out one another's eyes.
+
+ GILL:
+ I suppose this place where creatures fell
+ In torments dwell is meant for--
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Well,
+ I think, my Gill, the place you've guessed,
+ So let me get on with our Geste.
+
+... they groaned and sighed lamentably--
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interjecteth:
+
+ GILL: Father--now don't get in a huff--
+ But don't you think they've groaned enough?
+
+ MYSELF: My Gillian--no! Leave well alone;
+ This is the place for them to groan.
+
+ Lamentably they did together moan,
+ And uttered each full many a hollow groan.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: But, father, groans are so distressing,
+ And groans in verse are most depressing--
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Then peace, child, and in common prose
+ I'll let the poor rogues vent their woes:
+
+... they groaned and they sighed lamentably--
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: What, father, are they groaning still?
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Of course they are, and so they will,
+ And so shall I; so, girl, take heed,
+ And cease their groaning to impede.
+ Is it agreed?
+
+ GILL: Oh, yes, indeed!
+
+ MYSELF: Then with our Geste I will proceed.
+
+... they groaned and sighed lamentably.
+
+“Alack!” cried Gurth, “I had not greatly minded till now, but this
+vile-tongued Fool hath stirred Fear to wakefulness within me. Here's me,
+scarce thirty turned, hale and hearty, yet must die woefully and with a
+maid as do love me grievously!”
+
+“And me!” groaned Rick. “No more than twenty and five, I--a very lad--and
+with two maids as do languish for me fain and fond!”
+
+“Ha, and what o' me?” mourned dismal, redheaded Will. “A lusty, proper
+fellow I be and wi' maids a score as do sigh continual. And me to die--O
+woe! And I a tanner!”
+
+“Content ye, brothers!” said Jocelyn. “Look now, here's Gurth hath lived
+but thirty years, and now must die--good: so shall he die weighted with
+less of sin than had he lived thirty more. Be ye comforted in this,
+distressful rogues, the shorter our life the less we sin, the which is a
+fair, good thing. As for these shackles, though our bodies be 'prisoned our
+souls go free, thus, while we languish here, our souls astride a sunbeam
+may mount aloft, 'bove all pains and tribulations soever. Thus if we must
+dance together in noose, our souls, I say, escaping these fleshy bonds,
+shall wing away to freedom everlasting. Bethink ye of this, grievous
+knaves, and take heart. Regarding the which same truths I will, for thy
+greater comforting, incontinent make ye a song--hearken!
+
+ “Let Folly sing a song to cheer
+ All poor rogues that languish here,
+ Doomed in dismal dungeon drear,
+ Doomed in dungeon dim.
+
+ “Though flesh full soon beneath the sod
+ Doth perish and decay,
+ Though cherished body is but clod,
+ Yet in his soul man is a God,
+ To do and live alway.
+ So hence with gloom and banish fear,
+ Come Mirth and Jollity,
+ Since, though we pine in dungeon drear,
+ Though these, our bodies, languish here,
+ We in our minds go free.”
+
+Thus cheerily sang Jocelyn until, chancing to see how the youth leaned
+forward great-eyed, watching as he sung, he broke off to question him
+blithely:
+
+“How now, good youth, hast a leaning to Folly e'en though Folly go
+fettered, and thyself in dungeon?”
+
+“Fool,” answered the youth, soft-voiced, “me-thinks 't is strange Folly can
+sing thus in chains! Hast thou no fear of death?”
+
+“Why truly I love it no more than my fellow-fools. But I, being fool
+uncommon, am wise enough to know that Death, howsoe'er he come, may come
+but once--and there's a comfortable thought!”
+
+So saying, Jocelyn seated himself beside the youth and watched him
+keen-eyed.
+
+“And thou canst sing of Freedom, Fool, to the jangle of thy fetters?”
+
+“Truly, youth, 't is but my baser part lieth shackled, thus while body
+pineth here, soul walketh i' the kindly sun--aye, e'en now as I do gaze on
+thee, I, in my thought, do stand in a fair garden--beside a lily-pool,
+where she I love cometh shy-footed to meet me, tall and gracious and sweet,
+as her flowers. A dream, belike, yet in this dream she looketh on me with
+eyes of love and love is on her lips and in her heart--so is my dream very
+precious.”
+
+At this, the youth shrank beneath his cloak while in an adjacent corner the
+three rolled dice with Robin and quarrelled hoarse and loud.
+
+“Youth,” said Jocelyn, “I pray thee, tell me thy name.”
+
+Without lifting head the youth answered:
+
+“Hugo!”
+
+“Look up, Hugo!” But Hugo bowed his head the lower.
+
+“Hast wondrous hair, Hugo--red gold 'neath thy hood!”
+
+Here came a slim, white hand to order the rebellious tress but, finding
+none, trembled and hid itself. Then very suddenly Jocelyn leaned near and
+caught this hand, clasping it fast yet with fingers very gentle, and spake
+quick and eager:
+
+“Hugo--alas, Hugo! What bringeth thee in this evil place? Art in danger?
+Speak, speak!”
+
+“Nay, here is no harm for me, Joconde. And I am hither come for sake of a
+poor Fool that is braver than the bravest--one did jeopardise his foolish
+life for sake of a maid, wherefore I, Hugo, do give him life. Take now this
+wallet, within is good store of gold and better--a potent charm to close
+all watchful eyes. Hist, Joconde, and mark me well! Ranulph o' the Axe is
+a mighty drinker--to-night, drawn by fame of thy wit, he cometh with his
+fellows. This money shall buy them wine, in the wine cast this powder so
+shall they sleep and thou go free.”
+
+“Aye!” said Jocelyn, “and then?”
+
+“There will meet thee a dwarf shall free thee of thy fetters, and by secret
+ways set thee without the city--then, tarry not, but flee for thy life--”
+
+“Now by the Holy Rood!” quoth Jocelyn softly, “never in all this world was
+there prisoner so happy as this poor Fool! But, Hugo, an I win free by
+reason of a brave and noble lady, so long as she bide in Canalise, so long
+must I--”
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now I understand--
+ Of course, this Hugo is Yolande!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss, the fact is clear;
+ But how on earth did she get here?
+ I don't want her here--
+
+ GILL: Why not?
+
+ MYSELF: Because, being here, she spoils my plot,
+ Which would drive any author frantic--
+
+ GILL: I think it's fine, and most romantic.
+ Besides, you know, you wrote her there--
+
+ MYSELF: She came--before I was aware--
+
+ GILL: She couldn't, father, for just think,
+ You've made her all of pen and ink.
+ So you, of course, can make her do
+ Exactly as you want her to.
+
+ MYSELF: Dear innocent! You little know
+ The trials poor authors undergo.
+ How heroines, when they break loose,
+ Are apt to play the very deuce,
+ Dragging their authors to and fro,
+ And where he wills--they will not go.
+
+ GILL: Well, since she's here, please let her be,
+ She wants to set Duke Joc'lyn free.
+
+ MYSELF: Enough--enough, my plans are made,
+ I'll set him free without her aid,
+ And in a manner, I apprise you,
+ As will, I fancy, quite surprise you.
+ Besides, a dungeon no fit place is
+ For a dainty lady's graces.
+ So, since she's in, 't is very plain
+ I now must get her out again.
+“To bide in Canalise, 't is folly!” cried Hugo. “O, 't were a madness fond!”
+
+“Aye,” sighed Jocelyn, “some do call love a madness--thus mad am I,
+forsooth!”
+
+“Hush!” whispered Hugo, as from without came the tramp of heavy feet.
+“Fare-thee-well and--ah, be not mad, Joconde!”
+
+The door creaked open, and six soldiers entered bringing a prisoner,
+chained and fettered, and therewith fast bound and gagged, whom they set
+ungently upon the stone floor; then straightway seizing upon Robin, they
+haled him to his feet.
+
+“Come, rogue,” said one, “thou art to hang at cockcrow!”
+
+“Is't so, good fellows?” quoth Robin,
+
+ “Then cock be curst
+ That croweth first!
+
+As for thee, good Motley, peradventure when, by hangman's noose, our souls
+enfranchised go, they shall company together, thine and mine! Till then
+--farewell, Folly!”
+
+So Robin was led forth of the dungeon and the heavy door crashed shut; but
+when Jocelyn looked for Hugo--lo! he was gone also.
+
+Evening was come and the light began to fail, therefore Jocelyn crouched
+beneath the narrow loophole and taking from his bosom the wallet, found
+therein good store of money together with the charm or philtre: and bowing
+his head above this little wallet, he fell to profound meditation.
+
+But presently, roused by hoarse laughter, he glanced up to find the three
+plaguing the helpless prisoner with sundry kicks and buffets; so Jocelyn
+crossed the dungeon, and putting the tormentors aside, stood amazed to
+behold in this latest captive none other than Sir Pertinax. Straightway he
+loosed off the gag, whereupon the good knight incontinent swore a gasping
+oath and prayed his limbs might be loosed also; the which done, he
+forthwith sprang up, and falling on the astonished three, he beat and
+clouted them with fist and manacles, and drave them to and fro about the
+dungeon.
+
+“Ha, dogs! Wilt spurn me with they vile feet, buffet me with thy beastly
+hands, forsooth!” roared he and kicked and cuffed them so that they,
+thinking him mad, cried aloud in fear until Sir Pertinax, growing a-weary,
+seated himself against the wall, and folding his arms, scowled indignant
+upon Jocelyn who greeted him merrily:
+
+“Hail and greeting to thee, my Pertinax; thy gloomy visage is a joy!”
+
+Sir Pertinax snorted, but spake not; wherefore the Duke questioned him full
+blithe: “What fair, good wind hath blown thee dungeon-wards, sweet soul?”
+
+“Ha!” quoth the knight. “Fetters, see'st thou, a dungeon, and these foul
+knaves for company--the which cometh of thy fool's folly, messire! So
+prithee ha' done with it!”
+
+“Stay, gentle gossip, thou'rt foolish, methinks; thou frettest 'gainst
+fate, thou kickest unwisely 'gainst the pricks, thou ragest pitifully
+'gainst circumstance--in fine, thou'rt a very Pertinax, my Pertinax!”
+
+“Aye troth, that am I and no dog to lie thus chained in noisome pit, par
+Dex! So let us out, messire, and that incontinent!”
+
+“Why here is a bright thought, sweet lad, let us out forthwith--but how?”
+
+“Summon the town-reeve, messire, the burgesses, the council, declare thy
+rank, so shall we go free--none shall dare hold thus a prince of thy
+exalted state and potent might! Declare thyself, lord.”
+
+“This were simple matter, Pertinax, but shall they believe us other than we
+seem, think ye?”
+
+Quoth Pertinax: “We can try!”
+
+“Verily,” said Jocelyn, “this very moment!” So saying, he turned to the
+three who sat in a corner muttering together.
+
+“Good brothers, gentle rogues,” said he, “behold and regard well this
+sturdy cut-throat fellow that sitteth beside me, big of body, unseemly of
+habit, fierce and unlovely of look--one to yield the wall unto, see ye! And
+yet--now heed me well, this fellow, ragged and unkempt, this ill-looking
+haunter of bye-ways, this furtive snatcher of purses (hold thy peace,
+Pertinax!). I say this unsavoury-seeming clapper-claw is yet neither one
+nor other, but a goodly knight, famous in battle, joust and tourney, a
+potent lord of noble heritage, known to the world as Sir Pertinax of Shene
+Castle and divers rich manors and demesnes. Furthermore, I that do seem a
+sorry jesting-fellow, I that in antic habit go, that cut ye capers with
+ass's ears a-dangle and languish here your fellow in bonds, am yet no
+antic, no poor, motley Fool, but a duke and lord of many fair towns
+and rich cities beyond Morfeville and the Southward March. How say ye,
+brothers?”
+
+“That thou'rt a fool!” quoth Rick.
+
+“True!” nodded Jocelyn.
+
+“Most true!” sighed Sir Pertinax.
+
+“And a liar!” growled Gurth.
+
+“And a murderous rogue!” cried Will, “and shall hang, along of us--as I'm a
+tanner!”
+
+“Alack, Sir Knight,” smiled Jocelyn, “of what avail rank or fame or both
+'gainst a motley habit and a ragged mantle. Thus, Pertinax, thou art
+no more than what thou seemest, to wit--a poor, fierce rogue, and I, a
+beggarly stroller.”
+
+“And like to have our necks stretched, lord, by reason of a fond and
+foolish whim!”
+
+“Unless, Pertinax, having naught to depend on but our native wit we, by our
+wit, win free. Other poor rogues in like case have broke prison ere now,
+and 'tis pity and shame in us if thou, a knight so potent and high-born,
+and I, a prince, may not do the like.”
+
+“Messire, unlearned am I in the breaking o' prisons so when my time cometh
+to die in a noose I can but die as knight should--though I had rather 't
+were in honest fight.”
+
+“Spoken like the very fool of a knight!” quoth Jocelyn. “So now will I
+show thee how by the wit of a brave and noble lady we may yet 'scape the
+hangman. Hearken in thine ear!”
+
+But, when Jocelyn had told him all and shown money and sleeping-charm, Sir
+Pertinax grew thoughtful, sighing deep and oft, yet speaking not, wherefore
+the Duke questioned him.
+
+“Good gossip, gasp not!” quoth he. “How think'st thou of prison-breaking
+now--expound!”
+
+ “Why, sir, I think when all do charmed and spellbound
+ snore,
+ Then will we shrewdly choke them that they wake
+ no more!”
+
+“Nay, Pertinax, here shall be no need of choking, forsooth!” Sir Pertinax
+bowed chin on fist and sighed again.
+
+“Pertinax, prithee puff not! Yet, an puff ye will, pronounce me then the
+why and wherefore of thy puffing.”
+
+“Lord, here is neither gasp nor puff, here is honest sighing. I can sigh as
+well as another.”
+
+“Since when hast learned this so tender art, my Pertinax?”
+
+“And I do sigh by reason of memory.”
+
+“As what, Pertinax?”
+
+“Eyes, lord--her eyes so darkly bright and, as I do think--black!”
+
+“Nay, blue, Pertinax--blue as heaven!”
+
+“Black, messire, black as--as black!”
+
+“Blue, boy, blue!”
+
+“Lord, they are black!”
+
+“Speak'st thou of Yolande?”
+
+“Messire, of one I speak, but whom, I know not. She came to me i' the
+greenwood as I sat a-fishing. Her hair long and black--ay, black and
+curled, her eyes dark, and for beauty ne'er saw I her like.”
+
+“And yet hast seen my Lady Yolande oft!”
+
+“Her voice, messire, her voice soft and sweet as the murmur of waters, and
+very full of allure.”
+
+“Why, how now!” cried Jocelyn. “Art thou--thou, my Pertinax, become
+at last one of Cupid's humble following? All joy to thee, my lovely
+lover--here in truth is added bond betwixt us! For since thou dost love a
+maid, even as I do love a maid, so being lovers twain needs must we love
+each other the better therefore.”
+
+“Nay, out alack, my lord!” sighed Sir Pertinax. “For though I do love her,
+she, by reason o' my ill-favoured looks, the which, woe's me, I may not
+alter, loveth not me, as I do judge.”
+
+“How judge ye this?”
+
+“Lord, she giveth me hard names. She, all in a breath, hath pictured me
+thus: 'Hooked of nose, fierce-eyed, of aspect grim--ungentle, unlovely,
+harsh o' tongue, dour o' visage, hard o' heart, flinty o' soul and of
+manners rude.'”
+
+“Good! But was this all, my Pertinax?”
+
+“Nay, lord, and with a wannion--there was more to like purpose.”
+
+“Excellent, my lovely knight--let hope sing in thee. For look now, if she
+named thee hooked of nose, fierce-eyed and of aspect grim--she speaketh
+very truth, for so thou art, my Pertinax. Now truth is a fair virtue in man
+or maid, so is she both virtuous and fair! Nay, puff not, sighful Pertinax,
+but for thy comforting mark this--she hath viewed and heeded thy outward
+man narrowly--so shall she not forget thee soon; she with woman's eye hath
+marked the great heart of thee through sorry habit and rusty mail, and
+found therein the love thy harsh tongue might not utter; and thus,
+methinks, she hath thee in mind--aye, even now, mayhap. Lastly, good,
+lovely blunderbore--mark this! 'Tis better to win a maid's anger than she
+should heed thee none at all. Let love carol i' thy heart and be ye worthy,
+so, when ye shall meet again, 'tis like enough, despite thy hooked nose,
+she shall find thine eyes gentle, thy unloveliness lovely, thy harsh tongue
+wondrous tender and thy flinty soul the soul of a man.”
+
+“Why, faith, lord,” quoth Pertinax, his grim lips softening to a smile,
+“despite her words, she spake in voice full sweet, and her eyes--ah,
+messire, her eyes were wondrous kind--gentle eyes--aye, her eyes were--”
+
+“Eyes, my Pertinax--black eyes!”
+
+“And gentle! By which same token, lord, she did give to me this token--this
+most strange trinket.”
+
+But all at once, was the creak of hinges, and the ponderous door opening,
+Ranulph o' the Axe appeared, followed by divers of the warders bearing
+torches.
+
+“Oho!” sighed Ranulph, doleful of visage. “Aha, good bawcocks, here come
+I, and these my fellows, for love o' thee, good Fool, thy quips, thy
+quirks, thy songs and antics capersome. For troth I'm a merry dog, I--a
+wanton wag, a bully boy and jovial, though woeful o' look!”
+
+“Wherefore woeful!”
+
+“For that I am not joyous, good Motley. Look 'ee--here's me born with a
+rare, merry heart, but sad and sober of head! Here's a heart bubbling with
+kindliness and soft and tender as sucking lamb, wedded to head and face
+full o' gloom! Here's laughter within me and woe without me, so am I ever
+at odds with myself--and there's my sorrow. Regarding the which same I will
+now chaunt ye song I made on myself; 'twas meant for merry song and blithe,
+but of itself turned mournful song anon as ye shall hear.”
+
+So saying, Ranulph o' the Axe threw back grim head and sang gruff, albeit
+plaintive, thus:
+
+ “O! merry I am and right merry I'll be,
+ Ho-ho for block, gibbet and rack--oho!
+ To hang or behead ye there's none like to me,
+ For I'm headsman, tormentor, and hangman, all three,
+ And never for work do I lack--oho!
+
+ “I live but to torture since torment's my trade,
+ But my torment well meant is, I trow;
+ If I hang or behead ye, it can't be gainsaid,
+ Though my head for the head of a headsman was made,
+ Still I'm all loving-kindness below.
+
+ “But if ever I strive merry story to tell,
+ Full of japeful and humorsome graces,
+ 'T is as though I were tolling a funeral bell
+ As if dismally, dolefully tolling a knell,
+ So solemn and sad grow all faces.
+
+ “I hang, burn and torture the best that I may,
+ Ho pincers and thumbscrews and rack--oho!
+ And all heads I cut off in a headsmanlike way;
+ So I'll hang, burn and torment 'till cometh the day
+ That my kind heart within me shall crack--oho!
+ Well-a-wey! Well-a-wey!
+ Woe is me for the day
+ That my poor heart inside me shall crack! Oho!
+
+“So there's my song! 'T is dull song and, striving to be merry song, is sad
+song, yet might be worse song, for I have heard a worse song, ere now--but
+'t is poor song. So come, Fool, do thou sing us merry song to cheer us
+'gainst my sad song.”
+
+“Why truly, Sir Headsman,” said Jocelyn, “here be songs a-many, yet if thou
+'rt for songs, songs will we sing thee, each and every of us. But first,
+behold here is money shall buy us wine in plenty that we may grow merry
+withal in very sooth.”
+
+“Oho!” cried Ranulph. “Spoken like a noble Motley, a fair, sweet Fool! Go
+thou, Bertram, obey this lord-like Fool--bring wine, good wine and much,
+and haste thee, for night draweth on and at cock-crow I must away.”
+
+“Aye,” nodded Jocelyn, “in the matter of one--Robin?”
+
+“Verily, Fool. A cheery soul is Robin, though an outlaw, and well beloved
+in Canalise. So is he to hang at cock-crow lest folk make disturbance.”
+
+“Where lieth he now?”
+
+“Where but in the watch-house beside the gallows 'neath Black Lewin's
+charge. But come, good Motley, sing--a pretty song, a merry ditty, ha!”
+
+So forthwith Jocelyn took his lute and sang:
+
+ “With dainty ditty
+ Quaint and pretty
+ I will fit ye,
+ So heed and mark me well,
+ And who we be
+ That here ye see
+ Now unto ye
+ Explicit I will tell:
+
+ “Then here first behold one Gurth, a worthy, dying
+ Dyer,
+ Since he by dyeing liveth, so to dye is his desire:
+ For being thus a very Dyer, he liveth but to dye,
+ And dyeing daily he doth all his daily wants
+ supply.
+ Full often hath he dyed ere now to earn his
+ daily bread,
+ Thus, dyeing not, this worthy Dyer must soon,
+ alas! be dead.
+
+ “Here's Rick--a saintly ploughman, he
+ Hath guided plough so well,
+ That here, with rogues the like of me,
+ He pines in dungeon cell.
+
+ “Here's Red-haired Will--O fie!
+ That Will should fettered lie
+ In such base, cruel manner!
+ For though his hair be red,
+ Brave Will, when all is said,
+ Is--hark 'ee--Will's a tanner!”
+
+“Enough, Fool!” cried Will. “An thou must sing, sing of thyself, for
+thyself, to thyself, and I will sing of myself an' need be!”
+
+Laughed JOCELYN:
+
+ Why then, brave Will,
+ Come, sing thy fill.
+
+Whereupon Will cleared his throat, squared his shoulders, and rumbling a
+note or so to fix the key, burst into songful roar:
+
+ “A tanner I, a lusty man,
+ A tanner men call Will,
+ And being tanner true, I tan,
+ Would I were tanning still;
+ Ho derry, derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ Would I were tanning still.”
+
+“Aye, verily!” growled Sir Pertinax. “And choked in thy vile tan-pit, for
+scurvier song was never heard, par Dex!”
+
+“Why 'tis heard, forsooth,” said Jocelyn, “and might be heard a mile hence!
+Chant on, brave Will.”
+
+The Tanner, nothing loth, wiped his mouth, clenched his fists and standing
+square and rigid, continued:
+
+ “How gaily I a-tanning went,
+ No tanner blithe as I,
+ No tanner e'er so innocent,
+ Though here in chains I lie.
+ Ho derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ In grievous chains I lie.
+
+ “No more, alack, poor Will will tan,
+ Since Will will, all unwilling,
+ Though tanner he and proper man,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.
+ Hey derry down,
+ Ho derry down,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.”
+
+“Now out upon thee, Tanner!” sighed Ranulph. “Here's sad song, a song o'
+graves, and therefore most unlovely, a song I--Saints and Angels!” he
+gasped:
+
+ And pointed where Sir Pertinax did stand,
+ The Heart of Crystal shining in his hand.
+ “The Heart-in-Heart! The Crystal Heart!” cried he,
+ And crying thus, sank down on bended knee,
+ While jailers all and scurvy knaves, pell-mell,
+ Betook them to their marrow-bones as well;
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax oped wond'ring eyes,
+ And questioned him 'twixt anger and surprise.
+ Then answered Ranulph, “Sir, though chained ye go,
+ Yet to thee we do all obedience owe
+ By reason of that sacred amulet,
+ That crystal heart in heart of crystal set:
+
+ 'For he that holdeth Crystal Heart
+ Holdeth all and every part,
+ And by night or eke by day
+ The Heart-in-Heart all must obey!”'
+
+ “Obey?” quoth Pertinax. “Ha! Let us see
+ If in thy vaunt there aught of virtue be:
+ For by this Heart of Crystal that I bear,
+ I charge ye loose the chains the Fool doth wear,
+ Then off with these accursèd gyves of mine,
+ Or--”
+
+ Ranulph to the warders gave a sign,
+ And they to work did go with such good speed,
+ That Joc'lyn soon with Pertinax stood freed,
+ “Now by my halidome!” quoth Pertinax,
+ “This talisman methinks no magic lacks,
+ So knaves, I bid ye--by this magic Heart,
+ Draw bolt and bar that hence we may depart--”
+ But now the scurvy knaves made dismal cry.
+ “Good sir!” they wailed, “Ah, leave us not to die!”
+ “Aye, by Heav'n's light!” fierce quoth Sir Pertinax,
+ “Ye're better dead by gibbet or by axe,
+ Since naught but scurvy, coward rogues are ye,
+ And so be hanged--be hanged to ye, all three!”
+
+ “Knight!” Joc'lyn sighed, “'neath Heaven's light
+ somewhere
+ Doth live a dark-eyed maid with black-curled hair--
+ Her voice is soft and full of sweet allure,
+ And thou, perchance, one day may humbly woo her;
+ So these poor rogues now woo their lives of thee,
+ Show mercy then and mercy find of she.”
+
+ At this Sir Pertinax rubbed chin and frowned,
+ Red grew his cheek, his fierce eyes sought the ground,
+ Then, even as he thus pinched chin and scowled,
+ “Loose, then, the dismal knaves!” at last he
+ growled.
+ But now grim Ranulph tangled beard tore
+ And wrung his hands and sighed and groaned and
+ swore
+ With loud complaints and woeful lamentations,
+ With muttered oaths and murmured objurgations,
+ With curses dire and impious imprecations.
+
+“Beshrew me, masters all!” quoth he. “Now here's ill prank to play a poor
+hangman, may I ne'er quaff good liquor more, let me languish o' the
+quartern ague and die o' the doleful dumps if I ever saw the like o' this!
+For look 'ee now, if I set these three rogues free, how may I hang 'em as
+hang 'em I must, since I by hanging live to hang again, and if I don't
+hang 'em whom shall I hang since hang I must, I being hangman? Bethink ye
+o' this, sirs, and show a little pity to a poor hangman.”
+
+“Why then, mark ye this, hangman,” said Jocelyn, “since on hanging doth thy
+hangman's reputation hang, then hang thou must; therefore, an ye lack rogue
+to hang, go hang thyself, so, hanging, shall thy hanging be done with and
+thou having lived a hangman, hangman die, thus, hangman hanging hangman,
+hangman hanging shall be hangman still, and being still, thus hanging,
+shall hang no more.”
+
+“Aye, verily!” quoth Sir Pertinax, “there it is in a nutshell--hangman, be
+hanged to thee! So off with their fetters, Master Gallows, by Crystal Heart
+I charge thee!”
+
+Hereupon the scurvy knaves were freed, to their great joy, and following
+the bold knight, made haste to quit their gloomy dungeon. Reaching the
+guardroom above, Sir Pertinax called lustily for sword and bascinet, and
+thereafter chose divers likely weapons for his companions who, with axe and
+pike and guisarme on shoulder, followed him out into the free air.
+
+Now it was night and very dark, but Gurth, who was a man of the town,
+brought them by dim and lonely alleys and crooked ways until at last they
+halted within a certain dark and narrow street.
+
+“Whither now?” questioned Sir Pertinax.
+
+“Verily,” said Jocelyn, “where but to the gatehouse--”
+
+“Not so,” muttered Gurth, “'tis overly well guarded--”
+
+“Aye,” growled Will, “which is true, as I'm a tanner!”
+
+“Howbeit,” said Jocelyn, “I'm for the gatehouse!”
+
+“And wherefore?” demanded Sir Pertinax.
+
+“In cause of one Rob, a robber.”
+
+“Aye, but,” said Gurth, “he is to hang at crow-o'-cock and 'tis nigh
+cock-crow now.”
+
+“The more need for haste,” said Jocelyn.
+
+ But, even now, as they together spoke,
+ A sullen tramp the sleeping echoes woke,
+ Behind them in the gloom dim forms they saw,
+ While others grimly barred the way before;
+ And so, by reason that they could not fly,
+ They grasped their weapons and prepared to die.
+ Then in the darkness of that narrow street,
+ Broad axe and pike and flashing sword did meet.
+ Duke Jocelyn full many a thrust drave home,
+ Till whirling pike-staff smote him on cock's-comb,
+ And staggering back to an adjacent wall,
+ In deep-sunk doorway groaning he did fall.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: Now, father, please don't let him die--
+
+ MYSELF: No, no, indeed, my Gill, not I,
+ My heroes take a lot of killing--
+
+ GILL: Then go on quick, it's very thrilling!
+ I hope he vanquishes his foes,
+ And let him do it, please, in prose.
+
+“O woe!” said a quavering voice. “Alack, and well-a-wey--”
+
+My daughter GILLIAN demurreth:
+
+ GILL: No, father--that's not right at all.
+ You'd got to where you'd made him fall.
+
+ MYSELF: Well, then, Duke Joc'lyn, from his swoon awaking,
+ Found that his head confoundedly was aching;
+ Found he was bruised all down from top to toe--
+
+ GILL: A bruise, father, and he a duke? No, no!
+ Besides, you make
+ A frightful mistake--
+ A hero's head should never ache;
+ And, father, now, whoever knew
+ A hero beaten black and blue?
+ And then a bruise, it seems to me,
+ Is unromantic as can be.
+ He can't be bruised,
+ And shan't be bruised,
+ For, if you bruise him,
+ And ill-use him,
+ I'll refuse him--
+ No reader, I am sure, would choose
+ A hero any one can bruise.
+ So, father, if you want him read,
+ Don't bruise him, please--
+
+ MYSELF: Enough is said!
+
+At this, Jocelyn sat up and wondered to find himself in a small chamber
+dim-lit by a smoking cresset. On one side of him leaned an ancient woman,
+a very hag-like dame
+
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below;
+
+and upon his other side a young damsel of a wondrous dark beauty.
+
+“Lady,” said he, “where am I?”
+
+“Hush, poor Motley!” whispered the maid. “Thou didst fall 'gainst the door
+yonder. But speak low, they that seek thy life may yet be nigh.”
+
+“Nay, then,” quoth Jocelyn, reaching for his sword, “I must out and aid my
+comrades.”
+
+“Alack!” sighed the old woman. “Thy comrades do without lie all slain save
+one that groaneth--hearken!”
+
+“O, woe!” mourned a quavering voice beyond the door. “O, woe, sore hurted I
+be, and like to die--and I a tanner!”
+
+Very heedfully, Jocelyn unbarred the door, and peering into the narrow
+street, found it deserted and empty save for certain outstretched forms
+that stirred not; looking down on these dim shapes he knew one for Rick the
+Ploughman, whose ploughing days were sped and, huddled in a corner hard by,
+he found Will the Tanner, who groaned fitfully; but of Sir Pertinax and
+Gurth he saw nothing. So Jocelyn made shift to bear the Tanner within the
+house, and here Will, finding his hurts of small account, sat up, and while
+the wise old woman bandaged his wound, answered Jocelyn's eager questions,
+and told how Sir Pertinax and Gurth the Dyer had broken through their
+assailants and made good their escape.
+
+Now, when the old woman had thus cherished their hurts, Jocelyn would
+fain have given her money, but she mumbled and mowed and cracked her
+finger-joints and shook grey head.
+
+“Not so, good Fool!” she croaked, “for I do know thee for that same gentle
+Motley did save me from Black Lewin--a murrain seize him! So now will I
+save thee--behold!” So saying she set bony hand to wall; and lo! in the
+wall yawned a square opening narrow and dark, whence issued a cold wind.
+“Begone, thou brave merryman!” quoth she. “Yonder safety lieth; this
+darksome way shall carry thee out beneath the city wall!”
+
+“Gramercy, thou kindly Witch!” said Jocelyn. “Yet first must I to the
+watch-house beside the gate for one Robin that lieth 'prisoned there.”
+
+“How, Fool, dost mean Robin-a-Green that is to hang?”
+
+“In truth!”
+
+“But Rob o' the Green is outlawed, banned o' Church, a very rogue!”
+
+“But a man, wherefore I would save him alive.”
+
+“Nay, Fool, o' thy folly be wise and seek ye safety instead. Would'st peril
+thy body for a thief?”
+
+“Verily, dame, even as I did for a Witch.”
+
+Now, here the old woman scowled and mumbled and cracked her finger-bones
+angrily. But the beauteous young maid viewed Jocelyn with bright, approving
+eyes:
+
+“But, Fool,” cried she, “O wondrous Fool, wilt adventure thyself in cause
+so desperate?”
+
+“Blithely, fair lady!”
+
+“But, alas! the guards be many and thou but one--”
+
+“Nay!” cried a voice:
+
+ “For thou may'st see
+ That two are we!”
+
+And forth of the dark opening in the wall strode Lobkyn Lollo the Dwarf,
+his great, spiked club on brawny shoulder. Jocelyn viewed the monstrous
+little man in awed wonder; but beholding his mighty girth and determined
+aspect, wonder changed to kindliness; quoth he:
+
+“Fair greeting, comrade! If thou'rt for a little bickering and disputation
+with that goodly club o' thine, come thy ways for methinks I do smell the
+dawn.”
+
+“Aha, thou naughty little one!” cried the Witch, shaking bony fist. “Art
+for fighting for rogue's life along of a Fool, then?”
+
+Quoth LOBKYN:
+
+ Aye, grannam, though ye slap me, still,
+ Fight and aid this Fool I will--
+
+“And talking o' Will,” quoth Will, “what o' me, for though I'm a tanner I'm
+a man, aye, verily, as I'm a tanner.”
+
+“And methinks a better man than tanner!” said Jocelyn. “So here we stand
+three goodly wights and well armed. Let's away--”
+
+“Nay, then, wild Madcap,” croaked the Witch, “an my Lobkyn go I go, and,
+though I be old and feeble, shalt find my craft more potent than sword or
+club--wait!”
+
+Here the old woman, opening a dingy cupboard, took thence a small crock
+over which she muttered spells and incantations with look and gesture so
+evil that Lobkyn eyed her askance, Will the Tanner cowered and whispered
+fragments of prayers, and even Jocelyn crossed himself.
+
+“Come!” croaked the Witch. “Now do I go to save rogue from gallows for sake
+of thee, tall Fool. Come ye, come and do as I bid ye in all things--come!”
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 6
+
+ Tells how for Robin a good fight was fought
+ And our old Witch a spell mysterious wrought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Phoebus, the young and gladsome god of day,
+ His fiery steeds had yoked to flaming car
+ (By which, my Gill, you may surmise
+ The sun was just about to rise)
+ And that be-feathered, crook-billed harbinger,
+ The rosy-wattled herald of the dawn,
+ Red comb aflaunt, bold-eyed and spurred for strife,
+ Brave Chanticleer, his strident summons raised
+ (By which fine phrase I'd have you know,
+ The cock had just begun to crow)
+ And gentle Zephyr, child of Boreas,
+ Stole soft the hush of dewy leaves,
+ And passing kissed the flowers to wakefulness.
+ Thus, laden with their sweetness, Zephyr came
+ O'er hill and dale, o'er battlement and wall,
+ Into the sleeping town of Canalise,
+ Through open lattice and through prison-bars,
+ To kiss the cheek of sleeping Innocence
+ And fevered brows of prisoners forlorn,
+ Who, stirring 'neath sweet Zephyr's soft caress,
+ Dreamed themselves young, with all their sins unwrought.
+ So, gentle Zephyr, messenger of dawn,
+ Fresh as the day-spring, of earth redolent,
+ Through narrow loophole into dungeon stole,
+ Where Robin the bold outlaw fettered lay,
+ Who, sighing, woke to feel her fragrant kiss,
+
+
+ And, breathing in this perfume-laden air,
+ He seemed to smell those thousand woodland scents
+ He oft had known, yet, knowing, never heeded:
+ Of lofty bracken, golden in the sun,
+ Of dewy violets shy that bloomed dim-seen
+ Beside some merry-laughing, woodland brook
+ Which, bubbling, with soft music filled the air;
+ The fragrant reek of smouldering camp-fire
+ Aglow beside some dark, sequestered pool
+ Whose placid waters a dim mirror made
+ To hold the glister of some lonely star;
+ He seemed to see again in sunny glade
+ The silky coats of yellow-dappled deer,
+ With branching antlers gallantly upborne;
+ To hear the twang of bow, the whizz of shaft,
+ And cheery sound of distant-winded horn.
+ Of this and more than this, bold Robin thought,
+ And, in his dungeon's gloomy solitude,
+ He groaned full deep and, since no eye could see,
+ Shed bitter tears.
+
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN supplicateth:
+
+ GILL: Poor Robin! Father, promise me
+ To save him from the gallows-tree.
+ He's much too nice a man to kill;
+ So save him, father; say you will!
+
+ MYSELF: But think of poor Ranulph with no one to hang!
+
+ GILL: Ranulph's song was top-hole, but--
+
+ MYSELF: You know I hate slang--
+
+ GILL: Yes, father--but then I hate Ranulph much more,
+ With his nasty great beard that in tangles he wore.
+ So, father, if you must have some one to slay,
+ Instead of poor Robin, hang Ranulph--
+
+ MYSELF: Why, pray?
+
+ GILL: In nice books the nasty folks only should die;
+ Those are the kind of books nice people buy.
+ I like a book that makes me glad,
+ And loathe a book that makes me sad;
+ So, as this Geste is made for me,
+ Make it as happy as can be.
+
+ MYSELF: And is it, so far, as you'd wish?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, though it's rather swish,
+ I think it needs a deal more love--
+
+ MYSELF: Swish? How--what's this? Great heavens
+ above!
+ Will you, pray, miss, explain to me
+ How any story “swish” may be?
+ And why, my daughter, you must choose
+ A frightful word like “swish” to use?
+ What hideous language are you talking?
+
+ GILL: Sorrow, father! “Swish” means “corking.”
+ I think our Geste is “out of sight,”
+ Except that, to please me, you might
+ Put in more love--
+
+ MYSELF: Now, how can Joc'lyn go love-making
+ When his head is sore and aching?
+ Besides, this is no place to woo;
+ He'll love-make when I want him to.
+
+ GILL: But, father, think--in all this time,
+ In all this blank-verse, prose and rhyme,
+ The fair Yolande he's never kissed,
+ And you've done nothing to assist;
+ And, as I'm sure they're both inclined,
+ I think your treatment most unkind.
+
+ MYSELF: This Geste I'll write in my own way,
+ That is, sweet Prattler, if I may;
+ When I'm ready for them to kiss,
+ Then kiss they shall; I promise this.
+ Now I'll to Rob return, if you,
+ My Gillian, will permit me to!
+
+ Thus in his prison pent, poor woeful Rob,
+ Since none might see or hear, scorned not to sob,
+ And mightily, in stricken heart, did grieve
+ That he so soon so fair a world must leave.
+ And all because the morning wind had brought
+ Earth's dewy fragrance with sweet mem'ries fraught.
+ So Robin wept nor sought his grief to stay,
+ Yearning amain for joys of yesterday;
+ Till, hearing nigh the warder's heavy tread,
+ He sobbed no more but strove to sing instead.
+
+ “A bow for me, a bow for me,
+ All underneath the greenwood tree,
+ Where slaves are men, and men are free;
+ Give me a bow!
+
+ “Give me a bow, a bow of yew,
+ Good hempen cord and arrows true,
+ When foes be thick and friends be few,
+ Give me a bow!”
+
+Thus cheerily sang Robin the while he dried his bitter tears, as the
+door of his prison was flung wide and Black Lewin strode in and with him
+men-at-arms bearing torches.
+
+“What ho, rogue Robin!” cried he. “The cock hath crowed. Ha! Will ye sing,
+knave, will ye sing, in faith?”
+
+“In faith, that will I!” laughed Robin.
+
+“Here come we to bring ye to the gallows, Robin--how say ye?”
+
+“The more reason for singing since my singing must soon be done!” So, with
+pikemen before him and behind, bold Robin marched forth to die, yet sang
+full blithely as he went:
+
+ “So lay my bones 'neath good yew-tree,
+ Thus Rob and yew soon one shall be,
+ Where all true men may find o' we
+ A trusty bow!”
+
+“Ha' done!” growled Black Lewin, shivering in the chilly air of dawn.
+“Quit--quit thy singing, rogue, or by the foul fiend I--”
+
+“Who dareth name the fiend?” croaked an awful voice, whereat Black Lewin
+halted, gaped and stood a-tremble, while beneath steel cap and bascinet
+all men's hair stirred and rose with horror; for before them was a ghastly
+shape, a shape that crouched in the gloom with dreadful face aflame with
+smouldering green fire.
+
+“Woe!” cried the voice. “Woe unto thee, Lewin the Black, that calleth on
+fiend o' the pit!”
+
+And now came a fiery hand that, hovering in the air, pointed lambent finger
+at gaping Lewin and at each of the shivering pike-men in turn.
+
+“Woe--sorrow and woe to one and all, ye men of blood, plague and pest, pain
+o' flesh, and grief of soul seize ye, be accursed and so--begone! Hence
+ho--away!
+
+ “Rommani hi! Avaunt, I say,
+ Prendraxon!
+ Thus direst curse on ye I lay
+ Shall make flesh shrink and bone decay,
+ To rot and rot by night and day
+ Till flesh and bone do fall away,
+ Mud unto mud and clay to clay.
+ A spell I cast,
+ Shall all men blast.
+ Hark ye,
+ Mark ye,
+ Rommani hi--prendraxon!”
+
+Down fell pike and guisarme from nerveless fingers and, gasping with fear,
+Black Lewin and his fellows turned and fled nor stayed for one look
+behind; only Robin stood there (since he might not run away by reason of
+his bonds) babbling prayers between chattering teeth and with all his
+fingers crossed.
+
+“Oho, Fool, aha!” cried the voice. “Thus have I, a poor, feeble old woman,
+wrought better than all thy valiance or Lobkyn's strength. So, by potency
+of my spells and magic are we quits, thou and I. Bring, then, thy rogue
+outlaw and haste ye!”
+
+So saying the old Witch muffled her awful, fiery face in ragged mantle and
+turned away; and in that moment Robin was aware of three forms about him in
+the grey dawn-light, felt his bonds loosed off by quick, strong hands and
+drew a great, joyous breath.
+
+“How, Fool, thou brave and noble Motley,” quoth he, “is it thou again? And
+I to live?”
+
+“Aye, marry, Robin! But come apace, the day breaketh and the city is
+astir--hark to yon shouts! Follow!”
+
+So with the Tanner on one side and Lobkyn on the other, Robin ran, hard on
+Jocelyn's heels; and ever the dawn brightened until up came the sun chasing
+away sullen shadow and filling street and alley with his glory.
+
+But now, and just as they reached that narrow street where safety lay,
+they heard a shout, a scream, a rush of feet and roar of fierce voices and
+beheld, amid a surge of armed men, the old woman struggling in the cruel
+grip of Black Lewin who (like many others I wot of, my Gill) was brave
+enough by daylight. Vainly the old creature strove, screaming for mercy as
+Black Lewin whirled aloft his sword; but his blade clashed upon another as
+Jocelyn sprang, and for a while the air rang with the sound of fierce-
+smiting steel until, throwing up his arms, Black Lewin fell and lay there.
+But, roaring vengeance, the soldiery closed about Jocelyn who, beset by
+blows on every side, sank in turn, yet, even as he fell, two short though
+mighty legs bestrode his prostrate form and Lobkyn Lollo, whirling huge
+club, smote down the foremost assailant and, ever as he smote, he
+versified and chanted--thus:
+
+ “I'm Lollo hight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I,
+ I'm Lollo hight,
+ 'Tis my delight
+ By day or night
+ In honest fight
+ With main and might
+ Good blows to smite,
+ And where they light
+ 'Tis sorry plight
+ For that poor wight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+
+ “Bows, swords and staves,
+ Come, lusty knaves,
+ And fit for graves
+ Brave Lobkyn soon will make ye;
+ So fight, say I,
+ Nor turn and fly,
+ Or, when ye die,
+ Then may old Horny take ye.”
+
+Fierce raged the conflict, but in that narrow street they made good play
+against their many assailants, the valiant Dwarf's mighty club, backed by
+the Tanner's darting pike and Robin's flashing sword, which he had
+snatched from a loosened grasp. But Jocelyn lay prone upon his face,
+between Lobkyn's firm-planted feet, and stirred not. So club whirled,
+sword flashed and pike darted while, high above the tumult, rose Lobkyn's
+fierce chant:
+
+ “Hot blood I quaff,
+ At death I laugh,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+ Come all that may,
+ And all I'll slay,
+ And teach ye how to die.”
+
+“Lob--Lobkyn!” screamed the Witch. “Thou that drinkest nought but
+milk--talk not of blood, thou naughty poppet. Back now--stand back, I do
+command thee!”
+
+Lobkyn smote a man to earth and, sighing regretful, stepped aside.
+
+ “Back!” screamed the Witch. “Stand back, I say, all three,
+ And leave this wicked rabblement to me.
+ Now shall they learn the terror of my curse,
+ Black magic shall they feel--and something worse!”
+
+ Then uttered she a sudden, hideous cry,
+ And, leaping, whirled her bony hands on high,
+ And lo! a choking dust-cloud filled the air;
+ That wreathed in whirling eddies here and there.
+
+ “Perendewix!” she cried. “Oh Radzywin--
+ Thraxa! Behold, my witchcraft doth begin!”
+ Back shrank their foes, back reeled they one and all,
+ They choked, they gasped, they let their weapons fall;
+ And some did groan, and some did fiercely sneeze,
+ And some fell prone, some writhed upon their knees;
+ Some strove to wipe the tears from blinded eyes,
+ But one and all gave voice to awful cries.
+
+“Come!” cried the Witch, “to the door--the door. Lobkyn, bear ye the brave
+Fool--and tenderly! Haste, naughty bantling, haste--I hear the tread of
+more soldiers!”
+
+So Lobkyn stooped and, lifting Jocelyn's inanimate form, tucked it beneath
+one arm, and with Robin and Will the Tanner, followed the old Witch into
+the house.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN commandeth:
+
+ GILL: Go on, father, do; why will you keep stopping?
+ I think the old Witch is just perfectly topping.
+ And what frightful words she uses for curses!
+
+ MYSELF: Very frightful, indeed, though your slang still much worse is,
+ With your “topping,” “top-holing,” your “swishing” and “clipping,”
+
+ GILL: Well, I merely intended to say it was ripping;
+ But, if you object to my praises--
+
+ MYSELF: I only object to your phrases,
+ For there's no author but will own
+ He “liveth not by bread alone.”
+ As for myself, if what I write
+ Doth please--then praise with all your might.
+
+ GILL: Well, then, the Witch is splendid, though
+ I'm very curious to know
+ Just how her face all fiery grew,
+ And what the stuff was that she threw--
+ The stuff that made the soldiers sneeze
+ And brought them choking to their knees
+ It sounds as though it might be snuff.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, they'd not found out such stuff.
+ But grisly witches long ago
+ Did many strange devices know.
+ Indeed, my Gill, they knew much more
+ Than wise folk gave them credit for.
+
+ GILL: Well, what was it? You haven't said.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll get on with our Geste instead.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 7
+
+ That telleth to the patient reader nought,
+ Save how the Duke was to the wild-wood brought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ With sleepy eyes Duke Jocelyn watched afar,
+ In deep, blue void a solitary star,
+ That, like some bright and wakeful eye, did seem
+ To watch him where he lay 'twixt sleep and dream.
+ And, as he viewed it winking high above,
+ He needs must think of Yolande and his love,
+ And how, while he this twinkling star did view,
+ She, wakeful lying, might behold it too,
+ Whereas she lay a spotless maid and fair,
+ Clothed in the red-gold glory of her hair;
+ And, thinking thus, needs must he fondly sigh,
+ Then frowned to hear a lusty snore hard by--
+
+--and looking whence came this sound, the Duke sat up and his wonder grew;
+for by light of a fire that glowed in a blackened fissure of rock he beheld
+himself couched on a bed of bracken within a roomy cave. Beside the fire
+leaned a mighty, iron-shod club, and beyond this, curled up like a dog,
+snored Lobkyn Lollo, the Dwarf. Hereupon Jocelyn reached out and shook Lob
+to wakefulness, who grunted sleepily, rubbed his eyes drowsily and yawned
+mightily:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Good Dwarf, where am I?
+
+ Answered LOBKYN:
+ Safe, Fool, safe art thou, I trow,
+ Where none but Lob and friends do know.
+
+ JOCELYN: But how am I hither?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, truly thou art hither, Fool,
+ Because thou art not thither, Fool!
+ In these two arms, thy life to save,
+ I bore thee to this goodly cave.
+
+ JOCELYN: How may one of thy inches bear man of mine so far?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, though I of inches lack,
+ I'm mighty strong, both arm and back,
+ Thou that art longer man than me,
+ Yet I am stronger man than thee,
+ Though, lusty Fool, big fool you be,
+ I'd bear thee, Fool, if thou wert three.
+ And mark, Fool, if my grammar seemeth weak,
+ Pray license it since I in verse must speak.
+
+ JOCELYN: And pray why must thou speak in verse?
+
+ LOBKYN: Nature hath on me laid this curse,
+ And, though to speak plain prose I yearn,
+ My prose to verse doth ever turn.
+ Therefore I grieve, as well I might,
+ Because of my poetic plight--
+ Though bards and rhymers all I scorn,
+ Alack! I was a rhymer born.
+
+ JOCELYN: Alack! poor Dwarf, as thou must versify,
+ By way of courtesy, then, so will I.
+
+ LOBKYN: How, Fool, then canst thou rhyme?
+
+ JOCELYN: Aye, Dwarf, at any time!
+ In dark, in light,
+ By day, by night,
+ Standing, sitting,
+ As be fitting,
+ Verses witty,
+ Quaint or pretty,
+ Incontinent I'll find.
+ Verses glad, Dwarf,
+ Verses sad, Dwarf,
+ Every sort, Lob,
+ Long or short, Lob
+ Or verses ill,
+ Yet verses still
+ Which might be worse,
+ I can rehearse
+ When I'm for verse inclined.
+ So, Lob, first speak me what became
+ Of our old Witch, that potent dame.
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, in faith she wrought so well
+ With direful curse and blasting spell
+ That every howling soldier-knave,
+ Every rogue and base-born slave
+ That by chance I did not slay,
+ From my grand-dam ran away.
+
+ JOCELYN: A noble Witch! Now, Lobkyn, tell
+ What hap'd when in the fight I fell,
+ And how alive I chance to be.
+
+ LOBKYN: Fool, I was there to succour thee.
+ I smote those pike-men hip and thigh,
+ That they did mangled pike-men lie;
+ Their arms, their legs, their skulls I broke,
+ Two, three, and four at every stroke.
+ I drave them here, I smote them there,
+ I smote, I slew, I none did spare,
+ I laughed, I sang, I--
+
+“Ha, Lob!” growled a sleepy voice. “Now, as I'm a tanner, here's a-many
+I's! By Saint Crispin, meseemeth thou'rt all I's--for as thou fought I
+fought, or thought I fought, forsooth!”
+
+ LOBKYN: True, Will, did'st fight in goodly manner,
+ Though fightedst, Will, like any tanner;
+ But I did fight, or I'm forsworn,
+ Like one unto the manner born.
+ I fought, forsooth, with such good will,
+ 'Tis marvel I'm not fighting still.
+ And so I should be, by my fay,
+ An I had any left to slay;
+ But since I slew them all--
+
+“Hold there!” cried the Tanner. “I slew one or two, Lob, and Robin
+likewise. Thou'rt a lusty fighter, but what o' me and Robin--ha, what o'
+we?”
+
+ LOBKYN: In faith, ye're proper men and tall,
+ And I'm squat man, my stature small,
+ Nath'less, though small and squat I be,
+ I am the best man of the three.
+
+“Why, as to that,” quoth the Tanner, “'tis but you says so! As to me I
+think what I will, and I do think--”
+
+But here Lobkyn started up and seized the great club; quoth he:
+
+ “Hark and mark,
+ Heard ye nought there i' the dark?”
+
+“Not I!” answered Will.
+
+“Methought I heard an owl hoot,” said Jocelyn.
+
+“Aye,” nodded Lobkyn:
+
+ “Aye, Fool, and yet this owl I 'll swear,
+ Hath ne'er a feather anywhere.
+ This owl hath ne'er a wing to fly,
+ But goes afoot like thou and I.
+ Now mark,
+ And hark!”
+
+Hereupon the Dwarf laid finger to lip and uttered an owl-cry so dismal,
+so tremulous and withal so true to nature that it was wonder to hear.
+Instantly, from the dimness beyond the cavern-mouth, the cry was repeated,
+and presently was heard a panting and 'plaining, a snuffling and a
+shuffling, and into the light of the fire hobbled the old Witch. Beholding
+Jocelyn sitting cross-legged on his couch of fern, she paused and, leaning
+on her crooked stick, viewed him with her wise, old eyes.
+
+“Aha, Motley!” she croaked. “Oho, thou flaunting jackanapes, didst peril
+thy foolish flesh for me that am poor and old and feeble, and cursed by
+all for witchcraft! So have I with my potions ministered to thee in thy
+sickness, and behold thou'rt alive, hale and strong again. Give me thy
+hand! Aha, here's cool, unfevered blood! Show me thy tongue. Oho! Aha! A
+little sup o' my black decoction--roots gathered at full o' moon--a little
+sup and shall be thyself by to-morrow's dawn. But--as for thee, thou
+good-for-naught, thou wicked elf--aha! would'st dare leave thy poor old
+grannam weak and 'fenceless? Give me thy rogue-ear!” Obediently, the mighty
+Dwarf arose and sighfully suffered the old woman to grasp him by the ear
+and to tweak and wring and twist it as she would.
+
+“What dost thou here i' the wild-wood, thou imp, thou poppet o' plagues,
+thou naughty wap-de-staldees?”
+
+To which Lobkyn, writhing and watering at the eyes, answered thus:
+
+ “Stay, prithee grannam, loose thy hold!
+ I would but be an outlaw bold,
+ An outlaw fierce that men shall fear--
+ Beseech thee, grand-dam, loose mine ear!”
+
+“An outlaw, naughty one!” screeched the Witch, tweaking ear the harder.
+“Dare ye tell me so, elf?”
+
+ LOBKIN: Aye, grand-dam--cuff me an ye will,
+ Nath'less an outlaw I'll be still,
+ And many a wicked rogue I'll kill--
+ O grand-dam, loose mine ear!
+ And day and night I'll slay until
+ All rogues my name do fear.
+
+ For grand-dam, I'm a fighter--O,
+ Beseech thee, let my ear go!
+ And bones shall crack and blood shall flow,
+ If any dare resist me.
+ And all the world my name shall know,
+ Pray by the ear don't twist me!
+
+ All men before my club shall fly,
+ All on their knees shall “mercy” cry,
+ Or mangled in their gore shall lie--
+ Ah, grand-dam, pray don't clout me!
+ Don't beat me, grannam dear, but try
+ To do awhile without me--
+
+“Without thee, thou piece o' naughtiness?” screamed the old woman. “Now
+will I lay my stick about thee--hold still, Rogue!”
+
+Saying which, she proceeded to belabour the poor Dwarf with her knotted
+stick, clutching him fast by his ear the while. Thus she be-thwacked him
+soundly until he roared for mercy.
+
+“Why, how now--how now?” cried a merry voice, and Robin strode into the
+firelight. “Gentle Witch, sweet dame,” quoth he, “what do ye with poor
+Lob?”
+
+“Thwack him shrewdly!”
+
+“Which is, Witch, that which none but witch the like o' thee might do, for
+lustier fighter and mightier dwarf never was. Thus, but for thy witch-like
+witcheries, the which, Witch, witch do prove thee, but for this and the
+power and potency of thy spells, now might he crack out thy life 'twixt
+finger and thumb--”
+
+“Ha, forest-rogue, 'tis a bad brat, a very naughty elf would run off into
+the wild to be rogue like thee--an outlaw, forsooth!”
+
+“Forsooth, Witch,” laughed Robin, “outlaw is he in very truth, in sooth and
+by my troth! Outlaw is Lob, banned by Church and Council of Ten, and so
+proclaimed i' the market square of Canalise this very morn by sound o'
+trumpet and--”
+
+“How? How?” cried the old woman, wringing her trembling hands. “My Lobkyn
+outlawed? My babe, my lovely brat, my pretty bantling, woe and alas! My
+dear ugly one an outlaw?”
+
+“Aye, marry is he, Witch, outlaw proclaimed, acclaimed, announced,
+pronounced and denounced; as such described, ascribed and proscribed by
+Master Gregory Bax, the port-reeve, for the late slaying and maiming of
+divers of the city guard. So outlaw is Lobkyn, his life henceforth forfeit
+even as mine.”
+
+“My Lobkyn an hairy outlaw i' the wild-wood! Out alas! And what of his poor
+old grannam? What o' me--?”
+
+“Content thee, sweet hag, since thou'rt outlawed along with him and, as
+witch, doomed to die unpleasantly by fire and flame and faggot, if thou'rt
+caught.”
+
+“Alack! Wala-wa! Woe 's me!” groaned the Witch, cracking her finger-bones.
+“And all this by reason o' the Fool yonder.”
+
+“Why, the Fool is dubbed outlaw likewise, Witch,” quoth Robin. “Outlaw is
+he along o' thee and Tanner Will.”
+
+“And all by reason that this Fool must needs peril our lives for sake of
+rogue-outlaw, of forest-robber, of knavish woodland-lurker--”
+
+“Hight Robin!” laughed Robin, leaning on his long bow-stave. “Now, this
+brave Fool having saved Robin his life, Witch, the which, Witch, was good
+thing for Robin, our Fool next saved thee, Witch, which was nought to
+Robin, in the which, Witch, Robin did not joy; for thou, old Witch, being
+witch, art therefore full o' witcheries which be apt to be-devil a man and
+fright his reason, for the which reason, being reasonable man, I reason,
+for this reason, that, so reasoning, I love thee not. But thou art old,
+Witch, which is good reason to reasonably reason thou art wise, Witch,
+and, being wise, I on this wise would seek counsel of thy wisdom, Witch.
+Imprimis, then--”
+
+“Hold!” commanded the Witch; “here's a whirl o' windy wind! Hast more of
+such-like, forester?”
+
+“Some little, Witch, which I will now, Witch--”
+
+“Nay, then, Robin-a-Green, suffer me to rest my old bones whiles thy mill
+clacks.” Hereupon the old Witch seated herself beside the fire, with bony
+knees up-drawn to bony chin. “Speak, outlaw Robin,” she croaked, blinking
+her red eyes, “and speak ye plain.”
+
+“Why, then, wise Witch, look 'ee: since we be outlaws each and every, with
+all men's hands against us, with none to succour, and death watchful for
+us, 'tis plain, and very plain, we, for our harbourage and defence, must in
+the wild-wood bide--”
+
+“Ho!” cried Lobkyn:
+
+ “It soundeth good,
+ The brave wild-wood,
+ Where flowers do spring
+ And birds do sing.
+ To slay the deer
+ And make good cheer,
+ With mead and beer,
+ The livelong year,
+ And--”
+
+“Roar not, toad!” cried the Witch. “Say on--Rogue-Robin!”
+
+“Why, mark me, good Witch, here's where buskin chafeth! Not long since I
+ruled i' the wild-wood, a very king, with ten-score lusty outlaw-rogues
+to do my will. To-day is there never an one, and for this reasonable
+reason--to wit, I am hanged, and, being hanged, am dead, and, being dead,
+am not, and thus Robin is nobody; and yet again, perceive me, Witch, being
+Robin, I am therefore somebody; thus is nobody somebody, and yet somebody
+that nobody will believe anybody. The which, Witch, is a parlous case,
+methinks, for here am I, somebody, nobody and Robin altogether and at the
+same time; therefore, Witch, o' thy witchful wisdom--who am I, what and
+which, Witch?”
+
+Here the Witch blinked and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones one after
+another. Quoth she:
+
+“For thy first, thou'rt thyself; for the second, a rogue; and for the
+third, a wind-bag. I would thy second might tie up thy first in thy third.”
+
+“So should Robin choke Robin with Robin. But hark 'ee again, good, patient
+dame. It seemeth that Ranulph the executioner betaketh him at cock-crow to
+hang poor me; but, finding me not, made great outcry, insomuch that the
+city guard, such as mighty Lob and Will had left alive, sought counsel
+together; and taking one of their slain fellows, Ranulph hanged him in my
+stead, and there he hangeth now, above the city gate, his face so marred
+that he might be me or any other.”
+
+“Ha, Robin--well?”
+
+“This day, at sunset, came I unto the trysting-oak, and by blast of horn
+summoned me my outlaw company. They came apace and in great wonderment,
+for, seeing me, they fell to great awe and dread, thinking me dead, since
+many had seen my body a-dangle on the gallows; wherefore, seeing me
+manifestly alive, they took me for ghoulish ghost 'stead o' good flesh and
+blood, and fled from me amain. So, by reason of my dead body, that is no
+body o' mine, yet that nobody will believe is no body o' mine, they believe
+that this my body is yet no body, but a phantom; the which is out of
+reason; yet thus unreasonably do the rogues reason by reason of the body
+that hangeth in place of my body above the city gate. Wherefore I reason
+there is yet reason in their unreason, seeing this body was somebody, yet
+no body o' mine, but which nobody among them can swear to. Which, Witch,
+is a matter which none but wise witch may counsel me in. How say'st thou,
+Witch?”
+
+But for a while the old Witch scowled on the fire, bony chin on bony knees,
+and dreamily cracked her finger-joints.
+
+“Oho!” she cried suddenly. “Aha--a body that nobody's is, yet body that
+everybody knoweth for body o' thine--aha! So must nobody know that nobody's
+body is not thy body. Dost see my meaning, Robin-a-Green?”
+
+“No whit, Witch! Thou growest involved, thy talk diffuse, abstruse and
+altogether beyond one so obtuse as simple Rob--”
+
+“Then hark 'ee again, Addlepate! Everybodymust believe nobody's body thy
+body, so by dead body will I make thy live body of so great account to
+everybody that nobody henceforth shall doubt dead body made live body, by
+my witchcraft, and thou be feared, therefore, of everybody. Dost follow me
+now, numskull?”
+
+“Aye, truly, mother! And truly 'tis a rare subtlety, a notable wile, and
+thou a right cunning witch and wise. But how wilt achieve this wonder?”
+
+“Since dead thou art, I to life will bring thee. Oho, I will summon thee
+through fire and flame; aha, I will make thee more dreaded than heretofore;
+thy fame shall fill the wild-wood and beyond. Know'st thou the Haunted
+Wood, hard by Thraxby Waste?”
+
+Now here Robin's merry smile languished, and he rubbed nose with dubious
+finger.
+
+“Aye, I do,” quoth he sombrely; “an ill place and--demon-rid, they say--”
+
+“Come ye there to-morrow at midnight.”
+
+“Alone?” says Robin, starting.
+
+“Alone!”
+
+“Nay, good Witch, most gentle, potent dame, I--though phantom accounted, I
+love not phantoms, and Thraxby Waste--”
+
+“Come ye there--at midnight!”
+
+“Why, then, good Witch, an come I must, suffer that I bring the valiant
+Fool and mighty Lob--prithee, now!”
+
+At this the old Witch scowled and mumbled and crackled her finger-bones
+louder than ever.
+
+“Oho!” cried she at last, “thou great child, afraid-o'-the-dark, bring
+these an ye will--but none other!”
+
+“Good mother, I thank thee!”
+
+“Tchak!” cried the Witch, and, struggling to her feet, hobbled to Jocelyn
+and laid bony finger on wrist and brow, nodded, mumbled, and so, bent on
+her staff, hobbled away; but, reaching the cave-mouth, she paused, and
+smote stick to earth fiercely.
+
+“To-morrow!” she croaked. “Midnight! Re--member!”
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 8
+
+ Tells how the Witch, with incantations dire,
+ In life to life brought Robin through the fire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The wind was cold--indeed 'twas plaguy chill--
+ That furtive crept and crept, like something ill
+ Stealing with dreadful purpose in the dark,
+ With scarce a sound its stealthy course to mark;
+ While pallid moon did seem to swoon, as though
+ It ghastly things beheld on earth below;
+ And Robin gripped the good sword by his side,
+ And Joc'lyn looked about him watchful-eyed;
+ While Lobkyn Lollo felt and looked the bolder
+ By reason of the club across his shoulder.
+
+ “Here,” whispered Robin, peering through the gloom,
+ “Is dismal place, I've heard, of death and doom.
+ Here do be ghosts and goblins, so 'tis said,
+ Demons, phantoms, spectres of the dead--”
+ “Aye, verily,” quoth Lob, “and what is worse,
+ 'Tis here my grand-dam oft doth come to curse,
+ And haunteth it with spiteful toads and bats,
+ With serpents fell, with ewts and clawful cats.
+ Here doth she revel hold o' moony nights,
+ With grave-rank ghouls and moaning spectral sprites;
+ And ... Saints! what's that?
+ A hook-winged bat?
+ Not so; perchance, within its hairy body fell
+ Is man or maid transformed by magic spell.
+ O, brothers, heedful be, and careful tread
+ Lest magic gin should catch and strike us dead!
+ O would my grannam might go with us here.
+ Since, being witch, she doth no witchcraft fear.”
+
+ So came the three at last to Haunted Wood,
+ Where mighty trees in gloomy grandeur stood,
+ Their wide-flung boughs so closely interweaving
+ Scarce space between for ghostly moonbeams leaving;
+ But, snake-like, round each other closely twined,
+ In shuddering wind did mournful voices find,
+ And, groaning, writhed together to and fro
+ Like souls that did the fiery torment know.
+ Thus, in the wood, 'twas dark and cold and dank,
+ And breathed an air of things long dead and rank;
+ While shapes, dim-seen, did creep and flit and fly
+ With sudden squeak, and bodeful, wailing cry.
+
+ At last they reached a clearing in the wood,
+ Where, all at once, as 'mid the leaves they stood,
+ From Lobkyn's lips, loud, tremulous, and high,
+ There rose and swelled the owlet's shuddering cry.
+ Scarce on the air this dismal sound had died,
+ When they the Witch's hobbling form espied.
+ Beholding Robin, by the arm she caught him,
+ And to a place of rocks in haste she brought him;
+ And here, where bosky thickets burgeoned round,
+ She pointed to a chasm in the ground.
+
+ “Go down!” she hissed. “Go down, thou thing of clay,
+ Thou that art dead--into thy grave I say.
+ Since thou 'rt hanged, a dead man shalt thou be
+ Till from thy grave my spells shall summon thee--”
+ “My grave?” gasped Robin, blenching from her frown.
+ “Aye, Rogue!” she croaked. “Behold thy grave! Go down!”
+ So shiv'ring Robin, in most woeful plight,
+ Crept into gloom and vanished from their sight.
+ “O, Robin, Robin!” the old Witch softly cried,
+ “Alack, I'm here!” faint voice, below, replied.
+ “Thou dead,” croaked she, “thou ghostly shade forlorn,
+ From charnel-vault sound now thy spectral horn,
+ Sound now thy rallying-note, then silent be
+ Till from thy mouldering tomb I summon thee!”
+
+ Now, on the stillness rose the ghostly sound
+ Of Robin's hunting horn that through the ground
+ Rang thin and high, unearthly-shrill and clear,
+ That thrilled the shivering woodland far and near,
+ And shuddering to silence, left behind
+ A whisper as of leaves in stealthy wind.
+ A rustling 'mid the underbrush they heard
+ Where, in the gloom about them, dim things stirred--
+ Vague, stealing shapes that softly nearer drew,
+ Till from the tree-gloom crept a ragged crew,
+ Wild men and fierce, a threatening, grimly herd,
+ Who stood like shadows, speaking not a word;
+ And the pale moon in fitful flashes played
+ On sword and headpiece, pike and broad axe-blade.
+ While the old hag, o'er witch-fire crouching low,
+ Puffed at the charcoal till it was aglow;
+ Then hobbling round and round her crackling fire,
+ She thus began her incantations dire:
+
+ “Come ye long-dead,
+ Ye spirits dread,
+
+
+ Ye things of quaking fear,
+ Ye poor, lost souls,
+ Ye ghosts, ye ghouls,
+ Haxwiggin bids ye here!
+ By one by two, by two by three,
+ Spirits of Night, I summon ye,
+ By three by four, by four by five,
+ Come ye now dead that were alive,
+ Come now I bid ye
+ From grave-clods rid ye,
+ Come!
+ From South and North,
+ I bid ye forth,
+ From East, from West,
+ At my behest--
+ Come!
+ Come great, come small,
+ Come one, come all,
+ Heed ye my call,
+ List to my call, I say,
+ From pitchy gloom
+ Of mouldered tomb
+ Here find ye room
+ For sport and holiday.
+ Come grisly ghosts and goblins pale,
+ Come spirits black and grey,
+ Ye shrouded spectres--Hail, O Hail!
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday.
+ Come wriggling snakes
+ From thorny brakes,
+ Hail!
+ Come grimly things
+ With horny wings,
+ That flit, that fly,
+ That croak, that cry,
+ Hail!
+
+ “Come ghouls, come demons one and all,
+ Here revel whiles ye may;
+ Ye noisome things that creep and crawl,
+ Come, sport and round me play.
+ Ho, claw and wing and hoof and horn,
+ Here revel till the clammy dawn.
+
+ “Peeping, creeping,
+ Flying, crying,
+ Fighting, biting,
+ Groaning, moaning,
+ Ailing, wailing,
+ Spirits fell,
+ Come to my spell,
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday!
+ So, are ye there,
+ High up in air,
+ The moonbeams riding
+ 'Mid shadows hiding?
+
+ “Now gather round, ye spectral crew,
+ This night have we brave work to do--
+ Bold Robin o' the Green, 'tis said,
+ On gallows hangeth cold and dead
+ Beneath the sky
+ On gibbet high,
+ They in a noose did swing him.
+ Go, goblins, go,
+ And ere they know,
+ Unto me hither bring him.”
+
+ Here paused the Witch to mend her glowing fire,
+ While each man to his neighbour shuffled nigher,
+ As witch-flame leapt and ever brighter grew,
+ Till, to their horror, sudden it burned blue;
+ Whereat each silent, fearful beholder
+ Felt in the gloom to touch his fellow's shoulder,
+ Yet, in that moment, knew an added dread
+ To see the fire from blue turn ghastly red;
+ Then, as the Witch did o'er it crooning lean,
+ Behold! it changed again to baleful green.
+ Whereat the Witch flung bony arms on high,
+ As though with claw-like hands she 'd rend the sky;
+ And while the lurid flames leapt ever higher,
+ She thus invoked the Spirit of the Fire.
+
+ “As fire doth change, yet, changed, unchanged doth burn,
+ By fiery spell shall dead to life return!
+
+ “Ho, goblins yonder--'neath the moon,
+ Have ye brought me the dead so soon?
+ Ha! is it Bxibin that ye bring,
+ That pale, that stiff, that clammy thing?
+ Now work we spell with might and main,
+ Shall make it live and breathe again.
+
+ “Now in and out,
+ And round about,
+ Ye wriggling rout,
+ With hoof and claw and wing;
+ Now high, now low,
+ Now fast, now slow,
+ Now to and fro
+ Tread we a magic ring.
+
+ “Thus, while the frighted moon doth peep,
+ We 'll wake this cold, dead thing from sleep,
+ Till Robin back to life shall leap.
+ And when he from the fire shall spring,
+ Ye outlaws hail him for your King.
+
+ “For on that wight
+ Who, day or night,
+ Shall Robin disobey
+ With purpose fell
+ I'll cast a spell
+ Shall wither him away.
+
+ “Ho, Robin! Ope thy death-cold eyes,
+ Ho, Robin! From thy grave arise,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+ Robin that doth bide so near me,
+ Robin, Robin, wake and hear me,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+
+ “Back to life I summon thee,
+ Through the fire thy path must be,
+ Through the fire that shall not harm thee,
+ Through flame that back to life shall charm thee,
+ Shall warm thy body all a-cold,
+ And make grim Death loose clammy hold.
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Leap back to life by all men seen!”
+
+ Through curling smoke-wreaths and through writhing flame,
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came,
+ And by the Witch did in the fire-light stand,
+ Sword by his side and bugle-horn in hand,
+ And laughed full blithe as he was wont to do,
+ And, joyous, hailed his wild and ragged crew:
+
+“What lads, are ye there forsooth? Is't Myles I see with lusty Watt and
+John and Hal o' the Quarterstaff? God den t' ye, friends, and merry hunting
+to one and all, for by oak and ash and thorn here stand I to live with
+thee, aye, good lads, and to die with ye here in the good greenwood--”
+
+But now and all at once from that grim and silent company a mighty shout
+went up:
+
+“'Tis Robin--'tis Robin, 'tis bold Robin-a-Green! 'Tis our Robin himself
+come back to us!”
+
+And fearful no longer, they hasted to him and clasped him in brawny arms,
+hugging him mightily and making great rejoicing over him.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 9
+
+ That tells almost as fully as it should,
+ The joys of living in the good greenwood.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Deep-hidden in the trackless wild the outlaws had made them a haven of
+refuge, a camp remote and well sequestered. Here were mossy, fern-clad
+rocks that soared aloft, and here green lawns where ran a blithesome brook;
+it was indeed a very pleasant place shut in by mighty trees. Within this
+leafy boskage stood huts of wattle, cunningly wrought; beneath the steep
+were many caves carpeted with dried fern and fragrant mosses, while
+everywhere, above and around, the trees spread mighty boughs, through which
+the sun darted golden beams be-dappling the sward, and in whose leafy
+mysteries the birds made joyous carolling.
+
+And here beneath bending willows arched over this merry brook, one
+sun-bright morning riotous with song of birds, sat Jocelyn with Robin
+a-sprawl beside him.
+
+“O brother,” says Robin, “O brother, 't is a fair place the greenwood, a
+fair, sweet place to live--aye, or to die in methinks, this good greenwood,
+whereof I have made a song--hark 'ee!”
+
+ “Oho, it is a right good thing
+ When trees do bud and flowers do spring
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood,
+ To hear the birds so blithely sing,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.
+
+ “Who cometh here leaves grief behind,
+ Here broken man hath welcome kind,
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ The hopeless here new hope may find,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the kind, green wood.
+
+ “Ho, friend, 'tis pleasant life we lead,
+ No laws have we, no laws we need
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+ For every man's a man indeed,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+
+ “All travellers that come this way
+ Must something in fair tribute pay
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ Or here in bonds is like to stay,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Lost in the good, green wood.
+
+ “Full many a lord, in boastful pride,
+ This tribute, scornful, hath denied
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ And thereupon hath sudden died,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the fair, green wood.
+
+ “And when our time shall come to die
+ Methinks we here may softly lie
+ Deep in the fair, green wood.
+ With birds to sing us lullaby,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.”
+
+“So there it is, brother--and life and death in a nutshell, as 'twere. Now,
+wherefore wilt not join us and turn outlaw, good Fool?”
+
+“For that I am a fool belike, Robin. Howbeit, I'm better Fool than outlaw.”
+
+“Say, rather, greater fool, Fool, for foresters' life is better than life
+o' folly, and payeth better to boot, what with booty--ha! Moreover, I do
+love thee, since, Fool, though fool, art wise in counsel and valiant beyond
+thought--so 'tis I would not lose thee. Stay, therefore, and live my
+comrade and brother, equal with me in all things. How say'st thou?”
+
+“Why, Robin, I say this: True friendship is a goodly thing and a rare in
+this world, and, therefore, to be treasured; 'tis thing no man may buy or
+seek, since itself is seeker and cometh of itself; 'tis a prop--a staff
+in stony ways, a shield 'gainst foes, a light i' the dark. So do I love
+friendship, Robin, and thou'rt my friend, yet must leave thee, though
+friendship shall abide.”
+
+Quoth ROBIN: How abide an we be parted?
+
+“In heart and mind and memory, Robin. Moreover, though I go, yet will I
+return anon, an life be mine.”
+
+“And wherefore go ye, brother?”
+
+“First to seek my comrade.”
+
+“Thy comrade--ha! I mind him, a fierce great fellow with hawk's beak and a
+fighting eye. And whither trend ye?”
+
+“To Canalise.”
+
+“Art crazed, brother? 'Tis there death waiteth thee!”
+
+“Yet must I go, Robin, since there my heart waiteth me.”
+
+“A maid, brother?”
+
+“A maid, Robin.”
+
+“Heigho! So wilt thou go, come joy, come pain, come life or death, since a
+maid is made to make man saint or devil, some days glad and some days sad,
+but ever and always a fool. And thou art Fool by profession, and, being
+lover professed and confessed, art doubly a fool; and since, good Folly,
+love's but folly and thou, a Fool, art deep in folly, so is thy state most
+melancholy.”
+
+“And dost think love so great folly, Robin?” said a soft voice, and,
+looking round, they beheld the lovely, dark-tressed Melissa, who viewed
+them bright-eyed and pouted red mouth, frowning a little.
+
+“Aye, verily, lady,” laughed Robin, as she sank on the grass beside them.
+“Forsooth, 'tis a madness fond. For see, now, a man being in love is out of
+all else.”
+
+“As how, Sir Outlaw?”
+
+“Marry, on this wise--when man's in love he mopeth apart and is ill
+company, so is he out o' friends; he hangeth humble head abashed, so is he
+out o' countenance; he uttereth frequent, windy, sighful suspirations,
+so is he out o' breath; he lavisheth lucre on his love, so is he out o'
+pocket; he forsweareth food, despiseth drink, scorneth sleep, so is he
+out o' health--in fine, he is out of all things, so is he out of himself;
+therefore he is mad, and so may go hang himself!”
+
+MELISSA: And hast thou loved, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: Ever and always, and none but Robin!
+
+MELISSA: And none more worthy, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: And none more, as I am worthy Robin.
+
+MELISSA: Lovest thou not Love, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: Love, love not I.
+
+MELISSA: Then Love canst thou know not.
+
+ROBIN: Then if I love Love for Love's sake, must Love then love me,
+therefore?
+
+MELISSA: If thy love for Love be true love, so shall Love love thee true.
+
+ROBIN: Then if Love should love me for my sake, then would I love Love for
+Love's sake; but since Love ne'er hath sought me for my sake, ne'er will I
+seek Love for Love's sake for my sake, since Love, though plaguy sweet, is
+a sweet plague, I judge and, so judging, will by my judgment stand.
+
+MELISBA: And how think you, Sir Fool?
+
+JOCELYN: I think if Love find Robin and Robin, so found of Love, shall
+learn to love Love for Love's sake, Love shall teach Robin how, hi loving
+Love--Love, if a plague, doth but plague him lovingly to his better
+judgment of Love, till, being on this wise, wise--he shall judge of Love
+lovingly, loving Love at last for Love's own lovely sake, rather than for
+his own selfish self. For as there is the passion of love, the which is a
+love selfish, so there is the true Spirit of Love, the which forgetteth
+self in Love's self, thus, self-forgotten, Love is crowned by Love's true
+self.
+
+MELISSA: How think ye of this, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: By Cupid, we are so deep in love that we are like to drown of love
+and we be not wary. Here hath my lovely jowlopped-crested brother so beset
+poor Robin with Love and self and Robin, that Robin kens not which is Love,
+Love's self or himself.
+
+MELISSA: And yet I do think 'tis very plain! Yet an thou canst express this
+plainer, prithee do, Sir Fool.
+
+“Blithely, sweet lady, here will I frame my meaning in a rhyme, thus:
+
+ “Who loveth Love himself above,
+ With Love base self transcending
+ Love, Love shall teach how Love may reach
+ The Love that hath no ending.
+
+
+ “'Tis thus Love-true, Love shall renew,
+ Love's love thus waning never,
+ So love each morn of Love new-born,
+ Love shall live loving ever.”
+
+ROBIN: Aye, verily, there's Love and yet such a love as no man may find
+methinks, brother.
+
+JOCELYN: Never, Robin, until it find him. For true love, like friendship,
+cometh unsought, like all other good things.
+
+ROBIN: 'Las! then needs must I be no good thing since I am sought e'en now
+of old Mopsa the Witch yonder!
+
+And he pointed where the old creature hobbled towards them bent on her
+crooked staff. Up rose Robin and, hasting to meet her, louted full low,
+since she was held in great respect of all men by reason of her potent
+spells. Chuckling evilly, she drew down Robin's tall head to whisper in his
+ear, whereupon he laughed, clapped hand to brawny thigh, and taking old
+Mopsa's feeble arm, hastened away with her. But Melissa, reclining 'neath
+the willow-shade, gazed down into the murmurous waters of the brook with
+eyes of dream whiles Jocelyn struck soft, sweet chords upon his lute. And
+presently she turned to view him thoughtfully--his strange, marred face;
+his eyes so quick and keen 'neath battered cock's-comb; his high, proud
+bearing despite his frayed and motley habit; and ever her wonder grew
+until, at last, she must needs question him:
+
+“Fools, Sir Fool, have I seen a-many, both in the motley and out, but thou
+art rare among all fools, I do think.”
+
+JOCELYN: Gramercy, lady! Truly fool am I of all fools singular.
+
+MELISSA: Thou'rt he I heard, upon a day, sing strange, sweet songs, within
+the marketplace of Canalise!
+
+JOCELYN: The same, lady.
+
+MELISSA: That soused my lord Gui head over ears in a lily-pool?
+
+JOCELYN: Verily, lady.
+
+MELISSA: O! Would one might do as much for Sir Agramore of Biename!
+
+JOCELYN: One doubtless will, lady.
+
+MELISSA: Thyself?
+
+JOCELYN: Nay--one that loveth the disputatious bickering of sharp steel
+better than I--one had rather fight than eat, and rather fight three men
+than one--
+
+“Three men?” cried Melissa, starting.
+
+“Aye, lady--and six men than three!”
+
+“There was such an one, Fool, in truth a very brave man, did fight three of
+my Lord Agramore's foresters on my behalf. Dost know of such an one, Fool?”
+
+“Methinks he is my comrade, Lady.”
+
+“Thy comrade--in truth? Then, pray you, speak me what seeming hath he.”
+
+“Ill, lady.”
+
+“How so, Fool?”
+
+“A great, fierce rogue is he, unlovely of look, bleak of eye, harsh of
+tongue, hooked of nose, flinty of soul, stony of heart, of aspect grim and
+manners rude!”
+
+“Then, verily, thy comrade have I never seen!” quoth Melissa, flushing and
+with head up-flung. “He that saved me is nothing the like of this.”
+
+“And yet,” said Jocelyn slyly, “'tis thus he hath been named ere now!”
+
+“Nay, Fool, indeed he that saved me was tall and seemly man, very fierce
+and strong in fight, but to me wondrous gentle--in truth, something
+timorous, and, 'spite rusty mail, spake and looked like a noble knight.”
+
+“Then forsooth, lady, thy champion is no comrade of mine, for he is but a
+poor rogue, ill-beseen, ill-kempt, ill-spoken, ill-mannered and altogether
+ill, save only that he is my friend--”
+
+“And thou speakest ill of thy ill friend, the which is ill in thee--ill
+Fool!” and the fair Melissa rose.
+
+“And pray, lady, didst learn thy preserver's name?”
+
+“Indeed, for I asked him.”
+
+“And it was--?”
+
+“Pertinax!” she sighed.
+
+“Pertinax!” said Jocelyn, both in the same moment; the dark-browed Melissa
+sat down again.
+
+“So thy comrade and--he are one, Fool?”
+
+“Indeed, lady. Yet here we have him, on the one hand, a man noble and
+seemly, and, on the other, a poor rogue, hook-nosed, ill-beseen, ill--”
+
+“'Tis thou hast miscalled him, Fool!” said she, frowning.
+
+“Not I, lady.”
+
+“Who, then?”
+
+“A maid--”
+
+“Ah!” said Melissa, frowning blacker than ever. “A maid, Fool? What maid?”
+
+“A wandering gipsy o' the wood, lady--a dark-eyed damsel with long, black
+curling hair and 'voice of sweet allure'--'tis so he named her--”
+
+“This was belike some wicked witch!” said Melissa, clenching white fist.
+
+“Aye, belike it was, lady, for she bestowed on him a strange jewel, a heart
+in heart of crystal, that wrought for us in Canalise marvels great as our
+wondrous Witch herself.”
+
+Now here the lovely Melissa's frown vanished, and her red lips curved to
+sudden smile.
+
+“Belike this was no witch after all!” said she gently.
+
+“Howbeit, lady,” quoth Jocelyn slyly, “my poor comrade is surely bewitched
+by her none the less. She hath wrought on him spell so potent that he
+groweth mopish and talketh of her eyes, her hair, her sweet and gentle
+voice, her little foot, forsooth.”
+
+“And doth he so, indeed?” said Melissa softly, and, twiddling one of
+her own pretty feet, she smiled at it. “Doth he sigh o'er much?” she
+questioned.
+
+“Consumedly! By the minute!”
+
+“Poor soldier!” she murmured.
+
+“Aye, poor rogue!” said Jocelyn; whereupon she frowned again, and turned
+her back upon him.
+
+“And he is thy comrade.”
+
+“Even so--poor knave!”
+
+“And destitute--even as thou?”
+
+“Aye, a sorry clapper-claw--even as I, lady.”
+
+“Then, pray thee, why doth he wear gold chain about his neck?”
+
+“Chain, lady--?”
+
+“Such as only knights do wear!”
+
+“Belike he stole it, lady--”
+
+“Aye--belike he did!” said she, rising; then she sighed and laughed, and so
+turned and left him.
+
+And in a while Jocelyn rose also, and went on beside the brook; but as he
+walked deep in thought, there met him Robin, he full of mirth and laughter.
+
+“Oho, brother, good brother!” cried he joyfully, clapping hand on Jocelyn's
+broad shoulder, “come away, now, and see what the good wind hath blown
+hither--come thy ways and see!”
+
+So came they where rose a great tree of huge girth, whose gnarled branches
+spread far and wide, a veryforest of leaves, beneath whose shade were many
+of the outlaws grouped about one who crouched miserably on his knees, his
+arms fast bound and a halter about his neck; and, as obedient to Robin's
+words the fierce company fell back, Jocelyn saw this torn and pallid
+captive was none other than Ranulph the Hangman.
+
+“Woe's me, my masters!” quoth he 'twixt chattering teeth. “'Tis pity poor
+Ranulph must die before his time, for ne'er shall be found hangman,
+headsman or torturer the like o' Ranulph--so dainty i' the nice adjustment
+o' noose! So clean and delicate wi' the axe! So tender and thoughtful wi'
+pincers, thumbscrew, rack or red-hot iron! A hangman so kindly o' soul, so
+merry o' heart, alack, so free, so gay, so merry--forsooth a very wanton,
+waggish, jovial bawcock-lad--”
+
+“Why, then, good, merry wag,” laughed Robin, “now shalt thou cut us an
+antic aloft in air, shalt caper and dance in noose to our joyance! Up with
+him, bully lads, and gently, that he may dance the longer!”
+
+But as Ranulph was dragged, shivering, to his feet, Jocelyn stepped
+forward.
+
+“Stay!” he cried. “Look, now, here's hangman did but hang since hang he
+must; must he hang therefore?”
+
+ROBIN: Aye, marry, since hanging shall his hanging end!
+
+JOCELYN: But if to hang his duty is, must he for duty hang? Moreover, if ye
+hang this hangman, unhanged hangmen shall hang still, and since ye may not
+all hangmen hang, wherefore should this hangman hang?
+
+ROBIN: Brother, an this hangman hang, fewer hangmen shall there be to hang,
+forsooth.
+
+JOCELYN: Not so, Robin, for hangman dead begetteth hangman new; this
+hangman hanged, hangman in his place shall hang men after him. Shall this
+hangman hang for hanging as in duty bound, whiles other hangmen, unhanged,
+hang still? Here, methinks, is small wisdom, little reason, and less of
+justice, Robin.
+
+ROBIN: Beshrew me, brother--but here's so much of hanging hanging on
+hanging plaguy hangman that hang me if I get the hang on't--
+
+JOCELYN: Plainly, Robin--wilt hang a man for doing his duty?
+
+ROBIN: Plainly, brother--no. But--
+
+JOCELYN: Then canst not hang this hangman, since hanging his duty is--
+
+ROBIN: Yet 'tis base, vile duty--
+
+JOCELYN: Yet duty it is--wherefore, an there be any justice in the good
+greenwood, this hangman unhanged must go.
+
+Now here Robin scowled, and his brawny fellows scowled likewise, and began
+to mutter and murmur against Jocelyn, who, leaning back to tree, strummed
+his lute and sang:
+
+ “O, Life is sweet, but Life is fleet,
+ O'er quick to go, alack!
+ And once 'tis spilt, try as thou wilt,
+ Thou canst not call it back!
+
+“So bethink thee, bold Robin, and, as thou 'rt king o' the wild-wood, be
+thou just king and merciful--”
+
+“Now out upon thee, brother!” cried Robin, forgetting to scowl. “Out on
+thee with thy honied phrases, thy quipsome lilting rhymes! Here go I to do
+a thing I ha' no lust to do--and all by reason o' thee! Off--off wi' the
+halter, lads--loose the hangman-claws of him! Hereafter, since he can pay
+no ransom, he shall be our serf; to have a hangman fetch and carry shall
+be rare, methinks!”
+
+Quoth JOCELYN: How much should hangman's flesh be worth i' the greenwood,
+Robin?
+
+“Why, brother, 'tis poor, sad and dismal knave; five gold pieces shall buy
+him, aye--halter and all, and 'tis fair, good halter, look you!”
+
+“Why, then,” said Jocelyn, opening his wallet, “behold the monies, so do I
+buy him of thee--”
+
+“Now, by Saint Nick!” cried Robin, amazed. “Nay, brother, an thou'lt buy so
+sorry a thing, give thy money to the merry lads; I'll none on't. And now,”
+ said he, the money duly paid, “what wilt do wi' thy hangman?”
+
+“Sir Fool,” cried Ranulph, falling on his knees at Jocelyn's feet, “fain
+would I serve thee--e'en to the peril o' the life thou hast saved. Bid me
+labour for thee and in labour shall be my joy, bid me fight for thee and I
+will fight whiles life is in me; bid me follow thee and I will follow even
+unto--”
+
+“Nay, hangman,” said Jocelyn, “I bid thee rise and sing for us, and so be
+gone wheresoever thou wilt.”
+
+Then Ranulph arose and glancing round upon the fierce company, from the
+noose at his feet to Jocelyn's scarred face, he drew a great breath; quoth
+he:
+
+“Sir Fool, since 'tis thy will fain would I give thee song blithe and
+joyful since joy is in my heart, but alack, though my songs begin in merry
+vein they do grow mournful anon; howbeit, for thy joy now will I sing my
+cheeriest;” whereupon Ranulph brake into song thus:
+
+ “I am forsooth a merry soul,
+ Hey deny down, ho ho!
+ I love a merry song to troll,
+ I love to quaff a cheery bowl,
+ And yet thinks I, alas!
+ Such things too soon do pass,
+ And proudest flesh is grass.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ “A goodly lover I might be,
+ Merrily, ho ho!
+ But pretty maids in terror flee,
+ When this my hangman's head they see.
+ But woe it is, thinks I,
+ All fair, sweet dames must die,
+ And pale, sad corpses lie.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ “Fairest beauty is but dust,
+ Shining armour soon will rust,
+ All good things soon perish must,
+ Look around, thinks I, and see
+ All that, one day, dead must be,
+ King and slave and you and me.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it must be so!”
+
+“Out!” cried Robin. “Here forsooth is dolorous doleful dirge--out on thee
+for sad and sorry snuffler!”
+
+“Aye, verily,” sighed Ranulph, “'tis my curse. I begin with laugh and end
+in groan. I did mean this for merry song, yet it turned of itself sad song
+despite poor I, and there's the pity on't--”
+
+“Enough!” growled Robin, “away with him. Brand, do you hoodwink him in his
+'kerchief and give him safe conduct to beyond the ford, and so set Master
+Hangman Grimglum-grief on his road--”
+
+“Sir Fool,” cried Ranulph, “God den t'ye and gramercy. Should it be e'er
+thy fate to die o' the gallows, may I have thy despatching--I will contrive
+it so sweetly shalt know nought of it--oho! 'twould be my joy.”
+
+“Off!” cried Robin. “Off, thou pestiferous fungus lest I tread on
+thee--hence, away!”
+
+So the outlaws blindfolded Ranulph and led him off at speed.
+
+“Away,” quoth Jocelyn, nodding, “so now in faith must I, Robin--”
+
+“What, is't indeed farewell, brother?”
+
+“Aye, Robin.”
+
+“Why, then, what may I give thee in way o' love and friendship?”
+
+“Thy hand.”
+
+“Behold it, brother! And what beside? Here is purse o' good pieces--ha?”
+
+“Nay, Robin, prithee keep them for those whose need is greater.”
+
+“Can I nought bestow--dost lack for nothing, brother?”
+
+“What thou, methinks, may not supply--”
+
+“And that?”
+
+“Horse and armour!” Now at this, Robin laughed and clapped hand to thigh;
+quoth he:
+
+“Come with Robin, brother!” So he brought Jocelyn into a cave beneath the
+steep and, lighting a torch from fire that burned there, led him on through
+other caves and winding passages rough-hewn in the rock, and so at last to
+a vasty cavern.
+
+And here was great store of merchandise of every sort,--velvets, silks,
+and rich carpets from the Orient; vases of gold and silver, and coffers
+strong-clamped with many iron bands. And here also, hanging against the
+rocky walls, were many and divers suits of armour with helms and shields
+set up in gallant array; beholding all of which Jocelyn paused to eye merry
+Robin askance; quoth he soberly:
+
+“Sir Rogue, how came ye by all this goodly furniture?”
+
+“By purest chance, brolher,” laughed Robin, “for hark 'ee--
+
+ “Chance is a wind to outlaws kind,
+ And many fair things blows us,
+ It--merchants, priors, lords, knights and squires,
+ And like good things bestows us--”
+
+“Aye,” said Jocelyn, “but what of all those knights and squires whose
+armour hangeth here?”
+
+“Here or there, brother, they come and they go. Ha, yonder soundeth
+Ralfwyn's horn--three blasts which do signify some right fair windfall.
+Come, let us see what this jolly wind hath blown us this time!” So
+saying, Robin laughed and led the way out into the sunny green. And here,
+surrounded by a ring of merry forest rogues, they beheld a knight right
+gallantly mounted and equipped, his armour blazing in the sun, his gaudy
+bannerole a-flutter from long lance, his shield gaudy and brave with new
+paint; beholding which, Robin chuckled gleefully; quoth he:
+
+“Oho! On a field vert three falcons gules, proper, charged with heart
+ensanguined--aha, here's good booty, methinks!”
+
+Now, as this splendid knight rode nearer, contemptuous of his brawny
+captors, Robin stared to see that on his helmet he wore a wreath of
+flowers, while lance and sword, mace and battle-axe were wreathed in
+blooming roses.
+
+“Ho, Jenkyn, Cuthbert!” cried Robin, “what Sir Daintiness have ye here?”
+ But ere his grinning captors could make reply, the knight himself spake
+thus:
+
+ “Behold a very gentle knight,
+ Sir Palamon of Tong,
+ A gentle knight in sorry plight,
+ That loveth love and hateth fight,
+ A knight than fight had rather write,
+ And strophes to fair dames indite,
+ Or sing a sighful song.
+
+ “By divers braggarts I'm abused,
+ 'Tis so as I've heard tell,
+ Because, since I'm to fight unused,
+ I many a fight have bold refused,
+ And, thereby, saved my bones unbruised,
+ Which pleaseth me right well.
+
+ “No joy have I in steed that prances,
+ True gentle man am I
+ To tread to lutes slow, stately dances.
+ 'Stead of your brutish swords and lances,
+ I love love's lureful looks and glances,
+ When hand to hand, unseen, advances,
+ And eye caresseth eye.”
+
+“And how a plague, Sir Gentleness,” questioned Robin, “may eye caress eye?”
+
+“E'en as lips voiceless may wooing speak, Sir Roguery, and tongue unwagging
+tell tales o' love, Sir Ferocity.”
+
+ROBIN: Then had I the trick o' voiceless speech, now would I, with silly
+tongue, tell thee thou art our prisoner to ransom, Sir Silken Softness.
+
+SIR PALAMON: And I joy therefore, Sir Forest Fiend.
+
+ROBIN: And wherefore therefore?
+
+SIR PALAMON: For that therefore I need not to the joust, to that
+bone-shattering sport of boastful, brutal braggadocios, but here, lapped
+soft in the gentle green, woo the fair Yolande--
+
+JOCELYN: How, knight, the fair lady Yolande, say'st thou?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Even she.
+
+JOCELYN: But here she is not and thou art, how then may one that is, woo
+one is not?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Gross mountebank, by thought--I woo in thought, breathe my
+thought upon the balmy air and air beareth it to her feet.
+
+ROBIN: And she treadeth on't, so there's an end o' thy love! But pray you,
+Sir Downy Daintiness, how come ye that are so gentle so ungently dight?
+Discourse, Sir Dove!
+
+SIR PALAMON: In two words then, thou lewd lurcher o' the thickets; I ride
+thus in steely panoply--the which doth irk me sore--by reason of the tongue
+of my mother (good soul!) the which doth irk me more. For she (worthy
+lady!) full-fed o' fatuous fantasies and fables fond, fuddled i' faith
+o' faddling fictions as--gestes of jongleurs, tales told by tramping
+troubadours, ballades of babbling braggarts, romances of roysterous
+rhymers, she (good gossip!) as I say, having hearkened to and perused the
+works of such-like pelting, paltry prosers and poets wherein sweep of sword
+and lunge o' lance is accompted of worthier repute than the penning of
+dainty distich and pretty poesies pleasingly passionate. She, I say--my
+mother (God rest her!), e'en she with tongue most harsh, most bitter and
+most unwearying, hath enforced me, her son (whom Venus bless!)--e'en I that
+am soul most transcendental--I that am a very wing-ed Mercury--me, I say
+she hath, by torrential tongueful tumult (gentle lady!), constrained to don
+the habit of a base, brawling, beefy and most material Mars! Wherefore at
+my mother's behest (gracious dame!) I ride nothing joyful to be bruised and
+battered by any base, brutal braggart that hath the mind to try a tilt with
+me. Moreover--
+
+ROBIN: Hold! Take breath, gentle sir, for thine own sweet sake draw thy
+wind.
+
+SIR PALAMON: 'Tis done, fellow, 'tis done! And now in three words will
+I--
+
+ROBIN: Cry ye mercy, sir, thy two words do yet halloo “Buzz-buzz” in mine
+ears.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Faith, robber-rogue, since I a tongue possess--
+
+ROBIN: Therein thou art very son o' thy mother (whom St. Anthony cherish!).
+
+SIR PALAMON: With this rare difference, outlaw--for whereas her tongue
+(honoured relict!) is tipped with gall, wormwood, henbane, hemlock,
+bitter-aloes and verjuice, and stingeth like the adder, the asp, the toad,
+the newt, the wasp, and snaky-haired head of Medusa, mine--
+
+ROBIN: Buzzeth, buzz, O buzz!
+
+SIR PALAMON: Mine, thou paltry knave, I say mine--
+
+ROBIN: Buzz--ha--buzz!
+
+JOCELYN: I pray you, Sir Knight, doth the Red Gui tilt at to-morrow's
+joust?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Base mime, he doth! My Lord Gui of Ells, Lord Seneschal of
+Raddemore, is myfriend, a very mirror of knightly prowess, the sure might
+of whose lance none may abide. He is, in very truth, the doughtiest
+champion in all this fair country, matchless at any and every weapon,
+a-horse or a-foot, in sooth a very Ajax, Achilles, Hector, Roland and
+Oliver together and at once, one and indivisible, aye--by Cupid a very
+paladin!
+
+“'Tis so I've heard,” said Jocelyn thoughtfully.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Two knights only there are might cope with him, and one Sir
+Agramore and one Jocelyn of the Helm, Duke of Brocelaunde. The fame of
+which last rumour hath so puffed up that thrice my Lord Gui hath sent his
+cartel of defiance, but the said Duke, intent on paltry battles beyond his
+marches, hath thrice refused, and wisely--so 'tis said.
+
+“Aye me, messire,” quoth Jocelyn, strumming his lute, “and so bloweth the
+wind. Yet mayhap these twain shall meet one day.”
+
+ROBIN: And heaven send me there to see! Now as to thee, Sir Softly Sweet,
+fair Lord of Tong, thy goodly horse and armour are mine henceforth,
+first because thy need of them is nothing, secondly because thou art my
+prisoner--
+
+SIR PALAMON: And thirdly, Sir Riotous Roughness, I do freely on thee bestow
+them, hide and hair, bolt and rivet.
+
+ROBIN: Now as to thy ransom, Sir Mildly-Meek, at what price dost rate thy
+value, spiritual and corporeal?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Fellow, though youthful, well-favoured and poet esteemed, I am
+yet marvellous modest! 'Tis true I am knight of lineage lofty, of patrimony
+proud, of manors many--
+
+ROBIN: Even as of thy words, Sir Emptiness.
+
+SIR PALAMON: 'Tis also true, thou ignorant atomy, I, like Demosthenes, am
+blessed with a wonder o' words and glory o' sweet phrase, and yet, and
+here's the enduring wonder--I am still but man, though man blessed with so
+much profundity, fecundity, and redundity of thought and expression, and
+therefore a facile scribe or speaker, able to create, relate, formulate or
+postulate any truth, axiomatic, sophistry subtle, or, in other words, I
+can narrate--
+
+ROBIN: Verily Sir Windbag thou dost, to narrate, thyself with wind
+inflate, and, being thus thyself inflate of air, thou dost thyself deflate
+of airy sounds which be words o' wind, and windy words is emptiness--thus
+by thy inflatings and deflatings cometh nought but wind bred o' wind, and
+nought is nothing, so nought is thy relation or narration; whereof make
+now a cessation, so will I, in due form, formulate, postulate and
+deliberate. Thus, with my good rogues' approbation and acclamation, I will
+of thy just valuation make tabulation, and give demonstration in relation
+to thy liberation from this thy situation, as namely, viz. and to-wit:
+First thou art a poet; in this is thy marketable value to us nought, for
+poets do go empty of aught but thought of sort when wrought, unbought;
+thus go they short which doth import they're empty, purse and belly.
+Second, upon thy testimony thou'rt a man. Go to! Here we be out again, for
+on the score of manliness thou art not. Yet thou art flesh and blood--
+good! for here we deal in such. Not that we yearn for thy flesh and blood,
+but, being thine, they are to thee dear, perchance, and thou would'st fain
+keep them alive a little longer; wherefore thou shalt for thy loved flesh
+and blood pay--purchasing the same of us. And, as flesh varies, so do our
+prices vary; we do sell a man his own flesh and blood at certain rateable
+values. Thus unto a hangman we did of late sell a hangman, in fair good
+halter, and he a hangman brawny, for no more than five gold pieces, the
+which was cheap, methinks, considering the goodly halter, and he a lusty,
+manly rogue to boot. Now as for thee, thou'rt soft and of a manlihood
+indifferent, so would I rate thee at one gold piece.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Ignorant grub! Am I less than base hangman--I, a knight--
+
+ROBIN: True, Sir Knight, thou'rt a knight for no reason but that thou
+art knight born and thus, by nought but being born, hath won to thyself
+nobility, riches and honours such as no man may win either by courage,
+skill, or learning, since highborn fool and noble rogue do rank high 'bove
+such. So _thou_ art knight, Sir Knight, and for thy knighthood, thy lineage
+lofty, thy manors many, mulcted thou shalt be in noble fashion. For thy
+manhood I assess thee at one gold piece, but, since thou'rt son o' thy dam
+(whom the Saints pity!) we do fine thee five thousand gold pieces--thy body
+ours until the purchase made. Away with him, lads; cherish him kindly,
+unarm him gently, and set him a-grinding corn till his ransom be
+paid--away!
+
+Now here was mighty roar of laughter and acclaim from all who heard,
+only Sir Palamon scowled, and, for once mute and tongue-tied, was led
+incontinent away to his labours.
+
+“And now, brother,” quoth Robin, turning where Jocelyn stood smiling and
+merry-eyed, “what o' this armour dost seek, and wherefore?”
+
+“Art a lovely robber, Robin,” said he; “a very various rogue, yet no rogue
+born, methinks!”
+
+“I was not always outlaw, brother--howbeit, what would a Fool with horse
+and knightly arms?”
+
+Now Jocelyn, bending close, whispered somewhatin Robin's ear, whereon he
+clapped hand to thigh, and laughed and laughed until the air rang again.
+
+“Oho, a jape--a jape indeed!” he roared. “O lovely brother, to see proud
+knight unhorsed by prancing motley Fool! Hey, how my heart doth jump for
+gladness! An thou wilt a-tilting ride, I will squire thee--a Fool of a
+knight tended by Rogue of a squire. O, rare--aha! oho! Come thy ways, sweet
+brother, and let us set about this joyous jape forthwith!”
+
+And thus it was that, as evening fell, there rode, through bowery bracken
+and grassy glade, two horsemen full blithe and merry, and the setting sun
+flashed back in glory from their glittering armour.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 10
+
+ How Red Gui sore smitten was in fight
+ By motley Fool in borrowed armour dight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Now shrill tucket and clarion, trumpet and horn
+ With their cheery summons saluted the morn,
+ Where the sun, in his splendour but newly put on,
+ Still more splendid made pennon and brave gonfalon
+ That with banners and pennoncelles fluttered and flew
+ High o'er tent and pavilion of every hue.
+ For the lists were placed here, for the tournament set,
+ Where already a bustling concourse was met;
+ Here were poor folk and rich folk, lord, lady and squire,
+ Clad in leather, in cloth and in silken attire;
+ Here folk pushed and folk jostled, as people still do
+ When the sitters be many, the seats scant and few;
+ Here was babble of voices and merry uproar,
+ For while some folk laughed loud, some lost tempers and swore.
+ Until on a sudden this tumult and riot
+ Was hushed to a murmur that sank into quiet
+ As forth into the lists, stern of air, grave of face,
+ Five fine heralds, with tabard and trumpet, did pace
+ With their Lion-at-arms, or Chief Herald, before;
+ And a look most portentous this Chief Herald wore,
+ And, though portly his shape and a little too round,
+ Sure a haughtier Chief Herald could nowhere be found.
+ So aloof was his look and so grave his demeanour,
+ Humble folk grew abashed, and mean folk felt the meaner;
+ When once more the loud clarions had all echoes woke
+ This Chief Herald in voice deep and sonorous spoke:
+
+ “Good people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Oyez!
+ Ye noble dames of high degree
+ Your pretty ears now lend to me,
+ And much I will declare to ye.
+ Oyez! Oyez!
+ Ye dainty lords of might and fame,
+ Ye potent gentles, do the same,
+ Ye puissant peers of noble name,
+ Now unto ye I do proclaim:
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!”
+
+ Here pealed the trumpets, ringing loud and clear,
+ That deafened folk who chanced to stand too near.
+ In special one--a bent and hag-like dame,
+ Who bent o'er crooked staff as she were lame;
+ Her long, sharp nose--but no, her nose none saw,
+ Since it was hidden 'neath the hood she wore
+ But from this hood she watched with glittering eye
+ Four lusty men-at-arms who lolled hard by,
+ Who, 'bove their armour, bore on back and breast
+ A bloody hand--Lord Gui's well-hated crest,
+ And who, unwitting of the hooded hag,
+ On sundry matters let their lewd tongues wag:
+
+THE FIRST SOLDIER: Why, she scorned him, 'tis well beknown!
+
+THE SECOND SOLDIER: Aye, and it doth not do to scorn the Red Gui, look 'ee!
+
+THE THIBD SOLDIER: She'll lie snug in his arms yet, her pride humbled, her
+proud spirit broke, I'll warrant me!
+
+THE FOURTH SOLDIER: She rideth hence in her litter, d'ye see; and with but
+scant few light-armed knaves attendant.
+
+THE FIRST SOLDIER: Aye, and our signal my lord's hunting-horn thrice
+winded--
+
+ Thus did they talk, with laughter loud and deep,
+ While nearer yet the hooded hag did creep;
+ But:--
+ Now blew the brazen clarions might and main,
+ Which done, the portly Herald spake again:
+
+ “Good people, all ye lords and ladies fair,
+ Oyez!
+ Now unto ye forthwith I do declare
+ The charms of two fair dames beyond compare.
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!
+ The first, our Duchess--Benedicta hight,
+ That late from Tissingors, her town, took flight,
+ To-day, returning here, doth bless our sight,
+ And view the prowess of each valiant knight;
+ Each champ-i-on, in shining armour dight,
+ With blunted weapons gallantly shall fight.
+ And, watched by eyes of ladies beamy-bright,
+ Inspired and strengthened by this sweet eye-light,
+ Shall quit themselves with very main and might;
+ The second:--in her beauty Beauty's peer,
+ Yolande the Fair, unto our Duchess dear,
+ For whose sweet charms hath splintered many a spear,
+ Throned with our lovely Duchess, sitteth here
+ With her bright charms all gallant hearts to cheer.
+ Now, ye brave knights, that nought but Cupid fear,
+ To these sweet dames give eye, to me give ear!
+ Oyez!
+ 'Tis now declared--”
+
+My daughter GILLIAN expostulateth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now
+ You must allow
+ That your herald is rather a bore.
+ He talks such a lot,
+ And it seems frightful rot--
+
+ MYSELF: I hate slang, miss! I told you before!
+ If my herald says much,
+ Yet he only says such
+ As by heralds was said in those days;
+ Though their trumpets they blew,
+ It is none the less true
+ That they blew them in other folks' praise.
+ If my herald verbose is
+ And gives us large doses
+ Of high-sounding rodomontade,
+ You'll find they spoke so
+ In the long, long ago,
+ So blame not--O, blame not the bard.
+ But while we are prating
+ Our herald stands waiting
+ In a perfectly terrible fume,
+ So, my dear, here and now,
+ The poor chap we'll allow
+ His long-winded speech to resume:
+
+ “'Tis here declared by order of the Ten,
+ Fair Benedicta's guardians--worthy men!
+ Thus they decree--ye lovers all rejoice!
+ She shall by their command, this day make choice
+ Of him--O, him! O blest, thrice blessed he
+ Who must anon her lord and husband be.
+ 'Tis so pronounced by her grave guardians ten,
+ By them made law--and they right reverend men!
+ And this the law--our lady, be it said,
+ This day shall choose the husband she must wed;
+ And he who wins our Duchess for his own
+ Crowned by her love shall mount to ducal throne,
+ So let each knight, by valiant prowess, prove
+ Himself most worthy to our lady's love.
+ Now make I here an end, and ending, pray
+ Ye quit you all like val'rous knights this day.”
+
+Thus spake the Chief Herald and so paced solemnly down the lists while the
+long clarions filled the air with gallant music. But the lovely Benedicta,
+throned beneath silken canopy, knit her black brows and clenched slender
+hands and stamped dainty foot, yet laughed thereafter, whereupon Yolande,
+leaning to kiss her flushed cheek, questioned her, wondering:
+
+“How say'st thou to this, my loved Benedicta?”
+
+Quoth the DUCHESS:
+
+ “I say, my sweeting, 'tis quite plain
+ That I must run away again!
+
+Howbeit I care not one rush for their laws! Marry forsooth--a fig! Let them
+make laws an they will, these reverend, right troublesome grey-beards of
+mine, they shall never wed me but to such a man as Love shall choose me,
+and loving him--him only will I wed, be he great or lowly, rich or poor,
+worthy or unworthy, so I do love him, as is the sweet and wondrous way of
+love.”
+
+“Ah, Benedicta! what is love?”
+
+
+“A joy that cometh but of itself, all unsought! This wisdom had I of a Fool
+i' the forest. Go learn you of this same Fool and sigh not, dear wench.”
+
+“Nay, but,” sighed Yolande, lovely cheeks a-flush, “what of Sir
+Agramore--hath he not sworn to wed thee?”
+
+“I do fear Sir Agramore no longer, Yolande, since I have found me one may
+cope with him perchance--even as did a Fool with my Lord Gui of Ells upon a
+tune. Art sighing again, sweet maid?”
+
+“Nay, indeed--and wherefore should I sigh?”
+
+“At mention of a Fool, belike.”
+
+“Ah, no, no, 'twere shame in me, Benedicta! A Fool forsooth!”
+
+“Yet Fool of all fools singular, Yolande. And for all his motley a very
+man, methinks, and of a proud, high bearing.”
+
+Here Yolande's soft cheek grew rosy again:
+
+“Yet is he but motley Fool--and his face--marred hatefully--”
+
+“Hast seen him smile, Yolande, for then--how, dost sigh again, my sweet?”
+
+“Nay, indeed; but talk we of other matters--thy so sudden flight--tell me
+all that chanced thee, dearest Benedicta.”
+
+“Why first--in thine ear, Yolande--my jewel is not--see!”
+
+“How--how, alas! O most sweet lady--hast lost it? Thy royal amulet?”
+
+“Bestowed it, Yolande.”
+
+“Benedicta! On whom?”
+
+“A poor soldier. One that saved me i' the forest from many of Sir
+Agramore's verderers--a man very tall and strong and brave, but dight in
+ragged cloak and rusty mail--”
+
+“Ragged? A thief--”
+
+“Mayhap!”
+
+“An outlaw--”
+
+“Mayhap!”
+
+“A wolf's-head--a wild man and fierce.”
+
+“True he is very wild and very fierce, but very, very gentle--”
+
+“And didst give to such thy jewel? O Benedicta! The Heart-in-heart?”
+
+“Freely--gladly! He begged it of me very humbly and all unknowing what it
+signified--”
+
+“O my loved Benedicta, alas!”
+
+“O my sweet Yolande, joy!”
+
+“But if he should claim thee, and he so poor and wild and ragged--”
+
+“If he should, Yolande, if he should--
+
+ 'He that taketh Heart-in-heart,
+ Taketh all and every part.'
+
+O, if he should, Yolande, then I--must fulfil the prophecy. Nay, dear my
+friend, stare not so great and sadly-eyed, he knoweth not the virtue of the
+jewel nor have I seen him these many days.”
+
+“And must thou sigh therefore, Benedicta?”
+
+But now the trumpets blew a fanfare, and forth rode divers gallant knights,
+who, spurring rearing steeds, charged amain to gore, to smite and batter
+each other with right good will while the concourse shouted, caps waved and
+scarves and ribands fluttered.
+
+ But here, methinks, it booteth not to tell
+ Of every fierce encounter that befell;
+ How knight 'gainst knight drove fierce with pointless spear
+ And met with shock that echoed far and near;
+ Or how, though they with blunted swords did smite,
+ Sore battered was full many a luckless wight.
+ But as the day advanced and sun rose high
+ Full often rose the shout: “A Gui--A Gui!”
+ For many a proud (though bruised and breathless) lord,
+ Red Gui's tough lance smote reeling on the sward;
+ And ever as these plaudits shook the air,
+ Through vizored casque at Yolande he would stare.
+
+And beholding all the beauty of her he smiled evilly and muttered to
+himself, glancing from her to certain lusty men-at-arms who, lolling
+'gainst the barriers, bore at back and breast his badge of the bloody hand.
+
+But the fair Yolande heeded him none at all, sitting with eyes a-dream
+and sighing ever and anon; insomuch that the Duchess, watching her slyly,
+sighed amain also and presently spake:
+
+“Indeed, and O verily, Yolande, meseemeth we do sigh and for ever sigh,
+thou and I, like two poor, love-sick maids. How think'st thou?”
+
+“Nay, O Benedicta, hearken! See, who rideth yonder?”
+
+ Now even as thus fair Yolanda spoke,
+ A horn's shrill note on all men's hearing broke,
+ And all eyes turned where rode a gallant knight,
+ In burnished armour sumptuously bedight.
+ His scarlet plumes 'bove gleaming helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ His gaudy shield with new-popped blazon glowed:
+ Three stooping falcons that on field vert showed;
+ But close-shut vizor hid from all his face
+ As thus he rode at easy, ambling pace.
+
+“Now as I live!” cried Benedicta. “By his device yon should be that foolish
+knight Sir Palamon of Tong!”
+
+“Aye, truly!” sighed Yolande. “Though he wear no motley hither rideth
+indeed a very fool. And look, Benedicta--look! O, sure never rode knight in
+like array--see how the very populace groweth dumb in its amaze!”
+
+ For now the crowd in wonderment grew mute,
+ To see this knight before him bare a lute,
+ While blooming roses his great helmet crowned,
+ They wreathed his sword, his mighty lance around.
+ Thus decked rode he in rosy pageantry,
+ And up the lists he ambled leisurely;
+ Till, all at once, from the astonied crowd
+ There brake a hum that swelled to laughter loud;
+ But on he rode, nor seemed to reck or heed,
+ Till 'neath the balcony he checked his steed.
+ Then, handing lance unto his tall esquire,
+ He sudden struck sweet chord upon his lyre,
+ And thus, serene, his lute he plucked until
+ The laughter died and all stood hushed and still;
+ Then, hollow in his helm, a clear voice rang,
+ As, through his lowered vizor, thus he sang:
+
+ “A gentle knight behold in me,
+ (Unless my blazon lie!)
+ For on my shield behold and see,
+ Upon field vert, gules falcons three,
+ Surcharged with heart ensanguiney,
+ To prove to one and all of ye,
+ A love-lorn knight am I.”
+
+But now cometh (and almost in haste) the haughty and right dignified Chief
+Herald with pursuivants attendant, which latter having trumpeted amain,
+the Herald challenged thus:
+
+ “Messire, by the device upon thy shield,
+ We know my Lord of Tong is in the field;
+ But pray thee now declare, pronounce, expound,
+ Why thus ye ride with foolish roses crowned?”
+
+Whereto the Knight maketh answer forthwith:
+
+ “If foolish be these flowers I bear,
+ Then fool am I, I trow.
+ Yet, in my folly, fool doth swear,
+ These flowers to fool an emblem rare
+ Of one, to fool, more sweet, more fair,
+ E'en she that is beyond compare,
+ A flower perchance for fool to wear,
+ Who shall his foolish love declare
+ Till she, mayhap, fool's life may share,
+ Nor shall this fool of love despair,
+ Till foolish hie shall go.
+
+ “For life were empty, life were vain,
+ If true love come not nigh,
+ Though honours, fortune, all I gain,
+ Yet poorer I than poor remain,
+ If true-love from me fly;
+ So here I pray,
+ If that thou may,
+ Ah--never pass me by!”
+
+
+Here the Chief Herald frowned, puffing his cheeks, and waved his ebony
+staff authoritatively.
+
+Quoth he: “Enough, Sir Knight! Here is no place for love! For inasmuch as
+we--”
+
+THE KNIGHT: Gentle Herald, I being here, here is Love, since I am lover,
+therefore love-full, thus where I go goeth Love--
+
+The Herald: Apprehend me, Sir Knight! For whereas love hath no part in--
+
+The Knight: Noble Herald, Love hath every part within me and without, thus
+I, from Love apart, have no part, and my love no part apart from my every
+part; wherefore, for my part, and on my part, ne'er will I with Love part
+for thy part and this to thee do I impart--
+
+“Sweet Saints aid us!” The Chief Herald clasped his massy brow and gazed
+with eye distraught. “Sir Knight--messire--my very good and noble Lord of
+Tong--I grope! Here is that which hath a seeming ... thy so many parts
+portend somewhat ... and yet ... I excogitate ... yet grope I still ...
+impart, part ... thy part and its part ... so many parts ... and roses ...
+and songs o' love ... a lute! O, thundering Mars, I ... Sound, trumpets!”
+
+But the Duchess up-starting, silenced Herald and trumpeters with imperious
+hand.
+
+“Sir Knight of Tong,” said she, “'tis told thou'rt of nimble tongue and a
+maker of songs, so we bid thee sing if thy song be of Love--for Love is
+a thing little known and seldom understood these days. Here be very many
+noble knights wondrous learned in the smiting of buffets, but little else;
+here be noble dames very apt at the play of eyes, the twining of fingers,
+the languishment of sighs, that, seeking True-love, find but its shadow;
+and here also grey beards that have forgot the very name of Love. So we bid
+thee sing us of Love--True-love, what it is. Our ears attend thee!”
+
+“Gracious lady,” answered the Knight, “gladly do I obey. But Love is
+mighty and I lowly, and may speak of Love but from mine own humility. And
+though much might be said of Love since Love's empire is the universe and
+Love immortal, yet will I strive to portray this mighty thing that is
+True-love in few, poor words.”
+
+Then, plucking sweet melody from his lute, the Knight sang as here
+followeth:
+
+ “What is Love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day
+ Ne'er to die or fade away
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ “Though youth, alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless doth remain
+ The same to-day and ever.”
+
+Now while the clarions rang out proclaiming Sir Palamon's defiance,
+Benedicta looked on Yolande and Yolande on Benedicta:
+
+“O, wonderful!” cried the Duchess. “My Lord of Tong hath found him manhood
+and therewith a wisdom beyond most and singeth such love as methought only
+angels knew and maids might vision in their dreams. Ah, Yolande--that
+such a love could be ... e'en though he went ragged and poor in all but
+love....”
+
+“Benedicta,” sighed Yolande, hands clasped on swelling bosom, “O Benedicta,
+here is no foolish Lord of Tong ... and yet ... O, I am mad!”
+
+“Why, then, 'tis sweet madness! So, my Yolande, let us be mad awhile
+together ... thou--a Fool ... and I--a beggar-rogue!”
+
+“Nay--alas, dear Benedicta! This were shame--”
+
+“And forsooth is it shame doth swell thy heart, Yolande, light the glamour
+in thine eyes and set thee a-tremble--e'en as I? Nay indeed, thou'rt
+a-thrill with Folly ... and I, with Roguery. Loved Folly! Sweet Roguery! O
+Yolande, let us fly from empty state, from this mockery of life and
+learn the sweet joys of ... of beggary, and, crowned with poverty, clasp
+life--”
+
+ MYSELF, myself interrupting:
+ By the way, my dear, you'll understand,
+ Though this is very fine,
+ Still, her Grace's counsel to Yolande
+ Must not be in your line!
+ Not that I'd have you wed for wealth,
+ Or many a beggar-man by stealth,
+ But I would have you, if you can--
+
+ GILL: Marry some strong, stern, silent man,
+ Named Mark, and with hair slightly gray by the ears!
+ Now he's just the sort who would bore me to tears.
+ If I for a husband feel ever inclined,
+ I shall choose quite an ordin'ry husband--the kind
+ With plenty of money and nothing to do,
+ With a nice, comfy house, and a motor or two--
+
+ MYSELF: That's all very fine, miss, but what would you do
+ If he, by some ill-chance, quite penniless grew?
+
+ GILL: Oh, why then--why, of course,
+ I should get a divorce--
+
+ MYSELF: A divorce? Gracious heaven! For goodness' sake--
+
+ GILL: 'Twould be the most dignified action to take!
+
+
+ MYSELF: Pray, what in the world of such things do you know?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, like you--each day older I grow.
+ But, instead of discussing poor me,
+ I think you would much nicer be
+ To get on with our Geste.
+
+ MYSELF: I obey your behest!
+
+Said Yolande to the duchess, said she:
+
+“Nay, my Benedicta, these be only dreams, but life is real and dreams a
+very emptiness!”
+
+“And is 't so, forsooth?” exclaimed the Duchess. “Then am I nought but a
+duchess and lonely, thou a maid fearful of her own heart, and yon singer of
+love only a very futile knight, Sir Palamon of Tong, nothing esteemed by
+thee for wit or valour and little by his peers--see how his challengers do
+throng. How think you?” But the lady Yolande sat very still and silent,
+only she stared, great-eyed, where danced the scarlet plume.
+
+And indeed many and divers were the knights who, beholding the blazon of
+Tong, sent the bearer their defiance, eager to cope with him; and each
+and every challenge Sir Palamon accepted by mouth of his tall esquire who
+(vizor closed, even as his lord's) spake the Chief Herald in loud, merry
+voice, thus:
+
+“Sir Herald, whereas and forinasmuch as this, my Lord of Tong himself,
+himself declaring fool, is so himself-like as to meet in combat each and
+every of his challengers--themselves ten, my lord that is fool, himself
+himself so declaring, now declareth by me that am no fool but only humble
+esquire--messire, I say, doth his esquire require that I, the said
+esquire, should on his part impart as followeth, namely and to wit: That
+these ten gentle knights, the said challengers, shall forthwith of
+themselves choose of themselves, themselves among themselves thereto
+agreeing, which of themselves, among themselves of themselves so chosen,
+shall first in combat adventure himself against my Lord of Tong himself.
+And moreover, should Fortune my lord bless with victory, the nine
+remaining shall among themselves choose, themselves agreeing, which of
+themselves shall next, thus chosen of themselves, themselves represent in
+single combat with this very noble, fool-like Lord of Tong, my master.
+Furthermore, whereas and notwithstanding--”
+
+“Hold, sir!” cried the Chief Herald, fingering harassed brow. “Pray thee
+'bate--O, abate thy speechful fervour. Here forsooth and of truth is
+notable saying--O, most infallibly--and yet perchance something discursive
+and mayhap a little involved.”
+
+“Nay, Sir Herald,” quoth the esquire, “if involved 'twill be resolved if
+revolved, thus: Here be ten lords would fight one, and one--that is my lord
+who is but one--ten fight one by one. But that ten, fighting one, may as
+one fight, let it be agreed that of these ten one be chosen one to fight,
+so shall one fight one and every one be satisfied--every one of these ten
+fighting one, one by one. Thus shall ten be one, and one ten fight one by
+one till one be discomfited. Shall we accord the matter simply, thus?”
+
+“Sir,” quoth the Chief Herald, gasping a little, “Amen!”
+
+“O!” cried the Duchess, clapping her hands, “O Yolande, hark to this rare
+esquire! Surely, I have heard yon cunning tongue ere this?”
+
+But Yolande gazed ever where Sir Palamon, having taken his station, set
+himself in array. For now, the ten knights having chosen one to represent
+them, forth rode their champion resplendent in shining mail and green
+surcoat with heralds before to proclaim his name and rank.
+
+“Yolande,” quoth the Duchess softly, “pray--pray this Lord of Tong may
+tilt as bravely as he doth sing, for Sir Thomas of Thornydyke is a notable
+jouster.”
+
+The trumpets blew a fanfare and, levelling their pointless lances, both
+knights gave spur, their great horses reared, broke into a gallop and
+thundered towards each other.
+
+ But hard midway upon the green surcoat,
+ Sir Palamon's stout lance so truly smote,
+ That, 'neath the shock, the bold Sir Thomas reeled
+ And, losing stirrups, saddle, lance and shield,
+ Down, down upon the ling outstretched he fell
+ And, losing all, lost breath and speech as well.
+ Thus, silent all, the bold Sir Thomas lay,
+ Though much, and many things, he yearned to say,
+ Which things his squires and pages might surmise
+ From the expression of his fish-like eyes
+ E'en as they bore him from that doleful place;
+ While, near and far, from all the populace,
+ Rose shout on shout that echoed loud and long:
+ “Sir Palamon! Sir Palamon of Tong!”
+ So came these ten good knights, but, one by one,
+ They fell before this bold Sir Palamon,
+ Whose lance unerring smote now helm, now shield,
+ That many an one lay rolling on the field.
+ But each and all themselves did vanquished yield;
+ And loud and louder did the plaudits grow,
+ That one knight should so many overthrow.
+ Even Sir Gui, within his silken tent
+ Scowled black in ever-growing wonderment.
+
+But the Knight of Tong, his gaudy shield a little battered, his fine
+surcoat frayed and torn, leaped from his wearied steed and forthwith
+mounted one held by his tall esquire, a mighty charger that tossed proud
+head and champed his bit, pawing impatient hoof.
+
+“Aha!” quoth the esquire, pointing to ten fair steeds held by ten fair
+pages. “Oho, good brother, most puissant Knight of Tong, here is good and
+rich booty--let us begone!”
+
+“Nay,” answered the Knight, tossing aside his blunt tilting-spear, “here is
+an end to sportful dalliance--reach me my lance!”
+
+“Ha, is't now the Red Gui's turn, brother? The Saints aid thee, in especial
+two, that, being women, are yet no saints yet awhile--see how they watch
+thee, sweet, gentle dames! Their prayers go with thee, methinks, brother,
+and mine also, for the Red Gui is forsooth a valiant rogue!”
+
+And now, mounted on the great black war-horse, the Knight of Tong rode up
+the lists:
+
+ His scarlet plume 'bove shining helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ Till he was come where, plain for all to spy,
+ Was hung the shield and blazon of Sir Gui,
+ With bends and bars in all their painted glory,
+ Surcharged with hand ensanguined--gules or gory.
+
+Full upon this bloody hand smote the sharp point of Sir Palamon's lance;
+whereupon the watching crowd surged and swayed and hummed expectant, since
+here was to be no play with blunted weapons but a deadly encounter.
+
+Up started Sir Gui and strode forth of his tent, grim-smiling and
+confident. Quoth he:
+
+“Ha, my Lord of Tong, thou'rt grown presumptuous and over-venturesome,
+methinks. But since life thou dost hold so cheap prepare ye for death
+forthright!”
+
+So spake the Lord of Ells and, beckoning to his esquires, did on his great
+tilting-helm and rode into the lists, whereon was mighty roar of welcome,
+for, though much hated, he was esteemed mighty at arms, and the accepted
+champion of the Duchy. So while the people thundered their acclaim the two
+knights galloped to their stations and, reining about, faced each other
+from either end of the lists,
+
+ And halted thus, their deadly spears they couched,
+ With helms stooped low, behind their shields they crouched;
+ Now rang the clarions; goading spurs struck deep,
+ The mighty chargers reared with furious leap
+ And, like two whirlwinds, met in full career,
+ To backward reel 'neath shock of splintering spear:
+ But, all unshaken, every eye might see
+ The bloody hand, the scarred gules falcons three.
+ Thrice thus they met, but at the fourth essay,
+ Rose sudden shout of wonder and dismay,
+ For, smitten sore through riven shield, Sir Gui
+ Thudded to earth there motionless to lie.
+
+Thus Sir Gui, Lord of Ells and Seneschal of Raddemore, wounded and utterly
+discomfited, was borne raging to his pavilion while the air rang with the
+blare of trumpet and clarion in honour of the victor. Thereafter, since no
+other knight thought it prudent to challenge him, Sir Palamon of Tong was
+declared champion of the tournament, and was summoned by the Chief
+Herald to receive the victor's crown. But even as he rode towards the
+silk-curtained balcony, a distant trumpet shrilled defiance, and into the
+lists galloped a solitary knight.
+
+ Well-armed was he in proud and war-like trim,
+ Of stature tall and wondrous long of limb;
+ 'Neath red surcoat black was the mail he wore;
+ His glitt'ring shield a rampant leopard bore,
+ Beholding which the crowd cried in acclaim,
+ “Ho for Sir Agramore of Biename!”
+
+But from rosy-red to pale, from pale to rosy-red flushed the Duchess
+Benedicta, and clenching white teeth, she frowned upon Sir Agramore's
+fierce and warlike figure. Quoth she:
+
+“Oh, sure there is no man so vile or so unworthy in all Christendom as this
+vile Lord of Biename!”
+
+“Unless,” said Yolande, frowning also, “unless it be my Lord Gui of Ells!”
+
+“True, my Yolanda! Now, as thou dost hate Sir Gui so hate I Sir Agramore,
+therefore pray we sweet maid, petition we the good Saints our valiant
+singer shall serve my hated Sir Agramore as he did thy hated Sir Gui--may
+he be bruised, may he be battered, may--”
+
+“Oho, 'tis done, my sweeting! A-hee--a-hi, 'tis done!” croaked a voice, and
+starting about, the Duchess beheld a bent and hag-like creature,
+
+ With long, sharp nose that showed beneath her hood,
+ A nose that curved as every witch's should,
+ And glittering eye, before whose baleful light,
+ The fair Yolande shrank back in sudden fright.
+
+“Nay, my Yolande,” cried the Duchess, “hast forgot old Mopsa, my
+foster-mother, that, being a wise-woman, fools decry as witch, and my
+ten grave and learned guardians have banished therefor? Hast forgot my
+loved and faithful Mopsa that is truly the dearest, gentlest, wisest
+witch that e'er witched rogue or fool? But O Mopsa, wise
+mother--would'st thou might plague and bewitch in very truth yon base
+caitiff knight, Sir Agramore of Biename!”
+
+“'Tis done, loved daughter, 'tis done!” chuckled the Witch.
+
+ “He groaneth,
+ He moaneth,
+ He aileth,
+ He waileth,
+ Lying sighing,
+ Nigh to dying,
+ Oho,
+ I know
+ 'Tis so.
+ With bones right sore,
+ Both 'hind and fore,
+ Sir Agramore
+ Doth ache all o'er.
+
+“He aileth sore yet waileth more--oho! I know, I have seen--in the chalk,
+in the ink, in the smoke--I looked and saw
+
+ “Sir Agramore,
+ By bold outlaw,
+ Bethwacked most sore
+ As told before--”
+
+“Nay, but, good Mopsa, how may this be? Sir Agramore rideth armed yonder,
+plain to my sight.”
+
+“Child, I have told thee sooth,” croaked the Witch. “Have patience, watch
+and be silent, and shalt grow wise as old Mopsa--mayhap--in time.
+
+ “For, 'tis written in the chalk,
+ Sore is he and may not walk.
+ O, sing heart merrily!
+ I have seen within the smoke
+ Bones bethwacked by lusty stroke,
+ Within the ink I looked and saw,
+ Swathed in clouts, Sir Agramore;
+ Dread of him for thee is o'er,
+ By reason of a bold outlaw.
+ Sing, heart, and joyful be!”
+
+“Go to, Mopsa, thou'rt mad!” quoth the Duchess. “For yonder is this hated
+lord very strong and hale, and in well-being whiles thou dost rave! Truly
+thou'rt run mad, methinks!”
+
+But the old Witch only mumbled and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones as
+is the custom of witches.
+
+Meantime, Sir Agramore, checking his fiery charger and brandishing heavy
+lance fiercely aloft, roared loud defiance:
+
+“What ho! Ye knights, lords, esquires, and lovers of lusty blows, hither
+come I with intent, sincere and hearty, to bicker with, fight, combat and
+withstand all that will--each and every, a-horse or a-foot, with sword,
+battleaxe or lance. Now all ye that love good blows--have at ye!”
+
+Here ensued great clamour and a mighty blowing of trumpets that waxed yet
+louder when it was proclaimed that Sir Palamon, as champion of the day, had
+accepted Sir Agramore's haughty challenge.
+
+And now all was hushed as these two doughty knights faced each other and,
+as the trumpets brayed, charged furiously to meet with thunderous shock of
+breaking lances and reeling horses that, rearing backwards, fell crashing
+upon the torn and trampled grass. But their riders, leaping clear of
+lashing hooves, drew their swords and, wasting no breath in words, beset
+each other forthwith, smiting with right good will.
+
+Sir Agramore's leopard shield was riven in twain by a single stroke, Sir
+Palamon's scarlet plume was shorn away, but they fought only the fiercer
+as, all untiring, the long blades whirled and flashed until their armour
+rang, sparks flew, and the populace rocked and swayed and roared for very
+joy. Once Sir Agramore was beaten to his knees, but rising, grasped his
+sword in two hands and smote a mighty swashing blow, a direful stroke that
+burst the lacing of Sir Palamon's great helm and sent it rolling on the
+sward. But, beholding thus his adversary's face, Sir Agramore, crying in
+sudden amaze, sprang back; for men all might see a visage framed in long,
+black-curled hair, grey-eyed, but a face so direly scarred that none,
+having seen it but once, might well forget.
+
+“Par Dex!” panted Sir Agramore, lifting his vizor.
+
+“Pertinax!” gasped Duke Jocelyn. “O Pertinax--thou loved and lovely
+smiter--ne'er have I been so sore battered ere now!”
+
+Hereupon all folk stared in hugeous wonderment to behold these two
+champions drop their swords and leap to clasp and hug each other in mighty
+arms, to pat each other's mailed shoulders and grasp each other's mailed
+hands. Quoth Sir Pertinax:
+
+“Lord, how came ye in this guise?”
+
+“My Pertinax, whence stole ye that goodly armour?”
+
+“Lord, oath made I to requite one Sir Agramore of Biename for certain felon
+blow. Him sought I latterly therefore, and this day met him journeying
+hither, and so, after some disputation, I left him lying by the way, nor
+shall he need armour awhile, methinks--wherefore I took it and rode hither
+seeking what might befall--”
+
+But here, Sir Gui, all heedless of his wound, started up from his couch,
+raising great outcry:
+
+“Ha--roguery, roguery! Ho, there, seize me yon knave that beareth the
+cognizance of Tong. Ha--treason, treason!” At this, others took up the cry
+and divers among the throng, beholding Duke Jocelyn's scarred features,
+made loud tumults: “The Fool! The Fool! 'Tis the Singing Motley! 'Tis the
+rogue-Fool that broke prison--seize him! Seize him!” And many, together
+with the soldiery, came running.
+
+“Lord,” quoth Sir Pertinax, catching up his sword, “here now is like to be
+a notable, sweet affray!” But even as these twain turned to meet their many
+assailants was thunder of hoofs, a loud, merry voice reached them, and they
+saw Robin hard by who held two trampling chargers.
+
+“Mount, brothers--mount!” he cried. “Mount, then spur we for the barriers!”
+ So they sprang to saddle and, spurring the rearing horses, galloped for
+the barriers, all three, nor was there any who dare stay them or abide the
+sweep of those long swords. Thus, leaping the barriers, they galloped away
+and left behind roaring tumult and dire confusion.
+
+And amid all this, hid by the silken curtains of her balcony, the Duchess
+Benedicta uttered a joyous cry and, clasping Yolande in her arms, kissed
+her rapturously.
+
+“Yolande!” she cried, “O dear my friend, thou didst see--even as did I--a
+sorry fool and a poor rogue-soldier at hand-strokes with each other--O wise
+Fool! O knightly Rogue! Come, let us fly, Yolande, let us to the wild-wood
+and, lost therein, love, True-love, methinks, shall find us. Nay--ask me
+nothing, only hear this. Be thou to thine own heart true, be thou brave and
+Shame shall fly thee since True-love out-faceth Shame! How say'st thou,
+Mopsa, thou wise witch-mother?”
+
+“Ah, sweet children!” croaked the Witch, touching each with claw-like hand
+yet hand wondrous gentle. “True-love shall indeed find ye, hide where ye
+will. For True-love, though blind, they say, hath eyes to see all that is
+good and sweet and true. A poor man-at-arms in rusty mail may yet be true
+man and a fool, for all his motley, wise. To love such seemeth great folly,
+yet to the old, love is but folly. Nath'less, being old I do love ye, and
+being wise I charge ye:
+
+ “Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies;
+ Love's blind, they say, but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly--follow!”
+
+My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: “Stop! Your tournament, father, seems too long drawn out,
+ With quite too much combating and knocking about.
+
+ MYSELF: I hope you're wrong, my dear, although
+ Who knows? Perhaps, it may be so.
+
+ GILL: And such scrappy bits of love-making you write;
+ You seem to prefer much describing a fight.
+ All authors should write what their readers like best;
+ But authors are selfish, yes--even the best
+ And you are an author!
+
+ MYSELF: Alack, that is true,
+ And, among other things, I'm the author of you.
+
+ GILL: Then, being my author, it's plain as can be
+ That you are to blame if I'm naughty--not me.
+ But, father, our Geste, though quite corking in places,
+ Has too many fights and too little embraces.
+ You've made all our lovers so frightfully slow,
+ You ought to have married them pages ago.
+ The books that are nicest are always the sort
+ That, when you have read them, seem always too short!
+ If you make all your readers impatient like me,
+ They'll buy none of your books--and then where shall we be?
+ All people like reading of love when they can,
+ So write them a lot, father, that is the plan.
+ Go on to the love, then, for every one's sake,
+ And end with a wedding--
+
+ MYSELF: Your counsel I 'll take.
+ I can woo them and wed them in less than no time,
+ I can do it in prose, in blank verse, or in rhyme;
+ But since, my dear, you are for speed,
+ To end our Geste I will proceed.
+ In many ways it may be done,
+ As I have told you--here is one:
+
+A short two years have elapsed and we find our hero Jocelyn tenderly
+playing with a golden-haired prattler, his beloved son and heir, while his
+beautiful spouse Yolande busied with her needle, smiles through happy
+tears.
+
+ GILL: O, hush, father! Of course, that is simply absurd!
+ Such terrible piffle--
+
+ MYSELF: I object to that word!
+
+ GILL: Well, then, please try a little verse.
+
+ MYSELF: With pleasure:
+
+ “My own at last!” Duke Joc'lyn fondly cried,
+ And kissed Yolande, his blooming, blushing bride.
+ “My own!” he sighed. “My own--my very own!”
+ “Thine, love!” she murmured. “Thine and thine alone,
+ Thy very own for days and months and years--”
+
+ GILL: O, stop! I think that's even worse!
+
+ MYSELF: Beyond measure.
+
+ Then here's a style may be admired
+ Since brevity is so desired:
+
+ So he married her and she married him,
+ and everybody married each other
+ and lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or again, and thus, my daughter,
+ Versified it may be shorter:
+
+ So all was marriage, joy and laughter,
+ And each lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or:
+ If for High Romance you sigh,
+ Here's Romance that's over high:
+
+ Shy summer swooned to autumn's sun-burned arms,
+ Swoon, summer, swoon!
+ While roses bloomed and blushing sighed their pain,
+ Blush, roses, blush!
+
+ Filling the world with perfume languorous,
+ Sighing forth their souls in fragrant amorousness;
+ And fair Yolande, amid these bloomful languors,
+ Blushing as they, as languorous, as sweet,
+ Sighed in the arms that passioned her around:
+ O Jocelyn, O lord of my delight,
+ See how--
+
+ GILL: Stop, father, stop, I beg of you.
+ Such awful stuff will never do,
+ I suppose you must finish it in your own way--
+
+ MYSELF: I suppose that I shall, child, that is--if I may.
+
+ GILL: But father, wait--I must insist
+ Whatever else you do
+ It's time that somebody was kissed
+ It doesn't matter who--
+ I mean either Yolande the Fair
+ Or else the Duchess--I don't care.
+
+ MYSELF: In these next two Fyttes both shall kiss
+ And be well kissed, I promise this.
+ Two Fyttes of kisses I will make
+ One after t' other, for your sake.
+ Two Fyttes of love I will invent
+ And make them both quite different,
+ Which is a trying matter rather
+ And difficult for any father--
+ But then, as well you know, my Gillian,
+ You have a father in a million;
+ And Oh, methinks 'tis very plain
+ You ne'er shall meet his like again.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 11
+
+How Pertinax fell out with Robin and with Friar, Yet, in that very hour,
+came by his heart's desire.
+
+The sinking sun had set the West aflame, When our three riders to the
+wild-wood came, Where a small wind 'mid sun-kissed branches played, And
+deep'ning shadows a soft twilight made; Where, save for leafy stirrings,
+all was still, Lulled by the murmur of a bubbling rill That flowed
+o'ershadowed by a mighty oak, Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning
+stroke. Here Robin checked his steed. “Good friends,” quoth he,
+
+ My daughter Gillian suggesteth:
+
+ Gill: That's rather good,
+ But, still, I should
+ In prose prefer the rest;
+ For if this fytte
+ Has love in it,
+ Prose is for love the best.
+ All ord'nary lovers, as every one knows,
+ Make love to each other much better in prose.
+ If, at last, our Sir Pertinax means to propose,
+ Why then--just to please me,
+ Father, prose let it be.
+
+ Myself: Very well, I agree!
+
+ Then said Robin, quoth he:
+“Good friends, here are we safe!” And, checking his steed within this
+pleasant shade, he dismounted.
+
+“Safe, quotha?” said Sir Pertinax, scowling back over shoulder. “Not so!
+Surely we are close pursued--hark! Yonder be horsemen riding at speed--ha,
+we are beset!”
+
+“Content you, sir!” answered Robin. “Think you I would leave behind good
+booty? Yonder come ten noble coursers laden with ten goodly armours the
+same won a-jousting to-day by this right wondrous Fool, my good gossip--”
+
+“Thy gossip, forsooth!” snorted Sir Pertinax. “But tell me, presumptuous
+fellow, how shall these ten steeds come a-galloping hither!”
+
+“Marry, on this wise, Sir Simple Innocence--these steeds do gallop for
+sufficient reason, namely--they are to gallop bidden being ridden,
+bestridden and chidden by whip and spur applied by certain trusty men o' my
+company, which men go habited, decked, dressed, clad, guised and disguised
+as smug, sleek citizens, Sir Innocent Simplicity--”
+
+“Par Dex!” exclaimed Sir Pertinax, scowling. “And who 'rt thou, sirrah,
+with men at thy beck and call?”
+
+“Behold!” said Robin, unhelming. “Behold the king of all masterless rogues,
+and thy fellow gallow's-bird, Sir High Mightiness!”
+
+“Ha, is 't thou?” cried Sir Pertinax. “Now a plague on thy kingdom and thee
+for an unhanged, thieving rogue--”
+
+“E'en as thyself,” nodded Robin, “thou that flaunted thy unlovely carcass
+in stolen armour.”
+
+“Ha!” roared Sir Pertinax, clapping hand on sword. “A pest--a murrain! This
+to me, thou dog's-meat? Malediction! Now will I crack thy numbskull for a
+pestilent malapert--”
+
+“Nay, Sir Grim-and-gory,” laughed Robin, “rather will I now use thee as
+thou would'st ha' served me on a day but for this generous and kindly Fool,
+my good comrade!” And speaking, Robin sprang nimbly to the great oak tree
+and thrusting long arm within the jagged fissure that gaped therein drew
+forth a hunting-horn and winded it loud and shrill. And presently was a
+stir, a rustle amid the surrounding brushwood and all about them were
+outlaws, wild men and fierce of aspect, and each and every grasped long-bow
+with arrow on string and every arrow was aimed at scowling Sir Pertinax.
+
+“Per Dex!” quoth he, “and is this death, then?”
+
+“Verily!” nodded Robin, “an I do speak the word.”
+
+“So be it--speak!” growled Sir Pertinax. “Come, Death--I fear thee not!”
+ And out flashed his long sword; but even then it was twisted from his
+grasp and Lobkyn Lollo, tossing the great blade aloft and, catching it
+very neatly, laughed and spake:
+
+ “Five times, five times ten
+ Are we, all lusty men.
+ An hundred twice and fifty deaths are we,
+ So, an Rob speak, dead thou 'lt as often be.”
+
+“Nay, hold a while, sweet lads!” laughed Robin, “the surly rogue shall sing
+for his life and our good pleasaunce.”
+
+“Sing?” roared Sir Pertinax. “I sing! I? Ha, dare ye bid me so, base dog?
+Sing, forsooth? By Og and Gog! By the Seven Champions and all the fiends,
+rather will I die!” And here, being defenceless, Sir Pertinax clenched
+mighty fists and swore until he lacked for breath.
+
+Then spake Jocelyn, gentle-voiced.
+
+“Sing, Pertinax,” quoth he.
+
+“Ha--never! Not for all the--”
+
+“I do command thee, Pertinax. As Robin once sang for his life, now must
+thou sing for thine. Song for song, 't is but just! Sing, Pertinax!”
+
+“Nay,” groaned the proud knight, “I had rather drink water and chew grass
+like a rabbit. Moreover I ha' no gift o' song--”
+
+“Do thy best!” quoth Robin.
+
+“I'm harsh o' voice--knave!”
+
+“Then croak--rogue!” quoth Robin.
+
+“No song have I--vermin!”
+
+“Make one--carrion! But sing thou shalt though thy song be no better than
+hog-song which is grunt. Howbeit sing thou must!”
+
+Hereupon Sir Pertinax gnashed his teeth and glaring balefully on Robin
+lifted hoarse voice and burst forth into fierce song:
+
+ “Thou base outlaw,
+ Vile clapper-claw,
+ Since I must sing a stave,
+ Then, here and now,
+ I do avow
+ Thou art a scurvy knave!
+ Thy hang-dog air
+ Doth plain declare
+ Thou 'rt very scurvy knave.
+
+ “Rogues breed apace
+ In each vile place,
+ But this I will avow,
+ Where e'er rogues be
+ No man may see
+ A viler rogue than thou,
+
+ Since it were vain
+ To meet again
+ A rogue more vile than thou.
+
+ “As rogue thou art,
+ In every part,
+ Then--”
+
+“Hold there--hold!” cried Robin, stopping his ears. “Thy voice is unlovely
+as thy look and thy song as ill as thy voice, so do we forgive thee the
+rest. Ha' done thy bellowing and begone--”
+
+“Ha--not so!” quoth Sir Pertinax. “For troth I do sing better than
+methought possible, and my rhyming is none so ill! So will I rhyme thy
+every knavish part and sing song till song and rhyme be ended. Have at thee
+again, base fellow!
+
+ Since rogue thou art
+ In every part--part--
+
+Ha, plague on't, hast put me out, rogue! I was about to hang thy every
+roguish part in rhyme, but my rhymes halt by reason o' thee, rogue.”
+
+“Forsooth!” laughed Robin. “Thus stickest thou, for thy part, at my every
+part, the which is well since I am man of parts. Thus then rhyme thou
+rhymes upon thyself therefore; thus, thyself rhyming rhymes of thee, thou
+shalt thyself, rhyming of thyself, thyself pleasure thereby, thou thus
+rhyming of thee, and thee, thou. Thus thy thee and thou shall be well
+accorded. How think'st thou?”
+
+But Sir Pertinax, astride his charger that cropped joyously at sweet,
+cool grass, sat chin on fist, lost in the throes of composition, nothing
+heeding, even when came the ten steeds with the ten suits of armour.
+
+Now these ten horses bare eleven riders, tall, lusty fellows all, save one
+shrouded in hood and cloak and whom Jocelyn viewed with quick, keen eyes.
+And thus he presently whispered Robin who, laughing slyly, made signal to
+his followers, whereupon, by ones and twos they stole silently away until
+there none remained save only Sir Pertinax who, wrestling with his muse,
+stared aloft under knitted brows, all unknowing, and presently brake out
+singing on this wise:
+
+ “All men may see
+ A man in me,
+ A man who feareth no man,
+ Thus, fearless, I
+ No danger fly--”
+
+“Except it be a woman!” sang a soft, sweet voice hard by, in pretty
+mockery. Hereat Sir Pertinax started so violently that his mail clashed and
+he stared about him eager-eyed but, finding himself quite alone, sighed and
+fell to reverie.
+
+“A woman?” said he aloud. “'Except it be a woman--'”
+
+THE VOICE: Aye--a woman, O craven soldier!
+
+SIR PERTINAX: Why here is strange echo methinks and speaketh--with her
+voice!
+
+THE VOICE: 'O voice so soft and full of sweet allure!'
+
+SIR PERTINAX: O voice beloved that might my dolour cure!
+
+THE VOICE: O craven soldier! O most timid wooer! SIR PERTINAX: Craven am I,
+yet lover--'t is most sure.
+
+THE VOICE: But thou 'rt a man--at least meseemeth so.
+
+SIR PERTINAX: And, being man, myself unworthy know,
+ Yet must I love and my belovèd seek
+ And, finding her, no words of love dare speak.
+ For this my love beyond all words doth reach,
+ And I'm slow-tongued and lack the trick of speech.
+ Nor hope have I that she should stoop to bless,
+ A man so full of all unworthiness.
+ So am I dumb--
+
+THE VOICE: And yet dost speak indeed,
+ Such words, methinks, as any maid might heed.
+
+“Ha, think ye so in verity, sweet voice!” cried Sir Pertinax, and springing
+lightly to earth, strode forward on eager feet. And lo! from behind a
+certain tree stepped one who, letting fall shrouding cloak and hood, stood
+there a maid, dark-haired and darkly bright of eye, very shapely and fair
+to see in her simple tire. And beholding her thus, the tender curve of
+scarlet lips, the flutter of slender hands, the languorous bewitchment of
+her eyes, Sir Pertinax halted.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interpolateth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ What, again? Father, that will never do.
+ Don't make him halt again, I beg of you.
+ Sir Pertinax has halted much too long,
+ To make him do it here would be quite
+ wrong!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, I wish you would not interrupt
+ My halting muse in manner so abrupt--
+
+ GILL:
+
+ But here 's a chance at last to let them kiss,
+ And now you make him halt!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss!
+
+Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head abashed.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN persisteth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ Well, father, while he halts, then tell me,
+ pray,
+ Just what you mean by that line where you
+ say,
+ 'The languorous bewitchment of her eyes'?
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, no child should authors catechise,
+ Especially, poor fellow, if, like me,
+ Father and author both at once is he.
+ Wise authors all such questions strictly ban,
+ And never answer--even if they can.
+ If of our good knight's wooing you would
+ hear,
+ Keep stilly tongue and hearken well, my
+ dear.
+
+Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head, abashed by her beauty.
+
+“Melissa!” he whispered, “O Melissa!” and so stood mute.
+
+“O Pertinax!” she sighed. “Art dumb at sight of me? O Pertinax, and
+wherefore?”
+
+“All have I forgot save only thy loveliness, Melissa!”
+
+“Methinks such--forgetfulness becometh thee well. Say on!”
+
+“Ah, Melissa, I--do love thee.”
+
+“Why this I knew when thou didst sit a-fishing!”
+
+“But, indeed, then I dreamed not of loving thee or any maid.”
+
+“Because thou art but a man.”
+
+“Verily, and being man, now came I seeking thee for Love's sweet sake yet,
+finding thee, know not how to speak thee. Alas, I do fear I am but sorry
+wooer!”
+
+“Alas, Pertinax, I do fear thou art! Yet thou shalt learn, perchance.
+How--art dumb again, canst speak me no more?”
+
+“Nought--save only this, thou art beyond all maids fair, Melissa!”
+
+“Why, I do think thou'lt make a wooer some day mayhap, by study diligent.
+'T will take long time and yet--I would not have thee learn too soon! And
+hast thought of me? A little?”
+
+“I have borne thee ever within my heart.”
+
+“And wherefore wilt love maid so lowly?”
+
+“For that thou art thyself and thyself--Melissa. And O, I love thy voice!”
+
+“My voice? And what more?”
+
+“Thine eyes. Thy little, pretty feet. Thy scarlet mouth. Thy gentle, small
+hands. Thy hair. All of thee!”
+
+“O,” she murmured a little breathlessly, “if thou dost so love me--woo
+me--a little!”
+
+“Alas!” he sighed, “I know not how.”
+
+“Hast ne'er wooed maid ere this, big soldier?”
+
+“Never!”
+
+“Thou poor Pertinax! How empty--how drear thy life. For this do I pity thee
+with pity kin to love--”
+
+“Love?” he whispered. “Ah, Melissa, couldst e'en learn to love one so
+unlovely, so rude, so rough and unmannered as I?”
+
+“Never!” she sighed, “O, never--unless thou teach me?”
+
+“Would indeed I might, Melissa. Ah, teach me how I may teach thee to love
+one so unworthy as Pertinax!”
+
+Now hearkening to his harsh voice grown soft and tremulous, beholding the
+truth in his honest eyes, Melissa smiled, wondrous tender, and reaching out
+took hold upon his two hands.
+
+“Kneel!” she commanded. “Kneel here upon the grass as I do kneel. Now, lay
+by thy cumbrous helmet. Now fold thy great, strong hands. Now bow thy tall,
+grim head and say in sweet, soft accents low and reverent: 'Melissa, I do
+love thee heart and soul, thee only do I love and thee only will I love now
+and for ever. So aid me, Love, amen!'” Then, closing his eyes, Sir Pertinax
+bowed reverent head, and, humbly folding his hands, spake as she bade him.
+Thereafter opening his eyes, he saw her watching him through gathering
+tears, and leaning near, he reached out eager arms, yet touched her not.
+Quoth he: “O maid beloved, what is thy sorrow?”
+
+“'Tis joy--joy, and thou--thou art so strong and fierce yet so gentle and
+simple of heart! O, may I prove worthy thy love--”
+
+“Worthy? Of my love?” he stammered. “But O Melissa, I am but he thou didst
+name harsh of tongue.”
+
+“Aye, I did!” she sobbed.
+
+“Hard of heart, flinty of soul, rude, unmannered and unlovely.”
+
+“Aye--I did and--loved thee the while!” she whispered. “So now do I pray
+that I prove worthy.”
+
+“Worthy? Thou? O my sweet maid--thou that art kin to the holy angels, thou
+so high and far removed 'bove me that I do tremble and--fear to touch
+thee--“.
+
+“Nay, fear me not, Pertinax,” she sighed, “for though indeed I am all this,
+yet maid am I also and by times--very human. So Pertinax, thou great,
+fearless man-at-arms, lay by thy so great fears a while--I do beseech
+thee.” Then Sir Pertinax, beholding the tender passion of her eyes, forgot
+his fear in glad wonderment and, reaching out hands that trembled for all
+their strength, drew her to his close embracement.
+
+And thus, kneeling together upon the sun-dappled sward, they forgot all
+things in this joyous world save only their love and the glory of it. And
+when they had kissed each other--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: But, wait, they haven't yet, you know!
+
+ MYSELF: Indeed, they have, I've just said so.
+
+ GILL: Then, father, please to tell me this:
+ How can a person say a kiss?
+ And so, since kisses can't be said,
+ Please make them do it now instead.
+
+Thus, cradled in his strong arms, she questioned him tenderly:
+
+“Dost mind how, upon a day, my Pertinax, didst ask of me the amulet I bore
+within my bosom?”
+
+“Aye,” he answered, “and sure 'tis charm of potent magic whose spell
+brought us out of the dungeon at Canalise--the which is great matter for
+wonder! But 'tis for thy dear sake I do cherish it--”
+
+“Bear you it yet?”
+
+“Here upon my heart.”
+
+“And if I should ask it of thee again--wouldst render it back to me?”
+
+“Never!” quoth he. “Never, until with it I give thee myself also!”
+
+But presently she stirred in his embrace for upon the air was an
+approaching clamour, voices, laughter and the ring of mail.
+
+“Come away!” whispered Melissa, upspringing to her feet. “Come, let thou
+and Love and I hide until these disturbers be gone and the sweet world hold
+but us three again.”
+
+Now, as they stood, hand in hand, deep hidden 'mid the green, they beheld
+six merry woodland rogues who led an ambling ass whereon rode a friar
+portly and perspiring albeit he had a jovial eye. And as he rode he spake
+his captors thus in voice full-toned and deep:
+
+“Have a care, gentle rogues and brethren, hurry not this ambulant animal
+unduly, poor, much-enduring beast. Behold the pensive pendulation of these
+auriculars so forlornly a-dangle! Here is ass that doth out-patience all
+asses, both four and two-legged. Here is meek ass of leisured soul loving
+not haste--a very pensive perambulator. So hurry not the ass, my brothers,
+for these several and distinct reasons or arguments. Firstly, dearly
+beloved, because I love haste no more than the ass; secondly, brethren, 't
+is property of Holy Church which is above all argument; and, thirdly, 't
+is bestridden by one Friar John, my very self, and I am forsooth weighty
+argument. Fourthly, beloved, 'tis an ass that--ha! O sweet vision for eyes
+human or divine! Do I see thee in very truth, thou damsel of disobedience,
+dear dame of discord, sweet, witching, wilful lady--is it thou in very
+truth, most loved daughter, or wraith conjured of thy magic and my
+perfervid imaginations--speak!”
+
+“'T is I myself, Reverend Father!” laughed Melissa. “O my dear, good Friar
+John, methinks the kind Saints have brought thee to my need.”
+
+“Saints, quotha!” exclaimed the Friar, rolling merry eye towards his
+several captors. “Call ye these--Saints? Long have I sought thee, thou
+naughty maid, and to-day in my quest these brawny 'saints' beset me with
+bow and quarterstaff and me constrained hither--but my blessing on them
+since they have brought me to thee. And now, sweet child and daughter,
+whiles the news yet runneth hot-foot or, like bird unseen, wingeth from lip
+to lip, I thy ghostly father have rare good news for thee--”
+
+“Nay, Friar John, I will guess thy tidings: Sir Agramore of Biename lieth
+sorry and sore of a cudgelling.”
+
+“How!” cried the Friar. “Thou dost know--so soon?”
+
+“Verily, Reverend Father, nor have I or my worthy guardians aught to fear
+of him hereafter. And now have I right wondrous news for thee, news that
+none may guess. List, dear Friar John, thou the wisest and best loved of
+all my guardians ten; to-day ye are absolved henceforth all care of your
+wilful ward since to-day she passeth from the guardianship of ye ten to the
+keeping of one. Come forth, Pertinax, thou only one beloved of me for no
+reason but that thou art thou and I am I--as is ever the sweet, mad way of
+True-love--come forth, my dear-loved, poor soldier!” Out from the trees
+strode Pertinax but, beholding his face, Friar John scowled and, viewing
+his rich surcoat and goodly armour, fell to perspiring wonder and amaze.
+
+“Now by the sweet Saint Amphibalus!” quoth he. “Surely these be the arms of
+Sir Agramore, dread Lord of Biename?”
+
+“Most true, dear Friar John,” answered Melissa, “and by this same token Sir
+Agramore lieth sore bruised e'en now.”
+
+“Aha!” quoth the Friar, mopping moist brow. “'T is well--'t is very well,
+so shall these two ears of mine, with eighteen others of lesser account,
+scathless go and all by reason of this good, tall fellow. Howbeit, I do
+know this same fellow for fellow of none account, and no fit mate for thee,
+noble daughter, love or no. A fierce, brawling, tatterdemalion this, that
+erstwhile tramped in company with long-legged ribald--a froward jesting
+fellow. Wherefore this fellow, though fellow serviceable, no fellow is for
+thee and for these sufficing reasons. Firstly--”
+
+“Ha--enough!” quoth Sir Pertinax, chin out-thrust. “'Fellow' me no more,
+Friar--”
+
+“Firstly,” continued Friar John, “because this out-at-elbows fellow is a
+rogue.”
+
+“'Rogue,' in thy teeth, Churchman!” growled Sir Pertinax.
+
+“Secondly,” continued Friar John, nothing abashed, “because this
+rogue-fellow is a runagate roysterer, a nameless knave, a highway-haunter,
+a filching flick-o'-the-gibbet and a--”
+
+“Friar,” snorted Sir Pertinax, “thou 'rt but a very fat man scant o'
+breath, moreover thou 'rt a friar, so needs must I leave thee alive to make
+pestilent the air yet a little until thou chokest of an epithet. Meantime
+perform now one gracious act in thy so graceless life and wed me with this
+forest maiden.”
+
+“Forest maiden, forsooth!” cried Friar John. “O Saints! O Martyrs! Forest
+maid, quotha! And wed her--and unto thee, presumptuous malapert! Ho,
+begone, thy base blood and nameless rank forbid--”
+
+“Hold there, shaveling!” quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. “Now mark me this!
+Though I, being very man, do know myself all unworthy maid so sweet and
+peerless, yet, and she stoop to wed me, then will I make her lady proud and
+dame of divers goodly manors and castles, of village and hamlet, pit and
+gallows, sac and soc, with powers the high, the middle and the low and
+with ten-score lances in her train. For though in humble guise I went, no
+nameless rogue am I, but Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling,
+Bracton and Deepdene--”
+
+“How!” cried Melissa, pouting rosy lip and frowning a little. “O Pertinax,
+art indeed a great lord?”
+
+“Why, sooth--forsooth and indeed,” he stammered, “I do fear I am.”
+
+“Then thou 'rt no poor, distressful, ragged, outlaw-soldier?”
+
+“Alack--no!” he groaned, regardful of her frown.
+
+“Then basely hast thou tricked me--O cruel!”
+
+“Nay, Melissa--hear me!” he cried, and, forgetful of friar and gaping
+outlaws, he clasped her fast 'prisoned 'gainst his heart. “Thee do I love,
+dear maid, 'bove rank, or fame, or riches, or aught this world may offer.
+So, an thou wouldst have me ragged and destitute and outlaw, all this will
+I be for thy sweet sake since life were nought without thee, O maid I do so
+love--how say'st thou?”
+
+“I say to thee, Pertinax, that thy so great love hath loosed thy tongue at
+last, Love hath touched thy lips with eloquence beyond all artifice since
+now, methinks, it is thy very soul doth speak me. And who shall resist such
+wooing? Surely not I that do--love thee beyond telling. So take me, my
+lord, thy right hand in mine, the talisman in thy left--so! Now, my
+Pertinax, speak thy heart's wish.”
+
+“Friar,” quoth Sir Pertinax, holding aloft the Crystal Heart, “as her love
+is mine and mine hers, wed and unite us in our love--by the magic of this
+jewel I do command thee!”
+
+Here, beholding the talisman, Friar John gasped and stared round-eyed and
+incredulous.
+
+“By Holy Rood!” he whispered, “'t is indeed the Crystal Heart!”
+
+“And O!” sighed Melissa, “O Friar John, thou dost mind the saying:
+
+ “'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'”
+
+“Aye, truly--truly!” nodded the Friar.
+
+ “'And by night, or eke by day,
+ The Crystal Heart all must obey!'”
+
+So saying he got him down from the ass and, for all his corpulence, louted
+full low.
+
+“Sir Knight of Shene,” quoth he, “by reason of this jewel potential thou
+dost bear, now must I perforce obey thy behest and wed thee unto this
+our gracious lady Benedicta, Duchess of Ambremont, Canalise, Tissingors,
+Fordyngstoke and divers other towns, villages and--”
+
+“Duchess--a duchess?” exclaimed Sir Pertinax. “Duchess say'st thou--this,
+the Duchess Benedicta! O Melissa--thou--thou--a duchess!”
+
+“Sooth and forsooth,” sighed she in pretty mockery, “I do fear I am!”
+
+“Then thou 'rt no humble maid, distressful and forlorn, Melissa?”
+
+“Yea, Pertinax--all this am I indeed unless thou love me, and loving me,
+wed me, and wedding me love me the better therefor, and loving me ever the
+better, thou may'st learn a little some day how a woman may love a man.”
+
+“Par Dex!” mumbled Sir Pertinax, kissing her rosy finger-tips, “be thou
+duchess or witch-maid o' the wood, I do love thee heart and soul, body and
+mind, now and for ever, Melissa.”
+
+Then Friar John, beholding the radiant joy of their faces, reached forth
+his hands in blessing.
+
+“Kneel ye, my children!” he sighed. “For here methinks is true-love such
+as brighteneth this world all too seldom. So here, within the forest, the
+which is surely God's cathedral, this your love shall be sanctified unto
+you and the world be the better therefor! Kneel ye, my children!”
+
+And thus, kneeling upon the flower-sprent turf hand in hand and with heads
+reverently bowed, they were wed, while the six outlaws stared in silent awe
+and the meek ass cropped the grass busily.
+
+“O Pertinax,” sighed the Duchess as they rose, “so greatly happy am I that
+I will others shall be happy likewise; let us make this indeed a day of
+gladness. I pray thee sound the bugle that hangeth within the great oak,
+yonder.”
+
+So Sir Pertinax took the horn and sounded thereon a mighty blast, loud and
+long and joyous. And presently came the outlaws, thronging in from all
+directions, until the sunny glade was full of their wild company, while
+in the green beyond pike-head twinkled and sword-blades glittered; and
+foremost was Robin with Lobkyn Lollo beside him.
+
+“Robin,” said the Duchess, beckoning him near with white, imperious
+finger, “Robin a' Green, thou whose tongue is quick and ready as thy hand,
+hast ever been gentle to the weak and helpless as I do know, in especial
+to two women that sought thy protection of late.”
+
+“Why, verily, lady, I mind them well,” nodded Robin, “and one was a maid
+passing fair and one an ancient dame exceeding wise. To aid such is ever a
+man's joy--or should be.”
+
+“Knew ye who and what this maid was, Robin?”
+
+“Aye, lady, I knew her then as now for that proud and noble lady the
+Duchess Benedicta.”
+
+“And yet, Robin, knowing this and having me in thy power didst suffer me to
+go without let or hindrance or single penny of ransom?”
+
+“My lady Duchess,” answered Robin, glancing round upon his wild company,
+“we be outlaws, 't is true, and rogues--mayhap, yet are we men and thou a
+lady passing fair, wherefore--though I knew thee for the Duchess Benedicta,
+thou wert safe with us since we war not with women and harm no maids be
+they of high or low degree!”
+
+“Spoke like a very knight!” exclaimed the Duchess. “How think'st thou, my
+lord?”
+
+“Par Dex!” quoth Sir Pertinax. “Aye, by Our Lady of Shene Chapel within the
+Wood I swear it--thou 'rt a man, Robin! So now do I sue pardon of thee for
+my song o' rogues since no rogue art thou. And thou didst aid and shield
+her--this my wife that is the very eyes of me! So, by my troth, my good
+friend art thou henceforth, Rob o' the Green!”
+
+“Nay, my lord,” answered Robin slyly, “for I am but Robin, and outlaw, and
+thou art the Duke!”
+
+“Forsooth--and so I am!” exclaimed Sir Pertinax. “Ha--yet am I still a man,
+and therefore--”
+
+“Wait, my lord!” said Benedicta. “Robin, give me thy sword!” So she took
+the weapon and motioning Robin to his knees, set the blade across his
+shoulder. “Robin a' Green,” said she, “since thou art knightly of word and
+deed, knight shalt thou be in very truth. Sir Robin a' Forest I make thee
+and warden over this our forest country. Rise up, Sir Robert.” Then up
+sprang Robin, bright-eyed and flushed of cheek.
+
+“Dear my lady,” cried he, “since knight hast made me, thy knight will I be
+henceforth in life or in death--” But here his voice was lost in the
+joyous acclamations of his followers who shouted amain until the Duchess
+quelled them with lifted hand.
+
+“Ye men of the wild-wood,” said she, looking round upon them gentle-eyed,
+“all ye that be homeless and desolate, lying without the law, this day joy
+hath found me, for this is my wedding-morn. And as I am happy I would see
+ye happy also. Therefore upon this glad day do we make proclamation, my
+Lord Duke and I--this day we lift from you each and every, the ban of
+outlawry--free men are ye to go and come as ye list--free men one and all
+and good citizens henceforth I pray!” Now here was silence awhile, then a
+hoarse murmur, swelling to a jubilant shout until the sunny woodland rang
+with the joy of it, near and far.
+
+“And now, Sir Robert,” laughed the Duchess, “pray you where is this noble
+Fool, this gentle Motley, this most rare singer of songs and breaker of
+lances? Bid him to us.”
+
+“Ha--the Fool!” exclaimed Sir Pertinax, starting.
+
+“My lady,” answered Robin, “true, he was here, but when I sought him, a
+while since, there was Sir Palamon's armour he had worn, but himself gone
+--”
+
+“Gone--gone say'st thou?” cried Sir Pertinax, glancing about. “Then needs
+must I go seek him--”
+
+“And wherefore, my lord?” cried the Duchess.
+
+“'T is my--my duty, Melissa!” stammered Sir Pertinax. “He is my--my friend
+and--sworn brother-in-arms!”
+
+“And am I not thy wife, Pertinax?”
+
+“Aye, most dearly loved, and I, thy husband--and yet--needs must I seek
+this Fool, Melissa.”
+
+“O Pertinax--wilt leave me?”
+
+“Leave thee?” groaned Sir Pertinax. “Aye--for a while! Leave thee?
+Aye--though it break my heart needs must I! He, my--brother-in-arms. My
+duty calleth--”
+
+“And what of thy duty to me?”
+
+Now as Sir Pertinax wrung his hands in an agony of indecision, rose a
+whisper of sweet sound, the murmur of softly-plucked lute-strings, and into
+the glade, cock's-comb aflaunt and ass's ears a-dangle Duke Jocelyn strode
+and sang as he came a song he had made on a time, a familiar air:
+
+ “Good Pertinax, why griev'st thou so?
+ Free of all duty thou dost go,
+ Save that which thou to Love dost owe,
+ My noble Pertinax.”
+
+“And love from heaven hath stooped thus low To me!” quoth Pertinax.
+
+But here came Robin with certain of his men leading a snow-white palfrey
+richly caparisoned.
+
+“Right noble lady,” said he, “behold here a goodly, fair jennet to thy
+gracious acceptance.”
+
+“And indeed--'t is rare, pretty beast!” exclaimed Benedicta. “But Robin,
+Robin, O Sir Robert, whence had you this?”
+
+“Lady, upon a time I was an outlaw and lived as outlaws may, taking such
+things as Fate bestowed, and, lady:
+
+ “Fate is a wind
+ To outlaws kind:
+
+But now since we be free-men all, I and my fellows, fain would we march
+hence in thy train to thy honour and our joyance. Wilt grant us this boon,
+lady?”
+
+“Freely, for 'tis rare good thought, Robin! Surely never rode duke and
+duchess so attended. How the townsfolk shall throng and stare to see our
+wild following, and my worthy guardians gape and pluck their beards for
+very amaze! How think you, good Friar John?”
+
+“Why, verily, daughter, I, that am chiefest of thy wardens ten, do think it
+wise measure; as for thy other guardians let them pluck and gape until they
+choke.
+
+ “In especial Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who both beard and wisdom lacks.
+
+I say 'tis wise, good measure, for these that were outlaws be sturdy
+fellows with many friends in town and village, so shall this thy day of
+union be for them re-union, and they joy with thee.”
+
+Now being mounted the Duchess rode where stood Jocelyn, and looked down on
+him merry-eyed.
+
+“Sir Fool,” said she, “who thou art I know not, but I have hunted in
+Brocelaunde ere now, and I have eyes. And as thou 'rt friend to my dear
+lord, friend art thou of mine, so do we give thee joyous welcome to our
+duchy. And, being thy friend, I pray thou may'st find that wonder of
+wonders the which hideth but to be found, and once found, shall make wise
+Fool wiser.”
+
+“Sweet friend and lady,” answered Jocelyn, “surely man so unlovely as I may
+not know this wonder for his very own until it first seek him. Is 't not
+so? Let now thy woman's heart counsel me.”
+
+“How, Sir Wise Folly, have I not heard thee preach boldness in love ere
+now?”
+
+“Aye--for others!” sighed Jocelyn. “But for myself--I fear--behold this
+motley! This scarred face!”
+
+“Why as to thy motley it becometh thee well--”
+
+“Aye, but my face? O, 't is a hideous face!”
+
+“O Fool!” sighed Benedicta, “know'st thou not that True-love's eyes possess
+a magic whereby all loved things become fair and beauteous. So take
+courage, noble Motley, and may thy desires be crowned--even as our own.”
+
+“Gramercy, thou sweet and gentle lady. Happiness companion thee alway and
+Love sing ever within thee. Now for ye twain is love's springtime, a season
+of sweet promise, may each promise find fulfilment and so farewell.”
+
+“Why then, Sir Fool, an thou wilt tarry here in the good greenwood a
+while, may Love guide thee. Now here is my counsel: Follow where thy heart
+commandeth and--fear not! And now, Sir Robert a' Forest, form thy company,
+and since this is a day of gladness let them sing as they march.”
+
+“In sooth, dear my lady, that will we!” cried Robin. “There is song o'
+spring and gladness I made that hath oft been our solace, and moreover it
+beginneth and endeth with jolly chorus well beknown to all. Ho, pikes
+to van and rear! Bows to the flanks--fall in! Now trusty friends o' the
+greenwood, free-men all, henceforth--now march we back to hearth and home
+and love, so sing ye--sing!”
+
+Hereupon from the ragged, close-ordered ranks burst a shout that swelled
+to rolling chorus; and these the words:
+
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily--hey!
+ And cheerily let us sing,
+ While youth is youth then youth is gay
+ And youth shall have his fling.
+
+ Robin: The merry merle on leafy spray,
+ The lark on fluttering wing
+ Do pipe a joyous roundelay,
+ To greet the blithesome spring.
+
+ Hence, hence cold Age, black Care--away!
+ Cold Age black Care doth bring;
+ When back is bowed and head is grey,
+ Black Care doth clasp and cling.
+
+ Black Care doth rosy Pleasure stay,
+ Age ageth everything;
+ 'T is farewell sport and holiday,
+ On flowery mead and ling.
+
+ If Death must come, then come he may,
+ And wed with death-cold ring,
+ Yet ere our youth and strength decay,
+ Blithe Joy shall be our king.
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily--hey!
+ And cheerily we will sing.
+
+So they marched blithely away, a right joyous company, flashing back the
+sunset glory from bright headpiece and sword-blade, while Jocelyn stood
+watching wistful-eyed until they were lost amid the green, until all sounds
+of their going grew to a hush mingling with the whisper of leaves and
+murmurous gurgle of the brook; and ever the shadows deepened about him, a
+purple solitude of misty trees and tangled thickets, depth on depth, fading
+to a glimmering mystery.
+
+Suddenly amid these glooming shadows a shadow moved, and forth into the
+darkling glade, mighty club on mighty shoulder, stepped Lobkyn Lollo the
+Dwarf, and his eyes were pensive and he sighed gustily.
+
+“Alack!” quoth he:
+
+ “So here's an end of outlawry,
+ And all along o' lady,
+ Yet still an outlaw I will be
+ Shut in o' shaws so shady.
+ And yet it is great shame, I trow,
+ That our good friends should freemen go
+ And leave us lonely to our woe,
+ And all along o' lady.
+
+ “And plague upon this love, I say,
+ For stealing thus thy friend away,
+ And since fast caught and wed is he
+ Thy friend henceforth is lost to thee,
+ And thou, poor Fool, dost mope and sigh,
+ And so a plague on love! say I.”
+
+“Nay, good Lobkyn, what know you of love?” Answered LOBKYN:
+
+ “Marry, enough o' love know I
+ To steal away if love be nigh.
+
+ “For love's an ill as light as air,
+ Yet heavy as a stone;
+ O, love is joy and love is care,
+ A song and eke a groan.
+
+ “Love is a sickness, I surmise,
+ Taketh a man first by the eyes,
+ And stealing thence into his heart,
+ There gripeth him with bitter smart.
+ Alas, poor soul,
+ What bitter dole,
+ Doth plague his every part!
+
+ “From heart to liver next it goes,
+ And fills him full o' windy woes,
+ And, being full o' gusty pain,
+ He groaneth oft, and sighs amain,
+ Poor soul is he
+ In verity,
+ And for his freedom sighs in vain.”
+
+ “Miscall not love, Lobkyn, for sure True-love is
+ every man's birthright.”
+
+Quoth LOBKYN:
+
+ “Why then, methinks there's many a wight
+ That cheated is of his birthright,
+ As, item first, here's Lobkyn Lollo
+ To prove thine argument quite hollow.
+ Dare I at maid to cast mine eye,
+ She mocketh me, and off doth fly,
+
+
+ And all because I'm humped o' back,
+ And something to my stature lack.
+ Thus, though I'm stronger man than three,
+ No maid may love the likes o' me.
+ Next, there's thyself--a Fool, I swear,
+ At fight or song beyond compare.
+ But--thou 'rt unlovely o' thy look,
+ And this no maid will ever brook.
+ So thou and I, for weal or woe,
+ To our lives' end unloved must go.
+ But think ye that I grieve or sigh?
+ Not so! A plague on love, say I!”
+
+Now here Jocelyn sighed amain and, sitting beneath a tree, fell to sad and
+wistful thinking.
+
+ “Aye, verily,” he repeated, “I am 'unlovely of my
+ look.'”
+
+ Quoth Lobkyn heartily:
+
+ “In very sooth,
+ Fool, that's the truth!”
+
+ “Alas!” sighed Jocelyn, “'And this no maid
+ will ever brook!'”
+
+ Answered Lobkyn:
+
+ “And there dost speak, wise Fool, again,
+ A truth right manifest and plain,
+ Since fairest maids have bat-like eyes,
+ And see no more than outward lies.
+ And seeing thus, they nothing see
+ Of worthiness in you or me.
+ And so, since love doth pass us by,
+ The plague o' plagues on love, say I!”
+
+“Nath'less,” cried the Duke, leaping to his feet. “I will put Love to the
+test--aye, this very hour!”
+
+ Lobkyn: Wilt go, good Motley? Pray thee where?
+
+ Jocelyn: To one beyond all ladies fair.
+
+ Lobkyn: Then dost thou need a friend about thee
+ To cheer and comfort when she flout thee.
+ So, an thou wilt a-wooing wend,
+ I'll follow thee like trusty friend.
+ In love or fight thou shalt not lack
+ A sturdy arm to 'fend thy back.
+ I'll follow thee in light or dark,
+ Through good or ill--Saints shield us!
+ Hark!
+
+And Lobkyn started about, club poised for swift action, for, out-stealing
+from the shadows crept strange and dismal sound, a thin wail that sank to
+awful groaning rumble, and so died away.
+
+“O!” whispered Lobkyn:
+
+ “Pray, Fool, pray with all thy might,
+ Here's goblin foul or woodland sprite
+ Come for to steal our souls away,
+ So on thy knees quick, Fool, and pray!”
+
+But, as these dismal sounds brake forth again, Jocelyn stole forward,
+quarter-staff gripped in ready hand; thus, coming nigh the great oak, he
+espied a dim, huddled form thereby and, creeping nearer, stared in wonder
+to behold Mopsa, the old witch, striving might and main to wind the great
+hunting-horn.
+
+“What, good Witch!” quoth he, “here methinks is that beyond all thy spells
+to achieve.”
+
+“O Fool,” she panted, “kind Fool, sound me this horn, for I'm old and scant
+o' breath. Wind it shrill and loud, good Motley, the rallying-note, for
+there is ill work afoot this night. Sound me shrewd blast, therefore.”
+
+“Nay, 't were labour in vain, Witch; there be no outlaws hereabout, free
+men are they henceforth and gone, each and every.”
+
+“Out alas--alas!” cried the old woman, wringing her hands. “Then woe is me
+for the fair lady Yolande.”
+
+“Ha! What of her, good Witch? Threateneth danger? Speak!”
+
+“Aye, Fool, danger most dire! My Lord Gui yet liveth, and this night divers
+of his men shall bear her away where he lieth raging for her in his black
+castle of Ells--”
+
+“Now by heaven's light!” swore Jocelyn, his eyes fierce and keen, “this
+night shall Fool be crowned of Love or sleep with kindly Death.”
+
+“Stay, Fool, thy foes be a many! Wilt cope with them alone?”
+
+“Nay!” cried a voice:
+
+ “Not so, grandam
+ For here I am!”
+
+and Lobkyn stepped forward.
+
+“Aha, my pretty poppet! Loved duck, my downy chick--what wouldst?”
+
+ “Fight, grandam,
+ Smite, grandam,
+ Sweet, blood-begetting blows.
+ Where Fool goeth
+ Well Fool knoweth
+ Lobkyn likewise goes.”
+
+“Why, then, my bantling--loved babe, fight thy fiercest, for these be
+wicked men and 't will be an evil fray. And she is sweet and good, so,
+Lobkyn, be thy strongest--”
+
+Saith Lobkyn:
+
+ “Aye that will I,
+ Or may I die.
+ By this good kiss
+ I vow thee this.
+
+ “And here is signal, Fool, shall shew
+ Each where the other chance to go.
+
+ “Croak like a frog,
+ Bark like a dog,
+ Grunt like a hog,
+ I'll know thee.
+
+ “Hoot like an owl,
+ Like grey wolf howl,
+ Or like bear growl,
+ 'T will shew thee--”
+
+“Then come, trusty Lob, and my thanks to thee!” cried Jocelyn, catching up
+his quarter-staff. “But haste ye, for I would be hence ere the moon get
+high. Come!”
+
+So Duke Jocelyn strode away with Lobkyn Lollo at his heels; now as they
+went, the moon began to rise.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 12
+
+Which being the last Fytte of our Geste I hope may please my daughter best.
+
+ “O, Wind of Night, soft-creeping,
+ Sweet charge I give to thee,
+ Steal where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me;
+ And in her dream,
+ Love, let me seem
+ All she would have me be.
+
+ “Kind sleep! By thee we may attain
+ To joys long hoped and sought in vain,
+ By thee we all may find again
+ Our lost divinity.
+
+ “So, Night-wind, softly creeping,
+ This charge I give to thee,
+ Go where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me.”
+
+Hearkening to this singing Yolande shivered, yet not with cold, and casting
+a cloak about her loveliness came and leaned forth into the warm, still
+glamour of the night, and saw where stood Jocelyn tall and shapely in the
+moonlight, but with hateful cock's-comb a-flaunt and ass's ears grotesquely
+a-dangle; wherefore she sighed and frowned upon him, saying nothing.
+
+“Yolande?” he questioned. “O my lady, and wilt frown upon my singing?”
+
+Answered she, leaning dimpled chin upon white fist and frowning yet:
+
+“Nay, not--not thy--singing.”
+
+“Is 't then this cap o' Folly--my ass's ears, Yolande? Then away with them!
+So shalt jester become very man as thou art very maid!” Forthwith he thrust
+back his cock's-comb and so stood gazing up at her wide-eyed.
+
+But she, beholding thus his scarred face, shivered again, shrinking a
+little, whereupon Jocelyn bowed his head, hiding his features in his long,
+black-curling hair.
+
+“Alas, my lady!” he said, “doth my ill face offend thee? This would I put
+off also for thy sake an it might be, but since this I may not do, close
+thou thine eyes a while and hear me speak. For now do I tell thee, Yolande,
+that I--e'en I that am poor jester--am yet a man loving thee with man's
+love. I that am one with face thus hatefully scarred do seek thee in thy
+beauty to my love--”
+
+“Presumptuous Fool, how darest thou speak me thus?” she whispered.
+
+“For that great love dareth greatly, Yolande.”
+
+“And what of thy lord? How of Duke Jocelyn, thy master?”
+
+“He is but man, lady, even as I. Moreover for thee he existeth not since
+thou hast ne'er beheld him--to thy knowing.”
+
+“Nay, then--what of this?” she questioned, drawing the jewelled picture
+from her bosom.
+
+“'T is but what it is, lady, a poor thing of paint!”
+
+“But sheweth face of noble beauty, Fool!”
+
+“Aye, nobly painted, Yolande! A thing of daubed colours, seeing naught of
+thy beauty, speaking thee no word of love, whiles here stand I, a sorry
+Fool of beauty none, yet therewithal a man to woo thee to my love--”
+
+“Thy love? Ah, wilt so betray thy lord's trust?”
+
+“Blithely, Yolande! For thee I would betray my very self.”
+
+“And thyself art Fool faithless to thy lord, a rhyming jester, a sorry
+thing for scorn or laughter--and yet--thy shameful habit shames thee not,
+and thy foolish songs hold naught of idle folly! And thou--thou art the
+same I saw 'mid gloom of dungeon sing brave song in thy chains! Thou art he
+that overthrew so many in the lists! O Joconde, my world is upside down by
+reason of thee.”
+
+“And thou, Yolande, didst stoop to me within my dungeon! And thou didst
+pray for me, Yolande, and now--now within this sweet night thou dost lean
+down to me through the glory of thy hair--to me in my very lowliness! And
+so it is I love thee, Yolande, love thee as none shall ever love thee, for
+man am I with heart to worship thee, tongue to woo thee, eyes to behold thy
+beauties, and arms to clasp thee. So am I richer than yon painted duke that
+needs must woo thee with my lips. And could I but win thee to love--ah,
+Yolande, could I, despite these foolish trappings, this blemished face, see
+Love look on me from thine eyes, O--then--”
+
+“How--then--Joconde?”
+
+“Then should Fool, by love exalted, change to man indeed and I--mount up to
+heaven--thus!” So saying, Jocelyn began to climb by gnarled ivy and carven
+buttress. And ever as he mounted she watched him through the silken curtain
+of her hair, wide of eye and with hands tight-clasped.
+
+“Ah, Joconde!” she whispered, “'t is madness--madness! Ah, Joconde!” But
+swift he came and swung himself upon the balcony beside her and reached out
+his arms in mute supplication, viewing her wistfully but with scarred face
+transfigured by smile ineffably tender, and when he spoke his voice was
+hushed and reverent.
+
+“I am here, Yolande, because methought to read within thy look the wonder
+of all wonders. But, O my lady, because I am but what I am, fain would I
+hear thee speak it also.”
+
+“Joconde,” said she in breathless voice, “wouldst shame me--?”
+
+“Shame?” he cried. “Shame? Can there be aught of shame in true love? Or is
+it that my ass's ears do shame thee, my cock's-comb and garments pied shame
+the worship of this foolish heart, and I, a Fool, worshipping thee, shame
+thee by such worship? Then--on, cock's-comb! Ring out, silly bells! Fool's
+love doth end in folly! Off love--on folly--a Fool can but love and die.”
+
+“Stay, Joconde; ah, how may I tell thee--? Why dost thou start and fumble
+with thy dagger?”
+
+“Heard you aught, lady?”
+
+“I heard an owl hoot in the shadows yonder, no more.”
+
+“True, lady, but now shall this owl croak like a frog--hearken! Aha--and
+now shall frog bark like dog--”
+
+“And what meaneth this?”
+
+“That thou, proud lady, must this night choose betwixt knightly rogue and
+motley Fool--here be two evils with yet a difference--”
+
+“Here is strange, wild talk, Fool!”
+
+“Here shall be wild doings anon, lady, methinks. Hush thee and listen!”
+
+A jangle of bridle-chains, a sound of voices loud and rough, and a tread of
+heavy feet that, breaking rudely upon the gentle-brooding night, drove the
+colour from Yolande's soft cheek and hushed her voice to broken whisper:
+
+“Heaven shield us, what now, Joconde?”
+
+“Wolves, lady, wolves that come to raven--see yonder!” Even as he spake
+they espied armed men who, bold and assured by reason of the solitude,
+moved in the garden below; and on back and breast of each was the sign of
+the Bloody Hand.
+
+“My Lord Gui's followers! Alas, Joconde, these mean thee ill--here is death
+for thee!” Now as she spake, Jocelyn thrilled to the touch of her hand upon
+his arm, a hand that trembled and stole to clasp his. “Alas, Joconde, they
+have tracked thee hither to slay thee--”
+
+“And were this so, wouldst fly with me, Yolande? Wouldst trust thy beauties
+to a Fool's keeping?”
+
+“Nay, nay, this were madness, Joconde; rather will I hide thee--aye, where
+none shall dare seek thee--come!”
+
+“Yolande,” he questioned, “Yolande, wilt trust thyself to Love and me?”
+ But seeing how she shrank away, his eager arms fell and he bowed his head.
+“Nay, I am answered,” quoth he, “even while thine eyes look love, thy body
+abhorreth Fool's embrace--I am answered. Nay, 't is enough, trouble not for
+words--ha, methinks it is too late, the wolves be hard upon us--hark ye to
+their baying!”
+
+And now was sudden uproar, a raving clamour of fierce shouts, and a
+thundering of blows upon the great door below.
+
+“Yolande--ha, Yolande, yield thee! Open! Open!”
+
+“Ah--mercy of God! Is it me they seek?” she whispered.
+
+“Thee, Yolande! To bear thee to their lord's embraces--”
+
+“Rather will I die!” she cried, and snatched the dagger from his girdle.
+
+“Not so!” quoth he, wresting the weapon from her grasp. “Rather shalt thou
+live a while--for thou art mine--mine to-night, Yolande--come!” And
+he clasped her in fierce arms. “Nay, strive not lest I kiss thee to
+submission, for thou art mine, though it be for one brief hour and death
+the next!” So, as she struggled for the dagger, he kissed her on mouth and
+eyes and hair until she lay all unresisting in his embrace; while ever and
+anon above the thunder of blows the night clamoured with the fierce shout:
+
+“Open--open! Yolande, ha, Yolande!”
+
+“There is death--and worse!” she panted. “Loose me!”
+
+“Stay,” he laughed, “here thou 'rt in thy rightful place at last--upon my
+heart, Yolande. Now whither shall I bear thee? Where lieth safety?”
+
+“Loose me!” she commanded.
+
+“Never! Hark, there yields the good door at last!”
+
+“Then here will we die!”
+
+“So be it, Yolande! A sweet death thus, heart to heart and lip to lip!”
+
+“O Fool--I hate thee!”
+
+“Howbeit, Yolande--I love thee!”
+
+“Yolande! Ha--Yolande!”
+
+The cry was louder now and so near that she shivered and, hiding her face,
+spake below her breath:
+
+“The turret-stair--behind the arras of my bed!”
+
+Swiftly, lightly he bore her down the winding stair and by divers
+passage-ways until, thrusting open a narrow door, he found himself within
+the garden and, keeping ever amid the darkest shadows, hasted on to the
+postern hard by the lily-pool.
+
+And now Yolande felt herself swung to lofty saddle, heard Jocelyn's warning
+shout drowned in a roar of voices and loud-trampling hoofs as the great
+horse reared, heard a fierce laugh and, looking up, saw the face above her
+grim and keen-eyed beneath its foolish cock's-comb as his vicious steel
+flashed to right and left, and ever as he smote he mocked and laughed:
+
+“Ha--well smitten, Lob! Oho, here Folly rides with pointed jest keen and
+two-edged--make way, knaves--make way for Folly--”
+
+The snorting charger, wheeled by strong hand, broke free, whereon rose an
+uproar of shouts and cries that sank to a meaningless babble swept backward
+on the rush of wind. Away, away they sped, through moonlight and shadow,
+with fast-beating hoofs that rang on paved walk, that thudded on soft
+grass, that trampled the tender flowers; and Yolande, swaying to the mighty
+arm that clasped her, saw the fierce, scarred face bent above her with eyes
+that gleamed under scowling brows and mouth grim-smiling; and shivering,
+she looked no more.
+
+On they sped with loosened rein, o'er grassy mead, through ferny hollows,
+o'erleaping chattering rill that babbled to the moon, 'mid swaying reeds
+and whispering sedge, past crouching bush and stately tree, and so at last
+they reached the woods. By shadowy brake and thicket, through pools of
+radiant moonlight, through leafy, whispering glooms they held their way,
+across broad glade and clearing, on and on until all noise of pursuit was
+lost and nought was to hear save the sounds of their going.
+
+Thus rode they, and with never a word betwixt them, deep and deeper into
+the wild until the moon was down and darkness shut them in; wherefore
+Jocelyn drew rein and sat a while to listen. He heard the good steed,
+deep-breathing, snuff at dewy grass; a stir and rustle all about him; the
+drowsy call of a bird afar; the soft ripple of water hard by and, over all,
+the deep hush of the wild-wood. Then upon this hush stole a whisper:
+
+“O, 'tis very dark!”
+
+He: Dark, Lady? Why so 'tis, and yet 'tis natural, for 'tis night,
+wherefore 'tis the bright god Phoebus is otherwhere, and Dian, sly-sweet
+goddess, hath stole her light from heaven, wherefore 'tis 'tis dark, lady.
+
+She: Where are we?
+
+He: The sweet Saints know that, lady--not I!
+
+She (_scornfully_): Verily, thou art no saint--
+
+He: Not yet, lady, not yet--witness these ass's ears.
+
+She: True, thou 'rt very Fool!
+
+He: In very truth, lady, and thou art lost with this same Fool, so art thou
+in very woeful case. As for me, a lost fool is no matter, wherefore Fool
+for himself grieveth no whit. But for thee--alas! Thou art a proud lady of
+high degree, very nice of thy dainty person, soft and delicate of body, so
+shall the greensward prove for thee uneasy couch, I judge, and thou sleep
+ill--
+
+She: Sleep? No thought have I of sleep! Ride on, therefore. Why tarry we
+here?
+
+He: Lady, for three sufficing reasons--our foes pursue not, I'm a-weary,
+and 'tis very dark--
+
+She: No matter! Ride on, I do command thee.
+
+He: Aye, but whither?
+
+She: I care not so thou leave this place; 'tis an evil place!
+
+He: Why, 'tis good place, very well secluded and with stream hard by that
+bubbleth. So here will we bide till dawn. Suffer me to aid thee down.
+
+She: Touch me not! Never think I fear thee though I am alone.
+
+He: Alone? Nay, thou 'rt with me, that is--I am with thee and thou art with
+a Fool. So is Fool care-full Fool since Fool hath care of thee. Suffer me
+now to aid thee down since here will we wait the day. Come, my arm about
+thee so, thy hand in mine--
+
+She (_angrily_): O Fool most base--most vile--
+
+He: Nay, hush thee, hush! and listen to yon blithesome, bubblesome,
+babbling brook how it sigheth 'mid the willows, whispereth under reedy bank
+and laugheth, rogue-like, in the shallows! Listen how it wooeth thee:
+
+ Though, lady, hard thy couch must be,
+ If thou should'st wakeful lie,
+ Here, from the dark, I'll sing to thee
+ A drowsy lullaby.
+ O lady fair--forget thy pride
+ Whiles thou within the greenwood bide.
+
+And now suffer me to aid thee down.
+
+She: Why wilt thou stay me in this evil place?
+
+He (_patiently_): The wild is ill travelling in the dark, lady; there be
+quagmires and perilous ways--wherefore here must we bide till dawn. Suffer
+me to--
+
+SHE (_breathlessly and shrinking from his touch_): But I fear not
+quagmires--there be greater perils--more shameful and--and--'tis so dark,
+so dark! 'Tis hateful place. Ride we till it be day--
+
+He (_mockingly_): Perils, lady? Why certes there be perils--and perils.
+Perils that creep and crawl, perils that go on four legs and perils
+two-legged--e'en as I. But I, though two-legged, am but very fool of
+fools and nothing perilous in blazing day or blackest night. So stint
+thy fears, lady, for here bide we till dawn!
+
+Herewith he caught her in sudden arms and lifted her to the ground; then,
+dismounting, he set about watering and cherishing the wearied steed and
+tethered him beside a dun stream that rippled beneath shadowy willows; and
+so doing, fell a-singing on this wise:
+
+ “'Fair lady, thou 'rt lost!' quoth he,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'And O, 'tis dark--'tis dark!' quoth she,
+ 'And in the dark dire perils be,'
+ O, derry, derry down!
+
+ “Quoth he: 'Fair lady, stint thy fear,'
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'I, being Fool, will sit me here,
+ And, till the kindly sun appear,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+
+ “'I'll make for thee, like foolish wight,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A song that shall out-last dark night,
+ And put thy foolish fears to flight
+ With derry, derry down.
+
+ “'For 'tis great shame thou shouldst fear so,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A peril that two-legged doth go,
+ Since he's but humble Fool, I trow,
+ With derry, derry down.'”
+
+Thus sang he, a dim figure beside dim stream and, having secured the horse,
+sat him down thereby and took forth his lute.
+
+But Yolande, though he could not see, clenched white fists and, though he
+could not hear, stamped slim foot at him.
+
+“Joconde,” quoth she, betwixt clenched teeth, “Joconde, I--scorn thee!”
+
+“Alack!” he sighed. “Alack, and my lute hath taken sore scath of a
+sword-thrust!”
+
+“Thou'rt hateful--hateful!” she cried. “Aye--hateful as thy hateful song,
+so do I contemn thee henceforth!”
+
+“Say'st thou so, lady, forsooth?” sighed he, busied with his lute. “Now
+were I other than Fool, here should I judge was hope of winning thy love.
+But being only Fool I, with aid of woe-begone lute, will sing thee merry
+song to cheer thee of thy perilous fears--”
+
+“Enough, ill Fool, I'll hear thee not!”
+
+“So be it, dear lady! Then will we sit an list to the song of yon stream,
+for streams and rivers, like the everlasting hills, are passing wise with
+length of days--”
+
+“And thou'rt a very Fool!” she cried angrily. “A fond Fool presumptuous in
+thy folly!”
+
+“As how presumptuous, proud lady?” he questioned humbly.
+
+“In that thou dreamest I--stoop to fear thee!”
+
+“Aye, verily!” sighed he. “Alas, thou poor, solitary, foolish, fearful
+maid, thou art sick with fear of me! So take now my dagger! Thus Fool
+offenceless shall lie defenceless at thy mercy and, so lying, sleep until
+joyous day shall banish thy so virginal fears!” Which saying, he tossed off
+belt and dagger and setting them beside her, rolled his weather-worn cloak
+about him, stretched himself beneath the dim willows and straightway
+fell a-snoring. And after some while she questioned him in voice low and
+troubled:
+
+“O Joconde, art truly sleeping?”
+
+“Fair lady,” he answered, “let these my so loud snores answer thee.”
+
+Up sprang Yolande and, coming beside him in the gloom, cast back his
+girdle, speaking quick and passionate:
+
+“Take back thy dagger lest I be tempted to smite it to the cruel, mocking
+heart of thee!” Then turned she stately back and left him, but, being hid
+from view, cast herself down full length upon the sward, her pride and
+stateliness forgotten quite. Now Jocelyn, propped on uneasy elbow, peered
+amid the gloom for sight of her and hearkened eagerly for sound of her; but
+finding this vain, arose and, creeping stealthily, presently espied her
+where she lay, face hidden in the dewy grass. Thus stood he chin in hand
+disquieted and anxious-eyed and wist not what to do.
+
+“Lady?” he questioned at last; but she stirred not nor spoke. “Yolande!”
+ he murmured, drawing nearer; but still she moved not, though his quick ear
+caught a sound faint though very pitiful. “Ah, dost thou weep?” he cried.
+Yolande sobbed again, whereupon down fell he beside her on his knees, “Dear
+lady, why grievest thou?”
+
+“O Joconde,” she sighed, “I am indeed solitary--and fearful! And thou--thou
+dost mock me!”
+
+“Forgive me,” he pleaded humbly, “and, since thou'rt solitary, here am I.
+And, for thy fears, nought is here shall harm thee, here may'st thou sleep
+secure--”
+
+“Stay, Joconde, the forest is haunted of wolves and--worse, 'tis said!”
+
+“Then will I watch beside thee till the day. And now will I go cut bracken
+for thy bed.”
+
+“Then will I aid thee.” So she arose forthwith and, amid the fragrant
+gloom, they laboured together side by side; and oft in the gloom her hand
+touched his, and oft upon his cheek and brow and lip was the silken touch
+of her wind-blown hair. Then beneath arching willows they made a bed,
+high-piled of springy bracken and sweet grasses, whereon she sank nestling,
+forthwith.
+
+“O, 'tis sweet couch!” she sighed.
+
+“Yet thou'lt be cold mayhap ere dawn,” quoth he, “suffer me to set my cloak
+about thee.”
+
+“But how of thyself, Joconde?”
+
+“I am a Fool well seasoned of wind and rain, heat and cold, lady, and 'tis
+night of summer.” So he covered her with his travel-stained cloak and,
+sitting beneath a tree, fell to his watch. And oft she stirred amid the
+fern, deep-sighing, and he, broad back against the tree, sighed oftener
+yet.
+
+“Art there, Joconde?” she questioned softly.
+
+“Here, lady.”
+
+“'Tis very dark,” sighed she, “and yet, methinks, 'tis sweet to lie thus
+in the greenwood so hushed and still and the stars to watch like eyes of
+angels.”
+
+“Why, 'tis night of summer, lady, a night soft and languorous and fragrant
+of sleeping flowers. But how of grim winter, how of rain and wind and
+lashing tempest--how think you?”
+
+“That summer would come again, Joconde.”
+
+“Truly here is brave thought, lady.”
+
+“Hark, how still is the night, Joconde, and yet full of soft stir, a
+sighing amid the leaves! 'Tis like the trees whispering one another. O,
+'tis sweet night!”
+
+“Soon to pass away, alas!” he sighed, whereupon she, stirring upon her
+ferny couch, sighed also; thereafter fell they silent awhile hearkening to
+the leafy stirrings all about them in the dark, and the slumberous murmur
+of the stream that, ever and anon, brake into faint gurglings like a voice
+that laughed, soft but roguish.
+
+SHE: I pray thee talk to me.
+
+HE: Whereof, lady?
+
+SHE: Thyself.
+
+HE: I am a Fool--
+
+SHE: And why sit so mumchance?
+
+HE: I think.
+
+SHE: Of what?
+
+HE: Folly.
+
+SHE: And why dost sigh so deep and oft?
+
+HE: I grieve for thee.
+
+SHE: For me! And wherefore?
+
+HE: Being lost with a Fool thou'rt desolate, sad and woeful.
+
+SHE: Am I, Joconde? And how dost know all this?
+
+HE: 'Tis so I do think, lady.
+
+SHE: Then are thy thoughts folly indeed. If thou must sigh, sigh for
+thyself.
+
+HE: Why so I do, lady, and therewith grieve for myself and thyself, myself
+being Fool and thyself a dame of high degree, thus, betwixt whiles, I do
+fear thee also.
+
+SHE: Thou fear! Thou fear me forsooth! And wherefore fear a helpless maid?
+
+HE: There is the reason--she is helpless!
+
+SHE: Ah, there doth Fool speak like chivalrous knight.
+
+HE: Or very fool--a fool that fain would win fair Dian from high heaven.
+Alas, poor Fool, that, being fool, must needs look and sigh and sigh and
+look and leave her to the winning of some young Endymion!
+
+SHE (_dreamily_): Endymion was but lowly shepherd, yet was he loved!
+
+HE: Endymion was fair youth comely of feature, lady. Now had he worn ass's
+ears 'bove visage scarred--how then? On Ida's mount he had been sighing
+forlorn and lonely yet, methinks. For maids' hearts are ever governed by
+their eyes--
+
+SHE: Art so wise in maids' hearts, Joconde?
+
+HE: Wise am I in this: No man may ever know the heart of a woman--and woman
+herself but seldom.
+
+Now here was silence again wherein Yolande, smiling, viewed him a dim shape
+in the gloom, and he leaned back to watch a star that twinkled through the
+leafy canopy above.
+
+SHE: Thou art Duke Jocelyn's Fool at court?
+
+HE: I am Duke Jocelyn's fool here and there and everywhere, lady.
+
+SHE: Yet have I heard Duke Jocelyn was a mighty man-at-arms and, though
+youthful, sober-minded, full of cares of state and kept no Fool at court.
+
+HE: Lady, his court is filled o' fools as is the way of other courts and
+amongst these many fools first cometh the Duke himself--
+
+SHE: How, and darest thou call this mighty Duke a fool?
+
+HE: Often, lady!
+
+SHE: And what like is he?
+
+HE: Very like a man, being endowed of arms, legs, eyes, ears--of each two,
+no more and no less, as is the vulgar custom.
+
+SHE: But is he not of beauty high and noble, of god-like perfection far
+beyond poor, common flesh and blood? 'Tis so the painter has limned his
+face, 'tis so I dream him to my fancy.
+
+HE: Lady, I am but a Fool, let the picture answer thee.
+
+SHE: And he, this mighty Duke of god-like beauty doth woo me to his
+wife--
+
+HE (_bitterly_): With my tongue.
+
+SHE: Why came he not in his own glorious person?
+
+HE: Lady, though a Duke, he hath his moments of wisdom and argueth thus:
+“I, though a Duke, am yet a man. Thus, should I as Duke woo her, she may
+wed the Duke, loving not the man--”
+
+SHE: And so he sent a Fool as his ambassador! And so do I scorn this
+god-like Duke--
+
+HE: Ha! Scorn him! My lady--O Yolande, what of me?
+
+She: Thou, false to him and faithless to thy trust, didst woo me for
+thyself which was ill in thee. But thou didst throw the terrible Red Gui
+into my lily-pool which was brave in thee. Thou didst endure chains and a
+prison undaunted which was noble in thee. Thou didst this night at peril of
+thy life save me from shame, but thou didst bear me urgently here into the
+wild, and in the wild here lie I beside thee, lost, yet warm and sleepy and
+safe beneath thy cloak--and so--'tis very well--
+
+HE: Safe, Yolande? Hath thy heart told thee this at last? But thou didst
+fear me--
+
+SHE: Because to-night thou didst clasp me in cruel arms and spake me words
+of love passionate and fierce and--and--
+
+HE: Kissed thee, Yolande!
+
+SHE: Many times--O cruel! And bore me hither and lost me in these dark
+solitudes! Here was good cause for any maid to fear thee methinks.
+
+Yet thou didst basely mock my fears with thy hateful song of “Derry down.”
+
+HE: Because thy fears, being unjust, hurt me, for ah, Yolande, my love for
+thee is deep and true, and True-love is ever gentle and very humble.
+
+SHE: Thus do I fear thee no more, Joconde!
+
+HE: Because I am but lowly--a Fool beneath thy proud disdain?
+
+SHE: Nay, Joconde. Because thou art indeed a very man. So now shall I sleep
+secure since nought of evil may come nigh me whiles I lie in thy care.
+
+Thus spake she softly 'mid the gloom, and turning upon her rustling couch
+sighed and presently fell to slumber.
+
+Now, sitting thus beside her as she slept, Jocelyn heard the stream ripple
+in the shadows like one that laughed soft but very joyously and, as he
+gazed up at the solitary star with eyes enraptured, this elfin laughter
+found its echo in his heart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A bird chirped drowsily from mazy thicket where sullen shadow thinned,
+little by little, until behind leaf and twig was a glimmer of light that
+waxed ever brighter. And presently amid this growing brightness was soft
+stir and twitter, sleepy chirpings changed to notes of wistful sweetness, a
+plaintive calling that was answered from afar.
+
+Thus the birds awaking sounded pretty warnings summoning each to each for
+that the day-spring was at hand, while ever the brightness changed to
+radiance and radiance to an orient glory and up flamed the sun in majesty
+and it was day. And now, from brake and thicket, from dewy mysteries
+of green boskage burst forth the sweet, glad chorus of bird-song, full
+throated, passionate of joy.
+
+And Jocelyn, sitting broad back against a tree, felt his soul uplifted
+thereby what time his eyes missed nothing of the beauties about him: the
+rugged boles of mighty trees bedappled with sunny splendour, the
+glittering dew that gemmed leaf and twig and fronded bracken, and the
+shapely loveliness of her who slumbered couched beneath his worn cloak,
+the gentle rise and fall of rounded bosom and the tress of hair that a
+fugitive sunbeam kissed to ruddy gold. Thus sat Jocelyn regardful,
+gladness in the heart of him, and a song of gladness bubbling to his lips.
+
+Suddenly he saw her lashes quiver, her rosy lips parted to a smile and,
+stirring in her slumber, she sighed and stretched shapely arms; so waked
+she to a glory of sun and, starting to an elbow, gazed round, great-eyed,
+until espying him, she smiled again.
+
+“Good morrow, Joconde! Ne'er have I slept sweeter. But thou hast
+out-watched dark night and art a-weary, so shalt sleep awhile--”
+
+“Nay,” he answered, “a plunge in the stream yonder and I shall be blithe
+for the road--an we find one. And I do fear me thou'rt hungry, Yolande, and
+I have nought to give thee--”
+
+“And what of thyself, man? Verily, I read hunger in thy look and weariness
+also, so, an thou may'st not eat, sleep thou shalt awhile here--in my
+place.”
+
+“Nay, Yolande, indeed--”
+
+“Yea, but thou must indeed whiles I watch over thee. 'Tis a sweet bed--come
+thy ways.”
+
+“And what wilt thou do?” he questioned.
+
+“Much!” she answered, viewing her rumpled, gown with rueful eyes. “As thou
+sayest, there is the pool yonder! So come, get thee to bed and--sleep!
+Come, let me cover thee with thy cloak and gainsay me not; sleep thou must
+and shalt.”
+
+So Duke Jocelyn stretched himself obediently upon the bed of fern and
+suffered her to cover him with the cloak; but as she stooped above him
+thus, he lifted the hem of her dress to reverent lips.
+
+“My lady!” he murmured. “My dear lady!”
+
+“Now close me thine eyes, wearied child!” she commanded. And, like a child,
+in this also he obeyed her, albeit unwillingly by reason of her radiant
+beauty, but hearing her beside him, was content, and thus presently fell to
+happy sleeping.
+
+When he awoke the sun was high and he lay awhile basking in this grateful
+radiance and joying in the pervading quiet; but little by little, growing
+uneasy by reason of this stillness, he started up to glance about him and
+knew sudden dread--for the little glade was empty--Yolande had vanished;
+moreover the horse was gone also.
+
+Cold with an awful fear he got him to his feet and looked hither and yon,
+but nowhere found any sign of violence or struggle. But like one distraught
+he turned to seek her, her name upon his lips, then, checking voice and
+movement, stood rigid, smitten by hateful doubt. For now it seemed to him
+that her gentle looks and words had been but sweet deceits to blind him to
+her purpose and now, so soon as she had lulled him to sleep, she had stolen
+away, leaving him for the poor, piteous fool he was. And now his despair
+was 'whelmed in sudden anger, and anger, little by little, changed to
+grief. She was fled away and he a sorry fool and very desolate.
+
+Full of these bitter thoughts he cast himself upon his face and, lying as
+in a pit of gloom, knew a great bitterness.
+
+Slowly, slowly, borne upon the gentle wind came a fragrance strange and
+unexpected, a savour delectable of cooking meat that made him know himself
+a man vastly hungry despite his grievous woe. But, lying within the black
+gulf of bitterness, he stirred not until, of a sudden, he heard a voice,
+rich and full and very sweet, upraised in joyous singing; and these the
+words:
+
+ “Rise, O laggard! See the sun,
+ To climb in glory hath begun:
+ The flowers have oped their pretty eyes,
+ The happy lark doth songful rise,
+ And merry birds in flowery brake,
+ Full-throated, joyous clamours make;
+ And I, indeed, that love it not,
+ Do sit alone and keel the pot,
+ Whiles thus I sing thee to entreat,
+ O sleepy laggard--come and eat!”
+
+“Forsooth and art sleeping yet, Joconde?” the voice questioned. Duke
+Jocelyn lifted woeful head and saw her standing tall and shapely amid
+the leaves, fresh and sweet as the morn itself, with laughter within her
+dream-soft eyes and laughter on her vivid lips and the sun bright in the
+braided tresses of her hair wherein she had set wild flowers like jewels.
+
+“Yolande!” he murmured, coming to his knees “Yolande--how glorious thou
+art!”
+
+“Nay,” she laughed, yet flushing to the worship of his eyes, “and my habit
+woefully torn of wicked bramble-thorns, and my hair ill-braided and all
+uncombed and--”
+
+“Ah, Yolande, I thought thee fled and I left to loneliness, and my pain was
+very sore.”
+
+“Then am I avenged thy mockery, Joconde, and thy song of 'Derry down.'
+'Twas for this I stole away! But now, if thou 'rt hungry man, come this
+ways.” And she reached him her hand. So she brought him to a little dell
+where burned a fire of sticks beneath a pot whence stole right savoury
+odour.
+
+“O most wonderful!” quoth he. “Whence came these goodly viands?”
+
+“Where but from the wallet behind thy horse's saddle, Joconde?” Then down
+sat they forthwith side by side and ate heartily and were very blithe
+together; and oft-times their looks would meet and they would fall silent
+awhile. At last, the meal ended, Jocelyn, turning from Yolande's beauty to
+the beauty of the world around, spake soft-voiced:
+
+“Yolande, were mine a selfish love, here, lost within these green
+solitudes, would I keep thee for mine own--to serve and worship thee unto
+my life's end. But, since I count thy happiness above my dearest desires,
+now will I go saddle the horse and bear thee hence.”
+
+“Whither, Joconde, whither wilt thou bear me?”
+
+“Back to the world,” said he ruefully, “thy world of prideful luxury, to
+thy kindred.”
+
+“But I have no kindred, alas!” sighed she, stooping to caress a
+daisy-flower that grew adjacent.
+
+“Why, then, thy friends--”
+
+“My friends be very few, Joconde, and Benedicta hath her husband.”
+
+“Yolande,” said he, leaning nearer, “whither should I bear thee?”
+
+“Nay,” saith she, patting the daisy with gentle finger-tip, “go thou and
+saddle thy horse, mayhap I shall know this anon. Go thou and saddle the
+horse.” So Jocelyn arose and having saddled and bridled the horse, back he
+cometh to find Yolande on her knees beside the stream, and she, hearing
+his step, bowed her head, hiding her face from him; now on the sward
+beside her lay the picture shattered beyond repair.
+
+“How,” said Jocelyn, “hast broken the Duke's picture, lady!”
+
+“Thou seest!” she answered.
+
+“And must thou weep therefore?” said he a little bitterly. “Oh, be
+comforted; 't was but a toy--soon will I get thee another.”
+
+“An thou bring me another, Joconde, that will I break also.”
+
+“Ha--thou didst break it--wilfully, then?”
+
+“With this stone, Joconde.”
+
+“Wherefore, O wherefore?” he questioned eagerly.
+
+“For that it was but painted toy, even as thou sayest!” she answered.
+“Moreover, I--love not Duke Jocelyn.”
+
+“And't was for this thou didst break the picture?”
+
+“Nay, 'twas because these painted features may never compare with the face
+of him I love.”
+
+“And whom--whom dost thou love?” quoth he, in voice low and unsteady.
+Speaking not, she pointed with slender finger down into the placid, stream.
+Wondering, he bent to look and thus from the stilly water his mirrored
+image looked back at him; now as he stooped so stooped she, and in this
+watery mirror their glances met.
+
+“Yolande?” he whispered. “O my lady, shall a Fool's fond dream come true,
+or am I mad indeed? Thou in thy beauty and I--”
+
+“Thou, Joconde,” said she, fronting him with head proudly uplift, “to my
+thought thou art man greater, nobler than any proud lord or mighty duke
+soever. And thou hast loved and wooed as never man wooed, methinks. And
+thou art so brave and strong and so very gentle and--thus it is--I do love
+thee.”
+
+“But my--my motley habit, my--”
+
+“Thy cap of Folly, Joconde, these garments pied thou hast dignified by thy
+very manhood, so are they dearer to me than lordly tire or knightly armour.
+And thy jingling bells--ah, Joconde, the jingle of thy bells hath waked
+within my heart that which shall never die--long time my heart hath cried
+for thee, and I, to my shame, heeded not the cry, wherefore here and now,
+thus upon my knees, I do most humbly confess my love.”
+
+“Thy love, Yolande--for me? Then dost truly love me? Oh, here is marvel
+beyond my understanding and belief.”
+
+“Why, Joconde, ah, why?”
+
+“See!” he cried, flinging back his head. “Look now upon this blemished
+face--here where the cruel sun may shew thee all my ugliness, every
+scar--behold! How may one so beautiful as thou learn love for one so lowly
+and with face thus hatefully marred? I have watched thee shrink from me ere
+now! I mind how, beside the lily-pool within thy garden, thou didst view me
+with eyes of horror! I do mind thy very words--the first that e'er I heard
+thee utter:
+
+'What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show A visage that might
+shame the gladsome day?'
+
+Yolande, Yolande, this poor blemished face is nothing changed since then;
+such as I was, such I am!”
+
+“Alas, Joconde!” she cried, reaching out her hands in passionate appeal.
+“My words were base, cruel--and hurt me now more, ah, much more, than e'er
+they wounded thee. For I do love thee with love as deep, as true as is
+thine own! Wilt not believe me?”
+
+“Oh, that I might indeed!” he groaned. “But--thou'rt alone, far from thy
+home and friends, thy wonted pride and state forgotten all--mayhap thou
+dost pity me or mayhap 'tis thy gratitude in guise of love doth speak me
+thus? But as thou art still thine own lovely self, so am I that same poor,
+motley Fool whose hateful face--”
+
+“Joconde,” she cried, “hush thee--Oh, hush thee! Thy words are whips to
+lash me!” and catching his hand she kissed it and cherished it 'gainst
+tear-wet cheek. “Ah, Joconde,” she sighed, “so wise and yet so foolish,
+know'st thou not thy dear, scarred face is the face of him I love, for love
+hath touched my eyes and I do see thee at last as thou truly art, a man
+great of soul, tender and strong-hearted. So art thou a man, the only man,
+my man. Oh, that I might but prove my love for thee, prove it to thee and
+before all men, no matter how, so I might but banish thy cruel doubts for
+ever. But now, for thy dear, scarred face--”
+
+Her soft, round arms were about his neck; and drawing him to her lips she
+kissed him, his scarred brow and cheek, his eyes, his lips grown dumb with
+wondering joy. Thus, lip to lip and with arms entwined, knelt they beside
+that slow-moving stream that whispered softly beneath the bank and gurgled
+roguish laughter in the shallows.
+
+A dog barked faintly in the distance, a frog croaked hoarsely from the
+neighbouring sedge, but lost in the wonder of their love, they heeded only
+the beating of their hearts.
+
+“A-billing and a-cooing! A-cooing and a-billing, as I'm a tanner true!”
+ exclaimed a hoarse voice. Up started Jocelyn, fierce-eyed and with hand on
+dagger-hilt, to behold a man with shock of red hair, a man squat and burly
+who, leaning on bow-stave, peered at them across the stream.
+
+“And is it Will the Tanner?” quoth Jocelyn, loosing his dagger.
+
+“None else, friend Motley.”
+
+“Why then, God keep thee! And now go about thy business.”
+
+“Marry, Fool, I am about my business, the which is to find thee. By Saint
+Nick, there's mighty hue and cry for thee up and down within the greenwood,
+aye--marry is there, as I'm a tanner tried and true. So needs must thou
+along wi' me.”
+
+“With thee, Tanner? And wherefore?”
+
+“Why, I know not wherefore, Fool, but must along. Here's me and Lob and
+the potent hag that is Mopsa the Witch, lain a-watching and a-watching ye
+a-billing--nay, scowl not, friend Fool, on tanner trusty, tried and
+true. For hark now, here's great stir, clamour and to-do within this
+forest-country for thee, Fool, the which is strange, seeing thou art but a
+motley fool. Howbeit there be many great lords and knights from beyond the
+Southern March a-seeking of thee, Fool.”
+
+“Ha!” quoth Jocelyn, frowning. “Envoys from Brocelaunde!”
+
+“Alas, Joconde, and seeking thee!” saith Yolande in troubled voice.
+
+“Moreover,” continued Will, “here's our Duke Pertinax and his lady Duchess
+yearning for thee, here's Robin that is Sir Robert a-clamouring for thee
+and all his goodly foresters, as myself, a-seeking thee.”
+
+“But't is I found thee, Sir Long-legged Fool, I--I!” croaked a voice, and
+old Mopsa the Witch peered at them from a bush hard by.
+
+“Verily, thou hast found us!” quoth Jocelyn ruefully. “And what now?”
+
+“Oho!” cried the Witch, cracking her finger-bones. “Now go I hot-foot to
+weave spells and enchantments, aha--oho! Spells that shall prove the false
+from the true, the gold from the dross. Thou, Sir Fool, art doubting lover,
+so art thou blind lover! I will resolve thee thy doubts, open thy eyes and
+show thee great joy or bitter sorrow--oho! Thou, proud lady, hast stooped
+to love a motley mountebank--nay, flash not thy bright eyes nor toss
+haughty head at an old woman--but here is solitude with none to mock
+thy lowly choice or cry thee shame to love a motley Fool, aha! And thou
+would'st fain prove thy love True-love, says thou? Why, so thou
+shalt--beyond all doubting now and for ever, aha--oho! Truest of true or
+falsest of false. Beware. Farewell, and remember:
+
+ “Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies,
+ Love's blind, they say; but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly, follow.
+
+Hither-ho, Lob-Lobkyn! Lend thine old granddam thine arm. Come, my pretty
+bantling, sweet poppet--come and--away!” o spake old Mopsa the Witch, and
+vanished into the green with Lobkyn, who turned to flourish his club in
+cheery salutation ere he plunged into the underbrush. Then Jocelyn smiled
+down on Yolande to find her pale and trembling, so would he have clasped
+her to his heart, but a hand grasped him and, turning, he beheld the Tanner
+at his elbow.
+
+“Friend Fool,” quoth he, “needs must I take thee to Robin that Sir Robert
+is, e'en as he did command, so come now thy ways with trusty tanner tried.”
+
+“Off, Red-head!” saith Jocelyn, frowning a little. “Away now, lest this my
+dagger bite thee.” Back leapt Will into the stream whence he had come, and
+there standing, clapped bugle to lip and winded it lustily, whereupon came
+divers fellows running, bow in hand, who beset Jocelyn on every side.
+
+“Now yield thee to Tanner, friend,” quoth Will, knee-deep in the stream,
+“for no mind have I to hurt thee. So away with thy dagger like gentle,
+kindly Fool, and away with thee to Sir Robin.”
+
+Now hereupon, as Jocelyn frowned upon them, Yolande, standing a-tiptoe,
+kissed his scarred cheek and clasped his dagger-hand in soft fingers.
+
+“Come,” she pleaded, “they be a-many, so yield me thy dagger and let us go
+with them, beloved!” At the whispered word Jocelyn loosed the dagger
+and, clasping her instead, kissed her full-lipped. Then turned he to his
+captors.
+
+“I'm with thee, Will, thou--tanner!” quoth he. “And now bring hither the
+horse for my lady's going.”
+
+“Nay,” answered Will, scratching red head, “Rob--Sir Robert spake nothing
+of horse for thee, or lady.”
+
+“Nor will I ride, Joconde,” she murmured happily, “rather will I trudge
+beside thee, my hand in thine--thus!”
+
+So, hand in hand, they went close-guarded by their captors yet heeding them
+not at all, having eyes but for each other. And oft her cheek flushed rosy
+beneath his look, and oft he thrilled to the warm, close pressure of her
+fingers; and thus tramped they happy in their captivity.
+
+The sun rose high and higher, but since for them their captors were not,
+neither was fatigue; and, if the way was rough there was Jocelyn's ready
+hand, while for him swamps and brooks were a joy since he might bear her
+in his arms. Thus tramped they by shady dingle and sunny glade, through
+marshy hollows and over laughing rills, until the men began to mutter
+their discontent, in especial a swart, hairy wight, and Will, glancing up
+at the sun, spake:
+
+“Two hours, lads, judge I.”
+
+“Nigher three, Tanner, nigher three!” growled the chief mutterer.
+
+“Why so much the better, Rafe, though two was the word. Howbeit we be come
+far enow, I judge, and 'tis hot I judge, so hey for Robin--and a draught o'
+perry!”
+
+“Art thou weary, my Yolande?”
+
+“Nay, is not thy dear arm about me!”
+
+“And--thou dost love me indeed?”
+
+“Indeed, Joconde! Mine is a love that ever groweth--”
+
+A horn's shrill challenge; a sound of voices, and below them opened a
+great, green hollow, shady with trees beneath whose shade were huts of
+wattle cunningly wrought, a brook that flowed sparkling, and beyond caves
+hollowed in the steepy bank.
+
+“How now, Tanner Will,” questioned Jocelyn, “hast brought us to the
+outlaw's refuge?”
+
+“Not so, good friend-Fool, not outlaws, foresters we of Duke Pertinax,
+and yonder, look 'ee, cometh Rob--Sir Robert to greet ye!” And the Tanner
+pointed where one came running, a man long of leg, long of arm and very
+bright of eye, a goodly man clad in hood and jerkin of neat's leather as
+aforetime, only now his bugle swung from baldrick of gold and silver and in
+his hood was brooched a long scarlet feather.
+
+“What brother!” cried he joyously. “By saint Nicholas, 'tis sweet to see
+thee again, thou lovely Fool!” And he clasped Jocelyn in brotherly embrace,
+which done, he stood off and shook doleful head. “Alas, brother!” quoth he.
+“Alas! my prisoner art thou this day, wherefor I grieve, and wherefor I
+know not save that it is by my lady Benedicta's strict command and her I
+must obey.” And now, turning to Yolande, he bared his head, louting full
+low. “Lady,” quoth he, “by thy rare and so great beauty I do know thee for
+Yolande the Fair, so do we of the wild give thee humble greeting. Here
+may'st thou rest awhile ere we bring thee to Canalise.”
+
+“But, messire,” answered Yolande, clasping Jocelyn's hand, “no mind have I
+to go to Canalise.”
+
+“Then alack for me, fair lady, for needs must I carry thee there within the
+hour along of my motley brother. Meanwhile here within yon bower thou
+shalt find cushions to thy repose, and all things to thy comfort and
+refreshment.”
+
+“O Sir Robert! O for a comb!” she sighed.
+
+“Expectant it waiteth thee, lady, together with water cool, sweet-perfumed
+essences, unguents and other nice, lady-like toys. Moreover, there be
+mirrors two of Venice and in pretty coffer--” But Yolande had vanished.
+
+Hereupon Robin led the way into a cool, arras-hung cave where was table set
+out with divers comfortable things both eatable and drinkable.
+
+Quoth Jocelyn, hunger and thirst appeased: “And now good Robin, what do
+these envoys from Brocelaunde? Why am I thy prisoner and wherefore must I
+to Canalise?”
+
+“Ha!” saith Robin, cocking merry eye, “and thy name is Joconde, the which
+is an excellent name, brother, and suiteth thee well, and yet--hum!
+Howbeit, friend, remember Robin loved thee for the Fool he found thee,
+that same Fool foolish enow to spare a rogue his life. Dost mind my Song
+o' Rogues? A good song, methinks, tripping merrily o' the tongue:
+
+ “'I'll sing a song
+ Not over long,
+ A song o' roguery,
+ For I'm a rogue,
+ And thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith is he.'
+
+I mind thy fierce, hawk-nosed gossip in rusty jack and ragged cloak, his
+curses! Troth brother, 'tis a world of change methinks, this same fierce,
+cursing, hook-nose rogue a noble knight and to-day my lord Duke! I, that
+was poor outlaw, knight-at-arms and lord warden, and thou--a motley Fool
+still--and my prisoner. How say'st thou, brother?”
+
+“Why I say, Robin, that my three questions wait thy answers!”
+
+“Verily, brother, and for this reason. I am a knight and noble, and so
+being have learned me policy, and my policy is, when unable to give answer
+direct to question direct, to question myself direct thus directing
+question to questions other or to talk of matters of interest universal, so
+do I of thyself and myself speak. And talking of myself I have on myself,
+of myself, of myself made a song, and these the words, hark 'ee:
+
+ “Now Rob that was Robin Sir Robert is hight
+ Though Rob oft did rob when outlaw,
+ Since outlaw now in law is dubbed a good knight,
+ Robin's robbing is done, Rob robbeth no more.
+
+Fair words brother, I think, and yet a little sad. 'But,' says you in vasty
+amaze, 'my very noble and right potent Sir Robert,' says you, 'if thou
+art indeed noble knight, wherefore go ye devoid of mail, surcoat, cyclas,
+crested helm, banderol, lance, shield and the like pomps and gauds?'
+'Brother,' says I, 'habit is habit and habit sticketh habitual, and my
+habit is to go habited as suiteth my habit, suiting habit o' body to habit
+o' mind.' Thus I, though Sir Robert, am Robin still, and go in soft leather
+'stead of chafing steel, and my rogues, loving Robin, love Sir Robert the
+better therefor, as sayeth my song in fashion apt and pertinent:
+
+ “Since habit is habit, my habit hath been
+ To wear habit habitually comely--
+
+Ha, there soundeth the mustering note, so must we away and I sing no
+further, which is well, for 'comely' is an ill word to rhyme with. Howbeit
+here must I, beginning my song o' Robin, of beginning must Rob make an end,
+for duty calleth Sir Robert, so must Robin away.”
+
+Hereupon he clapped horn to lip at which shrill summons came archers and
+pikemen ranked very orderly about a fair horse-litter. But Yolande coming
+radiant from the bower and espying the litter, shook her head. Quoth she:
+
+“An thou go afoot, Joconde, so will I.”
+
+The sun was low when they came before the walls of Canalise, and passing
+beneath grim portcullis and through frowning gateway, with ring and tramp,
+crossed the wide market square a-throng with jostling townsfolk, who
+laughed and pointed, cheered and hooted, staring amain at Jocelyn in his
+threadbare motley; but Yolande, fronting all eyes with proud head aloft,
+drew nearer and held his hand in firmer clasp.
+
+Thus they came at last to the great courtyard before the palace, bright
+with the glitter of steel, where men-at-arms stood mustered. Here Robin
+halted his company, whereon rose the silvery note of a clarion, and forth
+paced the dignified Chief Herald, who spake him full-toned and sonorous:
+
+“In the name of our potent Duke Pertinax and his gracious lady Benedicta, I
+greet thee well, Sir Robert-a-Forest. Now whom bring ye here? Pronounce!”
+
+“Dan Merriment, Sir Gravity,” answered Robin, “a Fool valiant and wise, a
+maker of songs, of quips and quiddities many and jocund, Joconde hight. Sir
+Wisdom, Folly behold, himself here _in propriâ personâ_.”
+
+The Chief Herald gestured haughtily with his wand whereupon forth stepped a
+file of soldiers and surrounded Jocelyn.
+
+“Ah, Joconde! What meaneth this?” said Yolande, in troubled voice.
+
+“Indeed, my lady, I know not!” he answered. “But let not thy brave heart
+fail thee.”
+
+“Ah, Joconde, I fear for thee--whither would they lead thee? Nay, sweet
+heaven, they shall not take thee from me!”
+
+“Fear not, beloved, though they part us awhile.”
+
+“Away with the Motley!” thundered the Chief Herald, flourishing his wand.
+
+“Yolande--O my beloved, fear not--” But even as he spake, the pikemen
+closed in, and Jocelyn was hustled away; so stood she trembling, hands
+clasped and eyes wide and fearful, until tall motley figure and flaunting
+cock's-comb were lost to her sight and the jingle of his bells had died
+away; then, finding herself alone and all men's eyes upon her, she lifted
+bowed head and stood white-cheeked and proudly patient, waiting for what
+might betide.
+
+And presently was distant stir that, growing nearer, swelled to the ring
+and clash of armour and the trampling of many hoofs; and presently through
+the great gateway rode many knights sumptuously caparisoned, their shields
+brave with gilded 'scutcheons, pennon and bannerole a-flutter above nodding
+plumes, and over all the Red Raven banner of Brocelaunde. So rode they
+two-and-two until the great courtyard blazed with flashing steel and
+broidered surcoats. And now a trumpet blared, and forth before this
+glorious array a pursuivant rode and halted to behold Pertinax, who stepped
+forth of the great banqueting-hall leading his fair Duchess by the hand,
+and behind them courtiers and ladies attendant.
+
+Once again the trumpets rang, and lifting his hand, the pursuivant spake:
+
+“My Lord Duke Pertinax, most gracious Duchess, Jocelyn the high and mighty
+Lord Duke of Brocelaunde greeteth you in all love and amity, and hither
+rideth to claim a fair lady to wife. Behold our Lord Duke Jocelyn!”
+
+Loud and long the trumpets blew as into the courtyard rode a single
+horseman; tall was he and bedight in plain black armour and white surcoat
+whereon the Red Raven glowed; but his face was hid in vizored helm. So
+rode he through his glorious array of knights, checking his fiery steed to
+gentle gait with practised hand, while thus spake the pursuivant:
+
+“Behold here Jocelyn, Duke of Brocelaunde, to claim this day in marriage
+the Lady Yolande according to her word.”
+
+“Stay, my lords!” cried a sweet, clear voice, and forth before them all
+stood Yolande herself, pale-cheeked but stately of bearing and very bright
+of eye.
+
+“Be it known to all here that I, Yolande, have given neither pledge nor
+troth unto Duke Jocelyn--”
+
+Now here was silence sudden and profound that none dared break saving only
+the haughty Chief Herald.
+
+“How lady, how,” quoth he, “no pledge, no troth, quotha--”
+
+“Neither one nor other, messire, nor shall there ever be--”
+
+“Here is madness, lady, madness--”
+
+“Here is truth, messire, truth; I may not pledge my troth with Duke Jocelyn
+since I have this day pledged myself unto Duke Jocelyn's jester--”
+
+“Jester, lady, jester? Venus aid us--Cupid shield us! A jester, a Fool, a
+motley mountebank, a--”
+
+“Aye!” cried Yolande. “All this is he, my lords. Very humble and lowly--yet
+do I love him! Oh, 'tis joy--'tis joy to thus confess my love--his cap and
+bells and motley livery are fairer to me than velvet mantle or knightly
+armour; he is but humble jester, a Fool for men's scorn or laughter, yet is
+he a man, so do I love him and so am I his--unto the end. My lords, I have
+no more to say save this--give me my jester--this man I love--and suffer us
+to go forth hand in hand together, even as we came.”
+
+The Duchess Benedicta uttered a soft, glad cry, and seizing her husband's
+arm, shook it for very joy. But now, as Yolande fronted them all, pale and
+proudly defiant, was the ring of a mailed foot, and turning, she shrank
+trembling to see Duke Jocelyn hasting toward her, his black armour
+glinting, his embroidered surcoat fluttering, his long arms outstretched
+to her; thus quick-striding he came but, even as she put out shaking hands
+to stay him, he fell upon his knee before her.
+
+“Most brave and noble lady--beloved Yolande,” he cried, and lifted his
+vizor. Now beholding the scarred face of him, the tender, smiling lips, the
+adoration in his grey eyes, she trembled amain and, swaying to him, rested
+her hands on his mailed shoulders.
+
+“Joconde,” she whispered, “ah, Joconde--what dream is this?”
+
+“Nay, beloved, the dream is ended and findeth me here at thy feet. The
+dream is past and we do wake at last, for thy motley Fool, thy Duke and
+lover am I, yet lover most of all. And thou who in thy divine mercy stooped
+to love the Fool, by that same love shalt thou lift Duke Jocelyn up to thee
+and heaven at last. And Oh, methinks the memory of thy so great and noble
+love shall be a memory fragrant everlastingly.”
+
+So speaking, Duke Jocelyn rose, and with her hand fast in his, looked from
+her loveliness round about him, blithe of eye.
+
+“My lords,” cried he, “behold my well-beloved, brave-hearted lady. Nobles
+of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande.”
+
+Hereupon was shout on shout of joyous acclaim, lost all at once in the
+sweet, glad clamour of bells pealing near and far; so, hand in hand, while
+the air thrilled with this merry riot, they crossed the wide courtyard, and
+she flushed 'neath the worship of his look and he thrilled to the close,
+warm pressure of her fingers--thus walked they betwixt the ranks of
+men-at-arms and glittering chivalry, yet saw them not.
+
+But now Yolande was aware of Benedicta's arms about her and Benedicta's
+voice in her ear.
+
+“Dear my Yolande, so True-love hath found thee at last since thou wert
+brave indeed and worthy. Come now and let me deck thee to thy bridal.”
+
+“Lord Duke,” quoth Pertinax, “here methinks was notable, worthy wooing.”
+
+“Aha!” quoth Mopsa the Witch, crackling her knuckle-bones. “Here, my
+children, is wooing that some fool shall strive to tell tale of some day,
+mayhap; but such love is beyond words and not to be told. Thus by cunning
+contrivement hath Mopsa the old Witch proved the true from the false, the
+gold from the dross; thou, my lady, hast proved thy love indeed, and thou,
+Lord Duke, may nevermore doubt such love. And now away and wed each other
+to love's fulfilment--hark where the bells do summon ye.”
+
+And thus, as evening fell, they were wed within the great Minster of
+Canalise, and thereafter came they to the banqueting-hall with retinue of
+knights and nobles. Last of all strode Robin with his foresters, and as
+they marched he sang a song he had learned of Jocelyn, and these the words:
+
+ “What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Ne'er to die or fade away,
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ “Though youth alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless shall remain
+ The same to-day and ever.”
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Geste of Duke Jocelyn
+
+Author: Jeffery Farnol
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8165]
+This file was first posted on June 24, 2003
+Last Updated: May 22, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN
+
+By Jeffery Farnol
+
+Illustrations in color by Eric Pape
+
+(Illustrations not included in this edition)
+
+
+Copyright, 1920,
+
+By Little, Brown, And Company.
+
+All rights reserved Published September, 1920
+
+Norwood Press
+
+Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co. Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+ My GILLIAN, thou child that budding woman art
+ For whom to-day and yesterday lie far apart
+ Already thou, my dear, dost longer dresses wear
+ And bobbest in most strange, new-fangled ways thy hair;
+ Thou lookest on the world with eyes grown serious
+ And rul'st thy father with a sway imperious
+ Particularly as regards his socks and ties
+ Insistent that each with the other harmonise.
+ Instead of simple fairy-tales that pleased of yore
+ Romantic verse thou read'st and novels by the score
+ And very oft I've known thee sigh and call them "stuff"
+ Vowing of love romantic they've not half enough.
+ Wherefore, like fond and doting parent, I
+ Will strive this want romantic to supply.
+ I'll write for thee a book of sighing lover
+ Crammed with ROMANCE from cover unto cover;
+ A book the like of which 't were hard to find
+ Filled with ROMANCE of every sort and kind.
+ I'll write it as the Gestours wrote of old,
+ In prose, blank-verse, and rhyme it shall be told.
+ And GILLIAN--
+ Some day perhaps, my dear, when you are grown
+ A portly dame with children of your own
+ You'll gather all your troop about your knee
+ And read to them this Geste I made for thee.
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+"Nobles of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande"
+
+They saw afar the town of Canalise
+
+"Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!" she sighed
+
+"Hush, poor Motley!" whispered the maid.
+
+With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came
+
+The long blades whirled and flashed
+
+
+
+
+PRELUDE
+
+ Long, long ago when castles grim did frown,
+ When massy wall and gate did 'fend each town;
+ When mighty lords in armour bright were seen,
+ And stealthy outlaws lurked amid the green
+ And oft were hanged for poaching of the deer,
+ Or, gasping, died upon a hunting spear;
+ When barons bold did on their rights insist
+ And hanged or burned all rogues who dared resist;
+ When humble folk on life had no freehold
+ And were in open market bought and sold;
+ When grisly witches (lean and bony hags)
+ Cast spells most dire yet, meantime, starved in rags;
+ When kings did lightly a-crusading fare
+ And left their kingdoms to the devil's care--
+ At such a time there lived a noble knight
+ Who sweet could sing and doughtily could fight,
+ Whose lance thrust strong, whose long sword bit
+ full deep
+ With darting point or mighty two-edged sweep.
+ A duke was he, rich, powerful--and yet
+ Fate had on him a heavy burden set,
+ For, while a youth, as he did hunt the boar,
+ The savage beast his goodly steed did gore,
+ And as the young duke thus defenceless lay,
+ With cruel tusk had reft his looks away,
+ Had marred his comely features and so mauled him
+ That, 'hind his back, "The ugly Duke" folk called
+ him--
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+GILL: An ugly hero?
+
+MYSELF: That is so.
+
+GILL: An ugly hero, father? O, absurd! Whoever of an "ugly" hero heard?
+
+MYSELF: I'll own, indeed, I've come across but few--
+
+GILL: But a duke--and ugly! Father, this from you?
+
+MYSELF: My duke is ugly, very, for good reason, As shall appear in due and
+proper season!
+
+GILL: I'm sure no one will want to read him then, For "heroes" all should
+be most handsome men. So make him handsome, please, or he won't do.
+
+MYSELF: By heaven, girl--no, plain heroes are too few!
+
+GILL: Then ev'ry one will leave him on the shelf!
+
+MYSELF: Why, then, I'll read the poor fellow myself.
+
+GILL: I won't!
+
+MYSELF: Then don't! Though, I might say, since you're set on it, child, My
+duke was not so ugly when he smiled--
+
+GILL: Then make him smile as often as you can.
+
+MYSELF: I might do that, 't is none so bad a plan.
+
+GILL: And the lady--she must be a lady fair.
+
+MYSELF: My dear, she's beautiful beyond compare.
+
+GILL: Why, then--
+
+MYSELF: My pen!
+
+ So here and now I do begin
+ The tale of young Duke Jocelyn,
+ For critics, schools,
+ And cramping rules,
+ Heedless and caring not a pin.
+
+ The title here behold
+ On this fair page enrolled,
+ In letters big and bold,
+ As seemeth fit--
+ To wit:--
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE I
+
+ Upon a day, but when it matters not,
+ Nor where, but mark! the sun was plaguy hot
+ Falling athwart a long and dusty road
+ In which same dust two dusty fellows strode.
+ One was a tall, broad-shouldered, goodly wight
+ In garb of motley like a jester dight,
+ Fool's cap on head with ass's ears a-swing,
+ While, with each stride, his bells did gaily ring;
+ But, 'neath his cock's-comb showed a face so marred
+ With cheek, with brow and lip so strangely scarred
+ As might scare tender maid or timid child
+ Unless, by chance, they saw him when he smiled,
+ For then his eyes, so deeply blue and bright,
+ Did hold in them such joyous, kindly light,
+ That sorrow was from heavy hearts beguiled--
+ This jester seemed less ugly when he smiled.
+
+ Here, O my Gill, right deftly, in a trice
+ I've made him smile and made him do it--twice.
+ That 't was the Duke of course you've guessed at once
+ Since you, I know, we nothing of a dunce.
+ But, what should bring a duke in cap and bells?
+ Read on and mark, while he the reason tells.
+
+ Now, 'spite of dust and heat, his lute he strummed,
+ And snatches of a merry song he hummed,
+ The while askance full merrily he eyed
+ The dusty knave who plodded at his side.
+ A bony fellow, this, and long of limb,
+
+ His habit poor, his aspect swart and grim;
+ His belt to bear a long broad-sword did serve,
+ His eye was bold, his nose did fiercely curve
+ Down which he snorted oft and (what is worse)
+ Beneath his breath gave vent to many a curse.
+ Whereat the Duke, sly laughing, plucked lutestring
+ And thus, in voice melodious did sing:
+
+
+ "Sir Pertinax, why curse ye so?
+ Since thus in humble guise we go
+ We merry chances oft may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene."
+
+ "And chances woeful, lord, also!"
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ "To every fool that passeth by
+ These foolish bells shall testify
+ That very fool, forsooth, am I,
+ Good Pertinax of Shene!"
+
+ "And, lord, methinks they'll tell no lie!"
+ Growled Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Then spake the Knight in something of a pet,
+ "Par Dex, lord Duke--plague take it, how I sweat,
+ By Cock, messire, ye know I have small lust
+ Like hind or serf to tramp it i' the dust!
+ Per De, my lord, a parch-ed pea am I--
+ I'm all athirst! Athirst? I am so dry
+ My very bones do rattle to and fro
+ And jig about within me as I go!
+ Why tramp we thus, bereft of state and rank?
+ Why go ye, lord, like foolish mountebank?
+ And whither doth our madcap journey trend?
+ And wherefore? Why? And, prithee, to what end?"
+ Then quoth the Duke, "See yonder in the green
+ Doth run a cooling water-brook I ween,
+ Come, Pertinax, beneath yon shady trees,
+ And there whiles we do rest outstretched at ease
+ Thy 'wherefores' and thy 'whys' shall answered be,
+ And of our doings I will counsel thee."
+
+ So turned they from the hot and dusty road
+ Where, 'mid green shade, a rill soft-bubbling flowed,
+ A brook that leapt and laughed in roguish wise,
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax with scowling eyes
+ Did frown upon the rippling water clear,
+ And sware sad oaths because it was not beer;
+ Sighful he knelt beside this murmurous rill,
+ Bent steel-clad head and bravely drank his fill.
+ Then sitting down, quoth he: "By Og and Gog,
+ I'll drink no more--nor horse am I nor dog
+ To gulp down water--pest, I hate the stuff!"
+
+ "Ah!" laughed the Duke, "'tis plain hast had enough,
+ And since well filled with water thou dost lie
+ To answer thee thy questions fain am I.
+ First then--thou art in lowly guise bedight,
+ For that thou art my trusty, most-loved knight,
+ Who at my side in many a bloody fray,
+ With thy good sword hath smit grim Death away--"
+ "Lord," quoth the Knight, "what's done is past return,
+ 'Tis of our future doings I would learn."
+
+ "Aye," said the Duke, "list, Pertinax, and know
+ 'Tis on a pilgrimage of love we go:
+ Mayhap hast heard the beauty and the fame
+ Of fair Yolande, that young and peerless dame
+
+
+ "For whom so many noble lovers sigh
+ And with each other in the lists do vie?
+ Though much I've dreamed of sweet Yolanda's charms
+ My days have passed in wars and feats of arms,
+ For, Pertinax, this blemished face I bear,
+ Should fright, methinks, a lady young and fair.
+ And so it is that I have deemed it wiser
+ To hide it when I might 'neath casque and visor--"
+
+ Hereat Sir Pertinax smote hand to knee
+ And, frowning, shook his head. "Messire," said he,
+ "Thou art a man, and young, of noble race,
+ And, being duke, what matter for thy face?
+ Rank, wealth, estate--these be the things I trow
+ Can make the fairest woman tender grow.
+ Ride unto her in thy rich armour dight,
+ With archer, man-at-arms, and many a knight
+ To swell thy train with pomp and majesty,
+ That she, and all, thy might and rank may see;
+ So shall all folk thy worthiness acclaim,
+ And her maid's heart, methinks, shall do the same.
+ Thy blemished face shall matter not one jot;
+ To mount thy throne she'll think a happy lot.
+ So woo her thus--"
+
+ "So will I woo her not!"
+ Quoth Jocelyn, "For than I'd win her so,
+ Alone and loveless all my days I'd go.
+ Ha, Pertinax, 'spite all thy noble parts,
+ 'Tis sooth ye little know of women's hearts!"
+
+ "Women?" quoth Pertinax, and scratched his jaw,
+ "'Tis true of dogs and horses I know more,
+ And dogs do bite, and steeds betimes will balk,
+ And fairest women, so they say, will talk."
+
+
+
+ "And so dost thou, my Pertinax, and yet,
+ 'Spite all thy talk, my mind on this is set--
+ Thus, in all lowliness I'll e'en go to her
+ And 'neath this foolish motley I will woo her.
+ And if, despite this face, this humble guise,
+ I once may read love's message in her eyes,
+ Then Pertinax--by all the Saints, 'twill be
+ The hope of all poor lovers after me,
+ These foolish bells a deathless tale shall ring,
+ And of Love's triumph evermore shall sing.
+
+ "So, Pertinax, ne'er curse ye so
+ For that in lowly guise we go,
+ We many a merry chance may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene."
+ "And chances evil, lord, also!"
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Now on a sudden, from the thorny brake,
+ E'en as Sir Pertinax thus doleful spake,
+ Leapt lusty loons and ragged rascals four,
+ Rusty their mail, yet bright the swords they bore.
+
+ Up sprang Sir Pertinax with gleeful shout,
+ Plucked forth his blade and fiercely laid about.
+ "Ha, rogues! Ha, knaves! Most scurvy dogs!" he cried.
+ While point and edge right lustily he plied
+ And smote to earth the foremost of the crew,
+ Then, laughing, pell-mell leapt on other two.
+ The fourth rogue's thrust, Duke Joc'lyn blithely parried
+ Right featly with the quarter-staff he carried.
+ Then 'neath the fellow's guard did nimbly slip
+ And caught him in a cunning wrestler's grip.
+ Now did they reel and stagger to and fro,
+ And on the ling each other strove to throw;
+
+ Arm locked with arm they heaved, they strove and panted,
+ With mighty shoulders bowed and feet firm-planted.
+ So on the sward, with golden sunlight dappled,
+ In silence grim they tussled, fiercely grappled.
+ Thus then Duke Jocelyn wrestled joyously,
+ For this tall rogue a lusty man was he,
+ But, 'spite his tricks and all his cunning play,
+ He in the Duke had met his match this day,
+ As, with a sudden heave and mighty swing,
+ Duke Jocelyn hurled him backwards on the ling,
+ And there he breathless lay and sore amazed,
+ While on the Duke with wonderment he gazed:
+ "A Fool?" he cried. "Nay, certes fool, per De,
+ Ne'er saw I fool, a fool the like o' thee!"
+
+ But now, e'en as the Duke did breathless stand,
+ Up strode Sir Pertinax, long sword in hand:
+ "Messire," he growled, "my rogues have run away,
+ So, since you've felled this fellow, him I'll slay."
+
+ "Not so," the Duke, short-breathing, made reply,
+ "Methinks this rogue is too much man to die."
+
+ "How?" cried the Knight; "not slay a knave--a thief?
+ Such clemency is strange and past belief!
+ Mean ye to let the dog all scathless go?"
+
+ "Nay," said the Duke, square chin on fist, "not so,
+ For since the rogue is plainly in the wrong
+ The rogue shall win his freedom with a song,
+ And since forsooth a rogue ingrain is he,
+ So shall he sing a song of roguery.
+ Rise, roguish rogue, get thee thy wind and sing,
+ Pipe me thy best lest on a tree ye swing!"
+
+ Up to his feet the lusty outlaw sprang,
+ And thus, in clear melodious voice, he sang:
+
+ "I'll sing a song not over long,
+ A song of roguery.
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith, is he.
+ And we are rogues, and ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.
+
+ "As die we must and turn to dust,
+ Since each is Adam's son,
+ A rogue was he, so rogues are we,
+ And rascals every one.
+
+ "The Abbot sleek with visage meek,
+ With candle, book and bell,
+ Our souls may curse, we're none the worse,
+ Since he's a rogue as well.
+
+ "My lord aloft doth hang full oft
+ Poor rogues the like o' me,
+ But all men know where e'er he go
+ A greater rogue is he.
+
+ "The king abroad with knight and lord
+ Doth ride in majesty,
+ But strip him bare and then and there
+ A shivering rogue ye'll see,
+
+ "Sirs, if ye will my life to spill,
+ Then hang me on a tree,
+ Since rogue am I, a rogue I'll die,
+ A roguish death for me.
+
+ "But i' the wind the leaves shall find
+ Small voices for my dole,
+
+ "And when I'm dead sigh o'er my head
+ Prayers for my poor rogue soul;
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou 'rt a rogue,
+ And so in faith is he,
+ As we are rogues, so ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity."
+
+ The singing done, the Duke sat lost in thought,
+ What time Sir Pertinax did stamp and snort:
+ "Ha, by the Mass! Now, by the Holy Rood!
+ Ne'er heard I roguish rant so bold and lewd!
+ He should be whipped, hanged, quartered, flayed alive--"
+
+ "Then," quoth the Duke, "pay him gold pieces five,"
+ "How--pay a rogue?" the Knight did fierce retort.
+ "A ribald's rant--give good, gold pieces for't?
+ A plague! A pest! The knave should surely die--"
+ But here he met Duke Joc'lyn's fierce blue eye,
+ And silent fell and in his poke did dive,
+ And slowly counted thence gold pieces five,
+ Though still he muttered fiercely 'neath his breath,
+ Such baleful words as: "'S blood!" and "'S bones!" and "'S death!"
+
+ Then laughed the Duke and from the greenwood strode;
+ But scarce was he upon the dusty road,
+ Than came the rogue who, louting to his knee:
+ "O Fool! Sir Fool! Most noble Fool!" said he.
+ "Either no fool, or fool forsooth thou art,
+ That dareth thus to take an outlaw's part.
+ Yet, since this day my rogue's life ye did spare,
+ So now by oak, by ash, by thorn I swear--
+
+ "And mark, Sir Fool, and to my saying heed--
+ Shouldst e'er lack friends to aid thee in thy need
+ Come by this stream where stands a mighty oak,
+ Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning stroke,
+ Hid in this cleft a hunting-horn ye'll see,
+ Take then this horn and sound thereon notes three.
+ So shall ye find the greenwood shall repay
+ The roguish life ye spared a rogue this day."
+
+ So spake he; then, uprising from his knees,
+ Strode blithe away and vanished 'mid the trees.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax shook doleful head:
+ "There go our good gold pieces, lord!" he said.
+ "Would that yon rogue swung high upon a tree,
+ And in my poke our gold again might be.
+ Full much I marvel, lord, and fain would know
+ Wherefore and why unhanged didst let him go?"
+
+ Then answered the Duke singing on this wise:
+
+ "Good Pertinax, if on a tree
+ Yon rogue were swinging high
+ A deader rogue no man could see--
+ 'He's but a rogue!' says you to me,
+ 'But a living rogue!' says I.
+
+ "And since he now alive doth go
+ More honest he may die,
+ Yon rogue an honest man may grow,
+ If we but give him time, I trow,
+ Says I to you, says I."
+
+ At this, Sir Pertinax growled in his beard--
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: A beard? O father--beard will never do!
+ No proper knight a beard ever grew.'
+ No knight could really romantic be
+ Who wore a beard! So, father, to please me,
+ No beard; they are, I think, such scrubby things--
+
+ MYSELF: Yet they are worn, sometimes, by poets and kings.
+
+ GILL: But your knight--
+
+ MYSELF: Oh, all right,
+ My Gill, from your disparagement to save him,
+ I, like a barber, will proceed to shave him.
+
+ Sir Pertinax, then, stroked his smooth-shaved chin,
+ And thus to curse he softly did begin,
+ "Par Dex, my lord--"
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+
+ GILL: Your knight, dear father, seems to love to curse.
+
+ MYSELF: He does. A difficult matter, child, in verse--
+
+ GILL: Of verse I feel a little tired--
+
+ MYSELF: Why, if you think a change desired,
+ A change we'll have, for, truth to tell,
+ This rhyming bothers me as well.
+ So here awhile we'll sink to prose.
+ Now, are you ready? Then here goes!
+
+
+"Par Dex, my lord!" growled Sir Pertinax. "A malison on't, says I, saving
+thy lordly grace, yet a rogue is a rogue and, being rogue, should die right
+roguishly as is the custom and the law. For if, messire, if--per De and by
+Our Sweet Lady of Shene Chapel within the Wood, if, I say, in thy new and
+sudden-put-on attitude o' folly, thou wilt save alive all rogues soever,
+then by Saint Cuthbert his curse, by sweet Saint Benedict his blessed
+bones, by--"
+
+"Hold now, Pertinax," said the Duke, slipping his lute into leathern bag
+and slinging it behind wide shoulders, "list ye, Sir Knight of Shene, and
+mark this, to wit: If a rogue in roguery die then rogue is he forsooth;
+but, mark this again, if a rogue be spared his life he may perchance and
+peradventure forswear, that is, eschew or, vulgarly speaking, turn from his
+roguish ways, and die as honest as I, aye, or even--thou!"
+
+Here Sir Pertinax snorted as they strode on together, yet in a little they
+turned aside from the hot and dusty road and journeyed on beneath the trees
+that grew thereby.
+
+"By all the fiends, my lord, and speaking vulgarly in turn, this belly o'
+mine lacketh, these my bowels do yearn consumedly unto messes savoury and
+cates succulent--"
+
+Whereat the Duke, smiling merry-eyed, chanted roguishly:
+
+ "A haunch o' venison juicy from the spit now?"
+ "Aha!" groaned the Knight, "Lord, let us haste--"
+ "A larded capon to thee might seem fit now?"
+ "Saints!" sighed the Knight, "but for one little taste."
+ "Or, Pertinax, a pasty plump and deep--"
+ "Ha--pasty, by the Mass!" the Knight did cry.
+ "Or pickled tongue of neat, Sir Knight, or sheep--"
+ "Oh, for a horse! For wings wherewith to fly--"
+ "Or breast of swan--"
+
+"Stay! nay, my lord, ha' mercy!" groaned Sir Pertinax, wiping moist brow.
+"Picture no more toothsome dainties to my soul lest for desire I swoon and
+languish by the way. I pray thee, let us haste, sire, so may we reach fair
+Canalise ere sunset--yet stay! Hearken, messire, hear ye aught? Sure, afar
+the tocsin soundeth?"
+
+ Now hearkening thus, they both became aware
+ Of distant bells that throbbed upon the air,
+ A faint, insistent sound that rose and fell,
+ A clamour vague that ominous did swell.
+ As thus they stood, well hidden from the road,
+ Footsteps they heard of feet that briskly strode.
+ And, through the leaves, a small man they espied,
+ Who came apace, a great sword by his side.
+ Large bascinet upon his head he bore,
+ 'Neath which his face a scowl portentous wore;
+ While after toiled a stout but reverend friar
+ Who, scant of breath, profusely did perspire
+ And, thus perspiring, panted sad complaints
+ Thus--on the heat, his comrade and the Saints.
+
+ "O Bax, O Bax! Saint Cuthbert aid me now!
+ O Bax, see how to sweat thou'st made me now!
+ Thy speed abate! O sweet Saint Dominic!
+ Why pliest thou thy puny shanks so quick;
+ O day! O Bax! O hot, sulphurous day,
+ My flesh betwixt ye melteth fast away.
+ Come, sit ye, Bax, in shade of yon sweet tree,
+ And, sitting soft, I'll sagely counsel thee."
+
+ "Not so, in faith," the small man, scowling, said,
+ "What use for counsel since the cause be fled?
+ And since she's fled--Saints succour us!" he cried;
+ As 'mid the leaves all suddenly he spied
+ Sir Pertinax in his unlovely trim,
+ His rusty mail, his aspect swart and grim--
+ "Ha!" gasped the little man, "we are beset!"
+ And starting back, off fell his bascinet.
+ Whereat he fiercely did but scowl the more,
+
+
+ And strove amain his ponderous sword to draw.
+ "Hence, dog!" he cried, "lest, with my swashing blow,
+ I make thee food for carrion kite and crow."
+ But in swift hands Sir Pertinax fast caught him
+ And, bearing him on high, to Joc'lyn brought him,
+ Who, while the captive small strove vain aloft
+ Reproved him thus in accents sweet and soft:
+
+
+"Right puissant and potential sir, we do beseech thee check thy ferocity,
+quell now thy so great anger and swear not to give our flesh for fowls to
+tear, so shalt thou come down to earth and stand again upon thine own two
+legs. And thou, most reverend friar, invoke now thy bloody-minded comrade
+that he swear to harm us not!"
+
+The stout friar seated himself hard by beneath a tree, mopped moist brow,
+fetched his wind and smiled.
+
+"Sir Fool," said he, "I am thy security that thou and thy brawny gossip
+need quake and tremble nothing by reason of this Bax, our valiant reeve--he
+shall harm ye no whit." Here, meeting Jocelyn's eye, Sir Pertinax set
+down the small Reeve, who having taken up and put on his great bascinet,
+scowled, whereupon Duke Jocelyn questioned him full meek:
+
+"Good master Reeve, of your courtesy pray you tell us why yon bells do ring
+so wild alarm."
+
+
+ The small Reeve viewed him with disdainful eye;
+ Sniffed haughty nose and proudly made reply:
+ 'Our bells we ring and clamour make, because
+ We've lost our lady fair of Tissingors.
+ Our Duchess Benedicta hath this day
+ From all her worthy guardians stole away.
+ Thus we for her do inquisition make,
+ Nor, 'till she's found, may hope our rest to take,
+ And thus we cause such outcry as we may,
+ Since we lose not our Duchess ev'ry day.
+ So then we'd have ye speak us--aye or no,
+ Saw ye our errant lady this way go?
+ And, that ye may her know for whom we seek,
+ Her just description fully I will speak:
+ Her hair night-black, her eyes the self-same hue,
+ Her habit brown, unless 't were red or blue,
+ And if not blue why then mayhap 'tis green,
+ Since she by turns of all such hues is seen--"
+
+ "Stay, sir," quoth Jocelyn, "'tis plain to see
+ No maid but a chameleon is she,
+ For here we have her brown and green and blue,
+ And if not brown then rosy is her hue,
+ And, if not red, why then 'tis very plain
+ That brown she is or blue or green again.
+ Now fain, sir, would I ask and question whether
+ She e'er is seen these colours all together?
+
+ "O fain would I a lady spy,
+ By countryside or town,
+ Who may be seen all blue and green,
+ Unless she's red or brown."
+
+ But now, while fierce the little man did scowl,
+ The rosy Friar, sly-smiling 'neath his cowl,
+ His visage meek, spake thus in dulcet tone:
+ "Sir Fool, our Reeve is something mixed, I'll own,
+ Though he by divers colours is bemused,
+ Learn ye this truth, so shall he stand excused:
+ Our Duchess Benedicta, be it known,
+ Hath this day from her several guardians flown.
+ Ten worthy men her several guardians be,
+ Of whom the chief and worthiest ye see,
+ As first--myself, a friar of some report,
+ Well-known, methinks, in country, town and court.
+ Who as all men can unto all men speak,
+ Well read beside in Latin and in Greek,
+ A humble soul albeit goodly preacher,
+ One apt to learn and therefore learned teacher,
+ One who can laugh betimes, betimes can pray,
+ Who'll colic cure or on the bagpipe play.
+ Who'll sing--"
+
+ "Stay!" cried the Reeve. "Friar, what o'me?"
+ "Patience, O Bax, too soon I'll come to thee!
+ Who'll sing ye then blithe as a bird on bough--"
+ "Friar!" growled the Reeve, "the time for me is now!"
+ "So be it, then," the Friar did gently say,
+ "I'll speak of thee as truly as I may:
+ Here then behold our port-reeve, Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who, save for reason, naught in reason lacks,
+ Who, though he small and puny seems to shew,
+ In speech he is Goliath-like, I trow,
+ Chief Councillor of Tissingors is he,
+ And of the council second but--to me.
+ For with the townsfolk first of all come I--"
+
+ REEVE: Since thy fat finger is in every pie--
+ "Saving your reverend grace," Duke Joc'lyn said,
+ "What of this maid that turneth green and red?"
+
+ REEVE: Fool, then learn this, ere that our lord duke died,
+ Ten guardians for his child he did provide,
+ The Friar and I, with men of lesser fame,
+ Co-guardians are of this right puissant dame.
+
+ JOCELYN: Beseech ye, sir, now tell us an' ye may,
+ Why hath thy youthful Duchess run away?
+
+"Fair Fool," quoth the Friar, fanning himself with a frond of bracken,
+"'tis a hot day, a day reminiscent of the ultimate fate of graceless
+sinners, and I am like the day and languish for breath, yet, to thy so
+pertinent question I will, straightly and in few words, pronounce and
+answer thee, as followeth: Our Lady Benedicta hath run away firstly,
+brethren, for that being formed woman after Nature's goodly plan she hath
+the wherewithal to walk, to leap, to skip or eke to run, as viz.: item and
+to wit--legs. Secondly, inquisitorial brethren, she ran for an excellent
+good reason--as observe--there was none to let or stay her. And thirdly,
+gentle and eager hearers, she did flit or fly, leave, vacate, or depart
+our goodly town of Tissingors for that she had--mark me--no mind to stay,
+remain or abide therein. And this for the following express, rare and most
+curious reason as--mark now--in a word--"
+
+"Hold--hold, Friar John!" exclaimed the Reeve; "here sit ye here
+a-sermonising, venting words a-many what time our vanished Duchess fleeth.
+Knew I not the contrary I should say thou didst countenance her flight and
+spent thyself in wordy-wind wherewith to aid her!"
+
+Now here, chancing to meet Duke Jocelyn's shrewd gaze, Friar John slowly
+and ponderously winked one round, bright eye.
+
+Quoth he:
+
+ "Hark to our valiant port-reeve Greg'ry Bax
+ Who, save for reason, nought of reason lacks!"
+"Howbeit," fumed the Reeve, stamping in the dust, "here sit ye at thy
+full-bodied ease, fanning flies and animadverting--"
+
+"Animadverting!" nodded Friar John. "A good word, Reeve, a fair, sweet
+word; in verity a word full-bodied as I, wherefore it liketh me well. So
+sit I here animadverting whiles thou kicketh up a dust in fashion foolish
+and un-reeve-like."
+
+"A plague o' words!" cried the Reeve. "A pest o' wind! Enough--enough,
+contain thy prolixities and rodomontade and let me to the point explain--"
+
+"Aha!" quoth the Friar. "Good sooth, here's a noble word! A word round
+i' the mouth, rolling upon the tongue. Ha, Reeve, I give thee joy of
+rodomontade!"
+
+"Thus then," continued the Reeve, "I will, with use of no verbiage
+circumlocutory, explain."
+
+"Ho-oho!" cried Friar John, rubbing plump hands ecstatic. "Good Bax, ne'er
+have I heard thee to so great advantage--verbiage circumlocutory--and
+thou--thou such small man to boot! O most excellent, puny Reeve!"
+
+Here the little man turned his back upon the Friar and continued hastily
+thus:
+
+ "A lord there is, a lord of lofty pride,
+ Who for our lady oft hath sued and sighed--"
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Whom she as oft hath scornfully denied!
+
+ THE REEVE: A mighty lord who seeketh her to wife--
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Though he, 'tis said, doth lead most evil life!
+ THE REEVE: To which fair lord our wilful maid we'd wed--
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Since this fair lord the council holds in dread!
+
+ THE REEVE: But she, defying us, this very day
+ Like wicked thief hath stole herself away.
+ Thus this poor lord such deeps of gloom is in
+ Vows he'll not wash, nor shave again his chin
+ Till found is she: He groaneth, sheddeth tears--
+
+ THE FRIAR: And swears her guardians ten shall lose their ears!
+
+ THE REEVE: Wherefore are we in mighty perturbation,
+ Amazed, distraught and filled with consternation.
+ Thus do our bells ring out their wild alarms,
+ Our civic bands do muster under arms;
+ Drums shall be drummed the countryside around,
+ Until our truant Duchess we have found,
+ And we have wed this most elusive dame
+ Unto Sir Agramore of Biename.
+
+ THE FRIAR: And yield her thus to woes and bitter shame!
+
+ THE REEVE: So speak me, fellows; as ye came this way
+ Saw ye aught of this wilful, errant may?
+
+ Answered JOCELYN: "Neither to-day nor any other day."
+
+"Why then," fumed the Reeve, "here have we been at great expense o' breath
+and time and all to no purpose. Come, Friar, beseech thee, let us haste to
+begone."
+
+ So Friar John got slowly to his feet
+ Complaining loud of hurry and of heat,
+ But paused behind the hasteful Reeve to linger,
+ And to plump nose he slyly laid plump finger.
+
+Now stood Sir Pertinax thoughtful, chin on fist, insomuch that Jocelyn,
+thrumming his lute, questioned him:
+
+ "Good Pertinax, how now
+ What pond'rest thou
+ With furrowed brow?
+ Thy care, Sir Knight, avow!"
+
+Saith Pertinax: "I meditate the way wondrous of woman, the frowardness of
+creatures feminine. For mark me, sir, here is one hath guardians ten, yet
+despite them she is fled away and they ten!"
+
+"Why truly, Pertinax, they are ten, so is she fled."
+
+"Aye, but if they be ten that ward her and she one that would flee, how
+shall this one flee these ten?"
+
+"For that they be ten."
+
+"Nay, lord, here be twenty eyes to watch one young maid and twenty legs to
+pursue the same, yet doth she evade them one and all, and here's the wonder
+on't--she's but one maid."
+
+"Nay, there's the reason on't, Pertinax--she is a maid."
+
+"The which is great matter for wonder, lord!"
+
+"Spoke like a very Pertinax, my Pertinax, for here's no wonder at all. For
+perceive, the lady is young, her wardens ten grave seniors, worthy wights
+--solemn, sober and sedate, Pertinax, wise and wearisome, grave yet
+garrulous, and therefore they suffice not."
+
+"Aye, prithee and wherefore not?"
+
+"For their divers worthy attributes and because they be--ten. Now had these
+ten been one and this one a very man--_the_ man--here had been no running
+away on part of the lady, I 'll warrant me?"
+
+"Stay, my lord," said Pertinax, in deep perplexity, "how judge ye so--and
+wherefore--why and by what manner o' reasoning?"
+
+"Ha, Pertinax!" laughed the Duke, "my lovely, loveless numskull!" So
+saying, he kicked the good Knight full joyously and so they trudged on
+again.
+
+ Till presently, beyond the green of trees,
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise,
+ A city fair, couched on a gentle height,
+ With walls embattled and strong towers bedight.
+ Now seeing that the sun was getting low,
+ Our travellers at quicker pace did go.
+ Thus as in haste near to the gate they came,
+ Before them limped a bent and hag-like dame,
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It beak-like wished to peck sharp chin below.
+ Humbly she crept in cloak all torn and rent,
+ And o'er a staff her tottering limbs were bent.
+ So came she to the gate, then cried in fear,
+ And started back from sudden-levelled spear;
+ For 'neath the gate lounged lusty fellows three
+ Who seldom spake yet spat right frequently.
+
+ "Kind sirs, good sirs," the ancient dame did cry,
+ "In mercy's name I pray ye let me by--"
+ But, as she spoke, a black-jowled fellow laughed,
+ And, spitting, tripped her with out-thrust pike-shaft,
+
+
+ That down she fell and wailed most piteously,
+ Whereat the brawny fellows laughed all three.
+ "Ha, witch!" they cried, as thus she helpless lay,
+ "Shalt know the fire and roasted be one day!"
+ Now as the aged creature wailed and wept,
+ Forth to her side Duke Joc'lyn lightly stepped,
+ With quarter-staff a-twirl he blithely came.
+ Quoth he: "Messires, harm not this ancient dame,
+ Bethink ye how e'en old and weak as she,
+ Your wives and mothers all must one day be.
+ So here then lies your mother, and 't were meeter
+ As ye are sons that as sons ye entreat her.
+ Come, let her by and, fool-like to requite ye,
+ With merry jape and quip I will delight ye,
+ Or with sweet song I 'll charm those ass's ears,
+ And melt, belike, those bullish hearts to tears--"
+
+ Now the chief warder, big and black of jowl,
+ Upon the Duke most scurvily did scowl.
+ "How now," quoth he, "we want no fool's-heads here--"
+ "Sooth," laughed the Duke, "you're fools enow 't is clear,
+ Yet there be fools and fools, ye must allow,
+ Gay fools as I and surly fools--as thou."
+
+ "Ha, look 'ee, Fool, Black Lewin e'en am I,
+ And, by my head, an ill man to defy.
+ Now, motley rogue, wilt call me fool?" he roared,
+ And roaring fierce, clapped hairy fist on sword.
+
+ "Aye, that will I," Duke Joc'lyn soft replied,
+ And black-avised, swart, knavish rogue beside."
+
+ But now, while thus our ducal jester spoke,
+ Black Lewin sprang and fetched him such a stroke
+
+
+ That Jocelyn saw flash before his eyes,
+ More stars that e'er he'd noticed in the skies.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax did gaping stare,
+ Then ground his teeth and mighty oaths did swear,
+ And in an instant bared his trusty blade,
+ But then the Duke his fiery onslaught stayed.
+
+ "Ha!" cried the Knight, "and wilt thou smitten be
+ By such base knave, such filthy rogue as he?"
+
+ "Nay," smiled the Duke, "stand back and watch, good brother,
+ A Rogue and Fool at buffets with each other."
+
+ And speaking thus, he leapt on Black Lewin,
+ And smote him twice full hard upon the chin,
+ Two goodly blows upon that big, black jowl,
+ Whereat Black Lewin lustily did howl
+ And falling back, his polished bascinet
+ With ringing clash the cold, hard flagstones met.
+ Whereat his fellows, shouting fierce alarms,
+ Incontinent betook them to their arms;
+ And thus it seemed a fight there must have been
+ But that a horseman sudden spurred between--
+ A blue-eyed youth with yellow, curling hair,
+ Of slender shape, of face and feature fair,
+ A dainty knight was he in very truth,
+ A blue-eyed, merry, laughter-loving youth.
+
+ "Ha, knaves, what do ye with the Fool?" lisped he,
+ "Wilt strike a motley, dogs--a Fool? Let be!
+ Though faith,'t would seem, Sir Fool, thou hast a fist
+ That surly Lewin to his dole hath kissed.
+ If it can strum thy lute but half as well,
+ Then gestours all methinks thou should'st excel--
+
+
+ Ye rogues, pass Folly in, no man shall say
+ That from our town we folly turned away.
+ Come, follow, Fool, into the market-square,
+ And give us earnest of thy foolish ware."
+
+Now it was market day, and within the goodly square were people come from
+near and far, a notable concourse, country folk and folk of the town,
+farmers and merchants, rustic maids, fair ladies, knights and esquires on
+horseback or a-foot, but who, hearing the jingle of the Duke's tinkling
+bells, seeing his flaunting cock's-comb, with one accord gathered to him
+from every quarter:
+
+ For when this long-legged gestour they espied,
+ They, laughing, hemmed him in on every side,
+ And, "See, a Fool! A Fool! The Fool must sing,"
+ And "Fool! A Fool!" upon the air did ring,
+ Wherefore the Duke betook him to his lute,
+ And strummed until the chattering crowd was mute.
+ Then while all folk did hold their peace to hear,
+ In golden voice he sang, full rich and clear:
+
+ "'A fool! A fool!' ye cry,
+ A fool forsooth am I.
+ But tell me, wise ones, if ye can,
+ Where shall ye find a happy man?
+ Lived there one since the world began?
+ Come, answer ye
+ To me!
+
+ "'What of the king?' says you.
+ Says I to you--'Go to!
+ A king despite his crown and throne,
+ Hath divers troubles all his own.
+ Such woes, methinks, as are unknown
+ To such as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ "'Ha, then--the rich!' ye cry,
+ 'Not so in truth,' says I.
+ 'The rich man's gold is load of care,
+ That day and night he needs must bear;
+ Less care he'd know if poor he were,
+ As poor as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ "For, sirs, as I do guess
+ This thing called 'Happiness'
+ Man leaveth with his youth behind;
+ So keep ye all a youthful mind,
+ Thus happiness ye all shall find
+ If wit have ye,
+ Like me!
+
+ "O list ye, great and small,
+ Proud knight, free man and thrall,
+ True happiness, since life began,
+ The birthright is of every man;
+ Seize then your birthright if ye can,
+ Since men are ye--
+ Like me!
+
+ "Thus I forsooth, a Fool,
+ Do now ye wise ones school;
+ Since of my folly, full and free,
+ I wisely thus admonish ye,
+ Be wise--or eke fools learn to be
+ In verity--
+ Like me!"
+
+Now when the song was ended some there were who laughed and some looked
+grave, some talked amain and some wagged solemn heads, while many a good
+coin rang heartily at Duke Jocelyn's feet; smiling, he bade Sir Pertinax
+take them up, joying to see the proud Knight stooping thus to pouch the
+money like any beggar. But now, when he would fain have gone his way into
+the town, the people would by no means suffer it and clamoured amain on
+all sides, insistent for more; wherefore, lifting his scarred face to the
+sunset sky, Duke Jocelyn sang as here followeth:
+
+ "When man is born he doth begin
+ With right good will, to daily sin,
+ And little careth.
+ But when his grave he thinketh near,
+ Then grave he groweth in his fear
+ And sin forsweareth.
+
+ "This life that man doth cherish so,
+ Is wondrous frail and quick to go,
+ Nor will it stay.
+ Yet where's the man that will not give
+ All that he hath so he might live
+ Another day.
+
+ "Fain would I know the reason why
+ All men so fearful are to die
+ And upward go?
+ Since Death all woes and ills doth end,
+ Sure Death, methinks, should be a friend,
+ Not hated foe.
+
+ "So when Death come, as come he must,
+ Grieve not that we this sorry dust
+ Do leave behind.
+ For when this fleeting life be run,
+
+
+ By Death we all of us--each one,
+ True life shall find."
+
+ Now while he sang melodious and clear
+ Amid the throng that closer pressed to hear,
+ Duke Joc'lyn of a sudden did espy
+ The "wherefore" of his coming and the "why."
+ Yolande herself he, singing, did behold,
+ Her eyes, red lips, her hair of ruddy gold;
+ And all her warm and glowing loveliness
+ Did sudden thus his raptured vision bless;
+ While she, in gracious ease, her horse did sit
+ That pawed round hoof and champed upon his bit,
+ Arching proud neck as if indeed he were
+ Proud of the lovely burden he did bear.
+ As Joc'lyn gazed upon her thus, she seemed
+ A thousand times more fair than he had dreamed.
+ Now while he sang, she viewed him, gentle-eyed,
+ And quite forgot the gallant by her side,
+ A tall, dark-featured, comely lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ Who, when the Duke made of his song an end
+ Did from his saddle o'er Yolanda bend.
+ With eyes on her warm beauty he stooped near
+ To touch white hand and whisper in her ear;
+ Whereat she laughed and frowned with cheek flushed red
+ Then, frowning still, she turned her horse's head,
+ And rode away with dame and squire and knight,
+ Till lost she was to Joc'lyn's ravished sight.
+
+"Ha, lord!" quoth Sir Pertinax, as they came within a quiet thoroughfare,
+"this lady is grown more fair since last we saw her Queen of Beauty at
+Melloc joust, concerning whom Fame, in troth, doth breed a just report for
+once. But, messire, didst mark him beside her--with touch o' hand, lord,
+whispers i' the ear--didst mark this wolf, this Seneschal, this thrice
+accurst Sir Gui?"
+
+"Aye, forsooth," answered the Duke, "but thou'rt an hungered, methinks?"
+
+"To touch her hand, lord--aha! To whisper in her ear, lord--oho! A right
+puissant lord, Seneschal of Raddemore, Lord of Thorn and Knight of Ells! A
+lord of puissance and power potential."
+
+"And thou, my Pertinax, art but a hungry Knight, that trampeth with a
+hungry Fool, wherefore let us forthwith--"
+
+"Aye, but mark me, lord, if this puissant lord with pomp and high estate
+doth woo the lady--"
+
+"So then, my Pertinax, will I woo this lady also."
+
+"How, in this thy foolish guise?"
+
+"Aye, forsooth."
+
+"Why, then, thou art like to be whipped for froward Fool and I for ragged
+rogue, and this our adventure brought to ill and woeful end--so here now is
+folly, lord, indeed!"
+
+"Aye, forsooth!" smiled the Duke,
+
+ "Whereto these bells give heed.
+ But come, amend thy speed,
+ Methinks thy fasting-need
+ These gloomy vapours breed.
+ Thy inner man doth plead
+ Good beef with ale or mead
+ Wherein, thou Fool decreed,
+ I am right well agreed
+ 'T were goodly thing to feed,
+ Nor will I thee impede,
+ So follow Folly's lead
+ And food-wards we'll proceed."
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 2
+
+ How Pertinax mine host's large ears did wring,
+ And Jocelyn of these same ears did sing.
+
+
+Now the town was full, and every inn a-throng with company--lords, both
+great and small, knights and esquires and their several followings, as
+archers, men-at-arms, and the like, all thither come from far and near
+to joust at the great tournament soon to be, to honour the birthday of
+Benedicta, Duchess of Tissingors, Ambremont, and divers other fair cities,
+towns and villages. Thus our travellers sought lodgment in vain, whereat
+Sir Pertinax cursed beneath his breath, and Duke Jocelyn hummed, as was
+each his wont and custom; and ever the grim Knight's anger grew.
+
+ Until, at last, an humble inn they saw--
+ A sorry place, with bush above the door.
+ This evil place they straightway entered in,
+ Where riot reigned, the wild, unlovely din
+ Of archers, men-at-arms, and rogues yet worse,
+ Who drank and sang, whiles some did fight and curse.
+ An evil place indeed, a lawless crew,
+ And landlord, like his inn, looked evil too:
+ Small was his nose, small were his pig-like eyes,
+ But ears had he of most prodigious size,
+ A brawny rogue, thick-jowled and beetle-browed,
+ Who, spying out our strangers 'mid the crowd,
+
+ Beholding them in humble, mean array,
+ With gestures fierce did order them away.
+ "Nay," quoth Sir Pertinax, "here will we bide,
+ Here will we eat and drink and sleep beside.
+ Go, bring us beef, dost hear? And therewith mead,
+ And, when we've ate, good beds and clean we 'll need."
+ "Ho!" cried the host. "Naught unto ye I'll bring
+ Until yon Fool shall caper first and sing!"
+ Said Jocelyn: "I'll sing when I have fed!"
+ "And then," quoth Pertinax, "we will to bed!"
+ "And wilt thou so?" the surly host replied;
+ "No beds for likes o' ye do I provide.
+ An' ye will sleep, knave, to the stable go,
+ The straw is good enough for ye, I trow."
+
+ "Ha!" roared Sir Pertinax. "A stable? Straw?
+ This to me, thou filthy clapper-claw,
+ Thou fly-blown cod's-head, thou pestiferous thing!"
+ And, roaring, on the brawny host did spring;
+
+ By his large ears Sir Pertinax did take him,
+ And to and fro, and up and down, did shake him;
+ He shook him quick and slow, from side to side,
+ While loud for aid the shaken landlord cried.
+ Whereat the vicious crowd, in sudden wrath,
+ Shouted and cursed and plucked their daggers forth.
+ But, ere to harm our bold Knight they were able,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lightly sprang on massy table;
+ Cock's-comb a-flaunt and silver bells a-ring,
+ He laughing stood and gaily plucked lute-string,
+ And cut an antic with such merry grace
+ That angry shouts to laughter loud gave place.
+
+ Thereafter he sang as followeth:
+
+ "Bold bawcocks, brave, bibulous, babbling boys,
+ Tall tosspots, come, temper this tumult and noise;
+ So shall I sing sweetly such songs as shall sure
+ Constrain carking care and contumacy cure.
+ Thus, therefore--"
+
+But here the surly landlord raised much clamour and outcry, whiles he
+touched and caressed his great ears with rare gentleness.
+
+"Oho, my yeres!" roared he. "My yeres do be in woeful estate. Oho, what o'
+yon fierce-fingered rogue, good fellows, what o' yon knave--'a did twist my
+yeres plaguily and wring 'em roguishly, 'a did! Shall 'a not be beaten and
+drubbed out into the kennel, ha? What o' poor Nykins' yeres, says I--my
+yeres, oho!"
+
+"Thine ears, unsavoury scullion," laughed Jocelyn; "thine ears, forsooth?
+Hark ye, of thy so great, so fair, so fine ears I'll incontinent make a
+song. List ye, one and all, so shall all here now hear my song of ears!"
+Forthwith Duke Jocelyn struck his lute and sang:
+
+ "Thine ears, in sooth, are long ears,
+ Stout ears, in truth, and strong ears,
+ Full ears, I trow, and fair ears,
+ Round ears also and rare ears.
+ So here's an ear that all eyes here
+ Shall see no beauty in, 'tis clear.
+ For these o' thine be such ears,
+ Large, loose, and over-much ears,
+ Ears that do make fingers itch,
+ Ears to twist and ears to twitch.
+
+
+ If thine ears had gone unseen,
+ Pulled forsooth they had not been;
+ Yet, since pulled indeed they were,
+ Thine ears plain the blame must bear.
+ So of thine ears no more complain,
+ Lest that thine ears be pulled again.
+ So hide thine ears as best ye may,
+ Of which same ears, to end, I say
+ Thine ears indeed be like my song,
+ Of none account, yet over long!"
+
+Now hereupon was huge laughter and merriment, insomuch that the
+thick-jowled landlord betook himself otherwhere, and all men thronged upon
+our jester, vociferous for more.
+
+"Aye, but, bold tosspots," laughed Jocelyn, "how now, sit ye without wine
+in very truth?"
+
+"Not so, good Fool," they cried. "Here be wine a-plenty for us and for
+thee!"
+
+"Go to, tall topers," quoth the Duke, "ye are witless, in faith, for there
+is no man here but is without wine, as in song will I shew--mark now:
+
+ "'Tis plain that ye are wine without,
+ Since wine's within ye, topers stout.
+ Without your wine, ye whineful show,
+ Thus wine-full, wine without ye go.
+ Being then without your wine, 'tis true,
+ Wine-less, ye still are wine-full too.
+ But, mark! As thus ye wine-full sit,
+ Since wine's within, out goeth wit.
+ Thus, truth to tell, tall topers stout,
+ Both wine and wit ye go without!"
+
+By such tricks of rhyme, jugglery of words, and the like, Duke Jocelyn won
+this fierce company to great good humour and delight; insomuch that divers
+of these roysterers pressed wine upon him and money galore. But, the hour
+growing late, he contrived at last to steal away with Sir Pertinax, which
+last, having fed copiously, now yawned consumedly, eager for bed. Howbeit,
+despite the Knight's fierce threats, they found no bed was to be had in
+all the inn, and so, perforce, betook them at last to the stable.
+
+ There, while our Knight cursed softly, though full deep,
+ Soon in the straw our Duke fell fast asleep.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, dear, I greatly fear
+ You 'll never be a poet!
+ MYSELF: Don't be too hard upon the bard,
+ I know it, girl, I know it!
+ These last two lines, I quite agree,
+ Might easily much better be.
+ Though, on the whole, I think my verse,
+ When all is said, might be much worse.
+ GILL: Worse, father? Yes, perhaps you're right,
+ Upon the whole--perhaps, it might.
+ MYSELF: But hark now, miss! Attend to this!
+ Poetic flights I do not fly;
+ When I begin, like poor Lobkyn,
+ I merely rhyme and versify.
+ Since my shortcomings I avow,
+ The story now, you must allow,
+ Trips lightly and in happy vein?
+ GILL: O, yes, father, though it is rather
+ Like some parts of your "Beltane."
+ MYSELF: How, child! Dare you accuse your sire
+ Of plagiary--that sin most dire?
+ And if I do, small blame there lies;
+ It is myself I plagiarise.
+
+ GILL: Why, yes, of course! And, as you know.
+ I always loved your "Beltane" so.
+
+ MYSELF: But don't you like the "geste" I'm writing?
+
+ GILL: Of course! It's getting most exciting,
+ In spite of all the rhymes and stuff--
+
+ MYSELF: Stuff?
+ Enough!
+ My daughter, you're so sweetly frank.
+ Henceforth my verses shall be blank.
+ No other rhyme I'll rhyme for you
+ Till you politely beg me to.
+ Now then, your blank-verse doom you know,
+ Hey, presto, and away we go!
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 3
+
+ Tell'th how Duke Jocelyn of love did sing,
+ And haughty knight in lily-pool did fling.
+
+
+ Upon a morn, when dewy flowers fresh-waked
+ Filled the glad air with perfume languorous,
+ And piping birds a pretty tumult made,
+ Thrilling the day with blended ecstasy;
+ When dew in grass did light a thousand fires,
+ And gemmed the green in flashing bravery--
+ Forth of her bower the fair Yolanda came,
+ Fresh as the morn and, like the morning, young,
+ Who, as she breathed the soft and fragrant air,
+ Felt her white flesh a-thrill with joyous life,
+ And heart that leapt responsive to the joy.
+ Vivid with life she trod the flowery ways,
+ Dreaming awhile of love and love and love;
+ Unknowing all of eyes that watched unseen,
+ Viewing her body's gracious loveliness:
+ Her scarlet mouth, her deep and dreamful eyes,
+ The glowing splendour of her sun-kissed hair,
+ Which in thick braids o'er rounded bosom fell
+ Past slender waist by jewelled girdle bound.
+
+ So stood Duke Jocelyn amid the leaves,
+ And marked how, as she walked, her silken gown
+ Did cling her round in soft embrace, as though
+ Itself had sense and wit enough to love her.
+ Entranced he stood, bound by her beauty's spell,
+ Whereby it seemed he did in her behold
+ The beauty of all fair and beauteous things.
+
+
+ Now leaned she o'er a pool where lilies pale
+ Oped their shy beauties to the gladsome day,
+ Yet in their beauty none of them so fair
+ As that fair face the swooning waters held.
+ And as, glad-eyed, she viewed her loveliness,
+ She fell to singing, soft and low and sweet,
+ Clear and full-throated as a piping merle,
+ And this the manner of her singing was:
+
+ "What is love? Ah, who shall say?
+ Flower to languish in a day,
+ Bird on wing that will away.
+ Love, I do defy thee!
+
+ "What is love? A toy so vain
+ 'T is but found to lose again,
+ Painful sweet and sweetest pain;
+ Ah, love, come not nigh me.
+
+ "But, love, an thou com'st to me,
+ Wert thou as I'd have thee be,
+ Welcome sweet I'd make for thee,
+ And weary of thee never.
+
+ "If with thy heart thou could'st endure,
+ If thou wert strong and thou wert sure,
+ A master now, and now a wooer,
+ Thy slave I'd be for ever."
+
+ Thus sang she sweet beside the lily-pool,
+ Unknowing any might her singing hear,
+ When rose another voice, so rich, so full
+ As thrilled her into rapt and pleasing wonder;
+ And as she hearkened to these deep-sung words,
+ She flushed anon and dimpled to a smile:
+
+ "What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Bird of joy to sing alway,
+ Deep in the heart of me.
+
+ "What is love? A joyous pain
+ That I ne'er may lose again,
+ Since for ever I am fain
+ To think and dream of thee."
+
+ Now hasted she to part the leafy screen,
+ And one in motley habit thus beheld.
+ But when 'neath flaunting cock's-comb she did mark
+ His blemished face, she backward from him drew
+ And caught her breath, and yet upon him gazed
+ 'Neath wrinkled brow, the while Duke Jocelyn
+ Read the expected horror in her eyes:
+ Wherefore he bowed his head upon his breast
+ And plucked at belt with sudden, nervous hand
+ As, cold and proud and high, she questioned him:
+ "What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show
+ A visage that might shame the gladsome day?"
+
+ Whereto he answered, low and humble-wise:
+ "A Fool! The very fool of fools am I--
+ A Fool that fain would pluck the sun from heaven."
+
+ "Begone!" she sighed. "Thy look doth make me cold,
+ E'en as I stand thus i' the kindly sun.
+ Yet, an thou 'rt poor as thy mean habit speaks thee,
+ Take first this dole for tender Jesu's sake."
+
+ Then answered Jocelyn on lowly knee:
+ "For thy sweet bounty I do thank thee well,
+ But, in good sooth, so great a fool am I,
+ 'Stead of thy gold I rather would possess
+
+ Yon happy flower that in thy bosom bloometh.
+ Give me but this and richer fool am I
+ Than any knight-like fool that coucheth lance--
+ Greater I than any lord soever,
+ Aye--e'en Duke Jocelyn of Brocelaunde."
+
+ Smiled now Yolande with rosy lip up-curving,
+ While in soft cheek a roguish dimple played.
+ Quoth she: "Duke Jocelyn, I've heard it said,
+ Is great and rich, a mighty man-at-arms,
+ And thou but sorry Fool in mean array,
+ Yet"--from white fingers she let fall the flower--
+ "Be thou, Fool, greater than this mighty Duke!
+ And now, since mighty Fool and rich I've made thee,
+ In quittance I would win of thee a song."
+
+ Now sat Yolande, white chin on dimpled fist,
+ Viewing him o'er with cruel, maiden-eyes,
+ So swift to heed each outward mark and blemish
+ (Since maids be apt to sly disparagement,
+ And scorn of all that seems un-beautiful)
+ While he did lean him by the marble rim,
+ His wistful gaze down-bent upon the pool,
+ Feeling her look and knowing while she looked:
+ What time he touched his lute with fingers skilled,
+ And so fell singing, wonder-low and sweet:
+
+ "Though foul and harsh of face am I,
+ Lady fair--O lady!
+ Fair thoughts within my heart may lie,
+ As flowers that bloom unseen to die,
+ Lady fair--O lady!
+
+ "Though this my hateful face may fright thee,
+ Lady fair--O list!
+ My folly mayhap shall delight thee,
+ A song of fools I will recite thee,
+ Lady fair--O list!"
+
+ Herewith he sighed amain, but smiled anon,
+ And fell anon to blither, louder note:
+
+ "Sing hey, Folly--Folly ho,
+ And here's a song of Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun,
+ Will gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.
+
+ "And Fool, forsooth, a Fool am I,
+ Well learned in foolish lore:
+ For I can sing ye, laugh or sigh:
+ Can any man do more?
+ Hey, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ 'Gainst sadness bar the door.
+
+ "A Fool am I, yet by fair leave,
+ Poor Fools have hearts to feel.
+ Poor Fools, like other fools, may grieve
+ If they their woes conceal.
+ Hither, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ All Fools to Folly kneel.
+
+ "What though a Fool be melancholy,
+ Sick, sick at heart--heigho!
+ Pain must he hide 'neath laughing Folly,
+ What Fool should heed his woe!
+ Hither, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Fool must unpitied go.
+
+ "E'en though a Fool should fondly woo,
+ E'en though his love be high,
+ Poor Folly's fool must wear the rue,
+ Proud love doth pass him by.
+ Heigho, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Poor Fool may love--and die.
+
+ "Though Wisdom should in motley go,
+ And fools the wise man ape;
+ Who is there that shall Wisdom know
+ Beneath a 'scalloped cape?
+ Heigho, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Life is but sorry jape.
+
+ "So, hey, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ And here's a song o' Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun
+ Do gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy."
+
+ The singing done, she viewed him kinder-eyed,
+ Till eyes met eyes--when she did pout and frown,
+ And chid him that his song was something sad,
+ And vowed so strange a Fool was never seen.
+ Then did she question him in idle wise
+ As, who he was and whence he came and why?
+ Whereto the Duke--
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ Dear father, if you're in the vein,
+ I'd like a little rhyme again;
+ For blank verse is so hard to read,
+ And yours is very blank indeed!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ Girl, when blank verse I write for thee,
+ I write it blank as blank can be.
+ Stay, I'll declare (no poet franker)
+ No blank verse, Gill, was ever blanker.
+ But:
+ Since, with your sex's sweet inconstancy,
+ Rhymes now you wish, rhymes now I'll
+ rhyme for thee:
+ As thus, my dear--
+ Give ear:
+
+Whereto the Duke did instant make reply:
+
+ "Sweet lady, since you question me,
+ Full blithely I will answer thee;
+ And, since you fain would merry be,
+ I'll sing and rhyme it merrily:
+
+ "Since Mirth's my trade and follies fond,
+ Methinks a fair name were Joconde;
+ And for thy sake
+ I travail make
+ Through briar and brake,
+ O'er fen and lake,
+ The Southward March beyond.
+
+ "For I an embassage do bear,
+ Now unto thee, Yolande the fair,
+ Which embassy,
+ Now unto thee,
+ Right soothfully,
+ And truthfully,
+ Most full, most free,
+ Explicit I 'll declare.
+
+ "Thus: videlicit and to wit,
+ Sith now thou art to wedlock fit--
+ Both day and night
+ In dark, in light
+ A worthy knight,
+ A lord of might,
+ In his own right,
+ Duke Joc'lyn hight
+ To thine his heart would knit.
+
+ "But, since the Duke may not come to thee,
+ I, in his stead, will humbly sue thee;
+ His love each day
+ I will portray
+ As best I may;
+ I'll sue, I'll pray,
+ I'll sing, I'll play,
+ Now grave, now gay,
+ And in this way,
+ I for the Duke will woo thee."
+
+ Now, fair Yolanda gazed with wide-oped eyes,
+ And checked sweet breath for wonder and surprise;
+ Then laughed full blithe and yet, anon, did frown,
+ And with slim fingers plucked at purfled gown:
+
+ "And is it thou--a sorry Fool," she cried.
+ "Art sent to win this mighty Duke a bride?"
+
+ "E'en so!" quoth he. "Whereof I token bring;
+ Behold, fair maid, Duke Joc'lyn's signet ring."
+ "Heaven's love!" she cried. "And can it truly be
+ The Duke doth send a mountebank like thee,
+ A Fool that hath nor likelihood nor grace
+ From worn-out shoon unto thy blemished face--
+ A face so scarred--so hateful that meseems
+ At night 't will haunt and fright me with ill dreams;
+ A slave so base--"
+
+ "E'en so!" Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ And his marred visage 'neath his hood did hide.
+ "But, though my motley hath thy pride distressed,
+ I am the Fool Duke Joc'lyn loveth best.
+ And--ah, my lady, thou shalt never see
+ In all this world a Fool the like of me!"
+
+ Thus spake the Duke, and then awhile stood mute,
+ And idly struck sweet chords upon his lute,
+ Watching Yolande's fair, frowning face the while,
+ With eyes that held a roguish, wistful smile.
+ She, meeting now these eyes of laughing blue,
+ Felt her cheeks burn, and sudden angry grew.
+
+ So up she rose in proud and stately fashion,
+ And stamped slim foot at him in sudden passion;
+ And vowed that of Duke Joc'lyn she cared naught;
+ That if he'd woo, by him she must be sought;
+ Vowed if he wooed his wooing should be vain,
+ And, as he came, he back should go again.
+ "For, since the Duke," she cried, "dare send to me
+ A sorry wight, a very Fool like thee,
+ By thy Fool's mouth I bid thee to him say,
+ He ne'er shall win me, woo he as he may;
+ Say that I know him not--"
+
+ "Yet," spake Duke Joc'lyn soft,
+ "E'er this, methinks, thou'st seen my lord full oft.
+ When at the joust thou wert fair Beauty's queen
+ Duke Joc'lyn by thy hand oft crowned hath been."
+ "True, Fool," she answered, 'twixt a smile and frown,
+ "I've seen him oft, but with his vizor down.
+ And verily he is a doughty knight,
+ But wherefore doth he hide his face from sight?"
+
+ "His face?" quoth Joc'lyn with a gloomy look,
+ "His face, alack!" And here his head he shook;
+ "His face, ah me!" And here Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ "His face--" "What of his face?" Yolanda cried.
+ "A mercy's name, speak--speak and do not fail."
+ "Lady," sighed Joc'lyn, "thereby hangs a tale,
+ The which, though strange it sound, is verity,
+ That here and now I will relate to thee--
+ 'T is ditty dire of dismal doating dames,
+ A lay of love-lorn, loveless languishment,
+ And ardent, amorous, anxious anguishment,
+ Full-fed forsooth of fierce and fiery flames;
+ So hark,
+ And mark:
+ In Brocelaunde not long ago,
+ Was born Duke Jocelyn. I trow
+ Not all the world a babe could show,
+ A babe so near divine:
+ For, truth to tell,
+ He waxed so well,
+ So fair o' face,
+ So gay o' grace,
+ That people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Where'er he went,
+ In wonderment
+ Would stare and stare
+ To see how fair
+ A lad was Jocelyn.
+
+ And when to man's estate he came,
+ Alack, fair lady, 't was the same!
+ And many a lovely, love-lorn dame
+ Would pitiful pant and pine.
+ These doleful dames
+ Felt forceful flames,
+ The old, the grey,
+ The young and gay,
+ Both dark and fair
+ Would rend their hair,
+ And sigh and weep
+ And seldom sleep;
+ And dames long wed
+ From spouses fled
+ For love of Jocelyn.
+
+ Therefore the Duke an oath did take
+ By one, by two, by three,
+ That for these love-lorn ladies' sake
+ No maid his face should see.
+ And thus it is, where'er he rideth
+ His love-begetting face he hideth."
+
+ Now laughed Yolande, her scorn forgotten quite,
+ "Alas!" she cried. "Poor Duke! O woeful plight!
+ And yet, O Fool, good Fool, full fain am I,
+ This ducal, love-begetting face to spy--"
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: "Then, my lady, prithee, look!"
+ And from his bosom he a picture took.
+
+ "Since this poor face of mine doth so affright thee
+ Here's one of paint that mayhap shall delight thee.
+ Take it, Yolande, for thee the craftsmen wrought it,
+ For thee I from Duke Jocelyn have brought it.
+ If day and night thou 'lt wear it, fair Yolande,"
+ And speaking thus, he gave it to her hand.
+ Its golden frame full many a jewel bore,
+ But 't was the face, the face alone she saw.
+ And viewing it, Yolanda did behold
+ A manly face, yet of a god-like mould.
+ Breathless she sate, nor moved she for a space,
+ Held by the beauty of this painted face;
+ 'Neath drooping lash she viewed it o'er and o'er,
+ And ever as she gazed new charms she saw.
+ Then, gazing yet, "Who--what is this?" she sighed.
+ "Paint, lady, paint!" Duke Joc'lyn straight replied,
+ "The painted visage of my lord it shows--
+ Item: one mouth, two eyes and eke a nose--"
+ "Nay, Fool," she murmured, "here's a face, meseems,
+ I oft have seen ere now within my dreams;
+ These dove-soft eyes in dreams have looked on me!"
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: "Yet these eyes can nothing see!"
+
+ "These tender lips in accents sweet I've heard!"
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: "Yet--they ne'er have spoke a word!
+ But here's a face at last doth please thee well
+ Yet hath no power to speak, see, sigh or smell,
+ Since tongueless, sightless, breathless 't is--thus I
+ A sorry Fool its needs must e'en supply.
+ And whiles thou doatest on yon painted head
+ My tongue I'll lend to woo thee in its stead.
+ I'll woo with wit
+ As seemeth fit,
+ Whiles there thou sit
+ And gaze on it.
+ Whiles it ye see
+ Its voice I'll be
+ And plead with thee,
+ So hark to me:
+ Yolande, I love thee in true loving way;
+ That is, I'll learn to love thee more each day,
+ Until so great my growing love shall grow,
+ This puny world in time 't will overflow.
+ To-day I love, and yet my love is such
+ That I to-morrow shall have twice as much.
+ Thus lovingly to love thee I will learn
+ Till thou shalt learn Love's lesson in thy turn,
+ And find therein how sweet this world can be
+ When as I love, thou, love, shall so love me."
+
+ "Hush, hush!" she sighed, and to her ruddy lip
+ She sudden pressed one rosy finger-tip.
+ And then, O happy picture! Swift from sight
+ She hid it in her fragrant bosom white.
+ "O Fool," she cried, "get thee behind yon tree,
+ And thou a very Fool indeed shall see,
+ A knightly fool who sighs and groans in verse
+ And oft-times woos in song, the which is worse."
+ For now they heard a voice that sung most harsh,
+ That shrilled and croaked like piping frog in marsh,
+ A voice that near and ever nearer drew
+ Until the lordly singer strode in view.
+ A noble singer he, both tall and slender,
+
+ With locks be-curled and clad in pompous splendour;
+ His mantle of rich velvet loose did flow,
+ As if his gorgeous habit he would show;
+ A jewelled bonnet on his curls he bore,
+ With nodding feather bravely decked before;
+ He was a lover very _point de vice_,
+ And all about him, save his voice, was nice.
+ Thus loudly sang, with lungs both sound and strong
+ This worthy knight, Sir Palamon of Tong.
+
+ "O must I groan
+ And make my moan
+ And live alone alway?
+ Yea, I must sigh
+ And droop and die,
+ If she reply, nay, nay!
+
+ "I groan for thee,
+ I moan for thee,
+ Alone for thee I pine.
+ All's ill for me
+ Until for me
+ She will for me be mine."
+
+But now, beholding Yolande amid her flowers, herself as sweet and fresh as
+they, he made an end of his singing and betook him, straightway, to amorous
+looks and deep-fetched sighs together with many supple bendings of
+the back, elegant posturings and motitions of slim legs, fannings and
+flauntings of be-feathered cap, and the like gallantries; and thereafter
+fell to his wooing on this fashion:
+
+"Lady, O lady of lovely ladies most loved! Fair lady of hearts, sweet dame
+of tenderness, tender me thine ears, suffer one, hath sighed and suffered
+for sake of thee, to sightful sue. Lovely thou art and therefore to be
+loved, and day and night thou and Love the sum of my excogitations art,
+wherefore I, with loving art, am hither come to woo thee, since, lady, I
+do love thee."
+
+"Alack, Sir Palamon!" she sighed, "and is it so?"
+
+"Alack!" he answered, "so it is. Yest're'en I did proclaim thee fairer than
+all fair ladies; to-day thou art yet fairer, thus this day thou art fairer
+than thyself; the which, though a paradox, is yet wittily true and truly
+witty, methinks. But as for me--for me, alas for me! I am forsooth the very
+slave of love, fettered fast by Dan Cupid, a slave grievous and woeful,
+yet, being thy slave, joying in my slavery and happy in my grievous woe.
+Thus it is I groan and moan, lady; I pine, repine and pine again most
+consumedly. I sleep little and eat less, I am, in fine and in all ways,
+'haviours, manners, customs, feints and fashions soever, thy lover
+manifest, confessed, subject, abject, in season and out of season, yearly,
+monthly, daily, hourly, and by the minute. Moreover--"
+
+"Beseech thee!" she cried, "Oh, beseech thee, take thy breath."
+
+"Gramercy, 'tis done, lady, 'tis done, and now forthwith resolved am I to
+sing thee--"
+
+"Nay, I pray you, sir, sing no more, but resolve me this mystery. What is
+love?"
+
+"Love, lady? Verily that will I in truth!" And herewith Sir Palamon fell
+to an attitude of thought with eyes ecstatic, with knitted brows and sage
+nodding of the head. "Love, my lady--ha! Love, lady is--hum! Love, then,
+perceive me, is of its nature elemental, being of the elements, as 'twere,
+composed and composite, as water, air and fire. For, remark me, there is no
+love but begetteth first water, which is tears; air, which is sighings and
+groanings; and fire, which is heart-burnings and the like. Thus is love a
+passion elemental. But yet, and heed me, lady, love is also metaphysical,
+being a motition of the soul and e'en the spirit, and being of the spirit
+'tis ghostly, and being ghostly 'tis--ha! Who comes hither to shatter the
+placid mirror of my thoughts?"
+
+So saying, the noble knight of Tong turned to behold one who strode towards
+them in haste, a tall man this whose black brows scowled fierce upon the
+day, and who spurned the tender flowers with foot ungentle as he came.
+
+ A tall, broad-shouldered, haughty lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ At sight of whom, Yolanda's laughter failed,
+ And in her cheek the rosy colour paled.
+
+ Quoth he: "Sir Palamon, now of thy grace,
+ And of thy courteous friendship yield me place,
+ To this fair lady I a word would say.
+ Thus do I for thy courteous-absence pray,
+ I am thy friend, Sir Knight, as thou dost know,
+ But--"
+
+ "My lord," quoth Sir Palamon, "I go--
+ Friendship methinks is a most holy bond,
+ A bond I hold all binding bonds beyond,
+ And thou 'rt a friend right potent, my lord Gui,
+ So to thy will I willingly comply.
+ Thus, since thy friendship I hold passing dear,
+ Thou need but ask--and lo! I am not here."
+ Thus having said, low bowed this courtly knight,
+ Then turned about and hasted out of sight.
+
+"And now, my lady," quoth Sir Gui, frowning upon her loveliness, "and now
+having discharged yon gaudy wind-bag, what of this letter I did receive
+but now--behold it!" and speaking, he snatched a crumpled missive from his
+bosom. "Behold it, I say!"
+
+"Indeed, my lord, I do," she answered, proud and disdainful; "it is,
+methinks, my answer to thy loathd suit--"
+
+ "Loathd!" he cried, and caught her slender wrist,
+ And held it so, crushed in his cruel fist;
+ But proud she faced him, shapely head raised high.
+ "Most loathd, my lord!" she, scornful, made reply.
+ "For rather than I'd wed myself with thee,
+ The wife of poorest, humblest slave I'd be,
+ Or sorriest fool that tramps the dusty way--"
+ "Ha! Dare thou scorn me so?" Sir Gui did say,
+ "Then I by force--by force will sudden take thee,
+ And slave of love, my very slave I 'll make thee--"
+
+ Out from the leaves Duke Joc'lyn thrust his head,
+ "O fie! Thou naughty, knavish knight!" he said.
+ "O tush! O tush! O tush again--go to!
+ 'T is windy, whining, wanton way to woo.
+ What tushful talk is this of 'force' and 'slaves',
+ Thou naughty, knavish, knightly knave of knaves?
+ Unhand the maid--loose thy offensive paw!"
+ Round sprang Sir Gui, and, all astonished, saw
+ A long-legged jester who behind him stood
+ With head out-thrust, grim-smiling 'neath his hood.
+
+ "Plague take thee, Fool! Out o' my sight!" growled he,
+ "Or cropped thine ugly nose and ears shall be.
+ Begone, base rogue! Haste, dog, and get thee hence,
+ Thy folly pleadeth this thy Fool's offence--
+
+ Yet go, or of thy motley shalt be stripped,
+ And from the town I 'll have thee shrewdly whipped,
+ For Lord of Ells and Raddemore am I,
+ Though folk, I've heard, do call me 'Red Sir Gui,'
+ Since blood is red and--I am Gui the Red."
+ "Red Gui?" quoth Joc'lyn. "Art thou Gui the dread--
+ Red Gui--in faith? Of him Dame Rumour saith,
+ His ways be vile but viler still--his breath.
+ Now though a life vile lived is thing most ill,
+ Yet some do think a vile breath viler still."
+
+ Swift, swift as lightning from a summer sky,
+ Out flashed the vengeful dagger of Sir Gui,
+ And darting with a deadly stroke and fierce,
+ Did Joc'lyn's motley habit rend and pierce,
+ Whereat with fearful cry up sprang Yolande,
+ But this strange jester did grim-smiling stand.
+ Quoth he: "Messire, a fool in very truth,
+ The fool of foolish fools he'd be, in sooth,
+ Who'd play a quip or so, my lord, with thee
+ Unless in triple armour dight were he;
+ And so it is this jester doth not fail
+ With such as thou to jest in shirt of mail.
+ Now since my heart thy foolish point hath missed
+ Thy dagger--thus I answer--with my fist!"
+ Then swift he leapt and, even as he spoke,
+ He fetched the knight so fierce and fell a stroke
+ That, reeling, on the greensward sank Sir Gui,
+ And stared, wide-eyed, unseeing, at the sky.
+ Right firmly then upon his knightly breast
+ Duke Joc'lyn's worn and dusty shoe did rest,
+ And while Yolande stood white and dumb with fear,
+ Thus sang the Duke full blithely and full clear:
+
+ "Dirt thou art since thou art dust,
+ And shalt to dust return;
+ Meanwhile Folly as he lust
+ Now thy base dust doth spurn.
+
+ "Yea, lord, though thy rank be high,
+ One day, since e'en lords must die,
+ Under all men's feet thou'lt lie."
+
+ Now, fierce, Sir Gui did curse the Fool amain,
+ And, cursing, strove his dagger to regain.
+ But Joc'lyn stooped, in mighty arms he swung him,
+ And down into the lily-pool he flung him.
+
+ With splash resounding fell the noble knight,
+ Then gurgling rose in damp and sorry plight,
+ Whiles Joc'lyn, leaning o'er the marble rim,
+ With lifted finger thus admonished him:
+
+ "Red Gui,
+ Dread Gui,
+ Lest a dead Gui,
+ Gui, I make of thee,
+ Understand, Gui,
+ Fair Yolande, Gui,
+ Humbly wooed must be.
+
+ "So, Gui,
+ Know, Gui,
+ Ere thou go, Gui,
+ Gui they call the Red;
+ And thou'lt woo, Gui,
+ Humbly sue, Gui,
+ Lest Love strike thee dead.
+
+ "Now while thou flound'rest in yon pool,
+ Learn thou this wisdom of a Fool;
+ Cold water oft can passion cool
+ And fiery ardours slake;
+ Thus, sir, since water quencheth fire,
+ So let it soothe away thine ire.
+ Then--go seek thee garments drier
+ Lest a rheum thou take."
+
+ Sir Gui did gasp, and gasping, strove to curse,
+ Whereat he, gasping, did but gasp the worse,
+ Till, finding he could gasp, but nothing say,
+ He shook clenched fist and, gasping, strode away.
+ Then Joc'lyn turned and thus beheld Yolande,
+ Who trembling all and pale of cheek did stand.
+
+ "O Fool!" she sighed. "Poor Fool, what hast
+ thou done?"
+
+ Quoth he: "Yolande, to woo thee I've begun,
+ I better might have wooed, it is most true,
+ If other wooers had not wooed thee too."
+
+ "Nay, Fool!" she whispered. "O beware--beware!
+ Death--death for thee is in the very air.
+ From Canalise, in haste, I bid thee fly,
+ For 'vengeful lord and cruel is Sir Gui.
+ Take now this gold to aid thee on thy way,
+ And for thy life upon my knees I'll pray,
+ And with the holy angels intercede
+ To comfort thee and aid thee in thy need.
+ And so--farewell! "Thus, speaking, turned Yolande.
+ But Joc'lyn stayed her there with gentle hand,
+ Whereat she viewed him o'er in mute surprise,
+ To see the radiant gladness of his eyes.
+
+ Quoth he: "Yolande, since thou wilt pray for me,
+ Of thy sweet prayers fain would I worthy be.
+ This I do know--let Death come when he may,
+ The love I bear thee shall live on alway.
+
+ Nor will I strive to leave grim Death behind me,
+ Since when Death wills methinks he sure will find me;
+ As in the world Death roameth everywhere,
+ Who flees him here perchance shall meet him there.
+ Here, then, I'll bide--let what so will betide me,
+ Thy prayers like holy angels, watch beside me.
+ So all day long and in thy pretty sleeping
+ 'Till next we meet the Saints have thee in keeping."
+
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: The last part seems to me much better.
+ I like Yolande, I hope he'll get her.
+
+ MYSELF: Patience, my dear, he's hardly met her.
+
+ GILL: I think it would be rather nice
+ To make him kiss her once or twice.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll make him kiss her well, my dear,
+ When he begins--but not just here.
+ I'll later see what I can do
+ In this matter to please you.
+
+ GILL: And then I hope, that by and by
+ He kills that frightful beast, Sir Gui.
+
+ MYSELF: Yes, I suppose, we ought to slay him,
+ For all his wickedness to pay him.
+
+ GILL: And Pertinax, I think--don't you?
+ Should have a lady fair to woo.
+ To see him in love would be perfectly clipping.
+ It's a corking idea, and quite awfully ripping--
+
+ MYSELF: If you use such vile slang, miss, I vow I will not--
+
+ GILL: O, Pax, father! I'm sorry; I almost forgot.
+
+ MYSELF: Very well, if my warning you'll bear well
+ in mind,
+ A fair damsel for Pertinax I 'll try to find.
+
+ GILL: Then make her, father, make her quick,
+ I always knew you were a brick.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 4
+
+ How Pertinax plied angle to his sport
+ And, catching him no fish, fish-like was caught.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By sleepy stream where bending willows swayed,
+ And, from the sun, a greeny twilight made,
+ Sir Pertinax, broad back against a tree,
+ Lolled at his ease and yawned right lustily.
+ In brawny fist he grasped a rod or angle,
+ With hook wherefrom sad worm did, writhing, dangle.
+ Full well he loved the piscatorial sport,
+ Though he as yet no single fish had caught.
+ Hard by, in easy reach upon the sward,
+ Lay rusty bascinet and good broadsword.
+ Thus patiently the good Knight sat and fished,
+ Yet in his heart most heartily he wished
+ That he, instead of fishing, snug had been
+ Seated within his goodly tower of Shene.
+ And thinking thus, he needs must cast his eye
+ On rusty mail, on battered shoon, and sigh,
+ And murmur fitful curses and lament
+ That in such base, unknightly garb he went--
+ A lord of might whose broad shield bravely bore
+ Of proud and noble quarterings a score.
+ "And 't was forsooth for foolish ducal whim
+ That he must plod abroad in such vile trim!"
+ Revolving thus, his anger sudden woke,
+ And, scowling, to the unseen fish he spoke:
+
+ "A Duke! A Fool! A fool-duke, by my head!
+ Who, clad like Fool, like Fool will fain be wed,
+
+ For ass and dolt and fool of fools is he
+ Who'll live in bondage to some talk-full she.
+ Yet, if he'll wed, why i' the foul fiend's name,
+ Must he in motley seek the haughty dame?"
+
+ But now, while he did on this problem dwell,
+ Two unexpected happenings befell:
+ A fish to nibble on the worm began,
+ And to him through the green a fair maid ran.
+ Fast, fast amid the tangled brake she fled,
+ Her cheeks all pale, her dark eyes wide with dread;
+ But Pertinax her beauty nothing heeded,
+ Since both his eyes to watch his fish were needed;
+ But started round with sudden, peevish snort
+ As in slim hands his brawny fist she caught;
+ "Ha, maid!" he cried, "Why must thou come this way
+ To spoil my sport and fright mine fish away?"
+ "O man--O man, if man thou art," she gasped,
+ "Save me!" And here his hand she closer grasped,
+ But even now, as thus she breathless spake,
+ Forth of the wood three lusty fellows brake;
+ Goodly their dress and bright the mail they wore,
+ While on their breasts a falcon-badge they bore.
+ "Oho!" cried one. "Yon dirty knave she's met!"
+ Sir Pertinax here donned his bascinet.
+ "But one poor rogue shan't let us!" t' other roared.
+ Sir Pertinax here reached and drew his sword.
+ "Then," cried the third, "let's at him now all three!"
+ Quoth Pertinax: "Maid, get thee 'hind yon tree,
+ For now, methinks, hast found me better sport
+ Than if, forsooth, yon plaguy fish I'd caught."
+ So saying, up he rose and, eyes a-dance
+ He 'gainst the three did joyously advance,
+ With sword that flashed full bright, but brighter yet
+ The eyes beneath his rusty bascinet;
+
+ While aspect bold and carriage proud and high,
+ Did plainly give his mean array the lie.
+ Thus, as he gaily strode to meet the three,
+ In look and gesture all proud knight was he;
+ Beholding which, the maid forgot her dread,
+ And, 'stead of pale, her cheek glowed softly red.
+
+ Now at the three Sir Pertinax did spring,
+ And clashing steel on steel did loudly ring,
+ Yet Pertinax was one and they were three,
+ And once was, swearing, smitten to his knee,
+ Whereat the maid hid face in sudden fear,
+ And, kneeling so, fierce cries and shouts did hear,
+ The sounds of combat dire, and deadly riot
+ Lost all at once and hushed to sudden quiet,
+ And glancing up she saw to her amaze
+ Three rogues who fleetly ran three several ways,
+ Three beaten rogues who fled with one accord,
+ While Pertinax, despondent, sheathed his sword.
+ "Par Dex!" he growled, "'Tis shame that they should run
+ Ere that to fight the rogues had scarce begun!"
+ So back he came, his rod and line he took,
+ And gloomed to find no worm upon his hook.
+ But now the maiden viewed him gentle-eyed;
+ "Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!" she sighed,
+ "Thou, like true knight, hast fought for me today--"
+ "And the fish," sighed he, "have stole my worm away,
+ Which is great pity, since my worms be few!"
+ And here the Knight's despond but deeper grew.
+ "Yon rogues," he sighed, "no stomach had for fight,
+ Yet scared the fish that had a mind to bite!"
+ "But thou hast saved me, noble man!" said she.
+ "So must I use another worm!" sighed he.
+
+ And straightway with his fishing he proceeded
+ While sat the maid beside him all unheeded;
+ Whereat she frowned and, scornful, thus did speak
+ With angry colour flaming in her cheek:
+ "What man art thou that canst but fight and fish?
+ Hast thou no higher thought, no better wish?"
+ "Certes," quoth he, "I would I had indeed
+ A goodly pot of foaming ale or mead."
+ "O base, most base!" the maid did scornful cry,
+ And viewed him o'er with proud, disdainful eye.
+ "That I should owe my life to man like thee!
+ That one so base could fight and master three!
+ Who art thou, man, and what? Speak me thy name,
+ Whither ye go and why, and whence ye came,
+ Thy rank, thy state, thy worth to me impart,
+ If soldier, serf, or outlawed man thou art;
+ And why 'neath ragged habit thou dost wear
+ A chain of gold such as but knights do bear,
+ Why thou canst front three armed rogues unafraid,
+ Yet fear methinks to look upon a maid?"
+
+ But to these questions Pertinax sat dumb--
+ That is, he rubbed his chin and murmured, "Hum!"
+ Whereat she, frowning, set determined chin
+ And thus again to question did begin:
+
+SHE: What manner of man art thou?
+
+HE: A man.
+
+SHE: A soldier?
+
+HE: Thou sayest.
+
+SHE: Art in service?
+
+HE: Truly.
+
+SHE: Whom serve ye?
+
+HE: A greater than I.
+
+SHE: Art thou wed?
+
+HE: The Saints forfend!
+
+SHE: Then art a poor soldier and solitary.
+
+HE: I might be richer.
+
+SHE: What dost thou fishing here?
+
+HE: I fish.
+
+SHE: And why didst fight three men for me--a maid unknown?
+
+HE: For lack of better employ.
+
+SHE: Rude soldier--whence comest thou?
+
+HE: Fair maiden, from beyond.
+
+SHE: Gross Knight, whither goest thou?
+
+HE: Dainty damosel, back again.
+
+SHE: Dost lack aught?
+
+HE: Quiet!
+
+SHE: How, would'st have me hold my peace, ill fellow?
+
+HE: 'T would be a marvel.
+
+SHE: Wherefore?
+
+HE: Thou'rt a woman.
+
+SHE: And thou a man, ill-tongued, ill-beseen, ill-mannered, unlovely,
+and I like thee not!
+
+HE: And what is worse, the fish bite not.
+
+Now here, and very suddenly, she fell a-weeping, to the Knight's no small
+discomfiture, though she wept in fashion wondrous apt and pretty; wherefore
+Sir Pertinax glanced at her once, looked twice and, looking, scratched his
+ear, rubbed his chin and finally questioned her in turn:
+
+HE: Distressful damosel, wherefore this dole? SHE: For that I am weary,
+woeful and solitary. And thou--thou'rt harsh of look, rough of tongue,
+ungentle of--HE: Misfortunate maiden, thy loneliness is soon amended, get
+thee to thy friends--thy gossips, thy--
+
+SHE: I have none. And thou'rt fierce and ungentle of face.
+
+Here she wept the more piteously and Sir Pertinax, viewing her distress,
+forgot his hook and worm, wherefore a fish nibbled it slyly, while the
+Knight questioned her further:
+
+HE: Woeful virgin, whence comest thou?
+
+SHE: From afar. And thou art ofeatures grim and--
+
+HE: And whither would'st journey?
+
+SHE: No where! And thou art--
+
+HE: Nay, here is thing impossible, since being here thou art somewhere and
+that within three bowshots of the goodly town of Canalise wherein thou
+shalt doubtless come by comfort and succour.
+
+SHE: Never! Never! Here will I weep and moan and perish. And thou--
+
+HE: And wherefore moan and perish?
+
+SHE: For that I am so minded, being a maid forlorn and desolate, a poor
+wanderer destitute of kith, of kin, of hope, of love, and all that maketh
+life sweet. And thou art sour-faced and--
+
+HE: Grievous maid, is, among thy many wants, a lack of money?
+
+SHE: That also. And thou art cold of eye, fierce of mouth, hooked of nose,
+flinty of heart, stony of soul, and I a perishing maid.
+
+At this Sir Pertinax blinked and caught his breath; thereafter he laid down
+his rod, whereupon the fish incontinent filched his worm all unnoticed
+while the Knight opened the wallet at his girdle and took thence certain
+monies.
+
+HE: Dolorous damsel, behold six good, gold pieces! Take them and go, get
+thee to eat--eat much, so shall thy dolour wax less, eat beef--since beef
+is a rare lightener of sorrow, by beef shall thy woes be comforted.
+
+SHE: Alas! I love not beef.
+
+Now here Sir Pertinax was dumb a space for wonder at her saying, while she
+stole a glance at him betwixt slender fingers.
+
+HE (_after some while_): Maid, I tell thee beef, fairly cooked and aptly
+seasoned, is of itself a virtue whereby the body is strengthened and
+nourished, whereby cometh content, and with content kindliness, and with
+kindliness charity, and therewith all other virtues small and eke great;
+therefore eat beef, maiden, for the good of thy soul.
+
+"How?" said she, viewing him bright-eyed 'twixt her fingers again. "Dost
+think by beef one may attain to paradise?"
+
+HE: Peradventure.
+
+SHE: Then no beef, for I would not live a saint yet awhile.
+
+HE: Nathless, take thou these monies and go buy what thou wilt.
+
+So saying, Sir Pertinax set the coins beside her shapely foot and took up
+his neglected rod.
+
+SHE: And is this gold truly mine?
+
+HE: Verily.
+
+SHE: Then I pray thee keep it for me lest I lose it by the way and so--let
+us begone.
+
+Here Sir Pertinax started.
+
+"Begone?" quoth he. "Begone--in truth? Thou and I in faith? Go whither?"
+
+SHE: Any whither.
+
+HE: Alone? Thou and I?
+
+"Nay, not alone," she sighed; "let us go together."
+
+Sir Pertinax dropped his fishing-rod and watched it idly float away down
+the stream:
+
+"Together, maiden?" said he at last.
+
+"Truly!" she sighed. "For thou art lonely even as I am lonely, and thou
+art, methinks, one a lonely maid may trust."
+
+"Ha--trust!" quoth he. "And wherefore would'st trust me, maiden?"
+
+SHE: For two reasons--thou art of age mature and something ill-favoured.
+
+Now, at this Sir Pertinax grew angered, grew thoughtful, grew sad and,
+beholding his image mirrored in the waters, sighed for his grim, unlovely
+look and, in his heart, cursed his vile garb anew. At last he spoke:
+
+HE: Truly thou may'st trust me, maiden.
+
+SHE: And wherefore sighest thou, sad soldier?
+
+HE: Verily for thy two reasons. Though, for mine age, I am not forty
+turned.
+
+Saying which, he sighed again, and stared gloomily into the murmurous
+waters. But presently, chancing to look aside, he beheld a head low down
+amid the underwood, a head huge and hairy with small, fierce eyes that
+watched him right bodefully, and a great mouth that grinned evilly; and now
+as he stared, amazed by this monstrous head, it nodded grimly, speaking
+thus:
+
+ "Lob, Lobkyn he
+ Commandeth thee
+ To let her be
+ And set her free,
+ Thou scurvy, cutpurse, outlaw knave,
+ Lest hanged thou be
+ Upon a tree
+ For roguery
+ And villainy,
+ Thou knavish, misbegotten slave;
+ For proud is she
+ Of high degree,
+ As unto ye
+ Explicitly--"
+
+"Ha!" quoth Sir Pertinax, rising and drawing sword. "Now, be thou imp of
+Satan, fiend accursed, or goblin fell, come forth, and I with steel will
+try thee, Thing!"
+
+Out from the leaves forthwith crawled a dwarf bowed of leg, mighty of
+shoulder, humped of back, and with arms very long and thick and hairy. In
+one great fist he grasped a ponderous club shod with iron spikes, and now,
+resting his hands on this and his chin on his hands, he scowled at the
+Knight, yet grinned also.
+
+"Ho!" he cried, rolling big head in threatening fashion:
+
+"Vile dog, thy rogue's sconce cracked shall be, Thy base-born bones
+be-thwacked shall be. I'll deal thee many a dour ding For that thou darest
+name me--Thing!"
+
+"Now, as I live!" said Sir Pertinax, scowling also. "Here will I, and with
+great joyance, cleave me thine impish mazzard and split thee to thy beastly
+chine. And for thy ill rhyming:
+
+ "I with this goodly steel will halve thee
+ And into clammy goblets carve thee.
+ So stand, Thing, to thy club betake thee,
+ And soon, Thing, I will no-thing make thee."
+
+But, as they closed on each other with eager and deadly intent, the maid
+stepped lightly betwixt.
+
+"Stay, soldier--hold!" she commanded. "Here is none but Lobkyn Lollo--poor,
+brave Lob, nor will I suffer him to harm thee."
+
+"How, maiden?" snorted the good Knight fiercely. "Harm me, say'st thou--yon
+puny Thing?"
+
+"Truly, soldier!" said she, roguish-eyed. "For though thou art very
+ungentle, harsh of tongue, of visage grim and manners rude--I would not
+have Lob harm thee--yet!"
+
+ Now hereupon our bold Sir Pertinax
+ With indignation red of face did wax.
+ The needful word his tongue was vainly seeking,
+ Since what he felt was quite beyond the speaking.
+ Though quick his hand to ward or give a blow,
+ His tongue all times unready was and slow,
+ Therefore he speechless looked upon the maid,
+ Who viewed him 'neath her lashes' dusky shade,
+ Whence Eros launched a sudden beamy dart
+ That 'spite chain-mail did reach and pierce his heart.
+ And in that instant Pertinax grew wise,
+ And trembled 'neath this forest-maiden's eyes;
+ And trembling, knew full well, seek where he might,
+ No eyes might hold for him such magic light,
+ No lips might hold for him such sweet allure,
+ No other hand might his distresses cure,
+ No other voice might so console and cheer,
+ No foot, light-treading, be so sweet to hear
+ As the eyes, lips, hand, voice, foot of her who stood
+ Before him now, cheek flushing 'neath her hood.
+ All this Sir Pertinax had in his thought,
+ And, wishing much to say to her, said nought,
+ By reason that his tongue was something slow,
+ And of smooth phrases he did little know.
+ But yet 't is likely, though he nothing said,
+ She, maid-like, what he spake not, guessed or read
+ In his flushed brow, his sudden-gentle eyes,
+ Since in such things all maids are wondrous wise.
+
+ Now suddenly the brawny Dwarf did cry:
+ "Beware, my old great-grand-dam creepeth nigh!"
+ Thus speaking, 'mid the bushes pointed he,
+ Where crook'd old woman crouched beneath a tree
+ Whence, bowed upon a staff, she towards them came,
+ An ancient, wrinkled, ragged, hag-like dame
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below.
+ Mutt'ring she came and mowing she drew near,
+ And straightway seized the Dwarf by hairy ear:
+ Fast by the ear this ancient dame did tweak him,
+ And cuffed his head and, cuffing, thus did speak him:
+
+ "Ha, dolt! Bad elf, and wilt thou slay, indeed,
+ This goodly man did aid me in my need?
+ For this was one that fought within the gate
+ And from Black Lewin saved thy grannam's pate!
+ Down, down, fool-lad, upon thy knees, I say,
+ And full forgiveness of this soldier pray."
+
+ But Sir Pertinax, perceiving how the old dame
+ did thus tweak and wring at the Dwarf's great,
+ hairy ear even until his eyes watered, interceded,
+ saying:
+
+ "Good, ancient soul, humble not the sturdy, unlovely,
+ mis-shapen, rascally imp for such small
+ matter."
+
+ "Nay, but," croaked the old woman, tightening
+ claw-like fingers, "kind master, he would doubtless
+ have slain thee." At this, Sir Pertinax scowled,
+ and would have sworn great oath but, meeting the
+ maid's bright eyes, checked himself, though with
+ much ado:
+
+ "Art so sure," he questioned, "so sure man of
+ my inches may be slain by thing so small?"
+
+ At this the maid laughed, and the old woman,
+ sighing, loosed the ear she clutched:
+
+ "Shew thy strength, Lob," she commanded and,
+ drawing the maiden out of ear-shot, sat down beside
+ her on the sward and fell to eager, whispered talk.
+ Meantime the Dwarf, having cherished his ear,
+ sulkily though tenderly, seized hold upon his great
+ club with both hairy hands:
+
+ And whirling it aloft, with sudden might
+ A fair, young tree in sunder he did smite,
+ That 'neath the blow it swayed and crashing fell.
+ Quoth Pertinax: "Good Thing, 't is very well.
+ Par Dex, and by the Holy Rood," quoth he,
+ "'T is just as well that I was not yon tree!"
+ And whirling his long sword as thus he spoke,
+ Shore through another at a single stroke.
+ "Here's tree for tree, stout manling!" he did say.
+ "What other trick canst show to me, I pray?"
+ Then Lobkyn stooped the broken stump to seize,
+ Bowed brawny back and with a wondrous ease
+
+ Up by the roots the rugged bole he tore
+ And tossed it far as it had been a straw.
+ Sad grew our knight this mighty feat perceiving,
+ Since well he knew't was past his own achieving.
+
+But anon he smiled and clapped the mighty Dwarf on shoulder, saying:
+
+"Greeting to thee, lusty Lob, for by Our Holy Lady of Shene Chapel within
+the Wood, ne'er saw I thine equal, since thou, being man so small, may do
+what man o' my goodly inches may nowise perform. Thou should'st make a
+right doughty man-at-arms!"
+
+Hereupon the Dwarf cut a caper but sighed thereafter: quoth he:
+
+ "Aha, good master, and Oho,
+ As man-at-arms fain would I go;
+ Aye, verily, I would be so,
+ But that my grannam sayeth 'No!'
+
+ "And, sir, my grand-dam I obey
+ Since she's a potent witch, they say;
+ Can cast ye spells by night or day
+ And charmeth warts and such away.
+
+ "Love philtres too she can supply
+ For fools that fond and foolish sigh,
+ That wert thou foul as hog in sty
+ Fair women must unto thee fly.
+
+ "Then deadly potions she can make,
+ Will turn a man to wriggling snake,
+ Or slimy worm, or duck, or drake,
+ Or loathly frog that croaks in lake.
+
+ "And she can curse beyond compare,
+ Can curse ye here, or curse ye there;
+ She'll curse ye clad or curse ye bare,
+ In fine, can curse ye anywhere.
+
+ "And she can summon, so 't is said,
+ From fire and water, spirits dread,
+ Strong charms she hath can wake the dead
+ And set the living in their stead.
+
+ "So thus it is, whate'er she say,
+ My grand-dam, master, I obey."
+
+"Now by my head," quoth Sir Pertinax, "an thy grand-dam hath a potency in
+spells and such black arts--the which is an ill thing--thou hast a powerful
+gift of versification the which, methinks, is worse. How cometh this
+distemper o' the tongue, Lobkyn?"
+
+ "O master," spake the sighful Dwarf forlorn,
+ "Like many such diseases, 't is inborn.
+ For even as a baby, I
+ Did pule in rhyme and versify;
+ And the stronger that I grew,
+ My rhyming habit strengthened too,
+ Until my sad sire in despair
+ Put me beneath the Church's care.
+ The holy fathers, 't is confessed,
+ With belt and sandal did their best,
+ But, though they often whipped me sore,
+ I, weeping, did but rhyme the more,
+ Till, finding all their efforts vain,
+ They sadly sent me home again."
+
+"A parlous case, methinks!" said Sir Pertinax, staring at the Dwarf's
+rueful visage. "Learned ye aught of the holy fathers?"
+
+ "Aye, sir, they taught me truth to tell,
+ To cipher and to read right well;
+ They taught me Latin, sir, and Greek,
+ Though even then in rhyme I'd speak."
+
+"And thou canst read and write!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax. "So can not I!"
+
+Cried LOB:
+
+ "What matter that? Heaven save the mark,
+ Far better be a soldier than a clerk,
+ Far rather had I be a fighter
+ Than learned reader or a writer,
+ Since they who'd read must mope in schools,
+ And they that write be mostly fools.
+ So 'stead of pen give me a sword,
+ And set me where the battle's toward,
+ Where blood--"
+
+But the ancient dame who had risen and approached silently, now very
+suddenly took Lobkyn by the ear again.
+
+"Talk not of blood and battles, naughty one!" she cried. "Think not to
+leave thy old grannam lone and lorn and helpless--nor this our fair maid.
+Shame on thee, Lob, O shame!" saying the which she cuffed him again and
+soundly.
+
+ "Master," he sighed, "thou seest I may not go,
+ Since that my grand-dam will not have it so."
+
+"Good mother, wise mother," said the maid, viewing Sir Pertinax smilingly
+askance, "why doth poor soldier go bedight in fine linen 'neath rusty
+hauberk? Why doth poor soldier wear knightly chain about his neck and swear
+by knightly oath? Good mother, wise mother, rede me this."
+
+The old woman viewed Pertinax with her bright, quick eyes, but, ere she
+could answer, he sheathed sword, drew ragged mantle about him, and made to
+go, but, turning to the maid, bent steel-clad head.
+
+"Most fair damosel," said he gently, "evening cometh on, and now, since
+thou art no longer forlorn, I will away."
+
+"Nay, first, I pray thee, what is thy name?"
+
+"Pertinax, madam."
+
+"So then doth Melissa thank Pertinax. And now--out alas! Will Pertinax
+leave Melissa, having but found her?"
+
+Sir Pertinax looked up, looked down, fidgeted with his cloak, and knew not
+how to answer; wherefore she sighed again, though with eyes full merry
+'neath drooping lashes and reached out to him her slender hand. "Aye me,
+and shall we meet no more, poor soldier?" she questioned softly.
+
+"This I know not," he answered.
+
+"For thy brave rescue I do give thee my humble thanks, poor soldier."
+
+"Thy rescue, child?" cried the old woman. "Alack and wert thou seen? Thy
+rescue, say'st thou?"
+
+"Indeed, good mother, from Sir Agramore's rough foresters. But for thee,
+thou needy soldier, my gratitude is thine henceforth. Had I aught else to
+give thee, that were thine also. Is there aught I may? Speak."
+
+Now Sir Pertinax could not but heed all the rich, warm beauty of her--these
+eyes so sombrely sweet, her delicate nose, the temptation of her vivid
+lips--and so spake hot with impulse:
+
+"Aye, truly, sweet maid, truly I would have of thee a--" Her eyes grew
+bright with laughter, a dimple played wanton in her cheek, and Sir
+Pertinax was all suddenly abashed, faint-hearted and unsure; thus, looking
+down, he chanced to espy a strange jewel that hung tremulous upon her
+moving bosom: a crowned heart within a heart of crystal.
+
+"Well, thou staid and sorry soldier, what would'st have of me?" she
+questioned.
+
+"Verily," he muttered, "I would have of thee yon trinket from thy bosom."
+Now at his words she started, caught her breath and stared at him
+wide-eyed; but, seeing his abashment, laughed and loosed off the jewel with
+quick, small fingers.
+
+"Be it so!" said she. But hereupon the old woman reached out sudden hand.
+
+"Child!" she croaked, "Art mad? Mind ye not the prophecy? Beware the
+prophecy--beware!
+
+ 'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'
+
+Beware, I say, Oh, beware!"
+
+"Nay, good mother, have I not promised? And for this crystal it hath
+brought me nought but unease hitherto. Take it, soldier, and for the sake
+of this poor maid that giveth, break it not, dishonour it not, and give it
+to none but can define for thee the secret thereof--and so, poor, brave,
+fearful soldier--fare thee well!"
+
+Saying which this fair maiden turned, and clasping the Witch's bony arm
+about her slender loveliness, passed away into the denser wood with Lobkyn
+Lollo marching grimly behind, his mighty club across his shoulder.
+
+Long stood Sir Pertinax, staring down at the strange jewel in his hand yet
+seeing it not, for, lost in his dreams, he beheld again two eyes,
+dusky-lashed and softly bright, a slender hand, a shapelyfoot, while in
+his ears was again the soft murmur of a maid's voice, a trill of girlish
+laughter. So lost in meditation was he that becoming aware of a shadow
+athwart the level sunset-glory, he started, glanced up and into the face
+of a horseman who had ridden up unheard upon the velvet ling; and this
+man was tall and armed at points like a knight; the vizor of his plumed
+casque was lifted, and Sir Pertinax saw a ruddy face, keen-eyed,
+hawk-nosed, thin-lipped.
+
+"Fellow," questioned the haughty knight, "what hold ye there?"
+
+"Fellow," quoth Sir Pertinax, haughty and gruff also, "'t is no matter to
+thee!" And speaking, he buttoned the jewel into the wallet at his belt.
+
+"Fool!" exclaimed the Knight, staring in amaze, "wilt dare name me
+'fellow'? Tell me, didst see three foresters hereabout?"
+
+"Poltroon, I did."
+
+"Knave, wilt defy me?"
+
+"Rogue, I do!"
+
+"Slave, what did these foresters?"
+
+"Villain, they ran away!"
+
+"Ha, varlet! and wherefore?"
+
+"Caitiff, I drubbed them shrewdly."
+
+"Dared ye withstand them, dog?"
+
+"Minion, I did."
+
+"Saw ye not the badge they bore?" demanded the fierce stranger-knight.
+
+"'T was the like of that upon thy shield!" nodded Sir Pertinax grimly.
+
+"Know ye who and what I am, dunghill rogue?"
+
+"No, dog's-breakfast--nor care!" growled Sir Pertinax, whereat the
+stranger-knight grew sudden red and clenched mailed fist.
+
+"Know then, thou kennel-scourer, that I am Sir
+
+Agramore of Biename, Lord of Swanscote and Hoccom, Lord Seneschal of
+Tissingors and the March."
+
+"Ha!" quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. "So do I know thee for a very rogue
+ingrain and villain manifest."
+
+"How!" roared Sir Agramore. "This to my face, thou vile creeper of ditches,
+thou unsavoury tavern-haunter--this in my teeth!"
+
+"Heartily, heartily!" nodded Sir Pertinax. "And may it choke thee for the
+knavish carcass thou art."
+
+At this, and very suddenly, the Knight loosed mace from saddle-bow, and
+therewith smote Sir Pertinax on rusty bascinet, and tumbled him backward
+among the bracken. Which done, Sir Agramore laughed full loud and, spurring
+his charger, galloped furiously away. And after some while Sir Pertinax
+arose, albeit unsteadily, but finding his legs weak, sat him down again;
+thereafter with fumbling hands he did off dinted bascinet and viewed it
+thoughtfully, felt his head tenderly and, crawling to the stream, bathed it
+solicitously; then, being greatly heartened, he arose and drawing sword,
+set it upright in the ling and, kneeling, clasped his hands and spake as
+follows:
+
+"Here and now, upon my good cross-hilt I swear I will with joy and
+zeal unremitting, seek me out one Sir Agramore of Biename. Then will I
+incontinent with any, all, or whatsoever weapon he chooseth fall upon him
+and, for this felon stroke, for his ungentle dealing with the maid, I will
+forthwith gore, rend, tear, pierce, batter, bruise and otherwise use the
+body of the said Sir Agramore until, growing aweary of its vile tenement,
+his viler soul shall flee hence to consume evermore with such unholy knaves
+as he. And this is the oath of me, Sir Pertinax,
+
+"Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling, Bracton and Deepdene, to the
+which oath may the Saints bend gracious ear, in especial Our Holy Lady of
+Shene Chapel within the Wood--Amen!"
+
+Having registered the which most solemn oath, Sir Pertinax arose, sheathed
+his sword, and strode blithely towards the fair and prosperous town of
+Canalise. But, being come within the gate, he was aware of much riot and
+confusion in the square and streets beyond, and hasting forward, beheld a
+wild concourse, a pushing, jostling throng of people making great clamour
+and outcry, above which hubbub ever and anon rose such shouts, as:
+"Murderer! Thief! Away with him! Death to him!"
+
+By dint of sharp elbow and brawny shoulder our good knight forced himself a
+way until--surrounded by men-at-arms, his limbs fast bound, his motley torn
+and bloody, his battered fool's-cap all awry--he beheld Duke Jocelyn haled
+and dragged along by fierce hands. For a moment Sir Pertinax stood dumb
+with horror and amaze, then, roaring, clapped hand to sword. Now, hearing
+this fierce and well-known battle shout, Duke Jocelyn turned and, beholding
+the Knight, shook bloody head in warning and slowly closed one bright, blue
+eye; and so, while Sir Pertinax stood rigid and dumb, was dragged away and
+lost in the fierce, jostling throng.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, when you began this Geste, I thought
+ It was a poem of a sort.
+
+ MYSELF: A sort, Miss Pert! A sort, indeed?
+
+ GILL: Of course--the sort folks love to read.
+ But in the last part we have heard
+ Of poetry there's scarce a word.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, if you the early Geste-books read,
+ You'll find that, oft as not, indeed,
+ The wearied Gestours, when by rhyming stumped,
+ Into plain prose quite often jumped.
+
+ GILL: But, father, dear, the last part seems to me
+ All prose--as prosy as can be--
+
+ MYSELF: Ha, prosy, miss! How, do you then suggest
+ Our Geste for you lacks interest?
+
+ GILL: Not for a moment, father, though
+ Sir Pertinax was much too slow.
+ When fair Melissa "laughing stood,"
+ He should have kissed--you know he
+ should--Because, of course, she wished him to.
+
+ MYSELF: Hum! Girl, I wonder if that's true?
+
+ GILL: O father, yes! Of course I'm right,
+ And you're as slow as your slow knight.
+ Were you as slow when you were young?
+
+ MYSELF: Hush, madam! Hold that saucy tongue.
+ You may be sure, in my young days,
+ I was most dutiful always.
+ Grown up, I was, it seems to me,
+ No slower than I ought to be.
+ And now, miss, since you pine for verse,
+ Rhyme with my prose I'll intersperse;
+ And, like a doting father, I
+ To hold your interest will try.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 5
+
+
+ Which of Duke Joc'lyn's woeful plight doth tell,
+ And all that chanced him pent in dungeon cell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In gloomy dungeon, scant of air and light,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lay in sad and woeful plight;
+ His hands and feet with massy fetters bound,
+ That clashed, whene'er he moved, with dismal sound;
+ His back against the clammy wall did rest,
+ His heavy head was bowed upon his breast,
+ But, 'neath drawn brows, he watched with wary eye
+ Three ragged 'wights who, shackled, lay hard by,
+ Three brawny rogues who, scowling, fiercely eyed him,
+ And with lewd gibes and mocking gestures plied him.
+ But Joc'lyn, huddled thus against the wall,
+ Seemed verily to heed them none at all,
+ Wherefore a red-haired rogue who thought he slept
+ With full intent upon him furtive crept.
+ But, ere he knew, right suddenly he felt
+ Duke Joc'lyn's battered shoe beneath his belt;
+ And falling back with sudden strangled cry,
+ Flat on his back awhile did breathless lie,
+ Whereat to rage his comrades did begin,
+ And clashed their fetters with such doleful din
+ That from a corner dim a fourth man sprang,
+ And laughed and laughed, until their prison rang.
+ "Well kicked, Sir Fool! Forsooth, well done!" laughed he,
+ "Ne'er saw I, Fool, a fool the like o' thee!"
+
+ Now beholding this tall fellow, Jocelyn knew him
+ for that same forest-rogue had wrestled with him
+ in the green, and sung for his life the "Song of
+ Roguery." Wherefore he smiled on the fellow and
+ the fellow on him:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: I grieve to see
+ A man like thee
+ In such a woeful plight--
+
+ Quoth the ROGUE: A Fool in fetters,
+ Like his betters,
+ Is yet a rarer sight.
+
+"Ha i' the clout, good fellow, for Folly in fetters is Folly in need, and
+Folly in need is Folly indeed! But, leaving folly awhile, who art thou and
+what thy name?"
+
+ Saith the ROGUE: Robin I'm named, Sir Fool,
+ Rob by the few,
+ Which few are right, methinks, for
+ so I do.
+
+"Then, Rob, if dost rob thou'rt a robber, and being robber thou'rt
+perchance in bonds for robbing, Robin?"
+
+"Aye, Fool, I, Rob, do rob and have robbed greater robbers that I might
+by robbery live to rob like robbers again, as thou, by thy foolish folly,
+fooleries make, befooling fools lesser than thou, that thou, Fool, by such
+fool-like fooleries may live to fool like fools again!"
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Thou robber Rob,
+ By Hob and Gob,
+ Though robber-rogue, I swear
+ That 't is great pity
+ Rogue so pretty
+ Must dance upon thin air.
+
+ Quoth ROBIN: Since I must die
+ On gallows high
+ And wriggle in a noose,
+ I'll none repine
+ Nor weep nor whine,
+ For where would be the use?
+ Yet sad am I
+ That I must die
+ With rogues so base and small,
+ Sly coney-catchers,
+ Poor girdle-snatchers,
+ That do in kennel crawl.
+
+"And yet," said Jocelyn, "thou thyself art rogue and thief confessed. How
+then art better than these thy fellows?"
+
+"By degree, Sir Fool. Even as thou'rt Fool o' folly uncommon, so am I no
+ordinary rogue, being rogue o' rare parts with power of rogues i' the wild
+wood, while these be but puny rogues of no parts soever."
+
+"No rogues are we!" the three did loudly cry,
+
+"But sad, poor souls, that perishing do lie!"
+
+ "In me," quoth one, "behold a man of worth,
+ By trade a dyer and yclepen Gurth;
+ In all this world no man, howe'er he try,
+ Could live a life so innocent as I!"
+
+ The second spake: "I am the ploughman Rick,
+ That ne'er harmed man or woman, maid or chick!
+ But here in direful dungeon doomed be I,
+ Yet cannot tell the wherefore nor the why."
+
+ Then spake Red-head, albeit gasping still:
+ "An honest tanner I, my name is Will;
+ 'T was me thou kickedst, Fool, in such ill manner,
+ Of crimes unjust accused--and I, a tanner!"
+ Here Joc'lyn smiled. "Most saintly rogues," said he;
+ "The Saints, methinks, were rogues compared with ye,
+ And one must needs in prison come who'd find
+ The noblest, worthiest, best of all mankind.
+ Poor, ill-used knaves, to lie in dungeon pent,
+ Rogues sin-less quite, and eke so innocent,
+ What though your looks another tale do tell,
+ Since I'm your fellow, fellows let us dwell,
+ For if ye're rogues that thus in bonds do lie,
+ So I'm a rogue since here in bonds am I,
+ Thus I, a rogue, do hail ye each a brother,
+ Like brethren, then, we 'll comfort one another."
+
+Thus spake Jocelyn, whereafter these "saintly rogues" all three grew
+mightily peevish and, withal, gloomy, while Robin laughed and laughed at
+them, nodding head and wagging finger.
+
+"Prithee, good Motley," he questioned, "what should bring so rare a Fool
+to lie in dungeon fettered and gyved along of innocent rogues and roguish
+robber?"
+
+ Whereto Duke Jocelyn answered on this wise:
+ "Hast heard, belike, of Gui the Red?"
+ (Here went there up a howl)
+ "A mighty lord of whom't is said,
+ That few do love and many dread."
+ (Here went there up a growl)
+
+ "This potent lord I chanced to view,
+ Behaving as no lord should do,
+ And thereupon, this lord I threw
+ In pretty, plashing pool!
+
+ "Whereon this dreadful lord did get
+ Exceeding wroth and very wet;
+ Wherefore in dungeon here I'm set,
+ For fierce and froward Fool."
+
+ Here went there up a shout of glee.
+ Cried Robin: "O sweet Fool,
+ I would I had been there to see
+ This haughty lord of high degree
+ In pretty, plashing pool."
+
+ Here shout of glee became a roar,
+ That made the dungeon ring;
+ They laughed, they rolled upon the floor,
+ Till suddenly the massy door
+ On creaking hinge did swing;
+ And to them the head jailer now appeared,
+ A sombre man who sighed through tangled beard.
+
+"How now, rogue-lads," said he, "grow ye merry in sooth by reason o' this
+Fool! Aye me, all men do grow merry save only I, Ranulph, Chief Torturer,
+Ranulph o' the Keys, o' the Gibbet, o' the City Axe--poor Ranulph the
+Headsman. Good lack! I've cut off the head o' many a man merrier than I--
+aye, that have I, and more's the pity! And now, ye that are to die so soon
+can wax joyous along o' this motley Fool! Why, 't is a manifest good Fool,
+and rare singer o' songs, 't is said, though malapert, with no respect for
+his betters and over-quick at dagger-play. So 't is a Fool must die and
+sing no more, and there's the pity on't for I do love a song, I--being a
+companionable soul and jovial withal, aye, a very bawcock of a boy, I.
+To-morrow Red Gui doth hale ye to his Castle o' the Rock, there to die all
+five for his good pleasure, as is very fitting and proper, so be merry
+whiles ye may. Meantime, behold here another rogue, a youngling imp. So is
+five become six, and six may laugh louder than five, methinks, so laugh
+your best."
+
+Then Ranulph o' the Keys sighed, closed the great door and went his way,
+leaving the new captive to their mercies. Fair he was and slender, and of
+a timid seeming, for now he crouched against the wall, his face hid 'neath
+the hood of ragged mantle; wherefore the "saintly" three incontinent
+scowled upon him, roared at him and made a horrid clashing with their
+fetters:
+
+"Ha, blood and bones!" cried Rick the Ploughman. "What murderous babe art
+thou to go unshackled in presence o' thy betters?"
+
+"Aye, forsooth," growled Will the Tanner, "who 'rt thou to come hither
+distressing the last hours o' we poor, perishing mortals? Discourse, lest I
+bite the heart o' thee!"
+
+"Pronounce, imp!" roared Gurth the Dyer, "lest I tear thy liver!"
+
+"Sit ye, here beside me, youth," said Jocelyn, "and presently thou shalt
+know these tearers of livers and biters of hearts for lambs of innocence
+and doves of gentleness--by their own confessions. For, remark now, gentle
+boy, all we are prisoners and therefore guiltless of every offence--indeed,
+where is the prisoner, but who, according to himself, is not more sinned
+against than sinner, and where the convicted rogue but, with his tongue,
+shall disprove all men's testimony? So here sit three guileless men,
+spotless of soul and beyond all thought innocent of every sin soever.
+Yonder is Rob, a robber, and here sit I, a Fool."
+
+"Ha!" cried Rick. "Yet murderous Fool art thou and apt to dagger-play!
+Belike hast slain a man this day in way o' folly--ha?"
+
+"Two!" answered Jocelyn, nodding. "These two had been more but that my
+dagger brake."
+
+Here was silence awhile what time Jocelyn hummed the line of a song and his
+companions eyed him with looks askance.
+
+"Why then, good Folly," said Rick at last, "'t is for a little spilling o'
+blood art here, a little, pretty business o' murder--ha?"
+
+"'T is so they name it," answered Jocelyn.
+
+"Bones o' me!" growled Will, "I do begin to love this Fool."
+
+"And didst pronounce thyself our brother, Fool?" questioned Gurth.
+
+"Aye, verily!"
+
+"Then brethren let us be henceforth, and comrades to boot!" cried Rick.
+"Jolly Clerks o' Saint Nicholas to share and share alike--ha? So then 't is
+accorded. And now what o' yon lily-livered imp? 'T is a sickly youth and
+I love him not. But he hath a cloak, look'ee--a cloak forsooth and poor
+Rick's a-cold! Ho, lad--throw me thy cloak!"
+
+"Beshrew me!" roared Gurth. "But he beareth belt and wallet! Ha, boy, give
+thy wallet and girdle--bestow!"
+
+"And by sweet Saint Nick," growled Will, "the dainty youngling disporteth
+himself to mine eyes in a gold finger-ring! Aha, boy! Give now thy trinket
+unto an honest tanner."
+
+Hereupon and with one accord up started the three, fierce-eyed; but
+Jocelyn, laughing, rose up also.
+
+"Back, corpses!" quoth he, swinging the heavy fetters to and fro between
+shackled wrists. "Stand, good Masters Dry-bones; of what avail cloak, or
+wallet, or ring to ye that are dead men? Now, since corpses ye are
+insomuch as concerneth this world, be ye reasonable and kindly corpses.
+Sit ye then, Masters Dust-and-Ashes, and I will incontinent sing ye, chant
+or intone ye a little song of organs and graves and the gallows-tree
+whereon we must dance anon; as, hearken:
+
+ "Sing a song of corpses three
+ That ere long shall dancing be,
+ On the merry gallows-tree--
+ High and low,
+ To and fro,
+ Leaping, skipping,
+ Turning, tripping,
+ Wriggling, whirling,
+ Twisting, twirling:
+ Sing hey for the gallows-tree."
+
+"Stint--stint thy beastly song now!" cried Will, pale of cheek. But Jocelyn
+sang the louder:
+
+ "Sing a song of dying groans,
+ Sing a song of cries and moans,
+ Sing a song of dead men's bones,
+ That shall rest,
+ All unblest,
+ To rot and rot,
+ Remembered not,
+ For dogs to gnaw
+ And battle for,
+ Sing hey for the dead rogue's bones."
+
+"Abate--ha--abate thy fiendish rant!" cried Rick, glancing fearfully over
+shoulder.
+
+"Aye, Fool--beseech thee! Fair flesh may not abide it!" cried Gurth,
+shivering, while Robin grinned no more and the fearful youth leaned
+wide-eyed to behold the singer, this strange, scarred face beneath its
+battered cock's-comb, these joyous eyes, these smiling lips as Jocelyn
+continued:
+
+ "Now ends my song with ghosts forlorn,
+ Three gibbering ghosts that mope and mourn,
+ Then shrieking, flee at breath of dawn,
+ Where creatures fell
+ In torment dwell,
+ Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl,
+ That rend and bite
+ And claw and fight.
+ Where fires red-hot
+ Consume them not,
+ And they in anguish
+ Writhe and languish
+ And groan in pain
+ For night again.
+ Sing hey for pale ghosts forlorn."
+
+Now when the song was ended, the three looked dismally on one another and,
+bethinking them of their cruel end, they groaned and sighed lamentably:
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, I like that song, it's fine;
+ But let me ask about this line:
+ "Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl."
+ Now tell me, please, if you don't mind,
+ Why were the little horrors blind?
+
+ MYSELF: The beastly things, as I surmise,
+ Had scratched out one another's eyes.
+
+ GILL:
+ I suppose this place where creatures fell
+ In torments dwell is meant for--
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Well,
+ I think, my Gill, the place you've guessed,
+ So let me get on with our Geste.
+
+... they groaned and sighed lamentably--
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interjecteth:
+
+ GILL: Father--now don't get in a huff--
+ But don't you think they've groaned enough?
+
+ MYSELF: My Gillian--no! Leave well alone;
+ This is the place for them to groan.
+
+ Lamentably they did together moan,
+ And uttered each full many a hollow groan.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: But, father, groans are so distressing,
+ And groans in verse are most depressing--
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Then peace, child, and in common prose
+ I'll let the poor rogues vent their woes:
+
+... they groaned and they sighed lamentably--
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: What, father, are they groaning still?
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Of course they are, and so they will,
+ And so shall I; so, girl, take heed,
+ And cease their groaning to impede.
+ Is it agreed?
+
+ GILL: Oh, yes, indeed!
+
+ MYSELF: Then with our Geste I will proceed.
+
+... they groaned and sighed lamentably.
+
+"Alack!" cried Gurth, "I had not greatly minded till now, but this
+vile-tongued Fool hath stirred Fear to wakefulness within me. Here's me,
+scarce thirty turned, hale and hearty, yet must die woefully and with a
+maid as do love me grievously!"
+
+"And me!" groaned Rick. "No more than twenty and five, I--a very lad--and
+with two maids as do languish for me fain and fond!"
+
+"Ha, and what o' me?" mourned dismal, redheaded Will. "A lusty, proper
+fellow I be and wi' maids a score as do sigh continual. And me to die--O
+woe! And I a tanner!"
+
+"Content ye, brothers!" said Jocelyn. "Look now, here's Gurth hath lived
+but thirty years, and now must die--good: so shall he die weighted with
+less of sin than had he lived thirty more. Be ye comforted in this,
+distressful rogues, the shorter our life the less we sin, the which is a
+fair, good thing. As for these shackles, though our bodies be 'prisoned our
+souls go free, thus, while we languish here, our souls astride a sunbeam
+may mount aloft, 'bove all pains and tribulations soever. Thus if we must
+dance together in noose, our souls, I say, escaping these fleshy bonds,
+shall wing away to freedom everlasting. Bethink ye of this, grievous
+knaves, and take heart. Regarding the which same truths I will, for thy
+greater comforting, incontinent make ye a song--hearken!
+
+ "Let Folly sing a song to cheer
+ All poor rogues that languish here,
+ Doomed in dismal dungeon drear,
+ Doomed in dungeon dim.
+
+ "Though flesh full soon beneath the sod
+ Doth perish and decay,
+ Though cherished body is but clod,
+ Yet in his soul man is a God,
+ To do and live alway.
+ So hence with gloom and banish fear,
+ Come Mirth and Jollity,
+ Since, though we pine in dungeon drear,
+ Though these, our bodies, languish here,
+ We in our minds go free."
+
+Thus cheerily sang Jocelyn until, chancing to see how the youth leaned
+forward great-eyed, watching as he sung, he broke off to question him
+blithely:
+
+"How now, good youth, hast a leaning to Folly e'en though Folly go
+fettered, and thyself in dungeon?"
+
+"Fool," answered the youth, soft-voiced, "me-thinks 't is strange Folly can
+sing thus in chains! Hast thou no fear of death?"
+
+"Why truly I love it no more than my fellow-fools. But I, being fool
+uncommon, am wise enough to know that Death, howsoe'er he come, may come
+but once--and there's a comfortable thought!"
+
+So saying, Jocelyn seated himself beside the youth and watched him
+keen-eyed.
+
+"And thou canst sing of Freedom, Fool, to the jangle of thy fetters?"
+
+"Truly, youth, 't is but my baser part lieth shackled, thus while body
+pineth here, soul walketh i' the kindly sun--aye, e'en now as I do gaze on
+thee, I, in my thought, do stand in a fair garden--beside a lily-pool,
+where she I love cometh shy-footed to meet me, tall and gracious and sweet,
+as her flowers. A dream, belike, yet in this dream she looketh on me with
+eyes of love and love is on her lips and in her heart--so is my dream very
+precious."
+
+At this, the youth shrank beneath his cloak while in an adjacent corner the
+three rolled dice with Robin and quarrelled hoarse and loud.
+
+"Youth," said Jocelyn, "I pray thee, tell me thy name."
+
+Without lifting head the youth answered:
+
+"Hugo!"
+
+"Look up, Hugo!" But Hugo bowed his head the lower.
+
+"Hast wondrous hair, Hugo--red gold 'neath thy hood!"
+
+Here came a slim, white hand to order the rebellious tress but, finding
+none, trembled and hid itself. Then very suddenly Jocelyn leaned near and
+caught this hand, clasping it fast yet with fingers very gentle, and spake
+quick and eager:
+
+"Hugo--alas, Hugo! What bringeth thee in this evil place? Art in danger?
+Speak, speak!"
+
+"Nay, here is no harm for me, Joconde. And I am hither come for sake of a
+poor Fool that is braver than the bravest--one did jeopardise his foolish
+life for sake of a maid, wherefore I, Hugo, do give him life. Take now this
+wallet, within is good store of gold and better--a potent charm to close
+all watchful eyes. Hist, Joconde, and mark me well! Ranulph o' the Axe is
+a mighty drinker--to-night, drawn by fame of thy wit, he cometh with his
+fellows. This money shall buy them wine, in the wine cast this powder so
+shall they sleep and thou go free."
+
+"Aye!" said Jocelyn, "and then?"
+
+"There will meet thee a dwarf shall free thee of thy fetters, and by secret
+ways set thee without the city--then, tarry not, but flee for thy life--"
+
+"Now by the Holy Rood!" quoth Jocelyn softly, "never in all this world was
+there prisoner so happy as this poor Fool! But, Hugo, an I win free by
+reason of a brave and noble lady, so long as she bide in Canalise, so long
+must I--"
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now I understand--
+ Of course, this Hugo is Yolande!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss, the fact is clear;
+ But how on earth did she get here?
+ I don't want her here--
+
+ GILL: Why not?
+
+ MYSELF: Because, being here, she spoils my plot,
+ Which would drive any author frantic--
+
+ GILL: I think it's fine, and most romantic.
+ Besides, you know, you wrote her there--
+
+ MYSELF: She came--before I was aware--
+
+ GILL: She couldn't, father, for just think,
+ You've made her all of pen and ink.
+ So you, of course, can make her do
+ Exactly as you want her to.
+
+ MYSELF: Dear innocent! You little know
+ The trials poor authors undergo.
+ How heroines, when they break loose,
+ Are apt to play the very deuce,
+ Dragging their authors to and fro,
+ And where he wills--they will not go.
+
+ GILL: Well, since she's here, please let her be,
+ She wants to set Duke Joc'lyn free.
+
+ MYSELF: Enough--enough, my plans are made,
+ I'll set him free without her aid,
+ And in a manner, I apprise you,
+ As will, I fancy, quite surprise you.
+ Besides, a dungeon no fit place is
+ For a dainty lady's graces.
+ So, since she's in, 't is very plain
+ I now must get her out again.
+"To bide in Canalise,'t is folly!" cried Hugo. "O,'t were a madness fond!"
+
+"Aye," sighed Jocelyn, "some do call love a madness--thus mad am I,
+forsooth!"
+
+"Hush!" whispered Hugo, as from without came the tramp of heavy feet.
+"Fare-thee-well and--ah, be not mad, Joconde!"
+
+The door creaked open, and six soldiers entered bringing a prisoner,
+chained and fettered, and therewith fast bound and gagged, whom they set
+ungently upon the stone floor; then straightway seizing upon Robin, they
+haled him to his feet.
+
+"Come, rogue," said one, "thou art to hang at cockcrow!"
+
+"Is't so, good fellows?" quoth Robin,
+
+ "Then cock be curst
+ That croweth first!
+
+As for thee, good Motley, peradventure when, by hangman's noose, our souls
+enfranchised go, they shall company together, thine and mine! Till then
+--farewell, Folly!"
+
+So Robin was led forth of the dungeon and the heavy door crashed shut; but
+when Jocelyn looked for Hugo--lo! he was gone also.
+
+Evening was come and the light began to fail, therefore Jocelyn crouched
+beneath the narrow loophole and taking from his bosom the wallet, found
+therein good store of money together with the charm or philtre: and bowing
+his head above this little wallet, he fell to profound meditation.
+
+But presently, roused by hoarse laughter, he glanced up to find the three
+plaguing the helpless prisoner with sundry kicks and buffets; so Jocelyn
+crossed the dungeon, and putting the tormentors aside, stood amazed to
+behold in this latest captive none other than Sir Pertinax. Straightway he
+loosed off the gag, whereupon the good knight incontinent swore a gasping
+oath and prayed his limbs might be loosed also; the which done, he
+forthwith sprang up, and falling on the astonished three, he beat and
+clouted them with fist and manacles, and drave them to and fro about the
+dungeon.
+
+"Ha, dogs! Wilt spurn me with they vile feet, buffet me with thy beastly
+hands, forsooth!" roared he and kicked and cuffed them so that they,
+thinking him mad, cried aloud in fear until Sir Pertinax, growing a-weary,
+seated himself against the wall, and folding his arms, scowled indignant
+upon Jocelyn who greeted him merrily:
+
+"Hail and greeting to thee, my Pertinax; thy gloomy visage is a joy!"
+
+Sir Pertinax snorted, but spake not; wherefore the Duke questioned him full
+blithe: "What fair, good wind hath blown thee dungeon-wards, sweet soul?"
+
+"Ha!" quoth the knight. "Fetters, see'st thou, a dungeon, and these foul
+knaves for company--the which cometh of thy fool's folly, messire! So
+prithee ha' done with it!"
+
+"Stay, gentle gossip, thou'rt foolish, methinks; thou frettest 'gainst
+fate, thou kickest unwisely 'gainst the pricks, thou ragest pitifully
+'gainst circumstance--in fine, thou'rt a very Pertinax, my Pertinax!"
+
+"Aye troth, that am I and no dog to lie thus chained in noisome pit, par
+Dex! So let us out, messire, and that incontinent!"
+
+"Why here is a bright thought, sweet lad, let us out forthwith--but how?"
+
+"Summon the town-reeve, messire, the burgesses, the council, declare thy
+rank, so shall we go free--none shall dare hold thus a prince of thy
+exalted state and potent might! Declare thyself, lord."
+
+"This were simple matter, Pertinax, but shall they believe us other than we
+seem, think ye?"
+
+Quoth Pertinax: "We can try!"
+
+"Verily," said Jocelyn, "this very moment!" So saying, he turned to the
+three who sat in a corner muttering together.
+
+"Good brothers, gentle rogues," said he, "behold and regard well this
+sturdy cut-throat fellow that sitteth beside me, big of body, unseemly of
+habit, fierce and unlovely of look--one to yield the wall unto, see ye! And
+yet--now heed me well, this fellow, ragged and unkempt, this ill-looking
+haunter of bye-ways, this furtive snatcher of purses (hold thy peace,
+Pertinax!). I say this unsavoury-seeming clapper-claw is yet neither one
+nor other, but a goodly knight, famous in battle, joust and tourney, a
+potent lord of noble heritage, known to the world as Sir Pertinax of Shene
+Castle and divers rich manors and demesnes. Furthermore, I that do seem a
+sorry jesting-fellow, I that in antic habit go, that cut ye capers with
+ass's ears a-dangle and languish here your fellow in bonds, am yet no
+antic, no poor, motley Fool, but a duke and lord of many fair towns
+and rich cities beyond Morfeville and the Southward March. How say ye,
+brothers?"
+
+"That thou'rt a fool!" quoth Rick.
+
+"True!" nodded Jocelyn.
+
+"Most true!" sighed Sir Pertinax.
+
+"And a liar!" growled Gurth.
+
+"And a murderous rogue!" cried Will, "and shall hang, along of us--as I'm a
+tanner!"
+
+"Alack, Sir Knight," smiled Jocelyn, "of what avail rank or fame or both
+'gainst a motley habit and a ragged mantle. Thus, Pertinax, thou art
+no more than what thou seemest, to wit--a poor, fierce rogue, and I, a
+beggarly stroller."
+
+"And like to have our necks stretched, lord, by reason of a fond and
+foolish whim!"
+
+"Unless, Pertinax, having naught to depend on but our native wit we, by our
+wit, win free. Other poor rogues in like case have broke prison ere now,
+and 'tis pity and shame in us if thou, a knight so potent and high-born,
+and I, a prince, may not do the like."
+
+"Messire, unlearned am I in the breaking o' prisons so when my time cometh
+to die in a noose I can but die as knight should--though I had rather 't
+were in honest fight."
+
+"Spoken like the very fool of a knight!" quoth Jocelyn. "So now will I
+show thee how by the wit of a brave and noble lady we may yet 'scape the
+hangman. Hearken in thine ear!"
+
+But, when Jocelyn had told him all and shown money and sleeping-charm, Sir
+Pertinax grew thoughtful, sighing deep and oft, yet speaking not, wherefore
+the Duke questioned him.
+
+"Good gossip, gasp not!" quoth he. "How think'st thou of prison-breaking
+now--expound!"
+
+ "Why, sir, I think when all do charmed and spellbound
+ snore,
+ Then will we shrewdly choke them that they wake
+ no more!"
+
+"Nay, Pertinax, here shall be no need of choking, forsooth!" Sir Pertinax
+bowed chin on fist and sighed again.
+
+"Pertinax, prithee puff not! Yet, an puff ye will, pronounce me then the
+why and wherefore of thy puffing."
+
+"Lord, here is neither gasp nor puff, here is honest sighing. I can sigh as
+well as another."
+
+"Since when hast learned this so tender art, my Pertinax?"
+
+"And I do sigh by reason of memory."
+
+"As what, Pertinax?"
+
+"Eyes, lord--her eyes so darkly bright and, as I do think--black!"
+
+"Nay, blue, Pertinax--blue as heaven!"
+
+"Black, messire, black as--as black!"
+
+"Blue, boy, blue!"
+
+"Lord, they are black!"
+
+"Speak'st thou of Yolande?"
+
+"Messire, of one I speak, but whom, I know not. She came to me i' the
+greenwood as I sat a-fishing. Her hair long and black--ay, black and
+curled, her eyes dark, and for beauty ne'er saw I her like."
+
+"And yet hast seen my Lady Yolande oft!"
+
+"Her voice, messire, her voice soft and sweet as the murmur of waters, and
+very full of allure."
+
+"Why, how now!" cried Jocelyn. "Art thou--thou, my Pertinax, become
+at last one of Cupid's humble following? All joy to thee, my lovely
+lover--here in truth is added bond betwixt us! For since thou dost love a
+maid, even as I do love a maid, so being lovers twain needs must we love
+each other the better therefore."
+
+"Nay, out alack, my lord!" sighed Sir Pertinax. "For though I do love her,
+she, by reason o' my ill-favoured looks, the which, woe's me, I may not
+alter, loveth not me, as I do judge."
+
+"How judge ye this?"
+
+"Lord, she giveth me hard names. She, all in a breath, hath pictured me
+thus: 'Hooked of nose, fierce-eyed, of aspect grim--ungentle, unlovely,
+harsh o' tongue, dour o' visage, hard o' heart, flinty o' soul and of
+manners rude.'"
+
+"Good! But was this all, my Pertinax?"
+
+"Nay, lord, and with a wannion--there was more to like purpose."
+
+"Excellent, my lovely knight--let hope sing in thee. For look now, if she
+named thee hooked of nose, fierce-eyed and of aspect grim--she speaketh
+very truth, for so thou art, my Pertinax. Now truth is a fair virtue in man
+or maid, so is she both virtuous and fair! Nay, puff not, sighful Pertinax,
+but for thy comforting mark this--she hath viewed and heeded thy outward
+man narrowly--so shall she not forget thee soon; she with woman's eye hath
+marked the great heart of thee through sorry habit and rusty mail, and
+found therein the love thy harsh tongue might not utter; and thus,
+methinks, she hath thee in mind--aye, even now, mayhap. Lastly, good,
+lovely blunderbore--mark this! 'Tis better to win a maid's anger than she
+should heed thee none at all. Let love carol i' thy heart and be ye worthy,
+so, when ye shall meet again, 'tis like enough, despite thy hooked nose,
+she shall find thine eyes gentle, thy unloveliness lovely, thy harsh tongue
+wondrous tender and thy flinty soul the soul of a man."
+
+"Why, faith, lord," quoth Pertinax, his grim lips softening to a smile,
+"despite her words, she spake in voice full sweet, and her eyes--ah,
+messire, her eyes were wondrous kind--gentle eyes--aye, her eyes were--"
+
+"Eyes, my Pertinax--black eyes!"
+
+"And gentle! By which same token, lord, she did give to me this token--this
+most strange trinket."
+
+But all at once, was the creak of hinges, and the ponderous door opening,
+Ranulph o' the Axe appeared, followed by divers of the warders bearing
+torches.
+
+"Oho!" sighed Ranulph, doleful of visage. "Aha, good bawcocks, here come
+I, and these my fellows, for love o' thee, good Fool, thy quips, thy
+quirks, thy songs and antics capersome. For troth I'm a merry dog, I--a
+wanton wag, a bully boy and jovial, though woeful o' look!"
+
+"Wherefore woeful!"
+
+"For that I am not joyous, good Motley. Look 'ee--here's me born with a
+rare, merry heart, but sad and sober of head! Here's a heart bubbling with
+kindliness and soft and tender as sucking lamb, wedded to head and face
+full o' gloom! Here's laughter within me and woe without me, so am I ever
+at odds with myself--and there's my sorrow. Regarding the which same I will
+now chaunt ye song I made on myself; 'twas meant for merry song and blithe,
+but of itself turned mournful song anon as ye shall hear."
+
+So saying, Ranulph o' the Axe threw back grim head and sang gruff, albeit
+plaintive, thus:
+
+ "O! merry I am and right merry I'll be,
+ Ho-ho for block, gibbet and rack--oho!
+ To hang or behead ye there's none like to me,
+ For I'm headsman, tormentor, and hangman, all three,
+ And never for work do I lack--oho!
+
+ "I live but to torture since torment's my trade,
+ But my torment well meant is, I trow;
+ If I hang or behead ye, it can't be gainsaid,
+ Though my head for the head of a headsman was made,
+ Still I'm all loving-kindness below.
+
+ "But if ever I strive merry story to tell,
+ Full of japeful and humorsome graces,
+ 'T is as though I were tolling a funeral bell
+ As if dismally, dolefully tolling a knell,
+ So solemn and sad grow all faces.
+
+ "I hang, burn and torture the best that I may,
+ Ho pincers and thumbscrews and rack--oho!
+ And all heads I cut off in a headsmanlike way;
+ So I'll hang, burn and torment 'till cometh the day
+ That my kind heart within me shall crack--oho!
+ Well-a-wey! Well-a-wey!
+ Woe is me for the day
+ That my poor heart inside me shall crack! Oho!
+
+"So there's my song! 'T is dull song and, striving to be merry song, is sad
+song, yet might be worse song, for I have heard a worse song, ere now--but
+'t is poor song. So come, Fool, do thou sing us merry song to cheer us
+'gainst my sad song."
+
+"Why truly, Sir Headsman," said Jocelyn, "here be songs a-many, yet if thou
+'rt for songs, songs will we sing thee, each and every of us. But first,
+behold here is money shall buy us wine in plenty that we may grow merry
+withal in very sooth."
+
+"Oho!" cried Ranulph. "Spoken like a noble Motley, a fair, sweet Fool! Go
+thou, Bertram, obey this lord-like Fool--bring wine, good wine and much,
+and haste thee, for night draweth on and at cock-crow I must away."
+
+"Aye," nodded Jocelyn, "in the matter of one--Robin?"
+
+"Verily, Fool. A cheery soul is Robin, though an outlaw, and well beloved
+in Canalise. So is he to hang at cock-crow lest folk make disturbance."
+
+"Where lieth he now?"
+
+"Where but in the watch-house beside the gallows 'neath Black Lewin's
+charge. But come, good Motley, sing--a pretty song, a merry ditty, ha!"
+
+So forthwith Jocelyn took his lute and sang:
+
+ "With dainty ditty
+ Quaint and pretty
+ I will fit ye,
+ So heed and mark me well,
+ And who we be
+ That here ye see
+ Now unto ye
+ Explicit I will tell:
+
+ "Then here first behold one Gurth, a worthy, dying
+ Dyer,
+ Since he by dyeing liveth, so to dye is his desire:
+ For being thus a very Dyer, he liveth but to dye,
+ And dyeing daily he doth all his daily wants
+ supply.
+ Full often hath he dyed ere now to earn his
+ daily bread,
+ Thus, dyeing not, this worthy Dyer must soon,
+ alas! be dead.
+
+ "Here's Rick--a saintly ploughman, he
+ Hath guided plough so well,
+ That here, with rogues the like of me,
+ He pines in dungeon cell.
+
+ "Here's Red-haired Will--O fie!
+ That Will should fettered lie
+ In such base, cruel manner!
+ For though his hair be red,
+ Brave Will, when all is said,
+ Is--hark 'ee--Will's a tanner!"
+
+"Enough, Fool!" cried Will. "An thou must sing, sing of thyself, for
+thyself, to thyself, and I will sing of myself an' need be!"
+
+Laughed JOCELYN:
+
+ Why then, brave Will,
+ Come, sing thy fill.
+
+Whereupon Will cleared his throat, squared his shoulders, and rumbling a
+note or so to fix the key, burst into songful roar:
+
+ "A tanner I, a lusty man,
+ A tanner men call Will,
+ And being tanner true, I tan,
+ Would I were tanning still;
+ Ho derry, derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ Would I were tanning still."
+
+"Aye, verily!" growled Sir Pertinax. "And choked in thy vile tan-pit, for
+scurvier song was never heard, par Dex!"
+
+"Why 'tis heard, forsooth," said Jocelyn, "and might be heard a mile hence!
+Chant on, brave Will."
+
+The Tanner, nothing loth, wiped his mouth, clenched his fists and standing
+square and rigid, continued:
+
+ "How gaily I a-tanning went,
+ No tanner blithe as I,
+ No tanner e'er so innocent,
+ Though here in chains I lie.
+ Ho derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ In grievous chains I lie.
+
+ "No more, alack, poor Will will tan,
+ Since Will will, all unwilling,
+ Though tanner he and proper man,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.
+ Hey derry down,
+ Ho derry down,
+ A gloomy grave be filling."
+
+"Now out upon thee, Tanner!" sighed Ranulph. "Here's sad song, a song o'
+graves, and therefore most unlovely, a song I--Saints and Angels!" he
+gasped:
+
+ And pointed where Sir Pertinax did stand,
+ The Heart of Crystal shining in his hand.
+ "The Heart-in-Heart! The Crystal Heart!" cried he,
+ And crying thus, sank down on bended knee,
+ While jailers all and scurvy knaves, pell-mell,
+ Betook them to their marrow-bones as well;
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax oped wond'ring eyes,
+ And questioned him 'twixt anger and surprise.
+ Then answered Ranulph, "Sir, though chained ye go,
+ Yet to thee we do all obedience owe
+ By reason of that sacred amulet,
+ That crystal heart in heart of crystal set:
+
+ 'For he that holdeth Crystal Heart
+ Holdeth all and every part,
+ And by night or eke by day
+ The Heart-in-Heart all must obey!"'
+
+ "Obey?" quoth Pertinax. "Ha! Let us see
+ If in thy vaunt there aught of virtue be:
+ For by this Heart of Crystal that I bear,
+ I charge ye loose the chains the Fool doth wear,
+ Then off with these accursd gyves of mine,
+ Or--"
+
+ Ranulph to the warders gave a sign,
+ And they to work did go with such good speed,
+ That Joc'lyn soon with Pertinax stood freed,
+ "Now by my halidome!" quoth Pertinax,
+ "This talisman methinks no magic lacks,
+ So knaves, I bid ye--by this magic Heart,
+ Draw bolt and bar that hence we may depart--"
+ But now the scurvy knaves made dismal cry.
+ "Good sir!" they wailed, "Ah, leave us not to die!"
+ "Aye, by Heav'n's light!" fierce quoth Sir Pertinax,
+ "Ye're better dead by gibbet or by axe,
+ Since naught but scurvy, coward rogues are ye,
+ And so be hanged--be hanged to ye, all three!"
+
+ "Knight!" Joc'lyn sighed, "'neath Heaven's light
+ somewhere
+ Doth live a dark-eyed maid with black-curled hair--
+ Her voice is soft and full of sweet allure,
+ And thou, perchance, one day may humbly woo her;
+ So these poor rogues now woo their lives of thee,
+ Show mercy then and mercy find of she."
+
+ At this Sir Pertinax rubbed chin and frowned,
+ Red grew his cheek, his fierce eyes sought the ground,
+ Then, even as he thus pinched chin and scowled,
+ "Loose, then, the dismal knaves!" at last he
+ growled.
+ But now grim Ranulph tangled beard tore
+ And wrung his hands and sighed and groaned and
+ swore
+ With loud complaints and woeful lamentations,
+ With muttered oaths and murmured objurgations,
+ With curses dire and impious imprecations.
+
+"Beshrew me, masters all!" quoth he. "Now here's ill prank to play a poor
+hangman, may I ne'er quaff good liquor more, let me languish o' the
+quartern ague and die o' the doleful dumps if I ever saw the like o' this!
+For look 'ee now, if I set these three rogues free, how may I hang 'em as
+hang 'em I must, since I by hanging live to hang again, and if I don't
+hang 'em whom shall I hang since hang I must, I being hangman? Bethink ye
+o' this, sirs, and show a little pity to a poor hangman."
+
+"Why then, mark ye this, hangman," said Jocelyn, "since on hanging doth thy
+hangman's reputation hang, then hang thou must; therefore, an ye lack rogue
+to hang, go hang thyself, so, hanging, shall thy hanging be done with and
+thou having lived a hangman, hangman die, thus, hangman hanging hangman,
+hangman hanging shall be hangman still, and being still, thus hanging,
+shall hang no more."
+
+"Aye, verily!" quoth Sir Pertinax, "there it is in a nutshell--hangman, be
+hanged to thee! So off with their fetters, Master Gallows, by Crystal Heart
+I charge thee!"
+
+Hereupon the scurvy knaves were freed, to their great joy, and following
+the bold knight, made haste to quit their gloomy dungeon. Reaching the
+guardroom above, Sir Pertinax called lustily for sword and bascinet, and
+thereafter chose divers likely weapons for his companions who, with axe and
+pike and guisarme on shoulder, followed him out into the free air.
+
+Now it was night and very dark, but Gurth, who was a man of the town,
+brought them by dim and lonely alleys and crooked ways until at last they
+halted within a certain dark and narrow street.
+
+"Whither now?" questioned Sir Pertinax.
+
+"Verily," said Jocelyn, "where but to the gatehouse--"
+
+"Not so," muttered Gurth, "'tis overly well guarded--"
+
+"Aye," growled Will, "which is true, as I'm a tanner!"
+
+"Howbeit," said Jocelyn, "I'm for the gatehouse!"
+
+"And wherefore?" demanded Sir Pertinax.
+
+"In cause of one Rob, a robber."
+
+"Aye, but," said Gurth, "he is to hang at crow-o'-cock and 'tis nigh
+cock-crow now."
+
+"The more need for haste," said Jocelyn.
+
+ But, even now, as they together spoke,
+ A sullen tramp the sleeping echoes woke,
+ Behind them in the gloom dim forms they saw,
+ While others grimly barred the way before;
+ And so, by reason that they could not fly,
+ They grasped their weapons and prepared to die.
+ Then in the darkness of that narrow street,
+ Broad axe and pike and flashing sword did meet.
+ Duke Jocelyn full many a thrust drave home,
+ Till whirling pike-staff smote him on cock's-comb,
+ And staggering back to an adjacent wall,
+ In deep-sunk doorway groaning he did fall.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: Now, father, please don't let him die--
+
+ MYSELF: No, no, indeed, my Gill, not I,
+ My heroes take a lot of killing--
+
+ GILL: Then go on quick, it's very thrilling!
+ I hope he vanquishes his foes,
+ And let him do it, please, in prose.
+
+"O woe!" said a quavering voice. "Alack, and well-a-wey--"
+
+My daughter GILLIAN demurreth:
+
+ GILL: No, father--that's not right at all.
+ You'd got to where you'd made him fall.
+
+ MYSELF: Well, then, Duke Joc'lyn, from his swoon awaking,
+ Found that his head confoundedly was aching;
+ Found he was bruised all down from top to toe--
+
+ GILL: A bruise, father, and he a duke? No, no!
+ Besides, you make
+ A frightful mistake--
+ A hero's head should never ache;
+ And, father, now, whoever knew
+ A hero beaten black and blue?
+ And then a bruise, it seems to me,
+ Is unromantic as can be.
+ He can't be bruised,
+ And shan't be bruised,
+ For, if you bruise him,
+ And ill-use him,
+ I'll refuse him--
+ No reader, I am sure, would choose
+ A hero any one can bruise.
+ So, father, if you want him read,
+ Don't bruise him, please--
+
+ MYSELF: Enough is said!
+
+At this, Jocelyn sat up and wondered to find himself in a small chamber
+dim-lit by a smoking cresset. On one side of him leaned an ancient woman,
+a very hag-like dame
+
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below;
+
+and upon his other side a young damsel of a wondrous dark beauty.
+
+"Lady," said he, "where am I?"
+
+"Hush, poor Motley!" whispered the maid. "Thou didst fall 'gainst the door
+yonder. But speak low, they that seek thy life may yet be nigh."
+
+"Nay, then," quoth Jocelyn, reaching for his sword, "I must out and aid my
+comrades."
+
+"Alack!" sighed the old woman. "Thy comrades do without lie all slain save
+one that groaneth--hearken!"
+
+"O, woe!" mourned a quavering voice beyond the door. "O, woe, sore hurted I
+be, and like to die--and I a tanner!"
+
+Very heedfully, Jocelyn unbarred the door, and peering into the narrow
+street, found it deserted and empty save for certain outstretched forms
+that stirred not; looking down on these dim shapes he knew one for Rick the
+Ploughman, whose ploughing days were sped and, huddled in a corner hard by,
+he found Will the Tanner, who groaned fitfully; but of Sir Pertinax and
+Gurth he saw nothing. So Jocelyn made shift to bear the Tanner within the
+house, and here Will, finding his hurts of small account, sat up, and while
+the wise old woman bandaged his wound, answered Jocelyn's eager questions,
+and told how Sir Pertinax and Gurth the Dyer had broken through their
+assailants and made good their escape.
+
+Now, when the old woman had thus cherished their hurts, Jocelyn would
+fain have given her money, but she mumbled and mowed and cracked her
+finger-joints and shook grey head.
+
+"Not so, good Fool!" she croaked, "for I do know thee for that same gentle
+Motley did save me from Black Lewin--a murrain seize him! So now will I
+save thee--behold!" So saying she set bony hand to wall; and lo! in the
+wall yawned a square opening narrow and dark, whence issued a cold wind.
+"Begone, thou brave merryman!" quoth she. "Yonder safety lieth; this
+darksome way shall carry thee out beneath the city wall!"
+
+"Gramercy, thou kindly Witch!" said Jocelyn. "Yet first must I to the
+watch-house beside the gate for one Robin that lieth 'prisoned there."
+
+"How, Fool, dost mean Robin-a-Green that is to hang?"
+
+"In truth!"
+
+"But Rob o' the Green is outlawed, banned o' Church, a very rogue!"
+
+"But a man, wherefore I would save him alive."
+
+"Nay, Fool, o' thy folly be wise and seek ye safety instead. Would'st peril
+thy body for a thief?"
+
+"Verily, dame, even as I did for a Witch."
+
+Now, here the old woman scowled and mumbled and cracked her finger-bones
+angrily. But the beauteous young maid viewed Jocelyn with bright, approving
+eyes:
+
+"But, Fool," cried she, "O wondrous Fool, wilt adventure thyself in cause
+so desperate?"
+
+"Blithely, fair lady!"
+
+"But, alas! the guards be many and thou but one--"
+
+"Nay!" cried a voice:
+
+ "For thou may'st see
+ That two are we!"
+
+And forth of the dark opening in the wall strode Lobkyn Lollo the Dwarf,
+his great, spiked club on brawny shoulder. Jocelyn viewed the monstrous
+little man in awed wonder; but beholding his mighty girth and determined
+aspect, wonder changed to kindliness; quoth he:
+
+"Fair greeting, comrade! If thou'rt for a little bickering and disputation
+with that goodly club o' thine, come thy ways for methinks I do smell the
+dawn."
+
+"Aha, thou naughty little one!" cried the Witch, shaking bony fist. "Art
+for fighting for rogue's life along of a Fool, then?"
+
+Quoth LOBKYN:
+
+ Aye, grannam, though ye slap me, still,
+ Fight and aid this Fool I will--
+
+"And talking o' Will," quoth Will, "what o' me, for though I'm a tanner I'm
+a man, aye, verily, as I'm a tanner."
+
+"And methinks a better man than tanner!" said Jocelyn. "So here we stand
+three goodly wights and well armed. Let's away--"
+
+"Nay, then, wild Madcap," croaked the Witch, "an my Lobkyn go I go, and,
+though I be old and feeble, shalt find my craft more potent than sword or
+club--wait!"
+
+Here the old woman, opening a dingy cupboard, took thence a small crock
+over which she muttered spells and incantations with look and gesture so
+evil that Lobkyn eyed her askance, Will the Tanner cowered and whispered
+fragments of prayers, and even Jocelyn crossed himself.
+
+"Come!" croaked the Witch. "Now do I go to save rogue from gallows for sake
+of thee, tall Fool. Come ye, come and do as I bid ye in all things--come!"
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 6
+
+ Tells how for Robin a good fight was fought
+ And our old Witch a spell mysterious wrought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Phoebus, the young and gladsome god of day,
+ His fiery steeds had yoked to flaming car
+ (By which, my Gill, you may surmise
+ The sun was just about to rise)
+ And that be-feathered, crook-billed harbinger,
+ The rosy-wattled herald of the dawn,
+ Red comb aflaunt, bold-eyed and spurred for strife,
+ Brave Chanticleer, his strident summons raised
+ (By which fine phrase I'd have you know,
+ The cock had just begun to crow)
+ And gentle Zephyr, child of Boreas,
+ Stole soft the hush of dewy leaves,
+ And passing kissed the flowers to wakefulness.
+ Thus, laden with their sweetness, Zephyr came
+ O'er hill and dale, o'er battlement and wall,
+ Into the sleeping town of Canalise,
+ Through open lattice and through prison-bars,
+ To kiss the cheek of sleeping Innocence
+ And fevered brows of prisoners forlorn,
+ Who, stirring 'neath sweet Zephyr's soft caress,
+ Dreamed themselves young, with all their sins unwrought.
+ So, gentle Zephyr, messenger of dawn,
+ Fresh as the day-spring, of earth redolent,
+ Through narrow loophole into dungeon stole,
+ Where Robin the bold outlaw fettered lay,
+ Who, sighing, woke to feel her fragrant kiss,
+
+
+ And, breathing in this perfume-laden air,
+ He seemed to smell those thousand woodland scents
+ He oft had known, yet, knowing, never heeded:
+ Of lofty bracken, golden in the sun,
+ Of dewy violets shy that bloomed dim-seen
+ Beside some merry-laughing, woodland brook
+ Which, bubbling, with soft music filled the air;
+ The fragrant reek of smouldering camp-fire
+ Aglow beside some dark, sequestered pool
+ Whose placid waters a dim mirror made
+ To hold the glister of some lonely star;
+ He seemed to see again in sunny glade
+ The silky coats of yellow-dappled deer,
+ With branching antlers gallantly upborne;
+ To hear the twang of bow, the whizz of shaft,
+ And cheery sound of distant-winded horn.
+ Of this and more than this, bold Robin thought,
+ And, in his dungeon's gloomy solitude,
+ He groaned full deep and, since no eye could see,
+ Shed bitter tears.
+
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN supplicateth:
+
+ GILL: Poor Robin! Father, promise me
+ To save him from the gallows-tree.
+ He's much too nice a man to kill;
+ So save him, father; say you will!
+
+ MYSELF: But think of poor Ranulph with no one to hang!
+
+ GILL: Ranulph's song was top-hole, but--
+
+ MYSELF: You know I hate slang--
+
+ GILL: Yes, father--but then I hate Ranulph much more,
+ With his nasty great beard that in tangles he wore.
+ So, father, if you must have some one to slay,
+ Instead of poor Robin, hang Ranulph--
+
+ MYSELF: Why, pray?
+
+ GILL: In nice books the nasty folks only should die;
+ Those are the kind of books nice people buy.
+ I like a book that makes me glad,
+ And loathe a book that makes me sad;
+ So, as this Geste is made for me,
+ Make it as happy as can be.
+
+ MYSELF: And is it, so far, as you'd wish?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, though it's rather swish,
+ I think it needs a deal more love--
+
+ MYSELF: Swish? How--what's this? Great heavens
+ above!
+ Will you, pray, miss, explain to me
+ How any story "swish" may be?
+ And why, my daughter, you must choose
+ A frightful word like "swish" to use?
+ What hideous language are you talking?
+
+ GILL: Sorrow, father! "Swish" means "corking."
+ I think our Geste is "out of sight,"
+ Except that, to please me, you might
+ Put in more love--
+
+ MYSELF: Now, how can Joc'lyn go love-making
+ When his head is sore and aching?
+ Besides, this is no place to woo;
+ He'll love-make when I want him to.
+
+ GILL: But, father, think--in all this time,
+ In all this blank-verse, prose and rhyme,
+ The fair Yolande he's never kissed,
+ And you've done nothing to assist;
+ And, as I'm sure they're both inclined,
+ I think your treatment most unkind.
+
+ MYSELF: This Geste I'll write in my own way,
+ That is, sweet Prattler, if I may;
+ When I'm ready for them to kiss,
+ Then kiss they shall; I promise this.
+ Now I'll to Rob return, if you,
+ My Gillian, will permit me to!
+
+ Thus in his prison pent, poor woeful Rob,
+ Since none might see or hear, scorned not to sob,
+ And mightily, in stricken heart, did grieve
+ That he so soon so fair a world must leave.
+ And all because the morning wind had brought
+ Earth's dewy fragrance with sweet mem'ries fraught.
+ So Robin wept nor sought his grief to stay,
+ Yearning amain for joys of yesterday;
+ Till, hearing nigh the warder's heavy tread,
+ He sobbed no more but strove to sing instead.
+
+ "A bow for me, a bow for me,
+ All underneath the greenwood tree,
+ Where slaves are men, and men are free;
+ Give me a bow!
+
+ "Give me a bow, a bow of yew,
+ Good hempen cord and arrows true,
+ When foes be thick and friends be few,
+ Give me a bow!"
+
+Thus cheerily sang Robin the while he dried his bitter tears, as the
+door of his prison was flung wide and Black Lewin strode in and with him
+men-at-arms bearing torches.
+
+"What ho, rogue Robin!" cried he. "The cock hath crowed. Ha! Will ye sing,
+knave, will ye sing, in faith?"
+
+"In faith, that will I!" laughed Robin.
+
+"Here come we to bring ye to the gallows, Robin--how say ye?"
+
+"The more reason for singing since my singing must soon be done!" So, with
+pikemen before him and behind, bold Robin marched forth to die, yet sang
+full blithely as he went:
+
+ "So lay my bones 'neath good yew-tree,
+ Thus Rob and yew soon one shall be,
+ Where all true men may find o' we
+ A trusty bow!"
+
+"Ha' done!" growled Black Lewin, shivering in the chilly air of dawn.
+"Quit--quit thy singing, rogue, or by the foul fiend I--"
+
+"Who dareth name the fiend?" croaked an awful voice, whereat Black Lewin
+halted, gaped and stood a-tremble, while beneath steel cap and bascinet
+all men's hair stirred and rose with horror; for before them was a ghastly
+shape, a shape that crouched in the gloom with dreadful face aflame with
+smouldering green fire.
+
+"Woe!" cried the voice. "Woe unto thee, Lewin the Black, that calleth on
+fiend o' the pit!"
+
+And now came a fiery hand that, hovering in the air, pointed lambent finger
+at gaping Lewin and at each of the shivering pike-men in turn.
+
+"Woe--sorrow and woe to one and all, ye men of blood, plague and pest, pain
+o' flesh, and grief of soul seize ye, be accursed and so--begone! Hence
+ho--away!
+
+ "Rommani hi! Avaunt, I say,
+ Prendraxon!
+ Thus direst curse on ye I lay
+ Shall make flesh shrink and bone decay,
+ To rot and rot by night and day
+ Till flesh and bone do fall away,
+ Mud unto mud and clay to clay.
+ A spell I cast,
+ Shall all men blast.
+ Hark ye,
+ Mark ye,
+ Rommani hi--prendraxon!"
+
+Down fell pike and guisarme from nerveless fingers and, gasping with fear,
+Black Lewin and his fellows turned and fled nor stayed for one look
+behind; only Robin stood there (since he might not run away by reason of
+his bonds) babbling prayers between chattering teeth and with all his
+fingers crossed.
+
+"Oho, Fool, aha!" cried the voice. "Thus have I, a poor, feeble old woman,
+wrought better than all thy valiance or Lobkyn's strength. So, by potency
+of my spells and magic are we quits, thou and I. Bring, then, thy rogue
+outlaw and haste ye!"
+
+So saying the old Witch muffled her awful, fiery face in ragged mantle and
+turned away; and in that moment Robin was aware of three forms about him in
+the grey dawn-light, felt his bonds loosed off by quick, strong hands and
+drew a great, joyous breath.
+
+"How, Fool, thou brave and noble Motley," quoth he, "is it thou again? And
+I to live?"
+
+"Aye, marry, Robin! But come apace, the day breaketh and the city is
+astir--hark to yon shouts! Follow!"
+
+So with the Tanner on one side and Lobkyn on the other, Robin ran, hard on
+Jocelyn's heels; and ever the dawn brightened until up came the sun chasing
+away sullen shadow and filling street and alley with his glory.
+
+But now, and just as they reached that narrow street where safety lay,
+they heard a shout, a scream, a rush of feet and roar of fierce voices and
+beheld, amid a surge of armed men, the old woman struggling in the cruel
+grip of Black Lewin who (like many others I wot of, my Gill) was brave
+enough by daylight. Vainly the old creature strove, screaming for mercy as
+Black Lewin whirled aloft his sword; but his blade clashed upon another as
+Jocelyn sprang, and for a while the air rang with the sound of fierce-
+smiting steel until, throwing up his arms, Black Lewin fell and lay there.
+But, roaring vengeance, the soldiery closed about Jocelyn who, beset by
+blows on every side, sank in turn, yet, even as he fell, two short though
+mighty legs bestrode his prostrate form and Lobkyn Lollo, whirling huge
+club, smote down the foremost assailant and, ever as he smote, he
+versified and chanted--thus:
+
+ "I'm Lollo hight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I,
+ I'm Lollo hight,
+ 'Tis my delight
+ By day or night
+ In honest fight
+ With main and might
+ Good blows to smite,
+ And where they light
+ 'Tis sorry plight
+ For that poor wight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+
+ "Bows, swords and staves,
+ Come, lusty knaves,
+ And fit for graves
+ Brave Lobkyn soon will make ye;
+ So fight, say I,
+ Nor turn and fly,
+ Or, when ye die,
+ Then may old Horny take ye."
+
+Fierce raged the conflict, but in that narrow street they made good play
+against their many assailants, the valiant Dwarf's mighty club, backed by
+the Tanner's darting pike and Robin's flashing sword, which he had
+snatched from a loosened grasp. But Jocelyn lay prone upon his face,
+between Lobkyn's firm-planted feet, and stirred not. So club whirled,
+sword flashed and pike darted while, high above the tumult, rose Lobkyn's
+fierce chant:
+
+ "Hot blood I quaff,
+ At death I laugh,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+ Come all that may,
+ And all I'll slay,
+ And teach ye how to die."
+
+"Lob--Lobkyn!" screamed the Witch. "Thou that drinkest nought but
+milk--talk not of blood, thou naughty poppet. Back now--stand back, I do
+command thee!"
+
+Lobkyn smote a man to earth and, sighing regretful, stepped aside.
+
+ "Back!" screamed the Witch. "Stand back, I say, all three,
+ And leave this wicked rabblement to me.
+ Now shall they learn the terror of my curse,
+ Black magic shall they feel--and something worse!"
+
+ Then uttered she a sudden, hideous cry,
+ And, leaping, whirled her bony hands on high,
+ And lo! a choking dust-cloud filled the air;
+ That wreathed in whirling eddies here and there.
+
+ "Perendewix!" she cried. "Oh Radzywin--
+ Thraxa! Behold, my witchcraft doth begin!"
+ Back shrank their foes, back reeled they one and all,
+ They choked, they gasped, they let their weapons fall;
+ And some did groan, and some did fiercely sneeze,
+ And some fell prone, some writhed upon their knees;
+ Some strove to wipe the tears from blinded eyes,
+ But one and all gave voice to awful cries.
+
+"Come!" cried the Witch, "to the door--the door. Lobkyn, bear ye the brave
+Fool--and tenderly! Haste, naughty bantling, haste--I hear the tread of
+more soldiers!"
+
+So Lobkyn stooped and, lifting Jocelyn's inanimate form, tucked it beneath
+one arm, and with Robin and Will the Tanner, followed the old Witch into
+the house.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN commandeth:
+
+ GILL: Go on, father, do; why will you keep stopping?
+ I think the old Witch is just perfectly topping.
+ And what frightful words she uses for curses!
+
+ MYSELF: Very frightful, indeed, though your slang still much worse is,
+ With your "topping," "top-holing," your "swishing" and "clipping,"
+
+ GILL: Well, I merely intended to say it was ripping;
+ But, if you object to my praises--
+
+ MYSELF: I only object to your phrases,
+ For there's no author but will own
+ He "liveth not by bread alone."
+ As for myself, if what I write
+ Doth please--then praise with all your might.
+
+ GILL: Well, then, the Witch is splendid, though
+ I'm very curious to know
+ Just how her face all fiery grew,
+ And what the stuff was that she threw--
+ The stuff that made the soldiers sneeze
+ And brought them choking to their knees
+ It sounds as though it might be snuff.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, they'd not found out such stuff.
+ But grisly witches long ago
+ Did many strange devices know.
+ Indeed, my Gill, they knew much more
+ Than wise folk gave them credit for.
+
+ GILL: Well, what was it? You haven't said.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll get on with our Geste instead.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 7
+
+ That telleth to the patient reader nought,
+ Save how the Duke was to the wild-wood brought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ With sleepy eyes Duke Jocelyn watched afar,
+ In deep, blue void a solitary star,
+ That, like some bright and wakeful eye, did seem
+ To watch him where he lay 'twixt sleep and dream.
+ And, as he viewed it winking high above,
+ He needs must think of Yolande and his love,
+ And how, while he this twinkling star did view,
+ She, wakeful lying, might behold it too,
+ Whereas she lay a spotless maid and fair,
+ Clothed in the red-gold glory of her hair;
+ And, thinking thus, needs must he fondly sigh,
+ Then frowned to hear a lusty snore hard by--
+
+--and looking whence came this sound, the Duke sat up and his wonder grew;
+for by light of a fire that glowed in a blackened fissure of rock he beheld
+himself couched on a bed of bracken within a roomy cave. Beside the fire
+leaned a mighty, iron-shod club, and beyond this, curled up like a dog,
+snored Lobkyn Lollo, the Dwarf. Hereupon Jocelyn reached out and shook Lob
+to wakefulness, who grunted sleepily, rubbed his eyes drowsily and yawned
+mightily:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Good Dwarf, where am I?
+
+ Answered LOBKYN:
+ Safe, Fool, safe art thou, I trow,
+ Where none but Lob and friends do know.
+
+ JOCELYN: But how am I hither?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, truly thou art hither, Fool,
+ Because thou art not thither, Fool!
+ In these two arms, thy life to save,
+ I bore thee to this goodly cave.
+
+ JOCELYN: How may one of thy inches bear man of mine so far?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, though I of inches lack,
+ I'm mighty strong, both arm and back,
+ Thou that art longer man than me,
+ Yet I am stronger man than thee,
+ Though, lusty Fool, big fool you be,
+ I'd bear thee, Fool, if thou wert three.
+ And mark, Fool, if my grammar seemeth weak,
+ Pray license it since I in verse must speak.
+
+ JOCELYN: And pray why must thou speak in verse?
+
+ LOBKYN: Nature hath on me laid this curse,
+ And, though to speak plain prose I yearn,
+ My prose to verse doth ever turn.
+ Therefore I grieve, as well I might,
+ Because of my poetic plight--
+ Though bards and rhymers all I scorn,
+ Alack! I was a rhymer born.
+
+ JOCELYN: Alack! poor Dwarf, as thou must versify,
+ By way of courtesy, then, so will I.
+
+ LOBKYN: How, Fool, then canst thou rhyme?
+
+ JOCELYN: Aye, Dwarf, at any time!
+ In dark, in light,
+ By day, by night,
+ Standing, sitting,
+ As be fitting,
+ Verses witty,
+ Quaint or pretty,
+ Incontinent I'll find.
+ Verses glad, Dwarf,
+ Verses sad, Dwarf,
+ Every sort, Lob,
+ Long or short, Lob
+ Or verses ill,
+ Yet verses still
+ Which might be worse,
+ I can rehearse
+ When I'm for verse inclined.
+ So, Lob, first speak me what became
+ Of our old Witch, that potent dame.
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, in faith she wrought so well
+ With direful curse and blasting spell
+ That every howling soldier-knave,
+ Every rogue and base-born slave
+ That by chance I did not slay,
+ From my grand-dam ran away.
+
+ JOCELYN: A noble Witch! Now, Lobkyn, tell
+ What hap'd when in the fight I fell,
+ And how alive I chance to be.
+
+ LOBKYN: Fool, I was there to succour thee.
+ I smote those pike-men hip and thigh,
+ That they did mangled pike-men lie;
+ Their arms, their legs, their skulls I broke,
+ Two, three, and four at every stroke.
+ I drave them here, I smote them there,
+ I smote, I slew, I none did spare,
+ I laughed, I sang, I--
+
+"Ha, Lob!" growled a sleepy voice. "Now, as I'm a tanner, here's a-many
+I's! By Saint Crispin, meseemeth thou'rt all I's--for as thou fought I
+fought, or thought I fought, forsooth!"
+
+ LOBKYN: True, Will, did'st fight in goodly manner,
+ Though fightedst, Will, like any tanner;
+ But I did fight, or I'm forsworn,
+ Like one unto the manner born.
+ I fought, forsooth, with such good will,
+ 'Tis marvel I'm not fighting still.
+ And so I should be, by my fay,
+ An I had any left to slay;
+ But since I slew them all--
+
+"Hold there!" cried the Tanner. "I slew one or two, Lob, and Robin
+likewise. Thou'rt a lusty fighter, but what o' me and Robin--ha, what o'
+we?"
+
+ LOBKYN: In faith, ye're proper men and tall,
+ And I'm squat man, my stature small,
+ Nath'less, though small and squat I be,
+ I am the best man of the three.
+
+"Why, as to that," quoth the Tanner, "'tis but you says so! As to me I
+think what I will, and I do think--"
+
+But here Lobkyn started up and seized the great club; quoth he:
+
+ "Hark and mark,
+ Heard ye nought there i' the dark?"
+
+"Not I!" answered Will.
+
+"Methought I heard an owl hoot," said Jocelyn.
+
+"Aye," nodded Lobkyn:
+
+ "Aye, Fool, and yet this owl I 'll swear,
+ Hath ne'er a feather anywhere.
+ This owl hath ne'er a wing to fly,
+ But goes afoot like thou and I.
+ Now mark,
+ And hark!"
+
+Hereupon the Dwarf laid finger to lip and uttered an owl-cry so dismal,
+so tremulous and withal so true to nature that it was wonder to hear.
+Instantly, from the dimness beyond the cavern-mouth, the cry was repeated,
+and presently was heard a panting and 'plaining, a snuffling and a
+shuffling, and into the light of the fire hobbled the old Witch. Beholding
+Jocelyn sitting cross-legged on his couch of fern, she paused and, leaning
+on her crooked stick, viewed him with her wise, old eyes.
+
+"Aha, Motley!" she croaked. "Oho, thou flaunting jackanapes, didst peril
+thy foolish flesh for me that am poor and old and feeble, and cursed by
+all for witchcraft! So have I with my potions ministered to thee in thy
+sickness, and behold thou'rt alive, hale and strong again. Give me thy
+hand! Aha, here's cool, unfevered blood! Show me thy tongue. Oho! Aha! A
+little sup o' my black decoction--roots gathered at full o' moon--a little
+sup and shall be thyself by to-morrow's dawn. But--as for thee, thou
+good-for-naught, thou wicked elf--aha! would'st dare leave thy poor old
+grannam weak and 'fenceless? Give me thy rogue-ear!" Obediently, the mighty
+Dwarf arose and sighfully suffered the old woman to grasp him by the ear
+and to tweak and wring and twist it as she would.
+
+"What dost thou here i' the wild-wood, thou imp, thou poppet o' plagues,
+thou naughty wap-de-staldees?"
+
+To which Lobkyn, writhing and watering at the eyes, answered thus:
+
+ "Stay, prithee grannam, loose thy hold!
+ I would but be an outlaw bold,
+ An outlaw fierce that men shall fear--
+ Beseech thee, grand-dam, loose mine ear!"
+
+"An outlaw, naughty one!" screeched the Witch, tweaking ear the harder.
+"Dare ye tell me so, elf?"
+
+ LOBKIN: Aye, grand-dam--cuff me an ye will,
+ Nath'less an outlaw I'll be still,
+ And many a wicked rogue I'll kill--
+ O grand-dam, loose mine ear!
+ And day and night I'll slay until
+ All rogues my name do fear.
+
+ For grand-dam, I'm a fighter--O,
+ Beseech thee, let my ear go!
+ And bones shall crack and blood shall flow,
+ If any dare resist me.
+ And all the world my name shall know,
+ Pray by the ear don't twist me!
+
+ All men before my club shall fly,
+ All on their knees shall "mercy" cry,
+ Or mangled in their gore shall lie--
+ Ah, grand-dam, pray don't clout me!
+ Don't beat me, grannam dear, but try
+ To do awhile without me--
+
+"Without thee, thou piece o' naughtiness?" screamed the old woman. "Now
+will I lay my stick about thee--hold still, Rogue!"
+
+Saying which, she proceeded to belabour the poor Dwarf with her knotted
+stick, clutching him fast by his ear the while. Thus she be-thwacked him
+soundly until he roared for mercy.
+
+"Why, how now--how now?" cried a merry voice, and Robin strode into the
+firelight. "Gentle Witch, sweet dame," quoth he, "what do ye with poor
+Lob?"
+
+"Thwack him shrewdly!"
+
+"Which is, Witch, that which none but witch the like o' thee might do, for
+lustier fighter and mightier dwarf never was. Thus, but for thy witch-like
+witcheries, the which, Witch, witch do prove thee, but for this and the
+power and potency of thy spells, now might he crack out thy life 'twixt
+finger and thumb--"
+
+"Ha, forest-rogue, 'tis a bad brat, a very naughty elf would run off into
+the wild to be rogue like thee--an outlaw, forsooth!"
+
+"Forsooth, Witch," laughed Robin, "outlaw is he in very truth, in sooth and
+by my troth! Outlaw is Lob, banned by Church and Council of Ten, and so
+proclaimed i' the market square of Canalise this very morn by sound o'
+trumpet and--"
+
+"How? How?" cried the old woman, wringing her trembling hands. "My Lobkyn
+outlawed? My babe, my lovely brat, my pretty bantling, woe and alas! My
+dear ugly one an outlaw?"
+
+"Aye, marry is he, Witch, outlaw proclaimed, acclaimed, announced,
+pronounced and denounced; as such described, ascribed and proscribed by
+Master Gregory Bax, the port-reeve, for the late slaying and maiming of
+divers of the city guard. So outlaw is Lobkyn, his life henceforth forfeit
+even as mine."
+
+"My Lobkyn an hairy outlaw i' the wild-wood! Out alas! And what of his poor
+old grannam? What o' me--?"
+
+"Content thee, sweet hag, since thou'rt outlawed along with him and, as
+witch, doomed to die unpleasantly by fire and flame and faggot, if thou'rt
+caught."
+
+"Alack! Wala-wa! Woe 's me!" groaned the Witch, cracking her finger-bones.
+"And all this by reason o' the Fool yonder."
+
+"Why, the Fool is dubbed outlaw likewise, Witch," quoth Robin. "Outlaw is
+he along o' thee and Tanner Will."
+
+"And all by reason that this Fool must needs peril our lives for sake of
+rogue-outlaw, of forest-robber, of knavish woodland-lurker--"
+
+"Hight Robin!" laughed Robin, leaning on his long bow-stave. "Now, this
+brave Fool having saved Robin his life, Witch, the which, Witch, was good
+thing for Robin, our Fool next saved thee, Witch, which was nought to
+Robin, in the which, Witch, Robin did not joy; for thou, old Witch, being
+witch, art therefore full o' witcheries which be apt to be-devil a man and
+fright his reason, for the which reason, being reasonable man, I reason,
+for this reason, that, so reasoning, I love thee not. But thou art old,
+Witch, which is good reason to reasonably reason thou art wise, Witch,
+and, being wise, I on this wise would seek counsel of thy wisdom, Witch.
+Imprimis, then--"
+
+"Hold!" commanded the Witch; "here's a whirl o' windy wind! Hast more of
+such-like, forester?"
+
+"Some little, Witch, which I will now, Witch--"
+
+"Nay, then, Robin-a-Green, suffer me to rest my old bones whiles thy mill
+clacks." Hereupon the old Witch seated herself beside the fire, with bony
+knees up-drawn to bony chin. "Speak, outlaw Robin," she croaked, blinking
+her red eyes, "and speak ye plain."
+
+"Why, then, wise Witch, look 'ee: since we be outlaws each and every, with
+all men's hands against us, with none to succour, and death watchful for
+us, 'tis plain, and very plain, we, for our harbourage and defence, must in
+the wild-wood bide--"
+
+"Ho!" cried Lobkyn:
+
+ "It soundeth good,
+ The brave wild-wood,
+ Where flowers do spring
+ And birds do sing.
+ To slay the deer
+ And make good cheer,
+ With mead and beer,
+ The livelong year,
+ And--"
+
+"Roar not, toad!" cried the Witch. "Say on--Rogue-Robin!"
+
+"Why, mark me, good Witch, here's where buskin chafeth! Not long since I
+ruled i' the wild-wood, a very king, with ten-score lusty outlaw-rogues
+to do my will. To-day is there never an one, and for this reasonable
+reason--to wit, I am hanged, and, being hanged, am dead, and, being dead,
+am not, and thus Robin is nobody; and yet again, perceive me, Witch, being
+Robin, I am therefore somebody; thus is nobody somebody, and yet somebody
+that nobody will believe anybody. The which, Witch, is a parlous case,
+methinks, for here am I, somebody, nobody and Robin altogether and at the
+same time; therefore, Witch, o' thy witchful wisdom--who am I, what and
+which, Witch?"
+
+Here the Witch blinked and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones one after
+another. Quoth she:
+
+"For thy first, thou'rt thyself; for the second, a rogue; and for the
+third, a wind-bag. I would thy second might tie up thy first in thy third."
+
+"So should Robin choke Robin with Robin. But hark 'ee again, good, patient
+dame. It seemeth that Ranulph the executioner betaketh him at cock-crow to
+hang poor me; but, finding me not, made great outcry, insomuch that the
+city guard, such as mighty Lob and Will had left alive, sought counsel
+together; and taking one of their slain fellows, Ranulph hanged him in my
+stead, and there he hangeth now, above the city gate, his face so marred
+that he might be me or any other."
+
+"Ha, Robin--well?"
+
+"This day, at sunset, came I unto the trysting-oak, and by blast of horn
+summoned me my outlaw company. They came apace and in great wonderment,
+for, seeing me, they fell to great awe and dread, thinking me dead, since
+many had seen my body a-dangle on the gallows; wherefore, seeing me
+manifestly alive, they took me for ghoulish ghost 'stead o' good flesh and
+blood, and fled from me amain. So, by reason of my dead body, that is no
+body o' mine, yet that nobody will believe is no body o' mine, they believe
+that this my body is yet no body, but a phantom; the which is out of
+reason; yet thus unreasonably do the rogues reason by reason of the body
+that hangeth in place of my body above the city gate. Wherefore I reason
+there is yet reason in their unreason, seeing this body was somebody, yet
+no body o' mine, but which nobody among them can swear to. Which, Witch,
+is a matter which none but wise witch may counsel me in. How say'st thou,
+Witch?"
+
+But for a while the old Witch scowled on the fire, bony chin on bony knees,
+and dreamily cracked her finger-joints.
+
+"Oho!" she cried suddenly. "Aha--a body that nobody's is, yet body that
+everybody knoweth for body o' thine--aha! So must nobody know that nobody's
+body is not thy body. Dost see my meaning, Robin-a-Green?"
+
+"No whit, Witch! Thou growest involved, thy talk diffuse, abstruse and
+altogether beyond one so obtuse as simple Rob--"
+
+"Then hark 'ee again, Addlepate! Everybodymust believe nobody's body thy
+body, so by dead body will I make thy live body of so great account to
+everybody that nobody henceforth shall doubt dead body made live body, by
+my witchcraft, and thou be feared, therefore, of everybody. Dost follow me
+now, numskull?"
+
+"Aye, truly, mother! And truly 'tis a rare subtlety, a notable wile, and
+thou a right cunning witch and wise. But how wilt achieve this wonder?"
+
+"Since dead thou art, I to life will bring thee. Oho, I will summon thee
+through fire and flame; aha, I will make thee more dreaded than heretofore;
+thy fame shall fill the wild-wood and beyond. Know'st thou the Haunted
+Wood, hard by Thraxby Waste?"
+
+Now here Robin's merry smile languished, and he rubbed nose with dubious
+finger.
+
+"Aye, I do," quoth he sombrely; "an ill place and--demon-rid, they say--"
+
+"Come ye there to-morrow at midnight."
+
+"Alone?" says Robin, starting.
+
+"Alone!"
+
+"Nay, good Witch, most gentle, potent dame, I--though phantom accounted, I
+love not phantoms, and Thraxby Waste--"
+
+"Come ye there--at midnight!"
+
+"Why, then, good Witch, an come I must, suffer that I bring the valiant
+Fool and mighty Lob--prithee, now!"
+
+At this the old Witch scowled and mumbled and crackled her finger-bones
+louder than ever.
+
+"Oho!" cried she at last, "thou great child, afraid-o'-the-dark, bring
+these an ye will--but none other!"
+
+"Good mother, I thank thee!"
+
+"Tchak!" cried the Witch, and, struggling to her feet, hobbled to Jocelyn
+and laid bony finger on wrist and brow, nodded, mumbled, and so, bent on
+her staff, hobbled away; but, reaching the cave-mouth, she paused, and
+smote stick to earth fiercely.
+
+"To-morrow!" she croaked. "Midnight! Re--member!"
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 8
+
+ Tells how the Witch, with incantations dire,
+ In life to life brought Robin through the fire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The wind was cold--indeed 'twas plaguy chill--
+ That furtive crept and crept, like something ill
+ Stealing with dreadful purpose in the dark,
+ With scarce a sound its stealthy course to mark;
+ While pallid moon did seem to swoon, as though
+ It ghastly things beheld on earth below;
+ And Robin gripped the good sword by his side,
+ And Joc'lyn looked about him watchful-eyed;
+ While Lobkyn Lollo felt and looked the bolder
+ By reason of the club across his shoulder.
+
+ "Here," whispered Robin, peering through the gloom,
+ "Is dismal place, I've heard, of death and doom.
+ Here do be ghosts and goblins, so 'tis said,
+ Demons, phantoms, spectres of the dead--"
+ "Aye, verily," quoth Lob, "and what is worse,
+ 'Tis here my grand-dam oft doth come to curse,
+ And haunteth it with spiteful toads and bats,
+ With serpents fell, with ewts and clawful cats.
+ Here doth she revel hold o' moony nights,
+ With grave-rank ghouls and moaning spectral sprites;
+ And ... Saints! what's that?
+ A hook-winged bat?
+ Not so; perchance, within its hairy body fell
+ Is man or maid transformed by magic spell.
+ O, brothers, heedful be, and careful tread
+ Lest magic gin should catch and strike us dead!
+ O would my grannam might go with us here.
+ Since, being witch, she doth no witchcraft fear."
+
+ So came the three at last to Haunted Wood,
+ Where mighty trees in gloomy grandeur stood,
+ Their wide-flung boughs so closely interweaving
+ Scarce space between for ghostly moonbeams leaving;
+ But, snake-like, round each other closely twined,
+ In shuddering wind did mournful voices find,
+ And, groaning, writhed together to and fro
+ Like souls that did the fiery torment know.
+ Thus, in the wood, 'twas dark and cold and dank,
+ And breathed an air of things long dead and rank;
+ While shapes, dim-seen, did creep and flit and fly
+ With sudden squeak, and bodeful, wailing cry.
+
+ At last they reached a clearing in the wood,
+ Where, all at once, as 'mid the leaves they stood,
+ From Lobkyn's lips, loud, tremulous, and high,
+ There rose and swelled the owlet's shuddering cry.
+ Scarce on the air this dismal sound had died,
+ When they the Witch's hobbling form espied.
+ Beholding Robin, by the arm she caught him,
+ And to a place of rocks in haste she brought him;
+ And here, where bosky thickets burgeoned round,
+ She pointed to a chasm in the ground.
+
+ "Go down!" she hissed. "Go down, thou thing of clay,
+ Thou that art dead--into thy grave I say.
+ Since thou 'rt hanged, a dead man shalt thou be
+ Till from thy grave my spells shall summon thee--"
+ "My grave?" gasped Robin, blenching from her frown.
+ "Aye, Rogue!" she croaked. "Behold thy grave! Go down!"
+ So shiv'ring Robin, in most woeful plight,
+ Crept into gloom and vanished from their sight.
+ "O, Robin, Robin!" the old Witch softly cried,
+ "Alack, I'm here!" faint voice, below, replied.
+ "Thou dead," croaked she, "thou ghostly shade forlorn,
+ From charnel-vault sound now thy spectral horn,
+ Sound now thy rallying-note, then silent be
+ Till from thy mouldering tomb I summon thee!"
+
+ Now, on the stillness rose the ghostly sound
+ Of Robin's hunting horn that through the ground
+ Rang thin and high, unearthly-shrill and clear,
+ That thrilled the shivering woodland far and near,
+ And shuddering to silence, left behind
+ A whisper as of leaves in stealthy wind.
+ A rustling 'mid the underbrush they heard
+ Where, in the gloom about them, dim things stirred--
+ Vague, stealing shapes that softly nearer drew,
+ Till from the tree-gloom crept a ragged crew,
+ Wild men and fierce, a threatening, grimly herd,
+ Who stood like shadows, speaking not a word;
+ And the pale moon in fitful flashes played
+ On sword and headpiece, pike and broad axe-blade.
+ While the old hag, o'er witch-fire crouching low,
+ Puffed at the charcoal till it was aglow;
+ Then hobbling round and round her crackling fire,
+ She thus began her incantations dire:
+
+ "Come ye long-dead,
+ Ye spirits dread,
+
+
+ Ye things of quaking fear,
+ Ye poor, lost souls,
+ Ye ghosts, ye ghouls,
+ Haxwiggin bids ye here!
+ By one by two, by two by three,
+ Spirits of Night, I summon ye,
+ By three by four, by four by five,
+ Come ye now dead that were alive,
+ Come now I bid ye
+ From grave-clods rid ye,
+ Come!
+ From South and North,
+ I bid ye forth,
+ From East, from West,
+ At my behest--
+ Come!
+ Come great, come small,
+ Come one, come all,
+ Heed ye my call,
+ List to my call, I say,
+ From pitchy gloom
+ Of mouldered tomb
+ Here find ye room
+ For sport and holiday.
+ Come grisly ghosts and goblins pale,
+ Come spirits black and grey,
+ Ye shrouded spectres--Hail, O Hail!
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday.
+ Come wriggling snakes
+ From thorny brakes,
+ Hail!
+ Come grimly things
+ With horny wings,
+ That flit, that fly,
+ That croak, that cry,
+ Hail!
+
+ "Come ghouls, come demons one and all,
+ Here revel whiles ye may;
+ Ye noisome things that creep and crawl,
+ Come, sport and round me play.
+ Ho, claw and wing and hoof and horn,
+ Here revel till the clammy dawn.
+
+ "Peeping, creeping,
+ Flying, crying,
+ Fighting, biting,
+ Groaning, moaning,
+ Ailing, wailing,
+ Spirits fell,
+ Come to my spell,
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday!
+ So, are ye there,
+ High up in air,
+ The moonbeams riding
+ 'Mid shadows hiding?
+
+ "Now gather round, ye spectral crew,
+ This night have we brave work to do--
+ Bold Robin o' the Green, 'tis said,
+ On gallows hangeth cold and dead
+ Beneath the sky
+ On gibbet high,
+ They in a noose did swing him.
+ Go, goblins, go,
+ And ere they know,
+ Unto me hither bring him."
+
+ Here paused the Witch to mend her glowing fire,
+ While each man to his neighbour shuffled nigher,
+ As witch-flame leapt and ever brighter grew,
+ Till, to their horror, sudden it burned blue;
+ Whereat each silent, fearful beholder
+ Felt in the gloom to touch his fellow's shoulder,
+ Yet, in that moment, knew an added dread
+ To see the fire from blue turn ghastly red;
+ Then, as the Witch did o'er it crooning lean,
+ Behold! it changed again to baleful green.
+ Whereat the Witch flung bony arms on high,
+ As though with claw-like hands she 'd rend the sky;
+ And while the lurid flames leapt ever higher,
+ She thus invoked the Spirit of the Fire.
+
+ "As fire doth change, yet, changed, unchanged doth burn,
+ By fiery spell shall dead to life return!
+
+ "Ho, goblins yonder--'neath the moon,
+ Have ye brought me the dead so soon?
+ Ha! is it Bxibin that ye bring,
+ That pale, that stiff, that clammy thing?
+ Now work we spell with might and main,
+ Shall make it live and breathe again.
+
+ "Now in and out,
+ And round about,
+ Ye wriggling rout,
+ With hoof and claw and wing;
+ Now high, now low,
+ Now fast, now slow,
+ Now to and fro
+ Tread we a magic ring.
+
+ "Thus, while the frighted moon doth peep,
+ We 'll wake this cold, dead thing from sleep,
+ Till Robin back to life shall leap.
+ And when he from the fire shall spring,
+ Ye outlaws hail him for your King.
+
+ "For on that wight
+ Who, day or night,
+ Shall Robin disobey
+ With purpose fell
+ I'll cast a spell
+ Shall wither him away.
+
+ "Ho, Robin! Ope thy death-cold eyes,
+ Ho, Robin! From thy grave arise,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+ Robin that doth bide so near me,
+ Robin, Robin, wake and hear me,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+
+ "Back to life I summon thee,
+ Through the fire thy path must be,
+ Through the fire that shall not harm thee,
+ Through flame that back to life shall charm thee,
+ Shall warm thy body all a-cold,
+ And make grim Death loose clammy hold.
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Leap back to life by all men seen!"
+
+ Through curling smoke-wreaths and through writhing flame,
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came,
+ And by the Witch did in the fire-light stand,
+ Sword by his side and bugle-horn in hand,
+ And laughed full blithe as he was wont to do,
+ And, joyous, hailed his wild and ragged crew:
+
+"What lads, are ye there forsooth? Is't Myles I see with lusty Watt and
+John and Hal o' the Quarterstaff? God den t' ye, friends, and merry hunting
+to one and all, for by oak and ash and thorn here stand I to live with
+thee, aye, good lads, and to die with ye here in the good greenwood--"
+
+But now and all at once from that grim and silent company a mighty shout
+went up:
+
+"'Tis Robin--'tis Robin, 'tis bold Robin-a-Green! 'Tis our Robin himself
+come back to us!"
+
+And fearful no longer, they hasted to him and clasped him in brawny arms,
+hugging him mightily and making great rejoicing over him.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 9
+
+ That tells almost as fully as it should,
+ The joys of living in the good greenwood.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Deep-hidden in the trackless wild the outlaws had made them a haven of
+refuge, a camp remote and well sequestered. Here were mossy, fern-clad
+rocks that soared aloft, and here green lawns where ran a blithesome brook;
+it was indeed a very pleasant place shut in by mighty trees. Within this
+leafy boskage stood huts of wattle, cunningly wrought; beneath the steep
+were many caves carpeted with dried fern and fragrant mosses, while
+everywhere, above and around, the trees spread mighty boughs, through which
+the sun darted golden beams be-dappling the sward, and in whose leafy
+mysteries the birds made joyous carolling.
+
+And here beneath bending willows arched over this merry brook, one
+sun-bright morning riotous with song of birds, sat Jocelyn with Robin
+a-sprawl beside him.
+
+"O brother," says Robin, "O brother, 't is a fair place the greenwood, a
+fair, sweet place to live--aye, or to die in methinks, this good greenwood,
+whereof I have made a song--hark 'ee!"
+
+ "Oho, it is a right good thing
+ When trees do bud and flowers do spring
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood,
+ To hear the birds so blithely sing,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.
+
+ "Who cometh here leaves grief behind,
+ Here broken man hath welcome kind,
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ The hopeless here new hope may find,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the kind, green wood.
+
+ "Ho, friend, 'tis pleasant life we lead,
+ No laws have we, no laws we need
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+ For every man's a man indeed,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+
+ "All travellers that come this way
+ Must something in fair tribute pay
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ Or here in bonds is like to stay,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Lost in the good, green wood.
+
+ "Full many a lord, in boastful pride,
+ This tribute, scornful, hath denied
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ And thereupon hath sudden died,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the fair, green wood.
+
+ "And when our time shall come to die
+ Methinks we here may softly lie
+ Deep in the fair, green wood.
+ With birds to sing us lullaby,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood."
+
+"So there it is, brother--and life and death in a nutshell, as 'twere. Now,
+wherefore wilt not join us and turn outlaw, good Fool?"
+
+"For that I am a fool belike, Robin. Howbeit, I'm better Fool than outlaw."
+
+"Say, rather, greater fool, Fool, for foresters' life is better than life
+o' folly, and payeth better to boot, what with booty--ha! Moreover, I do
+love thee, since, Fool, though fool, art wise in counsel and valiant beyond
+thought--so 'tis I would not lose thee. Stay, therefore, and live my
+comrade and brother, equal with me in all things. How say'st thou?"
+
+"Why, Robin, I say this: True friendship is a goodly thing and a rare in
+this world, and, therefore, to be treasured; 'tis thing no man may buy or
+seek, since itself is seeker and cometh of itself; 'tis a prop--a staff
+in stony ways, a shield 'gainst foes, a light i' the dark. So do I love
+friendship, Robin, and thou'rt my friend, yet must leave thee, though
+friendship shall abide."
+
+Quoth ROBIN: How abide an we be parted?
+
+"In heart and mind and memory, Robin. Moreover, though I go, yet will I
+return anon, an life be mine."
+
+"And wherefore go ye, brother?"
+
+"First to seek my comrade."
+
+"Thy comrade--ha! I mind him, a fierce great fellow with hawk's beak and a
+fighting eye. And whither trend ye?"
+
+"To Canalise."
+
+"Art crazed, brother? 'Tis there death waiteth thee!"
+
+"Yet must I go, Robin, since there my heart waiteth me."
+
+"A maid, brother?"
+
+"A maid, Robin."
+
+"Heigho! So wilt thou go, come joy, come pain, come life or death, since a
+maid is made to make man saint or devil, some days glad and some days sad,
+but ever and always a fool. And thou art Fool by profession, and, being
+lover professed and confessed, art doubly a fool; and since, good Folly,
+love's but folly and thou, a Fool, art deep in folly, so is thy state most
+melancholy."
+
+"And dost think love so great folly, Robin?" said a soft voice, and,
+looking round, they beheld the lovely, dark-tressed Melissa, who viewed
+them bright-eyed and pouted red mouth, frowning a little.
+
+"Aye, verily, lady," laughed Robin, as she sank on the grass beside them.
+"Forsooth, 'tis a madness fond. For see, now, a man being in love is out of
+all else."
+
+"As how, Sir Outlaw?"
+
+"Marry, on this wise--when man's in love he mopeth apart and is ill
+company, so is he out o' friends; he hangeth humble head abashed, so is he
+out o' countenance; he uttereth frequent, windy, sighful suspirations,
+so is he out o' breath; he lavisheth lucre on his love, so is he out o'
+pocket; he forsweareth food, despiseth drink, scorneth sleep, so is he
+out o' health--in fine, he is out of all things, so is he out of himself;
+therefore he is mad, and so may go hang himself!"
+
+MELISSA: And hast thou loved, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: Ever and always, and none but Robin!
+
+MELISSA: And none more worthy, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: And none more, as I am worthy Robin.
+
+MELISSA: Lovest thou not Love, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: Love, love not I.
+
+MELISSA: Then Love canst thou know not.
+
+ROBIN: Then if I love Love for Love's sake, must Love then love me,
+therefore?
+
+MELISSA: If thy love for Love be true love, so shall Love love thee true.
+
+ROBIN: Then if Love should love me for my sake, then would I love Love for
+Love's sake; but since Love ne'er hath sought me for my sake, ne'er will I
+seek Love for Love's sake for my sake, since Love, though plaguy sweet, is
+a sweet plague, I judge and, so judging, will by my judgment stand.
+
+MELISBA: And how think you, Sir Fool?
+
+JOCELYN: I think if Love find Robin and Robin, so found of Love, shall
+learn to love Love for Love's sake, Love shall teach Robin how, hi loving
+Love--Love, if a plague, doth but plague him lovingly to his better
+judgment of Love, till, being on this wise, wise--he shall judge of Love
+lovingly, loving Love at last for Love's own lovely sake, rather than for
+his own selfish self. For as there is the passion of love, the which is a
+love selfish, so there is the true Spirit of Love, the which forgetteth
+self in Love's self, thus, self-forgotten, Love is crowned by Love's true
+self.
+
+MELISSA: How think ye of this, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: By Cupid, we are so deep in love that we are like to drown of love
+and we be not wary. Here hath my lovely jowlopped-crested brother so beset
+poor Robin with Love and self and Robin, that Robin kens not which is Love,
+Love's self or himself.
+
+MELISSA: And yet I do think 'tis very plain! Yet an thou canst express this
+plainer, prithee do, Sir Fool.
+
+"Blithely, sweet lady, here will I frame my meaning in a rhyme, thus:
+
+ "Who loveth Love himself above,
+ With Love base self transcending
+ Love, Love shall teach how Love may reach
+ The Love that hath no ending.
+
+
+ "'Tis thus Love-true, Love shall renew,
+ Love's love thus waning never,
+ So love each morn of Love new-born,
+ Love shall live loving ever."
+
+ROBIN: Aye, verily, there's Love and yet such a love as no man may find
+methinks, brother.
+
+JOCELYN: Never, Robin, until it find him. For true love, like friendship,
+cometh unsought, like all other good things.
+
+ROBIN: 'Las! then needs must I be no good thing since I am sought e'en now
+of old Mopsa the Witch yonder!
+
+And he pointed where the old creature hobbled towards them bent on her
+crooked staff. Up rose Robin and, hasting to meet her, louted full low,
+since she was held in great respect of all men by reason of her potent
+spells. Chuckling evilly, she drew down Robin's tall head to whisper in his
+ear, whereupon he laughed, clapped hand to brawny thigh, and taking old
+Mopsa's feeble arm, hastened away with her. But Melissa, reclining 'neath
+the willow-shade, gazed down into the murmurous waters of the brook with
+eyes of dream whiles Jocelyn struck soft, sweet chords upon his lute. And
+presently she turned to view him thoughtfully--his strange, marred face;
+his eyes so quick and keen 'neath battered cock's-comb; his high, proud
+bearing despite his frayed and motley habit; and ever her wonder grew
+until, at last, she must needs question him:
+
+"Fools, Sir Fool, have I seen a-many, both in the motley and out, but thou
+art rare among all fools, I do think."
+
+JOCELYN: Gramercy, lady! Truly fool am I of all fools singular.
+
+MELISSA: Thou'rt he I heard, upon a day, sing strange, sweet songs, within
+the marketplace of Canalise!
+
+JOCELYN: The same, lady.
+
+MELISSA: That soused my lord Gui head over ears in a lily-pool?
+
+JOCELYN: Verily, lady.
+
+MELISSA: O! Would one might do as much for Sir Agramore of Biename!
+
+JOCELYN: One doubtless will, lady.
+
+MELISSA: Thyself?
+
+JOCELYN: Nay--one that loveth the disputatious bickering of sharp steel
+better than I--one had rather fight than eat, and rather fight three men
+than one--
+
+"Three men?" cried Melissa, starting.
+
+"Aye, lady--and six men than three!"
+
+"There was such an one, Fool, in truth a very brave man, did fight three of
+my Lord Agramore's foresters on my behalf. Dost know of such an one, Fool?"
+
+"Methinks he is my comrade, Lady."
+
+"Thy comrade--in truth? Then, pray you, speak me what seeming hath he."
+
+"Ill, lady."
+
+"How so, Fool?"
+
+"A great, fierce rogue is he, unlovely of look, bleak of eye, harsh of
+tongue, hooked of nose, flinty of soul, stony of heart, of aspect grim and
+manners rude!"
+
+"Then, verily, thy comrade have I never seen!" quoth Melissa, flushing and
+with head up-flung. "He that saved me is nothing the like of this."
+
+"And yet," said Jocelyn slyly, "'tis thus he hath been named ere now!"
+
+"Nay, Fool, indeed he that saved me was tall and seemly man, very fierce
+and strong in fight, but to me wondrous gentle--in truth, something
+timorous, and, 'spite rusty mail, spake and looked like a noble knight."
+
+"Then forsooth, lady, thy champion is no comrade of mine, for he is but a
+poor rogue, ill-beseen, ill-kempt, ill-spoken, ill-mannered and altogether
+ill, save only that he is my friend--"
+
+"And thou speakest ill of thy ill friend, the which is ill in thee--ill
+Fool!" and the fair Melissa rose.
+
+"And pray, lady, didst learn thy preserver's name?"
+
+"Indeed, for I asked him."
+
+"And it was--?"
+
+"Pertinax!" she sighed.
+
+"Pertinax!" said Jocelyn, both in the same moment; the dark-browed Melissa
+sat down again.
+
+"So thy comrade and--he are one, Fool?"
+
+"Indeed, lady. Yet here we have him, on the one hand, a man noble and
+seemly, and, on the other, a poor rogue, hook-nosed, ill-beseen, ill--"
+
+"'Tis thou hast miscalled him, Fool!" said she, frowning.
+
+"Not I, lady."
+
+"Who, then?"
+
+"A maid--"
+
+"Ah!" said Melissa, frowning blacker than ever. "A maid, Fool? What maid?"
+
+"A wandering gipsy o' the wood, lady--a dark-eyed damsel with long, black
+curling hair and 'voice of sweet allure'--'tis so he named her--"
+
+"This was belike some wicked witch!" said Melissa, clenching white fist.
+
+"Aye, belike it was, lady, for she bestowed on him a strange jewel, a heart
+in heart of crystal, that wrought for us in Canalise marvels great as our
+wondrous Witch herself."
+
+Now here the lovely Melissa's frown vanished, and her red lips curved to
+sudden smile.
+
+"Belike this was no witch after all!" said she gently.
+
+"Howbeit, lady," quoth Jocelyn slyly, "my poor comrade is surely bewitched
+by her none the less. She hath wrought on him spell so potent that he
+groweth mopish and talketh of her eyes, her hair, her sweet and gentle
+voice, her little foot, forsooth."
+
+"And doth he so, indeed?" said Melissa softly, and, twiddling one of
+her own pretty feet, she smiled at it. "Doth he sigh o'er much?" she
+questioned.
+
+"Consumedly! By the minute!"
+
+"Poor soldier!" she murmured.
+
+"Aye, poor rogue!" said Jocelyn; whereupon she frowned again, and turned
+her back upon him.
+
+"And he is thy comrade."
+
+"Even so--poor knave!"
+
+"And destitute--even as thou?"
+
+"Aye, a sorry clapper-claw--even as I, lady."
+
+"Then, pray thee, why doth he wear gold chain about his neck?"
+
+"Chain, lady--?"
+
+"Such as only knights do wear!"
+
+"Belike he stole it, lady--"
+
+"Aye--belike he did!" said she, rising; then she sighed and laughed, and so
+turned and left him.
+
+And in a while Jocelyn rose also, and went on beside the brook; but as he
+walked deep in thought, there met him Robin, he full of mirth and laughter.
+
+"Oho, brother, good brother!" cried he joyfully, clapping hand on Jocelyn's
+broad shoulder, "come away, now, and see what the good wind hath blown
+hither--come thy ways and see!"
+
+So came they where rose a great tree of huge girth, whose gnarled branches
+spread far and wide, a veryforest of leaves, beneath whose shade were many
+of the outlaws grouped about one who crouched miserably on his knees, his
+arms fast bound and a halter about his neck; and, as obedient to Robin's
+words the fierce company fell back, Jocelyn saw this torn and pallid
+captive was none other than Ranulph the Hangman.
+
+"Woe's me, my masters!" quoth he 'twixt chattering teeth. "'Tis pity poor
+Ranulph must die before his time, for ne'er shall be found hangman,
+headsman or torturer the like o' Ranulph--so dainty i' the nice adjustment
+o' noose! So clean and delicate wi' the axe! So tender and thoughtful wi'
+pincers, thumbscrew, rack or red-hot iron! A hangman so kindly o' soul, so
+merry o' heart, alack, so free, so gay, so merry--forsooth a very wanton,
+waggish, jovial bawcock-lad--"
+
+"Why, then, good, merry wag," laughed Robin, "now shalt thou cut us an
+antic aloft in air, shalt caper and dance in noose to our joyance! Up with
+him, bully lads, and gently, that he may dance the longer!"
+
+But as Ranulph was dragged, shivering, to his feet, Jocelyn stepped
+forward.
+
+"Stay!" he cried. "Look, now, here's hangman did but hang since hang he
+must; must he hang therefore?"
+
+ROBIN: Aye, marry, since hanging shall his hanging end!
+
+JOCELYN: But if to hang his duty is, must he for duty hang? Moreover, if ye
+hang this hangman, unhanged hangmen shall hang still, and since ye may not
+all hangmen hang, wherefore should this hangman hang?
+
+ROBIN: Brother, an this hangman hang, fewer hangmen shall there be to hang,
+forsooth.
+
+JOCELYN: Not so, Robin, for hangman dead begetteth hangman new; this
+hangman hanged, hangman in his place shall hang men after him. Shall this
+hangman hang for hanging as in duty bound, whiles other hangmen, unhanged,
+hang still? Here, methinks, is small wisdom, little reason, and less of
+justice, Robin.
+
+ROBIN: Beshrew me, brother--but here's so much of hanging hanging on
+hanging plaguy hangman that hang me if I get the hang on't--
+
+JOCELYN: Plainly, Robin--wilt hang a man for doing his duty?
+
+ROBIN: Plainly, brother--no. But--
+
+JOCELYN: Then canst not hang this hangman, since hanging his duty is--
+
+ROBIN: Yet 'tis base, vile duty--
+
+JOCELYN: Yet duty it is--wherefore, an there be any justice in the good
+greenwood, this hangman unhanged must go.
+
+Now here Robin scowled, and his brawny fellows scowled likewise, and began
+to mutter and murmur against Jocelyn, who, leaning back to tree, strummed
+his lute and sang:
+
+ "O, Life is sweet, but Life is fleet,
+ O'er quick to go, alack!
+ And once 'tis spilt, try as thou wilt,
+ Thou canst not call it back!
+
+"So bethink thee, bold Robin, and, as thou 'rt king o' the wild-wood, be
+thou just king and merciful--"
+
+"Now out upon thee, brother!" cried Robin, forgetting to scowl. "Out on
+thee with thy honied phrases, thy quipsome lilting rhymes! Here go I to do
+a thing I ha' no lust to do--and all by reason o' thee! Off--off wi' the
+halter, lads--loose the hangman-claws of him! Hereafter, since he can pay
+no ransom, he shall be our serf; to have a hangman fetch and carry shall
+be rare, methinks!"
+
+Quoth JOCELYN: How much should hangman's flesh be worth i' the greenwood,
+Robin?
+
+"Why, brother, 'tis poor, sad and dismal knave; five gold pieces shall buy
+him, aye--halter and all, and 'tis fair, good halter, look you!"
+
+"Why, then," said Jocelyn, opening his wallet, "behold the monies, so do I
+buy him of thee--"
+
+"Now, by Saint Nick!" cried Robin, amazed. "Nay, brother, an thou'lt buy so
+sorry a thing, give thy money to the merry lads; I'll none on't. And now,"
+said he, the money duly paid, "what wilt do wi' thy hangman?"
+
+"Sir Fool," cried Ranulph, falling on his knees at Jocelyn's feet, "fain
+would I serve thee--e'en to the peril o' the life thou hast saved. Bid me
+labour for thee and in labour shall be my joy, bid me fight for thee and I
+will fight whiles life is in me; bid me follow thee and I will follow even
+unto--"
+
+"Nay, hangman," said Jocelyn, "I bid thee rise and sing for us, and so be
+gone wheresoever thou wilt."
+
+Then Ranulph arose and glancing round upon the fierce company, from the
+noose at his feet to Jocelyn's scarred face, he drew a great breath; quoth
+he:
+
+"Sir Fool, since 'tis thy will fain would I give thee song blithe and
+joyful since joy is in my heart, but alack, though my songs begin in merry
+vein they do grow mournful anon; howbeit, for thy joy now will I sing my
+cheeriest;" whereupon Ranulph brake into song thus:
+
+ "I am forsooth a merry soul,
+ Hey deny down, ho ho!
+ I love a merry song to troll,
+ I love to quaff a cheery bowl,
+ And yet thinks I, alas!
+ Such things too soon do pass,
+ And proudest flesh is grass.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ "A goodly lover I might be,
+ Merrily, ho ho!
+ But pretty maids in terror flee,
+ When this my hangman's head they see.
+ But woe it is, thinks I,
+ All fair, sweet dames must die,
+ And pale, sad corpses lie.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ "Fairest beauty is but dust,
+ Shining armour soon will rust,
+ All good things soon perish must,
+ Look around, thinks I, and see
+ All that, one day, dead must be,
+ King and slave and you and me.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it must be so!"
+
+"Out!" cried Robin. "Here forsooth is dolorous doleful dirge--out on thee
+for sad and sorry snuffler!"
+
+"Aye, verily," sighed Ranulph, "'tis my curse. I begin with laugh and end
+in groan. I did mean this for merry song, yet it turned of itself sad song
+despite poor I, and there's the pity on't--"
+
+"Enough!" growled Robin, "away with him. Brand, do you hoodwink him in his
+'kerchief and give him safe conduct to beyond the ford, and so set Master
+Hangman Grimglum-grief on his road--"
+
+"Sir Fool," cried Ranulph, "God den t'ye and gramercy. Should it be e'er
+thy fate to die o' the gallows, may I have thy despatching--I will contrive
+it so sweetly shalt know nought of it--oho! 'twould be my joy."
+
+"Off!" cried Robin. "Off, thou pestiferous fungus lest I tread on
+thee--hence, away!"
+
+So the outlaws blindfolded Ranulph and led him off at speed.
+
+"Away," quoth Jocelyn, nodding, "so now in faith must I, Robin--"
+
+"What, is't indeed farewell, brother?"
+
+"Aye, Robin."
+
+"Why, then, what may I give thee in way o' love and friendship?"
+
+"Thy hand."
+
+"Behold it, brother! And what beside? Here is purse o' good pieces--ha?"
+
+"Nay, Robin, prithee keep them for those whose need is greater."
+
+"Can I nought bestow--dost lack for nothing, brother?"
+
+"What thou, methinks, may not supply--"
+
+"And that?"
+
+"Horse and armour!" Now at this, Robin laughed and clapped hand to thigh;
+quoth he:
+
+"Come with Robin, brother!" So he brought Jocelyn into a cave beneath the
+steep and, lighting a torch from fire that burned there, led him on through
+other caves and winding passages rough-hewn in the rock, and so at last to
+a vasty cavern.
+
+And here was great store of merchandise of every sort,--velvets, silks,
+and rich carpets from the Orient; vases of gold and silver, and coffers
+strong-clamped with many iron bands. And here also, hanging against the
+rocky walls, were many and divers suits of armour with helms and shields
+set up in gallant array; beholding all of which Jocelyn paused to eye merry
+Robin askance; quoth he soberly:
+
+"Sir Rogue, how came ye by all this goodly furniture?"
+
+"By purest chance, brolher," laughed Robin, "for hark 'ee--
+
+ "Chance is a wind to outlaws kind,
+ And many fair things blows us,
+ It--merchants, priors, lords, knights and squires,
+ And like good things bestows us--"
+
+"Aye," said Jocelyn, "but what of all those knights and squires whose
+armour hangeth here?"
+
+"Here or there, brother, they come and they go. Ha, yonder soundeth
+Ralfwyn's horn--three blasts which do signify some right fair windfall.
+Come, let us see what this jolly wind hath blown us this time!" So
+saying, Robin laughed and led the way out into the sunny green. And here,
+surrounded by a ring of merry forest rogues, they beheld a knight right
+gallantly mounted and equipped, his armour blazing in the sun, his gaudy
+bannerole a-flutter from long lance, his shield gaudy and brave with new
+paint; beholding which, Robin chuckled gleefully; quoth he:
+
+"Oho! On a field vert three falcons gules, proper, charged with heart
+ensanguined--aha, here's good booty, methinks!"
+
+Now, as this splendid knight rode nearer, contemptuous of his brawny
+captors, Robin stared to see that on his helmet he wore a wreath of
+flowers, while lance and sword, mace and battle-axe were wreathed in
+blooming roses.
+
+"Ho, Jenkyn, Cuthbert!" cried Robin, "what Sir Daintiness have ye here?"
+But ere his grinning captors could make reply, the knight himself spake
+thus:
+
+ "Behold a very gentle knight,
+ Sir Palamon of Tong,
+ A gentle knight in sorry plight,
+ That loveth love and hateth fight,
+ A knight than fight had rather write,
+ And strophes to fair dames indite,
+ Or sing a sighful song.
+
+ "By divers braggarts I'm abused,
+ 'Tis so as I've heard tell,
+ Because, since I'm to fight unused,
+ I many a fight have bold refused,
+ And, thereby, saved my bones unbruised,
+ Which pleaseth me right well.
+
+ "No joy have I in steed that prances,
+ True gentle man am I
+ To tread to lutes slow, stately dances.
+ 'Stead of your brutish swords and lances,
+ I love love's lureful looks and glances,
+ When hand to hand, unseen, advances,
+ And eye caresseth eye."
+
+"And how a plague, Sir Gentleness," questioned Robin, "may eye caress eye?"
+
+"E'en as lips voiceless may wooing speak, Sir Roguery, and tongue unwagging
+tell tales o' love, Sir Ferocity."
+
+ROBIN: Then had I the trick o' voiceless speech, now would I, with silly
+tongue, tell thee thou art our prisoner to ransom, Sir Silken Softness.
+
+SIR PALAMON: And I joy therefore, Sir Forest Fiend.
+
+ROBIN: And wherefore therefore?
+
+SIR PALAMON: For that therefore I need not to the joust, to that
+bone-shattering sport of boastful, brutal braggadocios, but here, lapped
+soft in the gentle green, woo the fair Yolande--
+
+JOCELYN: How, knight, the fair lady Yolande, say'st thou?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Even she.
+
+JOCELYN: But here she is not and thou art, how then may one that is, woo
+one is not?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Gross mountebank, by thought--I woo in thought, breathe my
+thought upon the balmy air and air beareth it to her feet.
+
+ROBIN: And she treadeth on't, so there's an end o' thy love! But pray you,
+Sir Downy Daintiness, how come ye that are so gentle so ungently dight?
+Discourse, Sir Dove!
+
+SIR PALAMON: In two words then, thou lewd lurcher o' the thickets; I ride
+thus in steely panoply--the which doth irk me sore--by reason of the tongue
+of my mother (good soul!) the which doth irk me more. For she (worthy
+lady!) full-fed o' fatuous fantasies and fables fond, fuddled i' faith
+o' faddling fictions as--gestes of jongleurs, tales told by tramping
+troubadours, ballades of babbling braggarts, romances of roysterous
+rhymers, she (good gossip!) as I say, having hearkened to and perused the
+works of such-like pelting, paltry prosers and poets wherein sweep of sword
+and lunge o' lance is accompted of worthier repute than the penning of
+dainty distich and pretty poesies pleasingly passionate. She, I say--my
+mother (God rest her!), e'en she with tongue most harsh, most bitter and
+most unwearying, hath enforced me, her son (whom Venus bless!)--e'en I that
+am soul most transcendental--I that am a very wing-ed Mercury--me, I say
+she hath, by torrential tongueful tumult (gentle lady!), constrained to don
+the habit of a base, brawling, beefy and most material Mars! Wherefore at
+my mother's behest (gracious dame!) I ride nothing joyful to be bruised and
+battered by any base, brutal braggart that hath the mind to try a tilt with
+me. Moreover--
+
+ROBIN: Hold! Take breath, gentle sir, for thine own sweet sake draw thy
+wind.
+
+SIR PALAMON: 'Tis done, fellow, 'tis done! And now in three words will
+I--
+
+ROBIN: Cry ye mercy, sir, thy two words do yet halloo "Buzz-buzz" in mine
+ears.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Faith, robber-rogue, since I a tongue possess--
+
+ROBIN: Therein thou art very son o' thy mother (whom St. Anthony cherish!).
+
+SIR PALAMON: With this rare difference, outlaw--for whereas her tongue
+(honoured relict!) is tipped with gall, wormwood, henbane, hemlock,
+bitter-aloes and verjuice, and stingeth like the adder, the asp, the toad,
+the newt, the wasp, and snaky-haired head of Medusa, mine--
+
+ROBIN: Buzzeth, buzz, O buzz!
+
+SIR PALAMON: Mine, thou paltry knave, I say mine--
+
+ROBIN: Buzz--ha--buzz!
+
+JOCELYN: I pray you, Sir Knight, doth the Red Gui tilt at to-morrow's
+joust?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Base mime, he doth! My Lord Gui of Ells, Lord Seneschal of
+Raddemore, is myfriend, a very mirror of knightly prowess, the sure might
+of whose lance none may abide. He is, in very truth, the doughtiest
+champion in all this fair country, matchless at any and every weapon,
+a-horse or a-foot, in sooth a very Ajax, Achilles, Hector, Roland and
+Oliver together and at once, one and indivisible, aye--by Cupid a very
+paladin!
+
+"'Tis so I've heard," said Jocelyn thoughtfully.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Two knights only there are might cope with him, and one Sir
+Agramore and one Jocelyn of the Helm, Duke of Brocelaunde. The fame of
+which last rumour hath so puffed up that thrice my Lord Gui hath sent his
+cartel of defiance, but the said Duke, intent on paltry battles beyond his
+marches, hath thrice refused, and wisely--so 'tis said.
+
+"Aye me, messire," quoth Jocelyn, strumming his lute, "and so bloweth the
+wind. Yet mayhap these twain shall meet one day."
+
+ROBIN: And heaven send me there to see! Now as to thee, Sir Softly Sweet,
+fair Lord of Tong, thy goodly horse and armour are mine henceforth,
+first because thy need of them is nothing, secondly because thou art my
+prisoner--
+
+SIR PALAMON: And thirdly, Sir Riotous Roughness, I do freely on thee bestow
+them, hide and hair, bolt and rivet.
+
+ROBIN: Now as to thy ransom, Sir Mildly-Meek, at what price dost rate thy
+value, spiritual and corporeal?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Fellow, though youthful, well-favoured and poet esteemed, I am
+yet marvellous modest! 'Tis true I am knight of lineage lofty, of patrimony
+proud, of manors many--
+
+ROBIN: Even as of thy words, Sir Emptiness.
+
+SIR PALAMON: 'Tis also true, thou ignorant atomy, I, like Demosthenes, am
+blessed with a wonder o' words and glory o' sweet phrase, and yet, and
+here's the enduring wonder--I am still but man, though man blessed with so
+much profundity, fecundity, and redundity of thought and expression, and
+therefore a facile scribe or speaker, able to create, relate, formulate or
+postulate any truth, axiomatic, sophistry subtle, or, in other words, I
+can narrate--
+
+ROBIN: Verily Sir Windbag thou dost, to narrate, thyself with wind
+inflate, and, being thus thyself inflate of air, thou dost thyself deflate
+of airy sounds which be words o' wind, and windy words is emptiness--thus
+by thy inflatings and deflatings cometh nought but wind bred o' wind, and
+nought is nothing, so nought is thy relation or narration; whereof make
+now a cessation, so will I, in due form, formulate, postulate and
+deliberate. Thus, with my good rogues' approbation and acclamation, I will
+of thy just valuation make tabulation, and give demonstration in relation
+to thy liberation from this thy situation, as namely, viz. and to-wit:
+First thou art a poet; in this is thy marketable value to us nought, for
+poets do go empty of aught but thought of sort when wrought, unbought;
+thus go they short which doth import they're empty, purse and belly.
+Second, upon thy testimony thou'rt a man. Go to! Here we be out again, for
+on the score of manliness thou art not. Yet thou art flesh and blood--
+good! for here we deal in such. Not that we yearn for thy flesh and blood,
+but, being thine, they are to thee dear, perchance, and thou would'st fain
+keep them alive a little longer; wherefore thou shalt for thy loved flesh
+and blood pay--purchasing the same of us. And, as flesh varies, so do our
+prices vary; we do sell a man his own flesh and blood at certain rateable
+values. Thus unto a hangman we did of late sell a hangman, in fair good
+halter, and he a hangman brawny, for no more than five gold pieces, the
+which was cheap, methinks, considering the goodly halter, and he a lusty,
+manly rogue to boot. Now as for thee, thou'rt soft and of a manlihood
+indifferent, so would I rate thee at one gold piece.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Ignorant grub! Am I less than base hangman--I, a knight--
+
+ROBIN: True, Sir Knight, thou'rt a knight for no reason but that thou
+art knight born and thus, by nought but being born, hath won to thyself
+nobility, riches and honours such as no man may win either by courage,
+skill, or learning, since highborn fool and noble rogue do rank high 'bove
+such. So _thou_ art knight, Sir Knight, and for thy knighthood, thy lineage
+lofty, thy manors many, mulcted thou shalt be in noble fashion. For thy
+manhood I assess thee at one gold piece, but, since thou'rt son o' thy dam
+(whom the Saints pity!) we do fine thee five thousand gold pieces--thy body
+ours until the purchase made. Away with him, lads; cherish him kindly,
+unarm him gently, and set him a-grinding corn till his ransom be
+paid--away!
+
+Now here was mighty roar of laughter and acclaim from all who heard,
+only Sir Palamon scowled, and, for once mute and tongue-tied, was led
+incontinent away to his labours.
+
+"And now, brother," quoth Robin, turning where Jocelyn stood smiling and
+merry-eyed, "what o' this armour dost seek, and wherefore?"
+
+"Art a lovely robber, Robin," said he; "a very various rogue, yet no rogue
+born, methinks!"
+
+"I was not always outlaw, brother--howbeit, what would a Fool with horse
+and knightly arms?"
+
+Now Jocelyn, bending close, whispered somewhatin Robin's ear, whereon he
+clapped hand to thigh, and laughed and laughed until the air rang again.
+
+"Oho, a jape--a jape indeed!" he roared. "O lovely brother, to see proud
+knight unhorsed by prancing motley Fool! Hey, how my heart doth jump for
+gladness! An thou wilt a-tilting ride, I will squire thee--a Fool of a
+knight tended by Rogue of a squire. O, rare--aha! oho! Come thy ways, sweet
+brother, and let us set about this joyous jape forthwith!"
+
+And thus it was that, as evening fell, there rode, through bowery bracken
+and grassy glade, two horsemen full blithe and merry, and the setting sun
+flashed back in glory from their glittering armour.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 10
+
+ How Red Gui sore smitten was in fight
+ By motley Fool in borrowed armour dight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Now shrill tucket and clarion, trumpet and horn
+ With their cheery summons saluted the morn,
+ Where the sun, in his splendour but newly put on,
+ Still more splendid made pennon and brave gonfalon
+ That with banners and pennoncelles fluttered and flew
+ High o'er tent and pavilion of every hue.
+ For the lists were placed here, for the tournament set,
+ Where already a bustling concourse was met;
+ Here were poor folk and rich folk, lord, lady and squire,
+ Clad in leather, in cloth and in silken attire;
+ Here folk pushed and folk jostled, as people still do
+ When the sitters be many, the seats scant and few;
+ Here was babble of voices and merry uproar,
+ For while some folk laughed loud, some lost tempers and swore.
+ Until on a sudden this tumult and riot
+ Was hushed to a murmur that sank into quiet
+ As forth into the lists, stern of air, grave of face,
+ Five fine heralds, with tabard and trumpet, did pace
+ With their Lion-at-arms, or Chief Herald, before;
+ And a look most portentous this Chief Herald wore,
+ And, though portly his shape and a little too round,
+ Sure a haughtier Chief Herald could nowhere be found.
+ So aloof was his look and so grave his demeanour,
+ Humble folk grew abashed, and mean folk felt the meaner;
+ When once more the loud clarions had all echoes woke
+ This Chief Herald in voice deep and sonorous spoke:
+
+ "Good people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Oyez!
+ Ye noble dames of high degree
+ Your pretty ears now lend to me,
+ And much I will declare to ye.
+ Oyez! Oyez!
+ Ye dainty lords of might and fame,
+ Ye potent gentles, do the same,
+ Ye puissant peers of noble name,
+ Now unto ye I do proclaim:
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!"
+
+ Here pealed the trumpets, ringing loud and clear,
+ That deafened folk who chanced to stand too near.
+ In special one--a bent and hag-like dame,
+ Who bent o'er crooked staff as she were lame;
+ Her long, sharp nose--but no, her nose none saw,
+ Since it was hidden 'neath the hood she wore
+ But from this hood she watched with glittering eye
+ Four lusty men-at-arms who lolled hard by,
+ Who, 'bove their armour, bore on back and breast
+ A bloody hand--Lord Gui's well-hated crest,
+ And who, unwitting of the hooded hag,
+ On sundry matters let their lewd tongues wag:
+
+THE FIRST SOLDIER: Why, she scorned him, 'tis well beknown!
+
+THE SECOND SOLDIER: Aye, and it doth not do to scorn the Red Gui, look 'ee!
+
+THE THIBD SOLDIER: She'll lie snug in his arms yet, her pride humbled, her
+proud spirit broke, I'll warrant me!
+
+THE FOURTH SOLDIER: She rideth hence in her litter, d'ye see; and with but
+scant few light-armed knaves attendant.
+
+THE FIRST SOLDIER: Aye, and our signal my lord's hunting-horn thrice
+winded--
+
+ Thus did they talk, with laughter loud and deep,
+ While nearer yet the hooded hag did creep;
+ But:--
+ Now blew the brazen clarions might and main,
+ Which done, the portly Herald spake again:
+
+ "Good people, all ye lords and ladies fair,
+ Oyez!
+ Now unto ye forthwith I do declare
+ The charms of two fair dames beyond compare.
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!
+ The first, our Duchess--Benedicta hight,
+ That late from Tissingors, her town, took flight,
+ To-day, returning here, doth bless our sight,
+ And view the prowess of each valiant knight;
+ Each champ-i-on, in shining armour dight,
+ With blunted weapons gallantly shall fight.
+ And, watched by eyes of ladies beamy-bright,
+ Inspired and strengthened by this sweet eye-light,
+ Shall quit themselves with very main and might;
+ The second:--in her beauty Beauty's peer,
+ Yolande the Fair, unto our Duchess dear,
+ For whose sweet charms hath splintered many a spear,
+ Throned with our lovely Duchess, sitteth here
+ With her bright charms all gallant hearts to cheer.
+ Now, ye brave knights, that nought but Cupid fear,
+ To these sweet dames give eye, to me give ear!
+ Oyez!
+ 'Tis now declared--"
+
+My daughter GILLIAN expostulateth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now
+ You must allow
+ That your herald is rather a bore.
+ He talks such a lot,
+ And it seems frightful rot--
+
+ MYSELF: I hate slang, miss! I told you before!
+ If my herald says much,
+ Yet he only says such
+ As by heralds was said in those days;
+ Though their trumpets they blew,
+ It is none the less true
+ That they blew them in other folks' praise.
+ If my herald verbose is
+ And gives us large doses
+ Of high-sounding rodomontade,
+ You'll find they spoke so
+ In the long, long ago,
+ So blame not--O, blame not the bard.
+ But while we are prating
+ Our herald stands waiting
+ In a perfectly terrible fume,
+ So, my dear, here and now,
+ The poor chap we'll allow
+ His long-winded speech to resume:
+
+ "'Tis here declared by order of the Ten,
+ Fair Benedicta's guardians--worthy men!
+ Thus they decree--ye lovers all rejoice!
+ She shall by their command, this day make choice
+ Of him--O, him! O blest, thrice blessed he
+ Who must anon her lord and husband be.
+ 'Tis so pronounced by her grave guardians ten,
+ By them made law--and they right reverend men!
+ And this the law--our lady, be it said,
+ This day shall choose the husband she must wed;
+ And he who wins our Duchess for his own
+ Crowned by her love shall mount to ducal throne,
+ So let each knight, by valiant prowess, prove
+ Himself most worthy to our lady's love.
+ Now make I here an end, and ending, pray
+ Ye quit you all like val'rous knights this day."
+
+Thus spake the Chief Herald and so paced solemnly down the lists while the
+long clarions filled the air with gallant music. But the lovely Benedicta,
+throned beneath silken canopy, knit her black brows and clenched slender
+hands and stamped dainty foot, yet laughed thereafter, whereupon Yolande,
+leaning to kiss her flushed cheek, questioned her, wondering:
+
+"How say'st thou to this, my loved Benedicta?"
+
+Quoth the DUCHESS:
+
+ "I say, my sweeting, 'tis quite plain
+ That I must run away again!
+
+Howbeit I care not one rush for their laws! Marry forsooth--a fig! Let them
+make laws an they will, these reverend, right troublesome grey-beards of
+mine, they shall never wed me but to such a man as Love shall choose me,
+and loving him--him only will I wed, be he great or lowly, rich or poor,
+worthy or unworthy, so I do love him, as is the sweet and wondrous way of
+love."
+
+"Ah, Benedicta! what is love?"
+
+
+"A joy that cometh but of itself, all unsought! This wisdom had I of a Fool
+i' the forest. Go learn you of this same Fool and sigh not, dear wench."
+
+"Nay, but," sighed Yolande, lovely cheeks a-flush, "what of Sir
+Agramore--hath he not sworn to wed thee?"
+
+"I do fear Sir Agramore no longer, Yolande, since I have found me one may
+cope with him perchance--even as did a Fool with my Lord Gui of Ells upon a
+tune. Art sighing again, sweet maid?"
+
+"Nay, indeed--and wherefore should I sigh?"
+
+"At mention of a Fool, belike."
+
+"Ah, no, no, 'twere shame in me, Benedicta! A Fool forsooth!"
+
+"Yet Fool of all fools singular, Yolande. And for all his motley a very
+man, methinks, and of a proud, high bearing."
+
+Here Yolande's soft cheek grew rosy again:
+
+"Yet is he but motley Fool--and his face--marred hatefully--"
+
+"Hast seen him smile, Yolande, for then--how, dost sigh again, my sweet?"
+
+"Nay, indeed; but talk we of other matters--thy so sudden flight--tell me
+all that chanced thee, dearest Benedicta."
+
+"Why first--in thine ear, Yolande--my jewel is not--see!"
+
+"How--how, alas! O most sweet lady--hast lost it? Thy royal amulet?"
+
+"Bestowed it, Yolande."
+
+"Benedicta! On whom?"
+
+"A poor soldier. One that saved me i' the forest from many of Sir
+Agramore's verderers--a man very tall and strong and brave, but dight in
+ragged cloak and rusty mail--"
+
+"Ragged? A thief--"
+
+"Mayhap!"
+
+"An outlaw--"
+
+"Mayhap!"
+
+"A wolf's-head--a wild man and fierce."
+
+"True he is very wild and very fierce, but very, very gentle--"
+
+"And didst give to such thy jewel? O Benedicta! The Heart-in-heart?"
+
+"Freely--gladly! He begged it of me very humbly and all unknowing what it
+signified--"
+
+"O my loved Benedicta, alas!"
+
+"O my sweet Yolande, joy!"
+
+"But if he should claim thee, and he so poor and wild and ragged--"
+
+"If he should, Yolande, if he should--
+
+ 'He that taketh Heart-in-heart,
+ Taketh all and every part.'
+
+O, if he should, Yolande, then I--must fulfil the prophecy. Nay, dear my
+friend, stare not so great and sadly-eyed, he knoweth not the virtue of the
+jewel nor have I seen him these many days."
+
+"And must thou sigh therefore, Benedicta?"
+
+But now the trumpets blew a fanfare, and forth rode divers gallant knights,
+who, spurring rearing steeds, charged amain to gore, to smite and batter
+each other with right good will while the concourse shouted, caps waved and
+scarves and ribands fluttered.
+
+ But here, methinks, it booteth not to tell
+ Of every fierce encounter that befell;
+ How knight 'gainst knight drove fierce with pointless spear
+ And met with shock that echoed far and near;
+ Or how, though they with blunted swords did smite,
+ Sore battered was full many a luckless wight.
+ But as the day advanced and sun rose high
+ Full often rose the shout: "A Gui--A Gui!"
+ For many a proud (though bruised and breathless) lord,
+ Red Gui's tough lance smote reeling on the sward;
+ And ever as these plaudits shook the air,
+ Through vizored casque at Yolande he would stare.
+
+And beholding all the beauty of her he smiled evilly and muttered to
+himself, glancing from her to certain lusty men-at-arms who, lolling
+'gainst the barriers, bore at back and breast his badge of the bloody hand.
+
+But the fair Yolande heeded him none at all, sitting with eyes a-dream
+and sighing ever and anon; insomuch that the Duchess, watching her slyly,
+sighed amain also and presently spake:
+
+"Indeed, and O verily, Yolande, meseemeth we do sigh and for ever sigh,
+thou and I, like two poor, love-sick maids. How think'st thou?"
+
+"Nay, O Benedicta, hearken! See, who rideth yonder?"
+
+ Now even as thus fair Yolanda spoke,
+ A horn's shrill note on all men's hearing broke,
+ And all eyes turned where rode a gallant knight,
+ In burnished armour sumptuously bedight.
+ His scarlet plumes 'bove gleaming helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ His gaudy shield with new-popped blazon glowed:
+ Three stooping falcons that on field vert showed;
+ But close-shut vizor hid from all his face
+ As thus he rode at easy, ambling pace.
+
+"Now as I live!" cried Benedicta. "By his device yon should be that foolish
+knight Sir Palamon of Tong!"
+
+"Aye, truly!" sighed Yolande. "Though he wear no motley hither rideth
+indeed a very fool. And look, Benedicta--look! O, sure never rode knight in
+like array--see how the very populace groweth dumb in its amaze!"
+
+ For now the crowd in wonderment grew mute,
+ To see this knight before him bare a lute,
+ While blooming roses his great helmet crowned,
+ They wreathed his sword, his mighty lance around.
+ Thus decked rode he in rosy pageantry,
+ And up the lists he ambled leisurely;
+ Till, all at once, from the astonied crowd
+ There brake a hum that swelled to laughter loud;
+ But on he rode, nor seemed to reck or heed,
+ Till 'neath the balcony he checked his steed.
+ Then, handing lance unto his tall esquire,
+ He sudden struck sweet chord upon his lyre,
+ And thus, serene, his lute he plucked until
+ The laughter died and all stood hushed and still;
+ Then, hollow in his helm, a clear voice rang,
+ As, through his lowered vizor, thus he sang:
+
+ "A gentle knight behold in me,
+ (Unless my blazon lie!)
+ For on my shield behold and see,
+ Upon field vert, gules falcons three,
+ Surcharged with heart ensanguiney,
+ To prove to one and all of ye,
+ A love-lorn knight am I."
+
+But now cometh (and almost in haste) the haughty and right dignified Chief
+Herald with pursuivants attendant, which latter having trumpeted amain,
+the Herald challenged thus:
+
+ "Messire, by the device upon thy shield,
+ We know my Lord of Tong is in the field;
+ But pray thee now declare, pronounce, expound,
+ Why thus ye ride with foolish roses crowned?"
+
+Whereto the Knight maketh answer forthwith:
+
+ "If foolish be these flowers I bear,
+ Then fool am I, I trow.
+ Yet, in my folly, fool doth swear,
+ These flowers to fool an emblem rare
+ Of one, to fool, more sweet, more fair,
+ E'en she that is beyond compare,
+ A flower perchance for fool to wear,
+ Who shall his foolish love declare
+ Till she, mayhap, fool's life may share,
+ Nor shall this fool of love despair,
+ Till foolish hie shall go.
+
+ "For life were empty, life were vain,
+ If true love come not nigh,
+ Though honours, fortune, all I gain,
+ Yet poorer I than poor remain,
+ If true-love from me fly;
+ So here I pray,
+ If that thou may,
+ Ah--never pass me by!"
+
+
+Here the Chief Herald frowned, puffing his cheeks, and waved his ebony
+staff authoritatively.
+
+Quoth he: "Enough, Sir Knight! Here is no place for love! For inasmuch as
+we--"
+
+THE KNIGHT: Gentle Herald, I being here, here is Love, since I am lover,
+therefore love-full, thus where I go goeth Love--
+
+The Herald: Apprehend me, Sir Knight! For whereas love hath no part in--
+
+The Knight: Noble Herald, Love hath every part within me and without, thus
+I, from Love apart, have no part, and my love no part apart from my every
+part; wherefore, for my part, and on my part, ne'er will I with Love part
+for thy part and this to thee do I impart--
+
+"Sweet Saints aid us!" The Chief Herald clasped his massy brow and gazed
+with eye distraught. "Sir Knight--messire--my very good and noble Lord of
+Tong--I grope! Here is that which hath a seeming ... thy so many parts
+portend somewhat ... and yet ... I excogitate ... yet grope I still ...
+impart, part ... thy part and its part ... so many parts ... and roses ...
+and songs o' love ... a lute! O, thundering Mars, I ... Sound, trumpets!"
+
+But the Duchess up-starting, silenced Herald and trumpeters with imperious
+hand.
+
+"Sir Knight of Tong," said she, "'tis told thou'rt of nimble tongue and a
+maker of songs, so we bid thee sing if thy song be of Love--for Love is
+a thing little known and seldom understood these days. Here be very many
+noble knights wondrous learned in the smiting of buffets, but little else;
+here be noble dames very apt at the play of eyes, the twining of fingers,
+the languishment of sighs, that, seeking True-love, find but its shadow;
+and here also grey beards that have forgot the very name of Love. So we bid
+thee sing us of Love--True-love, what it is. Our ears attend thee!"
+
+"Gracious lady," answered the Knight, "gladly do I obey. But Love is
+mighty and I lowly, and may speak of Love but from mine own humility. And
+though much might be said of Love since Love's empire is the universe and
+Love immortal, yet will I strive to portray this mighty thing that is
+True-love in few, poor words."
+
+Then, plucking sweet melody from his lute, the Knight sang as here
+followeth:
+
+ "What is Love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day
+ Ne'er to die or fade away
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ "Though youth, alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless doth remain
+ The same to-day and ever."
+
+Now while the clarions rang out proclaiming Sir Palamon's defiance,
+Benedicta looked on Yolande and Yolande on Benedicta:
+
+"O, wonderful!" cried the Duchess. "My Lord of Tong hath found him manhood
+and therewith a wisdom beyond most and singeth such love as methought only
+angels knew and maids might vision in their dreams. Ah, Yolande--that
+such a love could be ... e'en though he went ragged and poor in all but
+love...."
+
+"Benedicta," sighed Yolande, hands clasped on swelling bosom, "O Benedicta,
+here is no foolish Lord of Tong ... and yet ... O, I am mad!"
+
+"Why, then, 'tis sweet madness! So, my Yolande, let us be mad awhile
+together ... thou--a Fool ... and I--a beggar-rogue!"
+
+"Nay--alas, dear Benedicta! This were shame--"
+
+"And forsooth is it shame doth swell thy heart, Yolande, light the glamour
+in thine eyes and set thee a-tremble--e'en as I? Nay indeed, thou'rt
+a-thrill with Folly ... and I, with Roguery. Loved Folly! Sweet Roguery! O
+Yolande, let us fly from empty state, from this mockery of life and
+learn the sweet joys of ... of beggary, and, crowned with poverty, clasp
+life--"
+
+ MYSELF, myself interrupting:
+ By the way, my dear, you'll understand,
+ Though this is very fine,
+ Still, her Grace's counsel to Yolande
+ Must not be in your line!
+ Not that I'd have you wed for wealth,
+ Or many a beggar-man by stealth,
+ But I would have you, if you can--
+
+ GILL: Marry some strong, stern, silent man,
+ Named Mark, and with hair slightly gray by the ears!
+ Now he's just the sort who would bore me to tears.
+ If I for a husband feel ever inclined,
+ I shall choose quite an ordin'ry husband--the kind
+ With plenty of money and nothing to do,
+ With a nice, comfy house, and a motor or two--
+
+ MYSELF: That's all very fine, miss, but what would you do
+ If he, by some ill-chance, quite penniless grew?
+
+ GILL: Oh, why then--why, of course,
+ I should get a divorce--
+
+ MYSELF: A divorce? Gracious heaven! For goodness' sake--
+
+ GILL: 'Twould be the most dignified action to take!
+
+
+ MYSELF: Pray, what in the world of such things do you know?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, like you--each day older I grow.
+ But, instead of discussing poor me,
+ I think you would much nicer be
+ To get on with our Geste.
+
+ MYSELF: I obey your behest!
+
+Said Yolande to the duchess, said she:
+
+"Nay, my Benedicta, these be only dreams, but life is real and dreams a
+very emptiness!"
+
+"And is 't so, forsooth?" exclaimed the Duchess. "Then am I nought but a
+duchess and lonely, thou a maid fearful of her own heart, and yon singer of
+love only a very futile knight, Sir Palamon of Tong, nothing esteemed by
+thee for wit or valour and little by his peers--see how his challengers do
+throng. How think you?" But the lady Yolande sat very still and silent,
+only she stared, great-eyed, where danced the scarlet plume.
+
+And indeed many and divers were the knights who, beholding the blazon of
+Tong, sent the bearer their defiance, eager to cope with him; and each
+and every challenge Sir Palamon accepted by mouth of his tall esquire who
+(vizor closed, even as his lord's) spake the Chief Herald in loud, merry
+voice, thus:
+
+"Sir Herald, whereas and forinasmuch as this, my Lord of Tong himself,
+himself declaring fool, is so himself-like as to meet in combat each and
+every of his challengers--themselves ten, my lord that is fool, himself
+himself so declaring, now declareth by me that am no fool but only humble
+esquire--messire, I say, doth his esquire require that I, the said
+esquire, should on his part impart as followeth, namely and to wit: That
+these ten gentle knights, the said challengers, shall forthwith of
+themselves choose of themselves, themselves among themselves thereto
+agreeing, which of themselves, among themselves of themselves so chosen,
+shall first in combat adventure himself against my Lord of Tong himself.
+And moreover, should Fortune my lord bless with victory, the nine
+remaining shall among themselves choose, themselves agreeing, which of
+themselves shall next, thus chosen of themselves, themselves represent in
+single combat with this very noble, fool-like Lord of Tong, my master.
+Furthermore, whereas and notwithstanding--"
+
+"Hold, sir!" cried the Chief Herald, fingering harassed brow. "Pray thee
+'bate--O, abate thy speechful fervour. Here forsooth and of truth is
+notable saying--O, most infallibly--and yet perchance something discursive
+and mayhap a little involved."
+
+"Nay, Sir Herald," quoth the esquire, "if involved 'twill be resolved if
+revolved, thus: Here be ten lords would fight one, and one--that is my lord
+who is but one--ten fight one by one. But that ten, fighting one, may as
+one fight, let it be agreed that of these ten one be chosen one to fight,
+so shall one fight one and every one be satisfied--every one of these ten
+fighting one, one by one. Thus shall ten be one, and one ten fight one by
+one till one be discomfited. Shall we accord the matter simply, thus?"
+
+"Sir," quoth the Chief Herald, gasping a little, "Amen!"
+
+"O!" cried the Duchess, clapping her hands, "O Yolande, hark to this rare
+esquire! Surely, I have heard yon cunning tongue ere this?"
+
+But Yolande gazed ever where Sir Palamon, having taken his station, set
+himself in array. For now, the ten knights having chosen one to represent
+them, forth rode their champion resplendent in shining mail and green
+surcoat with heralds before to proclaim his name and rank.
+
+"Yolande," quoth the Duchess softly, "pray--pray this Lord of Tong may
+tilt as bravely as he doth sing, for Sir Thomas of Thornydyke is a notable
+jouster."
+
+The trumpets blew a fanfare and, levelling their pointless lances, both
+knights gave spur, their great horses reared, broke into a gallop and
+thundered towards each other.
+
+ But hard midway upon the green surcoat,
+ Sir Palamon's stout lance so truly smote,
+ That, 'neath the shock, the bold Sir Thomas reeled
+ And, losing stirrups, saddle, lance and shield,
+ Down, down upon the ling outstretched he fell
+ And, losing all, lost breath and speech as well.
+ Thus, silent all, the bold Sir Thomas lay,
+ Though much, and many things, he yearned to say,
+ Which things his squires and pages might surmise
+ From the expression of his fish-like eyes
+ E'en as they bore him from that doleful place;
+ While, near and far, from all the populace,
+ Rose shout on shout that echoed loud and long:
+ "Sir Palamon! Sir Palamon of Tong!"
+ So came these ten good knights, but, one by one,
+ They fell before this bold Sir Palamon,
+ Whose lance unerring smote now helm, now shield,
+ That many an one lay rolling on the field.
+ But each and all themselves did vanquished yield;
+ And loud and louder did the plaudits grow,
+ That one knight should so many overthrow.
+ Even Sir Gui, within his silken tent
+ Scowled black in ever-growing wonderment.
+
+But the Knight of Tong, his gaudy shield a little battered, his fine
+surcoat frayed and torn, leaped from his wearied steed and forthwith
+mounted one held by his tall esquire, a mighty charger that tossed proud
+head and champed his bit, pawing impatient hoof.
+
+"Aha!" quoth the esquire, pointing to ten fair steeds held by ten fair
+pages. "Oho, good brother, most puissant Knight of Tong, here is good and
+rich booty--let us begone!"
+
+"Nay," answered the Knight, tossing aside his blunt tilting-spear, "here is
+an end to sportful dalliance--reach me my lance!"
+
+"Ha, is't now the Red Gui's turn, brother? The Saints aid thee, in especial
+two, that, being women, are yet no saints yet awhile--see how they watch
+thee, sweet, gentle dames! Their prayers go with thee, methinks, brother,
+and mine also, for the Red Gui is forsooth a valiant rogue!"
+
+And now, mounted on the great black war-horse, the Knight of Tong rode up
+the lists:
+
+ His scarlet plume 'bove shining helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ Till he was come where, plain for all to spy,
+ Was hung the shield and blazon of Sir Gui,
+ With bends and bars in all their painted glory,
+ Surcharged with hand ensanguined--gules or gory.
+
+Full upon this bloody hand smote the sharp point of Sir Palamon's lance;
+whereupon the watching crowd surged and swayed and hummed expectant, since
+here was to be no play with blunted weapons but a deadly encounter.
+
+Up started Sir Gui and strode forth of his tent, grim-smiling and
+confident. Quoth he:
+
+"Ha, my Lord of Tong, thou'rt grown presumptuous and over-venturesome,
+methinks. But since life thou dost hold so cheap prepare ye for death
+forthright!"
+
+So spake the Lord of Ells and, beckoning to his esquires, did on his great
+tilting-helm and rode into the lists, whereon was mighty roar of welcome,
+for, though much hated, he was esteemed mighty at arms, and the accepted
+champion of the Duchy. So while the people thundered their acclaim the two
+knights galloped to their stations and, reining about, faced each other
+from either end of the lists,
+
+ And halted thus, their deadly spears they couched,
+ With helms stooped low, behind their shields they crouched;
+ Now rang the clarions; goading spurs struck deep,
+ The mighty chargers reared with furious leap
+ And, like two whirlwinds, met in full career,
+ To backward reel 'neath shock of splintering spear:
+ But, all unshaken, every eye might see
+ The bloody hand, the scarred gules falcons three.
+ Thrice thus they met, but at the fourth essay,
+ Rose sudden shout of wonder and dismay,
+ For, smitten sore through riven shield, Sir Gui
+ Thudded to earth there motionless to lie.
+
+Thus Sir Gui, Lord of Ells and Seneschal of Raddemore, wounded and utterly
+discomfited, was borne raging to his pavilion while the air rang with the
+blare of trumpet and clarion in honour of the victor. Thereafter, since no
+other knight thought it prudent to challenge him, Sir Palamon of Tong was
+declared champion of the tournament, and was summoned by the Chief
+Herald to receive the victor's crown. But even as he rode towards the
+silk-curtained balcony, a distant trumpet shrilled defiance, and into the
+lists galloped a solitary knight.
+
+ Well-armed was he in proud and war-like trim,
+ Of stature tall and wondrous long of limb;
+ 'Neath red surcoat black was the mail he wore;
+ His glitt'ring shield a rampant leopard bore,
+ Beholding which the crowd cried in acclaim,
+ "Ho for Sir Agramore of Biename!"
+
+But from rosy-red to pale, from pale to rosy-red flushed the Duchess
+Benedicta, and clenching white teeth, she frowned upon Sir Agramore's
+fierce and warlike figure. Quoth she:
+
+"Oh, sure there is no man so vile or so unworthy in all Christendom as this
+vile Lord of Biename!"
+
+"Unless," said Yolande, frowning also, "unless it be my Lord Gui of Ells!"
+
+"True, my Yolanda! Now, as thou dost hate Sir Gui so hate I Sir Agramore,
+therefore pray we sweet maid, petition we the good Saints our valiant
+singer shall serve my hated Sir Agramore as he did thy hated Sir Gui--may
+he be bruised, may he be battered, may--"
+
+"Oho, 'tis done, my sweeting! A-hee--a-hi, 'tis done!" croaked a voice, and
+starting about, the Duchess beheld a bent and hag-like creature,
+
+ With long, sharp nose that showed beneath her hood,
+ A nose that curved as every witch's should,
+ And glittering eye, before whose baleful light,
+ The fair Yolande shrank back in sudden fright.
+
+"Nay, my Yolande," cried the Duchess, "hast forgot old Mopsa, my
+foster-mother, that, being a wise-woman, fools decry as witch, and my
+ten grave and learned guardians have banished therefor? Hast forgot my
+loved and faithful Mopsa that is truly the dearest, gentlest, wisest
+witch that e'er witched rogue or fool? But O Mopsa, wise
+mother--would'st thou might plague and bewitch in very truth yon base
+caitiff knight, Sir Agramore of Biename!"
+
+"'Tis done, loved daughter, 'tis done!" chuckled the Witch.
+
+ "He groaneth,
+ He moaneth,
+ He aileth,
+ He waileth,
+ Lying sighing,
+ Nigh to dying,
+ Oho,
+ I know
+ 'Tis so.
+ With bones right sore,
+ Both 'hind and fore,
+ Sir Agramore
+ Doth ache all o'er.
+
+"He aileth sore yet waileth more--oho! I know, I have seen--in the chalk,
+in the ink, in the smoke--I looked and saw
+
+ "Sir Agramore,
+ By bold outlaw,
+ Bethwacked most sore
+ As told before--"
+
+"Nay, but, good Mopsa, how may this be? Sir Agramore rideth armed yonder,
+plain to my sight."
+
+"Child, I have told thee sooth," croaked the Witch. "Have patience, watch
+and be silent, and shalt grow wise as old Mopsa--mayhap--in time.
+
+ "For, 'tis written in the chalk,
+ Sore is he and may not walk.
+ O, sing heart merrily!
+ I have seen within the smoke
+ Bones bethwacked by lusty stroke,
+ Within the ink I looked and saw,
+ Swathed in clouts, Sir Agramore;
+ Dread of him for thee is o'er,
+ By reason of a bold outlaw.
+ Sing, heart, and joyful be!"
+
+"Go to, Mopsa, thou'rt mad!" quoth the Duchess. "For yonder is this hated
+lord very strong and hale, and in well-being whiles thou dost rave! Truly
+thou'rt run mad, methinks!"
+
+But the old Witch only mumbled and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones as
+is the custom of witches.
+
+Meantime, Sir Agramore, checking his fiery charger and brandishing heavy
+lance fiercely aloft, roared loud defiance:
+
+"What ho! Ye knights, lords, esquires, and lovers of lusty blows, hither
+come I with intent, sincere and hearty, to bicker with, fight, combat and
+withstand all that will--each and every, a-horse or a-foot, with sword,
+battleaxe or lance. Now all ye that love good blows--have at ye!"
+
+Here ensued great clamour and a mighty blowing of trumpets that waxed yet
+louder when it was proclaimed that Sir Palamon, as champion of the day, had
+accepted Sir Agramore's haughty challenge.
+
+And now all was hushed as these two doughty knights faced each other and,
+as the trumpets brayed, charged furiously to meet with thunderous shock of
+breaking lances and reeling horses that, rearing backwards, fell crashing
+upon the torn and trampled grass. But their riders, leaping clear of
+lashing hooves, drew their swords and, wasting no breath in words, beset
+each other forthwith, smiting with right good will.
+
+Sir Agramore's leopard shield was riven in twain by a single stroke, Sir
+Palamon's scarlet plume was shorn away, but they fought only the fiercer
+as, all untiring, the long blades whirled and flashed until their armour
+rang, sparks flew, and the populace rocked and swayed and roared for very
+joy. Once Sir Agramore was beaten to his knees, but rising, grasped his
+sword in two hands and smote a mighty swashing blow, a direful stroke that
+burst the lacing of Sir Palamon's great helm and sent it rolling on the
+sward. But, beholding thus his adversary's face, Sir Agramore, crying in
+sudden amaze, sprang back; for men all might see a visage framed in long,
+black-curled hair, grey-eyed, but a face so direly scarred that none,
+having seen it but once, might well forget.
+
+"Par Dex!" panted Sir Agramore, lifting his vizor.
+
+"Pertinax!" gasped Duke Jocelyn. "O Pertinax--thou loved and lovely
+smiter--ne'er have I been so sore battered ere now!"
+
+Hereupon all folk stared in hugeous wonderment to behold these two
+champions drop their swords and leap to clasp and hug each other in mighty
+arms, to pat each other's mailed shoulders and grasp each other's mailed
+hands. Quoth Sir Pertinax:
+
+"Lord, how came ye in this guise?"
+
+"My Pertinax, whence stole ye that goodly armour?"
+
+"Lord, oath made I to requite one Sir Agramore of Biename for certain felon
+blow. Him sought I latterly therefore, and this day met him journeying
+hither, and so, after some disputation, I left him lying by the way, nor
+shall he need armour awhile, methinks--wherefore I took it and rode hither
+seeking what might befall--"
+
+But here, Sir Gui, all heedless of his wound, started up from his couch,
+raising great outcry:
+
+"Ha--roguery, roguery! Ho, there, seize me yon knave that beareth the
+cognizance of Tong. Ha--treason, treason!" At this, others took up the cry
+and divers among the throng, beholding Duke Jocelyn's scarred features,
+made loud tumults: "The Fool! The Fool! 'Tis the Singing Motley! 'Tis the
+rogue-Fool that broke prison--seize him! Seize him!" And many, together
+with the soldiery, came running.
+
+"Lord," quoth Sir Pertinax, catching up his sword, "here now is like to be
+a notable, sweet affray!" But even as these twain turned to meet their many
+assailants was thunder of hoofs, a loud, merry voice reached them, and they
+saw Robin hard by who held two trampling chargers.
+
+"Mount, brothers--mount!" he cried. "Mount, then spur we for the barriers!"
+So they sprang to saddle and, spurring the rearing horses, galloped for
+the barriers, all three, nor was there any who dare stay them or abide the
+sweep of those long swords. Thus, leaping the barriers, they galloped away
+and left behind roaring tumult and dire confusion.
+
+And amid all this, hid by the silken curtains of her balcony, the Duchess
+Benedicta uttered a joyous cry and, clasping Yolande in her arms, kissed
+her rapturously.
+
+"Yolande!" she cried, "O dear my friend, thou didst see--even as did I--a
+sorry fool and a poor rogue-soldier at hand-strokes with each other--O wise
+Fool! O knightly Rogue! Come, let us fly, Yolande, let us to the wild-wood
+and, lost therein, love, True-love, methinks, shall find us. Nay--ask me
+nothing, only hear this. Be thou to thine own heart true, be thou brave and
+Shame shall fly thee since True-love out-faceth Shame! How say'st thou,
+Mopsa, thou wise witch-mother?"
+
+"Ah, sweet children!" croaked the Witch, touching each with claw-like hand
+yet hand wondrous gentle. "True-love shall indeed find ye, hide where ye
+will. For True-love, though blind, they say, hath eyes to see all that is
+good and sweet and true. A poor man-at-arms in rusty mail may yet be true
+man and a fool, for all his motley, wise. To love such seemeth great folly,
+yet to the old, love is but folly. Nath'less, being old I do love ye, and
+being wise I charge ye:
+
+ "Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies;
+ Love's blind, they say, but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly--follow!"
+
+My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: "Stop! Your tournament, father, seems too long drawn out,
+ With quite too much combating and knocking about.
+
+ MYSELF: I hope you're wrong, my dear, although
+ Who knows? Perhaps, it may be so.
+
+ GILL: And such scrappy bits of love-making you write;
+ You seem to prefer much describing a fight.
+ All authors should write what their readers like best;
+ But authors are selfish, yes--even the best
+ And you are an author!
+
+ MYSELF: Alack, that is true,
+ And, among other things, I'm the author of you.
+
+ GILL: Then, being my author, it's plain as can be
+ That you are to blame if I'm naughty--not me.
+ But, father, our Geste, though quite corking in places,
+ Has too many fights and too little embraces.
+ You've made all our lovers so frightfully slow,
+ You ought to have married them pages ago.
+ The books that are nicest are always the sort
+ That, when you have read them, seem always too short!
+ If you make all your readers impatient like me,
+ They'll buy none of your books--and then where shall we be?
+ All people like reading of love when they can,
+ So write them a lot, father, that is the plan.
+ Go on to the love, then, for every one's sake,
+ And end with a wedding--
+
+ MYSELF: Your counsel I 'll take.
+ I can woo them and wed them in less than no time,
+ I can do it in prose, in blank verse, or in rhyme;
+ But since, my dear, you are for speed,
+ To end our Geste I will proceed.
+ In many ways it may be done,
+ As I have told you--here is one:
+
+A short two years have elapsed and we find our hero Jocelyn tenderly
+playing with a golden-haired prattler, his beloved son and heir, while his
+beautiful spouse Yolande busied with her needle, smiles through happy
+tears.
+
+ GILL: O, hush, father! Of course, that is simply absurd!
+ Such terrible piffle--
+
+ MYSELF: I object to that word!
+
+ GILL: Well, then, please try a little verse.
+
+ MYSELF: With pleasure:
+
+ "My own at last!" Duke Joc'lyn fondly cried,
+ And kissed Yolande, his blooming, blushing bride.
+ "My own!" he sighed. "My own--my very own!"
+ "Thine, love!" she murmured. "Thine and thine alone,
+ Thy very own for days and months and years--"
+
+ GILL: O, stop! I think that's even worse!
+
+ MYSELF: Beyond measure.
+
+ Then here's a style may be admired
+ Since brevity is so desired:
+
+ So he married her and she married him,
+ and everybody married each other
+ and lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or again, and thus, my daughter,
+ Versified it may be shorter:
+
+ So all was marriage, joy and laughter,
+ And each lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or:
+ If for High Romance you sigh,
+ Here's Romance that's over high:
+
+ Shy summer swooned to autumn's sun-burned arms,
+ Swoon, summer, swoon!
+ While roses bloomed and blushing sighed their pain,
+ Blush, roses, blush!
+
+ Filling the world with perfume languorous,
+ Sighing forth their souls in fragrant amorousness;
+ And fair Yolande, amid these bloomful languors,
+ Blushing as they, as languorous, as sweet,
+ Sighed in the arms that passioned her around:
+ O Jocelyn, O lord of my delight,
+ See how--
+
+ GILL: Stop, father, stop, I beg of you.
+ Such awful stuff will never do,
+ I suppose you must finish it in your own way--
+
+ MYSELF: I suppose that I shall, child, that is--if I may.
+
+ GILL: But father, wait--I must insist
+ Whatever else you do
+ It's time that somebody was kissed
+ It doesn't matter who--
+ I mean either Yolande the Fair
+ Or else the Duchess--I don't care.
+
+ MYSELF: In these next two Fyttes both shall kiss
+ And be well kissed, I promise this.
+ Two Fyttes of kisses I will make
+ One after t' other, for your sake.
+ Two Fyttes of love I will invent
+ And make them both quite different,
+ Which is a trying matter rather
+ And difficult for any father--
+ But then, as well you know, my Gillian,
+ You have a father in a million;
+ And Oh, methinks 'tis very plain
+ You ne'er shall meet his like again.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 11
+
+How Pertinax fell out with Robin and with Friar, Yet, in that very hour,
+came by his heart's desire.
+
+The sinking sun had set the West aflame, When our three riders to the
+wild-wood came, Where a small wind 'mid sun-kissed branches played, And
+deep'ning shadows a soft twilight made; Where, save for leafy stirrings,
+all was still, Lulled by the murmur of a bubbling rill That flowed
+o'ershadowed by a mighty oak, Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning
+stroke. Here Robin checked his steed. "Good friends," quoth he,
+
+ My daughter Gillian suggesteth:
+
+ Gill: That's rather good,
+ But, still, I should
+ In prose prefer the rest;
+ For if this fytte
+ Has love in it,
+ Prose is for love the best.
+ All ord'nary lovers, as every one knows,
+ Make love to each other much better in prose.
+ If, at last, our Sir Pertinax means to propose,
+ Why then--just to please me,
+ Father, prose let it be.
+
+ Myself: Very well, I agree!
+
+ Then said Robin, quoth he:
+"Good friends, here are we safe!" And, checking his steed within this
+pleasant shade, he dismounted.
+
+"Safe, quotha?" said Sir Pertinax, scowling back over shoulder. "Not so!
+Surely we are close pursued--hark! Yonder be horsemen riding at speed--ha,
+we are beset!"
+
+"Content you, sir!" answered Robin. "Think you I would leave behind good
+booty? Yonder come ten noble coursers laden with ten goodly armours the
+same won a-jousting to-day by this right wondrous Fool, my good gossip--"
+
+"Thy gossip, forsooth!" snorted Sir Pertinax. "But tell me, presumptuous
+fellow, how shall these ten steeds come a-galloping hither!"
+
+"Marry, on this wise, Sir Simple Innocence--these steeds do gallop for
+sufficient reason, namely--they are to gallop bidden being ridden,
+bestridden and chidden by whip and spur applied by certain trusty men o' my
+company, which men go habited, decked, dressed, clad, guised and disguised
+as smug, sleek citizens, Sir Innocent Simplicity--"
+
+"Par Dex!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax, scowling. "And who 'rt thou, sirrah,
+with men at thy beck and call?"
+
+"Behold!" said Robin, unhelming. "Behold the king of all masterless rogues,
+and thy fellow gallow's-bird, Sir High Mightiness!"
+
+"Ha, is 't thou?" cried Sir Pertinax. "Now a plague on thy kingdom and thee
+for an unhanged, thieving rogue--"
+
+"E'en as thyself," nodded Robin, "thou that flaunted thy unlovely carcass
+in stolen armour."
+
+"Ha!" roared Sir Pertinax, clapping hand on sword. "A pest--a murrain! This
+to me, thou dog's-meat? Malediction! Now will I crack thy numbskull for a
+pestilent malapert--"
+
+"Nay, Sir Grim-and-gory," laughed Robin, "rather will I now use thee as
+thou would'st ha' served me on a day but for this generous and kindly Fool,
+my good comrade!" And speaking, Robin sprang nimbly to the great oak tree
+and thrusting long arm within the jagged fissure that gaped therein drew
+forth a hunting-horn and winded it loud and shrill. And presently was a
+stir, a rustle amid the surrounding brushwood and all about them were
+outlaws, wild men and fierce of aspect, and each and every grasped long-bow
+with arrow on string and every arrow was aimed at scowling Sir Pertinax.
+
+"Per Dex!" quoth he, "and is this death, then?"
+
+"Verily!" nodded Robin, "an I do speak the word."
+
+"So be it--speak!" growled Sir Pertinax. "Come, Death--I fear thee not!"
+And out flashed his long sword; but even then it was twisted from his
+grasp and Lobkyn Lollo, tossing the great blade aloft and, catching it
+very neatly, laughed and spake:
+
+ "Five times, five times ten
+ Are we, all lusty men.
+ An hundred twice and fifty deaths are we,
+ So, an Rob speak, dead thou 'lt as often be."
+
+"Nay, hold a while, sweet lads!" laughed Robin, "the surly rogue shall sing
+for his life and our good pleasaunce."
+
+"Sing?" roared Sir Pertinax. "I sing! I? Ha, dare ye bid me so, base dog?
+Sing, forsooth? By Og and Gog! By the Seven Champions and all the fiends,
+rather will I die!" And here, being defenceless, Sir Pertinax clenched
+mighty fists and swore until he lacked for breath.
+
+Then spake Jocelyn, gentle-voiced.
+
+"Sing, Pertinax," quoth he.
+
+"Ha--never! Not for all the--"
+
+"I do command thee, Pertinax. As Robin once sang for his life, now must
+thou sing for thine. Song for song, 't is but just! Sing, Pertinax!"
+
+"Nay," groaned the proud knight, "I had rather drink water and chew grass
+like a rabbit. Moreover I ha' no gift o' song--"
+
+"Do thy best!" quoth Robin.
+
+"I'm harsh o' voice--knave!"
+
+"Then croak--rogue!" quoth Robin.
+
+"No song have I--vermin!"
+
+"Make one--carrion! But sing thou shalt though thy song be no better than
+hog-song which is grunt. Howbeit sing thou must!"
+
+Hereupon Sir Pertinax gnashed his teeth and glaring balefully on Robin
+lifted hoarse voice and burst forth into fierce song:
+
+ "Thou base outlaw,
+ Vile clapper-claw,
+ Since I must sing a stave,
+ Then, here and now,
+ I do avow
+ Thou art a scurvy knave!
+ Thy hang-dog air
+ Doth plain declare
+ Thou 'rt very scurvy knave.
+
+ "Rogues breed apace
+ In each vile place,
+ But this I will avow,
+ Where e'er rogues be
+ No man may see
+ A viler rogue than thou,
+
+ Since it were vain
+ To meet again
+ A rogue more vile than thou.
+
+ "As rogue thou art,
+ In every part,
+ Then--"
+
+"Hold there--hold!" cried Robin, stopping his ears. "Thy voice is unlovely
+as thy look and thy song as ill as thy voice, so do we forgive thee the
+rest. Ha' done thy bellowing and begone--"
+
+"Ha--not so!" quoth Sir Pertinax. "For troth I do sing better than
+methought possible, and my rhyming is none so ill! So will I rhyme thy
+every knavish part and sing song till song and rhyme be ended. Have at thee
+again, base fellow!
+
+ Since rogue thou art
+ In every part--part--
+
+Ha, plague on't, hast put me out, rogue! I was about to hang thy every
+roguish part in rhyme, but my rhymes halt by reason o' thee, rogue."
+
+"Forsooth!" laughed Robin. "Thus stickest thou, for thy part, at my every
+part, the which is well since I am man of parts. Thus then rhyme thou
+rhymes upon thyself therefore; thus, thyself rhyming rhymes of thee, thou
+shalt thyself, rhyming of thyself, thyself pleasure thereby, thou thus
+rhyming of thee, and thee, thou. Thus thy thee and thou shall be well
+accorded. How think'st thou?"
+
+But Sir Pertinax, astride his charger that cropped joyously at sweet,
+cool grass, sat chin on fist, lost in the throes of composition, nothing
+heeding, even when came the ten steeds with the ten suits of armour.
+
+Now these ten horses bare eleven riders, tall, lusty fellows all, save one
+shrouded in hood and cloak and whom Jocelyn viewed with quick, keen eyes.
+And thus he presently whispered Robin who, laughing slyly, made signal to
+his followers, whereupon, by ones and twos they stole silently away until
+there none remained save only Sir Pertinax who, wrestling with his muse,
+stared aloft under knitted brows, all unknowing, and presently brake out
+singing on this wise:
+
+ "All men may see
+ A man in me,
+ A man who feareth no man,
+ Thus, fearless, I
+ No danger fly--"
+
+"Except it be a woman!" sang a soft, sweet voice hard by, in pretty
+mockery. Hereat Sir Pertinax started so violently that his mail clashed and
+he stared about him eager-eyed but, finding himself quite alone, sighed and
+fell to reverie.
+
+"A woman?" said he aloud. "'Except it be a woman--'"
+
+THE VOICE: Aye--a woman, O craven soldier!
+
+SIR PERTINAX: Why here is strange echo methinks and speaketh--with her
+voice!
+
+THE VOICE: 'O voice so soft and full of sweet allure!'
+
+SIR PERTINAX: O voice beloved that might my dolour cure!
+
+THE VOICE: O craven soldier! O most timid wooer! SIR PERTINAX: Craven am I,
+yet lover--'t is most sure.
+
+THE VOICE: But thou 'rt a man--at least meseemeth so.
+
+SIR PERTINAX: And, being man, myself unworthy know,
+ Yet must I love and my belovd seek
+ And, finding her, no words of love dare speak.
+ For this my love beyond all words doth reach,
+ And I'm slow-tongued and lack the trick of speech.
+ Nor hope have I that she should stoop to bless,
+ A man so full of all unworthiness.
+ So am I dumb--
+
+THE VOICE: And yet dost speak indeed,
+ Such words, methinks, as any maid might heed.
+
+"Ha, think ye so in verity, sweet voice!" cried Sir Pertinax, and springing
+lightly to earth, strode forward on eager feet. And lo! from behind a
+certain tree stepped one who, letting fall shrouding cloak and hood, stood
+there a maid, dark-haired and darkly bright of eye, very shapely and fair
+to see in her simple tire. And beholding her thus, the tender curve of
+scarlet lips, the flutter of slender hands, the languorous bewitchment of
+her eyes, Sir Pertinax halted.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interpolateth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ What, again? Father, that will never do.
+ Don't make him halt again, I beg of you.
+ Sir Pertinax has halted much too long,
+ To make him do it here would be quite
+ wrong!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, I wish you would not interrupt
+ My halting muse in manner so abrupt--
+
+ GILL:
+
+ But here 's a chance at last to let them kiss,
+ And now you make him halt!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss!
+
+Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head abashed.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN persisteth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ Well, father, while he halts, then tell me,
+ pray,
+ Just what you mean by that line where you
+ say,
+ 'The languorous bewitchment of her eyes'?
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, no child should authors catechise,
+ Especially, poor fellow, if, like me,
+ Father and author both at once is he.
+ Wise authors all such questions strictly ban,
+ And never answer--even if they can.
+ If of our good knight's wooing you would
+ hear,
+ Keep stilly tongue and hearken well, my
+ dear.
+
+Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head, abashed by her beauty.
+
+"Melissa!" he whispered, "O Melissa!" and so stood mute.
+
+"O Pertinax!" she sighed. "Art dumb at sight of me? O Pertinax, and
+wherefore?"
+
+"All have I forgot save only thy loveliness, Melissa!"
+
+"Methinks such--forgetfulness becometh thee well. Say on!"
+
+"Ah, Melissa, I--do love thee."
+
+"Why this I knew when thou didst sit a-fishing!"
+
+"But, indeed, then I dreamed not of loving thee or any maid."
+
+"Because thou art but a man."
+
+"Verily, and being man, now came I seeking thee for Love's sweet sake yet,
+finding thee, know not how to speak thee. Alas, I do fear I am but sorry
+wooer!"
+
+"Alas, Pertinax, I do fear thou art! Yet thou shalt learn, perchance.
+How--art dumb again, canst speak me no more?"
+
+"Nought--save only this, thou art beyond all maids fair, Melissa!"
+
+"Why, I do think thou'lt make a wooer some day mayhap, by study diligent.
+'T will take long time and yet--I would not have thee learn too soon! And
+hast thought of me? A little?"
+
+"I have borne thee ever within my heart."
+
+"And wherefore wilt love maid so lowly?"
+
+"For that thou art thyself and thyself--Melissa. And O, I love thy voice!"
+
+"My voice? And what more?"
+
+"Thine eyes. Thy little, pretty feet. Thy scarlet mouth. Thy gentle, small
+hands. Thy hair. All of thee!"
+
+"O," she murmured a little breathlessly, "if thou dost so love me--woo
+me--a little!"
+
+"Alas!" he sighed, "I know not how."
+
+"Hast ne'er wooed maid ere this, big soldier?"
+
+"Never!"
+
+"Thou poor Pertinax! How empty--how drear thy life. For this do I pity thee
+with pity kin to love--"
+
+"Love?" he whispered. "Ah, Melissa, couldst e'en learn to love one so
+unlovely, so rude, so rough and unmannered as I?"
+
+"Never!" she sighed, "O, never--unless thou teach me?"
+
+"Would indeed I might, Melissa. Ah, teach me how I may teach thee to love
+one so unworthy as Pertinax!"
+
+Now hearkening to his harsh voice grown soft and tremulous, beholding the
+truth in his honest eyes, Melissa smiled, wondrous tender, and reaching out
+took hold upon his two hands.
+
+"Kneel!" she commanded. "Kneel here upon the grass as I do kneel. Now, lay
+by thy cumbrous helmet. Now fold thy great, strong hands. Now bow thy tall,
+grim head and say in sweet, soft accents low and reverent: 'Melissa, I do
+love thee heart and soul, thee only do I love and thee only will I love now
+and for ever. So aid me, Love, amen!'" Then, closing his eyes, Sir Pertinax
+bowed reverent head, and, humbly folding his hands, spake as she bade him.
+Thereafter opening his eyes, he saw her watching him through gathering
+tears, and leaning near, he reached out eager arms, yet touched her not.
+Quoth he: "O maid beloved, what is thy sorrow?"
+
+"'Tis joy--joy, and thou--thou art so strong and fierce yet so gentle and
+simple of heart! O, may I prove worthy thy love--"
+
+"Worthy? Of my love?" he stammered. "But O Melissa, I am but he thou didst
+name harsh of tongue."
+
+"Aye, I did!" she sobbed.
+
+"Hard of heart, flinty of soul, rude, unmannered and unlovely."
+
+"Aye--I did and--loved thee the while!" she whispered. "So now do I pray
+that I prove worthy."
+
+"Worthy? Thou? O my sweet maid--thou that art kin to the holy angels, thou
+so high and far removed 'bove me that I do tremble and--fear to touch
+thee--".
+
+"Nay, fear me not, Pertinax," she sighed, "for though indeed I am all this,
+yet maid am I also and by times--very human. So Pertinax, thou great,
+fearless man-at-arms, lay by thy so great fears a while--I do beseech
+thee." Then Sir Pertinax, beholding the tender passion of her eyes, forgot
+his fear in glad wonderment and, reaching out hands that trembled for all
+their strength, drew her to his close embracement.
+
+And thus, kneeling together upon the sun-dappled sward, they forgot all
+things in this joyous world save only their love and the glory of it. And
+when they had kissed each other--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: But, wait, they haven't yet, you know!
+
+ MYSELF: Indeed, they have, I've just said so.
+
+ GILL: Then, father, please to tell me this:
+ How can a person say a kiss?
+ And so, since kisses can't be said,
+ Please make them do it now instead.
+
+Thus, cradled in his strong arms, she questioned him tenderly:
+
+"Dost mind how, upon a day, my Pertinax, didst ask of me the amulet I bore
+within my bosom?"
+
+"Aye," he answered, "and sure 'tis charm of potent magic whose spell
+brought us out of the dungeon at Canalise--the which is great matter for
+wonder! But 'tis for thy dear sake I do cherish it--"
+
+"Bear you it yet?"
+
+"Here upon my heart."
+
+"And if I should ask it of thee again--wouldst render it back to me?"
+
+"Never!" quoth he. "Never, until with it I give thee myself also!"
+
+But presently she stirred in his embrace for upon the air was an
+approaching clamour, voices, laughter and the ring of mail.
+
+"Come away!" whispered Melissa, upspringing to her feet. "Come, let thou
+and Love and I hide until these disturbers be gone and the sweet world hold
+but us three again."
+
+Now, as they stood, hand in hand, deep hidden 'mid the green, they beheld
+six merry woodland rogues who led an ambling ass whereon rode a friar
+portly and perspiring albeit he had a jovial eye. And as he rode he spake
+his captors thus in voice full-toned and deep:
+
+"Have a care, gentle rogues and brethren, hurry not this ambulant animal
+unduly, poor, much-enduring beast. Behold the pensive pendulation of these
+auriculars so forlornly a-dangle! Here is ass that doth out-patience all
+asses, both four and two-legged. Here is meek ass of leisured soul loving
+not haste--a very pensive perambulator. So hurry not the ass, my brothers,
+for these several and distinct reasons or arguments. Firstly, dearly
+beloved, because I love haste no more than the ass; secondly, brethren, 't
+is property of Holy Church which is above all argument; and, thirdly, 't
+is bestridden by one Friar John, my very self, and I am forsooth weighty
+argument. Fourthly, beloved, 'tis an ass that--ha! O sweet vision for eyes
+human or divine! Do I see thee in very truth, thou damsel of disobedience,
+dear dame of discord, sweet, witching, wilful lady--is it thou in very
+truth, most loved daughter, or wraith conjured of thy magic and my
+perfervid imaginations--speak!"
+
+"'T is I myself, Reverend Father!" laughed Melissa. "O my dear, good Friar
+John, methinks the kind Saints have brought thee to my need."
+
+"Saints, quotha!" exclaimed the Friar, rolling merry eye towards his
+several captors. "Call ye these--Saints? Long have I sought thee, thou
+naughty maid, and to-day in my quest these brawny 'saints' beset me with
+bow and quarterstaff and me constrained hither--but my blessing on them
+since they have brought me to thee. And now, sweet child and daughter,
+whiles the news yet runneth hot-foot or, like bird unseen, wingeth from lip
+to lip, I thy ghostly father have rare good news for thee--"
+
+"Nay, Friar John, I will guess thy tidings: Sir Agramore of Biename lieth
+sorry and sore of a cudgelling."
+
+"How!" cried the Friar. "Thou dost know--so soon?"
+
+"Verily, Reverend Father, nor have I or my worthy guardians aught to fear
+of him hereafter. And now have I right wondrous news for thee, news that
+none may guess. List, dear Friar John, thou the wisest and best loved of
+all my guardians ten; to-day ye are absolved henceforth all care of your
+wilful ward since to-day she passeth from the guardianship of ye ten to the
+keeping of one. Come forth, Pertinax, thou only one beloved of me for no
+reason but that thou art thou and I am I--as is ever the sweet, mad way of
+True-love--come forth, my dear-loved, poor soldier!" Out from the trees
+strode Pertinax but, beholding his face, Friar John scowled and, viewing
+his rich surcoat and goodly armour, fell to perspiring wonder and amaze.
+
+"Now by the sweet Saint Amphibalus!" quoth he. "Surely these be the arms of
+Sir Agramore, dread Lord of Biename?"
+
+"Most true, dear Friar John," answered Melissa, "and by this same token Sir
+Agramore lieth sore bruised e'en now."
+
+"Aha!" quoth the Friar, mopping moist brow. "'T is well--'t is very well,
+so shall these two ears of mine, with eighteen others of lesser account,
+scathless go and all by reason of this good, tall fellow. Howbeit, I do
+know this same fellow for fellow of none account, and no fit mate for thee,
+noble daughter, love or no. A fierce, brawling, tatterdemalion this, that
+erstwhile tramped in company with long-legged ribald--a froward jesting
+fellow. Wherefore this fellow, though fellow serviceable, no fellow is for
+thee and for these sufficing reasons. Firstly--"
+
+"Ha--enough!" quoth Sir Pertinax, chin out-thrust. "'Fellow' me no more,
+Friar--"
+
+"Firstly," continued Friar John, "because this out-at-elbows fellow is a
+rogue."
+
+"'Rogue,' in thy teeth, Churchman!" growled Sir Pertinax.
+
+"Secondly," continued Friar John, nothing abashed, "because this
+rogue-fellow is a runagate roysterer, a nameless knave, a highway-haunter,
+a filching flick-o'-the-gibbet and a--"
+
+"Friar," snorted Sir Pertinax, "thou 'rt but a very fat man scant o'
+breath, moreover thou 'rt a friar, so needs must I leave thee alive to make
+pestilent the air yet a little until thou chokest of an epithet. Meantime
+perform now one gracious act in thy so graceless life and wed me with this
+forest maiden."
+
+"Forest maiden, forsooth!" cried Friar John. "O Saints! O Martyrs! Forest
+maid, quotha! And wed her--and unto thee, presumptuous malapert! Ho,
+begone, thy base blood and nameless rank forbid--"
+
+"Hold there, shaveling!" quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. "Now mark me this!
+Though I, being very man, do know myself all unworthy maid so sweet and
+peerless, yet, and she stoop to wed me, then will I make her lady proud and
+dame of divers goodly manors and castles, of village and hamlet, pit and
+gallows, sac and soc, with powers the high, the middle and the low and
+with ten-score lances in her train. For though in humble guise I went, no
+nameless rogue am I, but Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling,
+Bracton and Deepdene--"
+
+"How!" cried Melissa, pouting rosy lip and frowning a little. "O Pertinax,
+art indeed a great lord?"
+
+"Why, sooth--forsooth and indeed," he stammered, "I do fear I am."
+
+"Then thou 'rt no poor, distressful, ragged, outlaw-soldier?"
+
+"Alack--no!" he groaned, regardful of her frown.
+
+"Then basely hast thou tricked me--O cruel!"
+
+"Nay, Melissa--hear me!" he cried, and, forgetful of friar and gaping
+outlaws, he clasped her fast 'prisoned 'gainst his heart. "Thee do I love,
+dear maid, 'bove rank, or fame, or riches, or aught this world may offer.
+So, an thou wouldst have me ragged and destitute and outlaw, all this will
+I be for thy sweet sake since life were nought without thee, O maid I do so
+love--how say'st thou?"
+
+"I say to thee, Pertinax, that thy so great love hath loosed thy tongue at
+last, Love hath touched thy lips with eloquence beyond all artifice since
+now, methinks, it is thy very soul doth speak me. And who shall resist such
+wooing? Surely not I that do--love thee beyond telling. So take me, my
+lord, thy right hand in mine, the talisman in thy left--so! Now, my
+Pertinax, speak thy heart's wish."
+
+"Friar," quoth Sir Pertinax, holding aloft the Crystal Heart, "as her love
+is mine and mine hers, wed and unite us in our love--by the magic of this
+jewel I do command thee!"
+
+Here, beholding the talisman, Friar John gasped and stared round-eyed and
+incredulous.
+
+"By Holy Rood!" he whispered, "'t is indeed the Crystal Heart!"
+
+"And O!" sighed Melissa, "O Friar John, thou dost mind the saying:
+
+ "'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'"
+
+"Aye, truly--truly!" nodded the Friar.
+
+ "'And by night, or eke by day,
+ The Crystal Heart all must obey!'"
+
+So saying he got him down from the ass and, for all his corpulence, louted
+full low.
+
+"Sir Knight of Shene," quoth he, "by reason of this jewel potential thou
+dost bear, now must I perforce obey thy behest and wed thee unto this
+our gracious lady Benedicta, Duchess of Ambremont, Canalise, Tissingors,
+Fordyngstoke and divers other towns, villages and--"
+
+"Duchess--a duchess?" exclaimed Sir Pertinax. "Duchess say'st thou--this,
+the Duchess Benedicta! O Melissa--thou--thou--a duchess!"
+
+"Sooth and forsooth," sighed she in pretty mockery, "I do fear I am!"
+
+"Then thou 'rt no humble maid, distressful and forlorn, Melissa?"
+
+"Yea, Pertinax--all this am I indeed unless thou love me, and loving me,
+wed me, and wedding me love me the better therefor, and loving me ever the
+better, thou may'st learn a little some day how a woman may love a man."
+
+"Par Dex!" mumbled Sir Pertinax, kissing her rosy finger-tips, "be thou
+duchess or witch-maid o' the wood, I do love thee heart and soul, body and
+mind, now and for ever, Melissa."
+
+Then Friar John, beholding the radiant joy of their faces, reached forth
+his hands in blessing.
+
+"Kneel ye, my children!" he sighed. "For here methinks is true-love such
+as brighteneth this world all too seldom. So here, within the forest, the
+which is surely God's cathedral, this your love shall be sanctified unto
+you and the world be the better therefor! Kneel ye, my children!"
+
+And thus, kneeling upon the flower-sprent turf hand in hand and with heads
+reverently bowed, they were wed, while the six outlaws stared in silent awe
+and the meek ass cropped the grass busily.
+
+"O Pertinax," sighed the Duchess as they rose, "so greatly happy am I that
+I will others shall be happy likewise; let us make this indeed a day of
+gladness. I pray thee sound the bugle that hangeth within the great oak,
+yonder."
+
+So Sir Pertinax took the horn and sounded thereon a mighty blast, loud and
+long and joyous. And presently came the outlaws, thronging in from all
+directions, until the sunny glade was full of their wild company, while
+in the green beyond pike-head twinkled and sword-blades glittered; and
+foremost was Robin with Lobkyn Lollo beside him.
+
+"Robin," said the Duchess, beckoning him near with white, imperious
+finger, "Robin a' Green, thou whose tongue is quick and ready as thy hand,
+hast ever been gentle to the weak and helpless as I do know, in especial
+to two women that sought thy protection of late."
+
+"Why, verily, lady, I mind them well," nodded Robin, "and one was a maid
+passing fair and one an ancient dame exceeding wise. To aid such is ever a
+man's joy--or should be."
+
+"Knew ye who and what this maid was, Robin?"
+
+"Aye, lady, I knew her then as now for that proud and noble lady the
+Duchess Benedicta."
+
+"And yet, Robin, knowing this and having me in thy power didst suffer me to
+go without let or hindrance or single penny of ransom?"
+
+"My lady Duchess," answered Robin, glancing round upon his wild company,
+"we be outlaws, 't is true, and rogues--mayhap, yet are we men and thou a
+lady passing fair, wherefore--though I knew thee for the Duchess Benedicta,
+thou wert safe with us since we war not with women and harm no maids be
+they of high or low degree!"
+
+"Spoke like a very knight!" exclaimed the Duchess. "How think'st thou, my
+lord?"
+
+"Par Dex!" quoth Sir Pertinax. "Aye, by Our Lady of Shene Chapel within the
+Wood I swear it--thou 'rt a man, Robin! So now do I sue pardon of thee for
+my song o' rogues since no rogue art thou. And thou didst aid and shield
+her--this my wife that is the very eyes of me! So, by my troth, my good
+friend art thou henceforth, Rob o' the Green!"
+
+"Nay, my lord," answered Robin slyly, "for I am but Robin, and outlaw, and
+thou art the Duke!"
+
+"Forsooth--and so I am!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax. "Ha--yet am I still a man,
+and therefore--"
+
+"Wait, my lord!" said Benedicta. "Robin, give me thy sword!" So she took
+the weapon and motioning Robin to his knees, set the blade across his
+shoulder. "Robin a' Green," said she, "since thou art knightly of word and
+deed, knight shalt thou be in very truth. Sir Robin a' Forest I make thee
+and warden over this our forest country. Rise up, Sir Robert." Then up
+sprang Robin, bright-eyed and flushed of cheek.
+
+"Dear my lady," cried he, "since knight hast made me, thy knight will I be
+henceforth in life or in death--" But here his voice was lost in the
+joyous acclamations of his followers who shouted amain until the Duchess
+quelled them with lifted hand.
+
+"Ye men of the wild-wood," said she, looking round upon them gentle-eyed,
+"all ye that be homeless and desolate, lying without the law, this day joy
+hath found me, for this is my wedding-morn. And as I am happy I would see
+ye happy also. Therefore upon this glad day do we make proclamation, my
+Lord Duke and I--this day we lift from you each and every, the ban of
+outlawry--free men are ye to go and come as ye list--free men one and all
+and good citizens henceforth I pray!" Now here was silence awhile, then a
+hoarse murmur, swelling to a jubilant shout until the sunny woodland rang
+with the joy of it, near and far.
+
+"And now, Sir Robert," laughed the Duchess, "pray you where is this noble
+Fool, this gentle Motley, this most rare singer of songs and breaker of
+lances? Bid him to us."
+
+"Ha--the Fool!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax, starting.
+
+"My lady," answered Robin, "true, he was here, but when I sought him, a
+while since, there was Sir Palamon's armour he had worn, but himself gone
+--"
+
+"Gone--gone say'st thou?" cried Sir Pertinax, glancing about. "Then needs
+must I go seek him--"
+
+"And wherefore, my lord?" cried the Duchess.
+
+"'T is my--my duty, Melissa!" stammered Sir Pertinax. "He is my--my friend
+and--sworn brother-in-arms!"
+
+"And am I not thy wife, Pertinax?"
+
+"Aye, most dearly loved, and I, thy husband--and yet--needs must I seek
+this Fool, Melissa."
+
+"O Pertinax--wilt leave me?"
+
+"Leave thee?" groaned Sir Pertinax. "Aye--for a while! Leave thee?
+Aye--though it break my heart needs must I! He, my--brother-in-arms. My
+duty calleth--"
+
+"And what of thy duty to me?"
+
+Now as Sir Pertinax wrung his hands in an agony of indecision, rose a
+whisper of sweet sound, the murmur of softly-plucked lute-strings, and into
+the glade, cock's-comb aflaunt and ass's ears a-dangle Duke Jocelyn strode
+and sang as he came a song he had made on a time, a familiar air:
+
+ "Good Pertinax, why griev'st thou so?
+ Free of all duty thou dost go,
+ Save that which thou to Love dost owe,
+ My noble Pertinax."
+
+"And love from heaven hath stooped thus low To me!" quoth Pertinax.
+
+But here came Robin with certain of his men leading a snow-white palfrey
+richly caparisoned.
+
+"Right noble lady," said he, "behold here a goodly, fair jennet to thy
+gracious acceptance."
+
+"And indeed--'t is rare, pretty beast!" exclaimed Benedicta. "But Robin,
+Robin, O Sir Robert, whence had you this?"
+
+"Lady, upon a time I was an outlaw and lived as outlaws may, taking such
+things as Fate bestowed, and, lady:
+
+ "Fate is a wind
+ To outlaws kind:
+
+But now since we be free-men all, I and my fellows, fain would we march
+hence in thy train to thy honour and our joyance. Wilt grant us this boon,
+lady?"
+
+"Freely, for 'tis rare good thought, Robin! Surely never rode duke and
+duchess so attended. How the townsfolk shall throng and stare to see our
+wild following, and my worthy guardians gape and pluck their beards for
+very amaze! How think you, good Friar John?"
+
+"Why, verily, daughter, I, that am chiefest of thy wardens ten, do think it
+wise measure; as for thy other guardians let them pluck and gape until they
+choke.
+
+ "In especial Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who both beard and wisdom lacks.
+
+I say 'tis wise, good measure, for these that were outlaws be sturdy
+fellows with many friends in town and village, so shall this thy day of
+union be for them re-union, and they joy with thee."
+
+Now being mounted the Duchess rode where stood Jocelyn, and looked down on
+him merry-eyed.
+
+"Sir Fool," said she, "who thou art I know not, but I have hunted in
+Brocelaunde ere now, and I have eyes. And as thou 'rt friend to my dear
+lord, friend art thou of mine, so do we give thee joyous welcome to our
+duchy. And, being thy friend, I pray thou may'st find that wonder of
+wonders the which hideth but to be found, and once found, shall make wise
+Fool wiser."
+
+"Sweet friend and lady," answered Jocelyn, "surely man so unlovely as I may
+not know this wonder for his very own until it first seek him. Is 't not
+so? Let now thy woman's heart counsel me."
+
+"How, Sir Wise Folly, have I not heard thee preach boldness in love ere
+now?"
+
+"Aye--for others!" sighed Jocelyn. "But for myself--I fear--behold this
+motley! This scarred face!"
+
+"Why as to thy motley it becometh thee well--"
+
+"Aye, but my face? O, 't is a hideous face!"
+
+"O Fool!" sighed Benedicta, "know'st thou not that True-love's eyes possess
+a magic whereby all loved things become fair and beauteous. So take
+courage, noble Motley, and may thy desires be crowned--even as our own."
+
+"Gramercy, thou sweet and gentle lady. Happiness companion thee alway and
+Love sing ever within thee. Now for ye twain is love's springtime, a season
+of sweet promise, may each promise find fulfilment and so farewell."
+
+"Why then, Sir Fool, an thou wilt tarry here in the good greenwood a
+while, may Love guide thee. Now here is my counsel: Follow where thy heart
+commandeth and--fear not! And now, Sir Robert a' Forest, form thy company,
+and since this is a day of gladness let them sing as they march."
+
+"In sooth, dear my lady, that will we!" cried Robin. "There is song o'
+spring and gladness I made that hath oft been our solace, and moreover it
+beginneth and endeth with jolly chorus well beknown to all. Ho, pikes
+to van and rear! Bows to the flanks--fall in! Now trusty friends o' the
+greenwood, free-men all, henceforth--now march we back to hearth and home
+and love, so sing ye--sing!"
+
+Hereupon from the ragged, close-ordered ranks burst a shout that swelled
+to rolling chorus; and these the words:
+
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily--hey!
+ And cheerily let us sing,
+ While youth is youth then youth is gay
+ And youth shall have his fling.
+
+ Robin: The merry merle on leafy spray,
+ The lark on fluttering wing
+ Do pipe a joyous roundelay,
+ To greet the blithesome spring.
+
+ Hence, hence cold Age, black Care--away!
+ Cold Age black Care doth bring;
+ When back is bowed and head is grey,
+ Black Care doth clasp and cling.
+
+ Black Care doth rosy Pleasure stay,
+ Age ageth everything;
+ 'T is farewell sport and holiday,
+ On flowery mead and ling.
+
+ If Death must come, then come he may,
+ And wed with death-cold ring,
+ Yet ere our youth and strength decay,
+ Blithe Joy shall be our king.
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily--hey!
+ And cheerily we will sing.
+
+So they marched blithely away, a right joyous company, flashing back the
+sunset glory from bright headpiece and sword-blade, while Jocelyn stood
+watching wistful-eyed until they were lost amid the green, until all sounds
+of their going grew to a hush mingling with the whisper of leaves and
+murmurous gurgle of the brook; and ever the shadows deepened about him, a
+purple solitude of misty trees and tangled thickets, depth on depth, fading
+to a glimmering mystery.
+
+Suddenly amid these glooming shadows a shadow moved, and forth into the
+darkling glade, mighty club on mighty shoulder, stepped Lobkyn Lollo the
+Dwarf, and his eyes were pensive and he sighed gustily.
+
+"Alack!" quoth he:
+
+ "So here's an end of outlawry,
+ And all along o' lady,
+ Yet still an outlaw I will be
+ Shut in o' shaws so shady.
+ And yet it is great shame, I trow,
+ That our good friends should freemen go
+ And leave us lonely to our woe,
+ And all along o' lady.
+
+ "And plague upon this love, I say,
+ For stealing thus thy friend away,
+ And since fast caught and wed is he
+ Thy friend henceforth is lost to thee,
+ And thou, poor Fool, dost mope and sigh,
+ And so a plague on love! say I."
+
+"Nay, good Lobkyn, what know you of love?" Answered LOBKYN:
+
+ "Marry, enough o' love know I
+ To steal away if love be nigh.
+
+ "For love's an ill as light as air,
+ Yet heavy as a stone;
+ O, love is joy and love is care,
+ A song and eke a groan.
+
+ "Love is a sickness, I surmise,
+ Taketh a man first by the eyes,
+ And stealing thence into his heart,
+ There gripeth him with bitter smart.
+ Alas, poor soul,
+ What bitter dole,
+ Doth plague his every part!
+
+ "From heart to liver next it goes,
+ And fills him full o' windy woes,
+ And, being full o' gusty pain,
+ He groaneth oft, and sighs amain,
+ Poor soul is he
+ In verity,
+ And for his freedom sighs in vain."
+
+ "Miscall not love, Lobkyn, for sure True-love is
+ every man's birthright."
+
+Quoth LOBKYN:
+
+ "Why then, methinks there's many a wight
+ That cheated is of his birthright,
+ As, item first, here's Lobkyn Lollo
+ To prove thine argument quite hollow.
+ Dare I at maid to cast mine eye,
+ She mocketh me, and off doth fly,
+
+
+ And all because I'm humped o' back,
+ And something to my stature lack.
+ Thus, though I'm stronger man than three,
+ No maid may love the likes o' me.
+ Next, there's thyself--a Fool, I swear,
+ At fight or song beyond compare.
+ But--thou 'rt unlovely o' thy look,
+ And this no maid will ever brook.
+ So thou and I, for weal or woe,
+ To our lives' end unloved must go.
+ But think ye that I grieve or sigh?
+ Not so! A plague on love, say I!"
+
+Now here Jocelyn sighed amain and, sitting beneath a tree, fell to sad and
+wistful thinking.
+
+ "Aye, verily," he repeated, "I am 'unlovely of my
+ look.'"
+
+ Quoth Lobkyn heartily:
+
+ "In very sooth,
+ Fool, that's the truth!"
+
+ "Alas!" sighed Jocelyn, "'And this no maid
+ will ever brook!'"
+
+ Answered Lobkyn:
+
+ "And there dost speak, wise Fool, again,
+ A truth right manifest and plain,
+ Since fairest maids have bat-like eyes,
+ And see no more than outward lies.
+ And seeing thus, they nothing see
+ Of worthiness in you or me.
+ And so, since love doth pass us by,
+ The plague o' plagues on love, say I!"
+
+"Nath'less," cried the Duke, leaping to his feet. "I will put Love to the
+test--aye, this very hour!"
+
+ Lobkyn: Wilt go, good Motley? Pray thee where?
+
+ Jocelyn: To one beyond all ladies fair.
+
+ Lobkyn: Then dost thou need a friend about thee
+ To cheer and comfort when she flout thee.
+ So, an thou wilt a-wooing wend,
+ I'll follow thee like trusty friend.
+ In love or fight thou shalt not lack
+ A sturdy arm to 'fend thy back.
+ I'll follow thee in light or dark,
+ Through good or ill--Saints shield us!
+ Hark!
+
+And Lobkyn started about, club poised for swift action, for, out-stealing
+from the shadows crept strange and dismal sound, a thin wail that sank to
+awful groaning rumble, and so died away.
+
+"O!" whispered Lobkyn:
+
+ "Pray, Fool, pray with all thy might,
+ Here's goblin foul or woodland sprite
+ Come for to steal our souls away,
+ So on thy knees quick, Fool, and pray!"
+
+But, as these dismal sounds brake forth again, Jocelyn stole forward,
+quarter-staff gripped in ready hand; thus, coming nigh the great oak, he
+espied a dim, huddled form thereby and, creeping nearer, stared in wonder
+to behold Mopsa, the old witch, striving might and main to wind the great
+hunting-horn.
+
+"What, good Witch!" quoth he, "here methinks is that beyond all thy spells
+to achieve."
+
+"O Fool," she panted, "kind Fool, sound me this horn, for I'm old and scant
+o' breath. Wind it shrill and loud, good Motley, the rallying-note, for
+there is ill work afoot this night. Sound me shrewd blast, therefore."
+
+"Nay, 't were labour in vain, Witch; there be no outlaws hereabout, free
+men are they henceforth and gone, each and every."
+
+"Out alas--alas!" cried the old woman, wringing her hands. "Then woe is me
+for the fair lady Yolande."
+
+"Ha! What of her, good Witch? Threateneth danger? Speak!"
+
+"Aye, Fool, danger most dire! My Lord Gui yet liveth, and this night divers
+of his men shall bear her away where he lieth raging for her in his black
+castle of Ells--"
+
+"Now by heaven's light!" swore Jocelyn, his eyes fierce and keen, "this
+night shall Fool be crowned of Love or sleep with kindly Death."
+
+"Stay, Fool, thy foes be a many! Wilt cope with them alone?"
+
+"Nay!" cried a voice:
+
+ "Not so, grandam
+ For here I am!"
+
+and Lobkyn stepped forward.
+
+"Aha, my pretty poppet! Loved duck, my downy chick--what wouldst?"
+
+ "Fight, grandam,
+ Smite, grandam,
+ Sweet, blood-begetting blows.
+ Where Fool goeth
+ Well Fool knoweth
+ Lobkyn likewise goes."
+
+"Why, then, my bantling--loved babe, fight thy fiercest, for these be
+wicked men and 't will be an evil fray. And she is sweet and good, so,
+Lobkyn, be thy strongest--"
+
+Saith Lobkyn:
+
+ "Aye that will I,
+ Or may I die.
+ By this good kiss
+ I vow thee this.
+
+ "And here is signal, Fool, shall shew
+ Each where the other chance to go.
+
+ "Croak like a frog,
+ Bark like a dog,
+ Grunt like a hog,
+ I'll know thee.
+
+ "Hoot like an owl,
+ Like grey wolf howl,
+ Or like bear growl,
+ 'T will shew thee--"
+
+"Then come, trusty Lob, and my thanks to thee!" cried Jocelyn, catching up
+his quarter-staff. "But haste ye, for I would be hence ere the moon get
+high. Come!"
+
+So Duke Jocelyn strode away with Lobkyn Lollo at his heels; now as they
+went, the moon began to rise.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 12
+
+Which being the last Fytte of our Geste I hope may please my daughter best.
+
+ "O, Wind of Night, soft-creeping,
+ Sweet charge I give to thee,
+ Steal where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me;
+ And in her dream,
+ Love, let me seem
+ All she would have me be.
+
+ "Kind sleep! By thee we may attain
+ To joys long hoped and sought in vain,
+ By thee we all may find again
+ Our lost divinity.
+
+ "So, Night-wind, softly creeping,
+ This charge I give to thee,
+ Go where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me."
+
+Hearkening to this singing Yolande shivered, yet not with cold, and casting
+a cloak about her loveliness came and leaned forth into the warm, still
+glamour of the night, and saw where stood Jocelyn tall and shapely in the
+moonlight, but with hateful cock's-comb a-flaunt and ass's ears grotesquely
+a-dangle; wherefore she sighed and frowned upon him, saying nothing.
+
+"Yolande?" he questioned. "O my lady, and wilt frown upon my singing?"
+
+Answered she, leaning dimpled chin upon white fist and frowning yet:
+
+"Nay, not--not thy--singing."
+
+"Is 't then this cap o' Folly--my ass's ears, Yolande? Then away with them!
+So shalt jester become very man as thou art very maid!" Forthwith he thrust
+back his cock's-comb and so stood gazing up at her wide-eyed.
+
+But she, beholding thus his scarred face, shivered again, shrinking a
+little, whereupon Jocelyn bowed his head, hiding his features in his long,
+black-curling hair.
+
+"Alas, my lady!" he said, "doth my ill face offend thee? This would I put
+off also for thy sake an it might be, but since this I may not do, close
+thou thine eyes a while and hear me speak. For now do I tell thee, Yolande,
+that I--e'en I that am poor jester--am yet a man loving thee with man's
+love. I that am one with face thus hatefully scarred do seek thee in thy
+beauty to my love--"
+
+"Presumptuous Fool, how darest thou speak me thus?" she whispered.
+
+"For that great love dareth greatly, Yolande."
+
+"And what of thy lord? How of Duke Jocelyn, thy master?"
+
+"He is but man, lady, even as I. Moreover for thee he existeth not since
+thou hast ne'er beheld him--to thy knowing."
+
+"Nay, then--what of this?" she questioned, drawing the jewelled picture
+from her bosom.
+
+"'T is but what it is, lady, a poor thing of paint!"
+
+"But sheweth face of noble beauty, Fool!"
+
+"Aye, nobly painted, Yolande! A thing of daubed colours, seeing naught of
+thy beauty, speaking thee no word of love, whiles here stand I, a sorry
+Fool of beauty none, yet therewithal a man to woo thee to my love--"
+
+"Thy love? Ah, wilt so betray thy lord's trust?"
+
+"Blithely, Yolande! For thee I would betray my very self."
+
+"And thyself art Fool faithless to thy lord, a rhyming jester, a sorry
+thing for scorn or laughter--and yet--thy shameful habit shames thee not,
+and thy foolish songs hold naught of idle folly! And thou--thou art the
+same I saw 'mid gloom of dungeon sing brave song in thy chains! Thou art he
+that overthrew so many in the lists! O Joconde, my world is upside down by
+reason of thee."
+
+"And thou, Yolande, didst stoop to me within my dungeon! And thou didst
+pray for me, Yolande, and now--now within this sweet night thou dost lean
+down to me through the glory of thy hair--to me in my very lowliness! And
+so it is I love thee, Yolande, love thee as none shall ever love thee, for
+man am I with heart to worship thee, tongue to woo thee, eyes to behold thy
+beauties, and arms to clasp thee. So am I richer than yon painted duke that
+needs must woo thee with my lips. And could I but win thee to love--ah,
+Yolande, could I, despite these foolish trappings, this blemished face, see
+Love look on me from thine eyes, O--then--"
+
+"How--then--Joconde?"
+
+"Then should Fool, by love exalted, change to man indeed and I--mount up to
+heaven--thus!" So saying, Jocelyn began to climb by gnarled ivy and carven
+buttress. And ever as he mounted she watched him through the silken curtain
+of her hair, wide of eye and with hands tight-clasped.
+
+"Ah, Joconde!" she whispered, "'t is madness--madness! Ah, Joconde!" But
+swift he came and swung himself upon the balcony beside her and reached out
+his arms in mute supplication, viewing her wistfully but with scarred face
+transfigured by smile ineffably tender, and when he spoke his voice was
+hushed and reverent.
+
+"I am here, Yolande, because methought to read within thy look the wonder
+of all wonders. But, O my lady, because I am but what I am, fain would I
+hear thee speak it also."
+
+"Joconde," said she in breathless voice, "wouldst shame me--?"
+
+"Shame?" he cried. "Shame? Can there be aught of shame in true love? Or is
+it that my ass's ears do shame thee, my cock's-comb and garments pied shame
+the worship of this foolish heart, and I, a Fool, worshipping thee, shame
+thee by such worship? Then--on, cock's-comb! Ring out, silly bells! Fool's
+love doth end in folly! Off love--on folly--a Fool can but love and die."
+
+"Stay, Joconde; ah, how may I tell thee--? Why dost thou start and fumble
+with thy dagger?"
+
+"Heard you aught, lady?"
+
+"I heard an owl hoot in the shadows yonder, no more."
+
+"True, lady, but now shall this owl croak like a frog--hearken! Aha--and
+now shall frog bark like dog--"
+
+"And what meaneth this?"
+
+"That thou, proud lady, must this night choose betwixt knightly rogue and
+motley Fool--here be two evils with yet a difference--"
+
+"Here is strange, wild talk, Fool!"
+
+"Here shall be wild doings anon, lady, methinks. Hush thee and listen!"
+
+A jangle of bridle-chains, a sound of voices loud and rough, and a tread of
+heavy feet that, breaking rudely upon the gentle-brooding night, drove the
+colour from Yolande's soft cheek and hushed her voice to broken whisper:
+
+"Heaven shield us, what now, Joconde?"
+
+"Wolves, lady, wolves that come to raven--see yonder!" Even as he spake
+they espied armed men who, bold and assured by reason of the solitude,
+moved in the garden below; and on back and breast of each was the sign of
+the Bloody Hand.
+
+"My Lord Gui's followers! Alas, Joconde, these mean thee ill--here is death
+for thee!" Now as she spake, Jocelyn thrilled to the touch of her hand upon
+his arm, a hand that trembled and stole to clasp his. "Alas, Joconde, they
+have tracked thee hither to slay thee--"
+
+"And were this so, wouldst fly with me, Yolande? Wouldst trust thy beauties
+to a Fool's keeping?"
+
+"Nay, nay, this were madness, Joconde; rather will I hide thee--aye, where
+none shall dare seek thee--come!"
+
+"Yolande," he questioned, "Yolande, wilt trust thyself to Love and me?"
+But seeing how she shrank away, his eager arms fell and he bowed his head.
+"Nay, I am answered," quoth he, "even while thine eyes look love, thy body
+abhorreth Fool's embrace--I am answered. Nay, 't is enough, trouble not for
+words--ha, methinks it is too late, the wolves be hard upon us--hark ye to
+their baying!"
+
+And now was sudden uproar, a raving clamour of fierce shouts, and a
+thundering of blows upon the great door below.
+
+"Yolande--ha, Yolande, yield thee! Open! Open!"
+
+"Ah--mercy of God! Is it me they seek?" she whispered.
+
+"Thee, Yolande! To bear thee to their lord's embraces--"
+
+"Rather will I die!" she cried, and snatched the dagger from his girdle.
+
+"Not so!" quoth he, wresting the weapon from her grasp. "Rather shalt thou
+live a while--for thou art mine--mine to-night, Yolande--come!" And
+he clasped her in fierce arms. "Nay, strive not lest I kiss thee to
+submission, for thou art mine, though it be for one brief hour and death
+the next!" So, as she struggled for the dagger, he kissed her on mouth and
+eyes and hair until she lay all unresisting in his embrace; while ever and
+anon above the thunder of blows the night clamoured with the fierce shout:
+
+"Open--open! Yolande, ha, Yolande!"
+
+"There is death--and worse!" she panted. "Loose me!"
+
+"Stay," he laughed, "here thou 'rt in thy rightful place at last--upon my
+heart, Yolande. Now whither shall I bear thee? Where lieth safety?"
+
+"Loose me!" she commanded.
+
+"Never! Hark, there yields the good door at last!"
+
+"Then here will we die!"
+
+"So be it, Yolande! A sweet death thus, heart to heart and lip to lip!"
+
+"O Fool--I hate thee!"
+
+"Howbeit, Yolande--I love thee!"
+
+"Yolande! Ha--Yolande!"
+
+The cry was louder now and so near that she shivered and, hiding her face,
+spake below her breath:
+
+"The turret-stair--behind the arras of my bed!"
+
+Swiftly, lightly he bore her down the winding stair and by divers
+passage-ways until, thrusting open a narrow door, he found himself within
+the garden and, keeping ever amid the darkest shadows, hasted on to the
+postern hard by the lily-pool.
+
+And now Yolande felt herself swung to lofty saddle, heard Jocelyn's warning
+shout drowned in a roar of voices and loud-trampling hoofs as the great
+horse reared, heard a fierce laugh and, looking up, saw the face above her
+grim and keen-eyed beneath its foolish cock's-comb as his vicious steel
+flashed to right and left, and ever as he smote he mocked and laughed:
+
+"Ha--well smitten, Lob! Oho, here Folly rides with pointed jest keen and
+two-edged--make way, knaves--make way for Folly--"
+
+The snorting charger, wheeled by strong hand, broke free, whereon rose an
+uproar of shouts and cries that sank to a meaningless babble swept backward
+on the rush of wind. Away, away they sped, through moonlight and shadow,
+with fast-beating hoofs that rang on paved walk, that thudded on soft
+grass, that trampled the tender flowers; and Yolande, swaying to the mighty
+arm that clasped her, saw the fierce, scarred face bent above her with eyes
+that gleamed under scowling brows and mouth grim-smiling; and shivering,
+she looked no more.
+
+On they sped with loosened rein, o'er grassy mead, through ferny hollows,
+o'erleaping chattering rill that babbled to the moon, 'mid swaying reeds
+and whispering sedge, past crouching bush and stately tree, and so at last
+they reached the woods. By shadowy brake and thicket, through pools of
+radiant moonlight, through leafy, whispering glooms they held their way,
+across broad glade and clearing, on and on until all noise of pursuit was
+lost and nought was to hear save the sounds of their going.
+
+Thus rode they, and with never a word betwixt them, deep and deeper into
+the wild until the moon was down and darkness shut them in; wherefore
+Jocelyn drew rein and sat a while to listen. He heard the good steed,
+deep-breathing, snuff at dewy grass; a stir and rustle all about him; the
+drowsy call of a bird afar; the soft ripple of water hard by and, over all,
+the deep hush of the wild-wood. Then upon this hush stole a whisper:
+
+"O, 'tis very dark!"
+
+He: Dark, Lady? Why so 'tis, and yet 'tis natural, for 'tis night,
+wherefore 'tis the bright god Phoebus is otherwhere, and Dian, sly-sweet
+goddess, hath stole her light from heaven, wherefore 'tis 'tis dark, lady.
+
+She: Where are we?
+
+He: The sweet Saints know that, lady--not I!
+
+She (_scornfully_): Verily, thou art no saint--
+
+He: Not yet, lady, not yet--witness these ass's ears.
+
+She: True, thou 'rt very Fool!
+
+He: In very truth, lady, and thou art lost with this same Fool, so art thou
+in very woeful case. As for me, a lost fool is no matter, wherefore Fool
+for himself grieveth no whit. But for thee--alas! Thou art a proud lady of
+high degree, very nice of thy dainty person, soft and delicate of body, so
+shall the greensward prove for thee uneasy couch, I judge, and thou sleep
+ill--
+
+She: Sleep? No thought have I of sleep! Ride on, therefore. Why tarry we
+here?
+
+He: Lady, for three sufficing reasons--our foes pursue not, I'm a-weary,
+and 'tis very dark--
+
+She: No matter! Ride on, I do command thee.
+
+He: Aye, but whither?
+
+She: I care not so thou leave this place; 'tis an evil place!
+
+He: Why,'tis good place, very well secluded and with stream hard by that
+bubbleth. So here will we bide till dawn. Suffer me to aid thee down.
+
+She: Touch me not! Never think I fear thee though I am alone.
+
+He: Alone? Nay, thou 'rt with me, that is--I am with thee and thou art with
+a Fool. So is Fool care-full Fool since Fool hath care of thee. Suffer me
+now to aid thee down since here will we wait the day. Come, my arm about
+thee so, thy hand in mine--
+
+She (_angrily_): O Fool most base--most vile--
+
+He: Nay, hush thee, hush! and listen to yon blithesome, bubblesome,
+babbling brook how it sigheth 'mid the willows, whispereth under reedy bank
+and laugheth, rogue-like, in the shallows! Listen how it wooeth thee:
+
+ Though, lady, hard thy couch must be,
+ If thou should'st wakeful lie,
+ Here, from the dark, I'll sing to thee
+ A drowsy lullaby.
+ O lady fair--forget thy pride
+ Whiles thou within the greenwood bide.
+
+And now suffer me to aid thee down.
+
+She: Why wilt thou stay me in this evil place?
+
+He (_patiently_): The wild is ill travelling in the dark, lady; there be
+quagmires and perilous ways--wherefore here must we bide till dawn. Suffer
+me to--
+
+SHE (_breathlessly and shrinking from his touch_): But I fear not
+quagmires--there be greater perils--more shameful and--and--'tis so dark,
+so dark! 'Tis hateful place. Ride we till it be day--
+
+He (_mockingly_): Perils, lady? Why certes there be perils--and perils.
+Perils that creep and crawl, perils that go on four legs and perils
+two-legged--e'en as I. But I, though two-legged, am but very fool of
+fools and nothing perilous in blazing day or blackest night. So stint
+thy fears, lady, for here bide we till dawn!
+
+Herewith he caught her in sudden arms and lifted her to the ground; then,
+dismounting, he set about watering and cherishing the wearied steed and
+tethered him beside a dun stream that rippled beneath shadowy willows; and
+so doing, fell a-singing on this wise:
+
+ "'Fair lady, thou 'rt lost!' quoth he,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'And O, 'tis dark--'tis dark!' quoth she,
+ 'And in the dark dire perils be,'
+ O, derry, derry down!
+
+ "Quoth he: 'Fair lady, stint thy fear,'
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'I, being Fool, will sit me here,
+ And, till the kindly sun appear,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+
+ "'I'll make for thee, like foolish wight,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A song that shall out-last dark night,
+ And put thy foolish fears to flight
+ With derry, derry down.
+
+ "'For 'tis great shame thou shouldst fear so,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A peril that two-legged doth go,
+ Since he's but humble Fool, I trow,
+ With derry, derry down.'"
+
+Thus sang he, a dim figure beside dim stream and, having secured the horse,
+sat him down thereby and took forth his lute.
+
+But Yolande, though he could not see, clenched white fists and, though he
+could not hear, stamped slim foot at him.
+
+"Joconde," quoth she, betwixt clenched teeth, "Joconde, I--scorn thee!"
+
+"Alack!" he sighed. "Alack, and my lute hath taken sore scath of a
+sword-thrust!"
+
+"Thou'rt hateful--hateful!" she cried. "Aye--hateful as thy hateful song,
+so do I contemn thee henceforth!"
+
+"Say'st thou so, lady, forsooth?" sighed he, busied with his lute. "Now
+were I other than Fool, here should I judge was hope of winning thy love.
+But being only Fool I, with aid of woe-begone lute, will sing thee merry
+song to cheer thee of thy perilous fears--"
+
+"Enough, ill Fool, I'll hear thee not!"
+
+"So be it, dear lady! Then will we sit an list to the song of yon stream,
+for streams and rivers, like the everlasting hills, are passing wise with
+length of days--"
+
+"And thou'rt a very Fool!" she cried angrily. "A fond Fool presumptuous in
+thy folly!"
+
+"As how presumptuous, proud lady?" he questioned humbly.
+
+"In that thou dreamest I--stoop to fear thee!"
+
+"Aye, verily!" sighed he. "Alas, thou poor, solitary, foolish, fearful
+maid, thou art sick with fear of me! So take now my dagger! Thus Fool
+offenceless shall lie defenceless at thy mercy and, so lying, sleep until
+joyous day shall banish thy so virginal fears!" Which saying, he tossed off
+belt and dagger and setting them beside her, rolled his weather-worn cloak
+about him, stretched himself beneath the dim willows and straightway
+fell a-snoring. And after some while she questioned him in voice low and
+troubled:
+
+"O Joconde, art truly sleeping?"
+
+"Fair lady," he answered, "let these my so loud snores answer thee."
+
+Up sprang Yolande and, coming beside him in the gloom, cast back his
+girdle, speaking quick and passionate:
+
+"Take back thy dagger lest I be tempted to smite it to the cruel, mocking
+heart of thee!" Then turned she stately back and left him, but, being hid
+from view, cast herself down full length upon the sward, her pride and
+stateliness forgotten quite. Now Jocelyn, propped on uneasy elbow, peered
+amid the gloom for sight of her and hearkened eagerly for sound of her; but
+finding this vain, arose and, creeping stealthily, presently espied her
+where she lay, face hidden in the dewy grass. Thus stood he chin in hand
+disquieted and anxious-eyed and wist not what to do.
+
+"Lady?" he questioned at last; but she stirred not nor spoke. "Yolande!"
+he murmured, drawing nearer; but still she moved not, though his quick ear
+caught a sound faint though very pitiful. "Ah, dost thou weep?" he cried.
+Yolande sobbed again, whereupon down fell he beside her on his knees, "Dear
+lady, why grievest thou?"
+
+"O Joconde," she sighed, "I am indeed solitary--and fearful! And thou--thou
+dost mock me!"
+
+"Forgive me," he pleaded humbly, "and, since thou'rt solitary, here am I.
+And, for thy fears, nought is here shall harm thee, here may'st thou sleep
+secure--"
+
+"Stay, Joconde, the forest is haunted of wolves and--worse, 'tis said!"
+
+"Then will I watch beside thee till the day. And now will I go cut bracken
+for thy bed."
+
+"Then will I aid thee." So she arose forthwith and, amid the fragrant
+gloom, they laboured together side by side; and oft in the gloom her hand
+touched his, and oft upon his cheek and brow and lip was the silken touch
+of her wind-blown hair. Then beneath arching willows they made a bed,
+high-piled of springy bracken and sweet grasses, whereon she sank nestling,
+forthwith.
+
+"O, 'tis sweet couch!" she sighed.
+
+"Yet thou'lt be cold mayhap ere dawn," quoth he, "suffer me to set my cloak
+about thee."
+
+"But how of thyself, Joconde?"
+
+"I am a Fool well seasoned of wind and rain, heat and cold, lady, and 'tis
+night of summer." So he covered her with his travel-stained cloak and,
+sitting beneath a tree, fell to his watch. And oft she stirred amid the
+fern, deep-sighing, and he, broad back against the tree, sighed oftener
+yet.
+
+"Art there, Joconde?" she questioned softly.
+
+"Here, lady."
+
+"'Tis very dark," sighed she, "and yet, methinks, 'tis sweet to lie thus
+in the greenwood so hushed and still and the stars to watch like eyes of
+angels."
+
+"Why, 'tis night of summer, lady, a night soft and languorous and fragrant
+of sleeping flowers. But how of grim winter, how of rain and wind and
+lashing tempest--how think you?"
+
+"That summer would come again, Joconde."
+
+"Truly here is brave thought, lady."
+
+"Hark, how still is the night, Joconde, and yet full of soft stir, a
+sighing amid the leaves! 'Tis like the trees whispering one another. O,
+'tis sweet night!"
+
+"Soon to pass away, alas!" he sighed, whereupon she, stirring upon her
+ferny couch, sighed also; thereafter fell they silent awhile hearkening to
+the leafy stirrings all about them in the dark, and the slumberous murmur
+of the stream that, ever and anon, brake into faint gurglings like a voice
+that laughed, soft but roguish.
+
+SHE: I pray thee talk to me.
+
+HE: Whereof, lady?
+
+SHE: Thyself.
+
+HE: I am a Fool--
+
+SHE: And why sit so mumchance?
+
+HE: I think.
+
+SHE: Of what?
+
+HE: Folly.
+
+SHE: And why dost sigh so deep and oft?
+
+HE: I grieve for thee.
+
+SHE: For me! And wherefore?
+
+HE: Being lost with a Fool thou'rt desolate, sad and woeful.
+
+SHE: Am I, Joconde? And how dost know all this?
+
+HE: 'Tis so I do think, lady.
+
+SHE: Then are thy thoughts folly indeed. If thou must sigh, sigh for
+thyself.
+
+HE: Why so I do, lady, and therewith grieve for myself and thyself, myself
+being Fool and thyself a dame of high degree, thus, betwixt whiles, I do
+fear thee also.
+
+SHE: Thou fear! Thou fear me forsooth! And wherefore fear a helpless maid?
+
+HE: There is the reason--she is helpless!
+
+SHE: Ah, there doth Fool speak like chivalrous knight.
+
+HE: Or very fool--a fool that fain would win fair Dian from high heaven.
+Alas, poor Fool, that, being fool, must needs look and sigh and sigh and
+look and leave her to the winning of some young Endymion!
+
+SHE (_dreamily_): Endymion was but lowly shepherd, yet was he loved!
+
+HE: Endymion was fair youth comely of feature, lady. Now had he worn ass's
+ears 'bove visage scarred--how then? On Ida's mount he had been sighing
+forlorn and lonely yet, methinks. For maids' hearts are ever governed by
+their eyes--
+
+SHE: Art so wise in maids' hearts, Joconde?
+
+HE: Wise am I in this: No man may ever know the heart of a woman--and woman
+herself but seldom.
+
+Now here was silence again wherein Yolande, smiling, viewed him a dim shape
+in the gloom, and he leaned back to watch a star that twinkled through the
+leafy canopy above.
+
+SHE: Thou art Duke Jocelyn's Fool at court?
+
+HE: I am Duke Jocelyn's fool here and there and everywhere, lady.
+
+SHE: Yet have I heard Duke Jocelyn was a mighty man-at-arms and, though
+youthful, sober-minded, full of cares of state and kept no Fool at court.
+
+HE: Lady, his court is filled o' fools as is the way of other courts and
+amongst these many fools first cometh the Duke himself--
+
+SHE: How, and darest thou call this mighty Duke a fool?
+
+HE: Often, lady!
+
+SHE: And what like is he?
+
+HE: Very like a man, being endowed of arms, legs, eyes, ears--of each two,
+no more and no less, as is the vulgar custom.
+
+SHE: But is he not of beauty high and noble, of god-like perfection far
+beyond poor, common flesh and blood? 'Tis so the painter has limned his
+face, 'tis so I dream him to my fancy.
+
+HE: Lady, I am but a Fool, let the picture answer thee.
+
+SHE: And he, this mighty Duke of god-like beauty doth woo me to his
+wife--
+
+HE (_bitterly_): With my tongue.
+
+SHE: Why came he not in his own glorious person?
+
+HE: Lady, though a Duke, he hath his moments of wisdom and argueth thus:
+"I, though a Duke, am yet a man. Thus, should I as Duke woo her, she may
+wed the Duke, loving not the man--"
+
+SHE: And so he sent a Fool as his ambassador! And so do I scorn this
+god-like Duke--
+
+HE: Ha! Scorn him! My lady--O Yolande, what of me?
+
+She: Thou, false to him and faithless to thy trust, didst woo me for
+thyself which was ill in thee. But thou didst throw the terrible Red Gui
+into my lily-pool which was brave in thee. Thou didst endure chains and a
+prison undaunted which was noble in thee. Thou didst this night at peril of
+thy life save me from shame, but thou didst bear me urgently here into the
+wild, and in the wild here lie I beside thee, lost, yet warm and sleepy and
+safe beneath thy cloak--and so--'tis very well--
+
+HE: Safe, Yolande? Hath thy heart told thee this at last? But thou didst
+fear me--
+
+SHE: Because to-night thou didst clasp me in cruel arms and spake me words
+of love passionate and fierce and--and--
+
+HE: Kissed thee, Yolande!
+
+SHE: Many times--O cruel! And bore me hither and lost me in these dark
+solitudes! Here was good cause for any maid to fear thee methinks.
+
+Yet thou didst basely mock my fears with thy hateful song of "Derry down."
+
+HE: Because thy fears, being unjust, hurt me, for ah, Yolande, my love for
+thee is deep and true, and True-love is ever gentle and very humble.
+
+SHE: Thus do I fear thee no more, Joconde!
+
+HE: Because I am but lowly--a Fool beneath thy proud disdain?
+
+SHE: Nay, Joconde. Because thou art indeed a very man. So now shall I sleep
+secure since nought of evil may come nigh me whiles I lie in thy care.
+
+Thus spake she softly 'mid the gloom, and turning upon her rustling couch
+sighed and presently fell to slumber.
+
+Now, sitting thus beside her as she slept, Jocelyn heard the stream ripple
+in the shadows like one that laughed soft but very joyously and, as he
+gazed up at the solitary star with eyes enraptured, this elfin laughter
+found its echo in his heart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A bird chirped drowsily from mazy thicket where sullen shadow thinned,
+little by little, until behind leaf and twig was a glimmer of light that
+waxed ever brighter. And presently amid this growing brightness was soft
+stir and twitter, sleepy chirpings changed to notes of wistful sweetness, a
+plaintive calling that was answered from afar.
+
+Thus the birds awaking sounded pretty warnings summoning each to each for
+that the day-spring was at hand, while ever the brightness changed to
+radiance and radiance to an orient glory and up flamed the sun in majesty
+and it was day. And now, from brake and thicket, from dewy mysteries
+of green boskage burst forth the sweet, glad chorus of bird-song, full
+throated, passionate of joy.
+
+And Jocelyn, sitting broad back against a tree, felt his soul uplifted
+thereby what time his eyes missed nothing of the beauties about him: the
+rugged boles of mighty trees bedappled with sunny splendour, the
+glittering dew that gemmed leaf and twig and fronded bracken, and the
+shapely loveliness of her who slumbered couched beneath his worn cloak,
+the gentle rise and fall of rounded bosom and the tress of hair that a
+fugitive sunbeam kissed to ruddy gold. Thus sat Jocelyn regardful,
+gladness in the heart of him, and a song of gladness bubbling to his lips.
+
+Suddenly he saw her lashes quiver, her rosy lips parted to a smile and,
+stirring in her slumber, she sighed and stretched shapely arms; so waked
+she to a glory of sun and, starting to an elbow, gazed round, great-eyed,
+until espying him, she smiled again.
+
+"Good morrow, Joconde! Ne'er have I slept sweeter. But thou hast
+out-watched dark night and art a-weary, so shalt sleep awhile--"
+
+"Nay," he answered, "a plunge in the stream yonder and I shall be blithe
+for the road--an we find one. And I do fear me thou'rt hungry, Yolande, and
+I have nought to give thee--"
+
+"And what of thyself, man? Verily, I read hunger in thy look and weariness
+also, so, an thou may'st not eat, sleep thou shalt awhile here--in my
+place."
+
+"Nay, Yolande, indeed--"
+
+"Yea, but thou must indeed whiles I watch over thee. 'Tis a sweet bed--come
+thy ways."
+
+"And what wilt thou do?" he questioned.
+
+"Much!" she answered, viewing her rumpled, gown with rueful eyes. "As thou
+sayest, there is the pool yonder! So come, get thee to bed and--sleep!
+Come, let me cover thee with thy cloak and gainsay me not; sleep thou must
+and shalt."
+
+So Duke Jocelyn stretched himself obediently upon the bed of fern and
+suffered her to cover him with the cloak; but as she stooped above him
+thus, he lifted the hem of her dress to reverent lips.
+
+"My lady!" he murmured. "My dear lady!"
+
+"Now close me thine eyes, wearied child!" she commanded. And, like a child,
+in this also he obeyed her, albeit unwillingly by reason of her radiant
+beauty, but hearing her beside him, was content, and thus presently fell to
+happy sleeping.
+
+When he awoke the sun was high and he lay awhile basking in this grateful
+radiance and joying in the pervading quiet; but little by little, growing
+uneasy by reason of this stillness, he started up to glance about him and
+knew sudden dread--for the little glade was empty--Yolande had vanished;
+moreover the horse was gone also.
+
+Cold with an awful fear he got him to his feet and looked hither and yon,
+but nowhere found any sign of violence or struggle. But like one distraught
+he turned to seek her, her name upon his lips, then, checking voice and
+movement, stood rigid, smitten by hateful doubt. For now it seemed to him
+that her gentle looks and words had been but sweet deceits to blind him to
+her purpose and now, so soon as she had lulled him to sleep, she had stolen
+away, leaving him for the poor, piteous fool he was. And now his despair
+was 'whelmed in sudden anger, and anger, little by little, changed to
+grief. She was fled away and he a sorry fool and very desolate.
+
+Full of these bitter thoughts he cast himself upon his face and, lying as
+in a pit of gloom, knew a great bitterness.
+
+Slowly, slowly, borne upon the gentle wind came a fragrance strange and
+unexpected, a savour delectable of cooking meat that made him know himself
+a man vastly hungry despite his grievous woe. But, lying within the black
+gulf of bitterness, he stirred not until, of a sudden, he heard a voice,
+rich and full and very sweet, upraised in joyous singing; and these the
+words:
+
+ "Rise, O laggard! See the sun,
+ To climb in glory hath begun:
+ The flowers have oped their pretty eyes,
+ The happy lark doth songful rise,
+ And merry birds in flowery brake,
+ Full-throated, joyous clamours make;
+ And I, indeed, that love it not,
+ Do sit alone and keel the pot,
+ Whiles thus I sing thee to entreat,
+ O sleepy laggard--come and eat!"
+
+"Forsooth and art sleeping yet, Joconde?" the voice questioned. Duke
+Jocelyn lifted woeful head and saw her standing tall and shapely amid
+the leaves, fresh and sweet as the morn itself, with laughter within her
+dream-soft eyes and laughter on her vivid lips and the sun bright in the
+braided tresses of her hair wherein she had set wild flowers like jewels.
+
+"Yolande!" he murmured, coming to his knees "Yolande--how glorious thou
+art!"
+
+"Nay," she laughed, yet flushing to the worship of his eyes, "and my habit
+woefully torn of wicked bramble-thorns, and my hair ill-braided and all
+uncombed and--"
+
+"Ah, Yolande, I thought thee fled and I left to loneliness, and my pain was
+very sore."
+
+"Then am I avenged thy mockery, Joconde, and thy song of 'Derry down.'
+'Twas for this I stole away! But now, if thou 'rt hungry man, come this
+ways." And she reached him her hand. So she brought him to a little dell
+where burned a fire of sticks beneath a pot whence stole right savoury
+odour.
+
+"O most wonderful!" quoth he. "Whence came these goodly viands?"
+
+"Where but from the wallet behind thy horse's saddle, Joconde?" Then down
+sat they forthwith side by side and ate heartily and were very blithe
+together; and oft-times their looks would meet and they would fall silent
+awhile. At last, the meal ended, Jocelyn, turning from Yolande's beauty to
+the beauty of the world around, spake soft-voiced:
+
+"Yolande, were mine a selfish love, here, lost within these green
+solitudes, would I keep thee for mine own--to serve and worship thee unto
+my life's end. But, since I count thy happiness above my dearest desires,
+now will I go saddle the horse and bear thee hence."
+
+"Whither, Joconde, whither wilt thou bear me?"
+
+"Back to the world," said he ruefully, "thy world of prideful luxury, to
+thy kindred."
+
+"But I have no kindred, alas!" sighed she, stooping to caress a
+daisy-flower that grew adjacent.
+
+"Why, then, thy friends--"
+
+"My friends be very few, Joconde, and Benedicta hath her husband."
+
+"Yolande," said he, leaning nearer, "whither should I bear thee?"
+
+"Nay," saith she, patting the daisy with gentle finger-tip, "go thou and
+saddle thy horse, mayhap I shall know this anon. Go thou and saddle the
+horse." So Jocelyn arose and having saddled and bridled the horse, back he
+cometh to find Yolande on her knees beside the stream, and she, hearing
+his step, bowed her head, hiding her face from him; now on the sward
+beside her lay the picture shattered beyond repair.
+
+"How," said Jocelyn, "hast broken the Duke's picture, lady!"
+
+"Thou seest!" she answered.
+
+"And must thou weep therefore?" said he a little bitterly. "Oh, be
+comforted; 't was but a toy--soon will I get thee another."
+
+"An thou bring me another, Joconde, that will I break also."
+
+"Ha--thou didst break it--wilfully, then?"
+
+"With this stone, Joconde."
+
+"Wherefore, O wherefore?" he questioned eagerly.
+
+"For that it was but painted toy, even as thou sayest!" she answered.
+"Moreover, I--love not Duke Jocelyn."
+
+"And't was for this thou didst break the picture?"
+
+"Nay, 'twas because these painted features may never compare with the face
+of him I love."
+
+"And whom--whom dost thou love?" quoth he, in voice low and unsteady.
+Speaking not, she pointed with slender finger down into the placid, stream.
+Wondering, he bent to look and thus from the stilly water his mirrored
+image looked back at him; now as he stooped so stooped she, and in this
+watery mirror their glances met.
+
+"Yolande?" he whispered. "O my lady, shall a Fool's fond dream come true,
+or am I mad indeed? Thou in thy beauty and I--"
+
+"Thou, Joconde," said she, fronting him with head proudly uplift, "to my
+thought thou art man greater, nobler than any proud lord or mighty duke
+soever. And thou hast loved and wooed as never man wooed, methinks. And
+thou art so brave and strong and so very gentle and--thus it is--I do love
+thee."
+
+"But my--my motley habit, my--"
+
+"Thy cap of Folly, Joconde, these garments pied thou hast dignified by thy
+very manhood, so are they dearer to me than lordly tire or knightly armour.
+And thy jingling bells--ah, Joconde, the jingle of thy bells hath waked
+within my heart that which shall never die--long time my heart hath cried
+for thee, and I, to my shame, heeded not the cry, wherefore here and now,
+thus upon my knees, I do most humbly confess my love."
+
+"Thy love, Yolande--for me? Then dost truly love me? Oh, here is marvel
+beyond my understanding and belief."
+
+"Why, Joconde, ah, why?"
+
+"See!" he cried, flinging back his head. "Look now upon this blemished
+face--here where the cruel sun may shew thee all my ugliness, every
+scar--behold! How may one so beautiful as thou learn love for one so lowly
+and with face thus hatefully marred? I have watched thee shrink from me ere
+now! I mind how, beside the lily-pool within thy garden, thou didst view me
+with eyes of horror! I do mind thy very words--the first that e'er I heard
+thee utter:
+
+'What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show A visage that might
+shame the gladsome day?'
+
+Yolande, Yolande, this poor blemished face is nothing changed since then;
+such as I was, such I am!"
+
+"Alas, Joconde!" she cried, reaching out her hands in passionate appeal.
+"My words were base, cruel--and hurt me now more, ah, much more, than e'er
+they wounded thee. For I do love thee with love as deep, as true as is
+thine own! Wilt not believe me?"
+
+"Oh, that I might indeed!" he groaned. "But--thou'rt alone, far from thy
+home and friends, thy wonted pride and state forgotten all--mayhap thou
+dost pity me or mayhap 'tis thy gratitude in guise of love doth speak me
+thus? But as thou art still thine own lovely self, so am I that same poor,
+motley Fool whose hateful face--"
+
+"Joconde," she cried, "hush thee--Oh, hush thee! Thy words are whips to
+lash me!" and catching his hand she kissed it and cherished it 'gainst
+tear-wet cheek. "Ah, Joconde," she sighed, "so wise and yet so foolish,
+know'st thou not thy dear, scarred face is the face of him I love, for love
+hath touched my eyes and I do see thee at last as thou truly art, a man
+great of soul, tender and strong-hearted. So art thou a man, the only man,
+my man. Oh, that I might but prove my love for thee, prove it to thee and
+before all men, no matter how, so I might but banish thy cruel doubts for
+ever. But now, for thy dear, scarred face--"
+
+Her soft, round arms were about his neck; and drawing him to her lips she
+kissed him, his scarred brow and cheek, his eyes, his lips grown dumb with
+wondering joy. Thus, lip to lip and with arms entwined, knelt they beside
+that slow-moving stream that whispered softly beneath the bank and gurgled
+roguish laughter in the shallows.
+
+A dog barked faintly in the distance, a frog croaked hoarsely from the
+neighbouring sedge, but lost in the wonder of their love, they heeded only
+the beating of their hearts.
+
+"A-billing and a-cooing! A-cooing and a-billing, as I'm a tanner true!"
+exclaimed a hoarse voice. Up started Jocelyn, fierce-eyed and with hand on
+dagger-hilt, to behold a man with shock of red hair, a man squat and burly
+who, leaning on bow-stave, peered at them across the stream.
+
+"And is it Will the Tanner?" quoth Jocelyn, loosing his dagger.
+
+"None else, friend Motley."
+
+"Why then, God keep thee! And now go about thy business."
+
+"Marry, Fool, I am about my business, the which is to find thee. By Saint
+Nick, there's mighty hue and cry for thee up and down within the greenwood,
+aye--marry is there, as I'm a tanner tried and true. So needs must thou
+along wi' me."
+
+"With thee, Tanner? And wherefore?"
+
+"Why, I know not wherefore, Fool, but must along. Here's me and Lob and
+the potent hag that is Mopsa the Witch, lain a-watching and a-watching ye
+a-billing--nay, scowl not, friend Fool, on tanner trusty, tried and
+true. For hark now, here's great stir, clamour and to-do within this
+forest-country for thee, Fool, the which is strange, seeing thou art but a
+motley fool. Howbeit there be many great lords and knights from beyond the
+Southern March a-seeking of thee, Fool."
+
+"Ha!" quoth Jocelyn, frowning. "Envoys from Brocelaunde!"
+
+"Alas, Joconde, and seeking thee!" saith Yolande in troubled voice.
+
+"Moreover," continued Will, "here's our Duke Pertinax and his lady Duchess
+yearning for thee, here's Robin that is Sir Robert a-clamouring for thee
+and all his goodly foresters, as myself, a-seeking thee."
+
+"But't is I found thee, Sir Long-legged Fool, I--I!" croaked a voice, and
+old Mopsa the Witch peered at them from a bush hard by.
+
+"Verily, thou hast found us!" quoth Jocelyn ruefully. "And what now?"
+
+"Oho!" cried the Witch, cracking her finger-bones. "Now go I hot-foot to
+weave spells and enchantments, aha--oho! Spells that shall prove the false
+from the true, the gold from the dross. Thou, Sir Fool, art doubting lover,
+so art thou blind lover! I will resolve thee thy doubts, open thy eyes and
+show thee great joy or bitter sorrow--oho! Thou, proud lady, hast stooped
+to love a motley mountebank--nay, flash not thy bright eyes nor toss
+haughty head at an old woman--but here is solitude with none to mock
+thy lowly choice or cry thee shame to love a motley Fool, aha! And thou
+would'st fain prove thy love True-love, says thou? Why, so thou
+shalt--beyond all doubting now and for ever, aha--oho! Truest of true or
+falsest of false. Beware. Farewell, and remember:
+
+ "Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies,
+ Love's blind, they say; but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly, follow.
+
+Hither-ho, Lob-Lobkyn! Lend thine old granddam thine arm. Come, my pretty
+bantling, sweet poppet--come and--away!" o spake old Mopsa the Witch, and
+vanished into the green with Lobkyn, who turned to flourish his club in
+cheery salutation ere he plunged into the underbrush. Then Jocelyn smiled
+down on Yolande to find her pale and trembling, so would he have clasped
+her to his heart, but a hand grasped him and, turning, he beheld the Tanner
+at his elbow.
+
+"Friend Fool," quoth he, "needs must I take thee to Robin that Sir Robert
+is, e'en as he did command, so come now thy ways with trusty tanner tried."
+
+"Off, Red-head!" saith Jocelyn, frowning a little. "Away now, lest this my
+dagger bite thee." Back leapt Will into the stream whence he had come, and
+there standing, clapped bugle to lip and winded it lustily, whereupon came
+divers fellows running, bow in hand, who beset Jocelyn on every side.
+
+"Now yield thee to Tanner, friend," quoth Will, knee-deep in the stream,
+"for no mind have I to hurt thee. So away with thy dagger like gentle,
+kindly Fool, and away with thee to Sir Robin."
+
+Now hereupon, as Jocelyn frowned upon them, Yolande, standing a-tiptoe,
+kissed his scarred cheek and clasped his dagger-hand in soft fingers.
+
+"Come," she pleaded, "they be a-many, so yield me thy dagger and let us go
+with them, beloved!" At the whispered word Jocelyn loosed the dagger
+and, clasping her instead, kissed her full-lipped. Then turned he to his
+captors.
+
+"I'm with thee, Will, thou--tanner!" quoth he. "And now bring hither the
+horse for my lady's going."
+
+"Nay," answered Will, scratching red head, "Rob--Sir Robert spake nothing
+of horse for thee, or lady."
+
+"Nor will I ride, Joconde," she murmured happily, "rather will I trudge
+beside thee, my hand in thine--thus!"
+
+So, hand in hand, they went close-guarded by their captors yet heeding them
+not at all, having eyes but for each other. And oft her cheek flushed rosy
+beneath his look, and oft he thrilled to the warm, close pressure of her
+fingers; and thus tramped they happy in their captivity.
+
+The sun rose high and higher, but since for them their captors were not,
+neither was fatigue; and, if the way was rough there was Jocelyn's ready
+hand, while for him swamps and brooks were a joy since he might bear her
+in his arms. Thus tramped they by shady dingle and sunny glade, through
+marshy hollows and over laughing rills, until the men began to mutter
+their discontent, in especial a swart, hairy wight, and Will, glancing up
+at the sun, spake:
+
+"Two hours, lads, judge I."
+
+"Nigher three, Tanner, nigher three!" growled the chief mutterer.
+
+"Why so much the better, Rafe, though two was the word. Howbeit we be come
+far enow, I judge, and 'tis hot I judge, so hey for Robin--and a draught o'
+perry!"
+
+"Art thou weary, my Yolande?"
+
+"Nay, is not thy dear arm about me!"
+
+"And--thou dost love me indeed?"
+
+"Indeed, Joconde! Mine is a love that ever groweth--"
+
+A horn's shrill challenge; a sound of voices, and below them opened a
+great, green hollow, shady with trees beneath whose shade were huts of
+wattle cunningly wrought, a brook that flowed sparkling, and beyond caves
+hollowed in the steepy bank.
+
+"How now, Tanner Will," questioned Jocelyn, "hast brought us to the
+outlaw's refuge?"
+
+"Not so, good friend-Fool, not outlaws, foresters we of Duke Pertinax,
+and yonder, look 'ee, cometh Rob--Sir Robert to greet ye!" And the Tanner
+pointed where one came running, a man long of leg, long of arm and very
+bright of eye, a goodly man clad in hood and jerkin of neat's leather as
+aforetime, only now his bugle swung from baldrick of gold and silver and in
+his hood was brooched a long scarlet feather.
+
+"What brother!" cried he joyously. "By saint Nicholas,'tis sweet to see
+thee again, thou lovely Fool!" And he clasped Jocelyn in brotherly embrace,
+which done, he stood off and shook doleful head. "Alas, brother!" quoth he.
+"Alas! my prisoner art thou this day, wherefor I grieve, and wherefor I
+know not save that it is by my lady Benedicta's strict command and her I
+must obey." And now, turning to Yolande, he bared his head, louting full
+low. "Lady," quoth he, "by thy rare and so great beauty I do know thee for
+Yolande the Fair, so do we of the wild give thee humble greeting. Here
+may'st thou rest awhile ere we bring thee to Canalise."
+
+"But, messire," answered Yolande, clasping Jocelyn's hand, "no mind have I
+to go to Canalise."
+
+"Then alack for me, fair lady, for needs must I carry thee there within the
+hour along of my motley brother. Meanwhile here within yon bower thou
+shalt find cushions to thy repose, and all things to thy comfort and
+refreshment."
+
+"O Sir Robert! O for a comb!" she sighed.
+
+"Expectant it waiteth thee, lady, together with water cool, sweet-perfumed
+essences, unguents and other nice, lady-like toys. Moreover, there be
+mirrors two of Venice and in pretty coffer--" But Yolande had vanished.
+
+Hereupon Robin led the way into a cool, arras-hung cave where was table set
+out with divers comfortable things both eatable and drinkable.
+
+Quoth Jocelyn, hunger and thirst appeased: "And now good Robin, what do
+these envoys from Brocelaunde? Why am I thy prisoner and wherefore must I
+to Canalise?"
+
+"Ha!" saith Robin, cocking merry eye, "and thy name is Joconde, the which
+is an excellent name, brother, and suiteth thee well, and yet--hum!
+Howbeit, friend, remember Robin loved thee for the Fool he found thee,
+that same Fool foolish enow to spare a rogue his life. Dost mind my Song
+o' Rogues? A good song, methinks, tripping merrily o' the tongue:
+
+ "'I'll sing a song
+ Not over long,
+ A song o' roguery,
+ For I'm a rogue,
+ And thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith is he.'
+
+I mind thy fierce, hawk-nosed gossip in rusty jack and ragged cloak, his
+curses! Troth brother,'tis a world of change methinks, this same fierce,
+cursing, hook-nose rogue a noble knight and to-day my lord Duke! I, that
+was poor outlaw, knight-at-arms and lord warden, and thou--a motley Fool
+still--and my prisoner. How say'st thou, brother?"
+
+"Why I say, Robin, that my three questions wait thy answers!"
+
+"Verily, brother, and for this reason. I am a knight and noble, and so
+being have learned me policy, and my policy is, when unable to give answer
+direct to question direct, to question myself direct thus directing
+question to questions other or to talk of matters of interest universal, so
+do I of thyself and myself speak. And talking of myself I have on myself,
+of myself, of myself made a song, and these the words, hark 'ee:
+
+ "Now Rob that was Robin Sir Robert is hight
+ Though Rob oft did rob when outlaw,
+ Since outlaw now in law is dubbed a good knight,
+ Robin's robbing is done, Rob robbeth no more.
+
+Fair words brother, I think, and yet a little sad. 'But,' says you in vasty
+amaze, 'my very noble and right potent Sir Robert,' says you, 'if thou
+art indeed noble knight, wherefore go ye devoid of mail, surcoat, cyclas,
+crested helm, banderol, lance, shield and the like pomps and gauds?'
+'Brother,' says I, 'habit is habit and habit sticketh habitual, and my
+habit is to go habited as suiteth my habit, suiting habit o' body to habit
+o' mind.' Thus I, though Sir Robert, am Robin still, and go in soft leather
+'stead of chafing steel, and my rogues, loving Robin, love Sir Robert the
+better therefor, as sayeth my song in fashion apt and pertinent:
+
+ "Since habit is habit, my habit hath been
+ To wear habit habitually comely--
+
+Ha, there soundeth the mustering note, so must we away and I sing no
+further, which is well, for 'comely' is an ill word to rhyme with. Howbeit
+here must I, beginning my song o' Robin, of beginning must Rob make an end,
+for duty calleth Sir Robert, so must Robin away."
+
+Hereupon he clapped horn to lip at which shrill summons came archers and
+pikemen ranked very orderly about a fair horse-litter. But Yolande coming
+radiant from the bower and espying the litter, shook her head. Quoth she:
+
+"An thou go afoot, Joconde, so will I."
+
+The sun was low when they came before the walls of Canalise, and passing
+beneath grim portcullis and through frowning gateway, with ring and tramp,
+crossed the wide market square a-throng with jostling townsfolk, who
+laughed and pointed, cheered and hooted, staring amain at Jocelyn in his
+threadbare motley; but Yolande, fronting all eyes with proud head aloft,
+drew nearer and held his hand in firmer clasp.
+
+Thus they came at last to the great courtyard before the palace, bright
+with the glitter of steel, where men-at-arms stood mustered. Here Robin
+halted his company, whereon rose the silvery note of a clarion, and forth
+paced the dignified Chief Herald, who spake him full-toned and sonorous:
+
+"In the name of our potent Duke Pertinax and his gracious lady Benedicta, I
+greet thee well, Sir Robert-a-Forest. Now whom bring ye here? Pronounce!"
+
+"Dan Merriment, Sir Gravity," answered Robin, "a Fool valiant and wise, a
+maker of songs, of quips and quiddities many and jocund, Joconde hight. Sir
+Wisdom, Folly behold, himself here _in propri person_."
+
+The Chief Herald gestured haughtily with his wand whereupon forth stepped a
+file of soldiers and surrounded Jocelyn.
+
+"Ah, Joconde! What meaneth this?" said Yolande, in troubled voice.
+
+"Indeed, my lady, I know not!" he answered. "But let not thy brave heart
+fail thee."
+
+"Ah, Joconde, I fear for thee--whither would they lead thee? Nay, sweet
+heaven, they shall not take thee from me!"
+
+"Fear not, beloved, though they part us awhile."
+
+"Away with the Motley!" thundered the Chief Herald, flourishing his wand.
+
+"Yolande--O my beloved, fear not--" But even as he spake, the pikemen
+closed in, and Jocelyn was hustled away; so stood she trembling, hands
+clasped and eyes wide and fearful, until tall motley figure and flaunting
+cock's-comb were lost to her sight and the jingle of his bells had died
+away; then, finding herself alone and all men's eyes upon her, she lifted
+bowed head and stood white-cheeked and proudly patient, waiting for what
+might betide.
+
+And presently was distant stir that, growing nearer, swelled to the ring
+and clash of armour and the trampling of many hoofs; and presently through
+the great gateway rode many knights sumptuously caparisoned, their shields
+brave with gilded 'scutcheons, pennon and bannerole a-flutter above nodding
+plumes, and over all the Red Raven banner of Brocelaunde. So rode they
+two-and-two until the great courtyard blazed with flashing steel and
+broidered surcoats. And now a trumpet blared, and forth before this
+glorious array a pursuivant rode and halted to behold Pertinax, who stepped
+forth of the great banqueting-hall leading his fair Duchess by the hand,
+and behind them courtiers and ladies attendant.
+
+Once again the trumpets rang, and lifting his hand, the pursuivant spake:
+
+"My Lord Duke Pertinax, most gracious Duchess, Jocelyn the high and mighty
+Lord Duke of Brocelaunde greeteth you in all love and amity, and hither
+rideth to claim a fair lady to wife. Behold our Lord Duke Jocelyn!"
+
+Loud and long the trumpets blew as into the courtyard rode a single
+horseman; tall was he and bedight in plain black armour and white surcoat
+whereon the Red Raven glowed; but his face was hid in vizored helm. So
+rode he through his glorious array of knights, checking his fiery steed to
+gentle gait with practised hand, while thus spake the pursuivant:
+
+"Behold here Jocelyn, Duke of Brocelaunde, to claim this day in marriage
+the Lady Yolande according to her word."
+
+"Stay, my lords!" cried a sweet, clear voice, and forth before them all
+stood Yolande herself, pale-cheeked but stately of bearing and very bright
+of eye.
+
+"Be it known to all here that I, Yolande, have given neither pledge nor
+troth unto Duke Jocelyn--"
+
+Now here was silence sudden and profound that none dared break saving only
+the haughty Chief Herald.
+
+"How lady, how," quoth he, "no pledge, no troth, quotha--"
+
+"Neither one nor other, messire, nor shall there ever be--"
+
+"Here is madness, lady, madness--"
+
+"Here is truth, messire, truth; I may not pledge my troth with Duke Jocelyn
+since I have this day pledged myself unto Duke Jocelyn's jester--"
+
+"Jester, lady, jester? Venus aid us--Cupid shield us! A jester, a Fool, a
+motley mountebank, a--"
+
+"Aye!" cried Yolande. "All this is he, my lords. Very humble and lowly--yet
+do I love him! Oh, 'tis joy--'tis joy to thus confess my love--his cap and
+bells and motley livery are fairer to me than velvet mantle or knightly
+armour; he is but humble jester, a Fool for men's scorn or laughter, yet is
+he a man, so do I love him and so am I his--unto the end. My lords, I have
+no more to say save this--give me my jester--this man I love--and suffer us
+to go forth hand in hand together, even as we came."
+
+The Duchess Benedicta uttered a soft, glad cry, and seizing her husband's
+arm, shook it for very joy. But now, as Yolande fronted them all, pale and
+proudly defiant, was the ring of a mailed foot, and turning, she shrank
+trembling to see Duke Jocelyn hasting toward her, his black armour
+glinting, his embroidered surcoat fluttering, his long arms outstretched
+to her; thus quick-striding he came but, even as she put out shaking hands
+to stay him, he fell upon his knee before her.
+
+"Most brave and noble lady--beloved Yolande," he cried, and lifted his
+vizor. Now beholding the scarred face of him, the tender, smiling lips, the
+adoration in his grey eyes, she trembled amain and, swaying to him, rested
+her hands on his mailed shoulders.
+
+"Joconde," she whispered, "ah, Joconde--what dream is this?"
+
+"Nay, beloved, the dream is ended and findeth me here at thy feet. The
+dream is past and we do wake at last, for thy motley Fool, thy Duke and
+lover am I, yet lover most of all. And thou who in thy divine mercy stooped
+to love the Fool, by that same love shalt thou lift Duke Jocelyn up to thee
+and heaven at last. And Oh, methinks the memory of thy so great and noble
+love shall be a memory fragrant everlastingly."
+
+So speaking, Duke Jocelyn rose, and with her hand fast in his, looked from
+her loveliness round about him, blithe of eye.
+
+"My lords," cried he, "behold my well-beloved, brave-hearted lady. Nobles
+of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande."
+
+Hereupon was shout on shout of joyous acclaim, lost all at once in the
+sweet, glad clamour of bells pealing near and far; so, hand in hand, while
+the air thrilled with this merry riot, they crossed the wide courtyard, and
+she flushed 'neath the worship of his look and he thrilled to the close,
+warm pressure of her fingers--thus walked they betwixt the ranks of
+men-at-arms and glittering chivalry, yet saw them not.
+
+But now Yolande was aware of Benedicta's arms about her and Benedicta's
+voice in her ear.
+
+"Dear my Yolande, so True-love hath found thee at last since thou wert
+brave indeed and worthy. Come now and let me deck thee to thy bridal."
+
+"Lord Duke," quoth Pertinax, "here methinks was notable, worthy wooing."
+
+"Aha!" quoth Mopsa the Witch, crackling her knuckle-bones. "Here, my
+children, is wooing that some fool shall strive to tell tale of some day,
+mayhap; but such love is beyond words and not to be told. Thus by cunning
+contrivement hath Mopsa the old Witch proved the true from the false, the
+gold from the dross; thou, my lady, hast proved thy love indeed, and thou,
+Lord Duke, may nevermore doubt such love. And now away and wed each other
+to love's fulfilment--hark where the bells do summon ye."
+
+And thus, as evening fell, they were wed within the great Minster of
+Canalise, and thereafter came they to the banqueting-hall with retinue of
+knights and nobles. Last of all strode Robin with his foresters, and as
+they marched he sang a song he had learned of Jocelyn, and these the words:
+
+ "What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Ne'er to die or fade away,
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ "Though youth alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless shall remain
+ The same to-day and ever."
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+
+<!DOCTYPE html
+ PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
+ "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd" >
+
+<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en">
+ <head>
+ <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html;charset=UTF-8" />
+ <title>
+ The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .75em; margin-bottom: .75em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
+ blockquote {font-size: 97%; font-style: italic; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%;}
+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
+ .side { float: right; font-size: 75%; width: 25%; padding-left: 0.8em;
+ border-left: dashed thin; margin-left: 0.8em; text-align: left;
+ text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
+ font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
+ pre {font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: 100%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Geste of Duke Jocelyn
+
+Author: Jeffery Farnol
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8165]
+This file was first posted on June 24, 2003
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Ted Garvin and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Jeffery Farnol
+ </h2>
+ <h5>
+ Illustrations in color by Eric Pape <br />(Illustrations not included in
+ this edition) <br /> <br /> <br />Copyright, 1920, <br /> <br />By Little,
+ Brown, And Company. <br /> <br />All rights reserved Published September,
+ 1920 <br /> <br />Norwood Press <br /> <br />Set up and electrotyped by J. S.
+ Cushing Co. Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> PRELUDE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> FYTTE I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> FYTTE 2 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> FYTTE 3 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> FYTTE 4 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> FYTTE 5 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> FYTTE 6 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> FYTTE 7 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> FYTTE 8 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> FYTTE 9 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> FYTTE 10 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> FYTTE 11 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> FYTTE 12 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My GILLIAN, thou child that budding woman art
+ For whom to-day and yesterday lie far apart
+ Already thou, my dear, dost longer dresses wear
+ And bobbest in most strange, new-fangled ways thy hair;
+ Thou lookest on the world with eyes grown serious
+ And rul'st thy father with a sway imperious
+ Particularly as regards his socks and ties
+ Insistent that each with the other harmonise.
+ Instead of simple fairy-tales that pleased of yore
+ Romantic verse thou read'st and novels by the score
+ And very oft I've known thee sigh and call them &ldquo;stuff&rdquo;
+ Vowing of love romantic they've not half enough.
+ Wherefore, like fond and doting parent, I
+ Will strive this want romantic to supply.
+ I'll write for thee a book of sighing lover
+ Crammed with ROMANCE from cover unto cover;
+ A book the like of which 't were hard to find
+ Filled with ROMANCE of every sort and kind.
+ I'll write it as the Gestours wrote of old,
+ In prose, blank-verse, and rhyme it shall be told.
+ And GILLIAN&mdash;
+ Some day perhaps, my dear, when you are grown
+ A portly dame with children of your own
+ You'll gather all your troop about your knee
+ And read to them this Geste I made for thee.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_ILLU" id="link2H_ILLU"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ ILLUSTRATIONS <br /> <br /> &ldquo;Nobles of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess
+ Yolande&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!&rdquo; she sighed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, poor Motley!&rdquo; whispered the maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long blades whirled and flashed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PRELUDE
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Long, long ago when castles grim did frown,
+ When massy wall and gate did 'fend each town;
+ When mighty lords in armour bright were seen,
+ And stealthy outlaws lurked amid the green
+ And oft were hanged for poaching of the deer,
+ Or, gasping, died upon a hunting spear;
+ When barons bold did on their rights insist
+ And hanged or burned all rogues who dared resist;
+ When humble folk on life had no freehold
+ And were in open market bought and sold;
+ When grisly witches (lean and bony hags)
+ Cast spells most dire yet, meantime, starved in rags;
+ When kings did lightly a-crusading fare
+ And left their kingdoms to the devil's care&mdash;
+ At such a time there lived a noble knight
+ Who sweet could sing and doughtily could fight,
+ Whose lance thrust strong, whose long sword bit
+ full deep
+ With darting point or mighty two-edged sweep.
+ A duke was he, rich, powerful&mdash;and yet
+ Fate had on him a heavy burden set,
+ For, while a youth, as he did hunt the boar,
+ The savage beast his goodly steed did gore,
+ And as the young duke thus defenceless lay,
+ With cruel tusk had reft his looks away,
+ Had marred his comely features and so mauled him
+ That, 'hind his back, &ldquo;The ugly Duke&rdquo; folk called
+ him&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: An ugly hero?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: That is so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: An ugly hero, father? O, absurd! Whoever of an &ldquo;ugly&rdquo; hero heard?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: I'll own, indeed, I've come across but few&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: But a duke&mdash;and ugly! Father, this from you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: My duke is ugly, very, for good reason, As shall appear in due and
+ proper season!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: I'm sure no one will want to read him then, For &ldquo;heroes&rdquo; all should
+ be most handsome men. So make him handsome, please, or he won't do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: By heaven, girl&mdash;no, plain heroes are too few!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: Then ev'ry one will leave him on the shelf!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: Why, then, I'll read the poor fellow myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: I won't!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: Then don't! Though, I might say, since you're set on it, child, My
+ duke was not so ugly when he smiled&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: Then make him smile as often as you can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: I might do that, 't is none so bad a plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: And the lady&mdash;she must be a lady fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: My dear, she's beautiful beyond compare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: Why, then&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: My pen!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So here and now I do begin
+ The tale of young Duke Jocelyn,
+ For critics, schools,
+ And cramping rules,
+ Heedless and caring not a pin.
+
+ The title here behold
+ On this fair page enrolled,
+ In letters big and bold,
+ As seemeth fit&mdash;
+ To wit:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE I
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Upon a day, but when it matters not,
+ Nor where, but mark! the sun was plaguy hot
+ Falling athwart a long and dusty road
+ In which same dust two dusty fellows strode.
+ One was a tall, broad-shouldered, goodly wight
+ In garb of motley like a jester dight,
+ Fool's cap on head with ass's ears a-swing,
+ While, with each stride, his bells did gaily ring;
+ But, 'neath his cock's-comb showed a face so marred
+ With cheek, with brow and lip so strangely scarred
+ As might scare tender maid or timid child
+ Unless, by chance, they saw him when he smiled,
+ For then his eyes, so deeply blue and bright,
+ Did hold in them such joyous, kindly light,
+ That sorrow was from heavy hearts beguiled&mdash;
+ This jester seemed less ugly when he smiled.
+
+ Here, O my Gill, right deftly, in a trice
+ I've made him smile and made him do it&mdash;twice.
+ That 't was the Duke of course you've guessed at once
+ Since you, I know, we nothing of a dunce.
+ But, what should bring a duke in cap and bells?
+ Read on and mark, while he the reason tells.
+
+ Now, 'spite of dust and heat, his lute he strummed,
+ And snatches of a merry song he hummed,
+ The while askance full merrily he eyed
+ The dusty knave who plodded at his side.
+ A bony fellow, this, and long of limb,
+
+ His habit poor, his aspect swart and grim;
+ His belt to bear a long broad-sword did serve,
+ His eye was bold, his nose did fiercely curve
+ Down which he snorted oft and (what is worse)
+ Beneath his breath gave vent to many a curse.
+ Whereat the Duke, sly laughing, plucked lutestring
+ And thus, in voice melodious did sing:
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sir Pertinax, why curse ye so?
+ Since thus in humble guise we go
+ We merry chances oft may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;And chances woeful, lord, also!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ &ldquo;To every fool that passeth by
+ These foolish bells shall testify
+ That very fool, forsooth, am I,
+ Good Pertinax of Shene!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;And, lord, methinks they'll tell no lie!&rdquo;
+ Growled Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Then spake the Knight in something of a pet,
+ &ldquo;Par Dex, lord Duke&mdash;plague take it, how I sweat,
+ By Cock, messire, ye know I have small lust
+ Like hind or serf to tramp it i' the dust!
+ Per De, my lord, a parch-ed pea am I&mdash;
+ I'm all athirst! Athirst? I am so dry
+ My very bones do rattle to and fro
+ And jig about within me as I go!
+ Why tramp we thus, bereft of state and rank?
+ Why go ye, lord, like foolish mountebank?
+ And whither doth our madcap journey trend?
+ And wherefore? Why? And, prithee, to what end?&rdquo;
+ Then quoth the Duke, &ldquo;See yonder in the green
+ Doth run a cooling water-brook I ween,
+ Come, Pertinax, beneath yon shady trees,
+ And there whiles we do rest outstretched at ease
+ Thy 'wherefores' and thy 'whys' shall answered be,
+ And of our doings I will counsel thee.&rdquo;
+
+ So turned they from the hot and dusty road
+ Where, 'mid green shade, a rill soft-bubbling flowed,
+ A brook that leapt and laughed in roguish wise,
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax with scowling eyes
+ Did frown upon the rippling water clear,
+ And sware sad oaths because it was not beer;
+ Sighful he knelt beside this murmurous rill,
+ Bent steel-clad head and bravely drank his fill.
+ Then sitting down, quoth he: &ldquo;By Og and Gog,
+ I'll drink no more&mdash;nor horse am I nor dog
+ To gulp down water&mdash;pest, I hate the stuff!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; laughed the Duke, &ldquo;'tis plain hast had enough,
+ And since well filled with water thou dost lie
+ To answer thee thy questions fain am I.
+ First then&mdash;thou art in lowly guise bedight,
+ For that thou art my trusty, most-loved knight,
+ Who at my side in many a bloody fray,
+ With thy good sword hath smit grim Death away&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; quoth the Knight, &ldquo;what's done is past return,
+ 'Tis of our future doings I would learn.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;list, Pertinax, and know
+ 'Tis on a pilgrimage of love we go:
+ Mayhap hast heard the beauty and the fame
+ Of fair Yolande, that young and peerless dame
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For whom so many noble lovers sigh
+ And with each other in the lists do vie?
+ Though much I've dreamed of sweet Yolanda's charms
+ My days have passed in wars and feats of arms,
+ For, Pertinax, this blemished face I bear,
+ Should fright, methinks, a lady young and fair.
+ And so it is that I have deemed it wiser
+ To hide it when I might 'neath casque and visor&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Hereat Sir Pertinax smote hand to knee
+ And, frowning, shook his head. &ldquo;Messire,&rdquo; said he,
+ &ldquo;Thou art a man, and young, of noble race,
+ And, being duke, what matter for thy face?
+ Rank, wealth, estate&mdash;these be the things I trow
+ Can make the fairest woman tender grow.
+ Ride unto her in thy rich armour dight,
+ With archer, man-at-arms, and many a knight
+ To swell thy train with pomp and majesty,
+ That she, and all, thy might and rank may see;
+ So shall all folk thy worthiness acclaim,
+ And her maid's heart, methinks, shall do the same.
+ Thy blemished face shall matter not one jot;
+ To mount thy throne she'll think a happy lot.
+ So woo her thus&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;So will I woo her not!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Jocelyn, &ldquo;For than I'd win her so,
+ Alone and loveless all my days I'd go.
+ Ha, Pertinax, 'spite all thy noble parts,
+ 'Tis sooth ye little know of women's hearts!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Women?&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, and scratched his jaw,
+ &ldquo;'Tis true of dogs and horses I know more,
+ And dogs do bite, and steeds betimes will balk,
+ And fairest women, so they say, will talk.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;And so dost thou, my Pertinax, and yet,
+ 'Spite all thy talk, my mind on this is set&mdash;
+ Thus, in all lowliness I'll e'en go to her
+ And 'neath this foolish motley I will woo her.
+ And if, despite this face, this humble guise,
+ I once may read love's message in her eyes,
+ Then Pertinax&mdash;by all the Saints, 'twill be
+ The hope of all poor lovers after me,
+ These foolish bells a deathless tale shall ring,
+ And of Love's triumph evermore shall sing.
+
+ &ldquo;So, Pertinax, ne'er curse ye so
+ For that in lowly guise we go,
+ We many a merry chance may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And chances evil, lord, also!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Now on a sudden, from the thorny brake,
+ E'en as Sir Pertinax thus doleful spake,
+ Leapt lusty loons and ragged rascals four,
+ Rusty their mail, yet bright the swords they bore.
+
+ Up sprang Sir Pertinax with gleeful shout,
+ Plucked forth his blade and fiercely laid about.
+ &ldquo;Ha, rogues! Ha, knaves! Most scurvy dogs!&rdquo; he cried.
+ While point and edge right lustily he plied
+ And smote to earth the foremost of the crew,
+ Then, laughing, pell-mell leapt on other two.
+ The fourth rogue's thrust, Duke Joc'lyn blithely parried
+ Right featly with the quarter-staff he carried.
+ Then 'neath the fellow's guard did nimbly slip
+ And caught him in a cunning wrestler's grip.
+ Now did they reel and stagger to and fro,
+ And on the ling each other strove to throw;
+
+ Arm locked with arm they heaved, they strove and panted,
+ With mighty shoulders bowed and feet firm-planted.
+ So on the sward, with golden sunlight dappled,
+ In silence grim they tussled, fiercely grappled.
+ Thus then Duke Jocelyn wrestled joyously,
+ For this tall rogue a lusty man was he,
+ But, 'spite his tricks and all his cunning play,
+ He in the Duke had met his match this day,
+ As, with a sudden heave and mighty swing,
+ Duke Jocelyn hurled him backwards on the ling,
+ And there he breathless lay and sore amazed,
+ While on the Duke with wonderment he gazed:
+ &ldquo;A Fool?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Nay, certes fool, per De,
+ Ne'er saw I fool, a fool the like o' thee!&rdquo;
+
+ But now, e'en as the Duke did breathless stand,
+ Up strode Sir Pertinax, long sword in hand:
+ &ldquo;Messire,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;my rogues have run away,
+ So, since you've felled this fellow, him I'll slay.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; the Duke, short-breathing, made reply,
+ &ldquo;Methinks this rogue is too much man to die.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; cried the Knight; &ldquo;not slay a knave&mdash;a thief?
+ Such clemency is strange and past belief!
+ Mean ye to let the dog all scathless go?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the Duke, square chin on fist, &ldquo;not so,
+ For since the rogue is plainly in the wrong
+ The rogue shall win his freedom with a song,
+ And since forsooth a rogue ingrain is he,
+ So shall he sing a song of roguery.
+ Rise, roguish rogue, get thee thy wind and sing,
+ Pipe me thy best lest on a tree ye swing!&rdquo;
+
+ Up to his feet the lusty outlaw sprang,
+ And thus, in clear melodious voice, he sang:
+
+ &ldquo;I'll sing a song not over long,
+ A song of roguery.
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith, is he.
+ And we are rogues, and ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.
+
+ &ldquo;As die we must and turn to dust,
+ Since each is Adam's son,
+ A rogue was he, so rogues are we,
+ And rascals every one.
+
+ &ldquo;The Abbot sleek with visage meek,
+ With candle, book and bell,
+ Our souls may curse, we're none the worse,
+ Since he's a rogue as well.
+
+ &ldquo;My lord aloft doth hang full oft
+ Poor rogues the like o' me,
+ But all men know where e'er he go
+ A greater rogue is he.
+
+ &ldquo;The king abroad with knight and lord
+ Doth ride in majesty,
+ But strip him bare and then and there
+ A shivering rogue ye'll see,
+
+ &ldquo;Sirs, if ye will my life to spill,
+ Then hang me on a tree,
+ Since rogue am I, a rogue I'll die,
+ A roguish death for me.
+
+ &ldquo;But i' the wind the leaves shall find
+ Small voices for my dole,
+
+ &ldquo;And when I'm dead sigh o'er my head
+ Prayers for my poor rogue soul;
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou 'rt a rogue,
+ And so in faith is he,
+ As we are rogues, so ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.&rdquo;
+
+ The singing done, the Duke sat lost in thought,
+ What time Sir Pertinax did stamp and snort:
+ &ldquo;Ha, by the Mass! Now, by the Holy Rood!
+ Ne'er heard I roguish rant so bold and lewd!
+ He should be whipped, hanged, quartered, flayed alive&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; quoth the Duke, &ldquo;pay him gold pieces five,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;pay a rogue?&rdquo; the Knight did fierce retort.
+ &ldquo;A ribald's rant&mdash;give good, gold pieces for't?
+ A plague! A pest! The knave should surely die&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But here he met Duke Joc'lyn's fierce blue eye,
+ And silent fell and in his poke did dive,
+ And slowly counted thence gold pieces five,
+ Though still he muttered fiercely 'neath his breath,
+ Such baleful words as: &ldquo;'S blood!&rdquo; and &ldquo;'S bones!&rdquo; and &ldquo;'S death!&rdquo;
+
+ Then laughed the Duke and from the greenwood strode;
+ But scarce was he upon the dusty road,
+ Than came the rogue who, louting to his knee:
+ &ldquo;O Fool! Sir Fool! Most noble Fool!&rdquo; said he.
+ &ldquo;Either no fool, or fool forsooth thou art,
+ That dareth thus to take an outlaw's part.
+ Yet, since this day my rogue's life ye did spare,
+ So now by oak, by ash, by thorn I swear&mdash;
+
+ &ldquo;And mark, Sir Fool, and to my saying heed&mdash;
+ Shouldst e'er lack friends to aid thee in thy need
+ Come by this stream where stands a mighty oak,
+ Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning stroke,
+ Hid in this cleft a hunting-horn ye'll see,
+ Take then this horn and sound thereon notes three.
+ So shall ye find the greenwood shall repay
+ The roguish life ye spared a rogue this day.&rdquo;
+
+ So spake he; then, uprising from his knees,
+ Strode blithe away and vanished 'mid the trees.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax shook doleful head:
+ &ldquo;There go our good gold pieces, lord!&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;Would that yon rogue swung high upon a tree,
+ And in my poke our gold again might be.
+ Full much I marvel, lord, and fain would know
+ Wherefore and why unhanged didst let him go?&rdquo;
+
+ Then answered the Duke singing on this wise:
+
+ &ldquo;Good Pertinax, if on a tree
+ Yon rogue were swinging high
+ A deader rogue no man could see&mdash;
+ 'He's but a rogue!' says you to me,
+ 'But a living rogue!' says I.
+
+ &ldquo;And since he now alive doth go
+ More honest he may die,
+ Yon rogue an honest man may grow,
+ If we but give him time, I trow,
+ Says I to you, says I.&rdquo;
+
+ At this, Sir Pertinax growled in his beard&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: A beard? O father&mdash;beard will never do!
+ No proper knight a beard ever grew.'
+ No knight could really romantic be
+ Who wore a beard! So, father, to please me,
+ No beard; they are, I think, such scrubby things&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Yet they are worn, sometimes, by poets and kings.
+
+ GILL: But your knight&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Oh, all right,
+ My Gill, from your disparagement to save him,
+ I, like a barber, will proceed to shave him.
+
+ Sir Pertinax, then, stroked his smooth-shaved chin,
+ And thus to curse he softly did begin,
+ &ldquo;Par Dex, my lord&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Your knight, dear father, seems to love to curse.
+
+ MYSELF: He does. A difficult matter, child, in verse&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Of verse I feel a little tired&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Why, if you think a change desired,
+ A change we'll have, for, truth to tell,
+ This rhyming bothers me as well.
+ So here awhile we'll sink to prose.
+ Now, are you ready? Then here goes!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex, my lord!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;A malison on't, says I, saving
+ thy lordly grace, yet a rogue is a rogue and, being rogue, should die
+ right roguishly as is the custom and the law. For if, messire, if&mdash;per
+ De and by Our Sweet Lady of Shene Chapel within the Wood, if, I say, in
+ thy new and sudden-put-on attitude o' folly, thou wilt save alive all
+ rogues soever, then by Saint Cuthbert his curse, by sweet Saint Benedict
+ his blessed bones, by&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold now, Pertinax,&rdquo; said the Duke, slipping his lute into leathern bag
+ and slinging it behind wide shoulders, &ldquo;list ye, Sir Knight of Shene, and
+ mark this, to wit: If a rogue in roguery die then rogue is he forsooth;
+ but, mark this again, if a rogue be spared his life he may perchance and
+ peradventure forswear, that is, eschew or, vulgarly speaking, turn from
+ his roguish ways, and die as honest as I, aye, or even&mdash;thou!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Pertinax snorted as they strode on together, yet in a little they
+ turned aside from the hot and dusty road and journeyed on beneath the
+ trees that grew thereby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By all the fiends, my lord, and speaking vulgarly in turn, this belly o'
+ mine lacketh, these my bowels do yearn consumedly unto messes savoury and
+ cates succulent&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereat the Duke, smiling merry-eyed, chanted roguishly:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A haunch o' venison juicy from the spit now?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; groaned the Knight, &ldquo;Lord, let us haste&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;A larded capon to thee might seem fit now?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Saints!&rdquo; sighed the Knight, &ldquo;but for one little taste.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Or, Pertinax, a pasty plump and deep&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;pasty, by the Mass!&rdquo; the Knight did cry.
+ &ldquo;Or pickled tongue of neat, Sir Knight, or sheep&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Oh, for a horse! For wings wherewith to fly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Or breast of swan&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay! nay, my lord, ha' mercy!&rdquo; groaned Sir Pertinax, wiping moist brow.
+ &ldquo;Picture no more toothsome dainties to my soul lest for desire I swoon and
+ languish by the way. I pray thee, let us haste, sire, so may we reach fair
+ Canalise ere sunset&mdash;yet stay! Hearken, messire, hear ye aught? Sure,
+ afar the tocsin soundeth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now hearkening thus, they both became aware
+ Of distant bells that throbbed upon the air,
+ A faint, insistent sound that rose and fell,
+ A clamour vague that ominous did swell.
+ As thus they stood, well hidden from the road,
+ Footsteps they heard of feet that briskly strode.
+ And, through the leaves, a small man they espied,
+ Who came apace, a great sword by his side.
+ Large bascinet upon his head he bore,
+ 'Neath which his face a scowl portentous wore;
+ While after toiled a stout but reverend friar
+ Who, scant of breath, profusely did perspire
+ And, thus perspiring, panted sad complaints
+ Thus&mdash;on the heat, his comrade and the Saints.
+
+ &ldquo;O Bax, O Bax! Saint Cuthbert aid me now!
+ O Bax, see how to sweat thou'st made me now!
+ Thy speed abate! O sweet Saint Dominic!
+ Why pliest thou thy puny shanks so quick;
+ O day! O Bax! O hot, sulphurous day,
+ My flesh betwixt ye melteth fast away.
+ Come, sit ye, Bax, in shade of yon sweet tree,
+ And, sitting soft, I'll sagely counsel thee.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Not so, in faith,&rdquo; the small man, scowling, said,
+ &ldquo;What use for counsel since the cause be fled?
+ And since she's fled&mdash;Saints succour us!&rdquo; he cried;
+ As 'mid the leaves all suddenly he spied
+ Sir Pertinax in his unlovely trim,
+ His rusty mail, his aspect swart and grim&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; gasped the little man, &ldquo;we are beset!&rdquo;
+ And starting back, off fell his bascinet.
+ Whereat he fiercely did but scowl the more,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And strove amain his ponderous sword to draw.
+ &ldquo;Hence, dog!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;lest, with my swashing blow,
+ I make thee food for carrion kite and crow.&rdquo;
+ But in swift hands Sir Pertinax fast caught him
+ And, bearing him on high, to Joc'lyn brought him,
+ Who, while the captive small strove vain aloft
+ Reproved him thus in accents sweet and soft:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right puissant and potential sir, we do beseech thee check thy ferocity,
+ quell now thy so great anger and swear not to give our flesh for fowls to
+ tear, so shalt thou come down to earth and stand again upon thine own two
+ legs. And thou, most reverend friar, invoke now thy bloody-minded comrade
+ that he swear to harm us not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stout friar seated himself hard by beneath a tree, mopped moist brow,
+ fetched his wind and smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I am thy security that thou and thy brawny gossip
+ need quake and tremble nothing by reason of this Bax, our valiant reeve&mdash;he
+ shall harm ye no whit.&rdquo; Here, meeting Jocelyn's eye, Sir Pertinax set down
+ the small Reeve, who having taken up and put on his great bascinet,
+ scowled, whereupon Duke Jocelyn questioned him full meek:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good master Reeve, of your courtesy pray you tell us why yon bells do
+ ring so wild alarm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The small Reeve viewed him with disdainful eye;
+ Sniffed haughty nose and proudly made reply:
+ 'Our bells we ring and clamour make, because
+ We've lost our lady fair of Tissingors.
+ Our Duchess Benedicta hath this day
+ From all her worthy guardians stole away.
+ Thus we for her do inquisition make,
+ Nor, 'till she's found, may hope our rest to take,
+ And thus we cause such outcry as we may,
+ Since we lose not our Duchess ev'ry day.
+ So then we'd have ye speak us&mdash;aye or no,
+ Saw ye our errant lady this way go?
+ And, that ye may her know for whom we seek,
+ Her just description fully I will speak:
+ Her hair night-black, her eyes the self-same hue,
+ Her habit brown, unless 't were red or blue,
+ And if not blue why then mayhap 'tis green,
+ Since she by turns of all such hues is seen&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Stay, sir,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, &ldquo;'tis plain to see
+ No maid but a chameleon is she,
+ For here we have her brown and green and blue,
+ And if not brown then rosy is her hue,
+ And, if not red, why then 'tis very plain
+ That brown she is or blue or green again.
+ Now fain, sir, would I ask and question whether
+ She e'er is seen these colours all together?
+
+ &ldquo;O fain would I a lady spy,
+ By countryside or town,
+ Who may be seen all blue and green,
+ Unless she's red or brown.&rdquo;
+
+ But now, while fierce the little man did scowl,
+ The rosy Friar, sly-smiling 'neath his cowl,
+ His visage meek, spake thus in dulcet tone:
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool, our Reeve is something mixed, I'll own,
+ Though he by divers colours is bemused,
+ Learn ye this truth, so shall he stand excused:
+ Our Duchess Benedicta, be it known,
+ Hath this day from her several guardians flown.
+ Ten worthy men her several guardians be,
+ Of whom the chief and worthiest ye see,
+ As first&mdash;myself, a friar of some report,
+ Well-known, methinks, in country, town and court.
+ Who as all men can unto all men speak,
+ Well read beside in Latin and in Greek,
+ A humble soul albeit goodly preacher,
+ One apt to learn and therefore learned teacher,
+ One who can laugh betimes, betimes can pray,
+ Who'll colic cure or on the bagpipe play.
+ Who'll sing&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; cried the Reeve. &ldquo;Friar, what o'me?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Patience, O Bax, too soon I'll come to thee!
+ Who'll sing ye then blithe as a bird on bough&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Friar!&rdquo; growled the Reeve, &ldquo;the time for me is now!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;So be it, then,&rdquo; the Friar did gently say,
+ &ldquo;I'll speak of thee as truly as I may:
+ Here then behold our port-reeve, Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who, save for reason, naught in reason lacks,
+ Who, though he small and puny seems to shew,
+ In speech he is Goliath-like, I trow,
+ Chief Councillor of Tissingors is he,
+ And of the council second but&mdash;to me.
+ For with the townsfolk first of all come I&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ REEVE: Since thy fat finger is in every pie&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Saving your reverend grace,&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn said,
+ &ldquo;What of this maid that turneth green and red?&rdquo;
+
+ REEVE: Fool, then learn this, ere that our lord duke died,
+ Ten guardians for his child he did provide,
+ The Friar and I, with men of lesser fame,
+ Co-guardians are of this right puissant dame.
+
+ JOCELYN: Beseech ye, sir, now tell us an' ye may,
+ Why hath thy youthful Duchess run away?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair Fool,&rdquo; quoth the Friar, fanning himself with a frond of bracken,
+ &ldquo;'tis a hot day, a day reminiscent of the ultimate fate of graceless
+ sinners, and I am like the day and languish for breath, yet, to thy so
+ pertinent question I will, straightly and in few words, pronounce and
+ answer thee, as followeth: Our Lady Benedicta hath run away firstly,
+ brethren, for that being formed woman after Nature's goodly plan she hath
+ the wherewithal to walk, to leap, to skip or eke to run, as viz.: item and
+ to wit&mdash;legs. Secondly, inquisitorial brethren, she ran for an
+ excellent good reason&mdash;as observe&mdash;there was none to let or stay
+ her. And thirdly, gentle and eager hearers, she did flit or fly, leave,
+ vacate, or depart our goodly town of Tissingors for that she had&mdash;mark
+ me&mdash;no mind to stay, remain or abide therein. And this for the
+ following express, rare and most curious reason as&mdash;mark now&mdash;in
+ a word&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold&mdash;hold, Friar John!&rdquo; exclaimed the Reeve; &ldquo;here sit ye here
+ a-sermonising, venting words a-many what time our vanished Duchess fleeth.
+ Knew I not the contrary I should say thou didst countenance her flight and
+ spent thyself in wordy-wind wherewith to aid her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here, chancing to meet Duke Jocelyn's shrewd gaze, Friar John slowly
+ and ponderously winked one round, bright eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hark to our valiant port-reeve Greg'ry Bax
+ Who, save for reason, nought of reason lacks!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Howbeit,&rdquo; fumed the Reeve, stamping in the dust, &ldquo;here sit ye at thy
+full-bodied ease, fanning flies and animadverting&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Animadverting!&rdquo; nodded Friar John. &ldquo;A good word, Reeve, a fair, sweet
+ word; in verity a word full-bodied as I, wherefore it liketh me well. So
+ sit I here animadverting whiles thou kicketh up a dust in fashion foolish
+ and un-reeve-like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A plague o' words!&rdquo; cried the Reeve. &ldquo;A pest o' wind! Enough&mdash;enough,
+ contain thy prolixities and rodomontade and let me to the point explain&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth the Friar. &ldquo;Good sooth, here's a noble word! A word round i'
+ the mouth, rolling upon the tongue. Ha, Reeve, I give thee joy of
+ rodomontade!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thus then,&rdquo; continued the Reeve, &ldquo;I will, with use of no verbiage
+ circumlocutory, explain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho-oho!&rdquo; cried Friar John, rubbing plump hands ecstatic. &ldquo;Good Bax, ne'er
+ have I heard thee to so great advantage&mdash;verbiage circumlocutory&mdash;and
+ thou&mdash;thou such small man to boot! O most excellent, puny Reeve!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the little man turned his back upon the Friar and continued hastily
+ thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A lord there is, a lord of lofty pride,
+ Who for our lady oft hath sued and sighed&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Whom she as oft hath scornfully denied!
+
+ THE REEVE: A mighty lord who seeketh her to wife&mdash;
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Though he, 'tis said, doth lead most evil life!
+ THE REEVE: To which fair lord our wilful maid we'd wed&mdash;
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Since this fair lord the council holds in dread!
+
+ THE REEVE: But she, defying us, this very day
+ Like wicked thief hath stole herself away.
+ Thus this poor lord such deeps of gloom is in
+ Vows he'll not wash, nor shave again his chin
+ Till found is she: He groaneth, sheddeth tears&mdash;
+
+ THE FRIAR: And swears her guardians ten shall lose their ears!
+
+ THE REEVE: Wherefore are we in mighty perturbation,
+ Amazed, distraught and filled with consternation.
+ Thus do our bells ring out their wild alarms,
+ Our civic bands do muster under arms;
+ Drums shall be drummed the countryside around,
+ Until our truant Duchess we have found,
+ And we have wed this most elusive dame
+ Unto Sir Agramore of Biename.
+
+ THE FRIAR: And yield her thus to woes and bitter shame!
+
+ THE REEVE: So speak me, fellows; as ye came this way
+ Saw ye aught of this wilful, errant may?
+
+ Answered JOCELYN: &ldquo;Neither to-day nor any other day.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then,&rdquo; fumed the Reeve, &ldquo;here have we been at great expense o' breath
+ and time and all to no purpose. Come, Friar, beseech thee, let us haste to
+ begone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So Friar John got slowly to his feet
+ Complaining loud of hurry and of heat,
+ But paused behind the hasteful Reeve to linger,
+ And to plump nose he slyly laid plump finger.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now stood Sir Pertinax thoughtful, chin on fist, insomuch that Jocelyn,
+ thrumming his lute, questioned him:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Good Pertinax, how now
+ What pond'rest thou
+ With furrowed brow?
+ Thy care, Sir Knight, avow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Saith Pertinax: &ldquo;I meditate the way wondrous of woman, the frowardness of
+ creatures feminine. For mark me, sir, here is one hath guardians ten, yet
+ despite them she is fled away and they ten!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why truly, Pertinax, they are ten, so is she fled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but if they be ten that ward her and she one that would flee, how
+ shall this one flee these ten?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that they be ten.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, here be twenty eyes to watch one young maid and twenty legs to
+ pursue the same, yet doth she evade them one and all, and here's the
+ wonder on't&mdash;she's but one maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, there's the reason on't, Pertinax&mdash;she is a maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The which is great matter for wonder, lord!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoke like a very Pertinax, my Pertinax, for here's no wonder at all. For
+ perceive, the lady is young, her wardens ten grave seniors, worthy wights
+ &mdash;solemn, sober and sedate, Pertinax, wise and wearisome, grave yet
+ garrulous, and therefore they suffice not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, prithee and wherefore not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For their divers worthy attributes and because they be&mdash;ten. Now had
+ these ten been one and this one a very man&mdash;<i>the</i> man&mdash;here
+ had been no running away on part of the lady, I 'll warrant me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, my lord,&rdquo; said Pertinax, in deep perplexity, &ldquo;how judge ye so&mdash;and
+ wherefore&mdash;why and by what manner o' reasoning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Pertinax!&rdquo; laughed the Duke, &ldquo;my lovely, loveless numskull!&rdquo; So
+ saying, he kicked the good Knight full joyously and so they trudged on
+ again.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Till presently, beyond the green of trees,
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise,
+ A city fair, couched on a gentle height,
+ With walls embattled and strong towers bedight.
+ Now seeing that the sun was getting low,
+ Our travellers at quicker pace did go.
+ Thus as in haste near to the gate they came,
+ Before them limped a bent and hag-like dame,
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It beak-like wished to peck sharp chin below.
+ Humbly she crept in cloak all torn and rent,
+ And o'er a staff her tottering limbs were bent.
+ So came she to the gate, then cried in fear,
+ And started back from sudden-levelled spear;
+ For 'neath the gate lounged lusty fellows three
+ Who seldom spake yet spat right frequently.
+
+ &ldquo;Kind sirs, good sirs,&rdquo; the ancient dame did cry,
+ &ldquo;In mercy's name I pray ye let me by&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But, as she spoke, a black-jowled fellow laughed,
+ And, spitting, tripped her with out-thrust pike-shaft,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That down she fell and wailed most piteously,
+ Whereat the brawny fellows laughed all three.
+ &ldquo;Ha, witch!&rdquo; they cried, as thus she helpless lay,
+ &ldquo;Shalt know the fire and roasted be one day!&rdquo;
+ Now as the aged creature wailed and wept,
+ Forth to her side Duke Joc'lyn lightly stepped,
+ With quarter-staff a-twirl he blithely came.
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Messires, harm not this ancient dame,
+ Bethink ye how e'en old and weak as she,
+ Your wives and mothers all must one day be.
+ So here then lies your mother, and 't were meeter
+ As ye are sons that as sons ye entreat her.
+ Come, let her by and, fool-like to requite ye,
+ With merry jape and quip I will delight ye,
+ Or with sweet song I 'll charm those ass's ears,
+ And melt, belike, those bullish hearts to tears&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Now the chief warder, big and black of jowl,
+ Upon the Duke most scurvily did scowl.
+ &ldquo;How now,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;we want no fool's-heads here&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Sooth,&rdquo; laughed the Duke, &ldquo;you're fools enow 't is clear,
+ Yet there be fools and fools, ye must allow,
+ Gay fools as I and surly fools&mdash;as thou.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Ha, look 'ee, Fool, Black Lewin e'en am I,
+ And, by my head, an ill man to defy.
+ Now, motley rogue, wilt call me fool?&rdquo; he roared,
+ And roaring fierce, clapped hairy fist on sword.
+
+ &ldquo;Aye, that will I,&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn soft replied,
+ And black-avised, swart, knavish rogue beside.&rdquo;
+
+ But now, while thus our ducal jester spoke,
+ Black Lewin sprang and fetched him such a stroke
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That Jocelyn saw flash before his eyes,
+ More stars that e'er he'd noticed in the skies.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax did gaping stare,
+ Then ground his teeth and mighty oaths did swear,
+ And in an instant bared his trusty blade,
+ But then the Duke his fiery onslaught stayed.
+
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; cried the Knight, &ldquo;and wilt thou smitten be
+ By such base knave, such filthy rogue as he?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; smiled the Duke, &ldquo;stand back and watch, good brother,
+ A Rogue and Fool at buffets with each other.&rdquo;
+
+ And speaking thus, he leapt on Black Lewin,
+ And smote him twice full hard upon the chin,
+ Two goodly blows upon that big, black jowl,
+ Whereat Black Lewin lustily did howl
+ And falling back, his polished bascinet
+ With ringing clash the cold, hard flagstones met.
+ Whereat his fellows, shouting fierce alarms,
+ Incontinent betook them to their arms;
+ And thus it seemed a fight there must have been
+ But that a horseman sudden spurred between&mdash;
+ A blue-eyed youth with yellow, curling hair,
+ Of slender shape, of face and feature fair,
+ A dainty knight was he in very truth,
+ A blue-eyed, merry, laughter-loving youth.
+
+ &ldquo;Ha, knaves, what do ye with the Fool?&rdquo; lisped he,
+ &ldquo;Wilt strike a motley, dogs&mdash;a Fool? Let be!
+ Though faith, 't would seem, Sir Fool, thou hast a fist
+ That surly Lewin to his dole hath kissed.
+ If it can strum thy lute but half as well,
+ Then gestours all methinks thou should'st excel&mdash;
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ye rogues, pass Folly in, no man shall say
+ That from our town we folly turned away.
+ Come, follow, Fool, into the market-square,
+ And give us earnest of thy foolish ware.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now it was market day, and within the goodly square were people come from
+ near and far, a notable concourse, country folk and folk of the town,
+ farmers and merchants, rustic maids, fair ladies, knights and esquires on
+ horseback or a-foot, but who, hearing the jingle of the Duke's tinkling
+ bells, seeing his flaunting cock's-comb, with one accord gathered to him
+ from every quarter:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ For when this long-legged gestour they espied,
+ They, laughing, hemmed him in on every side,
+ And, &ldquo;See, a Fool! A Fool! The Fool must sing,&rdquo;
+ And &ldquo;Fool! A Fool!&rdquo; upon the air did ring,
+ Wherefore the Duke betook him to his lute,
+ And strummed until the chattering crowd was mute.
+ Then while all folk did hold their peace to hear,
+ In golden voice he sang, full rich and clear:
+
+ &ldquo;'A fool! A fool!' ye cry,
+ A fool forsooth am I.
+ But tell me, wise ones, if ye can,
+ Where shall ye find a happy man?
+ Lived there one since the world began?
+ Come, answer ye
+ To me!
+
+ &ldquo;'What of the king?' says you.
+ Says I to you&mdash;'Go to!
+ A king despite his crown and throne,
+ Hath divers troubles all his own.
+ Such woes, methinks, as are unknown
+ To such as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ &ldquo;'Ha, then&mdash;the rich!' ye cry,
+ 'Not so in truth,' says I.
+ 'The rich man's gold is load of care,
+ That day and night he needs must bear;
+ Less care he'd know if poor he were,
+ As poor as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ &ldquo;For, sirs, as I do guess
+ This thing called 'Happiness'
+ Man leaveth with his youth behind;
+ So keep ye all a youthful mind,
+ Thus happiness ye all shall find
+ If wit have ye,
+ Like me!
+
+ &ldquo;O list ye, great and small,
+ Proud knight, free man and thrall,
+ True happiness, since life began,
+ The birthright is of every man;
+ Seize then your birthright if ye can,
+ Since men are ye&mdash;
+ Like me!
+
+ &ldquo;Thus I forsooth, a Fool,
+ Do now ye wise ones school;
+ Since of my folly, full and free,
+ I wisely thus admonish ye,
+ Be wise&mdash;or eke fools learn to be
+ In verity&mdash;
+ Like me!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now when the song was ended some there were who laughed and some looked
+ grave, some talked amain and some wagged solemn heads, while many a good
+ coin rang heartily at Duke Jocelyn's feet; smiling, he bade Sir Pertinax
+ take them up, joying to see the proud Knight stooping thus to pouch the
+ money like any beggar. But now, when he would fain have gone his way into
+ the town, the people would by no means suffer it and clamoured amain on
+ all sides, insistent for more; wherefore, lifting his scarred face to the
+ sunset sky, Duke Jocelyn sang as here followeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;When man is born he doth begin
+ With right good will, to daily sin,
+ And little careth.
+ But when his grave he thinketh near,
+ Then grave he groweth in his fear
+ And sin forsweareth.
+
+ &ldquo;This life that man doth cherish so,
+ Is wondrous frail and quick to go,
+ Nor will it stay.
+ Yet where's the man that will not give
+ All that he hath so he might live
+ Another day.
+
+ &ldquo;Fain would I know the reason why
+ All men so fearful are to die
+ And upward go?
+ Since Death all woes and ills doth end,
+ Sure Death, methinks, should be a friend,
+ Not hated foe.
+
+ &ldquo;So when Death come, as come he must,
+ Grieve not that we this sorry dust
+ Do leave behind.
+ For when this fleeting life be run,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ By Death we all of us&mdash;each one,
+ True life shall find.&rdquo;
+
+ Now while he sang melodious and clear
+ Amid the throng that closer pressed to hear,
+ Duke Joc'lyn of a sudden did espy
+ The &ldquo;wherefore&rdquo; of his coming and the &ldquo;why.&rdquo;
+ Yolande herself he, singing, did behold,
+ Her eyes, red lips, her hair of ruddy gold;
+ And all her warm and glowing loveliness
+ Did sudden thus his raptured vision bless;
+ While she, in gracious ease, her horse did sit
+ That pawed round hoof and champed upon his bit,
+ Arching proud neck as if indeed he were
+ Proud of the lovely burden he did bear.
+ As Joc'lyn gazed upon her thus, she seemed
+ A thousand times more fair than he had dreamed.
+ Now while he sang, she viewed him, gentle-eyed,
+ And quite forgot the gallant by her side,
+ A tall, dark-featured, comely lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ Who, when the Duke made of his song an end
+ Did from his saddle o'er Yolanda bend.
+ With eyes on her warm beauty he stooped near
+ To touch white hand and whisper in her ear;
+ Whereat she laughed and frowned with cheek flushed red
+ Then, frowning still, she turned her horse's head,
+ And rode away with dame and squire and knight,
+ Till lost she was to Joc'lyn's ravished sight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, lord!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, as they came within a quiet thoroughfare,
+ &ldquo;this lady is grown more fair since last we saw her Queen of Beauty at
+ Melloc joust, concerning whom Fame, in troth, doth breed a just report for
+ once. But, messire, didst mark him beside her&mdash;with touch o' hand,
+ lord, whispers i' the ear&mdash;didst mark this wolf, this Seneschal, this
+ thrice accurst Sir Gui?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth,&rdquo; answered the Duke, &ldquo;but thou'rt an hungered, methinks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To touch her hand, lord&mdash;aha! To whisper in her ear, lord&mdash;oho!
+ A right puissant lord, Seneschal of Raddemore, Lord of Thorn and Knight of
+ Ells! A lord of puissance and power potential.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou, my Pertinax, art but a hungry Knight, that trampeth with a
+ hungry Fool, wherefore let us forthwith&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but mark me, lord, if this puissant lord with pomp and high estate
+ doth woo the lady&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So then, my Pertinax, will I woo this lady also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, in this thy foolish guise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, thou art like to be whipped for froward Fool and I for ragged
+ rogue, and this our adventure brought to ill and woeful end&mdash;so here
+ now is folly, lord, indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth!&rdquo; smiled the Duke,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Whereto these bells give heed.
+ But come, amend thy speed,
+ Methinks thy fasting-need
+ These gloomy vapours breed.
+ Thy inner man doth plead
+ Good beef with ale or mead
+ Wherein, thou Fool decreed,
+ I am right well agreed
+ 'T were goodly thing to feed,
+ Nor will I thee impede,
+ So follow Folly's lead
+ And food-wards we'll proceed.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 2
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How Pertinax mine host's large ears did wring,
+ And Jocelyn of these same ears did sing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now the town was full, and every inn a-throng with company&mdash;lords,
+ both great and small, knights and esquires and their several followings,
+ as archers, men-at-arms, and the like, all thither come from far and near
+ to joust at the great tournament soon to be, to honour the birthday of
+ Benedicta, Duchess of Tissingors, Ambremont, and divers other fair cities,
+ towns and villages. Thus our travellers sought lodgment in vain, whereat
+ Sir Pertinax cursed beneath his breath, and Duke Jocelyn hummed, as was
+ each his wont and custom; and ever the grim Knight's anger grew.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Until, at last, an humble inn they saw&mdash;
+ A sorry place, with bush above the door.
+ This evil place they straightway entered in,
+ Where riot reigned, the wild, unlovely din
+ Of archers, men-at-arms, and rogues yet worse,
+ Who drank and sang, whiles some did fight and curse.
+ An evil place indeed, a lawless crew,
+ And landlord, like his inn, looked evil too:
+ Small was his nose, small were his pig-like eyes,
+ But ears had he of most prodigious size,
+ A brawny rogue, thick-jowled and beetle-browed,
+ Who, spying out our strangers 'mid the crowd,
+
+ Beholding them in humble, mean array,
+ With gestures fierce did order them away.
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;here will we bide,
+ Here will we eat and drink and sleep beside.
+ Go, bring us beef, dost hear? And therewith mead,
+ And, when we've ate, good beds and clean we 'll need.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; cried the host. &ldquo;Naught unto ye I'll bring
+ Until yon Fool shall caper first and sing!&rdquo;
+ Said Jocelyn: &ldquo;I'll sing when I have fed!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, &ldquo;we will to bed!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And wilt thou so?&rdquo; the surly host replied;
+ &ldquo;No beds for likes o' ye do I provide.
+ An' ye will sleep, knave, to the stable go,
+ The straw is good enough for ye, I trow.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; roared Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;A stable? Straw?
+ This to me, thou filthy clapper-claw,
+ Thou fly-blown cod's-head, thou pestiferous thing!&rdquo;
+ And, roaring, on the brawny host did spring;
+
+ By his large ears Sir Pertinax did take him,
+ And to and fro, and up and down, did shake him;
+ He shook him quick and slow, from side to side,
+ While loud for aid the shaken landlord cried.
+ Whereat the vicious crowd, in sudden wrath,
+ Shouted and cursed and plucked their daggers forth.
+ But, ere to harm our bold Knight they were able,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lightly sprang on massy table;
+ Cock's-comb a-flaunt and silver bells a-ring,
+ He laughing stood and gaily plucked lute-string,
+ And cut an antic with such merry grace
+ That angry shouts to laughter loud gave place.
+
+ Thereafter he sang as followeth:
+
+ &ldquo;Bold bawcocks, brave, bibulous, babbling boys,
+ Tall tosspots, come, temper this tumult and noise;
+ So shall I sing sweetly such songs as shall sure
+ Constrain carking care and contumacy cure.
+ Thus, therefore&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But here the surly landlord raised much clamour and outcry, whiles he
+ touched and caressed his great ears with rare gentleness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, my yeres!&rdquo; roared he. &ldquo;My yeres do be in woeful estate. Oho, what o'
+ yon fierce-fingered rogue, good fellows, what o' yon knave&mdash;'a did
+ twist my yeres plaguily and wring 'em roguishly, 'a did! Shall 'a not be
+ beaten and drubbed out into the kennel, ha? What o' poor Nykins' yeres,
+ says I&mdash;my yeres, oho!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thine ears, unsavoury scullion,&rdquo; laughed Jocelyn; &ldquo;thine ears, forsooth?
+ Hark ye, of thy so great, so fair, so fine ears I'll incontinent make a
+ song. List ye, one and all, so shall all here now hear my song of ears!&rdquo;
+ Forthwith Duke Jocelyn struck his lute and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Thine ears, in sooth, are long ears,
+ Stout ears, in truth, and strong ears,
+ Full ears, I trow, and fair ears,
+ Round ears also and rare ears.
+ So here's an ear that all eyes here
+ Shall see no beauty in, 'tis clear.
+ For these o' thine be such ears,
+ Large, loose, and over-much ears,
+ Ears that do make fingers itch,
+ Ears to twist and ears to twitch.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ If thine ears had gone unseen,
+ Pulled forsooth they had not been;
+ Yet, since pulled indeed they were,
+ Thine ears plain the blame must bear.
+ So of thine ears no more complain,
+ Lest that thine ears be pulled again.
+ So hide thine ears as best ye may,
+ Of which same ears, to end, I say
+ Thine ears indeed be like my song,
+ Of none account, yet over long!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now hereupon was huge laughter and merriment, insomuch that the
+ thick-jowled landlord betook himself otherwhere, and all men thronged upon
+ our jester, vociferous for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but, bold tosspots,&rdquo; laughed Jocelyn, &ldquo;how now, sit ye without wine
+ in very truth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, good Fool,&rdquo; they cried. &ldquo;Here be wine a-plenty for us and for
+ thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go to, tall topers,&rdquo; quoth the Duke, &ldquo;ye are witless, in faith, for there
+ is no man here but is without wine, as in song will I shew&mdash;mark now:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Tis plain that ye are wine without,
+ Since wine's within ye, topers stout.
+ Without your wine, ye whineful show,
+ Thus wine-full, wine without ye go.
+ Being then without your wine, 'tis true,
+ Wine-less, ye still are wine-full too.
+ But, mark! As thus ye wine-full sit,
+ Since wine's within, out goeth wit.
+ Thus, truth to tell, tall topers stout,
+ Both wine and wit ye go without!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ By such tricks of rhyme, jugglery of words, and the like, Duke Jocelyn won
+ this fierce company to great good humour and delight; insomuch that divers
+ of these roysterers pressed wine upon him and money galore. But, the hour
+ growing late, he contrived at last to steal away with Sir Pertinax, which
+ last, having fed copiously, now yawned consumedly, eager for bed. Howbeit,
+ despite the Knight's fierce threats, they found no bed was to be had in
+ all the inn, and so, perforce, betook them at last to the stable.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ There, while our Knight cursed softly, though full deep,
+ Soon in the straw our Duke fell fast asleep.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, dear, I greatly fear
+ You 'll never be a poet!
+ MYSELF: Don't be too hard upon the bard,
+ I know it, girl, I know it!
+ These last two lines, I quite agree,
+ Might easily much better be.
+ Though, on the whole, I think my verse,
+ When all is said, might be much worse.
+ GILL: Worse, father? Yes, perhaps you're right,
+ Upon the whole&mdash;perhaps, it might.
+ MYSELF: But hark now, miss! Attend to this!
+ Poetic flights I do not fly;
+ When I begin, like poor Lobkyn,
+ I merely rhyme and versify.
+ Since my shortcomings I avow,
+ The story now, you must allow,
+ Trips lightly and in happy vein?
+ GILL: O, yes, father, though it is rather
+ Like some parts of your &ldquo;Beltane.&rdquo;
+ MYSELF: How, child! Dare you accuse your sire
+ Of plagiary&mdash;that sin most dire?
+ And if I do, small blame there lies;
+ It is myself I plagiarise.
+
+ GILL: Why, yes, of course! And, as you know.
+ I always loved your &ldquo;Beltane&rdquo; so.
+
+ MYSELF: But don't you like the &ldquo;geste&rdquo; I'm writing?
+
+ GILL: Of course! It's getting most exciting,
+ In spite of all the rhymes and stuff&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Stuff?
+ Enough!
+ My daughter, you're so sweetly frank.
+ Henceforth my verses shall be blank.
+ No other rhyme I'll rhyme for you
+ Till you politely beg me to.
+ Now then, your blank-verse doom you know,
+ Hey, presto, and away we go!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 3
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tell'th how Duke Jocelyn of love did sing,
+ And haughty knight in lily-pool did fling.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Upon a morn, when dewy flowers fresh-waked
+ Filled the glad air with perfume languorous,
+ And piping birds a pretty tumult made,
+ Thrilling the day with blended ecstasy;
+ When dew in grass did light a thousand fires,
+ And gemmed the green in flashing bravery&mdash;
+ Forth of her bower the fair Yolanda came,
+ Fresh as the morn and, like the morning, young,
+ Who, as she breathed the soft and fragrant air,
+ Felt her white flesh a-thrill with joyous life,
+ And heart that leapt responsive to the joy.
+ Vivid with life she trod the flowery ways,
+ Dreaming awhile of love and love and love;
+ Unknowing all of eyes that watched unseen,
+ Viewing her body's gracious loveliness:
+ Her scarlet mouth, her deep and dreamful eyes,
+ The glowing splendour of her sun-kissed hair,
+ Which in thick braids o'er rounded bosom fell
+ Past slender waist by jewelled girdle bound.
+
+ So stood Duke Jocelyn amid the leaves,
+ And marked how, as she walked, her silken gown
+ Did cling her round in soft embrace, as though
+ Itself had sense and wit enough to love her.
+ Entranced he stood, bound by her beauty's spell,
+ Whereby it seemed he did in her behold
+ The beauty of all fair and beauteous things.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now leaned she o'er a pool where lilies pale
+ Oped their shy beauties to the gladsome day,
+ Yet in their beauty none of them so fair
+ As that fair face the swooning waters held.
+ And as, glad-eyed, she viewed her loveliness,
+ She fell to singing, soft and low and sweet,
+ Clear and full-throated as a piping merle,
+ And this the manner of her singing was:
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? Ah, who shall say?
+ Flower to languish in a day,
+ Bird on wing that will away.
+ Love, I do defy thee!
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? A toy so vain
+ 'T is but found to lose again,
+ Painful sweet and sweetest pain;
+ Ah, love, come not nigh me.
+
+ &ldquo;But, love, an thou com'st to me,
+ Wert thou as I'd have thee be,
+ Welcome sweet I'd make for thee,
+ And weary of thee never.
+
+ &ldquo;If with thy heart thou could'st endure,
+ If thou wert strong and thou wert sure,
+ A master now, and now a wooer,
+ Thy slave I'd be for ever.&rdquo;
+
+ Thus sang she sweet beside the lily-pool,
+ Unknowing any might her singing hear,
+ When rose another voice, so rich, so full
+ As thrilled her into rapt and pleasing wonder;
+ And as she hearkened to these deep-sung words,
+ She flushed anon and dimpled to a smile:
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Bird of joy to sing alway,
+ Deep in the heart of me.
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? A joyous pain
+ That I ne'er may lose again,
+ Since for ever I am fain
+ To think and dream of thee.&rdquo;
+
+ Now hasted she to part the leafy screen,
+ And one in motley habit thus beheld.
+ But when 'neath flaunting cock's-comb she did mark
+ His blemished face, she backward from him drew
+ And caught her breath, and yet upon him gazed
+ 'Neath wrinkled brow, the while Duke Jocelyn
+ Read the expected horror in her eyes:
+ Wherefore he bowed his head upon his breast
+ And plucked at belt with sudden, nervous hand
+ As, cold and proud and high, she questioned him:
+ &ldquo;What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show
+ A visage that might shame the gladsome day?&rdquo;
+
+ Whereto he answered, low and humble-wise:
+ &ldquo;A Fool! The very fool of fools am I&mdash;
+ A Fool that fain would pluck the sun from heaven.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Begone!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;Thy look doth make me cold,
+ E'en as I stand thus i' the kindly sun.
+ Yet, an thou 'rt poor as thy mean habit speaks thee,
+ Take first this dole for tender Jesu's sake.&rdquo;
+
+ Then answered Jocelyn on lowly knee:
+ &ldquo;For thy sweet bounty I do thank thee well,
+ But, in good sooth, so great a fool am I,
+ 'Stead of thy gold I rather would possess
+
+ Yon happy flower that in thy bosom bloometh.
+ Give me but this and richer fool am I
+ Than any knight-like fool that coucheth lance&mdash;
+ Greater I than any lord soever,
+ Aye&mdash;e'en Duke Jocelyn of Brocelaunde.&rdquo;
+
+ Smiled now Yolande with rosy lip up-curving,
+ While in soft cheek a roguish dimple played.
+ Quoth she: &ldquo;Duke Jocelyn, I've heard it said,
+ Is great and rich, a mighty man-at-arms,
+ And thou but sorry Fool in mean array,
+ Yet&rdquo;&mdash;from white fingers she let fall the flower&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Be thou, Fool, greater than this mighty Duke!
+ And now, since mighty Fool and rich I've made thee,
+ In quittance I would win of thee a song.&rdquo;
+
+ Now sat Yolande, white chin on dimpled fist,
+ Viewing him o'er with cruel, maiden-eyes,
+ So swift to heed each outward mark and blemish
+ (Since maids be apt to sly disparagement,
+ And scorn of all that seems un-beautiful)
+ While he did lean him by the marble rim,
+ His wistful gaze down-bent upon the pool,
+ Feeling her look and knowing while she looked:
+ What time he touched his lute with fingers skilled,
+ And so fell singing, wonder-low and sweet:
+
+ &ldquo;Though foul and harsh of face am I,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O lady!
+ Fair thoughts within my heart may lie,
+ As flowers that bloom unseen to die,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O lady!
+
+ &ldquo;Though this my hateful face may fright thee,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O list!
+ My folly mayhap shall delight thee,
+ A song of fools I will recite thee,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O list!&rdquo;
+
+ Herewith he sighed amain, but smiled anon,
+ And fell anon to blither, louder note:
+
+ &ldquo;Sing hey, Folly&mdash;Folly ho,
+ And here's a song of Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun,
+ Will gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.
+
+ &ldquo;And Fool, forsooth, a Fool am I,
+ Well learned in foolish lore:
+ For I can sing ye, laugh or sigh:
+ Can any man do more?
+ Hey, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ 'Gainst sadness bar the door.
+
+ &ldquo;A Fool am I, yet by fair leave,
+ Poor Fools have hearts to feel.
+ Poor Fools, like other fools, may grieve
+ If they their woes conceal.
+ Hither, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ All Fools to Folly kneel.
+
+ &ldquo;What though a Fool be melancholy,
+ Sick, sick at heart&mdash;heigho!
+ Pain must he hide 'neath laughing Folly,
+ What Fool should heed his woe!
+ Hither, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ Fool must unpitied go.
+
+ &ldquo;E'en though a Fool should fondly woo,
+ E'en though his love be high,
+ Poor Folly's fool must wear the rue,
+ Proud love doth pass him by.
+ Heigho, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ Poor Fool may love&mdash;and die.
+
+ &ldquo;Though Wisdom should in motley go,
+ And fools the wise man ape;
+ Who is there that shall Wisdom know
+ Beneath a 'scalloped cape?
+ Heigho, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ Life is but sorry jape.
+
+ &ldquo;So, hey, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ And here's a song o' Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun
+ Do gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.&rdquo;
+
+ The singing done, she viewed him kinder-eyed,
+ Till eyes met eyes&mdash;when she did pout and frown,
+ And chid him that his song was something sad,
+ And vowed so strange a Fool was never seen.
+ Then did she question him in idle wise
+ As, who he was and whence he came and why?
+ Whereto the Duke&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL:
+
+ Dear father, if you're in the vein,
+ I'd like a little rhyme again;
+ For blank verse is so hard to read,
+ And yours is very blank indeed!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ Girl, when blank verse I write for thee,
+ I write it blank as blank can be.
+ Stay, I'll declare (no poet franker)
+ No blank verse, Gill, was ever blanker.
+ But:
+ Since, with your sex's sweet inconstancy,
+ Rhymes now you wish, rhymes now I'll
+ rhyme for thee:
+ As thus, my dear&mdash;
+ Give ear:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereto the Duke did instant make reply:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sweet lady, since you question me,
+ Full blithely I will answer thee;
+ And, since you fain would merry be,
+ I'll sing and rhyme it merrily:
+
+ &ldquo;Since Mirth's my trade and follies fond,
+ Methinks a fair name were Joconde;
+ And for thy sake
+ I travail make
+ Through briar and brake,
+ O'er fen and lake,
+ The Southward March beyond.
+
+ &ldquo;For I an embassage do bear,
+ Now unto thee, Yolande the fair,
+ Which embassy,
+ Now unto thee,
+ Right soothfully,
+ And truthfully,
+ Most full, most free,
+ Explicit I 'll declare.
+
+ &ldquo;Thus: videlicit and to wit,
+ Sith now thou art to wedlock fit&mdash;
+ Both day and night
+ In dark, in light
+ A worthy knight,
+ A lord of might,
+ In his own right,
+ Duke Joc'lyn hight
+ To thine his heart would knit.
+
+ &ldquo;But, since the Duke may not come to thee,
+ I, in his stead, will humbly sue thee;
+ His love each day
+ I will portray
+ As best I may;
+ I'll sue, I'll pray,
+ I'll sing, I'll play,
+ Now grave, now gay,
+ And in this way,
+ I for the Duke will woo thee.&rdquo;
+
+ Now, fair Yolanda gazed with wide-oped eyes,
+ And checked sweet breath for wonder and surprise;
+ Then laughed full blithe and yet, anon, did frown,
+ And with slim fingers plucked at purfled gown:
+
+ &ldquo;And is it thou&mdash;a sorry Fool,&rdquo; she cried.
+ &ldquo;Art sent to win this mighty Duke a bride?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;E'en so!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Whereof I token bring;
+ Behold, fair maid, Duke Joc'lyn's signet ring.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Heaven's love!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;And can it truly be
+ The Duke doth send a mountebank like thee,
+ A Fool that hath nor likelihood nor grace
+ From worn-out shoon unto thy blemished face&mdash;
+ A face so scarred&mdash;so hateful that meseems
+ At night 't will haunt and fright me with ill dreams;
+ A slave so base&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;E'en so!&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ And his marred visage 'neath his hood did hide.
+ &ldquo;But, though my motley hath thy pride distressed,
+ I am the Fool Duke Joc'lyn loveth best.
+ And&mdash;ah, my lady, thou shalt never see
+ In all this world a Fool the like of me!&rdquo;
+
+ Thus spake the Duke, and then awhile stood mute,
+ And idly struck sweet chords upon his lute,
+ Watching Yolande's fair, frowning face the while,
+ With eyes that held a roguish, wistful smile.
+ She, meeting now these eyes of laughing blue,
+ Felt her cheeks burn, and sudden angry grew.
+
+ So up she rose in proud and stately fashion,
+ And stamped slim foot at him in sudden passion;
+ And vowed that of Duke Joc'lyn she cared naught;
+ That if he'd woo, by him she must be sought;
+ Vowed if he wooed his wooing should be vain,
+ And, as he came, he back should go again.
+ &ldquo;For, since the Duke,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;dare send to me
+ A sorry wight, a very Fool like thee,
+ By thy Fool's mouth I bid thee to him say,
+ He ne'er shall win me, woo he as he may;
+ Say that I know him not&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; spake Duke Joc'lyn soft,
+ &ldquo;E'er this, methinks, thou'st seen my lord full oft.
+ When at the joust thou wert fair Beauty's queen
+ Duke Joc'lyn by thy hand oft crowned hath been.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;True, Fool,&rdquo; she answered, 'twixt a smile and frown,
+ &ldquo;I've seen him oft, but with his vizor down.
+ And verily he is a doughty knight,
+ But wherefore doth he hide his face from sight?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;His face?&rdquo; quoth Joc'lyn with a gloomy look,
+ &ldquo;His face, alack!&rdquo; And here his head he shook;
+ &ldquo;His face, ah me!&rdquo; And here Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ &ldquo;His face&mdash;&rdquo; &ldquo;What of his face?&rdquo; Yolanda cried.
+ &ldquo;A mercy's name, speak&mdash;speak and do not fail.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; sighed Joc'lyn, &ldquo;thereby hangs a tale,
+ The which, though strange it sound, is verity,
+ That here and now I will relate to thee&mdash;
+ 'T is ditty dire of dismal doating dames,
+ A lay of love-lorn, loveless languishment,
+ And ardent, amorous, anxious anguishment,
+ Full-fed forsooth of fierce and fiery flames;
+ So hark,
+ And mark:
+ In Brocelaunde not long ago,
+ Was born Duke Jocelyn. I trow
+ Not all the world a babe could show,
+ A babe so near divine:
+ For, truth to tell,
+ He waxed so well,
+ So fair o' face,
+ So gay o' grace,
+ That people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Where'er he went,
+ In wonderment
+ Would stare and stare
+ To see how fair
+ A lad was Jocelyn.
+
+ And when to man's estate he came,
+ Alack, fair lady, 't was the same!
+ And many a lovely, love-lorn dame
+ Would pitiful pant and pine.
+ These doleful dames
+ Felt forceful flames,
+ The old, the grey,
+ The young and gay,
+ Both dark and fair
+ Would rend their hair,
+ And sigh and weep
+ And seldom sleep;
+ And dames long wed
+ From spouses fled
+ For love of Jocelyn.
+
+ Therefore the Duke an oath did take
+ By one, by two, by three,
+ That for these love-lorn ladies' sake
+ No maid his face should see.
+ And thus it is, where'er he rideth
+ His love-begetting face he hideth.&rdquo;
+
+ Now laughed Yolande, her scorn forgotten quite,
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Poor Duke! O woeful plight!
+ And yet, O Fool, good Fool, full fain am I,
+ This ducal, love-begetting face to spy&mdash;&rdquo;
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: &ldquo;Then, my lady, prithee, look!&rdquo;
+ And from his bosom he a picture took.
+
+ &ldquo;Since this poor face of mine doth so affright thee
+ Here's one of paint that mayhap shall delight thee.
+ Take it, Yolande, for thee the craftsmen wrought it,
+ For thee I from Duke Jocelyn have brought it.
+ If day and night thou 'lt wear it, fair Yolande,&rdquo;
+ And speaking thus, he gave it to her hand.
+ Its golden frame full many a jewel bore,
+ But 't was the face, the face alone she saw.
+ And viewing it, Yolanda did behold
+ A manly face, yet of a god-like mould.
+ Breathless she sate, nor moved she for a space,
+ Held by the beauty of this painted face;
+ 'Neath drooping lash she viewed it o'er and o'er,
+ And ever as she gazed new charms she saw.
+ Then, gazing yet, &ldquo;Who&mdash;what is this?&rdquo; she sighed.
+ &ldquo;Paint, lady, paint!&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn straight replied,
+ &ldquo;The painted visage of my lord it shows&mdash;
+ Item: one mouth, two eyes and eke a nose&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;here's a face, meseems,
+ I oft have seen ere now within my dreams;
+ These dove-soft eyes in dreams have looked on me!&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: &ldquo;Yet these eyes can nothing see!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;These tender lips in accents sweet I've heard!&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: &ldquo;Yet&mdash;they ne'er have spoke a word!
+ But here's a face at last doth please thee well
+ Yet hath no power to speak, see, sigh or smell,
+ Since tongueless, sightless, breathless 't is&mdash;thus I
+ A sorry Fool its needs must e'en supply.
+ And whiles thou doatest on yon painted head
+ My tongue I'll lend to woo thee in its stead.
+ I'll woo with wit
+ As seemeth fit,
+ Whiles there thou sit
+ And gaze on it.
+ Whiles it ye see
+ Its voice I'll be
+ And plead with thee,
+ So hark to me:
+ Yolande, I love thee in true loving way;
+ That is, I'll learn to love thee more each day,
+ Until so great my growing love shall grow,
+ This puny world in time 't will overflow.
+ To-day I love, and yet my love is such
+ That I to-morrow shall have twice as much.
+ Thus lovingly to love thee I will learn
+ Till thou shalt learn Love's lesson in thy turn,
+ And find therein how sweet this world can be
+ When as I love, thou, love, shall so love me.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush!&rdquo; she sighed, and to her ruddy lip
+ She sudden pressed one rosy finger-tip.
+ And then, O happy picture! Swift from sight
+ She hid it in her fragrant bosom white.
+ &ldquo;O Fool,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;get thee behind yon tree,
+ And thou a very Fool indeed shall see,
+ A knightly fool who sighs and groans in verse
+ And oft-times woos in song, the which is worse.&rdquo;
+ For now they heard a voice that sung most harsh,
+ That shrilled and croaked like piping frog in marsh,
+ A voice that near and ever nearer drew
+ Until the lordly singer strode in view.
+ A noble singer he, both tall and slender,
+
+ With locks be-curled and clad in pompous splendour;
+ His mantle of rich velvet loose did flow,
+ As if his gorgeous habit he would show;
+ A jewelled bonnet on his curls he bore,
+ With nodding feather bravely decked before;
+ He was a lover very <i>point de vice</i>,
+ And all about him, save his voice, was nice.
+ Thus loudly sang, with lungs both sound and strong
+ This worthy knight, Sir Palamon of Tong.
+
+ &ldquo;O must I groan
+ And make my moan
+ And live alone alway?
+ Yea, I must sigh
+ And droop and die,
+ If she reply, nay, nay!
+
+ &ldquo;I groan for thee,
+ I moan for thee,
+ Alone for thee I pine.
+ All's ill for me
+ Until for me
+ She will for me be mine.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But now, beholding Yolande amid her flowers, herself as sweet and fresh as
+ they, he made an end of his singing and betook him, straightway, to
+ amorous looks and deep-fetched sighs together with many supple bendings of
+ the back, elegant posturings and motitions of slim legs, fannings and
+ flauntings of be-feathered cap, and the like gallantries; and thereafter
+ fell to his wooing on this fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady, O lady of lovely ladies most loved! Fair lady of hearts, sweet dame
+ of tenderness, tender me thine ears, suffer one, hath sighed and suffered
+ for sake of thee, to sightful sue. Lovely thou art and therefore to be
+ loved, and day and night thou and Love the sum of my excogitations art,
+ wherefore I, with loving art, am hither come to woo thee, since, lady, I
+ do love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack, Sir Palamon!&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;and is it so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;so it is. Yest're'en I did proclaim thee fairer
+ than all fair ladies; to-day thou art yet fairer, thus this day thou art
+ fairer than thyself; the which, though a paradox, is yet wittily true and
+ truly witty, methinks. But as for me&mdash;for me, alas for me! I am
+ forsooth the very slave of love, fettered fast by Dan Cupid, a slave
+ grievous and woeful, yet, being thy slave, joying in my slavery and happy
+ in my grievous woe. Thus it is I groan and moan, lady; I pine, repine and
+ pine again most consumedly. I sleep little and eat less, I am, in fine and
+ in all ways, 'haviours, manners, customs, feints and fashions soever, thy
+ lover manifest, confessed, subject, abject, in season and out of season,
+ yearly, monthly, daily, hourly, and by the minute. Moreover&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beseech thee!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;Oh, beseech thee, take thy breath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, 'tis done, lady, 'tis done, and now forthwith resolved am I to
+ sing thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I pray you, sir, sing no more, but resolve me this mystery. What is
+ love?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love, lady? Verily that will I in truth!&rdquo; And herewith Sir Palamon fell
+ to an attitude of thought with eyes ecstatic, with knitted brows and sage
+ nodding of the head. &ldquo;Love, my lady&mdash;ha! Love, lady is&mdash;hum!
+ Love, then, perceive me, is of its nature elemental, being of the
+ elements, as 'twere, composed and composite, as water, air and fire. For,
+ remark me, there is no love but begetteth first water, which is tears;
+ air, which is sighings and groanings; and fire, which is heart-burnings
+ and the like. Thus is love a passion elemental. But yet, and heed me,
+ lady, love is also metaphysical, being a motition of the soul and e'en the
+ spirit, and being of the spirit 'tis ghostly, and being ghostly 'tis&mdash;ha!
+ Who comes hither to shatter the placid mirror of my thoughts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, the noble knight of Tong turned to behold one who strode
+ towards them in haste, a tall man this whose black brows scowled fierce
+ upon the day, and who spurned the tender flowers with foot ungentle as he
+ came.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A tall, broad-shouldered, haughty lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ At sight of whom, Yolanda's laughter failed,
+ And in her cheek the rosy colour paled.
+
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Sir Palamon, now of thy grace,
+ And of thy courteous friendship yield me place,
+ To this fair lady I a word would say.
+ Thus do I for thy courteous-absence pray,
+ I am thy friend, Sir Knight, as thou dost know,
+ But&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; quoth Sir Palamon, &ldquo;I go&mdash;
+ Friendship methinks is a most holy bond,
+ A bond I hold all binding bonds beyond,
+ And thou 'rt a friend right potent, my lord Gui,
+ So to thy will I willingly comply.
+ Thus, since thy friendship I hold passing dear,
+ Thou need but ask&mdash;and lo! I am not here.&rdquo;
+ Thus having said, low bowed this courtly knight,
+ Then turned about and hasted out of sight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, my lady,&rdquo; quoth Sir Gui, frowning upon her loveliness, &ldquo;and now
+ having discharged yon gaudy wind-bag, what of this letter I did receive
+ but now&mdash;behold it!&rdquo; and speaking, he snatched a crumpled missive
+ from his bosom. &ldquo;Behold it, I say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, my lord, I do,&rdquo; she answered, proud and disdainful; &ldquo;it is,
+ methinks, my answer to thy loathèd suit&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Loathèd!&rdquo; he cried, and caught her slender wrist,
+ And held it so, crushed in his cruel fist;
+ But proud she faced him, shapely head raised high.
+ &ldquo;Most loathèd, my lord!&rdquo; she, scornful, made reply.
+ &ldquo;For rather than I'd wed myself with thee,
+ The wife of poorest, humblest slave I'd be,
+ Or sorriest fool that tramps the dusty way&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ha! Dare thou scorn me so?&rdquo; Sir Gui did say,
+ &ldquo;Then I by force&mdash;by force will sudden take thee,
+ And slave of love, my very slave I 'll make thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Out from the leaves Duke Joc'lyn thrust his head,
+ &ldquo;O fie! Thou naughty, knavish knight!&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;O tush! O tush! O tush again&mdash;go to!
+ 'T is windy, whining, wanton way to woo.
+ What tushful talk is this of 'force' and 'slaves',
+ Thou naughty, knavish, knightly knave of knaves?
+ Unhand the maid&mdash;loose thy offensive paw!&rdquo;
+ Round sprang Sir Gui, and, all astonished, saw
+ A long-legged jester who behind him stood
+ With head out-thrust, grim-smiling 'neath his hood.
+
+ &ldquo;Plague take thee, Fool! Out o' my sight!&rdquo; growled he,
+ &ldquo;Or cropped thine ugly nose and ears shall be.
+ Begone, base rogue! Haste, dog, and get thee hence,
+ Thy folly pleadeth this thy Fool's offence&mdash;
+
+ Yet go, or of thy motley shalt be stripped,
+ And from the town I 'll have thee shrewdly whipped,
+ For Lord of Ells and Raddemore am I,
+ Though folk, I've heard, do call me 'Red Sir Gui,'
+ Since blood is red and&mdash;I am Gui the Red.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Red Gui?&rdquo; quoth Joc'lyn. &ldquo;Art thou Gui the dread&mdash;
+ Red Gui&mdash;in faith? Of him Dame Rumour saith,
+ His ways be vile but viler still&mdash;his breath.
+ Now though a life vile lived is thing most ill,
+ Yet some do think a vile breath viler still.&rdquo;
+
+ Swift, swift as lightning from a summer sky,
+ Out flashed the vengeful dagger of Sir Gui,
+ And darting with a deadly stroke and fierce,
+ Did Joc'lyn's motley habit rend and pierce,
+ Whereat with fearful cry up sprang Yolande,
+ But this strange jester did grim-smiling stand.
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Messire, a fool in very truth,
+ The fool of foolish fools he'd be, in sooth,
+ Who'd play a quip or so, my lord, with thee
+ Unless in triple armour dight were he;
+ And so it is this jester doth not fail
+ With such as thou to jest in shirt of mail.
+ Now since my heart thy foolish point hath missed
+ Thy dagger&mdash;thus I answer&mdash;with my fist!&rdquo;
+ Then swift he leapt and, even as he spoke,
+ He fetched the knight so fierce and fell a stroke
+ That, reeling, on the greensward sank Sir Gui,
+ And stared, wide-eyed, unseeing, at the sky.
+ Right firmly then upon his knightly breast
+ Duke Joc'lyn's worn and dusty shoe did rest,
+ And while Yolande stood white and dumb with fear,
+ Thus sang the Duke full blithely and full clear:
+
+ &ldquo;Dirt thou art since thou art dust,
+ And shalt to dust return;
+ Meanwhile Folly as he lust
+ Now thy base dust doth spurn.
+
+ &ldquo;Yea, lord, though thy rank be high,
+ One day, since e'en lords must die,
+ Under all men's feet thou'lt lie.&rdquo;
+
+ Now, fierce, Sir Gui did curse the Fool amain,
+ And, cursing, strove his dagger to regain.
+ But Joc'lyn stooped, in mighty arms he swung him,
+ And down into the lily-pool he flung him.
+
+ With splash resounding fell the noble knight,
+ Then gurgling rose in damp and sorry plight,
+ Whiles Joc'lyn, leaning o'er the marble rim,
+ With lifted finger thus admonished him:
+
+ &ldquo;Red Gui,
+ Dread Gui,
+ Lest a dead Gui,
+ Gui, I make of thee,
+ Understand, Gui,
+ Fair Yolande, Gui,
+ Humbly wooed must be.
+
+ &ldquo;So, Gui,
+ Know, Gui,
+ Ere thou go, Gui,
+ Gui they call the Red;
+ And thou'lt woo, Gui,
+ Humbly sue, Gui,
+ Lest Love strike thee dead.
+
+ &ldquo;Now while thou flound'rest in yon pool,
+ Learn thou this wisdom of a Fool;
+ Cold water oft can passion cool
+ And fiery ardours slake;
+ Thus, sir, since water quencheth fire,
+ So let it soothe away thine ire.
+ Then&mdash;go seek thee garments drier
+ Lest a rheum thou take.&rdquo;
+
+ Sir Gui did gasp, and gasping, strove to curse,
+ Whereat he, gasping, did but gasp the worse,
+ Till, finding he could gasp, but nothing say,
+ He shook clenched fist and, gasping, strode away.
+ Then Joc'lyn turned and thus beheld Yolande,
+ Who trembling all and pale of cheek did stand.
+
+ &ldquo;O Fool!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;Poor Fool, what hast
+ thou done?&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Yolande, to woo thee I've begun,
+ I better might have wooed, it is most true,
+ If other wooers had not wooed thee too.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;O beware&mdash;beware!
+ Death&mdash;death for thee is in the very air.
+ From Canalise, in haste, I bid thee fly,
+ For 'vengeful lord and cruel is Sir Gui.
+ Take now this gold to aid thee on thy way,
+ And for thy life upon my knees I'll pray,
+ And with the holy angels intercede
+ To comfort thee and aid thee in thy need.
+ And so&mdash;farewell! &ldquo;Thus, speaking, turned Yolande.
+ But Joc'lyn stayed her there with gentle hand,
+ Whereat she viewed him o'er in mute surprise,
+ To see the radiant gladness of his eyes.
+
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Yolande, since thou wilt pray for me,
+ Of thy sweet prayers fain would I worthy be.
+ This I do know&mdash;let Death come when he may,
+ The love I bear thee shall live on alway.
+
+ Nor will I strive to leave grim Death behind me,
+ Since when Death wills methinks he sure will find me;
+ As in the world Death roameth everywhere,
+ Who flees him here perchance shall meet him there.
+ Here, then, I'll bide&mdash;let what so will betide me,
+ Thy prayers like holy angels, watch beside me.
+ So all day long and in thy pretty sleeping
+ 'Till next we meet the Saints have thee in keeping.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: The last part seems to me much better.
+ I like Yolande, I hope he'll get her.
+
+ MYSELF: Patience, my dear, he's hardly met her.
+
+ GILL: I think it would be rather nice
+ To make him kiss her once or twice.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll make him kiss her well, my dear,
+ When he begins&mdash;but not just here.
+ I'll later see what I can do
+ In this matter to please you.
+
+ GILL: And then I hope, that by and by
+ He kills that frightful beast, Sir Gui.
+
+ MYSELF: Yes, I suppose, we ought to slay him,
+ For all his wickedness to pay him.
+
+ GILL: And Pertinax, I think&mdash;don't you?
+ Should have a lady fair to woo.
+ To see him in love would be perfectly clipping.
+ It's a corking idea, and quite awfully ripping&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: If you use such vile slang, miss, I vow I will not&mdash;
+
+ GILL: O, Pax, father! I'm sorry; I almost forgot.
+
+ MYSELF: Very well, if my warning you'll bear well
+ in mind,
+ A fair damsel for Pertinax I 'll try to find.
+
+ GILL: Then make her, father, make her quick,
+ I always knew you were a brick.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 4
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How Pertinax plied angle to his sport
+ And, catching him no fish, fish-like was caught.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ By sleepy stream where bending willows swayed,
+ And, from the sun, a greeny twilight made,
+ Sir Pertinax, broad back against a tree,
+ Lolled at his ease and yawned right lustily.
+ In brawny fist he grasped a rod or angle,
+ With hook wherefrom sad worm did, writhing, dangle.
+ Full well he loved the piscatorial sport,
+ Though he as yet no single fish had caught.
+ Hard by, in easy reach upon the sward,
+ Lay rusty bascinet and good broadsword.
+ Thus patiently the good Knight sat and fished,
+ Yet in his heart most heartily he wished
+ That he, instead of fishing, snug had been
+ Seated within his goodly tower of Shene.
+ And thinking thus, he needs must cast his eye
+ On rusty mail, on battered shoon, and sigh,
+ And murmur fitful curses and lament
+ That in such base, unknightly garb he went&mdash;
+ A lord of might whose broad shield bravely bore
+ Of proud and noble quarterings a score.
+ &ldquo;And 't was forsooth for foolish ducal whim
+ That he must plod abroad in such vile trim!&rdquo;
+ Revolving thus, his anger sudden woke,
+ And, scowling, to the unseen fish he spoke:
+
+ &ldquo;A Duke! A Fool! A fool-duke, by my head!
+ Who, clad like Fool, like Fool will fain be wed,
+
+ For ass and dolt and fool of fools is he
+ Who'll live in bondage to some talk-full she.
+ Yet, if he'll wed, why i' the foul fiend's name,
+ Must he in motley seek the haughty dame?&rdquo;
+
+ But now, while he did on this problem dwell,
+ Two unexpected happenings befell:
+ A fish to nibble on the worm began,
+ And to him through the green a fair maid ran.
+ Fast, fast amid the tangled brake she fled,
+ Her cheeks all pale, her dark eyes wide with dread;
+ But Pertinax her beauty nothing heeded,
+ Since both his eyes to watch his fish were needed;
+ But started round with sudden, peevish snort
+ As in slim hands his brawny fist she caught;
+ &ldquo;Ha, maid!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;Why must thou come this way
+ To spoil my sport and fright mine fish away?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;O man&mdash;O man, if man thou art,&rdquo; she gasped,
+ &ldquo;Save me!&rdquo; And here his hand she closer grasped,
+ But even now, as thus she breathless spake,
+ Forth of the wood three lusty fellows brake;
+ Goodly their dress and bright the mail they wore,
+ While on their breasts a falcon-badge they bore.
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried one. &ldquo;Yon dirty knave she's met!&rdquo;
+ Sir Pertinax here donned his bascinet.
+ &ldquo;But one poor rogue shan't let us!&rdquo; t' other roared.
+ Sir Pertinax here reached and drew his sword.
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; cried the third, &ldquo;let's at him now all three!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Pertinax: &ldquo;Maid, get thee 'hind yon tree,
+ For now, methinks, hast found me better sport
+ Than if, forsooth, yon plaguy fish I'd caught.&rdquo;
+ So saying, up he rose and, eyes a-dance
+ He 'gainst the three did joyously advance,
+ With sword that flashed full bright, but brighter yet
+ The eyes beneath his rusty bascinet;
+
+ While aspect bold and carriage proud and high,
+ Did plainly give his mean array the lie.
+ Thus, as he gaily strode to meet the three,
+ In look and gesture all proud knight was he;
+ Beholding which, the maid forgot her dread,
+ And, 'stead of pale, her cheek glowed softly red.
+
+ Now at the three Sir Pertinax did spring,
+ And clashing steel on steel did loudly ring,
+ Yet Pertinax was one and they were three,
+ And once was, swearing, smitten to his knee,
+ Whereat the maid hid face in sudden fear,
+ And, kneeling so, fierce cries and shouts did hear,
+ The sounds of combat dire, and deadly riot
+ Lost all at once and hushed to sudden quiet,
+ And glancing up she saw to her amaze
+ Three rogues who fleetly ran three several ways,
+ Three beaten rogues who fled with one accord,
+ While Pertinax, despondent, sheathed his sword.
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;'Tis shame that they should run
+ Ere that to fight the rogues had scarce begun!&rdquo;
+ So back he came, his rod and line he took,
+ And gloomed to find no worm upon his hook.
+ But now the maiden viewed him gentle-eyed;
+ &ldquo;Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!&rdquo; she sighed,
+ &ldquo;Thou, like true knight, hast fought for me today&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And the fish,&rdquo; sighed he, &ldquo;have stole my worm away,
+ Which is great pity, since my worms be few!&rdquo;
+ And here the Knight's despond but deeper grew.
+ &ldquo;Yon rogues,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;no stomach had for fight,
+ Yet scared the fish that had a mind to bite!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;But thou hast saved me, noble man!&rdquo; said she.
+ &ldquo;So must I use another worm!&rdquo; sighed he.
+
+ And straightway with his fishing he proceeded
+ While sat the maid beside him all unheeded;
+ Whereat she frowned and, scornful, thus did speak
+ With angry colour flaming in her cheek:
+ &ldquo;What man art thou that canst but fight and fish?
+ Hast thou no higher thought, no better wish?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Certes,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;I would I had indeed
+ A goodly pot of foaming ale or mead.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;O base, most base!&rdquo; the maid did scornful cry,
+ And viewed him o'er with proud, disdainful eye.
+ &ldquo;That I should owe my life to man like thee!
+ That one so base could fight and master three!
+ Who art thou, man, and what? Speak me thy name,
+ Whither ye go and why, and whence ye came,
+ Thy rank, thy state, thy worth to me impart,
+ If soldier, serf, or outlawed man thou art;
+ And why 'neath ragged habit thou dost wear
+ A chain of gold such as but knights do bear,
+ Why thou canst front three armed rogues unafraid,
+ Yet fear methinks to look upon a maid?&rdquo;
+
+ But to these questions Pertinax sat dumb&mdash;
+ That is, he rubbed his chin and murmured, &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo;
+ Whereat she, frowning, set determined chin
+ And thus again to question did begin:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ SHE: What manner of man art thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: A man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: A soldier?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Thou sayest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Art in service?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Truly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Whom serve ye?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: A greater than I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Art thou wed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: The Saints forfend!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then art a poor soldier and solitary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I might be richer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: What dost thou fishing here?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And why didst fight three men for me&mdash;a maid unknown?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: For lack of better employ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Rude soldier&mdash;whence comest thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Fair maiden, from beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Gross Knight, whither goest thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Dainty damosel, back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Dost lack aught?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Quiet!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: How, would'st have me hold my peace, ill fellow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: 'T would be a marvel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Wherefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Thou'rt a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And thou a man, ill-tongued, ill-beseen, ill-mannered, unlovely, and
+ I like thee not!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: And what is worse, the fish bite not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here, and very suddenly, she fell a-weeping, to the Knight's no small
+ discomfiture, though she wept in fashion wondrous apt and pretty;
+ wherefore Sir Pertinax glanced at her once, looked twice and, looking,
+ scratched his ear, rubbed his chin and finally questioned her in turn:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Distressful damosel, wherefore this dole? SHE: For that I am weary,
+ woeful and solitary. And thou&mdash;thou'rt harsh of look, rough of
+ tongue, ungentle of&mdash;HE: Misfortunate maiden, thy loneliness is soon
+ amended, get thee to thy friends&mdash;thy gossips, thy&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: I have none. And thou'rt fierce and ungentle of face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she wept the more piteously and Sir Pertinax, viewing her distress,
+ forgot his hook and worm, wherefore a fish nibbled it slyly, while the
+ Knight questioned her further:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Woeful virgin, whence comest thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: From afar. And thou art ofeatures grim and&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: And whither would'st journey?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: No where! And thou art&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Nay, here is thing impossible, since being here thou art somewhere and
+ that within three bowshots of the goodly town of Canalise wherein thou
+ shalt doubtless come by comfort and succour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Never! Never! Here will I weep and moan and perish. And thou&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: And wherefore moan and perish?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: For that I am so minded, being a maid forlorn and desolate, a poor
+ wanderer destitute of kith, of kin, of hope, of love, and all that maketh
+ life sweet. And thou art sour-faced and&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Grievous maid, is, among thy many wants, a lack of money?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: That also. And thou art cold of eye, fierce of mouth, hooked of nose,
+ flinty of heart, stony of soul, and I a perishing maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Sir Pertinax blinked and caught his breath; thereafter he laid
+ down his rod, whereupon the fish incontinent filched his worm all
+ unnoticed while the Knight opened the wallet at his girdle and took thence
+ certain monies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Dolorous damsel, behold six good, gold pieces! Take them and go, get
+ thee to eat&mdash;eat much, so shall thy dolour wax less, eat beef&mdash;since
+ beef is a rare lightener of sorrow, by beef shall thy woes be comforted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Alas! I love not beef.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here Sir Pertinax was dumb a space for wonder at her saying, while she
+ stole a glance at him betwixt slender fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE (<i>after some while</i>): Maid, I tell thee beef, fairly cooked and
+ aptly seasoned, is of itself a virtue whereby the body is strengthened and
+ nourished, whereby cometh content, and with content kindliness, and with
+ kindliness charity, and therewith all other virtues small and eke great;
+ therefore eat beef, maiden, for the good of thy soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; said she, viewing him bright-eyed 'twixt her fingers again. &ldquo;Dost
+ think by beef one may attain to paradise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Peradventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then no beef, for I would not live a saint yet awhile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Nathless, take thou these monies and go buy what thou wilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Sir Pertinax set the coins beside her shapely foot and took up
+ his neglected rod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And is this gold truly mine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Verily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then I pray thee keep it for me lest I lose it by the way and so&mdash;let
+ us begone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Pertinax started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Begone?&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Begone&mdash;in truth? Thou and I in faith? Go
+ whither?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Any whither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Alone? Thou and I?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not alone,&rdquo; she sighed; &ldquo;let us go together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax dropped his fishing-rod and watched it idly float away down
+ the stream:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Together, maiden?&rdquo; said he at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;For thou art lonely even as I am lonely, and thou
+ art, methinks, one a lonely maid may trust.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;trust!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;And wherefore would'st trust me, maiden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: For two reasons&mdash;thou art of age mature and something
+ ill-favoured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at this Sir Pertinax grew angered, grew thoughtful, grew sad and,
+ beholding his image mirrored in the waters, sighed for his grim, unlovely
+ look and, in his heart, cursed his vile garb anew. At last he spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Truly thou may'st trust me, maiden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And wherefore sighest thou, sad soldier?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Verily for thy two reasons. Though, for mine age, I am not forty
+ turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying which, he sighed again, and stared gloomily into the murmurous
+ waters. But presently, chancing to look aside, he beheld a head low down
+ amid the underwood, a head huge and hairy with small, fierce eyes that
+ watched him right bodefully, and a great mouth that grinned evilly; and
+ now as he stared, amazed by this monstrous head, it nodded grimly,
+ speaking thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Lob, Lobkyn he
+ Commandeth thee
+ To let her be
+ And set her free,
+ Thou scurvy, cutpurse, outlaw knave,
+ Lest hanged thou be
+ Upon a tree
+ For roguery
+ And villainy,
+ Thou knavish, misbegotten slave;
+ For proud is she
+ Of high degree,
+ As unto ye
+ Explicitly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, rising and drawing sword. &ldquo;Now, be thou imp of
+ Satan, fiend accursed, or goblin fell, come forth, and I with steel will
+ try thee, Thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out from the leaves forthwith crawled a dwarf bowed of leg, mighty of
+ shoulder, humped of back, and with arms very long and thick and hairy. In
+ one great fist he grasped a ponderous club shod with iron spikes, and now,
+ resting his hands on this and his chin on his hands, he scowled at the
+ Knight, yet grinned also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; he cried, rolling big head in threatening fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vile dog, thy rogue's sconce cracked shall be, Thy base-born bones
+ be-thwacked shall be. I'll deal thee many a dour ding For that thou darest
+ name me&mdash;Thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, as I live!&rdquo; said Sir Pertinax, scowling also. &ldquo;Here will I, and with
+ great joyance, cleave me thine impish mazzard and split thee to thy
+ beastly chine. And for thy ill rhyming:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I with this goodly steel will halve thee
+ And into clammy goblets carve thee.
+ So stand, Thing, to thy club betake thee,
+ And soon, Thing, I will no-thing make thee.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But, as they closed on each other with eager and deadly intent, the maid
+ stepped lightly betwixt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, soldier&mdash;hold!&rdquo; she commanded. &ldquo;Here is none but Lobkyn Lollo&mdash;poor,
+ brave Lob, nor will I suffer him to harm thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, maiden?&rdquo; snorted the good Knight fiercely. &ldquo;Harm me, say'st thou&mdash;yon
+ puny Thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly, soldier!&rdquo; said she, roguish-eyed. &ldquo;For though thou art very
+ ungentle, harsh of tongue, of visage grim and manners rude&mdash;I would
+ not have Lob harm thee&mdash;yet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now hereupon our bold Sir Pertinax
+ With indignation red of face did wax.
+ The needful word his tongue was vainly seeking,
+ Since what he felt was quite beyond the speaking.
+ Though quick his hand to ward or give a blow,
+ His tongue all times unready was and slow,
+ Therefore he speechless looked upon the maid,
+ Who viewed him 'neath her lashes' dusky shade,
+ Whence Eros launched a sudden beamy dart
+ That 'spite chain-mail did reach and pierce his heart.
+ And in that instant Pertinax grew wise,
+ And trembled 'neath this forest-maiden's eyes;
+ And trembling, knew full well, seek where he might,
+ No eyes might hold for him such magic light,
+ No lips might hold for him such sweet allure,
+ No other hand might his distresses cure,
+ No other voice might so console and cheer,
+ No foot, light-treading, be so sweet to hear
+ As the eyes, lips, hand, voice, foot of her who stood
+ Before him now, cheek flushing 'neath her hood.
+ All this Sir Pertinax had in his thought,
+ And, wishing much to say to her, said nought,
+ By reason that his tongue was something slow,
+ And of smooth phrases he did little know.
+ But yet 't is likely, though he nothing said,
+ She, maid-like, what he spake not, guessed or read
+ In his flushed brow, his sudden-gentle eyes,
+ Since in such things all maids are wondrous wise.
+
+ Now suddenly the brawny Dwarf did cry:
+ &ldquo;Beware, my old great-grand-dam creepeth nigh!&rdquo;
+ Thus speaking, 'mid the bushes pointed he,
+ Where crook'd old woman crouched beneath a tree
+ Whence, bowed upon a staff, she towards them came,
+ An ancient, wrinkled, ragged, hag-like dame
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below.
+ Mutt'ring she came and mowing she drew near,
+ And straightway seized the Dwarf by hairy ear:
+ Fast by the ear this ancient dame did tweak him,
+ And cuffed his head and, cuffing, thus did speak him:
+
+ &ldquo;Ha, dolt! Bad elf, and wilt thou slay, indeed,
+ This goodly man did aid me in my need?
+ For this was one that fought within the gate
+ And from Black Lewin saved thy grannam's pate!
+ Down, down, fool-lad, upon thy knees, I say,
+ And full forgiveness of this soldier pray.&rdquo;
+
+ But Sir Pertinax, perceiving how the old dame
+ did thus tweak and wring at the Dwarf's great,
+ hairy ear even until his eyes watered, interceded,
+ saying:
+
+ &ldquo;Good, ancient soul, humble not the sturdy, unlovely,
+ mis-shapen, rascally imp for such small
+ matter.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; croaked the old woman, tightening
+ claw-like fingers, &ldquo;kind master, he would doubtless
+ have slain thee.&rdquo; At this, Sir Pertinax scowled,
+ and would have sworn great oath but, meeting the
+ maid's bright eyes, checked himself, though with
+ much ado:
+
+ &ldquo;Art so sure,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;so sure man of
+ my inches may be slain by thing so small?&rdquo;
+
+ At this the maid laughed, and the old woman,
+ sighing, loosed the ear she clutched:
+
+ &ldquo;Shew thy strength, Lob,&rdquo; she commanded and,
+ drawing the maiden out of ear-shot, sat down beside
+ her on the sward and fell to eager, whispered talk.
+ Meantime the Dwarf, having cherished his ear,
+ sulkily though tenderly, seized hold upon his great
+ club with both hairy hands:
+
+ And whirling it aloft, with sudden might
+ A fair, young tree in sunder he did smite,
+ That 'neath the blow it swayed and crashing fell.
+ Quoth Pertinax: &ldquo;Good Thing, 't is very well.
+ Par Dex, and by the Holy Rood,&rdquo; quoth he,
+ &ldquo;'T is just as well that I was not yon tree!&rdquo;
+ And whirling his long sword as thus he spoke,
+ Shore through another at a single stroke.
+ &ldquo;Here's tree for tree, stout manling!&rdquo; he did say.
+ &ldquo;What other trick canst show to me, I pray?&rdquo;
+ Then Lobkyn stooped the broken stump to seize,
+ Bowed brawny back and with a wondrous ease
+
+ Up by the roots the rugged bole he tore
+ And tossed it far as it had been a straw.
+ Sad grew our knight this mighty feat perceiving,
+ Since well he knew't was past his own achieving.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But anon he smiled and clapped the mighty Dwarf on shoulder, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting to thee, lusty Lob, for by Our Holy Lady of Shene Chapel within
+ the Wood, ne'er saw I thine equal, since thou, being man so small, may do
+ what man o' my goodly inches may nowise perform. Thou should'st make a
+ right doughty man-at-arms!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon the Dwarf cut a caper but sighed thereafter: quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aha, good master, and Oho,
+ As man-at-arms fain would I go;
+ Aye, verily, I would be so,
+ But that my grannam sayeth 'No!'
+
+ &ldquo;And, sir, my grand-dam I obey
+ Since she's a potent witch, they say;
+ Can cast ye spells by night or day
+ And charmeth warts and such away.
+
+ &ldquo;Love philtres too she can supply
+ For fools that fond and foolish sigh,
+ That wert thou foul as hog in sty
+ Fair women must unto thee fly.
+
+ &ldquo;Then deadly potions she can make,
+ Will turn a man to wriggling snake,
+ Or slimy worm, or duck, or drake,
+ Or loathly frog that croaks in lake.
+
+ &ldquo;And she can curse beyond compare,
+ Can curse ye here, or curse ye there;
+ She'll curse ye clad or curse ye bare,
+ In fine, can curse ye anywhere.
+
+ &ldquo;And she can summon, so 't is said,
+ From fire and water, spirits dread,
+ Strong charms she hath can wake the dead
+ And set the living in their stead.
+
+ &ldquo;So thus it is, whate'er she say,
+ My grand-dam, master, I obey.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by my head,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;an thy grand-dam hath a potency in
+ spells and such black arts&mdash;the which is an ill thing&mdash;thou hast
+ a powerful gift of versification the which, methinks, is worse. How cometh
+ this distemper o' the tongue, Lobkyn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O master,&rdquo; spake the sighful Dwarf forlorn,
+ &ldquo;Like many such diseases, 't is inborn.
+ For even as a baby, I
+ Did pule in rhyme and versify;
+ And the stronger that I grew,
+ My rhyming habit strengthened too,
+ Until my sad sire in despair
+ Put me beneath the Church's care.
+ The holy fathers, 't is confessed,
+ With belt and sandal did their best,
+ But, though they often whipped me sore,
+ I, weeping, did but rhyme the more,
+ Till, finding all their efforts vain,
+ They sadly sent me home again.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A parlous case, methinks!&rdquo; said Sir Pertinax, staring at the Dwarf's
+ rueful visage. &ldquo;Learned ye aught of the holy fathers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye, sir, they taught me truth to tell,
+ To cipher and to read right well;
+ They taught me Latin, sir, and Greek,
+ Though even then in rhyme I'd speak.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou canst read and write!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;So can not I!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cried LOB:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What matter that? Heaven save the mark,
+ Far better be a soldier than a clerk,
+ Far rather had I be a fighter
+ Than learned reader or a writer,
+ Since they who'd read must mope in schools,
+ And they that write be mostly fools.
+ So 'stead of pen give me a sword,
+ And set me where the battle's toward,
+ Where blood&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But the ancient dame who had risen and approached silently, now very
+ suddenly took Lobkyn by the ear again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talk not of blood and battles, naughty one!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Think not to
+ leave thy old grannam lone and lorn and helpless&mdash;nor this our fair
+ maid. Shame on thee, Lob, O shame!&rdquo; saying the which she cuffed him again
+ and soundly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Master,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;thou seest I may not go,
+ Since that my grand-dam will not have it so.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good mother, wise mother,&rdquo; said the maid, viewing Sir Pertinax smilingly
+ askance, &ldquo;why doth poor soldier go bedight in fine linen 'neath rusty
+ hauberk? Why doth poor soldier wear knightly chain about his neck and
+ swear by knightly oath? Good mother, wise mother, rede me this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old woman viewed Pertinax with her bright, quick eyes, but, ere she
+ could answer, he sheathed sword, drew ragged mantle about him, and made to
+ go, but, turning to the maid, bent steel-clad head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most fair damosel,&rdquo; said he gently, &ldquo;evening cometh on, and now, since
+ thou art no longer forlorn, I will away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, first, I pray thee, what is thy name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So then doth Melissa thank Pertinax. And now&mdash;out alas! Will
+ Pertinax leave Melissa, having but found her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax looked up, looked down, fidgeted with his cloak, and knew not
+ how to answer; wherefore she sighed again, though with eyes full merry
+ 'neath drooping lashes and reached out to him her slender hand. &ldquo;Aye me,
+ and shall we meet no more, poor soldier?&rdquo; she questioned softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This I know not,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For thy brave rescue I do give thee my humble thanks, poor soldier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy rescue, child?&rdquo; cried the old woman. &ldquo;Alack and wert thou seen? Thy
+ rescue, say'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, good mother, from Sir Agramore's rough foresters. But for thee,
+ thou needy soldier, my gratitude is thine henceforth. Had I aught else to
+ give thee, that were thine also. Is there aught I may? Speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Sir Pertinax could not but heed all the rich, warm beauty of her&mdash;these
+ eyes so sombrely sweet, her delicate nose, the temptation of her vivid
+ lips&mdash;and so spake hot with impulse:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly, sweet maid, truly I would have of thee a&mdash;&rdquo; Her eyes
+ grew bright with laughter, a dimple played wanton in her cheek, and Sir
+ Pertinax was all suddenly abashed, faint-hearted and unsure; thus, looking
+ down, he chanced to espy a strange jewel that hung tremulous upon her
+ moving bosom: a crowned heart within a heart of crystal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, thou staid and sorry soldier, what would'st have of me?&rdquo; she
+ questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily,&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;I would have of thee yon trinket from thy bosom.&rdquo;
+ Now at his words she started, caught her breath and stared at him
+ wide-eyed; but, seeing his abashment, laughed and loosed off the jewel
+ with quick, small fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so!&rdquo; said she. But hereupon the old woman reached out sudden hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child!&rdquo; she croaked, &ldquo;Art mad? Mind ye not the prophecy? Beware the
+ prophecy&mdash;beware!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Beware, I say, Oh, beware!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good mother, have I not promised? And for this crystal it hath
+ brought me nought but unease hitherto. Take it, soldier, and for the sake
+ of this poor maid that giveth, break it not, dishonour it not, and give it
+ to none but can define for thee the secret thereof&mdash;and so, poor,
+ brave, fearful soldier&mdash;fare thee well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying which this fair maiden turned, and clasping the Witch's bony arm
+ about her slender loveliness, passed away into the denser wood with Lobkyn
+ Lollo marching grimly behind, his mighty club across his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long stood Sir Pertinax, staring down at the strange jewel in his hand yet
+ seeing it not, for, lost in his dreams, he beheld again two eyes,
+ dusky-lashed and softly bright, a slender hand, a shapelyfoot, while in
+ his ears was again the soft murmur of a maid's voice, a trill of girlish
+ laughter. So lost in meditation was he that becoming aware of a shadow
+ athwart the level sunset-glory, he started, glanced up and into the face
+ of a horseman who had ridden up unheard upon the velvet ling; and this man
+ was tall and armed at points like a knight; the vizor of his plumed casque
+ was lifted, and Sir Pertinax saw a ruddy face, keen-eyed, hawk-nosed,
+ thin-lipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow,&rdquo; questioned the haughty knight, &ldquo;what hold ye there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, haughty and gruff also, &ldquo;'t is no matter to
+ thee!&rdquo; And speaking, he buttoned the jewel into the wallet at his belt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; exclaimed the Knight, staring in amaze, &ldquo;wilt dare name me
+ 'fellow'? Tell me, didst see three foresters hereabout?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poltroon, I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knave, wilt defy me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rogue, I do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Slave, what did these foresters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villain, they ran away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, varlet! and wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Caitiff, I drubbed them shrewdly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dared ye withstand them, dog?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Minion, I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saw ye not the badge they bore?&rdquo; demanded the fierce stranger-knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T was the like of that upon thy shield!&rdquo; nodded Sir Pertinax grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know ye who and what I am, dunghill rogue?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, dog's-breakfast&mdash;nor care!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax, whereat the
+ stranger-knight grew sudden red and clenched mailed fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know then, thou kennel-scourer, that I am Sir
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Agramore of Biename, Lord of Swanscote and Hoccom, Lord Seneschal of
+ Tissingors and the March.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. &ldquo;So do I know thee for a very rogue
+ ingrain and villain manifest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How!&rdquo; roared Sir Agramore. &ldquo;This to my face, thou vile creeper of
+ ditches, thou unsavoury tavern-haunter&mdash;this in my teeth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heartily, heartily!&rdquo; nodded Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;And may it choke thee for the
+ knavish carcass thou art.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, and very suddenly, the Knight loosed mace from saddle-bow, and
+ therewith smote Sir Pertinax on rusty bascinet, and tumbled him backward
+ among the bracken. Which done, Sir Agramore laughed full loud and,
+ spurring his charger, galloped furiously away. And after some while Sir
+ Pertinax arose, albeit unsteadily, but finding his legs weak, sat him down
+ again; thereafter with fumbling hands he did off dinted bascinet and
+ viewed it thoughtfully, felt his head tenderly and, crawling to the
+ stream, bathed it solicitously; then, being greatly heartened, he arose
+ and drawing sword, set it upright in the ling and, kneeling, clasped his
+ hands and spake as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here and now, upon my good cross-hilt I swear I will with joy and zeal
+ unremitting, seek me out one Sir Agramore of Biename. Then will I
+ incontinent with any, all, or whatsoever weapon he chooseth fall upon him
+ and, for this felon stroke, for his ungentle dealing with the maid, I will
+ forthwith gore, rend, tear, pierce, batter, bruise and otherwise use the
+ body of the said Sir Agramore until, growing aweary of its vile tenement,
+ his viler soul shall flee hence to consume evermore with such unholy
+ knaves as he. And this is the oath of me, Sir Pertinax,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling, Bracton and Deepdene, to the
+ which oath may the Saints bend gracious ear, in especial Our Holy Lady of
+ Shene Chapel within the Wood&mdash;Amen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having registered the which most solemn oath, Sir Pertinax arose, sheathed
+ his sword, and strode blithely towards the fair and prosperous town of
+ Canalise. But, being come within the gate, he was aware of much riot and
+ confusion in the square and streets beyond, and hasting forward, beheld a
+ wild concourse, a pushing, jostling throng of people making great clamour
+ and outcry, above which hubbub ever and anon rose such shouts, as:
+ &ldquo;Murderer! Thief! Away with him! Death to him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By dint of sharp elbow and brawny shoulder our good knight forced himself
+ a way until&mdash;surrounded by men-at-arms, his limbs fast bound, his
+ motley torn and bloody, his battered fool's-cap all awry&mdash;he beheld
+ Duke Jocelyn haled and dragged along by fierce hands. For a moment Sir
+ Pertinax stood dumb with horror and amaze, then, roaring, clapped hand to
+ sword. Now, hearing this fierce and well-known battle shout, Duke Jocelyn
+ turned and, beholding the Knight, shook bloody head in warning and slowly
+ closed one bright, blue eye; and so, while Sir Pertinax stood rigid and
+ dumb, was dragged away and lost in the fierce, jostling throng.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, when you began this Geste, I thought
+ It was a poem of a sort.
+
+ MYSELF: A sort, Miss Pert! A sort, indeed?
+
+ GILL: Of course&mdash;the sort folks love to read.
+ But in the last part we have heard
+ Of poetry there's scarce a word.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, if you the early Geste-books read,
+ You'll find that, oft as not, indeed,
+ The wearied Gestours, when by rhyming stumped,
+ Into plain prose quite often jumped.
+
+ GILL: But, father, dear, the last part seems to me
+ All prose&mdash;as prosy as can be&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Ha, prosy, miss! How, do you then suggest
+ Our Geste for you lacks interest?
+
+ GILL: Not for a moment, father, though
+ Sir Pertinax was much too slow.
+ When fair Melissa &ldquo;laughing stood,&rdquo;
+ He should have kissed&mdash;you know he
+ should&mdash;Because, of course, she wished him to.
+
+ MYSELF: Hum! Girl, I wonder if that's true?
+
+ GILL: O father, yes! Of course I'm right,
+ And you're as slow as your slow knight.
+ Were you as slow when you were young?
+
+ MYSELF: Hush, madam! Hold that saucy tongue.
+ You may be sure, in my young days,
+ I was most dutiful always.
+ Grown up, I was, it seems to me,
+ No slower than I ought to be.
+ And now, miss, since you pine for verse,
+ Rhyme with my prose I'll intersperse;
+ And, like a doting father, I
+ To hold your interest will try.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 5
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Which of Duke Joc'lyn's woeful plight doth tell,
+ And all that chanced him pent in dungeon cell.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In gloomy dungeon, scant of air and light,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lay in sad and woeful plight;
+ His hands and feet with massy fetters bound,
+ That clashed, whene'er he moved, with dismal sound;
+ His back against the clammy wall did rest,
+ His heavy head was bowed upon his breast,
+ But, 'neath drawn brows, he watched with wary eye
+ Three ragged 'wights who, shackled, lay hard by,
+ Three brawny rogues who, scowling, fiercely eyed him,
+ And with lewd gibes and mocking gestures plied him.
+ But Joc'lyn, huddled thus against the wall,
+ Seemed verily to heed them none at all,
+ Wherefore a red-haired rogue who thought he slept
+ With full intent upon him furtive crept.
+ But, ere he knew, right suddenly he felt
+ Duke Joc'lyn's battered shoe beneath his belt;
+ And falling back with sudden strangled cry,
+ Flat on his back awhile did breathless lie,
+ Whereat to rage his comrades did begin,
+ And clashed their fetters with such doleful din
+ That from a corner dim a fourth man sprang,
+ And laughed and laughed, until their prison rang.
+ &ldquo;Well kicked, Sir Fool! Forsooth, well done!&rdquo; laughed he,
+ &ldquo;Ne'er saw I, Fool, a fool the like o' thee!&rdquo;
+
+ Now beholding this tall fellow, Jocelyn knew him
+ for that same forest-rogue had wrestled with him
+ in the green, and sung for his life the &ldquo;Song of
+ Roguery.&rdquo; Wherefore he smiled on the fellow and
+ the fellow on him:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: I grieve to see
+ A man like thee
+ In such a woeful plight&mdash;
+
+ Quoth the ROGUE: A Fool in fetters,
+ Like his betters,
+ Is yet a rarer sight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha i' the clout, good fellow, for Folly in fetters is Folly in need, and
+ Folly in need is Folly indeed! But, leaving folly awhile, who art thou and
+ what thy name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Saith the ROGUE: Robin I'm named, Sir Fool,
+ Rob by the few,
+ Which few are right, methinks, for
+ so I do.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, Rob, if dost rob thou'rt a robber, and being robber thou'rt
+ perchance in bonds for robbing, Robin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool, I, Rob, do rob and have robbed greater robbers that I might by
+ robbery live to rob like robbers again, as thou, by thy foolish folly,
+ fooleries make, befooling fools lesser than thou, that thou, Fool, by such
+ fool-like fooleries may live to fool like fools again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Thou robber Rob,
+ By Hob and Gob,
+ Though robber-rogue, I swear
+ That 't is great pity
+ Rogue so pretty
+ Must dance upon thin air.
+
+ Quoth ROBIN: Since I must die
+ On gallows high
+ And wriggle in a noose,
+ I'll none repine
+ Nor weep nor whine,
+ For where would be the use?
+ Yet sad am I
+ That I must die
+ With rogues so base and small,
+ Sly coney-catchers,
+ Poor girdle-snatchers,
+ That do in kennel crawl.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;thou thyself art rogue and thief confessed. How
+ then art better than these thy fellows?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By degree, Sir Fool. Even as thou'rt Fool o' folly uncommon, so am I no
+ ordinary rogue, being rogue o' rare parts with power of rogues i' the wild
+ wood, while these be but puny rogues of no parts soever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No rogues are we!&rdquo; the three did loudly cry,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But sad, poor souls, that perishing do lie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In me,&rdquo; quoth one, &ldquo;behold a man of worth,
+ By trade a dyer and yclepen Gurth;
+ In all this world no man, howe'er he try,
+ Could live a life so innocent as I!&rdquo;
+
+ The second spake: &ldquo;I am the ploughman Rick,
+ That ne'er harmed man or woman, maid or chick!
+ But here in direful dungeon doomed be I,
+ Yet cannot tell the wherefore nor the why.&rdquo;
+
+ Then spake Red-head, albeit gasping still:
+ &ldquo;An honest tanner I, my name is Will;
+ 'T was me thou kickedst, Fool, in such ill manner,
+ Of crimes unjust accused&mdash;and I, a tanner!&rdquo;
+ Here Joc'lyn smiled. &ldquo;Most saintly rogues,&rdquo; said he;
+ &ldquo;The Saints, methinks, were rogues compared with ye,
+ And one must needs in prison come who'd find
+ The noblest, worthiest, best of all mankind.
+ Poor, ill-used knaves, to lie in dungeon pent,
+ Rogues sin-less quite, and eke so innocent,
+ What though your looks another tale do tell,
+ Since I'm your fellow, fellows let us dwell,
+ For if ye're rogues that thus in bonds do lie,
+ So I'm a rogue since here in bonds am I,
+ Thus I, a rogue, do hail ye each a brother,
+ Like brethren, then, we 'll comfort one another.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake Jocelyn, whereafter these &ldquo;saintly rogues&rdquo; all three grew
+ mightily peevish and, withal, gloomy, while Robin laughed and laughed at
+ them, nodding head and wagging finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prithee, good Motley,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;what should bring so rare a Fool
+ to lie in dungeon fettered and gyved along of innocent rogues and roguish
+ robber?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Whereto Duke Jocelyn answered on this wise:
+ &ldquo;Hast heard, belike, of Gui the Red?&rdquo;
+ (Here went there up a howl)
+ &ldquo;A mighty lord of whom't is said,
+ That few do love and many dread.&rdquo;
+ (Here went there up a growl)
+
+ &ldquo;This potent lord I chanced to view,
+ Behaving as no lord should do,
+ And thereupon, this lord I threw
+ In pretty, plashing pool!
+
+ &ldquo;Whereon this dreadful lord did get
+ Exceeding wroth and very wet;
+ Wherefore in dungeon here I'm set,
+ For fierce and froward Fool.&rdquo;
+
+ Here went there up a shout of glee.
+ Cried Robin: &ldquo;O sweet Fool,
+ I would I had been there to see
+ This haughty lord of high degree
+ In pretty, plashing pool.&rdquo;
+
+ Here shout of glee became a roar,
+ That made the dungeon ring;
+ They laughed, they rolled upon the floor,
+ Till suddenly the massy door
+ On creaking hinge did swing;
+ And to them the head jailer now appeared,
+ A sombre man who sighed through tangled beard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, rogue-lads,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;grow ye merry in sooth by reason o' this
+ Fool! Aye me, all men do grow merry save only I, Ranulph, Chief Torturer,
+ Ranulph o' the Keys, o' the Gibbet, o' the City Axe&mdash;poor Ranulph the
+ Headsman. Good lack! I've cut off the head o' many a man merrier than I&mdash;
+ aye, that have I, and more's the pity! And now, ye that are to die so soon
+ can wax joyous along o' this motley Fool! Why, 't is a manifest good Fool,
+ and rare singer o' songs, 't is said, though malapert, with no respect for
+ his betters and over-quick at dagger-play. So 't is a Fool must die and
+ sing no more, and there's the pity on't for I do love a song, I&mdash;being
+ a companionable soul and jovial withal, aye, a very bawcock of a boy, I.
+ To-morrow Red Gui doth hale ye to his Castle o' the Rock, there to die all
+ five for his good pleasure, as is very fitting and proper, so be merry
+ whiles ye may. Meantime, behold here another rogue, a youngling imp. So is
+ five become six, and six may laugh louder than five, methinks, so laugh
+ your best.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ranulph o' the Keys sighed, closed the great door and went his way,
+ leaving the new captive to their mercies. Fair he was and slender, and of
+ a timid seeming, for now he crouched against the wall, his face hid 'neath
+ the hood of ragged mantle; wherefore the &ldquo;saintly&rdquo; three incontinent
+ scowled upon him, roared at him and made a horrid clashing with their
+ fetters:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, blood and bones!&rdquo; cried Rick the Ploughman. &ldquo;What murderous babe art
+ thou to go unshackled in presence o' thy betters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth,&rdquo; growled Will the Tanner, &ldquo;who 'rt thou to come hither
+ distressing the last hours o' we poor, perishing mortals? Discourse, lest
+ I bite the heart o' thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pronounce, imp!&rdquo; roared Gurth the Dyer, &ldquo;lest I tear thy liver!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit ye, here beside me, youth,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;and presently thou shalt
+ know these tearers of livers and biters of hearts for lambs of innocence
+ and doves of gentleness&mdash;by their own confessions. For, remark now,
+ gentle boy, all we are prisoners and therefore guiltless of every offence&mdash;indeed,
+ where is the prisoner, but who, according to himself, is not more sinned
+ against than sinner, and where the convicted rogue but, with his tongue,
+ shall disprove all men's testimony? So here sit three guileless men,
+ spotless of soul and beyond all thought innocent of every sin soever.
+ Yonder is Rob, a robber, and here sit I, a Fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; cried Rick. &ldquo;Yet murderous Fool art thou and apt to dagger-play!
+ Belike hast slain a man this day in way o' folly&mdash;ha?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two!&rdquo; answered Jocelyn, nodding. &ldquo;These two had been more but that my
+ dagger brake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was silence awhile what time Jocelyn hummed the line of a song and
+ his companions eyed him with looks askance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, good Folly,&rdquo; said Rick at last, &ldquo;'t is for a little spilling o'
+ blood art here, a little, pretty business o' murder&mdash;ha?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is so they name it,&rdquo; answered Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bones o' me!&rdquo; growled Will, &ldquo;I do begin to love this Fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And didst pronounce thyself our brother, Fool?&rdquo; questioned Gurth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then brethren let us be henceforth, and comrades to boot!&rdquo; cried Rick.
+ &ldquo;Jolly Clerks o' Saint Nicholas to share and share alike&mdash;ha? So then
+ 't is accorded. And now what o' yon lily-livered imp? 'T is a sickly youth
+ and I love him not. But he hath a cloak, look'ee&mdash;a cloak forsooth
+ and poor Rick's a-cold! Ho, lad&mdash;throw me thy cloak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beshrew me!&rdquo; roared Gurth. &ldquo;But he beareth belt and wallet! Ha, boy, give
+ thy wallet and girdle&mdash;bestow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And by sweet Saint Nick,&rdquo; growled Will, &ldquo;the dainty youngling disporteth
+ himself to mine eyes in a gold finger-ring! Aha, boy! Give now thy trinket
+ unto an honest tanner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon and with one accord up started the three, fierce-eyed; but
+ Jocelyn, laughing, rose up also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back, corpses!&rdquo; quoth he, swinging the heavy fetters to and fro between
+ shackled wrists. &ldquo;Stand, good Masters Dry-bones; of what avail cloak, or
+ wallet, or ring to ye that are dead men? Now, since corpses ye are
+ insomuch as concerneth this world, be ye reasonable and kindly corpses.
+ Sit ye then, Masters Dust-and-Ashes, and I will incontinent sing ye, chant
+ or intone ye a little song of organs and graves and the gallows-tree
+ whereon we must dance anon; as, hearken:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sing a song of corpses three
+ That ere long shall dancing be,
+ On the merry gallows-tree&mdash;
+ High and low,
+ To and fro,
+ Leaping, skipping,
+ Turning, tripping,
+ Wriggling, whirling,
+ Twisting, twirling:
+ Sing hey for the gallows-tree.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stint&mdash;stint thy beastly song now!&rdquo; cried Will, pale of cheek. But
+ Jocelyn sang the louder:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sing a song of dying groans,
+ Sing a song of cries and moans,
+ Sing a song of dead men's bones,
+ That shall rest,
+ All unblest,
+ To rot and rot,
+ Remembered not,
+ For dogs to gnaw
+ And battle for,
+ Sing hey for the dead rogue's bones.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Abate&mdash;ha&mdash;abate thy fiendish rant!&rdquo; cried Rick, glancing
+ fearfully over shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool&mdash;beseech thee! Fair flesh may not abide it!&rdquo; cried Gurth,
+ shivering, while Robin grinned no more and the fearful youth leaned
+ wide-eyed to behold the singer, this strange, scarred face beneath its
+ battered cock's-comb, these joyous eyes, these smiling lips as Jocelyn
+ continued:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Now ends my song with ghosts forlorn,
+ Three gibbering ghosts that mope and mourn,
+ Then shrieking, flee at breath of dawn,
+ Where creatures fell
+ In torment dwell,
+ Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl,
+ That rend and bite
+ And claw and fight.
+ Where fires red-hot
+ Consume them not,
+ And they in anguish
+ Writhe and languish
+ And groan in pain
+ For night again.
+ Sing hey for pale ghosts forlorn.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now when the song was ended, the three looked dismally on one another and,
+ bethinking them of their cruel end, they groaned and sighed lamentably:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Father, I like that song, it's fine;
+ But let me ask about this line:
+ &ldquo;Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl.&rdquo;
+ Now tell me, please, if you don't mind,
+ Why were the little horrors blind?
+
+ MYSELF: The beastly things, as I surmise,
+ Had scratched out one another's eyes.
+
+ GILL:
+ I suppose this place where creatures fell
+ In torments dwell is meant for&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Well,
+ I think, my Gill, the place you've guessed,
+ So let me get on with our Geste.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ... they groaned and sighed lamentably&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interjecteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Father&mdash;now don't get in a huff&mdash;
+ But don't you think they've groaned enough?
+
+ MYSELF: My Gillian&mdash;no! Leave well alone;
+ This is the place for them to groan.
+
+ Lamentably they did together moan,
+ And uttered each full many a hollow groan.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: But, father, groans are so distressing,
+ And groans in verse are most depressing&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Then peace, child, and in common prose
+ I'll let the poor rogues vent their woes:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ... they groaned and they sighed lamentably&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: What, father, are they groaning still?
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Of course they are, and so they will,
+ And so shall I; so, girl, take heed,
+ And cease their groaning to impede.
+ Is it agreed?
+
+ GILL: Oh, yes, indeed!
+
+ MYSELF: Then with our Geste I will proceed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ... they groaned and sighed lamentably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; cried Gurth, &ldquo;I had not greatly minded till now, but this
+ vile-tongued Fool hath stirred Fear to wakefulness within me. Here's me,
+ scarce thirty turned, hale and hearty, yet must die woefully and with a
+ maid as do love me grievously!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And me!&rdquo; groaned Rick. &ldquo;No more than twenty and five, I&mdash;a very lad&mdash;and
+ with two maids as do languish for me fain and fond!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, and what o' me?&rdquo; mourned dismal, redheaded Will. &ldquo;A lusty, proper
+ fellow I be and wi' maids a score as do sigh continual. And me to die&mdash;O
+ woe! And I a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content ye, brothers!&rdquo; said Jocelyn. &ldquo;Look now, here's Gurth hath lived
+ but thirty years, and now must die&mdash;good: so shall he die weighted
+ with less of sin than had he lived thirty more. Be ye comforted in this,
+ distressful rogues, the shorter our life the less we sin, the which is a
+ fair, good thing. As for these shackles, though our bodies be 'prisoned
+ our souls go free, thus, while we languish here, our souls astride a
+ sunbeam may mount aloft, 'bove all pains and tribulations soever. Thus if
+ we must dance together in noose, our souls, I say, escaping these fleshy
+ bonds, shall wing away to freedom everlasting. Bethink ye of this,
+ grievous knaves, and take heart. Regarding the which same truths I will,
+ for thy greater comforting, incontinent make ye a song&mdash;hearken!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Let Folly sing a song to cheer
+ All poor rogues that languish here,
+ Doomed in dismal dungeon drear,
+ Doomed in dungeon dim.
+
+ &ldquo;Though flesh full soon beneath the sod
+ Doth perish and decay,
+ Though cherished body is but clod,
+ Yet in his soul man is a God,
+ To do and live alway.
+ So hence with gloom and banish fear,
+ Come Mirth and Jollity,
+ Since, though we pine in dungeon drear,
+ Though these, our bodies, languish here,
+ We in our minds go free.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus cheerily sang Jocelyn until, chancing to see how the youth leaned
+ forward great-eyed, watching as he sung, he broke off to question him
+ blithely:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, good youth, hast a leaning to Folly e'en though Folly go
+ fettered, and thyself in dungeon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool,&rdquo; answered the youth, soft-voiced, &ldquo;me-thinks 't is strange Folly
+ can sing thus in chains! Hast thou no fear of death?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why truly I love it no more than my fellow-fools. But I, being fool
+ uncommon, am wise enough to know that Death, howsoe'er he come, may come
+ but once&mdash;and there's a comfortable thought!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Jocelyn seated himself beside the youth and watched him
+ keen-eyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou canst sing of Freedom, Fool, to the jangle of thy fetters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly, youth, 't is but my baser part lieth shackled, thus while body
+ pineth here, soul walketh i' the kindly sun&mdash;aye, e'en now as I do
+ gaze on thee, I, in my thought, do stand in a fair garden&mdash;beside a
+ lily-pool, where she I love cometh shy-footed to meet me, tall and
+ gracious and sweet, as her flowers. A dream, belike, yet in this dream she
+ looketh on me with eyes of love and love is on her lips and in her heart&mdash;so
+ is my dream very precious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, the youth shrank beneath his cloak while in an adjacent corner
+ the three rolled dice with Robin and quarrelled hoarse and loud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Youth,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;I pray thee, tell me thy name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without lifting head the youth answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hugo!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look up, Hugo!&rdquo; But Hugo bowed his head the lower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast wondrous hair, Hugo&mdash;red gold 'neath thy hood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here came a slim, white hand to order the rebellious tress but, finding
+ none, trembled and hid itself. Then very suddenly Jocelyn leaned near and
+ caught this hand, clasping it fast yet with fingers very gentle, and spake
+ quick and eager:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hugo&mdash;alas, Hugo! What bringeth thee in this evil place? Art in
+ danger? Speak, speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, here is no harm for me, Joconde. And I am hither come for sake of a
+ poor Fool that is braver than the bravest&mdash;one did jeopardise his
+ foolish life for sake of a maid, wherefore I, Hugo, do give him life. Take
+ now this wallet, within is good store of gold and better&mdash;a potent
+ charm to close all watchful eyes. Hist, Joconde, and mark me well! Ranulph
+ o' the Axe is a mighty drinker&mdash;to-night, drawn by fame of thy wit,
+ he cometh with his fellows. This money shall buy them wine, in the wine
+ cast this powder so shall they sleep and thou go free.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye!&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;and then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There will meet thee a dwarf shall free thee of thy fetters, and by
+ secret ways set thee without the city&mdash;then, tarry not, but flee for
+ thy life&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by the Holy Rood!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn softly, &ldquo;never in all this world was
+ there prisoner so happy as this poor Fool! But, Hugo, an I win free by
+ reason of a brave and noble lady, so long as she bide in Canalise, so long
+ must I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now I understand&mdash;
+ Of course, this Hugo is Yolande!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss, the fact is clear;
+ But how on earth did she get here?
+ I don't want her here&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Why not?
+
+ MYSELF: Because, being here, she spoils my plot,
+ Which would drive any author frantic&mdash;
+
+ GILL: I think it's fine, and most romantic.
+ Besides, you know, you wrote her there&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: She came&mdash;before I was aware&mdash;
+
+ GILL: She couldn't, father, for just think,
+ You've made her all of pen and ink.
+ So you, of course, can make her do
+ Exactly as you want her to.
+
+ MYSELF: Dear innocent! You little know
+ The trials poor authors undergo.
+ How heroines, when they break loose,
+ Are apt to play the very deuce,
+ Dragging their authors to and fro,
+ And where he wills&mdash;they will not go.
+
+ GILL: Well, since she's here, please let her be,
+ She wants to set Duke Joc'lyn free.
+
+ MYSELF: Enough&mdash;enough, my plans are made,
+ I'll set him free without her aid,
+ And in a manner, I apprise you,
+ As will, I fancy, quite surprise you.
+ Besides, a dungeon no fit place is
+ For a dainty lady's graces.
+ So, since she's in, 't is very plain
+ I now must get her out again.
+&ldquo;To bide in Canalise, 't is folly!&rdquo; cried Hugo. &ldquo;O, 't were a madness fond!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; sighed Jocelyn, &ldquo;some do call love a madness&mdash;thus mad am I,
+ forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; whispered Hugo, as from without came the tramp of heavy feet.
+ &ldquo;Fare-thee-well and&mdash;ah, be not mad, Joconde!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door creaked open, and six soldiers entered bringing a prisoner,
+ chained and fettered, and therewith fast bound and gagged, whom they set
+ ungently upon the stone floor; then straightway seizing upon Robin, they
+ haled him to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, rogue,&rdquo; said one, &ldquo;thou art to hang at cockcrow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is't so, good fellows?&rdquo; quoth Robin,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Then cock be curst
+ That croweth first!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As for thee, good Motley, peradventure when, by hangman's noose, our souls
+ enfranchised go, they shall company together, thine and mine! Till then
+ &mdash;farewell, Folly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin was led forth of the dungeon and the heavy door crashed shut; but
+ when Jocelyn looked for Hugo&mdash;lo! he was gone also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evening was come and the light began to fail, therefore Jocelyn crouched
+ beneath the narrow loophole and taking from his bosom the wallet, found
+ therein good store of money together with the charm or philtre: and bowing
+ his head above this little wallet, he fell to profound meditation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently, roused by hoarse laughter, he glanced up to find the three
+ plaguing the helpless prisoner with sundry kicks and buffets; so Jocelyn
+ crossed the dungeon, and putting the tormentors aside, stood amazed to
+ behold in this latest captive none other than Sir Pertinax. Straightway he
+ loosed off the gag, whereupon the good knight incontinent swore a gasping
+ oath and prayed his limbs might be loosed also; the which done, he
+ forthwith sprang up, and falling on the astonished three, he beat and
+ clouted them with fist and manacles, and drave them to and fro about the
+ dungeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, dogs! Wilt spurn me with they vile feet, buffet me with thy beastly
+ hands, forsooth!&rdquo; roared he and kicked and cuffed them so that they,
+ thinking him mad, cried aloud in fear until Sir Pertinax, growing a-weary,
+ seated himself against the wall, and folding his arms, scowled indignant
+ upon Jocelyn who greeted him merrily:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hail and greeting to thee, my Pertinax; thy gloomy visage is a joy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax snorted, but spake not; wherefore the Duke questioned him
+ full blithe: &ldquo;What fair, good wind hath blown thee dungeon-wards, sweet
+ soul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth the knight. &ldquo;Fetters, see'st thou, a dungeon, and these foul
+ knaves for company&mdash;the which cometh of thy fool's folly, messire! So
+ prithee ha' done with it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, gentle gossip, thou'rt foolish, methinks; thou frettest 'gainst
+ fate, thou kickest unwisely 'gainst the pricks, thou ragest pitifully
+ 'gainst circumstance&mdash;in fine, thou'rt a very Pertinax, my Pertinax!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye troth, that am I and no dog to lie thus chained in noisome pit, par
+ Dex! So let us out, messire, and that incontinent!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why here is a bright thought, sweet lad, let us out forthwith&mdash;but
+ how?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Summon the town-reeve, messire, the burgesses, the council, declare thy
+ rank, so shall we go free&mdash;none shall dare hold thus a prince of thy
+ exalted state and potent might! Declare thyself, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This were simple matter, Pertinax, but shall they believe us other than
+ we seem, think ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth Pertinax: &ldquo;We can try!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;this very moment!&rdquo; So saying, he turned to the
+ three who sat in a corner muttering together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good brothers, gentle rogues,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;behold and regard well this
+ sturdy cut-throat fellow that sitteth beside me, big of body, unseemly of
+ habit, fierce and unlovely of look&mdash;one to yield the wall unto, see
+ ye! And yet&mdash;now heed me well, this fellow, ragged and unkempt, this
+ ill-looking haunter of bye-ways, this furtive snatcher of purses (hold thy
+ peace, Pertinax!). I say this unsavoury-seeming clapper-claw is yet
+ neither one nor other, but a goodly knight, famous in battle, joust and
+ tourney, a potent lord of noble heritage, known to the world as Sir
+ Pertinax of Shene Castle and divers rich manors and demesnes. Furthermore,
+ I that do seem a sorry jesting-fellow, I that in antic habit go, that cut
+ ye capers with ass's ears a-dangle and languish here your fellow in bonds,
+ am yet no antic, no poor, motley Fool, but a duke and lord of many fair
+ towns and rich cities beyond Morfeville and the Southward March. How say
+ ye, brothers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That thou'rt a fool!&rdquo; quoth Rick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True!&rdquo; nodded Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most true!&rdquo; sighed Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a liar!&rdquo; growled Gurth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a murderous rogue!&rdquo; cried Will, &ldquo;and shall hang, along of us&mdash;as
+ I'm a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack, Sir Knight,&rdquo; smiled Jocelyn, &ldquo;of what avail rank or fame or both
+ 'gainst a motley habit and a ragged mantle. Thus, Pertinax, thou art no
+ more than what thou seemest, to wit&mdash;a poor, fierce rogue, and I, a
+ beggarly stroller.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And like to have our necks stretched, lord, by reason of a fond and
+ foolish whim!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless, Pertinax, having naught to depend on but our native wit we, by
+ our wit, win free. Other poor rogues in like case have broke prison ere
+ now, and 'tis pity and shame in us if thou, a knight so potent and
+ high-born, and I, a prince, may not do the like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Messire, unlearned am I in the breaking o' prisons so when my time cometh
+ to die in a noose I can but die as knight should&mdash;though I had rather
+ 't were in honest fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoken like the very fool of a knight!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn. &ldquo;So now will I
+ show thee how by the wit of a brave and noble lady we may yet 'scape the
+ hangman. Hearken in thine ear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, when Jocelyn had told him all and shown money and sleeping-charm, Sir
+ Pertinax grew thoughtful, sighing deep and oft, yet speaking not,
+ wherefore the Duke questioned him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gossip, gasp not!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;How think'st thou of prison-breaking
+ now&mdash;expound!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Why, sir, I think when all do charmed and spellbound
+ snore,
+ Then will we shrewdly choke them that they wake
+ no more!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Pertinax, here shall be no need of choking, forsooth!&rdquo; Sir Pertinax
+ bowed chin on fist and sighed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax, prithee puff not! Yet, an puff ye will, pronounce me then the
+ why and wherefore of thy puffing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, here is neither gasp nor puff, here is honest sighing. I can sigh
+ as well as another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since when hast learned this so tender art, my Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I do sigh by reason of memory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As what, Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eyes, lord&mdash;her eyes so darkly bright and, as I do think&mdash;black!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, blue, Pertinax&mdash;blue as heaven!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Black, messire, black as&mdash;as black!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blue, boy, blue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, they are black!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak'st thou of Yolande?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Messire, of one I speak, but whom, I know not. She came to me i' the
+ greenwood as I sat a-fishing. Her hair long and black&mdash;ay, black and
+ curled, her eyes dark, and for beauty ne'er saw I her like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet hast seen my Lady Yolande oft!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her voice, messire, her voice soft and sweet as the murmur of waters, and
+ very full of allure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how now!&rdquo; cried Jocelyn. &ldquo;Art thou&mdash;thou, my Pertinax, become
+ at last one of Cupid's humble following? All joy to thee, my lovely lover&mdash;here
+ in truth is added bond betwixt us! For since thou dost love a maid, even
+ as I do love a maid, so being lovers twain needs must we love each other
+ the better therefore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, out alack, my lord!&rdquo; sighed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;For though I do love her,
+ she, by reason o' my ill-favoured looks, the which, woe's me, I may not
+ alter, loveth not me, as I do judge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How judge ye this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, she giveth me hard names. She, all in a breath, hath pictured me
+ thus: 'Hooked of nose, fierce-eyed, of aspect grim&mdash;ungentle,
+ unlovely, harsh o' tongue, dour o' visage, hard o' heart, flinty o' soul
+ and of manners rude.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good! But was this all, my Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, and with a wannion&mdash;there was more to like purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excellent, my lovely knight&mdash;let hope sing in thee. For look now, if
+ she named thee hooked of nose, fierce-eyed and of aspect grim&mdash;she
+ speaketh very truth, for so thou art, my Pertinax. Now truth is a fair
+ virtue in man or maid, so is she both virtuous and fair! Nay, puff not,
+ sighful Pertinax, but for thy comforting mark this&mdash;she hath viewed
+ and heeded thy outward man narrowly&mdash;so shall she not forget thee
+ soon; she with woman's eye hath marked the great heart of thee through
+ sorry habit and rusty mail, and found therein the love thy harsh tongue
+ might not utter; and thus, methinks, she hath thee in mind&mdash;aye, even
+ now, mayhap. Lastly, good, lovely blunderbore&mdash;mark this! 'Tis better
+ to win a maid's anger than she should heed thee none at all. Let love
+ carol i' thy heart and be ye worthy, so, when ye shall meet again, 'tis
+ like enough, despite thy hooked nose, she shall find thine eyes gentle,
+ thy unloveliness lovely, thy harsh tongue wondrous tender and thy flinty
+ soul the soul of a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, faith, lord,&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, his grim lips softening to a smile,
+ &ldquo;despite her words, she spake in voice full sweet, and her eyes&mdash;ah,
+ messire, her eyes were wondrous kind&mdash;gentle eyes&mdash;aye, her eyes
+ were&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eyes, my Pertinax&mdash;black eyes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And gentle! By which same token, lord, she did give to me this token&mdash;this
+ most strange trinket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all at once, was the creak of hinges, and the ponderous door opening,
+ Ranulph o' the Axe appeared, followed by divers of the warders bearing
+ torches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; sighed Ranulph, doleful of visage. &ldquo;Aha, good bawcocks, here come
+ I, and these my fellows, for love o' thee, good Fool, thy quips, thy
+ quirks, thy songs and antics capersome. For troth I'm a merry dog, I&mdash;a
+ wanton wag, a bully boy and jovial, though woeful o' look!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore woeful!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that I am not joyous, good Motley. Look 'ee&mdash;here's me born with
+ a rare, merry heart, but sad and sober of head! Here's a heart bubbling
+ with kindliness and soft and tender as sucking lamb, wedded to head and
+ face full o' gloom! Here's laughter within me and woe without me, so am I
+ ever at odds with myself&mdash;and there's my sorrow. Regarding the which
+ same I will now chaunt ye song I made on myself; 'twas meant for merry
+ song and blithe, but of itself turned mournful song anon as ye shall
+ hear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Ranulph o' the Axe threw back grim head and sang gruff, albeit
+ plaintive, thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O! merry I am and right merry I'll be,
+ Ho-ho for block, gibbet and rack&mdash;oho!
+ To hang or behead ye there's none like to me,
+ For I'm headsman, tormentor, and hangman, all three,
+ And never for work do I lack&mdash;oho!
+
+ &ldquo;I live but to torture since torment's my trade,
+ But my torment well meant is, I trow;
+ If I hang or behead ye, it can't be gainsaid,
+ Though my head for the head of a headsman was made,
+ Still I'm all loving-kindness below.
+
+ &ldquo;But if ever I strive merry story to tell,
+ Full of japeful and humorsome graces,
+ 'T is as though I were tolling a funeral bell
+ As if dismally, dolefully tolling a knell,
+ So solemn and sad grow all faces.
+
+ &ldquo;I hang, burn and torture the best that I may,
+ Ho pincers and thumbscrews and rack&mdash;oho!
+ And all heads I cut off in a headsmanlike way;
+ So I'll hang, burn and torment 'till cometh the day
+ That my kind heart within me shall crack&mdash;oho!
+ Well-a-wey! Well-a-wey!
+ Woe is me for the day
+ That my poor heart inside me shall crack! Oho!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So there's my song! 'T is dull song and, striving to be merry song, is
+ sad song, yet might be worse song, for I have heard a worse song, ere now&mdash;but
+ 't is poor song. So come, Fool, do thou sing us merry song to cheer us
+ 'gainst my sad song.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why truly, Sir Headsman,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;here be songs a-many, yet if
+ thou 'rt for songs, songs will we sing thee, each and every of us. But
+ first, behold here is money shall buy us wine in plenty that we may grow
+ merry withal in very sooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried Ranulph. &ldquo;Spoken like a noble Motley, a fair, sweet Fool! Go
+ thou, Bertram, obey this lord-like Fool&mdash;bring wine, good wine and
+ much, and haste thee, for night draweth on and at cock-crow I must away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; nodded Jocelyn, &ldquo;in the matter of one&mdash;Robin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, Fool. A cheery soul is Robin, though an outlaw, and well beloved
+ in Canalise. So is he to hang at cock-crow lest folk make disturbance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where lieth he now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where but in the watch-house beside the gallows 'neath Black Lewin's
+ charge. But come, good Motley, sing&mdash;a pretty song, a merry ditty,
+ ha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So forthwith Jocelyn took his lute and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;With dainty ditty
+ Quaint and pretty
+ I will fit ye,
+ So heed and mark me well,
+ And who we be
+ That here ye see
+ Now unto ye
+ Explicit I will tell:
+
+ &ldquo;Then here first behold one Gurth, a worthy, dying
+ Dyer,
+ Since he by dyeing liveth, so to dye is his desire:
+ For being thus a very Dyer, he liveth but to dye,
+ And dyeing daily he doth all his daily wants
+ supply.
+ Full often hath he dyed ere now to earn his
+ daily bread,
+ Thus, dyeing not, this worthy Dyer must soon,
+ alas! be dead.
+
+ &ldquo;Here's Rick&mdash;a saintly ploughman, he
+ Hath guided plough so well,
+ That here, with rogues the like of me,
+ He pines in dungeon cell.
+
+ &ldquo;Here's Red-haired Will&mdash;O fie!
+ That Will should fettered lie
+ In such base, cruel manner!
+ For though his hair be red,
+ Brave Will, when all is said,
+ Is&mdash;hark 'ee&mdash;Will's a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough, Fool!&rdquo; cried Will. &ldquo;An thou must sing, sing of thyself, for
+ thyself, to thyself, and I will sing of myself an' need be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laughed JOCELYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Why then, brave Will,
+ Come, sing thy fill.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon Will cleared his throat, squared his shoulders, and rumbling a
+ note or so to fix the key, burst into songful roar:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A tanner I, a lusty man,
+ A tanner men call Will,
+ And being tanner true, I tan,
+ Would I were tanning still;
+ Ho derry, derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ Would I were tanning still.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;And choked in thy vile tan-pit, for
+ scurvier song was never heard, par Dex!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why 'tis heard, forsooth,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;and might be heard a mile
+ hence! Chant on, brave Will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tanner, nothing loth, wiped his mouth, clenched his fists and standing
+ square and rigid, continued:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;How gaily I a-tanning went,
+ No tanner blithe as I,
+ No tanner e'er so innocent,
+ Though here in chains I lie.
+ Ho derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ In grievous chains I lie.
+
+ &ldquo;No more, alack, poor Will will tan,
+ Since Will will, all unwilling,
+ Though tanner he and proper man,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.
+ Hey derry down,
+ Ho derry down,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now out upon thee, Tanner!&rdquo; sighed Ranulph. &ldquo;Here's sad song, a song o'
+ graves, and therefore most unlovely, a song I&mdash;Saints and Angels!&rdquo; he
+ gasped:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And pointed where Sir Pertinax did stand,
+ The Heart of Crystal shining in his hand.
+ &ldquo;The Heart-in-Heart! The Crystal Heart!&rdquo; cried he,
+ And crying thus, sank down on bended knee,
+ While jailers all and scurvy knaves, pell-mell,
+ Betook them to their marrow-bones as well;
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax oped wond'ring eyes,
+ And questioned him 'twixt anger and surprise.
+ Then answered Ranulph, &ldquo;Sir, though chained ye go,
+ Yet to thee we do all obedience owe
+ By reason of that sacred amulet,
+ That crystal heart in heart of crystal set:
+
+ 'For he that holdeth Crystal Heart
+ Holdeth all and every part,
+ And by night or eke by day
+ The Heart-in-Heart all must obey!&rdquo;'
+
+ &ldquo;Obey?&rdquo; quoth Pertinax. &ldquo;Ha! Let us see
+ If in thy vaunt there aught of virtue be:
+ For by this Heart of Crystal that I bear,
+ I charge ye loose the chains the Fool doth wear,
+ Then off with these accursèd gyves of mine,
+ Or&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Ranulph to the warders gave a sign,
+ And they to work did go with such good speed,
+ That Joc'lyn soon with Pertinax stood freed,
+ &ldquo;Now by my halidome!&rdquo; quoth Pertinax,
+ &ldquo;This talisman methinks no magic lacks,
+ So knaves, I bid ye&mdash;by this magic Heart,
+ Draw bolt and bar that hence we may depart&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But now the scurvy knaves made dismal cry.
+ &ldquo;Good sir!&rdquo; they wailed, &ldquo;Ah, leave us not to die!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Aye, by Heav'n's light!&rdquo; fierce quoth Sir Pertinax,
+ &ldquo;Ye're better dead by gibbet or by axe,
+ Since naught but scurvy, coward rogues are ye,
+ And so be hanged&mdash;be hanged to ye, all three!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Knight!&rdquo; Joc'lyn sighed, &ldquo;'neath Heaven's light
+ somewhere
+ Doth live a dark-eyed maid with black-curled hair&mdash;
+ Her voice is soft and full of sweet allure,
+ And thou, perchance, one day may humbly woo her;
+ So these poor rogues now woo their lives of thee,
+ Show mercy then and mercy find of she.&rdquo;
+
+ At this Sir Pertinax rubbed chin and frowned,
+ Red grew his cheek, his fierce eyes sought the ground,
+ Then, even as he thus pinched chin and scowled,
+ &ldquo;Loose, then, the dismal knaves!&rdquo; at last he
+ growled.
+ But now grim Ranulph tangled beard tore
+ And wrung his hands and sighed and groaned and
+ swore
+ With loud complaints and woeful lamentations,
+ With muttered oaths and murmured objurgations,
+ With curses dire and impious imprecations.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beshrew me, masters all!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Now here's ill prank to play a poor
+ hangman, may I ne'er quaff good liquor more, let me languish o' the
+ quartern ague and die o' the doleful dumps if I ever saw the like o' this!
+ For look 'ee now, if I set these three rogues free, how may I hang 'em as
+ hang 'em I must, since I by hanging live to hang again, and if I don't
+ hang 'em whom shall I hang since hang I must, I being hangman? Bethink ye
+ o' this, sirs, and show a little pity to a poor hangman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, mark ye this, hangman,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;since on hanging doth
+ thy hangman's reputation hang, then hang thou must; therefore, an ye lack
+ rogue to hang, go hang thyself, so, hanging, shall thy hanging be done
+ with and thou having lived a hangman, hangman die, thus, hangman hanging
+ hangman, hangman hanging shall be hangman still, and being still, thus
+ hanging, shall hang no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;there it is in a nutshell&mdash;hangman,
+ be hanged to thee! So off with their fetters, Master Gallows, by Crystal
+ Heart I charge thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon the scurvy knaves were freed, to their great joy, and following
+ the bold knight, made haste to quit their gloomy dungeon. Reaching the
+ guardroom above, Sir Pertinax called lustily for sword and bascinet, and
+ thereafter chose divers likely weapons for his companions who, with axe
+ and pike and guisarme on shoulder, followed him out into the free air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was night and very dark, but Gurth, who was a man of the town,
+ brought them by dim and lonely alleys and crooked ways until at last they
+ halted within a certain dark and narrow street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither now?&rdquo; questioned Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;where but to the gatehouse&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; muttered Gurth, &ldquo;'tis overly well guarded&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; growled Will, &ldquo;which is true, as I'm a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howbeit,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;I'm for the gatehouse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore?&rdquo; demanded Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In cause of one Rob, a robber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but,&rdquo; said Gurth, &ldquo;he is to hang at crow-o'-cock and 'tis nigh
+ cock-crow now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The more need for haste,&rdquo; said Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But, even now, as they together spoke,
+ A sullen tramp the sleeping echoes woke,
+ Behind them in the gloom dim forms they saw,
+ While others grimly barred the way before;
+ And so, by reason that they could not fly,
+ They grasped their weapons and prepared to die.
+ Then in the darkness of that narrow street,
+ Broad axe and pike and flashing sword did meet.
+ Duke Jocelyn full many a thrust drave home,
+ Till whirling pike-staff smote him on cock's-comb,
+ And staggering back to an adjacent wall,
+ In deep-sunk doorway groaning he did fall.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Now, father, please don't let him die&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: No, no, indeed, my Gill, not I,
+ My heroes take a lot of killing&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Then go on quick, it's very thrilling!
+ I hope he vanquishes his foes,
+ And let him do it, please, in prose.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O woe!&rdquo; said a quavering voice. &ldquo;Alack, and well-a-wey&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN demurreth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: No, father&mdash;that's not right at all.
+ You'd got to where you'd made him fall.
+
+ MYSELF: Well, then, Duke Joc'lyn, from his swoon awaking,
+ Found that his head confoundedly was aching;
+ Found he was bruised all down from top to toe&mdash;
+
+ GILL: A bruise, father, and he a duke? No, no!
+ Besides, you make
+ A frightful mistake&mdash;
+ A hero's head should never ache;
+ And, father, now, whoever knew
+ A hero beaten black and blue?
+ And then a bruise, it seems to me,
+ Is unromantic as can be.
+ He can't be bruised,
+ And shan't be bruised,
+ For, if you bruise him,
+ And ill-use him,
+ I'll refuse him&mdash;
+ No reader, I am sure, would choose
+ A hero any one can bruise.
+ So, father, if you want him read,
+ Don't bruise him, please&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Enough is said!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At this, Jocelyn sat up and wondered to find himself in a small chamber
+ dim-lit by a smoking cresset. On one side of him leaned an ancient woman,
+ a very hag-like dame
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ and upon his other side a young damsel of a wondrous dark beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;where am I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, poor Motley!&rdquo; whispered the maid. &ldquo;Thou didst fall 'gainst the door
+ yonder. But speak low, they that seek thy life may yet be nigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, reaching for his sword, &ldquo;I must out and aid my
+ comrades.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; sighed the old woman. &ldquo;Thy comrades do without lie all slain save
+ one that groaneth&mdash;hearken!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, woe!&rdquo; mourned a quavering voice beyond the door. &ldquo;O, woe, sore hurted
+ I be, and like to die&mdash;and I a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very heedfully, Jocelyn unbarred the door, and peering into the narrow
+ street, found it deserted and empty save for certain outstretched forms
+ that stirred not; looking down on these dim shapes he knew one for Rick
+ the Ploughman, whose ploughing days were sped and, huddled in a corner
+ hard by, he found Will the Tanner, who groaned fitfully; but of Sir
+ Pertinax and Gurth he saw nothing. So Jocelyn made shift to bear the
+ Tanner within the house, and here Will, finding his hurts of small
+ account, sat up, and while the wise old woman bandaged his wound, answered
+ Jocelyn's eager questions, and told how Sir Pertinax and Gurth the Dyer
+ had broken through their assailants and made good their escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when the old woman had thus cherished their hurts, Jocelyn would fain
+ have given her money, but she mumbled and mowed and cracked her
+ finger-joints and shook grey head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, good Fool!&rdquo; she croaked, &ldquo;for I do know thee for that same gentle
+ Motley did save me from Black Lewin&mdash;a murrain seize him! So now will
+ I save thee&mdash;behold!&rdquo; So saying she set bony hand to wall; and lo! in
+ the wall yawned a square opening narrow and dark, whence issued a cold
+ wind. &ldquo;Begone, thou brave merryman!&rdquo; quoth she. &ldquo;Yonder safety lieth; this
+ darksome way shall carry thee out beneath the city wall!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, thou kindly Witch!&rdquo; said Jocelyn. &ldquo;Yet first must I to the
+ watch-house beside the gate for one Robin that lieth 'prisoned there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, Fool, dost mean Robin-a-Green that is to hang?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In truth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Rob o' the Green is outlawed, banned o' Church, a very rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But a man, wherefore I would save him alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool, o' thy folly be wise and seek ye safety instead. Would'st
+ peril thy body for a thief?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, dame, even as I did for a Witch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, here the old woman scowled and mumbled and cracked her finger-bones
+ angrily. But the beauteous young maid viewed Jocelyn with bright,
+ approving eyes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Fool,&rdquo; cried she, &ldquo;O wondrous Fool, wilt adventure thyself in cause
+ so desperate?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blithely, fair lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, alas! the guards be many and thou but one&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay!&rdquo; cried a voice:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For thou may'st see
+ That two are we!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And forth of the dark opening in the wall strode Lobkyn Lollo the Dwarf,
+ his great, spiked club on brawny shoulder. Jocelyn viewed the monstrous
+ little man in awed wonder; but beholding his mighty girth and determined
+ aspect, wonder changed to kindliness; quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair greeting, comrade! If thou'rt for a little bickering and disputation
+ with that goodly club o' thine, come thy ways for methinks I do smell the
+ dawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, thou naughty little one!&rdquo; cried the Witch, shaking bony fist. &ldquo;Art
+ for fighting for rogue's life along of a Fool, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth LOBKYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Aye, grannam, though ye slap me, still,
+ Fight and aid this Fool I will&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And talking o' Will,&rdquo; quoth Will, &ldquo;what o' me, for though I'm a tanner
+ I'm a man, aye, verily, as I'm a tanner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And methinks a better man than tanner!&rdquo; said Jocelyn. &ldquo;So here we stand
+ three goodly wights and well armed. Let's away&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, wild Madcap,&rdquo; croaked the Witch, &ldquo;an my Lobkyn go I go, and,
+ though I be old and feeble, shalt find my craft more potent than sword or
+ club&mdash;wait!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the old woman, opening a dingy cupboard, took thence a small crock
+ over which she muttered spells and incantations with look and gesture so
+ evil that Lobkyn eyed her askance, Will the Tanner cowered and whispered
+ fragments of prayers, and even Jocelyn crossed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; croaked the Witch. &ldquo;Now do I go to save rogue from gallows for
+ sake of thee, tall Fool. Come ye, come and do as I bid ye in all things&mdash;come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 6
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tells how for Robin a good fight was fought
+ And our old Witch a spell mysterious wrought.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Phoebus, the young and gladsome god of day,
+ His fiery steeds had yoked to flaming car
+ (By which, my Gill, you may surmise
+ The sun was just about to rise)
+ And that be-feathered, crook-billed harbinger,
+ The rosy-wattled herald of the dawn,
+ Red comb aflaunt, bold-eyed and spurred for strife,
+ Brave Chanticleer, his strident summons raised
+ (By which fine phrase I'd have you know,
+ The cock had just begun to crow)
+ And gentle Zephyr, child of Boreas,
+ Stole soft the hush of dewy leaves,
+ And passing kissed the flowers to wakefulness.
+ Thus, laden with their sweetness, Zephyr came
+ O'er hill and dale, o'er battlement and wall,
+ Into the sleeping town of Canalise,
+ Through open lattice and through prison-bars,
+ To kiss the cheek of sleeping Innocence
+ And fevered brows of prisoners forlorn,
+ Who, stirring 'neath sweet Zephyr's soft caress,
+ Dreamed themselves young, with all their sins unwrought.
+ So, gentle Zephyr, messenger of dawn,
+ Fresh as the day-spring, of earth redolent,
+ Through narrow loophole into dungeon stole,
+ Where Robin the bold outlaw fettered lay,
+ Who, sighing, woke to feel her fragrant kiss,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And, breathing in this perfume-laden air,
+ He seemed to smell those thousand woodland scents
+ He oft had known, yet, knowing, never heeded:
+ Of lofty bracken, golden in the sun,
+ Of dewy violets shy that bloomed dim-seen
+ Beside some merry-laughing, woodland brook
+ Which, bubbling, with soft music filled the air;
+ The fragrant reek of smouldering camp-fire
+ Aglow beside some dark, sequestered pool
+ Whose placid waters a dim mirror made
+ To hold the glister of some lonely star;
+ He seemed to see again in sunny glade
+ The silky coats of yellow-dappled deer,
+ With branching antlers gallantly upborne;
+ To hear the twang of bow, the whizz of shaft,
+ And cheery sound of distant-winded horn.
+ Of this and more than this, bold Robin thought,
+ And, in his dungeon's gloomy solitude,
+ He groaned full deep and, since no eye could see,
+ Shed bitter tears.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN supplicateth:
+
+ GILL: Poor Robin! Father, promise me
+ To save him from the gallows-tree.
+ He's much too nice a man to kill;
+ So save him, father; say you will!
+
+ MYSELF: But think of poor Ranulph with no one to hang!
+
+ GILL: Ranulph's song was top-hole, but&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: You know I hate slang&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Yes, father&mdash;but then I hate Ranulph much more,
+ With his nasty great beard that in tangles he wore.
+ So, father, if you must have some one to slay,
+ Instead of poor Robin, hang Ranulph&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Why, pray?
+
+ GILL: In nice books the nasty folks only should die;
+ Those are the kind of books nice people buy.
+ I like a book that makes me glad,
+ And loathe a book that makes me sad;
+ So, as this Geste is made for me,
+ Make it as happy as can be.
+
+ MYSELF: And is it, so far, as you'd wish?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, though it's rather swish,
+ I think it needs a deal more love&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Swish? How&mdash;what's this? Great heavens
+ above!
+ Will you, pray, miss, explain to me
+ How any story &ldquo;swish&rdquo; may be?
+ And why, my daughter, you must choose
+ A frightful word like &ldquo;swish&rdquo; to use?
+ What hideous language are you talking?
+
+ GILL: Sorrow, father! &ldquo;Swish&rdquo; means &ldquo;corking.&rdquo;
+ I think our Geste is &ldquo;out of sight,&rdquo;
+ Except that, to please me, you might
+ Put in more love&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Now, how can Joc'lyn go love-making
+ When his head is sore and aching?
+ Besides, this is no place to woo;
+ He'll love-make when I want him to.
+
+ GILL: But, father, think&mdash;in all this time,
+ In all this blank-verse, prose and rhyme,
+ The fair Yolande he's never kissed,
+ And you've done nothing to assist;
+ And, as I'm sure they're both inclined,
+ I think your treatment most unkind.
+
+ MYSELF: This Geste I'll write in my own way,
+ That is, sweet Prattler, if I may;
+ When I'm ready for them to kiss,
+ Then kiss they shall; I promise this.
+ Now I'll to Rob return, if you,
+ My Gillian, will permit me to!
+
+ Thus in his prison pent, poor woeful Rob,
+ Since none might see or hear, scorned not to sob,
+ And mightily, in stricken heart, did grieve
+ That he so soon so fair a world must leave.
+ And all because the morning wind had brought
+ Earth's dewy fragrance with sweet mem'ries fraught.
+ So Robin wept nor sought his grief to stay,
+ Yearning amain for joys of yesterday;
+ Till, hearing nigh the warder's heavy tread,
+ He sobbed no more but strove to sing instead.
+
+ &ldquo;A bow for me, a bow for me,
+ All underneath the greenwood tree,
+ Where slaves are men, and men are free;
+ Give me a bow!
+
+ &ldquo;Give me a bow, a bow of yew,
+ Good hempen cord and arrows true,
+ When foes be thick and friends be few,
+ Give me a bow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus cheerily sang Robin the while he dried his bitter tears, as the door
+ of his prison was flung wide and Black Lewin strode in and with him
+ men-at-arms bearing torches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What ho, rogue Robin!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;The cock hath crowed. Ha! Will ye sing,
+ knave, will ye sing, in faith?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In faith, that will I!&rdquo; laughed Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here come we to bring ye to the gallows, Robin&mdash;how say ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The more reason for singing since my singing must soon be done!&rdquo; So, with
+ pikemen before him and behind, bold Robin marched forth to die, yet sang
+ full blithely as he went:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;So lay my bones 'neath good yew-tree,
+ Thus Rob and yew soon one shall be,
+ Where all true men may find o' we
+ A trusty bow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha' done!&rdquo; growled Black Lewin, shivering in the chilly air of dawn.
+ &ldquo;Quit&mdash;quit thy singing, rogue, or by the foul fiend I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who dareth name the fiend?&rdquo; croaked an awful voice, whereat Black Lewin
+ halted, gaped and stood a-tremble, while beneath steel cap and bascinet
+ all men's hair stirred and rose with horror; for before them was a ghastly
+ shape, a shape that crouched in the gloom with dreadful face aflame with
+ smouldering green fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe!&rdquo; cried the voice. &ldquo;Woe unto thee, Lewin the Black, that calleth on
+ fiend o' the pit!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now came a fiery hand that, hovering in the air, pointed lambent
+ finger at gaping Lewin and at each of the shivering pike-men in turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe&mdash;sorrow and woe to one and all, ye men of blood, plague and
+ pest, pain o' flesh, and grief of soul seize ye, be accursed and so&mdash;begone!
+ Hence ho&mdash;away!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Rommani hi! Avaunt, I say,
+ Prendraxon!
+ Thus direst curse on ye I lay
+ Shall make flesh shrink and bone decay,
+ To rot and rot by night and day
+ Till flesh and bone do fall away,
+ Mud unto mud and clay to clay.
+ A spell I cast,
+ Shall all men blast.
+ Hark ye,
+ Mark ye,
+ Rommani hi&mdash;prendraxon!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Down fell pike and guisarme from nerveless fingers and, gasping with fear,
+ Black Lewin and his fellows turned and fled nor stayed for one look
+ behind; only Robin stood there (since he might not run away by reason of
+ his bonds) babbling prayers between chattering teeth and with all his
+ fingers crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, Fool, aha!&rdquo; cried the voice. &ldquo;Thus have I, a poor, feeble old woman,
+ wrought better than all thy valiance or Lobkyn's strength. So, by potency
+ of my spells and magic are we quits, thou and I. Bring, then, thy rogue
+ outlaw and haste ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying the old Witch muffled her awful, fiery face in ragged mantle and
+ turned away; and in that moment Robin was aware of three forms about him
+ in the grey dawn-light, felt his bonds loosed off by quick, strong hands
+ and drew a great, joyous breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, Fool, thou brave and noble Motley,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;is it thou again? And
+ I to live?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, marry, Robin! But come apace, the day breaketh and the city is astir&mdash;hark
+ to yon shouts! Follow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So with the Tanner on one side and Lobkyn on the other, Robin ran, hard on
+ Jocelyn's heels; and ever the dawn brightened until up came the sun
+ chasing away sullen shadow and filling street and alley with his glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now, and just as they reached that narrow street where safety lay,
+ they heard a shout, a scream, a rush of feet and roar of fierce voices and
+ beheld, amid a surge of armed men, the old woman struggling in the cruel
+ grip of Black Lewin who (like many others I wot of, my Gill) was brave
+ enough by daylight. Vainly the old creature strove, screaming for mercy as
+ Black Lewin whirled aloft his sword; but his blade clashed upon another as
+ Jocelyn sprang, and for a while the air rang with the sound of fierce-
+ smiting steel until, throwing up his arms, Black Lewin fell and lay there.
+ But, roaring vengeance, the soldiery closed about Jocelyn who, beset by
+ blows on every side, sank in turn, yet, even as he fell, two short though
+ mighty legs bestrode his prostrate form and Lobkyn Lollo, whirling huge
+ club, smote down the foremost assailant and, ever as he smote, he
+ versified and chanted&mdash;thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I'm Lollo hight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I,
+ I'm Lollo hight,
+ 'Tis my delight
+ By day or night
+ In honest fight
+ With main and might
+ Good blows to smite,
+ And where they light
+ 'Tis sorry plight
+ For that poor wight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+
+ &ldquo;Bows, swords and staves,
+ Come, lusty knaves,
+ And fit for graves
+ Brave Lobkyn soon will make ye;
+ So fight, say I,
+ Nor turn and fly,
+ Or, when ye die,
+ Then may old Horny take ye.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Fierce raged the conflict, but in that narrow street they made good play
+ against their many assailants, the valiant Dwarf's mighty club, backed by
+ the Tanner's darting pike and Robin's flashing sword, which he had
+ snatched from a loosened grasp. But Jocelyn lay prone upon his face,
+ between Lobkyn's firm-planted feet, and stirred not. So club whirled,
+ sword flashed and pike darted while, high above the tumult, rose Lobkyn's
+ fierce chant:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hot blood I quaff,
+ At death I laugh,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+ Come all that may,
+ And all I'll slay,
+ And teach ye how to die.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lob&mdash;Lobkyn!&rdquo; screamed the Witch. &ldquo;Thou that drinkest nought but
+ milk&mdash;talk not of blood, thou naughty poppet. Back now&mdash;stand
+ back, I do command thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobkyn smote a man to earth and, sighing regretful, stepped aside.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Back!&rdquo; screamed the Witch. &ldquo;Stand back, I say, all three,
+ And leave this wicked rabblement to me.
+ Now shall they learn the terror of my curse,
+ Black magic shall they feel&mdash;and something worse!&rdquo;
+
+ Then uttered she a sudden, hideous cry,
+ And, leaping, whirled her bony hands on high,
+ And lo! a choking dust-cloud filled the air;
+ That wreathed in whirling eddies here and there.
+
+ &ldquo;Perendewix!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Oh Radzywin&mdash;
+ Thraxa! Behold, my witchcraft doth begin!&rdquo;
+ Back shrank their foes, back reeled they one and all,
+ They choked, they gasped, they let their weapons fall;
+ And some did groan, and some did fiercely sneeze,
+ And some fell prone, some writhed upon their knees;
+ Some strove to wipe the tears from blinded eyes,
+ But one and all gave voice to awful cries.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; cried the Witch, &ldquo;to the door&mdash;the door. Lobkyn, bear ye the
+ brave Fool&mdash;and tenderly! Haste, naughty bantling, haste&mdash;I hear
+ the tread of more soldiers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Lobkyn stooped and, lifting Jocelyn's inanimate form, tucked it beneath
+ one arm, and with Robin and Will the Tanner, followed the old Witch into
+ the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN commandeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Go on, father, do; why will you keep stopping?
+ I think the old Witch is just perfectly topping.
+ And what frightful words she uses for curses!
+
+ MYSELF: Very frightful, indeed, though your slang still much worse is,
+ With your &ldquo;topping,&rdquo; &ldquo;top-holing,&rdquo; your &ldquo;swishing&rdquo; and &ldquo;clipping,&rdquo;
+
+ GILL: Well, I merely intended to say it was ripping;
+ But, if you object to my praises&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I only object to your phrases,
+ For there's no author but will own
+ He &ldquo;liveth not by bread alone.&rdquo;
+ As for myself, if what I write
+ Doth please&mdash;then praise with all your might.
+
+ GILL: Well, then, the Witch is splendid, though
+ I'm very curious to know
+ Just how her face all fiery grew,
+ And what the stuff was that she threw&mdash;
+ The stuff that made the soldiers sneeze
+ And brought them choking to their knees
+ It sounds as though it might be snuff.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, they'd not found out such stuff.
+ But grisly witches long ago
+ Did many strange devices know.
+ Indeed, my Gill, they knew much more
+ Than wise folk gave them credit for.
+
+ GILL: Well, what was it? You haven't said.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll get on with our Geste instead.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 7
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That telleth to the patient reader nought,
+ Save how the Duke was to the wild-wood brought.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With sleepy eyes Duke Jocelyn watched afar,
+ In deep, blue void a solitary star,
+ That, like some bright and wakeful eye, did seem
+ To watch him where he lay 'twixt sleep and dream.
+ And, as he viewed it winking high above,
+ He needs must think of Yolande and his love,
+ And how, while he this twinkling star did view,
+ She, wakeful lying, might behold it too,
+ Whereas she lay a spotless maid and fair,
+ Clothed in the red-gold glory of her hair;
+ And, thinking thus, needs must he fondly sigh,
+ Then frowned to hear a lusty snore hard by&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;and looking whence came this sound, the Duke sat up and his wonder
+ grew; for by light of a fire that glowed in a blackened fissure of rock he
+ beheld himself couched on a bed of bracken within a roomy cave. Beside the
+ fire leaned a mighty, iron-shod club, and beyond this, curled up like a
+ dog, snored Lobkyn Lollo, the Dwarf. Hereupon Jocelyn reached out and
+ shook Lob to wakefulness, who grunted sleepily, rubbed his eyes drowsily
+ and yawned mightily:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Good Dwarf, where am I?
+
+ Answered LOBKYN:
+ Safe, Fool, safe art thou, I trow,
+ Where none but Lob and friends do know.
+
+ JOCELYN: But how am I hither?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, truly thou art hither, Fool,
+ Because thou art not thither, Fool!
+ In these two arms, thy life to save,
+ I bore thee to this goodly cave.
+
+ JOCELYN: How may one of thy inches bear man of mine so far?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, though I of inches lack,
+ I'm mighty strong, both arm and back,
+ Thou that art longer man than me,
+ Yet I am stronger man than thee,
+ Though, lusty Fool, big fool you be,
+ I'd bear thee, Fool, if thou wert three.
+ And mark, Fool, if my grammar seemeth weak,
+ Pray license it since I in verse must speak.
+
+ JOCELYN: And pray why must thou speak in verse?
+
+ LOBKYN: Nature hath on me laid this curse,
+ And, though to speak plain prose I yearn,
+ My prose to verse doth ever turn.
+ Therefore I grieve, as well I might,
+ Because of my poetic plight&mdash;
+ Though bards and rhymers all I scorn,
+ Alack! I was a rhymer born.
+
+ JOCELYN: Alack! poor Dwarf, as thou must versify,
+ By way of courtesy, then, so will I.
+
+ LOBKYN: How, Fool, then canst thou rhyme?
+
+ JOCELYN: Aye, Dwarf, at any time!
+ In dark, in light,
+ By day, by night,
+ Standing, sitting,
+ As be fitting,
+ Verses witty,
+ Quaint or pretty,
+ Incontinent I'll find.
+ Verses glad, Dwarf,
+ Verses sad, Dwarf,
+ Every sort, Lob,
+ Long or short, Lob
+ Or verses ill,
+ Yet verses still
+ Which might be worse,
+ I can rehearse
+ When I'm for verse inclined.
+ So, Lob, first speak me what became
+ Of our old Witch, that potent dame.
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, in faith she wrought so well
+ With direful curse and blasting spell
+ That every howling soldier-knave,
+ Every rogue and base-born slave
+ That by chance I did not slay,
+ From my grand-dam ran away.
+
+ JOCELYN: A noble Witch! Now, Lobkyn, tell
+ What hap'd when in the fight I fell,
+ And how alive I chance to be.
+
+ LOBKYN: Fool, I was there to succour thee.
+ I smote those pike-men hip and thigh,
+ That they did mangled pike-men lie;
+ Their arms, their legs, their skulls I broke,
+ Two, three, and four at every stroke.
+ I drave them here, I smote them there,
+ I smote, I slew, I none did spare,
+ I laughed, I sang, I&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Lob!&rdquo; growled a sleepy voice. &ldquo;Now, as I'm a tanner, here's a-many
+ I's! By Saint Crispin, meseemeth thou'rt all I's&mdash;for as thou fought
+ I fought, or thought I fought, forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOBKYN: True, Will, did'st fight in goodly manner,
+ Though fightedst, Will, like any tanner;
+ But I did fight, or I'm forsworn,
+ Like one unto the manner born.
+ I fought, forsooth, with such good will,
+ 'Tis marvel I'm not fighting still.
+ And so I should be, by my fay,
+ An I had any left to slay;
+ But since I slew them all&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold there!&rdquo; cried the Tanner. &ldquo;I slew one or two, Lob, and Robin
+ likewise. Thou'rt a lusty fighter, but what o' me and Robin&mdash;ha, what
+ o' we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOBKYN: In faith, ye're proper men and tall,
+ And I'm squat man, my stature small,
+ Nath'less, though small and squat I be,
+ I am the best man of the three.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, as to that,&rdquo; quoth the Tanner, &ldquo;'tis but you says so! As to me I
+ think what I will, and I do think&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here Lobkyn started up and seized the great club; quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hark and mark,
+ Heard ye nought there i' the dark?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I!&rdquo; answered Will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methought I heard an owl hoot,&rdquo; said Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; nodded Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool, and yet this owl I 'll swear,
+ Hath ne'er a feather anywhere.
+ This owl hath ne'er a wing to fly,
+ But goes afoot like thou and I.
+ Now mark,
+ And hark!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon the Dwarf laid finger to lip and uttered an owl-cry so dismal, so
+ tremulous and withal so true to nature that it was wonder to hear.
+ Instantly, from the dimness beyond the cavern-mouth, the cry was repeated,
+ and presently was heard a panting and 'plaining, a snuffling and a
+ shuffling, and into the light of the fire hobbled the old Witch. Beholding
+ Jocelyn sitting cross-legged on his couch of fern, she paused and, leaning
+ on her crooked stick, viewed him with her wise, old eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, Motley!&rdquo; she croaked. &ldquo;Oho, thou flaunting jackanapes, didst peril
+ thy foolish flesh for me that am poor and old and feeble, and cursed by
+ all for witchcraft! So have I with my potions ministered to thee in thy
+ sickness, and behold thou'rt alive, hale and strong again. Give me thy
+ hand! Aha, here's cool, unfevered blood! Show me thy tongue. Oho! Aha! A
+ little sup o' my black decoction&mdash;roots gathered at full o' moon&mdash;a
+ little sup and shall be thyself by to-morrow's dawn. But&mdash;as for
+ thee, thou good-for-naught, thou wicked elf&mdash;aha! would'st dare leave
+ thy poor old grannam weak and 'fenceless? Give me thy rogue-ear!&rdquo;
+ Obediently, the mighty Dwarf arose and sighfully suffered the old woman to
+ grasp him by the ear and to tweak and wring and twist it as she would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What dost thou here i' the wild-wood, thou imp, thou poppet o' plagues,
+ thou naughty wap-de-staldees?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To which Lobkyn, writhing and watering at the eyes, answered thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Stay, prithee grannam, loose thy hold!
+ I would but be an outlaw bold,
+ An outlaw fierce that men shall fear&mdash;
+ Beseech thee, grand-dam, loose mine ear!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An outlaw, naughty one!&rdquo; screeched the Witch, tweaking ear the harder.
+ &ldquo;Dare ye tell me so, elf?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOBKIN: Aye, grand-dam&mdash;cuff me an ye will,
+ Nath'less an outlaw I'll be still,
+ And many a wicked rogue I'll kill&mdash;
+ O grand-dam, loose mine ear!
+ And day and night I'll slay until
+ All rogues my name do fear.
+
+ For grand-dam, I'm a fighter&mdash;O,
+ Beseech thee, let my ear go!
+ And bones shall crack and blood shall flow,
+ If any dare resist me.
+ And all the world my name shall know,
+ Pray by the ear don't twist me!
+
+ All men before my club shall fly,
+ All on their knees shall &ldquo;mercy&rdquo; cry,
+ Or mangled in their gore shall lie&mdash;
+ Ah, grand-dam, pray don't clout me!
+ Don't beat me, grannam dear, but try
+ To do awhile without me&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Without thee, thou piece o' naughtiness?&rdquo; screamed the old woman. &ldquo;Now
+ will I lay my stick about thee&mdash;hold still, Rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying which, she proceeded to belabour the poor Dwarf with her knotted
+ stick, clutching him fast by his ear the while. Thus she be-thwacked him
+ soundly until he roared for mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how now&mdash;how now?&rdquo; cried a merry voice, and Robin strode into
+ the firelight. &ldquo;Gentle Witch, sweet dame,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;what do ye with poor
+ Lob?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thwack him shrewdly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which is, Witch, that which none but witch the like o' thee might do, for
+ lustier fighter and mightier dwarf never was. Thus, but for thy witch-like
+ witcheries, the which, Witch, witch do prove thee, but for this and the
+ power and potency of thy spells, now might he crack out thy life 'twixt
+ finger and thumb&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, forest-rogue, 'tis a bad brat, a very naughty elf would run off into
+ the wild to be rogue like thee&mdash;an outlaw, forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth, Witch,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;outlaw is he in very truth, in sooth
+ and by my troth! Outlaw is Lob, banned by Church and Council of Ten, and
+ so proclaimed i' the market square of Canalise this very morn by sound o'
+ trumpet and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? How?&rdquo; cried the old woman, wringing her trembling hands. &ldquo;My Lobkyn
+ outlawed? My babe, my lovely brat, my pretty bantling, woe and alas! My
+ dear ugly one an outlaw?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, marry is he, Witch, outlaw proclaimed, acclaimed, announced,
+ pronounced and denounced; as such described, ascribed and proscribed by
+ Master Gregory Bax, the port-reeve, for the late slaying and maiming of
+ divers of the city guard. So outlaw is Lobkyn, his life henceforth forfeit
+ even as mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lobkyn an hairy outlaw i' the wild-wood! Out alas! And what of his
+ poor old grannam? What o' me&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content thee, sweet hag, since thou'rt outlawed along with him and, as
+ witch, doomed to die unpleasantly by fire and flame and faggot, if thou'rt
+ caught.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack! Wala-wa! Woe 's me!&rdquo; groaned the Witch, cracking her finger-bones.
+ &ldquo;And all this by reason o' the Fool yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the Fool is dubbed outlaw likewise, Witch,&rdquo; quoth Robin. &ldquo;Outlaw is
+ he along o' thee and Tanner Will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And all by reason that this Fool must needs peril our lives for sake of
+ rogue-outlaw, of forest-robber, of knavish woodland-lurker&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hight Robin!&rdquo; laughed Robin, leaning on his long bow-stave. &ldquo;Now, this
+ brave Fool having saved Robin his life, Witch, the which, Witch, was good
+ thing for Robin, our Fool next saved thee, Witch, which was nought to
+ Robin, in the which, Witch, Robin did not joy; for thou, old Witch, being
+ witch, art therefore full o' witcheries which be apt to be-devil a man and
+ fright his reason, for the which reason, being reasonable man, I reason,
+ for this reason, that, so reasoning, I love thee not. But thou art old,
+ Witch, which is good reason to reasonably reason thou art wise, Witch,
+ and, being wise, I on this wise would seek counsel of thy wisdom, Witch.
+ Imprimis, then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; commanded the Witch; &ldquo;here's a whirl o' windy wind! Hast more of
+ such-like, forester?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some little, Witch, which I will now, Witch&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, Robin-a-Green, suffer me to rest my old bones whiles thy mill
+ clacks.&rdquo; Hereupon the old Witch seated herself beside the fire, with bony
+ knees up-drawn to bony chin. &ldquo;Speak, outlaw Robin,&rdquo; she croaked, blinking
+ her red eyes, &ldquo;and speak ye plain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, wise Witch, look 'ee: since we be outlaws each and every, with
+ all men's hands against us, with none to succour, and death watchful for
+ us, 'tis plain, and very plain, we, for our harbourage and defence, must
+ in the wild-wood bide&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; cried Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;It soundeth good,
+ The brave wild-wood,
+ Where flowers do spring
+ And birds do sing.
+ To slay the deer
+ And make good cheer,
+ With mead and beer,
+ The livelong year,
+ And&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Roar not, toad!&rdquo; cried the Witch. &ldquo;Say on&mdash;Rogue-Robin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, mark me, good Witch, here's where buskin chafeth! Not long since I
+ ruled i' the wild-wood, a very king, with ten-score lusty outlaw-rogues to
+ do my will. To-day is there never an one, and for this reasonable reason&mdash;to
+ wit, I am hanged, and, being hanged, am dead, and, being dead, am not, and
+ thus Robin is nobody; and yet again, perceive me, Witch, being Robin, I am
+ therefore somebody; thus is nobody somebody, and yet somebody that nobody
+ will believe anybody. The which, Witch, is a parlous case, methinks, for
+ here am I, somebody, nobody and Robin altogether and at the same time;
+ therefore, Witch, o' thy witchful wisdom&mdash;who am I, what and which,
+ Witch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Witch blinked and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones one after
+ another. Quoth she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For thy first, thou'rt thyself; for the second, a rogue; and for the
+ third, a wind-bag. I would thy second might tie up thy first in thy
+ third.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So should Robin choke Robin with Robin. But hark 'ee again, good, patient
+ dame. It seemeth that Ranulph the executioner betaketh him at cock-crow to
+ hang poor me; but, finding me not, made great outcry, insomuch that the
+ city guard, such as mighty Lob and Will had left alive, sought counsel
+ together; and taking one of their slain fellows, Ranulph hanged him in my
+ stead, and there he hangeth now, above the city gate, his face so marred
+ that he might be me or any other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Robin&mdash;well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This day, at sunset, came I unto the trysting-oak, and by blast of horn
+ summoned me my outlaw company. They came apace and in great wonderment,
+ for, seeing me, they fell to great awe and dread, thinking me dead, since
+ many had seen my body a-dangle on the gallows; wherefore, seeing me
+ manifestly alive, they took me for ghoulish ghost 'stead o' good flesh and
+ blood, and fled from me amain. So, by reason of my dead body, that is no
+ body o' mine, yet that nobody will believe is no body o' mine, they
+ believe that this my body is yet no body, but a phantom; the which is out
+ of reason; yet thus unreasonably do the rogues reason by reason of the
+ body that hangeth in place of my body above the city gate. Wherefore I
+ reason there is yet reason in their unreason, seeing this body was
+ somebody, yet no body o' mine, but which nobody among them can swear to.
+ Which, Witch, is a matter which none but wise witch may counsel me in. How
+ say'st thou, Witch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for a while the old Witch scowled on the fire, bony chin on bony
+ knees, and dreamily cracked her finger-joints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; she cried suddenly. &ldquo;Aha&mdash;a body that nobody's is, yet body
+ that everybody knoweth for body o' thine&mdash;aha! So must nobody know
+ that nobody's body is not thy body. Dost see my meaning, Robin-a-Green?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No whit, Witch! Thou growest involved, thy talk diffuse, abstruse and
+ altogether beyond one so obtuse as simple Rob&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then hark 'ee again, Addlepate! Everybodymust believe nobody's body thy
+ body, so by dead body will I make thy live body of so great account to
+ everybody that nobody henceforth shall doubt dead body made live body, by
+ my witchcraft, and thou be feared, therefore, of everybody. Dost follow me
+ now, numskull?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly, mother! And truly 'tis a rare subtlety, a notable wile, and
+ thou a right cunning witch and wise. But how wilt achieve this wonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since dead thou art, I to life will bring thee. Oho, I will summon thee
+ through fire and flame; aha, I will make thee more dreaded than
+ heretofore; thy fame shall fill the wild-wood and beyond. Know'st thou the
+ Haunted Wood, hard by Thraxby Waste?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here Robin's merry smile languished, and he rubbed nose with dubious
+ finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, I do,&rdquo; quoth he sombrely; &ldquo;an ill place and&mdash;demon-rid, they
+ say&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come ye there to-morrow at midnight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alone?&rdquo; says Robin, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good Witch, most gentle, potent dame, I&mdash;though phantom
+ accounted, I love not phantoms, and Thraxby Waste&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come ye there&mdash;at midnight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, good Witch, an come I must, suffer that I bring the valiant
+ Fool and mighty Lob&mdash;prithee, now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this the old Witch scowled and mumbled and crackled her finger-bones
+ louder than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried she at last, &ldquo;thou great child, afraid-o'-the-dark, bring
+ these an ye will&mdash;but none other!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good mother, I thank thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tchak!&rdquo; cried the Witch, and, struggling to her feet, hobbled to Jocelyn
+ and laid bony finger on wrist and brow, nodded, mumbled, and so, bent on
+ her staff, hobbled away; but, reaching the cave-mouth, she paused, and
+ smote stick to earth fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow!&rdquo; she croaked. &ldquo;Midnight! Re&mdash;member!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 8
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tells how the Witch, with incantations dire,
+ In life to life brought Robin through the fire.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The wind was cold&mdash;indeed 'twas plaguy chill&mdash;
+ That furtive crept and crept, like something ill
+ Stealing with dreadful purpose in the dark,
+ With scarce a sound its stealthy course to mark;
+ While pallid moon did seem to swoon, as though
+ It ghastly things beheld on earth below;
+ And Robin gripped the good sword by his side,
+ And Joc'lyn looked about him watchful-eyed;
+ While Lobkyn Lollo felt and looked the bolder
+ By reason of the club across his shoulder.
+
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; whispered Robin, peering through the gloom,
+ &ldquo;Is dismal place, I've heard, of death and doom.
+ Here do be ghosts and goblins, so 'tis said,
+ Demons, phantoms, spectres of the dead&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily,&rdquo; quoth Lob, &ldquo;and what is worse,
+ 'Tis here my grand-dam oft doth come to curse,
+ And haunteth it with spiteful toads and bats,
+ With serpents fell, with ewts and clawful cats.
+ Here doth she revel hold o' moony nights,
+ With grave-rank ghouls and moaning spectral sprites;
+ And ... Saints! what's that?
+ A hook-winged bat?
+ Not so; perchance, within its hairy body fell
+ Is man or maid transformed by magic spell.
+ O, brothers, heedful be, and careful tread
+ Lest magic gin should catch and strike us dead!
+ O would my grannam might go with us here.
+ Since, being witch, she doth no witchcraft fear.&rdquo;
+
+ So came the three at last to Haunted Wood,
+ Where mighty trees in gloomy grandeur stood,
+ Their wide-flung boughs so closely interweaving
+ Scarce space between for ghostly moonbeams leaving;
+ But, snake-like, round each other closely twined,
+ In shuddering wind did mournful voices find,
+ And, groaning, writhed together to and fro
+ Like souls that did the fiery torment know.
+ Thus, in the wood, 'twas dark and cold and dank,
+ And breathed an air of things long dead and rank;
+ While shapes, dim-seen, did creep and flit and fly
+ With sudden squeak, and bodeful, wailing cry.
+
+ At last they reached a clearing in the wood,
+ Where, all at once, as 'mid the leaves they stood,
+ From Lobkyn's lips, loud, tremulous, and high,
+ There rose and swelled the owlet's shuddering cry.
+ Scarce on the air this dismal sound had died,
+ When they the Witch's hobbling form espied.
+ Beholding Robin, by the arm she caught him,
+ And to a place of rocks in haste she brought him;
+ And here, where bosky thickets burgeoned round,
+ She pointed to a chasm in the ground.
+
+ &ldquo;Go down!&rdquo; she hissed. &ldquo;Go down, thou thing of clay,
+ Thou that art dead&mdash;into thy grave I say.
+ Since thou 'rt hanged, a dead man shalt thou be
+ Till from thy grave my spells shall summon thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;My grave?&rdquo; gasped Robin, blenching from her frown.
+ &ldquo;Aye, Rogue!&rdquo; she croaked. &ldquo;Behold thy grave! Go down!&rdquo;
+ So shiv'ring Robin, in most woeful plight,
+ Crept into gloom and vanished from their sight.
+ &ldquo;O, Robin, Robin!&rdquo; the old Witch softly cried,
+ &ldquo;Alack, I'm here!&rdquo; faint voice, below, replied.
+ &ldquo;Thou dead,&rdquo; croaked she, &ldquo;thou ghostly shade forlorn,
+ From charnel-vault sound now thy spectral horn,
+ Sound now thy rallying-note, then silent be
+ Till from thy mouldering tomb I summon thee!&rdquo;
+
+ Now, on the stillness rose the ghostly sound
+ Of Robin's hunting horn that through the ground
+ Rang thin and high, unearthly-shrill and clear,
+ That thrilled the shivering woodland far and near,
+ And shuddering to silence, left behind
+ A whisper as of leaves in stealthy wind.
+ A rustling 'mid the underbrush they heard
+ Where, in the gloom about them, dim things stirred&mdash;
+ Vague, stealing shapes that softly nearer drew,
+ Till from the tree-gloom crept a ragged crew,
+ Wild men and fierce, a threatening, grimly herd,
+ Who stood like shadows, speaking not a word;
+ And the pale moon in fitful flashes played
+ On sword and headpiece, pike and broad axe-blade.
+ While the old hag, o'er witch-fire crouching low,
+ Puffed at the charcoal till it was aglow;
+ Then hobbling round and round her crackling fire,
+ She thus began her incantations dire:
+
+ &ldquo;Come ye long-dead,
+ Ye spirits dread,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ye things of quaking fear,
+ Ye poor, lost souls,
+ Ye ghosts, ye ghouls,
+ Haxwiggin bids ye here!
+ By one by two, by two by three,
+ Spirits of Night, I summon ye,
+ By three by four, by four by five,
+ Come ye now dead that were alive,
+ Come now I bid ye
+ From grave-clods rid ye,
+ Come!
+ From South and North,
+ I bid ye forth,
+ From East, from West,
+ At my behest&mdash;
+ Come!
+ Come great, come small,
+ Come one, come all,
+ Heed ye my call,
+ List to my call, I say,
+ From pitchy gloom
+ Of mouldered tomb
+ Here find ye room
+ For sport and holiday.
+ Come grisly ghosts and goblins pale,
+ Come spirits black and grey,
+ Ye shrouded spectres&mdash;Hail, O Hail!
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday.
+ Come wriggling snakes
+ From thorny brakes,
+ Hail!
+ Come grimly things
+ With horny wings,
+ That flit, that fly,
+ That croak, that cry,
+ Hail!
+
+ &ldquo;Come ghouls, come demons one and all,
+ Here revel whiles ye may;
+ Ye noisome things that creep and crawl,
+ Come, sport and round me play.
+ Ho, claw and wing and hoof and horn,
+ Here revel till the clammy dawn.
+
+ &ldquo;Peeping, creeping,
+ Flying, crying,
+ Fighting, biting,
+ Groaning, moaning,
+ Ailing, wailing,
+ Spirits fell,
+ Come to my spell,
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday!
+ So, are ye there,
+ High up in air,
+ The moonbeams riding
+ 'Mid shadows hiding?
+
+ &ldquo;Now gather round, ye spectral crew,
+ This night have we brave work to do&mdash;
+ Bold Robin o' the Green, 'tis said,
+ On gallows hangeth cold and dead
+ Beneath the sky
+ On gibbet high,
+ They in a noose did swing him.
+ Go, goblins, go,
+ And ere they know,
+ Unto me hither bring him.&rdquo;
+
+ Here paused the Witch to mend her glowing fire,
+ While each man to his neighbour shuffled nigher,
+ As witch-flame leapt and ever brighter grew,
+ Till, to their horror, sudden it burned blue;
+ Whereat each silent, fearful beholder
+ Felt in the gloom to touch his fellow's shoulder,
+ Yet, in that moment, knew an added dread
+ To see the fire from blue turn ghastly red;
+ Then, as the Witch did o'er it crooning lean,
+ Behold! it changed again to baleful green.
+ Whereat the Witch flung bony arms on high,
+ As though with claw-like hands she 'd rend the sky;
+ And while the lurid flames leapt ever higher,
+ She thus invoked the Spirit of the Fire.
+
+ &ldquo;As fire doth change, yet, changed, unchanged doth burn,
+ By fiery spell shall dead to life return!
+
+ &ldquo;Ho, goblins yonder&mdash;'neath the moon,
+ Have ye brought me the dead so soon?
+ Ha! is it Bxibin that ye bring,
+ That pale, that stiff, that clammy thing?
+ Now work we spell with might and main,
+ Shall make it live and breathe again.
+
+ &ldquo;Now in and out,
+ And round about,
+ Ye wriggling rout,
+ With hoof and claw and wing;
+ Now high, now low,
+ Now fast, now slow,
+ Now to and fro
+ Tread we a magic ring.
+
+ &ldquo;Thus, while the frighted moon doth peep,
+ We 'll wake this cold, dead thing from sleep,
+ Till Robin back to life shall leap.
+ And when he from the fire shall spring,
+ Ye outlaws hail him for your King.
+
+ &ldquo;For on that wight
+ Who, day or night,
+ Shall Robin disobey
+ With purpose fell
+ I'll cast a spell
+ Shall wither him away.
+
+ &ldquo;Ho, Robin! Ope thy death-cold eyes,
+ Ho, Robin! From thy grave arise,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+ Robin that doth bide so near me,
+ Robin, Robin, wake and hear me,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+
+ &ldquo;Back to life I summon thee,
+ Through the fire thy path must be,
+ Through the fire that shall not harm thee,
+ Through flame that back to life shall charm thee,
+ Shall warm thy body all a-cold,
+ And make grim Death loose clammy hold.
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Leap back to life by all men seen!&rdquo;
+
+ Through curling smoke-wreaths and through writhing flame,
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came,
+ And by the Witch did in the fire-light stand,
+ Sword by his side and bugle-horn in hand,
+ And laughed full blithe as he was wont to do,
+ And, joyous, hailed his wild and ragged crew:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What lads, are ye there forsooth? Is't Myles I see with lusty Watt and
+ John and Hal o' the Quarterstaff? God den t' ye, friends, and merry
+ hunting to one and all, for by oak and ash and thorn here stand I to live
+ with thee, aye, good lads, and to die with ye here in the good greenwood&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now and all at once from that grim and silent company a mighty shout
+ went up:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis Robin&mdash;'tis Robin, 'tis bold Robin-a-Green! 'Tis our Robin
+ himself come back to us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And fearful no longer, they hasted to him and clasped him in brawny arms,
+ hugging him mightily and making great rejoicing over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 9
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That tells almost as fully as it should,
+ The joys of living in the good greenwood.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deep-hidden in the trackless wild the outlaws had made them a haven of
+ refuge, a camp remote and well sequestered. Here were mossy, fern-clad
+ rocks that soared aloft, and here green lawns where ran a blithesome
+ brook; it was indeed a very pleasant place shut in by mighty trees. Within
+ this leafy boskage stood huts of wattle, cunningly wrought; beneath the
+ steep were many caves carpeted with dried fern and fragrant mosses, while
+ everywhere, above and around, the trees spread mighty boughs, through
+ which the sun darted golden beams be-dappling the sward, and in whose
+ leafy mysteries the birds made joyous carolling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here beneath bending willows arched over this merry brook, one
+ sun-bright morning riotous with song of birds, sat Jocelyn with Robin
+ a-sprawl beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O brother,&rdquo; says Robin, &ldquo;O brother, 't is a fair place the greenwood, a
+ fair, sweet place to live&mdash;aye, or to die in methinks, this good
+ greenwood, whereof I have made a song&mdash;hark 'ee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Oho, it is a right good thing
+ When trees do bud and flowers do spring
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood,
+ To hear the birds so blithely sing,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;Who cometh here leaves grief behind,
+ Here broken man hath welcome kind,
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ The hopeless here new hope may find,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the kind, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;Ho, friend, 'tis pleasant life we lead,
+ No laws have we, no laws we need
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+ For every man's a man indeed,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;All travellers that come this way
+ Must something in fair tribute pay
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ Or here in bonds is like to stay,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Lost in the good, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;Full many a lord, in boastful pride,
+ This tribute, scornful, hath denied
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ And thereupon hath sudden died,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the fair, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;And when our time shall come to die
+ Methinks we here may softly lie
+ Deep in the fair, green wood.
+ With birds to sing us lullaby,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So there it is, brother&mdash;and life and death in a nutshell, as
+ 'twere. Now, wherefore wilt not join us and turn outlaw, good Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that I am a fool belike, Robin. Howbeit, I'm better Fool than
+ outlaw.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, rather, greater fool, Fool, for foresters' life is better than life
+ o' folly, and payeth better to boot, what with booty&mdash;ha! Moreover, I
+ do love thee, since, Fool, though fool, art wise in counsel and valiant
+ beyond thought&mdash;so 'tis I would not lose thee. Stay, therefore, and
+ live my comrade and brother, equal with me in all things. How say'st
+ thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Robin, I say this: True friendship is a goodly thing and a rare in
+ this world, and, therefore, to be treasured; 'tis thing no man may buy or
+ seek, since itself is seeker and cometh of itself; 'tis a prop&mdash;a
+ staff in stony ways, a shield 'gainst foes, a light i' the dark. So do I
+ love friendship, Robin, and thou'rt my friend, yet must leave thee, though
+ friendship shall abide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth ROBIN: How abide an we be parted?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In heart and mind and memory, Robin. Moreover, though I go, yet will I
+ return anon, an life be mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore go ye, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First to seek my comrade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy comrade&mdash;ha! I mind him, a fierce great fellow with hawk's beak
+ and a fighting eye. And whither trend ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Canalise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art crazed, brother? 'Tis there death waiteth thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet must I go, Robin, since there my heart waiteth me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A maid, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A maid, Robin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heigho! So wilt thou go, come joy, come pain, come life or death, since a
+ maid is made to make man saint or devil, some days glad and some days sad,
+ but ever and always a fool. And thou art Fool by profession, and, being
+ lover professed and confessed, art doubly a fool; and since, good Folly,
+ love's but folly and thou, a Fool, art deep in folly, so is thy state most
+ melancholy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And dost think love so great folly, Robin?&rdquo; said a soft voice, and,
+ looking round, they beheld the lovely, dark-tressed Melissa, who viewed
+ them bright-eyed and pouted red mouth, frowning a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily, lady,&rdquo; laughed Robin, as she sank on the grass beside them.
+ &ldquo;Forsooth, 'tis a madness fond. For see, now, a man being in love is out
+ of all else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As how, Sir Outlaw?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, on this wise&mdash;when man's in love he mopeth apart and is ill
+ company, so is he out o' friends; he hangeth humble head abashed, so is he
+ out o' countenance; he uttereth frequent, windy, sighful suspirations, so
+ is he out o' breath; he lavisheth lucre on his love, so is he out o'
+ pocket; he forsweareth food, despiseth drink, scorneth sleep, so is he out
+ o' health&mdash;in fine, he is out of all things, so is he out of himself;
+ therefore he is mad, and so may go hang himself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: And hast thou loved, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Ever and always, and none but Robin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: And none more worthy, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And none more, as I am worthy Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Lovest thou not Love, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Love, love not I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Then Love canst thou know not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Then if I love Love for Love's sake, must Love then love me,
+ therefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: If thy love for Love be true love, so shall Love love thee true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Then if Love should love me for my sake, then would I love Love for
+ Love's sake; but since Love ne'er hath sought me for my sake, ne'er will I
+ seek Love for Love's sake for my sake, since Love, though plaguy sweet, is
+ a sweet plague, I judge and, so judging, will by my judgment stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISBA: And how think you, Sir Fool?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: I think if Love find Robin and Robin, so found of Love, shall
+ learn to love Love for Love's sake, Love shall teach Robin how, hi loving
+ Love&mdash;Love, if a plague, doth but plague him lovingly to his better
+ judgment of Love, till, being on this wise, wise&mdash;he shall judge of
+ Love lovingly, loving Love at last for Love's own lovely sake, rather than
+ for his own selfish self. For as there is the passion of love, the which
+ is a love selfish, so there is the true Spirit of Love, the which
+ forgetteth self in Love's self, thus, self-forgotten, Love is crowned by
+ Love's true self.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: How think ye of this, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: By Cupid, we are so deep in love that we are like to drown of love
+ and we be not wary. Here hath my lovely jowlopped-crested brother so beset
+ poor Robin with Love and self and Robin, that Robin kens not which is
+ Love, Love's self or himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: And yet I do think 'tis very plain! Yet an thou canst express
+ this plainer, prithee do, Sir Fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blithely, sweet lady, here will I frame my meaning in a rhyme, thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Who loveth Love himself above,
+ With Love base self transcending
+ Love, Love shall teach how Love may reach
+ The Love that hath no ending.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Tis thus Love-true, Love shall renew,
+ Love's love thus waning never,
+ So love each morn of Love new-born,
+ Love shall live loving ever.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Aye, verily, there's Love and yet such a love as no man may find
+ methinks, brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Never, Robin, until it find him. For true love, like friendship,
+ cometh unsought, like all other good things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: 'Las! then needs must I be no good thing since I am sought e'en now
+ of old Mopsa the Witch yonder!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he pointed where the old creature hobbled towards them bent on her
+ crooked staff. Up rose Robin and, hasting to meet her, louted full low,
+ since she was held in great respect of all men by reason of her potent
+ spells. Chuckling evilly, she drew down Robin's tall head to whisper in
+ his ear, whereupon he laughed, clapped hand to brawny thigh, and taking
+ old Mopsa's feeble arm, hastened away with her. But Melissa, reclining
+ 'neath the willow-shade, gazed down into the murmurous waters of the brook
+ with eyes of dream whiles Jocelyn struck soft, sweet chords upon his lute.
+ And presently she turned to view him thoughtfully&mdash;his strange,
+ marred face; his eyes so quick and keen 'neath battered cock's-comb; his
+ high, proud bearing despite his frayed and motley habit; and ever her
+ wonder grew until, at last, she must needs question him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fools, Sir Fool, have I seen a-many, both in the motley and out, but thou
+ art rare among all fools, I do think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Gramercy, lady! Truly fool am I of all fools singular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Thou'rt he I heard, upon a day, sing strange, sweet songs, within
+ the marketplace of Canalise!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: The same, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: That soused my lord Gui head over ears in a lily-pool?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Verily, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: O! Would one might do as much for Sir Agramore of Biename!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: One doubtless will, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Thyself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Nay&mdash;one that loveth the disputatious bickering of sharp
+ steel better than I&mdash;one had rather fight than eat, and rather fight
+ three men than one&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three men?&rdquo; cried Melissa, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, lady&mdash;and six men than three!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was such an one, Fool, in truth a very brave man, did fight three
+ of my Lord Agramore's foresters on my behalf. Dost know of such an one,
+ Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks he is my comrade, Lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy comrade&mdash;in truth? Then, pray you, speak me what seeming hath
+ he.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How so, Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A great, fierce rogue is he, unlovely of look, bleak of eye, harsh of
+ tongue, hooked of nose, flinty of soul, stony of heart, of aspect grim and
+ manners rude!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, verily, thy comrade have I never seen!&rdquo; quoth Melissa, flushing and
+ with head up-flung. &ldquo;He that saved me is nothing the like of this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Jocelyn slyly, &ldquo;'tis thus he hath been named ere now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool, indeed he that saved me was tall and seemly man, very fierce
+ and strong in fight, but to me wondrous gentle&mdash;in truth, something
+ timorous, and, 'spite rusty mail, spake and looked like a noble knight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then forsooth, lady, thy champion is no comrade of mine, for he is but a
+ poor rogue, ill-beseen, ill-kempt, ill-spoken, ill-mannered and altogether
+ ill, save only that he is my friend&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou speakest ill of thy ill friend, the which is ill in thee&mdash;ill
+ Fool!&rdquo; and the fair Melissa rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And pray, lady, didst learn thy preserver's name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, for I asked him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it was&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax!&rdquo; she sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax!&rdquo; said Jocelyn, both in the same moment; the dark-browed Melissa
+ sat down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So thy comrade and&mdash;he are one, Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, lady. Yet here we have him, on the one hand, a man noble and
+ seemly, and, on the other, a poor rogue, hook-nosed, ill-beseen, ill&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis thou hast miscalled him, Fool!&rdquo; said she, frowning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A maid&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Melissa, frowning blacker than ever. &ldquo;A maid, Fool? What maid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wandering gipsy o' the wood, lady&mdash;a dark-eyed damsel with long,
+ black curling hair and 'voice of sweet allure'&mdash;'tis so he named her&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This was belike some wicked witch!&rdquo; said Melissa, clenching white fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, belike it was, lady, for she bestowed on him a strange jewel, a
+ heart in heart of crystal, that wrought for us in Canalise marvels great
+ as our wondrous Witch herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here the lovely Melissa's frown vanished, and her red lips curved to
+ sudden smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Belike this was no witch after all!&rdquo; said she gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howbeit, lady,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn slyly, &ldquo;my poor comrade is surely bewitched
+ by her none the less. She hath wrought on him spell so potent that he
+ groweth mopish and talketh of her eyes, her hair, her sweet and gentle
+ voice, her little foot, forsooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And doth he so, indeed?&rdquo; said Melissa softly, and, twiddling one of her
+ own pretty feet, she smiled at it. &ldquo;Doth he sigh o'er much?&rdquo; she
+ questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Consumedly! By the minute!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor soldier!&rdquo; she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, poor rogue!&rdquo; said Jocelyn; whereupon she frowned again, and turned
+ her back upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he is thy comrade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even so&mdash;poor knave!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And destitute&mdash;even as thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, a sorry clapper-claw&mdash;even as I, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, pray thee, why doth he wear gold chain about his neck?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chain, lady&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such as only knights do wear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Belike he stole it, lady&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye&mdash;belike he did!&rdquo; said she, rising; then she sighed and laughed,
+ and so turned and left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in a while Jocelyn rose also, and went on beside the brook; but as he
+ walked deep in thought, there met him Robin, he full of mirth and
+ laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, brother, good brother!&rdquo; cried he joyfully, clapping hand on
+ Jocelyn's broad shoulder, &ldquo;come away, now, and see what the good wind hath
+ blown hither&mdash;come thy ways and see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So came they where rose a great tree of huge girth, whose gnarled branches
+ spread far and wide, a veryforest of leaves, beneath whose shade were many
+ of the outlaws grouped about one who crouched miserably on his knees, his
+ arms fast bound and a halter about his neck; and, as obedient to Robin's
+ words the fierce company fell back, Jocelyn saw this torn and pallid
+ captive was none other than Ranulph the Hangman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe's me, my masters!&rdquo; quoth he 'twixt chattering teeth. &ldquo;'Tis pity poor
+ Ranulph must die before his time, for ne'er shall be found hangman,
+ headsman or torturer the like o' Ranulph&mdash;so dainty i' the nice
+ adjustment o' noose! So clean and delicate wi' the axe! So tender and
+ thoughtful wi' pincers, thumbscrew, rack or red-hot iron! A hangman so
+ kindly o' soul, so merry o' heart, alack, so free, so gay, so merry&mdash;forsooth
+ a very wanton, waggish, jovial bawcock-lad&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, good, merry wag,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;now shalt thou cut us an
+ antic aloft in air, shalt caper and dance in noose to our joyance! Up with
+ him, bully lads, and gently, that he may dance the longer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as Ranulph was dragged, shivering, to his feet, Jocelyn stepped
+ forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Look, now, here's hangman did but hang since hang he
+ must; must he hang therefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Aye, marry, since hanging shall his hanging end!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: But if to hang his duty is, must he for duty hang? Moreover, if
+ ye hang this hangman, unhanged hangmen shall hang still, and since ye may
+ not all hangmen hang, wherefore should this hangman hang?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Brother, an this hangman hang, fewer hangmen shall there be to
+ hang, forsooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Not so, Robin, for hangman dead begetteth hangman new; this
+ hangman hanged, hangman in his place shall hang men after him. Shall this
+ hangman hang for hanging as in duty bound, whiles other hangmen, unhanged,
+ hang still? Here, methinks, is small wisdom, little reason, and less of
+ justice, Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Beshrew me, brother&mdash;but here's so much of hanging hanging on
+ hanging plaguy hangman that hang me if I get the hang on't&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Plainly, Robin&mdash;wilt hang a man for doing his duty?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Plainly, brother&mdash;no. But&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Then canst not hang this hangman, since hanging his duty is&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Yet 'tis base, vile duty&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Yet duty it is&mdash;wherefore, an there be any justice in the
+ good greenwood, this hangman unhanged must go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here Robin scowled, and his brawny fellows scowled likewise, and began
+ to mutter and murmur against Jocelyn, who, leaning back to tree, strummed
+ his lute and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O, Life is sweet, but Life is fleet,
+ O'er quick to go, alack!
+ And once 'tis spilt, try as thou wilt,
+ Thou canst not call it back!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So bethink thee, bold Robin, and, as thou 'rt king o' the wild-wood, be
+ thou just king and merciful&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now out upon thee, brother!&rdquo; cried Robin, forgetting to scowl. &ldquo;Out on
+ thee with thy honied phrases, thy quipsome lilting rhymes! Here go I to do
+ a thing I ha' no lust to do&mdash;and all by reason o' thee! Off&mdash;off
+ wi' the halter, lads&mdash;loose the hangman-claws of him! Hereafter,
+ since he can pay no ransom, he shall be our serf; to have a hangman fetch
+ and carry shall be rare, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth JOCELYN: How much should hangman's flesh be worth i' the greenwood,
+ Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, brother, 'tis poor, sad and dismal knave; five gold pieces shall buy
+ him, aye&mdash;halter and all, and 'tis fair, good halter, look you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, opening his wallet, &ldquo;behold the monies, so do I
+ buy him of thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by Saint Nick!&rdquo; cried Robin, amazed. &ldquo;Nay, brother, an thou'lt buy
+ so sorry a thing, give thy money to the merry lads; I'll none on't. And
+ now,&rdquo; said he, the money duly paid, &ldquo;what wilt do wi' thy hangman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; cried Ranulph, falling on his knees at Jocelyn's feet, &ldquo;fain
+ would I serve thee&mdash;e'en to the peril o' the life thou hast saved.
+ Bid me labour for thee and in labour shall be my joy, bid me fight for
+ thee and I will fight whiles life is in me; bid me follow thee and I will
+ follow even unto&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, hangman,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;I bid thee rise and sing for us, and so be
+ gone wheresoever thou wilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ranulph arose and glancing round upon the fierce company, from the
+ noose at his feet to Jocelyn's scarred face, he drew a great breath; quoth
+ he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool, since 'tis thy will fain would I give thee song blithe and
+ joyful since joy is in my heart, but alack, though my songs begin in merry
+ vein they do grow mournful anon; howbeit, for thy joy now will I sing my
+ cheeriest;&rdquo; whereupon Ranulph brake into song thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I am forsooth a merry soul,
+ Hey deny down, ho ho!
+ I love a merry song to troll,
+ I love to quaff a cheery bowl,
+ And yet thinks I, alas!
+ Such things too soon do pass,
+ And proudest flesh is grass.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ &ldquo;A goodly lover I might be,
+ Merrily, ho ho!
+ But pretty maids in terror flee,
+ When this my hangman's head they see.
+ But woe it is, thinks I,
+ All fair, sweet dames must die,
+ And pale, sad corpses lie.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ &ldquo;Fairest beauty is but dust,
+ Shining armour soon will rust,
+ All good things soon perish must,
+ Look around, thinks I, and see
+ All that, one day, dead must be,
+ King and slave and you and me.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it must be so!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;Here forsooth is dolorous doleful dirge&mdash;out on
+ thee for sad and sorry snuffler!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily,&rdquo; sighed Ranulph, &ldquo;'tis my curse. I begin with laugh and end
+ in groan. I did mean this for merry song, yet it turned of itself sad song
+ despite poor I, and there's the pity on't&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough!&rdquo; growled Robin, &ldquo;away with him. Brand, do you hoodwink him in his
+ 'kerchief and give him safe conduct to beyond the ford, and so set Master
+ Hangman Grimglum-grief on his road&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; cried Ranulph, &ldquo;God den t'ye and gramercy. Should it be e'er
+ thy fate to die o' the gallows, may I have thy despatching&mdash;I will
+ contrive it so sweetly shalt know nought of it&mdash;oho! 'twould be my
+ joy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Off!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;Off, thou pestiferous fungus lest I tread on thee&mdash;hence,
+ away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the outlaws blindfolded Ranulph and led him off at speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, nodding, &ldquo;so now in faith must I, Robin&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, is't indeed farewell, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Robin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, what may I give thee in way o' love and friendship?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold it, brother! And what beside? Here is purse o' good pieces&mdash;ha?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Robin, prithee keep them for those whose need is greater.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I nought bestow&mdash;dost lack for nothing, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What thou, methinks, may not supply&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Horse and armour!&rdquo; Now at this, Robin laughed and clapped hand to thigh;
+ quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with Robin, brother!&rdquo; So he brought Jocelyn into a cave beneath the
+ steep and, lighting a torch from fire that burned there, led him on
+ through other caves and winding passages rough-hewn in the rock, and so at
+ last to a vasty cavern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here was great store of merchandise of every sort,&mdash;velvets,
+ silks, and rich carpets from the Orient; vases of gold and silver, and
+ coffers strong-clamped with many iron bands. And here also, hanging
+ against the rocky walls, were many and divers suits of armour with helms
+ and shields set up in gallant array; beholding all of which Jocelyn paused
+ to eye merry Robin askance; quoth he soberly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Rogue, how came ye by all this goodly furniture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By purest chance, brolher,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;for hark 'ee&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Chance is a wind to outlaws kind,
+ And many fair things blows us,
+ It&mdash;merchants, priors, lords, knights and squires,
+ And like good things bestows us&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;but what of all those knights and squires whose
+ armour hangeth here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here or there, brother, they come and they go. Ha, yonder soundeth
+ Ralfwyn's horn&mdash;three blasts which do signify some right fair
+ windfall. Come, let us see what this jolly wind hath blown us this time!&rdquo;
+ So saying, Robin laughed and led the way out into the sunny green. And
+ here, surrounded by a ring of merry forest rogues, they beheld a knight
+ right gallantly mounted and equipped, his armour blazing in the sun, his
+ gaudy bannerole a-flutter from long lance, his shield gaudy and brave with
+ new paint; beholding which, Robin chuckled gleefully; quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho! On a field vert three falcons gules, proper, charged with heart
+ ensanguined&mdash;aha, here's good booty, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as this splendid knight rode nearer, contemptuous of his brawny
+ captors, Robin stared to see that on his helmet he wore a wreath of
+ flowers, while lance and sword, mace and battle-axe were wreathed in
+ blooming roses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho, Jenkyn, Cuthbert!&rdquo; cried Robin, &ldquo;what Sir Daintiness have ye here?&rdquo;
+ But ere his grinning captors could make reply, the knight himself spake
+ thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Behold a very gentle knight,
+ Sir Palamon of Tong,
+ A gentle knight in sorry plight,
+ That loveth love and hateth fight,
+ A knight than fight had rather write,
+ And strophes to fair dames indite,
+ Or sing a sighful song.
+
+ &ldquo;By divers braggarts I'm abused,
+ 'Tis so as I've heard tell,
+ Because, since I'm to fight unused,
+ I many a fight have bold refused,
+ And, thereby, saved my bones unbruised,
+ Which pleaseth me right well.
+
+ &ldquo;No joy have I in steed that prances,
+ True gentle man am I
+ To tread to lutes slow, stately dances.
+ 'Stead of your brutish swords and lances,
+ I love love's lureful looks and glances,
+ When hand to hand, unseen, advances,
+ And eye caresseth eye.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how a plague, Sir Gentleness,&rdquo; questioned Robin, &ldquo;may eye caress
+ eye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E'en as lips voiceless may wooing speak, Sir Roguery, and tongue
+ unwagging tell tales o' love, Sir Ferocity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Then had I the trick o' voiceless speech, now would I, with silly
+ tongue, tell thee thou art our prisoner to ransom, Sir Silken Softness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: And I joy therefore, Sir Forest Fiend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And wherefore therefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: For that therefore I need not to the joust, to that
+ bone-shattering sport of boastful, brutal braggadocios, but here, lapped
+ soft in the gentle green, woo the fair Yolande&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: How, knight, the fair lady Yolande, say'st thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Even she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: But here she is not and thou art, how then may one that is, woo
+ one is not?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Gross mountebank, by thought&mdash;I woo in thought, breathe
+ my thought upon the balmy air and air beareth it to her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And she treadeth on't, so there's an end o' thy love! But pray you,
+ Sir Downy Daintiness, how come ye that are so gentle so ungently dight?
+ Discourse, Sir Dove!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: In two words then, thou lewd lurcher o' the thickets; I ride
+ thus in steely panoply&mdash;the which doth irk me sore&mdash;by reason of
+ the tongue of my mother (good soul!) the which doth irk me more. For she
+ (worthy lady!) full-fed o' fatuous fantasies and fables fond, fuddled i'
+ faith o' faddling fictions as&mdash;gestes of jongleurs, tales told by
+ tramping troubadours, ballades of babbling braggarts, romances of
+ roysterous rhymers, she (good gossip!) as I say, having hearkened to and
+ perused the works of such-like pelting, paltry prosers and poets wherein
+ sweep of sword and lunge o' lance is accompted of worthier repute than the
+ penning of dainty distich and pretty poesies pleasingly passionate. She, I
+ say&mdash;my mother (God rest her!), e'en she with tongue most harsh, most
+ bitter and most unwearying, hath enforced me, her son (whom Venus bless!)&mdash;e'en
+ I that am soul most transcendental&mdash;I that am a very wing-ed Mercury&mdash;me,
+ I say she hath, by torrential tongueful tumult (gentle lady!), constrained
+ to don the habit of a base, brawling, beefy and most material Mars!
+ Wherefore at my mother's behest (gracious dame!) I ride nothing joyful to
+ be bruised and battered by any base, brutal braggart that hath the mind to
+ try a tilt with me. Moreover&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Hold! Take breath, gentle sir, for thine own sweet sake draw thy
+ wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: 'Tis done, fellow, 'tis done! And now in three words will I&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Cry ye mercy, sir, thy two words do yet halloo &ldquo;Buzz-buzz&rdquo; in mine
+ ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Faith, robber-rogue, since I a tongue possess&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Therein thou art very son o' thy mother (whom St. Anthony
+ cherish!).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: With this rare difference, outlaw&mdash;for whereas her
+ tongue (honoured relict!) is tipped with gall, wormwood, henbane, hemlock,
+ bitter-aloes and verjuice, and stingeth like the adder, the asp, the toad,
+ the newt, the wasp, and snaky-haired head of Medusa, mine&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Buzzeth, buzz, O buzz!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Mine, thou paltry knave, I say mine&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Buzz&mdash;ha&mdash;buzz!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: I pray you, Sir Knight, doth the Red Gui tilt at to-morrow's
+ joust?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Base mime, he doth! My Lord Gui of Ells, Lord Seneschal of
+ Raddemore, is myfriend, a very mirror of knightly prowess, the sure might
+ of whose lance none may abide. He is, in very truth, the doughtiest
+ champion in all this fair country, matchless at any and every weapon,
+ a-horse or a-foot, in sooth a very Ajax, Achilles, Hector, Roland and
+ Oliver together and at once, one and indivisible, aye&mdash;by Cupid a
+ very paladin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis so I've heard,&rdquo; said Jocelyn thoughtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Two knights only there are might cope with him, and one Sir
+ Agramore and one Jocelyn of the Helm, Duke of Brocelaunde. The fame of
+ which last rumour hath so puffed up that thrice my Lord Gui hath sent his
+ cartel of defiance, but the said Duke, intent on paltry battles beyond his
+ marches, hath thrice refused, and wisely&mdash;so 'tis said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye me, messire,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, strumming his lute, &ldquo;and so bloweth the
+ wind. Yet mayhap these twain shall meet one day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And heaven send me there to see! Now as to thee, Sir Softly Sweet,
+ fair Lord of Tong, thy goodly horse and armour are mine henceforth, first
+ because thy need of them is nothing, secondly because thou art my prisoner&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: And thirdly, Sir Riotous Roughness, I do freely on thee
+ bestow them, hide and hair, bolt and rivet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Now as to thy ransom, Sir Mildly-Meek, at what price dost rate thy
+ value, spiritual and corporeal?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Fellow, though youthful, well-favoured and poet esteemed, I
+ am yet marvellous modest! 'Tis true I am knight of lineage lofty, of
+ patrimony proud, of manors many&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Even as of thy words, Sir Emptiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: 'Tis also true, thou ignorant atomy, I, like Demosthenes, am
+ blessed with a wonder o' words and glory o' sweet phrase, and yet, and
+ here's the enduring wonder&mdash;I am still but man, though man blessed
+ with so much profundity, fecundity, and redundity of thought and
+ expression, and therefore a facile scribe or speaker, able to create,
+ relate, formulate or postulate any truth, axiomatic, sophistry subtle, or,
+ in other words, I can narrate&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Verily Sir Windbag thou dost, to narrate, thyself with wind
+ inflate, and, being thus thyself inflate of air, thou dost thyself deflate
+ of airy sounds which be words o' wind, and windy words is emptiness&mdash;thus
+ by thy inflatings and deflatings cometh nought but wind bred o' wind, and
+ nought is nothing, so nought is thy relation or narration; whereof make
+ now a cessation, so will I, in due form, formulate, postulate and
+ deliberate. Thus, with my good rogues' approbation and acclamation, I will
+ of thy just valuation make tabulation, and give demonstration in relation
+ to thy liberation from this thy situation, as namely, viz. and to-wit:
+ First thou art a poet; in this is thy marketable value to us nought, for
+ poets do go empty of aught but thought of sort when wrought, unbought;
+ thus go they short which doth import they're empty, purse and belly.
+ Second, upon thy testimony thou'rt a man. Go to! Here we be out again, for
+ on the score of manliness thou art not. Yet thou art flesh and blood&mdash;
+ good! for here we deal in such. Not that we yearn for thy flesh and blood,
+ but, being thine, they are to thee dear, perchance, and thou would'st fain
+ keep them alive a little longer; wherefore thou shalt for thy loved flesh
+ and blood pay&mdash;purchasing the same of us. And, as flesh varies, so do
+ our prices vary; we do sell a man his own flesh and blood at certain
+ rateable values. Thus unto a hangman we did of late sell a hangman, in
+ fair good halter, and he a hangman brawny, for no more than five gold
+ pieces, the which was cheap, methinks, considering the goodly halter, and
+ he a lusty, manly rogue to boot. Now as for thee, thou'rt soft and of a
+ manlihood indifferent, so would I rate thee at one gold piece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Ignorant grub! Am I less than base hangman&mdash;I, a knight&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: True, Sir Knight, thou'rt a knight for no reason but that thou art
+ knight born and thus, by nought but being born, hath won to thyself
+ nobility, riches and honours such as no man may win either by courage,
+ skill, or learning, since highborn fool and noble rogue do rank high 'bove
+ such. So <i>thou</i> art knight, Sir Knight, and for thy knighthood, thy
+ lineage lofty, thy manors many, mulcted thou shalt be in noble fashion.
+ For thy manhood I assess thee at one gold piece, but, since thou'rt son o'
+ thy dam (whom the Saints pity!) we do fine thee five thousand gold pieces&mdash;thy
+ body ours until the purchase made. Away with him, lads; cherish him
+ kindly, unarm him gently, and set him a-grinding corn till his ransom be
+ paid&mdash;away!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here was mighty roar of laughter and acclaim from all who heard, only
+ Sir Palamon scowled, and, for once mute and tongue-tied, was led
+ incontinent away to his labours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, brother,&rdquo; quoth Robin, turning where Jocelyn stood smiling and
+ merry-eyed, &ldquo;what o' this armour dost seek, and wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art a lovely robber, Robin,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a very various rogue, yet no rogue
+ born, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was not always outlaw, brother&mdash;howbeit, what would a Fool with
+ horse and knightly arms?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Jocelyn, bending close, whispered somewhatin Robin's ear, whereon he
+ clapped hand to thigh, and laughed and laughed until the air rang again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, a jape&mdash;a jape indeed!&rdquo; he roared. &ldquo;O lovely brother, to see
+ proud knight unhorsed by prancing motley Fool! Hey, how my heart doth jump
+ for gladness! An thou wilt a-tilting ride, I will squire thee&mdash;a Fool
+ of a knight tended by Rogue of a squire. O, rare&mdash;aha! oho! Come thy
+ ways, sweet brother, and let us set about this joyous jape forthwith!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus it was that, as evening fell, there rode, through bowery bracken
+ and grassy glade, two horsemen full blithe and merry, and the setting sun
+ flashed back in glory from their glittering armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 10
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How Red Gui sore smitten was in fight
+ By motley Fool in borrowed armour dight.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now shrill tucket and clarion, trumpet and horn
+ With their cheery summons saluted the morn,
+ Where the sun, in his splendour but newly put on,
+ Still more splendid made pennon and brave gonfalon
+ That with banners and pennoncelles fluttered and flew
+ High o'er tent and pavilion of every hue.
+ For the lists were placed here, for the tournament set,
+ Where already a bustling concourse was met;
+ Here were poor folk and rich folk, lord, lady and squire,
+ Clad in leather, in cloth and in silken attire;
+ Here folk pushed and folk jostled, as people still do
+ When the sitters be many, the seats scant and few;
+ Here was babble of voices and merry uproar,
+ For while some folk laughed loud, some lost tempers and swore.
+ Until on a sudden this tumult and riot
+ Was hushed to a murmur that sank into quiet
+ As forth into the lists, stern of air, grave of face,
+ Five fine heralds, with tabard and trumpet, did pace
+ With their Lion-at-arms, or Chief Herald, before;
+ And a look most portentous this Chief Herald wore,
+ And, though portly his shape and a little too round,
+ Sure a haughtier Chief Herald could nowhere be found.
+ So aloof was his look and so grave his demeanour,
+ Humble folk grew abashed, and mean folk felt the meaner;
+ When once more the loud clarions had all echoes woke
+ This Chief Herald in voice deep and sonorous spoke:
+
+ &ldquo;Good people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Oyez!
+ Ye noble dames of high degree
+ Your pretty ears now lend to me,
+ And much I will declare to ye.
+ Oyez! Oyez!
+ Ye dainty lords of might and fame,
+ Ye potent gentles, do the same,
+ Ye puissant peers of noble name,
+ Now unto ye I do proclaim:
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!&rdquo;
+
+ Here pealed the trumpets, ringing loud and clear,
+ That deafened folk who chanced to stand too near.
+ In special one&mdash;a bent and hag-like dame,
+ Who bent o'er crooked staff as she were lame;
+ Her long, sharp nose&mdash;but no, her nose none saw,
+ Since it was hidden 'neath the hood she wore
+ But from this hood she watched with glittering eye
+ Four lusty men-at-arms who lolled hard by,
+ Who, 'bove their armour, bore on back and breast
+ A bloody hand&mdash;Lord Gui's well-hated crest,
+ And who, unwitting of the hooded hag,
+ On sundry matters let their lewd tongues wag:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE FIRST SOLDIER: Why, she scorned him, 'tis well beknown!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE SECOND SOLDIER: Aye, and it doth not do to scorn the Red Gui, look
+ 'ee!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE THIBD SOLDIER: She'll lie snug in his arms yet, her pride humbled, her
+ proud spirit broke, I'll warrant me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE FOURTH SOLDIER: She rideth hence in her litter, d'ye see; and with but
+ scant few light-armed knaves attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE FIRST SOLDIER: Aye, and our signal my lord's hunting-horn thrice
+ winded&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Thus did they talk, with laughter loud and deep,
+ While nearer yet the hooded hag did creep;
+ But:&mdash;
+ Now blew the brazen clarions might and main,
+ Which done, the portly Herald spake again:
+
+ &ldquo;Good people, all ye lords and ladies fair,
+ Oyez!
+ Now unto ye forthwith I do declare
+ The charms of two fair dames beyond compare.
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!
+ The first, our Duchess&mdash;Benedicta hight,
+ That late from Tissingors, her town, took flight,
+ To-day, returning here, doth bless our sight,
+ And view the prowess of each valiant knight;
+ Each champ-i-on, in shining armour dight,
+ With blunted weapons gallantly shall fight.
+ And, watched by eyes of ladies beamy-bright,
+ Inspired and strengthened by this sweet eye-light,
+ Shall quit themselves with very main and might;
+ The second:&mdash;in her beauty Beauty's peer,
+ Yolande the Fair, unto our Duchess dear,
+ For whose sweet charms hath splintered many a spear,
+ Throned with our lovely Duchess, sitteth here
+ With her bright charms all gallant hearts to cheer.
+ Now, ye brave knights, that nought but Cupid fear,
+ To these sweet dames give eye, to me give ear!
+ Oyez!
+ 'Tis now declared&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN expostulateth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: O, father, now
+ You must allow
+ That your herald is rather a bore.
+ He talks such a lot,
+ And it seems frightful rot&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I hate slang, miss! I told you before!
+ If my herald says much,
+ Yet he only says such
+ As by heralds was said in those days;
+ Though their trumpets they blew,
+ It is none the less true
+ That they blew them in other folks' praise.
+ If my herald verbose is
+ And gives us large doses
+ Of high-sounding rodomontade,
+ You'll find they spoke so
+ In the long, long ago,
+ So blame not&mdash;O, blame not the bard.
+ But while we are prating
+ Our herald stands waiting
+ In a perfectly terrible fume,
+ So, my dear, here and now,
+ The poor chap we'll allow
+ His long-winded speech to resume:
+
+ &ldquo;'Tis here declared by order of the Ten,
+ Fair Benedicta's guardians&mdash;worthy men!
+ Thus they decree&mdash;ye lovers all rejoice!
+ She shall by their command, this day make choice
+ Of him&mdash;O, him! O blest, thrice blessed he
+ Who must anon her lord and husband be.
+ 'Tis so pronounced by her grave guardians ten,
+ By them made law&mdash;and they right reverend men!
+ And this the law&mdash;our lady, be it said,
+ This day shall choose the husband she must wed;
+ And he who wins our Duchess for his own
+ Crowned by her love shall mount to ducal throne,
+ So let each knight, by valiant prowess, prove
+ Himself most worthy to our lady's love.
+ Now make I here an end, and ending, pray
+ Ye quit you all like val'rous knights this day.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake the Chief Herald and so paced solemnly down the lists while the
+ long clarions filled the air with gallant music. But the lovely Benedicta,
+ throned beneath silken canopy, knit her black brows and clenched slender
+ hands and stamped dainty foot, yet laughed thereafter, whereupon Yolande,
+ leaning to kiss her flushed cheek, questioned her, wondering:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How say'st thou to this, my loved Benedicta?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth the DUCHESS:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I say, my sweeting, 'tis quite plain
+ That I must run away again!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Howbeit I care not one rush for their laws! Marry forsooth&mdash;a fig!
+ Let them make laws an they will, these reverend, right troublesome
+ grey-beards of mine, they shall never wed me but to such a man as Love
+ shall choose me, and loving him&mdash;him only will I wed, be he great or
+ lowly, rich or poor, worthy or unworthy, so I do love him, as is the sweet
+ and wondrous way of love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Benedicta! what is love?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A joy that cometh but of itself, all unsought! This wisdom had I of a
+ Fool i' the forest. Go learn you of this same Fool and sigh not, dear
+ wench.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; sighed Yolande, lovely cheeks a-flush, &ldquo;what of Sir Agramore&mdash;hath
+ he not sworn to wed thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do fear Sir Agramore no longer, Yolande, since I have found me one may
+ cope with him perchance&mdash;even as did a Fool with my Lord Gui of Ells
+ upon a tune. Art sighing again, sweet maid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, indeed&mdash;and wherefore should I sigh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At mention of a Fool, belike.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, no, no, 'twere shame in me, Benedicta! A Fool forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet Fool of all fools singular, Yolande. And for all his motley a very
+ man, methinks, and of a proud, high bearing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Yolande's soft cheek grew rosy again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet is he but motley Fool&mdash;and his face&mdash;marred hatefully&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast seen him smile, Yolande, for then&mdash;how, dost sigh again, my
+ sweet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, indeed; but talk we of other matters&mdash;thy so sudden flight&mdash;tell
+ me all that chanced thee, dearest Benedicta.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why first&mdash;in thine ear, Yolande&mdash;my jewel is not&mdash;see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;how, alas! O most sweet lady&mdash;hast lost it? Thy royal
+ amulet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bestowed it, Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Benedicta! On whom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A poor soldier. One that saved me i' the forest from many of Sir
+ Agramore's verderers&mdash;a man very tall and strong and brave, but dight
+ in ragged cloak and rusty mail&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ragged? A thief&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An outlaw&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wolf's-head&mdash;a wild man and fierce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True he is very wild and very fierce, but very, very gentle&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And didst give to such thy jewel? O Benedicta! The Heart-in-heart?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freely&mdash;gladly! He begged it of me very humbly and all unknowing
+ what it signified&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O my loved Benedicta, alas!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O my sweet Yolande, joy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he should claim thee, and he so poor and wild and ragged&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he should, Yolande, if he should&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'He that taketh Heart-in-heart,
+ Taketh all and every part.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ O, if he should, Yolande, then I&mdash;must fulfil the prophecy. Nay, dear
+ my friend, stare not so great and sadly-eyed, he knoweth not the virtue of
+ the jewel nor have I seen him these many days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And must thou sigh therefore, Benedicta?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now the trumpets blew a fanfare, and forth rode divers gallant
+ knights, who, spurring rearing steeds, charged amain to gore, to smite and
+ batter each other with right good will while the concourse shouted, caps
+ waved and scarves and ribands fluttered.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But here, methinks, it booteth not to tell
+ Of every fierce encounter that befell;
+ How knight 'gainst knight drove fierce with pointless spear
+ And met with shock that echoed far and near;
+ Or how, though they with blunted swords did smite,
+ Sore battered was full many a luckless wight.
+ But as the day advanced and sun rose high
+ Full often rose the shout: &ldquo;A Gui&mdash;A Gui!&rdquo;
+ For many a proud (though bruised and breathless) lord,
+ Red Gui's tough lance smote reeling on the sward;
+ And ever as these plaudits shook the air,
+ Through vizored casque at Yolande he would stare.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And beholding all the beauty of her he smiled evilly and muttered to
+ himself, glancing from her to certain lusty men-at-arms who, lolling
+ 'gainst the barriers, bore at back and breast his badge of the bloody
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fair Yolande heeded him none at all, sitting with eyes a-dream and
+ sighing ever and anon; insomuch that the Duchess, watching her slyly,
+ sighed amain also and presently spake:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, and O verily, Yolande, meseemeth we do sigh and for ever sigh,
+ thou and I, like two poor, love-sick maids. How think'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, O Benedicta, hearken! See, who rideth yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now even as thus fair Yolanda spoke,
+ A horn's shrill note on all men's hearing broke,
+ And all eyes turned where rode a gallant knight,
+ In burnished armour sumptuously bedight.
+ His scarlet plumes 'bove gleaming helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ His gaudy shield with new-popped blazon glowed:
+ Three stooping falcons that on field vert showed;
+ But close-shut vizor hid from all his face
+ As thus he rode at easy, ambling pace.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now as I live!&rdquo; cried Benedicta. &ldquo;By his device yon should be that
+ foolish knight Sir Palamon of Tong!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly!&rdquo; sighed Yolande. &ldquo;Though he wear no motley hither rideth
+ indeed a very fool. And look, Benedicta&mdash;look! O, sure never rode
+ knight in like array&mdash;see how the very populace groweth dumb in its
+ amaze!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ For now the crowd in wonderment grew mute,
+ To see this knight before him bare a lute,
+ While blooming roses his great helmet crowned,
+ They wreathed his sword, his mighty lance around.
+ Thus decked rode he in rosy pageantry,
+ And up the lists he ambled leisurely;
+ Till, all at once, from the astonied crowd
+ There brake a hum that swelled to laughter loud;
+ But on he rode, nor seemed to reck or heed,
+ Till 'neath the balcony he checked his steed.
+ Then, handing lance unto his tall esquire,
+ He sudden struck sweet chord upon his lyre,
+ And thus, serene, his lute he plucked until
+ The laughter died and all stood hushed and still;
+ Then, hollow in his helm, a clear voice rang,
+ As, through his lowered vizor, thus he sang:
+
+ &ldquo;A gentle knight behold in me,
+ (Unless my blazon lie!)
+ For on my shield behold and see,
+ Upon field vert, gules falcons three,
+ Surcharged with heart ensanguiney,
+ To prove to one and all of ye,
+ A love-lorn knight am I.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But now cometh (and almost in haste) the haughty and right dignified Chief
+ Herald with pursuivants attendant, which latter having trumpeted amain,
+ the Herald challenged thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Messire, by the device upon thy shield,
+ We know my Lord of Tong is in the field;
+ But pray thee now declare, pronounce, expound,
+ Why thus ye ride with foolish roses crowned?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereto the Knight maketh answer forthwith:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;If foolish be these flowers I bear,
+ Then fool am I, I trow.
+ Yet, in my folly, fool doth swear,
+ These flowers to fool an emblem rare
+ Of one, to fool, more sweet, more fair,
+ E'en she that is beyond compare,
+ A flower perchance for fool to wear,
+ Who shall his foolish love declare
+ Till she, mayhap, fool's life may share,
+ Nor shall this fool of love despair,
+ Till foolish hie shall go.
+
+ &ldquo;For life were empty, life were vain,
+ If true love come not nigh,
+ Though honours, fortune, all I gain,
+ Yet poorer I than poor remain,
+ If true-love from me fly;
+ So here I pray,
+ If that thou may,
+ Ah&mdash;never pass me by!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Here the Chief Herald frowned, puffing his cheeks, and waved his ebony
+ staff authoritatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Enough, Sir Knight! Here is no place for love! For inasmuch as
+ we&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE KNIGHT: Gentle Herald, I being here, here is Love, since I am lover,
+ therefore love-full, thus where I go goeth Love&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Herald: Apprehend me, Sir Knight! For whereas love hath no part in&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight: Noble Herald, Love hath every part within me and without, thus
+ I, from Love apart, have no part, and my love no part apart from my every
+ part; wherefore, for my part, and on my part, ne'er will I with Love part
+ for thy part and this to thee do I impart&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet Saints aid us!&rdquo; The Chief Herald clasped his massy brow and gazed
+ with eye distraught. &ldquo;Sir Knight&mdash;messire&mdash;my very good and
+ noble Lord of Tong&mdash;I grope! Here is that which hath a seeming ...
+ thy so many parts portend somewhat ... and yet ... I excogitate ... yet
+ grope I still ... impart, part ... thy part and its part ... so many parts
+ ... and roses ... and songs o' love ... a lute! O, thundering Mars, I ...
+ Sound, trumpets!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Duchess up-starting, silenced Herald and trumpeters with imperious
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Knight of Tong,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;'tis told thou'rt of nimble tongue and a
+ maker of songs, so we bid thee sing if thy song be of Love&mdash;for Love
+ is a thing little known and seldom understood these days. Here be very
+ many noble knights wondrous learned in the smiting of buffets, but little
+ else; here be noble dames very apt at the play of eyes, the twining of
+ fingers, the languishment of sighs, that, seeking True-love, find but its
+ shadow; and here also grey beards that have forgot the very name of Love.
+ So we bid thee sing us of Love&mdash;True-love, what it is. Our ears
+ attend thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious lady,&rdquo; answered the Knight, &ldquo;gladly do I obey. But Love is
+ mighty and I lowly, and may speak of Love but from mine own humility. And
+ though much might be said of Love since Love's empire is the universe and
+ Love immortal, yet will I strive to portray this mighty thing that is
+ True-love in few, poor words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, plucking sweet melody from his lute, the Knight sang as here
+ followeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What is Love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day
+ Ne'er to die or fade away
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ &ldquo;Though youth, alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless doth remain
+ The same to-day and ever.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now while the clarions rang out proclaiming Sir Palamon's defiance,
+ Benedicta looked on Yolande and Yolande on Benedicta:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, wonderful!&rdquo; cried the Duchess. &ldquo;My Lord of Tong hath found him manhood
+ and therewith a wisdom beyond most and singeth such love as methought only
+ angels knew and maids might vision in their dreams. Ah, Yolande&mdash;that
+ such a love could be ... e'en though he went ragged and poor in all but
+ love....&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Benedicta,&rdquo; sighed Yolande, hands clasped on swelling bosom, &ldquo;O
+ Benedicta, here is no foolish Lord of Tong ... and yet ... O, I am mad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, 'tis sweet madness! So, my Yolande, let us be mad awhile
+ together ... thou&mdash;a Fool ... and I&mdash;a beggar-rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay&mdash;alas, dear Benedicta! This were shame&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And forsooth is it shame doth swell thy heart, Yolande, light the glamour
+ in thine eyes and set thee a-tremble&mdash;e'en as I? Nay indeed, thou'rt
+ a-thrill with Folly ... and I, with Roguery. Loved Folly! Sweet Roguery! O
+ Yolande, let us fly from empty state, from this mockery of life and learn
+ the sweet joys of ... of beggary, and, crowned with poverty, clasp life&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MYSELF, myself interrupting:
+ By the way, my dear, you'll understand,
+ Though this is very fine,
+ Still, her Grace's counsel to Yolande
+ Must not be in your line!
+ Not that I'd have you wed for wealth,
+ Or many a beggar-man by stealth,
+ But I would have you, if you can&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Marry some strong, stern, silent man,
+ Named Mark, and with hair slightly gray by the ears!
+ Now he's just the sort who would bore me to tears.
+ If I for a husband feel ever inclined,
+ I shall choose quite an ordin'ry husband&mdash;the kind
+ With plenty of money and nothing to do,
+ With a nice, comfy house, and a motor or two&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: That's all very fine, miss, but what would you do
+ If he, by some ill-chance, quite penniless grew?
+
+ GILL: Oh, why then&mdash;why, of course,
+ I should get a divorce&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: A divorce? Gracious heaven! For goodness' sake&mdash;
+
+ GILL: 'Twould be the most dignified action to take!
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MYSELF: Pray, what in the world of such things do you know?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, like you&mdash;each day older I grow.
+ But, instead of discussing poor me,
+ I think you would much nicer be
+ To get on with our Geste.
+
+ MYSELF: I obey your behest!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Said Yolande to the duchess, said she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my Benedicta, these be only dreams, but life is real and dreams a
+ very emptiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And is 't so, forsooth?&rdquo; exclaimed the Duchess. &ldquo;Then am I nought but a
+ duchess and lonely, thou a maid fearful of her own heart, and yon singer
+ of love only a very futile knight, Sir Palamon of Tong, nothing esteemed
+ by thee for wit or valour and little by his peers&mdash;see how his
+ challengers do throng. How think you?&rdquo; But the lady Yolande sat very still
+ and silent, only she stared, great-eyed, where danced the scarlet plume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed many and divers were the knights who, beholding the blazon of
+ Tong, sent the bearer their defiance, eager to cope with him; and each and
+ every challenge Sir Palamon accepted by mouth of his tall esquire who
+ (vizor closed, even as his lord's) spake the Chief Herald in loud, merry
+ voice, thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Herald, whereas and forinasmuch as this, my Lord of Tong himself,
+ himself declaring fool, is so himself-like as to meet in combat each and
+ every of his challengers&mdash;themselves ten, my lord that is fool,
+ himself himself so declaring, now declareth by me that am no fool but only
+ humble esquire&mdash;messire, I say, doth his esquire require that I, the
+ said esquire, should on his part impart as followeth, namely and to wit:
+ That these ten gentle knights, the said challengers, shall forthwith of
+ themselves choose of themselves, themselves among themselves thereto
+ agreeing, which of themselves, among themselves of themselves so chosen,
+ shall first in combat adventure himself against my Lord of Tong himself.
+ And moreover, should Fortune my lord bless with victory, the nine
+ remaining shall among themselves choose, themselves agreeing, which of
+ themselves shall next, thus chosen of themselves, themselves represent in
+ single combat with this very noble, fool-like Lord of Tong, my master.
+ Furthermore, whereas and notwithstanding&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, sir!&rdquo; cried the Chief Herald, fingering harassed brow. &ldquo;Pray thee
+ 'bate&mdash;O, abate thy speechful fervour. Here forsooth and of truth is
+ notable saying&mdash;O, most infallibly&mdash;and yet perchance something
+ discursive and mayhap a little involved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Sir Herald,&rdquo; quoth the esquire, &ldquo;if involved 'twill be resolved if
+ revolved, thus: Here be ten lords would fight one, and one&mdash;that is
+ my lord who is but one&mdash;ten fight one by one. But that ten, fighting
+ one, may as one fight, let it be agreed that of these ten one be chosen
+ one to fight, so shall one fight one and every one be satisfied&mdash;every
+ one of these ten fighting one, one by one. Thus shall ten be one, and one
+ ten fight one by one till one be discomfited. Shall we accord the matter
+ simply, thus?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; quoth the Chief Herald, gasping a little, &ldquo;Amen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; cried the Duchess, clapping her hands, &ldquo;O Yolande, hark to this rare
+ esquire! Surely, I have heard yon cunning tongue ere this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Yolande gazed ever where Sir Palamon, having taken his station, set
+ himself in array. For now, the ten knights having chosen one to represent
+ them, forth rode their champion resplendent in shining mail and green
+ surcoat with heralds before to proclaim his name and rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande,&rdquo; quoth the Duchess softly, &ldquo;pray&mdash;pray this Lord of Tong
+ may tilt as bravely as he doth sing, for Sir Thomas of Thornydyke is a
+ notable jouster.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trumpets blew a fanfare and, levelling their pointless lances, both
+ knights gave spur, their great horses reared, broke into a gallop and
+ thundered towards each other.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But hard midway upon the green surcoat,
+ Sir Palamon's stout lance so truly smote,
+ That, 'neath the shock, the bold Sir Thomas reeled
+ And, losing stirrups, saddle, lance and shield,
+ Down, down upon the ling outstretched he fell
+ And, losing all, lost breath and speech as well.
+ Thus, silent all, the bold Sir Thomas lay,
+ Though much, and many things, he yearned to say,
+ Which things his squires and pages might surmise
+ From the expression of his fish-like eyes
+ E'en as they bore him from that doleful place;
+ While, near and far, from all the populace,
+ Rose shout on shout that echoed loud and long:
+ &ldquo;Sir Palamon! Sir Palamon of Tong!&rdquo;
+ So came these ten good knights, but, one by one,
+ They fell before this bold Sir Palamon,
+ Whose lance unerring smote now helm, now shield,
+ That many an one lay rolling on the field.
+ But each and all themselves did vanquished yield;
+ And loud and louder did the plaudits grow,
+ That one knight should so many overthrow.
+ Even Sir Gui, within his silken tent
+ Scowled black in ever-growing wonderment.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But the Knight of Tong, his gaudy shield a little battered, his fine
+ surcoat frayed and torn, leaped from his wearied steed and forthwith
+ mounted one held by his tall esquire, a mighty charger that tossed proud
+ head and champed his bit, pawing impatient hoof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth the esquire, pointing to ten fair steeds held by ten fair
+ pages. &ldquo;Oho, good brother, most puissant Knight of Tong, here is good and
+ rich booty&mdash;let us begone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered the Knight, tossing aside his blunt tilting-spear, &ldquo;here
+ is an end to sportful dalliance&mdash;reach me my lance!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, is't now the Red Gui's turn, brother? The Saints aid thee, in
+ especial two, that, being women, are yet no saints yet awhile&mdash;see
+ how they watch thee, sweet, gentle dames! Their prayers go with thee,
+ methinks, brother, and mine also, for the Red Gui is forsooth a valiant
+ rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, mounted on the great black war-horse, the Knight of Tong rode up
+ the lists:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ His scarlet plume 'bove shining helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ Till he was come where, plain for all to spy,
+ Was hung the shield and blazon of Sir Gui,
+ With bends and bars in all their painted glory,
+ Surcharged with hand ensanguined&mdash;gules or gory.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Full upon this bloody hand smote the sharp point of Sir Palamon's lance;
+ whereupon the watching crowd surged and swayed and hummed expectant, since
+ here was to be no play with blunted weapons but a deadly encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up started Sir Gui and strode forth of his tent, grim-smiling and
+ confident. Quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, my Lord of Tong, thou'rt grown presumptuous and over-venturesome,
+ methinks. But since life thou dost hold so cheap prepare ye for death
+ forthright!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So spake the Lord of Ells and, beckoning to his esquires, did on his great
+ tilting-helm and rode into the lists, whereon was mighty roar of welcome,
+ for, though much hated, he was esteemed mighty at arms, and the accepted
+ champion of the Duchy. So while the people thundered their acclaim the two
+ knights galloped to their stations and, reining about, faced each other
+ from either end of the lists,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And halted thus, their deadly spears they couched,
+ With helms stooped low, behind their shields they crouched;
+ Now rang the clarions; goading spurs struck deep,
+ The mighty chargers reared with furious leap
+ And, like two whirlwinds, met in full career,
+ To backward reel 'neath shock of splintering spear:
+ But, all unshaken, every eye might see
+ The bloody hand, the scarred gules falcons three.
+ Thrice thus they met, but at the fourth essay,
+ Rose sudden shout of wonder and dismay,
+ For, smitten sore through riven shield, Sir Gui
+ Thudded to earth there motionless to lie.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus Sir Gui, Lord of Ells and Seneschal of Raddemore, wounded and utterly
+ discomfited, was borne raging to his pavilion while the air rang with the
+ blare of trumpet and clarion in honour of the victor. Thereafter, since no
+ other knight thought it prudent to challenge him, Sir Palamon of Tong was
+ declared champion of the tournament, and was summoned by the Chief Herald
+ to receive the victor's crown. But even as he rode towards the
+ silk-curtained balcony, a distant trumpet shrilled defiance, and into the
+ lists galloped a solitary knight.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Well-armed was he in proud and war-like trim,
+ Of stature tall and wondrous long of limb;
+ 'Neath red surcoat black was the mail he wore;
+ His glitt'ring shield a rampant leopard bore,
+ Beholding which the crowd cried in acclaim,
+ &ldquo;Ho for Sir Agramore of Biename!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But from rosy-red to pale, from pale to rosy-red flushed the Duchess
+ Benedicta, and clenching white teeth, she frowned upon Sir Agramore's
+ fierce and warlike figure. Quoth she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, sure there is no man so vile or so unworthy in all Christendom as
+ this vile Lord of Biename!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless,&rdquo; said Yolande, frowning also, &ldquo;unless it be my Lord Gui of Ells!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, my Yolanda! Now, as thou dost hate Sir Gui so hate I Sir Agramore,
+ therefore pray we sweet maid, petition we the good Saints our valiant
+ singer shall serve my hated Sir Agramore as he did thy hated Sir Gui&mdash;may
+ he be bruised, may he be battered, may&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, 'tis done, my sweeting! A-hee&mdash;a-hi, 'tis done!&rdquo; croaked a
+ voice, and starting about, the Duchess beheld a bent and hag-like
+ creature,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With long, sharp nose that showed beneath her hood,
+ A nose that curved as every witch's should,
+ And glittering eye, before whose baleful light,
+ The fair Yolande shrank back in sudden fright.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my Yolande,&rdquo; cried the Duchess, &ldquo;hast forgot old Mopsa, my
+ foster-mother, that, being a wise-woman, fools decry as witch, and my ten
+ grave and learned guardians have banished therefor? Hast forgot my loved
+ and faithful Mopsa that is truly the dearest, gentlest, wisest witch that
+ e'er witched rogue or fool? But O Mopsa, wise mother&mdash;would'st thou
+ might plague and bewitch in very truth yon base caitiff knight, Sir
+ Agramore of Biename!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis done, loved daughter, 'tis done!&rdquo; chuckled the Witch.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;He groaneth,
+ He moaneth,
+ He aileth,
+ He waileth,
+ Lying sighing,
+ Nigh to dying,
+ Oho,
+ I know
+ 'Tis so.
+ With bones right sore,
+ Both 'hind and fore,
+ Sir Agramore
+ Doth ache all o'er.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He aileth sore yet waileth more&mdash;oho! I know, I have seen&mdash;in
+ the chalk, in the ink, in the smoke&mdash;I looked and saw
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sir Agramore,
+ By bold outlaw,
+ Bethwacked most sore
+ As told before&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but, good Mopsa, how may this be? Sir Agramore rideth armed yonder,
+ plain to my sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child, I have told thee sooth,&rdquo; croaked the Witch. &ldquo;Have patience, watch
+ and be silent, and shalt grow wise as old Mopsa&mdash;mayhap&mdash;in
+ time.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For, 'tis written in the chalk,
+ Sore is he and may not walk.
+ O, sing heart merrily!
+ I have seen within the smoke
+ Bones bethwacked by lusty stroke,
+ Within the ink I looked and saw,
+ Swathed in clouts, Sir Agramore;
+ Dread of him for thee is o'er,
+ By reason of a bold outlaw.
+ Sing, heart, and joyful be!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go to, Mopsa, thou'rt mad!&rdquo; quoth the Duchess. &ldquo;For yonder is this hated
+ lord very strong and hale, and in well-being whiles thou dost rave! Truly
+ thou'rt run mad, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the old Witch only mumbled and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones as
+ is the custom of witches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, Sir Agramore, checking his fiery charger and brandishing heavy
+ lance fiercely aloft, roared loud defiance:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What ho! Ye knights, lords, esquires, and lovers of lusty blows, hither
+ come I with intent, sincere and hearty, to bicker with, fight, combat and
+ withstand all that will&mdash;each and every, a-horse or a-foot, with
+ sword, battleaxe or lance. Now all ye that love good blows&mdash;have at
+ ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here ensued great clamour and a mighty blowing of trumpets that waxed yet
+ louder when it was proclaimed that Sir Palamon, as champion of the day,
+ had accepted Sir Agramore's haughty challenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now all was hushed as these two doughty knights faced each other and,
+ as the trumpets brayed, charged furiously to meet with thunderous shock of
+ breaking lances and reeling horses that, rearing backwards, fell crashing
+ upon the torn and trampled grass. But their riders, leaping clear of
+ lashing hooves, drew their swords and, wasting no breath in words, beset
+ each other forthwith, smiting with right good will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Agramore's leopard shield was riven in twain by a single stroke, Sir
+ Palamon's scarlet plume was shorn away, but they fought only the fiercer
+ as, all untiring, the long blades whirled and flashed until their armour
+ rang, sparks flew, and the populace rocked and swayed and roared for very
+ joy. Once Sir Agramore was beaten to his knees, but rising, grasped his
+ sword in two hands and smote a mighty swashing blow, a direful stroke that
+ burst the lacing of Sir Palamon's great helm and sent it rolling on the
+ sward. But, beholding thus his adversary's face, Sir Agramore, crying in
+ sudden amaze, sprang back; for men all might see a visage framed in long,
+ black-curled hair, grey-eyed, but a face so direly scarred that none,
+ having seen it but once, might well forget.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; panted Sir Agramore, lifting his vizor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax!&rdquo; gasped Duke Jocelyn. &ldquo;O Pertinax&mdash;thou loved and lovely
+ smiter&mdash;ne'er have I been so sore battered ere now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon all folk stared in hugeous wonderment to behold these two
+ champions drop their swords and leap to clasp and hug each other in mighty
+ arms, to pat each other's mailed shoulders and grasp each other's mailed
+ hands. Quoth Sir Pertinax:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, how came ye in this guise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Pertinax, whence stole ye that goodly armour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, oath made I to requite one Sir Agramore of Biename for certain
+ felon blow. Him sought I latterly therefore, and this day met him
+ journeying hither, and so, after some disputation, I left him lying by the
+ way, nor shall he need armour awhile, methinks&mdash;wherefore I took it
+ and rode hither seeking what might befall&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here, Sir Gui, all heedless of his wound, started up from his couch,
+ raising great outcry:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;roguery, roguery! Ho, there, seize me yon knave that beareth the
+ cognizance of Tong. Ha&mdash;treason, treason!&rdquo; At this, others took up
+ the cry and divers among the throng, beholding Duke Jocelyn's scarred
+ features, made loud tumults: &ldquo;The Fool! The Fool! 'Tis the Singing Motley!
+ 'Tis the rogue-Fool that broke prison&mdash;seize him! Seize him!&rdquo; And
+ many, together with the soldiery, came running.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, catching up his sword, &ldquo;here now is like to be
+ a notable, sweet affray!&rdquo; But even as these twain turned to meet their
+ many assailants was thunder of hoofs, a loud, merry voice reached them,
+ and they saw Robin hard by who held two trampling chargers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mount, brothers&mdash;mount!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Mount, then spur we for the
+ barriers!&rdquo; So they sprang to saddle and, spurring the rearing horses,
+ galloped for the barriers, all three, nor was there any who dare stay them
+ or abide the sweep of those long swords. Thus, leaping the barriers, they
+ galloped away and left behind roaring tumult and dire confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And amid all this, hid by the silken curtains of her balcony, the Duchess
+ Benedicta uttered a joyous cry and, clasping Yolande in her arms, kissed
+ her rapturously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;O dear my friend, thou didst see&mdash;even as did
+ I&mdash;a sorry fool and a poor rogue-soldier at hand-strokes with each
+ other&mdash;O wise Fool! O knightly Rogue! Come, let us fly, Yolande, let
+ us to the wild-wood and, lost therein, love, True-love, methinks, shall
+ find us. Nay&mdash;ask me nothing, only hear this. Be thou to thine own
+ heart true, be thou brave and Shame shall fly thee since True-love
+ out-faceth Shame! How say'st thou, Mopsa, thou wise witch-mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, sweet children!&rdquo; croaked the Witch, touching each with claw-like hand
+ yet hand wondrous gentle. &ldquo;True-love shall indeed find ye, hide where ye
+ will. For True-love, though blind, they say, hath eyes to see all that is
+ good and sweet and true. A poor man-at-arms in rusty mail may yet be true
+ man and a fool, for all his motley, wise. To love such seemeth great
+ folly, yet to the old, love is but folly. Nath'less, being old I do love
+ ye, and being wise I charge ye:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies;
+ Love's blind, they say, but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly&mdash;follow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: &ldquo;Stop! Your tournament, father, seems too long drawn out,
+ With quite too much combating and knocking about.
+
+ MYSELF: I hope you're wrong, my dear, although
+ Who knows? Perhaps, it may be so.
+
+ GILL: And such scrappy bits of love-making you write;
+ You seem to prefer much describing a fight.
+ All authors should write what their readers like best;
+ But authors are selfish, yes&mdash;even the best
+ And you are an author!
+
+ MYSELF: Alack, that is true,
+ And, among other things, I'm the author of you.
+
+ GILL: Then, being my author, it's plain as can be
+ That you are to blame if I'm naughty&mdash;not me.
+ But, father, our Geste, though quite corking in places,
+ Has too many fights and too little embraces.
+ You've made all our lovers so frightfully slow,
+ You ought to have married them pages ago.
+ The books that are nicest are always the sort
+ That, when you have read them, seem always too short!
+ If you make all your readers impatient like me,
+ They'll buy none of your books&mdash;and then where shall we be?
+ All people like reading of love when they can,
+ So write them a lot, father, that is the plan.
+ Go on to the love, then, for every one's sake,
+ And end with a wedding&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Your counsel I 'll take.
+ I can woo them and wed them in less than no time,
+ I can do it in prose, in blank verse, or in rhyme;
+ But since, my dear, you are for speed,
+ To end our Geste I will proceed.
+ In many ways it may be done,
+ As I have told you&mdash;here is one:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A short two years have elapsed and we find our hero Jocelyn tenderly
+ playing with a golden-haired prattler, his beloved son and heir, while his
+ beautiful spouse Yolande busied with her needle, smiles through happy
+ tears.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: O, hush, father! Of course, that is simply absurd!
+ Such terrible piffle&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I object to that word!
+
+ GILL: Well, then, please try a little verse.
+
+ MYSELF: With pleasure:
+
+ &ldquo;My own at last!&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn fondly cried,
+ And kissed Yolande, his blooming, blushing bride.
+ &ldquo;My own!&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;My own&mdash;my very own!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Thine, love!&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;Thine and thine alone,
+ Thy very own for days and months and years&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ GILL: O, stop! I think that's even worse!
+
+ MYSELF: Beyond measure.
+
+ Then here's a style may be admired
+ Since brevity is so desired:
+
+ So he married her and she married him,
+ and everybody married each other
+ and lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or again, and thus, my daughter,
+ Versified it may be shorter:
+
+ So all was marriage, joy and laughter,
+ And each lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or:
+ If for High Romance you sigh,
+ Here's Romance that's over high:
+
+ Shy summer swooned to autumn's sun-burned arms,
+ Swoon, summer, swoon!
+ While roses bloomed and blushing sighed their pain,
+ Blush, roses, blush!
+
+ Filling the world with perfume languorous,
+ Sighing forth their souls in fragrant amorousness;
+ And fair Yolande, amid these bloomful languors,
+ Blushing as they, as languorous, as sweet,
+ Sighed in the arms that passioned her around:
+ O Jocelyn, O lord of my delight,
+ See how&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Stop, father, stop, I beg of you.
+ Such awful stuff will never do,
+ I suppose you must finish it in your own way&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I suppose that I shall, child, that is&mdash;if I may.
+
+ GILL: But father, wait&mdash;I must insist
+ Whatever else you do
+ It's time that somebody was kissed
+ It doesn't matter who&mdash;
+ I mean either Yolande the Fair
+ Or else the Duchess&mdash;I don't care.
+
+ MYSELF: In these next two Fyttes both shall kiss
+ And be well kissed, I promise this.
+ Two Fyttes of kisses I will make
+ One after t' other, for your sake.
+ Two Fyttes of love I will invent
+ And make them both quite different,
+ Which is a trying matter rather
+ And difficult for any father&mdash;
+ But then, as well you know, my Gillian,
+ You have a father in a million;
+ And Oh, methinks 'tis very plain
+ You ne'er shall meet his like again.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 11
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ How Pertinax fell out with Robin and with Friar, Yet, in that very hour,
+ came by his heart's desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sinking sun had set the West aflame, When our three riders to the
+ wild-wood came, Where a small wind 'mid sun-kissed branches played, And
+ deep'ning shadows a soft twilight made; Where, save for leafy stirrings,
+ all was still, Lulled by the murmur of a bubbling rill That flowed
+ o'ershadowed by a mighty oak, Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning
+ stroke. Here Robin checked his steed. &ldquo;Good friends,&rdquo; quoth he,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter Gillian suggesteth:
+
+ Gill: That's rather good,
+ But, still, I should
+ In prose prefer the rest;
+ For if this fytte
+ Has love in it,
+ Prose is for love the best.
+ All ord'nary lovers, as every one knows,
+ Make love to each other much better in prose.
+ If, at last, our Sir Pertinax means to propose,
+ Why then&mdash;just to please me,
+ Father, prose let it be.
+
+ Myself: Very well, I agree!
+
+ Then said Robin, quoth he:
+&ldquo;Good friends, here are we safe!&rdquo; And, checking his steed within this
+pleasant shade, he dismounted.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Safe, quotha?&rdquo; said Sir Pertinax, scowling back over shoulder. &ldquo;Not so!
+ Surely we are close pursued&mdash;hark! Yonder be horsemen riding at speed&mdash;ha,
+ we are beset!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content you, sir!&rdquo; answered Robin. &ldquo;Think you I would leave behind good
+ booty? Yonder come ten noble coursers laden with ten goodly armours the
+ same won a-jousting to-day by this right wondrous Fool, my good gossip&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy gossip, forsooth!&rdquo; snorted Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;But tell me, presumptuous
+ fellow, how shall these ten steeds come a-galloping hither!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, on this wise, Sir Simple Innocence&mdash;these steeds do gallop
+ for sufficient reason, namely&mdash;they are to gallop bidden being
+ ridden, bestridden and chidden by whip and spur applied by certain trusty
+ men o' my company, which men go habited, decked, dressed, clad, guised and
+ disguised as smug, sleek citizens, Sir Innocent Simplicity&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax, scowling. &ldquo;And who 'rt thou, sirrah,
+ with men at thy beck and call?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold!&rdquo; said Robin, unhelming. &ldquo;Behold the king of all masterless
+ rogues, and thy fellow gallow's-bird, Sir High Mightiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, is 't thou?&rdquo; cried Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Now a plague on thy kingdom and
+ thee for an unhanged, thieving rogue&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E'en as thyself,&rdquo; nodded Robin, &ldquo;thou that flaunted thy unlovely carcass
+ in stolen armour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; roared Sir Pertinax, clapping hand on sword. &ldquo;A pest&mdash;a
+ murrain! This to me, thou dog's-meat? Malediction! Now will I crack thy
+ numbskull for a pestilent malapert&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Sir Grim-and-gory,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;rather will I now use thee as
+ thou would'st ha' served me on a day but for this generous and kindly
+ Fool, my good comrade!&rdquo; And speaking, Robin sprang nimbly to the great oak
+ tree and thrusting long arm within the jagged fissure that gaped therein
+ drew forth a hunting-horn and winded it loud and shrill. And presently was
+ a stir, a rustle amid the surrounding brushwood and all about them were
+ outlaws, wild men and fierce of aspect, and each and every grasped
+ long-bow with arrow on string and every arrow was aimed at scowling Sir
+ Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Per Dex!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and is this death, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily!&rdquo; nodded Robin, &ldquo;an I do speak the word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it&mdash;speak!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Come, Death&mdash;I fear
+ thee not!&rdquo; And out flashed his long sword; but even then it was twisted
+ from his grasp and Lobkyn Lollo, tossing the great blade aloft and,
+ catching it very neatly, laughed and spake:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Five times, five times ten
+ Are we, all lusty men.
+ An hundred twice and fifty deaths are we,
+ So, an Rob speak, dead thou 'lt as often be.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, hold a while, sweet lads!&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;the surly rogue shall
+ sing for his life and our good pleasaunce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sing?&rdquo; roared Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;I sing! I? Ha, dare ye bid me so, base dog?
+ Sing, forsooth? By Og and Gog! By the Seven Champions and all the fiends,
+ rather will I die!&rdquo; And here, being defenceless, Sir Pertinax clenched
+ mighty fists and swore until he lacked for breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then spake Jocelyn, gentle-voiced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sing, Pertinax,&rdquo; quoth he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;never! Not for all the&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do command thee, Pertinax. As Robin once sang for his life, now must
+ thou sing for thine. Song for song, 't is but just! Sing, Pertinax!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; groaned the proud knight, &ldquo;I had rather drink water and chew grass
+ like a rabbit. Moreover I ha' no gift o' song&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do thy best!&rdquo; quoth Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm harsh o' voice&mdash;knave!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then croak&mdash;rogue!&rdquo; quoth Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No song have I&mdash;vermin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make one&mdash;carrion! But sing thou shalt though thy song be no better
+ than hog-song which is grunt. Howbeit sing thou must!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon Sir Pertinax gnashed his teeth and glaring balefully on Robin
+ lifted hoarse voice and burst forth into fierce song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Thou base outlaw,
+ Vile clapper-claw,
+ Since I must sing a stave,
+ Then, here and now,
+ I do avow
+ Thou art a scurvy knave!
+ Thy hang-dog air
+ Doth plain declare
+ Thou 'rt very scurvy knave.
+
+ &ldquo;Rogues breed apace
+ In each vile place,
+ But this I will avow,
+ Where e'er rogues be
+ No man may see
+ A viler rogue than thou,
+
+ Since it were vain
+ To meet again
+ A rogue more vile than thou.
+
+ &ldquo;As rogue thou art,
+ In every part,
+ Then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold there&mdash;hold!&rdquo; cried Robin, stopping his ears. &ldquo;Thy voice is
+ unlovely as thy look and thy song as ill as thy voice, so do we forgive
+ thee the rest. Ha' done thy bellowing and begone&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;not so!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;For troth I do sing better than
+ methought possible, and my rhyming is none so ill! So will I rhyme thy
+ every knavish part and sing song till song and rhyme be ended. Have at
+ thee again, base fellow!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Since rogue thou art
+ In every part&mdash;part&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ha, plague on't, hast put me out, rogue! I was about to hang thy every
+ roguish part in rhyme, but my rhymes halt by reason o' thee, rogue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth!&rdquo; laughed Robin. &ldquo;Thus stickest thou, for thy part, at my every
+ part, the which is well since I am man of parts. Thus then rhyme thou
+ rhymes upon thyself therefore; thus, thyself rhyming rhymes of thee, thou
+ shalt thyself, rhyming of thyself, thyself pleasure thereby, thou thus
+ rhyming of thee, and thee, thou. Thus thy thee and thou shall be well
+ accorded. How think'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sir Pertinax, astride his charger that cropped joyously at sweet, cool
+ grass, sat chin on fist, lost in the throes of composition, nothing
+ heeding, even when came the ten steeds with the ten suits of armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now these ten horses bare eleven riders, tall, lusty fellows all, save one
+ shrouded in hood and cloak and whom Jocelyn viewed with quick, keen eyes.
+ And thus he presently whispered Robin who, laughing slyly, made signal to
+ his followers, whereupon, by ones and twos they stole silently away until
+ there none remained save only Sir Pertinax who, wrestling with his muse,
+ stared aloft under knitted brows, all unknowing, and presently brake out
+ singing on this wise:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;All men may see
+ A man in me,
+ A man who feareth no man,
+ Thus, fearless, I
+ No danger fly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Except it be a woman!&rdquo; sang a soft, sweet voice hard by, in pretty
+ mockery. Hereat Sir Pertinax started so violently that his mail clashed
+ and he stared about him eager-eyed but, finding himself quite alone,
+ sighed and fell to reverie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A woman?&rdquo; said he aloud. &ldquo;'Except it be a woman&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: Aye&mdash;a woman, O craven soldier!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PERTINAX: Why here is strange echo methinks and speaketh&mdash;with
+ her voice!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: 'O voice so soft and full of sweet allure!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PERTINAX: O voice beloved that might my dolour cure!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: O craven soldier! O most timid wooer! SIR PERTINAX: Craven am
+ I, yet lover&mdash;'t is most sure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: But thou 'rt a man&mdash;at least meseemeth so.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+SIR PERTINAX: And, being man, myself unworthy know,
+ Yet must I love and my belovèd seek
+ And, finding her, no words of love dare speak.
+ For this my love beyond all words doth reach,
+ And I'm slow-tongued and lack the trick of speech.
+ Nor hope have I that she should stoop to bless,
+ A man so full of all unworthiness.
+ So am I dumb&mdash;
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+THE VOICE: And yet dost speak indeed,
+ Such words, methinks, as any maid might heed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, think ye so in verity, sweet voice!&rdquo; cried Sir Pertinax, and
+ springing lightly to earth, strode forward on eager feet. And lo! from
+ behind a certain tree stepped one who, letting fall shrouding cloak and
+ hood, stood there a maid, dark-haired and darkly bright of eye, very
+ shapely and fair to see in her simple tire. And beholding her thus, the
+ tender curve of scarlet lips, the flutter of slender hands, the languorous
+ bewitchment of her eyes, Sir Pertinax halted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interpolateth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL:
+
+ What, again? Father, that will never do.
+ Don't make him halt again, I beg of you.
+ Sir Pertinax has halted much too long,
+ To make him do it here would be quite
+ wrong!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, I wish you would not interrupt
+ My halting muse in manner so abrupt&mdash;
+
+ GILL:
+
+ But here 's a chance at last to let them kiss,
+ And now you make him halt!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head abashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN persisteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL:
+
+ Well, father, while he halts, then tell me,
+ pray,
+ Just what you mean by that line where you
+ say,
+ 'The languorous bewitchment of her eyes'?
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, no child should authors catechise,
+ Especially, poor fellow, if, like me,
+ Father and author both at once is he.
+ Wise authors all such questions strictly ban,
+ And never answer&mdash;even if they can.
+ If of our good knight's wooing you would
+ hear,
+ Keep stilly tongue and hearken well, my
+ dear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head, abashed by her beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Melissa!&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;O Melissa!&rdquo; and so stood mute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Pertinax!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;Art dumb at sight of me? O Pertinax, and
+ wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All have I forgot save only thy loveliness, Melissa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks such&mdash;forgetfulness becometh thee well. Say on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Melissa, I&mdash;do love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why this I knew when thou didst sit a-fishing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, indeed, then I dreamed not of loving thee or any maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because thou art but a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, and being man, now came I seeking thee for Love's sweet sake yet,
+ finding thee, know not how to speak thee. Alas, I do fear I am but sorry
+ wooer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Pertinax, I do fear thou art! Yet thou shalt learn, perchance. How&mdash;art
+ dumb again, canst speak me no more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nought&mdash;save only this, thou art beyond all maids fair, Melissa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I do think thou'lt make a wooer some day mayhap, by study diligent.
+ 'T will take long time and yet&mdash;I would not have thee learn too soon!
+ And hast thought of me? A little?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have borne thee ever within my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore wilt love maid so lowly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that thou art thyself and thyself&mdash;Melissa. And O, I love thy
+ voice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My voice? And what more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thine eyes. Thy little, pretty feet. Thy scarlet mouth. Thy gentle, small
+ hands. Thy hair. All of thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O,&rdquo; she murmured a little breathlessly, &ldquo;if thou dost so love me&mdash;woo
+ me&mdash;a little!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;I know not how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast ne'er wooed maid ere this, big soldier?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou poor Pertinax! How empty&mdash;how drear thy life. For this do I
+ pity thee with pity kin to love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Ah, Melissa, couldst e'en learn to love one so
+ unlovely, so rude, so rough and unmannered as I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;O, never&mdash;unless thou teach me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would indeed I might, Melissa. Ah, teach me how I may teach thee to love
+ one so unworthy as Pertinax!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now hearkening to his harsh voice grown soft and tremulous, beholding the
+ truth in his honest eyes, Melissa smiled, wondrous tender, and reaching
+ out took hold upon his two hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kneel!&rdquo; she commanded. &ldquo;Kneel here upon the grass as I do kneel. Now, lay
+ by thy cumbrous helmet. Now fold thy great, strong hands. Now bow thy
+ tall, grim head and say in sweet, soft accents low and reverent: 'Melissa,
+ I do love thee heart and soul, thee only do I love and thee only will I
+ love now and for ever. So aid me, Love, amen!'&rdquo; Then, closing his eyes,
+ Sir Pertinax bowed reverent head, and, humbly folding his hands, spake as
+ she bade him. Thereafter opening his eyes, he saw her watching him through
+ gathering tears, and leaning near, he reached out eager arms, yet touched
+ her not. Quoth he: &ldquo;O maid beloved, what is thy sorrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis joy&mdash;joy, and thou&mdash;thou art so strong and fierce yet so
+ gentle and simple of heart! O, may I prove worthy thy love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Worthy? Of my love?&rdquo; he stammered. &ldquo;But O Melissa, I am but he thou didst
+ name harsh of tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, I did!&rdquo; she sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hard of heart, flinty of soul, rude, unmannered and unlovely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye&mdash;I did and&mdash;loved thee the while!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;So now
+ do I pray that I prove worthy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Worthy? Thou? O my sweet maid&mdash;thou that art kin to the holy angels,
+ thou so high and far removed 'bove me that I do tremble and&mdash;fear to
+ touch thee&mdash;&ldquo;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, fear me not, Pertinax,&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;for though indeed I am all
+ this, yet maid am I also and by times&mdash;very human. So Pertinax, thou
+ great, fearless man-at-arms, lay by thy so great fears a while&mdash;I do
+ beseech thee.&rdquo; Then Sir Pertinax, beholding the tender passion of her
+ eyes, forgot his fear in glad wonderment and, reaching out hands that
+ trembled for all their strength, drew her to his close embracement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, kneeling together upon the sun-dappled sward, they forgot all
+ things in this joyous world save only their love and the glory of it. And
+ when they had kissed each other&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: But, wait, they haven't yet, you know!
+
+ MYSELF: Indeed, they have, I've just said so.
+
+ GILL: Then, father, please to tell me this:
+ How can a person say a kiss?
+ And so, since kisses can't be said,
+ Please make them do it now instead.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus, cradled in his strong arms, she questioned him tenderly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dost mind how, upon a day, my Pertinax, didst ask of me the amulet I bore
+ within my bosom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and sure 'tis charm of potent magic whose spell
+ brought us out of the dungeon at Canalise&mdash;the which is great matter
+ for wonder! But 'tis for thy dear sake I do cherish it&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bear you it yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here upon my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I should ask it of thee again&mdash;wouldst render it back to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Never, until with it I give thee myself also!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently she stirred in his embrace for upon the air was an
+ approaching clamour, voices, laughter and the ring of mail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come away!&rdquo; whispered Melissa, upspringing to her feet. &ldquo;Come, let thou
+ and Love and I hide until these disturbers be gone and the sweet world
+ hold but us three again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as they stood, hand in hand, deep hidden 'mid the green, they beheld
+ six merry woodland rogues who led an ambling ass whereon rode a friar
+ portly and perspiring albeit he had a jovial eye. And as he rode he spake
+ his captors thus in voice full-toned and deep:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care, gentle rogues and brethren, hurry not this ambulant animal
+ unduly, poor, much-enduring beast. Behold the pensive pendulation of these
+ auriculars so forlornly a-dangle! Here is ass that doth out-patience all
+ asses, both four and two-legged. Here is meek ass of leisured soul loving
+ not haste&mdash;a very pensive perambulator. So hurry not the ass, my
+ brothers, for these several and distinct reasons or arguments. Firstly,
+ dearly beloved, because I love haste no more than the ass; secondly,
+ brethren, 't is property of Holy Church which is above all argument; and,
+ thirdly, 't is bestridden by one Friar John, my very self, and I am
+ forsooth weighty argument. Fourthly, beloved, 'tis an ass that&mdash;ha! O
+ sweet vision for eyes human or divine! Do I see thee in very truth, thou
+ damsel of disobedience, dear dame of discord, sweet, witching, wilful lady&mdash;is
+ it thou in very truth, most loved daughter, or wraith conjured of thy
+ magic and my perfervid imaginations&mdash;speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is I myself, Reverend Father!&rdquo; laughed Melissa. &ldquo;O my dear, good Friar
+ John, methinks the kind Saints have brought thee to my need.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saints, quotha!&rdquo; exclaimed the Friar, rolling merry eye towards his
+ several captors. &ldquo;Call ye these&mdash;Saints? Long have I sought thee,
+ thou naughty maid, and to-day in my quest these brawny 'saints' beset me
+ with bow and quarterstaff and me constrained hither&mdash;but my blessing
+ on them since they have brought me to thee. And now, sweet child and
+ daughter, whiles the news yet runneth hot-foot or, like bird unseen,
+ wingeth from lip to lip, I thy ghostly father have rare good news for thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Friar John, I will guess thy tidings: Sir Agramore of Biename lieth
+ sorry and sore of a cudgelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How!&rdquo; cried the Friar. &ldquo;Thou dost know&mdash;so soon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, Reverend Father, nor have I or my worthy guardians aught to fear
+ of him hereafter. And now have I right wondrous news for thee, news that
+ none may guess. List, dear Friar John, thou the wisest and best loved of
+ all my guardians ten; to-day ye are absolved henceforth all care of your
+ wilful ward since to-day she passeth from the guardianship of ye ten to
+ the keeping of one. Come forth, Pertinax, thou only one beloved of me for
+ no reason but that thou art thou and I am I&mdash;as is ever the sweet,
+ mad way of True-love&mdash;come forth, my dear-loved, poor soldier!&rdquo; Out
+ from the trees strode Pertinax but, beholding his face, Friar John scowled
+ and, viewing his rich surcoat and goodly armour, fell to perspiring wonder
+ and amaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by the sweet Saint Amphibalus!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Surely these be the arms
+ of Sir Agramore, dread Lord of Biename?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most true, dear Friar John,&rdquo; answered Melissa, &ldquo;and by this same token
+ Sir Agramore lieth sore bruised e'en now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth the Friar, mopping moist brow. &ldquo;'T is well&mdash;'t is very
+ well, so shall these two ears of mine, with eighteen others of lesser
+ account, scathless go and all by reason of this good, tall fellow.
+ Howbeit, I do know this same fellow for fellow of none account, and no fit
+ mate for thee, noble daughter, love or no. A fierce, brawling,
+ tatterdemalion this, that erstwhile tramped in company with long-legged
+ ribald&mdash;a froward jesting fellow. Wherefore this fellow, though
+ fellow serviceable, no fellow is for thee and for these sufficing reasons.
+ Firstly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;enough!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, chin out-thrust. &ldquo;'Fellow' me no
+ more, Friar&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Firstly,&rdquo; continued Friar John, &ldquo;because this out-at-elbows fellow is a
+ rogue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Rogue,' in thy teeth, Churchman!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Secondly,&rdquo; continued Friar John, nothing abashed, &ldquo;because this
+ rogue-fellow is a runagate roysterer, a nameless knave, a highway-haunter,
+ a filching flick-o'-the-gibbet and a&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friar,&rdquo; snorted Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;thou 'rt but a very fat man scant o'
+ breath, moreover thou 'rt a friar, so needs must I leave thee alive to
+ make pestilent the air yet a little until thou chokest of an epithet.
+ Meantime perform now one gracious act in thy so graceless life and wed me
+ with this forest maiden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forest maiden, forsooth!&rdquo; cried Friar John. &ldquo;O Saints! O Martyrs! Forest
+ maid, quotha! And wed her&mdash;and unto thee, presumptuous malapert! Ho,
+ begone, thy base blood and nameless rank forbid&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold there, shaveling!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. &ldquo;Now mark me this!
+ Though I, being very man, do know myself all unworthy maid so sweet and
+ peerless, yet, and she stoop to wed me, then will I make her lady proud
+ and dame of divers goodly manors and castles, of village and hamlet, pit
+ and gallows, sac and soc, with powers the high, the middle and the low and
+ with ten-score lances in her train. For though in humble guise I went, no
+ nameless rogue am I, but Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling,
+ Bracton and Deepdene&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How!&rdquo; cried Melissa, pouting rosy lip and frowning a little. &ldquo;O Pertinax,
+ art indeed a great lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, sooth&mdash;forsooth and indeed,&rdquo; he stammered, &ldquo;I do fear I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou 'rt no poor, distressful, ragged, outlaw-soldier?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack&mdash;no!&rdquo; he groaned, regardful of her frown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then basely hast thou tricked me&mdash;O cruel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Melissa&mdash;hear me!&rdquo; he cried, and, forgetful of friar and gaping
+ outlaws, he clasped her fast 'prisoned 'gainst his heart. &ldquo;Thee do I love,
+ dear maid, 'bove rank, or fame, or riches, or aught this world may offer.
+ So, an thou wouldst have me ragged and destitute and outlaw, all this will
+ I be for thy sweet sake since life were nought without thee, O maid I do
+ so love&mdash;how say'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say to thee, Pertinax, that thy so great love hath loosed thy tongue at
+ last, Love hath touched thy lips with eloquence beyond all artifice since
+ now, methinks, it is thy very soul doth speak me. And who shall resist
+ such wooing? Surely not I that do&mdash;love thee beyond telling. So take
+ me, my lord, thy right hand in mine, the talisman in thy left&mdash;so!
+ Now, my Pertinax, speak thy heart's wish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friar,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, holding aloft the Crystal Heart, &ldquo;as her love
+ is mine and mine hers, wed and unite us in our love&mdash;by the magic of
+ this jewel I do command thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, beholding the talisman, Friar John gasped and stared round-eyed and
+ incredulous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Holy Rood!&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;'t is indeed the Crystal Heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And O!&rdquo; sighed Melissa, &ldquo;O Friar John, thou dost mind the saying:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly&mdash;truly!&rdquo; nodded the Friar.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'And by night, or eke by day,
+ The Crystal Heart all must obey!'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ So saying he got him down from the ass and, for all his corpulence, louted
+ full low.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Knight of Shene,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;by reason of this jewel potential thou
+ dost bear, now must I perforce obey thy behest and wed thee unto this our
+ gracious lady Benedicta, Duchess of Ambremont, Canalise, Tissingors,
+ Fordyngstoke and divers other towns, villages and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Duchess&mdash;a duchess?&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Duchess say'st thou&mdash;this,
+ the Duchess Benedicta! O Melissa&mdash;thou&mdash;thou&mdash;a duchess!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sooth and forsooth,&rdquo; sighed she in pretty mockery, &ldquo;I do fear I am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou 'rt no humble maid, distressful and forlorn, Melissa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, Pertinax&mdash;all this am I indeed unless thou love me, and loving
+ me, wed me, and wedding me love me the better therefor, and loving me ever
+ the better, thou may'st learn a little some day how a woman may love a
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; mumbled Sir Pertinax, kissing her rosy finger-tips, &ldquo;be thou
+ duchess or witch-maid o' the wood, I do love thee heart and soul, body and
+ mind, now and for ever, Melissa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Friar John, beholding the radiant joy of their faces, reached forth
+ his hands in blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kneel ye, my children!&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;For here methinks is true-love such
+ as brighteneth this world all too seldom. So here, within the forest, the
+ which is surely God's cathedral, this your love shall be sanctified unto
+ you and the world be the better therefor! Kneel ye, my children!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, kneeling upon the flower-sprent turf hand in hand and with heads
+ reverently bowed, they were wed, while the six outlaws stared in silent
+ awe and the meek ass cropped the grass busily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Pertinax,&rdquo; sighed the Duchess as they rose, &ldquo;so greatly happy am I that
+ I will others shall be happy likewise; let us make this indeed a day of
+ gladness. I pray thee sound the bugle that hangeth within the great oak,
+ yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Sir Pertinax took the horn and sounded thereon a mighty blast, loud and
+ long and joyous. And presently came the outlaws, thronging in from all
+ directions, until the sunny glade was full of their wild company, while in
+ the green beyond pike-head twinkled and sword-blades glittered; and
+ foremost was Robin with Lobkyn Lollo beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin,&rdquo; said the Duchess, beckoning him near with white, imperious
+ finger, &ldquo;Robin a' Green, thou whose tongue is quick and ready as thy hand,
+ hast ever been gentle to the weak and helpless as I do know, in especial
+ to two women that sought thy protection of late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, verily, lady, I mind them well,&rdquo; nodded Robin, &ldquo;and one was a maid
+ passing fair and one an ancient dame exceeding wise. To aid such is ever a
+ man's joy&mdash;or should be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knew ye who and what this maid was, Robin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, lady, I knew her then as now for that proud and noble lady the
+ Duchess Benedicta.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet, Robin, knowing this and having me in thy power didst suffer me
+ to go without let or hindrance or single penny of ransom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady Duchess,&rdquo; answered Robin, glancing round upon his wild company,
+ &ldquo;we be outlaws, 't is true, and rogues&mdash;mayhap, yet are we men and
+ thou a lady passing fair, wherefore&mdash;though I knew thee for the
+ Duchess Benedicta, thou wert safe with us since we war not with women and
+ harm no maids be they of high or low degree!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoke like a very knight!&rdquo; exclaimed the Duchess. &ldquo;How think'st thou, my
+ lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Aye, by Our Lady of Shene Chapel within
+ the Wood I swear it&mdash;thou 'rt a man, Robin! So now do I sue pardon of
+ thee for my song o' rogues since no rogue art thou. And thou didst aid and
+ shield her&mdash;this my wife that is the very eyes of me! So, by my
+ troth, my good friend art thou henceforth, Rob o' the Green!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lord,&rdquo; answered Robin slyly, &ldquo;for I am but Robin, and outlaw, and
+ thou art the Duke!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth&mdash;and so I am!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Ha&mdash;yet am I
+ still a man, and therefore&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait, my lord!&rdquo; said Benedicta. &ldquo;Robin, give me thy sword!&rdquo; So she took
+ the weapon and motioning Robin to his knees, set the blade across his
+ shoulder. &ldquo;Robin a' Green,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;since thou art knightly of word and
+ deed, knight shalt thou be in very truth. Sir Robin a' Forest I make thee
+ and warden over this our forest country. Rise up, Sir Robert.&rdquo; Then up
+ sprang Robin, bright-eyed and flushed of cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear my lady,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;since knight hast made me, thy knight will I be
+ henceforth in life or in death&mdash;&rdquo; But here his voice was lost in the
+ joyous acclamations of his followers who shouted amain until the Duchess
+ quelled them with lifted hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye men of the wild-wood,&rdquo; said she, looking round upon them gentle-eyed,
+ &ldquo;all ye that be homeless and desolate, lying without the law, this day joy
+ hath found me, for this is my wedding-morn. And as I am happy I would see
+ ye happy also. Therefore upon this glad day do we make proclamation, my
+ Lord Duke and I&mdash;this day we lift from you each and every, the ban of
+ outlawry&mdash;free men are ye to go and come as ye list&mdash;free men
+ one and all and good citizens henceforth I pray!&rdquo; Now here was silence
+ awhile, then a hoarse murmur, swelling to a jubilant shout until the sunny
+ woodland rang with the joy of it, near and far.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, Sir Robert,&rdquo; laughed the Duchess, &ldquo;pray you where is this noble
+ Fool, this gentle Motley, this most rare singer of songs and breaker of
+ lances? Bid him to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;the Fool!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady,&rdquo; answered Robin, &ldquo;true, he was here, but when I sought him, a
+ while since, there was Sir Palamon's armour he had worn, but himself gone
+ &mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gone&mdash;gone say'st thou?&rdquo; cried Sir Pertinax, glancing about. &ldquo;Then
+ needs must I go seek him&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore, my lord?&rdquo; cried the Duchess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is my&mdash;my duty, Melissa!&rdquo; stammered Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;He is my&mdash;my
+ friend and&mdash;sworn brother-in-arms!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And am I not thy wife, Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, most dearly loved, and I, thy husband&mdash;and yet&mdash;needs must
+ I seek this Fool, Melissa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Pertinax&mdash;wilt leave me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave thee?&rdquo; groaned Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Aye&mdash;for a while! Leave thee?
+ Aye&mdash;though it break my heart needs must I! He, my&mdash;brother-in-arms.
+ My duty calleth&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what of thy duty to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as Sir Pertinax wrung his hands in an agony of indecision, rose a
+ whisper of sweet sound, the murmur of softly-plucked lute-strings, and
+ into the glade, cock's-comb aflaunt and ass's ears a-dangle Duke Jocelyn
+ strode and sang as he came a song he had made on a time, a familiar air:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Good Pertinax, why griev'st thou so?
+ Free of all duty thou dost go,
+ Save that which thou to Love dost owe,
+ My noble Pertinax.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And love from heaven hath stooped thus low To me!&rdquo; quoth Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here came Robin with certain of his men leading a snow-white palfrey
+ richly caparisoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right noble lady,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;behold here a goodly, fair jennet to thy
+ gracious acceptance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And indeed&mdash;'t is rare, pretty beast!&rdquo; exclaimed Benedicta. &ldquo;But
+ Robin, Robin, O Sir Robert, whence had you this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady, upon a time I was an outlaw and lived as outlaws may, taking such
+ things as Fate bestowed, and, lady:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Fate is a wind
+ To outlaws kind:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But now since we be free-men all, I and my fellows, fain would we march
+ hence in thy train to thy honour and our joyance. Wilt grant us this boon,
+ lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freely, for 'tis rare good thought, Robin! Surely never rode duke and
+ duchess so attended. How the townsfolk shall throng and stare to see our
+ wild following, and my worthy guardians gape and pluck their beards for
+ very amaze! How think you, good Friar John?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, verily, daughter, I, that am chiefest of thy wardens ten, do think
+ it wise measure; as for thy other guardians let them pluck and gape until
+ they choke.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In especial Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who both beard and wisdom lacks.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I say 'tis wise, good measure, for these that were outlaws be sturdy
+ fellows with many friends in town and village, so shall this thy day of
+ union be for them re-union, and they joy with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now being mounted the Duchess rode where stood Jocelyn, and looked down on
+ him merry-eyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;who thou art I know not, but I have hunted in
+ Brocelaunde ere now, and I have eyes. And as thou 'rt friend to my dear
+ lord, friend art thou of mine, so do we give thee joyous welcome to our
+ duchy. And, being thy friend, I pray thou may'st find that wonder of
+ wonders the which hideth but to be found, and once found, shall make wise
+ Fool wiser.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet friend and lady,&rdquo; answered Jocelyn, &ldquo;surely man so unlovely as I
+ may not know this wonder for his very own until it first seek him. Is 't
+ not so? Let now thy woman's heart counsel me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, Sir Wise Folly, have I not heard thee preach boldness in love ere
+ now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye&mdash;for others!&rdquo; sighed Jocelyn. &ldquo;But for myself&mdash;I fear&mdash;behold
+ this motley! This scarred face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why as to thy motley it becometh thee well&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but my face? O, 't is a hideous face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Fool!&rdquo; sighed Benedicta, &ldquo;know'st thou not that True-love's eyes
+ possess a magic whereby all loved things become fair and beauteous. So
+ take courage, noble Motley, and may thy desires be crowned&mdash;even as
+ our own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, thou sweet and gentle lady. Happiness companion thee alway and
+ Love sing ever within thee. Now for ye twain is love's springtime, a
+ season of sweet promise, may each promise find fulfilment and so
+ farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, Sir Fool, an thou wilt tarry here in the good greenwood a
+ while, may Love guide thee. Now here is my counsel: Follow where thy heart
+ commandeth and&mdash;fear not! And now, Sir Robert a' Forest, form thy
+ company, and since this is a day of gladness let them sing as they march.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth, dear my lady, that will we!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;There is song o'
+ spring and gladness I made that hath oft been our solace, and moreover it
+ beginneth and endeth with jolly chorus well beknown to all. Ho, pikes to
+ van and rear! Bows to the flanks&mdash;fall in! Now trusty friends o' the
+ greenwood, free-men all, henceforth&mdash;now march we back to hearth and
+ home and love, so sing ye&mdash;sing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon from the ragged, close-ordered ranks burst a shout that swelled
+ to rolling chorus; and these the words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily&mdash;hey!
+ And cheerily let us sing,
+ While youth is youth then youth is gay
+ And youth shall have his fling.
+
+ Robin: The merry merle on leafy spray,
+ The lark on fluttering wing
+ Do pipe a joyous roundelay,
+ To greet the blithesome spring.
+
+ Hence, hence cold Age, black Care&mdash;away!
+ Cold Age black Care doth bring;
+ When back is bowed and head is grey,
+ Black Care doth clasp and cling.
+
+ Black Care doth rosy Pleasure stay,
+ Age ageth everything;
+ 'T is farewell sport and holiday,
+ On flowery mead and ling.
+
+ If Death must come, then come he may,
+ And wed with death-cold ring,
+ Yet ere our youth and strength decay,
+ Blithe Joy shall be our king.
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily&mdash;hey!
+ And cheerily we will sing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So they marched blithely away, a right joyous company, flashing back the
+ sunset glory from bright headpiece and sword-blade, while Jocelyn stood
+ watching wistful-eyed until they were lost amid the green, until all
+ sounds of their going grew to a hush mingling with the whisper of leaves
+ and murmurous gurgle of the brook; and ever the shadows deepened about
+ him, a purple solitude of misty trees and tangled thickets, depth on
+ depth, fading to a glimmering mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly amid these glooming shadows a shadow moved, and forth into the
+ darkling glade, mighty club on mighty shoulder, stepped Lobkyn Lollo the
+ Dwarf, and his eyes were pensive and he sighed gustily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;So here's an end of outlawry,
+ And all along o' lady,
+ Yet still an outlaw I will be
+ Shut in o' shaws so shady.
+ And yet it is great shame, I trow,
+ That our good friends should freemen go
+ And leave us lonely to our woe,
+ And all along o' lady.
+
+ &ldquo;And plague upon this love, I say,
+ For stealing thus thy friend away,
+ And since fast caught and wed is he
+ Thy friend henceforth is lost to thee,
+ And thou, poor Fool, dost mope and sigh,
+ And so a plague on love! say I.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good Lobkyn, what know you of love?&rdquo; Answered LOBKYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Marry, enough o' love know I
+ To steal away if love be nigh.
+
+ &ldquo;For love's an ill as light as air,
+ Yet heavy as a stone;
+ O, love is joy and love is care,
+ A song and eke a groan.
+
+ &ldquo;Love is a sickness, I surmise,
+ Taketh a man first by the eyes,
+ And stealing thence into his heart,
+ There gripeth him with bitter smart.
+ Alas, poor soul,
+ What bitter dole,
+ Doth plague his every part!
+
+ &ldquo;From heart to liver next it goes,
+ And fills him full o' windy woes,
+ And, being full o' gusty pain,
+ He groaneth oft, and sighs amain,
+ Poor soul is he
+ In verity,
+ And for his freedom sighs in vain.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Miscall not love, Lobkyn, for sure True-love is
+ every man's birthright.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Quoth LOBKYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Why then, methinks there's many a wight
+ That cheated is of his birthright,
+ As, item first, here's Lobkyn Lollo
+ To prove thine argument quite hollow.
+ Dare I at maid to cast mine eye,
+ She mocketh me, and off doth fly,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And all because I'm humped o' back,
+ And something to my stature lack.
+ Thus, though I'm stronger man than three,
+ No maid may love the likes o' me.
+ Next, there's thyself&mdash;a Fool, I swear,
+ At fight or song beyond compare.
+ But&mdash;thou 'rt unlovely o' thy look,
+ And this no maid will ever brook.
+ So thou and I, for weal or woe,
+ To our lives' end unloved must go.
+ But think ye that I grieve or sigh?
+ Not so! A plague on love, say I!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now here Jocelyn sighed amain and, sitting beneath a tree, fell to sad and
+ wistful thinking.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily,&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;I am 'unlovely of my
+ look.'&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth Lobkyn heartily:
+
+ &ldquo;In very sooth,
+ Fool, that's the truth!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; sighed Jocelyn, &ldquo;'And this no maid
+ will ever brook!'&rdquo;
+
+ Answered Lobkyn:
+
+ &ldquo;And there dost speak, wise Fool, again,
+ A truth right manifest and plain,
+ Since fairest maids have bat-like eyes,
+ And see no more than outward lies.
+ And seeing thus, they nothing see
+ Of worthiness in you or me.
+ And so, since love doth pass us by,
+ The plague o' plagues on love, say I!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nath'less,&rdquo; cried the Duke, leaping to his feet. &ldquo;I will put Love to the
+ test&mdash;aye, this very hour!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Lobkyn: Wilt go, good Motley? Pray thee where?
+
+ Jocelyn: To one beyond all ladies fair.
+
+ Lobkyn: Then dost thou need a friend about thee
+ To cheer and comfort when she flout thee.
+ So, an thou wilt a-wooing wend,
+ I'll follow thee like trusty friend.
+ In love or fight thou shalt not lack
+ A sturdy arm to 'fend thy back.
+ I'll follow thee in light or dark,
+ Through good or ill&mdash;Saints shield us!
+ Hark!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And Lobkyn started about, club poised for swift action, for, out-stealing
+ from the shadows crept strange and dismal sound, a thin wail that sank to
+ awful groaning rumble, and so died away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; whispered Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Pray, Fool, pray with all thy might,
+ Here's goblin foul or woodland sprite
+ Come for to steal our souls away,
+ So on thy knees quick, Fool, and pray!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But, as these dismal sounds brake forth again, Jocelyn stole forward,
+ quarter-staff gripped in ready hand; thus, coming nigh the great oak, he
+ espied a dim, huddled form thereby and, creeping nearer, stared in wonder
+ to behold Mopsa, the old witch, striving might and main to wind the great
+ hunting-horn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, good Witch!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;here methinks is that beyond all thy spells
+ to achieve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Fool,&rdquo; she panted, &ldquo;kind Fool, sound me this horn, for I'm old and
+ scant o' breath. Wind it shrill and loud, good Motley, the rallying-note,
+ for there is ill work afoot this night. Sound me shrewd blast, therefore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, 't were labour in vain, Witch; there be no outlaws hereabout, free
+ men are they henceforth and gone, each and every.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out alas&mdash;alas!&rdquo; cried the old woman, wringing her hands. &ldquo;Then woe
+ is me for the fair lady Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! What of her, good Witch? Threateneth danger? Speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool, danger most dire! My Lord Gui yet liveth, and this night
+ divers of his men shall bear her away where he lieth raging for her in his
+ black castle of Ells&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by heaven's light!&rdquo; swore Jocelyn, his eyes fierce and keen, &ldquo;this
+ night shall Fool be crowned of Love or sleep with kindly Death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Fool, thy foes be a many! Wilt cope with them alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay!&rdquo; cried a voice:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Not so, grandam
+ For here I am!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ and Lobkyn stepped forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, my pretty poppet! Loved duck, my downy chick&mdash;what wouldst?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Fight, grandam,
+ Smite, grandam,
+ Sweet, blood-begetting blows.
+ Where Fool goeth
+ Well Fool knoweth
+ Lobkyn likewise goes.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, my bantling&mdash;loved babe, fight thy fiercest, for these be
+ wicked men and 't will be an evil fray. And she is sweet and good, so,
+ Lobkyn, be thy strongest&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saith Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye that will I,
+ Or may I die.
+ By this good kiss
+ I vow thee this.
+
+ &ldquo;And here is signal, Fool, shall shew
+ Each where the other chance to go.
+
+ &ldquo;Croak like a frog,
+ Bark like a dog,
+ Grunt like a hog,
+ I'll know thee.
+
+ &ldquo;Hoot like an owl,
+ Like grey wolf howl,
+ Or like bear growl,
+ 'T will shew thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then come, trusty Lob, and my thanks to thee!&rdquo; cried Jocelyn, catching up
+ his quarter-staff. &ldquo;But haste ye, for I would be hence ere the moon get
+ high. Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Duke Jocelyn strode away with Lobkyn Lollo at his heels; now as they
+ went, the moon began to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 12
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Which being the last Fytte of our Geste I hope may please my daughter
+ best.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O, Wind of Night, soft-creeping,
+ Sweet charge I give to thee,
+ Steal where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me;
+ And in her dream,
+ Love, let me seem
+ All she would have me be.
+
+ &ldquo;Kind sleep! By thee we may attain
+ To joys long hoped and sought in vain,
+ By thee we all may find again
+ Our lost divinity.
+
+ &ldquo;So, Night-wind, softly creeping,
+ This charge I give to thee,
+ Go where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Hearkening to this singing Yolande shivered, yet not with cold, and
+ casting a cloak about her loveliness came and leaned forth into the warm,
+ still glamour of the night, and saw where stood Jocelyn tall and shapely
+ in the moonlight, but with hateful cock's-comb a-flaunt and ass's ears
+ grotesquely a-dangle; wherefore she sighed and frowned upon him, saying
+ nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande?&rdquo; he questioned. &ldquo;O my lady, and wilt frown upon my singing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answered she, leaning dimpled chin upon white fist and frowning yet:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not&mdash;not thy&mdash;singing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is 't then this cap o' Folly&mdash;my ass's ears, Yolande? Then away with
+ them! So shalt jester become very man as thou art very maid!&rdquo; Forthwith he
+ thrust back his cock's-comb and so stood gazing up at her wide-eyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she, beholding thus his scarred face, shivered again, shrinking a
+ little, whereupon Jocelyn bowed his head, hiding his features in his long,
+ black-curling hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, my lady!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;doth my ill face offend thee? This would I put
+ off also for thy sake an it might be, but since this I may not do, close
+ thou thine eyes a while and hear me speak. For now do I tell thee,
+ Yolande, that I&mdash;e'en I that am poor jester&mdash;am yet a man loving
+ thee with man's love. I that am one with face thus hatefully scarred do
+ seek thee in thy beauty to my love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Presumptuous Fool, how darest thou speak me thus?&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that great love dareth greatly, Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what of thy lord? How of Duke Jocelyn, thy master?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is but man, lady, even as I. Moreover for thee he existeth not since
+ thou hast ne'er beheld him&mdash;to thy knowing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then&mdash;what of this?&rdquo; she questioned, drawing the jewelled
+ picture from her bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is but what it is, lady, a poor thing of paint!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But sheweth face of noble beauty, Fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, nobly painted, Yolande! A thing of daubed colours, seeing naught of
+ thy beauty, speaking thee no word of love, whiles here stand I, a sorry
+ Fool of beauty none, yet therewithal a man to woo thee to my love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy love? Ah, wilt so betray thy lord's trust?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blithely, Yolande! For thee I would betray my very self.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thyself art Fool faithless to thy lord, a rhyming jester, a sorry
+ thing for scorn or laughter&mdash;and yet&mdash;thy shameful habit shames
+ thee not, and thy foolish songs hold naught of idle folly! And thou&mdash;thou
+ art the same I saw 'mid gloom of dungeon sing brave song in thy chains!
+ Thou art he that overthrew so many in the lists! O Joconde, my world is
+ upside down by reason of thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou, Yolande, didst stoop to me within my dungeon! And thou didst
+ pray for me, Yolande, and now&mdash;now within this sweet night thou dost
+ lean down to me through the glory of thy hair&mdash;to me in my very
+ lowliness! And so it is I love thee, Yolande, love thee as none shall ever
+ love thee, for man am I with heart to worship thee, tongue to woo thee,
+ eyes to behold thy beauties, and arms to clasp thee. So am I richer than
+ yon painted duke that needs must woo thee with my lips. And could I but
+ win thee to love&mdash;ah, Yolande, could I, despite these foolish
+ trappings, this blemished face, see Love look on me from thine eyes, O&mdash;then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;then&mdash;Joconde?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then should Fool, by love exalted, change to man indeed and I&mdash;mount
+ up to heaven&mdash;thus!&rdquo; So saying, Jocelyn began to climb by gnarled ivy
+ and carven buttress. And ever as he mounted she watched him through the
+ silken curtain of her hair, wide of eye and with hands tight-clasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Joconde!&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;'t is madness&mdash;madness! Ah, Joconde!&rdquo;
+ But swift he came and swung himself upon the balcony beside her and
+ reached out his arms in mute supplication, viewing her wistfully but with
+ scarred face transfigured by smile ineffably tender, and when he spoke his
+ voice was hushed and reverent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am here, Yolande, because methought to read within thy look the wonder
+ of all wonders. But, O my lady, because I am but what I am, fain would I
+ hear thee speak it also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; said she in breathless voice, &ldquo;wouldst shame me&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shame?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Shame? Can there be aught of shame in true love? Or is
+ it that my ass's ears do shame thee, my cock's-comb and garments pied
+ shame the worship of this foolish heart, and I, a Fool, worshipping thee,
+ shame thee by such worship? Then&mdash;on, cock's-comb! Ring out, silly
+ bells! Fool's love doth end in folly! Off love&mdash;on folly&mdash;a Fool
+ can but love and die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Joconde; ah, how may I tell thee&mdash;? Why dost thou start and
+ fumble with thy dagger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heard you aught, lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I heard an owl hoot in the shadows yonder, no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, lady, but now shall this owl croak like a frog&mdash;hearken! Aha&mdash;and
+ now shall frog bark like dog&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what meaneth this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That thou, proud lady, must this night choose betwixt knightly rogue and
+ motley Fool&mdash;here be two evils with yet a difference&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is strange, wild talk, Fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here shall be wild doings anon, lady, methinks. Hush thee and listen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A jangle of bridle-chains, a sound of voices loud and rough, and a tread
+ of heavy feet that, breaking rudely upon the gentle-brooding night, drove
+ the colour from Yolande's soft cheek and hushed her voice to broken
+ whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven shield us, what now, Joconde?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wolves, lady, wolves that come to raven&mdash;see yonder!&rdquo; Even as he
+ spake they espied armed men who, bold and assured by reason of the
+ solitude, moved in the garden below; and on back and breast of each was
+ the sign of the Bloody Hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Gui's followers! Alas, Joconde, these mean thee ill&mdash;here is
+ death for thee!&rdquo; Now as she spake, Jocelyn thrilled to the touch of her
+ hand upon his arm, a hand that trembled and stole to clasp his. &ldquo;Alas,
+ Joconde, they have tracked thee hither to slay thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And were this so, wouldst fly with me, Yolande? Wouldst trust thy
+ beauties to a Fool's keeping?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay, this were madness, Joconde; rather will I hide thee&mdash;aye,
+ where none shall dare seek thee&mdash;come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;Yolande, wilt trust thyself to Love and me?&rdquo;
+ But seeing how she shrank away, his eager arms fell and he bowed his head.
+ &ldquo;Nay, I am answered,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;even while thine eyes look love, thy body
+ abhorreth Fool's embrace&mdash;I am answered. Nay, 't is enough, trouble
+ not for words&mdash;ha, methinks it is too late, the wolves be hard upon
+ us&mdash;hark ye to their baying!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now was sudden uproar, a raving clamour of fierce shouts, and a
+ thundering of blows upon the great door below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande&mdash;ha, Yolande, yield thee! Open! Open!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;mercy of God! Is it me they seek?&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thee, Yolande! To bear thee to their lord's embraces&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rather will I die!&rdquo; she cried, and snatched the dagger from his girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so!&rdquo; quoth he, wresting the weapon from her grasp. &ldquo;Rather shalt thou
+ live a while&mdash;for thou art mine&mdash;mine to-night, Yolande&mdash;come!&rdquo;
+ And he clasped her in fierce arms. &ldquo;Nay, strive not lest I kiss thee to
+ submission, for thou art mine, though it be for one brief hour and death
+ the next!&rdquo; So, as she struggled for the dagger, he kissed her on mouth and
+ eyes and hair until she lay all unresisting in his embrace; while ever and
+ anon above the thunder of blows the night clamoured with the fierce shout:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open&mdash;open! Yolande, ha, Yolande!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is death&mdash;and worse!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;Loose me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; he laughed, &ldquo;here thou 'rt in thy rightful place at last&mdash;upon
+ my heart, Yolande. Now whither shall I bear thee? Where lieth safety?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loose me!&rdquo; she commanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never! Hark, there yields the good door at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then here will we die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, Yolande! A sweet death thus, heart to heart and lip to lip!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Fool&mdash;I hate thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howbeit, Yolande&mdash;I love thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande! Ha&mdash;Yolande!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cry was louder now and so near that she shivered and, hiding her face,
+ spake below her breath:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The turret-stair&mdash;behind the arras of my bed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swiftly, lightly he bore her down the winding stair and by divers
+ passage-ways until, thrusting open a narrow door, he found himself within
+ the garden and, keeping ever amid the darkest shadows, hasted on to the
+ postern hard by the lily-pool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Yolande felt herself swung to lofty saddle, heard Jocelyn's
+ warning shout drowned in a roar of voices and loud-trampling hoofs as the
+ great horse reared, heard a fierce laugh and, looking up, saw the face
+ above her grim and keen-eyed beneath its foolish cock's-comb as his
+ vicious steel flashed to right and left, and ever as he smote he mocked
+ and laughed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;well smitten, Lob! Oho, here Folly rides with pointed jest keen
+ and two-edged&mdash;make way, knaves&mdash;make way for Folly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The snorting charger, wheeled by strong hand, broke free, whereon rose an
+ uproar of shouts and cries that sank to a meaningless babble swept
+ backward on the rush of wind. Away, away they sped, through moonlight and
+ shadow, with fast-beating hoofs that rang on paved walk, that thudded on
+ soft grass, that trampled the tender flowers; and Yolande, swaying to the
+ mighty arm that clasped her, saw the fierce, scarred face bent above her
+ with eyes that gleamed under scowling brows and mouth grim-smiling; and
+ shivering, she looked no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On they sped with loosened rein, o'er grassy mead, through ferny hollows,
+ o'erleaping chattering rill that babbled to the moon, 'mid swaying reeds
+ and whispering sedge, past crouching bush and stately tree, and so at last
+ they reached the woods. By shadowy brake and thicket, through pools of
+ radiant moonlight, through leafy, whispering glooms they held their way,
+ across broad glade and clearing, on and on until all noise of pursuit was
+ lost and nought was to hear save the sounds of their going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus rode they, and with never a word betwixt them, deep and deeper into
+ the wild until the moon was down and darkness shut them in; wherefore
+ Jocelyn drew rein and sat a while to listen. He heard the good steed,
+ deep-breathing, snuff at dewy grass; a stir and rustle all about him; the
+ drowsy call of a bird afar; the soft ripple of water hard by and, over
+ all, the deep hush of the wild-wood. Then upon this hush stole a whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, 'tis very dark!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Dark, Lady? Why so 'tis, and yet 'tis natural, for 'tis night,
+ wherefore 'tis the bright god Phoebus is otherwhere, and Dian, sly-sweet
+ goddess, hath stole her light from heaven, wherefore 'tis 'tis dark, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Where are we?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: The sweet Saints know that, lady&mdash;not I!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She (<i>scornfully</i>): Verily, thou art no saint&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Not yet, lady, not yet&mdash;witness these ass's ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: True, thou 'rt very Fool!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: In very truth, lady, and thou art lost with this same Fool, so art
+ thou in very woeful case. As for me, a lost fool is no matter, wherefore
+ Fool for himself grieveth no whit. But for thee&mdash;alas! Thou art a
+ proud lady of high degree, very nice of thy dainty person, soft and
+ delicate of body, so shall the greensward prove for thee uneasy couch, I
+ judge, and thou sleep ill&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Sleep? No thought have I of sleep! Ride on, therefore. Why tarry we
+ here?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Lady, for three sufficing reasons&mdash;our foes pursue not, I'm
+ a-weary, and 'tis very dark&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: No matter! Ride on, I do command thee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Aye, but whither?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: I care not so thou leave this place; 'tis an evil place!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Why, 'tis good place, very well secluded and with stream hard by that
+ bubbleth. So here will we bide till dawn. Suffer me to aid thee down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Touch me not! Never think I fear thee though I am alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Alone? Nay, thou 'rt with me, that is&mdash;I am with thee and thou
+ art with a Fool. So is Fool care-full Fool since Fool hath care of thee.
+ Suffer me now to aid thee down since here will we wait the day. Come, my
+ arm about thee so, thy hand in mine&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She (<i>angrily</i>): O Fool most base&mdash;most vile&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Nay, hush thee, hush! and listen to yon blithesome, bubblesome,
+ babbling brook how it sigheth 'mid the willows, whispereth under reedy
+ bank and laugheth, rogue-like, in the shallows! Listen how it wooeth thee:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Though, lady, hard thy couch must be,
+ If thou should'st wakeful lie,
+ Here, from the dark, I'll sing to thee
+ A drowsy lullaby.
+ O lady fair&mdash;forget thy pride
+ Whiles thou within the greenwood bide.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And now suffer me to aid thee down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Why wilt thou stay me in this evil place?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He (<i>patiently</i>): The wild is ill travelling in the dark, lady; there
+ be quagmires and perilous ways&mdash;wherefore here must we bide till
+ dawn. Suffer me to&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE (<i>breathlessly and shrinking from his touch</i>): But I fear not
+ quagmires&mdash;there be greater perils&mdash;more shameful and&mdash;and&mdash;'tis
+ so dark, so dark! 'Tis hateful place. Ride we till it be day&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He (<i>mockingly</i>): Perils, lady? Why certes there be perils&mdash;and
+ perils. Perils that creep and crawl, perils that go on four legs and
+ perils two-legged&mdash;e'en as I. But I, though two-legged, am but very
+ fool of fools and nothing perilous in blazing day or blackest night. So
+ stint thy fears, lady, for here bide we till dawn!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith he caught her in sudden arms and lifted her to the ground; then,
+ dismounting, he set about watering and cherishing the wearied steed and
+ tethered him beside a dun stream that rippled beneath shadowy willows; and
+ so doing, fell a-singing on this wise:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Fair lady, thou 'rt lost!' quoth he,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'And O, 'tis dark&mdash;'tis dark!' quoth she,
+ 'And in the dark dire perils be,'
+ O, derry, derry down!
+
+ &ldquo;Quoth he: 'Fair lady, stint thy fear,'
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'I, being Fool, will sit me here,
+ And, till the kindly sun appear,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+
+ &ldquo;'I'll make for thee, like foolish wight,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A song that shall out-last dark night,
+ And put thy foolish fears to flight
+ With derry, derry down.
+
+ &ldquo;'For 'tis great shame thou shouldst fear so,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A peril that two-legged doth go,
+ Since he's but humble Fool, I trow,
+ With derry, derry down.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus sang he, a dim figure beside dim stream and, having secured the
+ horse, sat him down thereby and took forth his lute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Yolande, though he could not see, clenched white fists and, though he
+ could not hear, stamped slim foot at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; quoth she, betwixt clenched teeth, &ldquo;Joconde, I&mdash;scorn
+ thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;Alack, and my lute hath taken sore scath of a
+ sword-thrust!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou'rt hateful&mdash;hateful!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Aye&mdash;hateful as thy
+ hateful song, so do I contemn thee henceforth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say'st thou so, lady, forsooth?&rdquo; sighed he, busied with his lute. &ldquo;Now
+ were I other than Fool, here should I judge was hope of winning thy love.
+ But being only Fool I, with aid of woe-begone lute, will sing thee merry
+ song to cheer thee of thy perilous fears&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough, ill Fool, I'll hear thee not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, dear lady! Then will we sit an list to the song of yon stream,
+ for streams and rivers, like the everlasting hills, are passing wise with
+ length of days&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou'rt a very Fool!&rdquo; she cried angrily. &ldquo;A fond Fool presumptuous in
+ thy folly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As how presumptuous, proud lady?&rdquo; he questioned humbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that thou dreamest I&mdash;stoop to fear thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo; sighed he. &ldquo;Alas, thou poor, solitary, foolish, fearful
+ maid, thou art sick with fear of me! So take now my dagger! Thus Fool
+ offenceless shall lie defenceless at thy mercy and, so lying, sleep until
+ joyous day shall banish thy so virginal fears!&rdquo; Which saying, he tossed
+ off belt and dagger and setting them beside her, rolled his weather-worn
+ cloak about him, stretched himself beneath the dim willows and straightway
+ fell a-snoring. And after some while she questioned him in voice low and
+ troubled:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Joconde, art truly sleeping?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair lady,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;let these my so loud snores answer thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up sprang Yolande and, coming beside him in the gloom, cast back his
+ girdle, speaking quick and passionate:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take back thy dagger lest I be tempted to smite it to the cruel, mocking
+ heart of thee!&rdquo; Then turned she stately back and left him, but, being hid
+ from view, cast herself down full length upon the sward, her pride and
+ stateliness forgotten quite. Now Jocelyn, propped on uneasy elbow, peered
+ amid the gloom for sight of her and hearkened eagerly for sound of her;
+ but finding this vain, arose and, creeping stealthily, presently espied
+ her where she lay, face hidden in the dewy grass. Thus stood he chin in
+ hand disquieted and anxious-eyed and wist not what to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady?&rdquo; he questioned at last; but she stirred not nor spoke. &ldquo;Yolande!&rdquo;
+ he murmured, drawing nearer; but still she moved not, though his quick ear
+ caught a sound faint though very pitiful. &ldquo;Ah, dost thou weep?&rdquo; he cried.
+ Yolande sobbed again, whereupon down fell he beside her on his knees,
+ &ldquo;Dear lady, why grievest thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Joconde,&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;I am indeed solitary&mdash;and fearful! And thou&mdash;thou
+ dost mock me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me,&rdquo; he pleaded humbly, &ldquo;and, since thou'rt solitary, here am I.
+ And, for thy fears, nought is here shall harm thee, here may'st thou sleep
+ secure&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Joconde, the forest is haunted of wolves and&mdash;worse, 'tis
+ said!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then will I watch beside thee till the day. And now will I go cut bracken
+ for thy bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then will I aid thee.&rdquo; So she arose forthwith and, amid the fragrant
+ gloom, they laboured together side by side; and oft in the gloom her hand
+ touched his, and oft upon his cheek and brow and lip was the silken touch
+ of her wind-blown hair. Then beneath arching willows they made a bed,
+ high-piled of springy bracken and sweet grasses, whereon she sank
+ nestling, forthwith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, 'tis sweet couch!&rdquo; she sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet thou'lt be cold mayhap ere dawn,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;suffer me to set my
+ cloak about thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how of thyself, Joconde?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a Fool well seasoned of wind and rain, heat and cold, lady, and 'tis
+ night of summer.&rdquo; So he covered her with his travel-stained cloak and,
+ sitting beneath a tree, fell to his watch. And oft she stirred amid the
+ fern, deep-sighing, and he, broad back against the tree, sighed oftener
+ yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art there, Joconde?&rdquo; she questioned softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis very dark,&rdquo; sighed she, &ldquo;and yet, methinks, 'tis sweet to lie thus
+ in the greenwood so hushed and still and the stars to watch like eyes of
+ angels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, 'tis night of summer, lady, a night soft and languorous and fragrant
+ of sleeping flowers. But how of grim winter, how of rain and wind and
+ lashing tempest&mdash;how think you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That summer would come again, Joconde.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly here is brave thought, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark, how still is the night, Joconde, and yet full of soft stir, a
+ sighing amid the leaves! 'Tis like the trees whispering one another. O,
+ 'tis sweet night!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soon to pass away, alas!&rdquo; he sighed, whereupon she, stirring upon her
+ ferny couch, sighed also; thereafter fell they silent awhile hearkening to
+ the leafy stirrings all about them in the dark, and the slumberous murmur
+ of the stream that, ever and anon, brake into faint gurglings like a voice
+ that laughed, soft but roguish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: I pray thee talk to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Whereof, lady?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thyself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I am a Fool&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And why sit so mumchance?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Of what?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Folly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And why dost sigh so deep and oft?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I grieve for thee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: For me! And wherefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Being lost with a Fool thou'rt desolate, sad and woeful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Am I, Joconde? And how dost know all this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: 'Tis so I do think, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then are thy thoughts folly indeed. If thou must sigh, sigh for
+ thyself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Why so I do, lady, and therewith grieve for myself and thyself, myself
+ being Fool and thyself a dame of high degree, thus, betwixt whiles, I do
+ fear thee also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thou fear! Thou fear me forsooth! And wherefore fear a helpless maid?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: There is the reason&mdash;she is helpless!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Ah, there doth Fool speak like chivalrous knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Or very fool&mdash;a fool that fain would win fair Dian from high
+ heaven. Alas, poor Fool, that, being fool, must needs look and sigh and
+ sigh and look and leave her to the winning of some young Endymion!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE (<i>dreamily</i>): Endymion was but lowly shepherd, yet was he loved!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Endymion was fair youth comely of feature, lady. Now had he worn ass's
+ ears 'bove visage scarred&mdash;how then? On Ida's mount he had been
+ sighing forlorn and lonely yet, methinks. For maids' hearts are ever
+ governed by their eyes&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Art so wise in maids' hearts, Joconde?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Wise am I in this: No man may ever know the heart of a woman&mdash;and
+ woman herself but seldom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here was silence again wherein Yolande, smiling, viewed him a dim
+ shape in the gloom, and he leaned back to watch a star that twinkled
+ through the leafy canopy above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thou art Duke Jocelyn's Fool at court?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I am Duke Jocelyn's fool here and there and everywhere, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Yet have I heard Duke Jocelyn was a mighty man-at-arms and, though
+ youthful, sober-minded, full of cares of state and kept no Fool at court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Lady, his court is filled o' fools as is the way of other courts and
+ amongst these many fools first cometh the Duke himself&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: How, and darest thou call this mighty Duke a fool?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Often, lady!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And what like is he?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Very like a man, being endowed of arms, legs, eyes, ears&mdash;of each
+ two, no more and no less, as is the vulgar custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: But is he not of beauty high and noble, of god-like perfection far
+ beyond poor, common flesh and blood? 'Tis so the painter has limned his
+ face, 'tis so I dream him to my fancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Lady, I am but a Fool, let the picture answer thee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And he, this mighty Duke of god-like beauty doth woo me to his wife&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE (<i>bitterly</i>): With my tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Why came he not in his own glorious person?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Lady, though a Duke, he hath his moments of wisdom and argueth thus:
+ &ldquo;I, though a Duke, am yet a man. Thus, should I as Duke woo her, she may
+ wed the Duke, loving not the man&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And so he sent a Fool as his ambassador! And so do I scorn this
+ god-like Duke&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Ha! Scorn him! My lady&mdash;O Yolande, what of me?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Thou, false to him and faithless to thy trust, didst woo me for
+ thyself which was ill in thee. But thou didst throw the terrible Red Gui
+ into my lily-pool which was brave in thee. Thou didst endure chains and a
+ prison undaunted which was noble in thee. Thou didst this night at peril
+ of thy life save me from shame, but thou didst bear me urgently here into
+ the wild, and in the wild here lie I beside thee, lost, yet warm and
+ sleepy and safe beneath thy cloak&mdash;and so&mdash;'tis very well&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Safe, Yolande? Hath thy heart told thee this at last? But thou didst
+ fear me&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Because to-night thou didst clasp me in cruel arms and spake me words
+ of love passionate and fierce and&mdash;and&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Kissed thee, Yolande!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Many times&mdash;O cruel! And bore me hither and lost me in these
+ dark solitudes! Here was good cause for any maid to fear thee methinks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet thou didst basely mock my fears with thy hateful song of &ldquo;Derry down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Because thy fears, being unjust, hurt me, for ah, Yolande, my love for
+ thee is deep and true, and True-love is ever gentle and very humble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thus do I fear thee no more, Joconde!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Because I am but lowly&mdash;a Fool beneath thy proud disdain?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Nay, Joconde. Because thou art indeed a very man. So now shall I
+ sleep secure since nought of evil may come nigh me whiles I lie in thy
+ care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake she softly 'mid the gloom, and turning upon her rustling couch
+ sighed and presently fell to slumber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, sitting thus beside her as she slept, Jocelyn heard the stream ripple
+ in the shadows like one that laughed soft but very joyously and, as he
+ gazed up at the solitary star with eyes enraptured, this elfin laughter
+ found its echo in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bird chirped drowsily from mazy thicket where sullen shadow thinned,
+ little by little, until behind leaf and twig was a glimmer of light that
+ waxed ever brighter. And presently amid this growing brightness was soft
+ stir and twitter, sleepy chirpings changed to notes of wistful sweetness,
+ a plaintive calling that was answered from afar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the birds awaking sounded pretty warnings summoning each to each for
+ that the day-spring was at hand, while ever the brightness changed to
+ radiance and radiance to an orient glory and up flamed the sun in majesty
+ and it was day. And now, from brake and thicket, from dewy mysteries of
+ green boskage burst forth the sweet, glad chorus of bird-song, full
+ throated, passionate of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Jocelyn, sitting broad back against a tree, felt his soul uplifted
+ thereby what time his eyes missed nothing of the beauties about him: the
+ rugged boles of mighty trees bedappled with sunny splendour, the
+ glittering dew that gemmed leaf and twig and fronded bracken, and the
+ shapely loveliness of her who slumbered couched beneath his worn cloak,
+ the gentle rise and fall of rounded bosom and the tress of hair that a
+ fugitive sunbeam kissed to ruddy gold. Thus sat Jocelyn regardful,
+ gladness in the heart of him, and a song of gladness bubbling to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he saw her lashes quiver, her rosy lips parted to a smile and,
+ stirring in her slumber, she sighed and stretched shapely arms; so waked
+ she to a glory of sun and, starting to an elbow, gazed round, great-eyed,
+ until espying him, she smiled again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good morrow, Joconde! Ne'er have I slept sweeter. But thou hast
+ out-watched dark night and art a-weary, so shalt sleep awhile&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;a plunge in the stream yonder and I shall be blithe
+ for the road&mdash;an we find one. And I do fear me thou'rt hungry,
+ Yolande, and I have nought to give thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what of thyself, man? Verily, I read hunger in thy look and weariness
+ also, so, an thou may'st not eat, sleep thou shalt awhile here&mdash;in my
+ place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Yolande, indeed&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, but thou must indeed whiles I watch over thee. 'Tis a sweet bed&mdash;come
+ thy ways.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what wilt thou do?&rdquo; he questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much!&rdquo; she answered, viewing her rumpled, gown with rueful eyes. &ldquo;As thou
+ sayest, there is the pool yonder! So come, get thee to bed and&mdash;sleep!
+ Come, let me cover thee with thy cloak and gainsay me not; sleep thou must
+ and shalt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Duke Jocelyn stretched himself obediently upon the bed of fern and
+ suffered her to cover him with the cloak; but as she stooped above him
+ thus, he lifted the hem of her dress to reverent lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady!&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;My dear lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now close me thine eyes, wearied child!&rdquo; she commanded. And, like a
+ child, in this also he obeyed her, albeit unwillingly by reason of her
+ radiant beauty, but hearing her beside him, was content, and thus
+ presently fell to happy sleeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he awoke the sun was high and he lay awhile basking in this grateful
+ radiance and joying in the pervading quiet; but little by little, growing
+ uneasy by reason of this stillness, he started up to glance about him and
+ knew sudden dread&mdash;for the little glade was empty&mdash;Yolande had
+ vanished; moreover the horse was gone also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold with an awful fear he got him to his feet and looked hither and yon,
+ but nowhere found any sign of violence or struggle. But like one
+ distraught he turned to seek her, her name upon his lips, then, checking
+ voice and movement, stood rigid, smitten by hateful doubt. For now it
+ seemed to him that her gentle looks and words had been but sweet deceits
+ to blind him to her purpose and now, so soon as she had lulled him to
+ sleep, she had stolen away, leaving him for the poor, piteous fool he was.
+ And now his despair was 'whelmed in sudden anger, and anger, little by
+ little, changed to grief. She was fled away and he a sorry fool and very
+ desolate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Full of these bitter thoughts he cast himself upon his face and, lying as
+ in a pit of gloom, knew a great bitterness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly, slowly, borne upon the gentle wind came a fragrance strange and
+ unexpected, a savour delectable of cooking meat that made him know himself
+ a man vastly hungry despite his grievous woe. But, lying within the black
+ gulf of bitterness, he stirred not until, of a sudden, he heard a voice,
+ rich and full and very sweet, upraised in joyous singing; and these the
+ words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Rise, O laggard! See the sun,
+ To climb in glory hath begun:
+ The flowers have oped their pretty eyes,
+ The happy lark doth songful rise,
+ And merry birds in flowery brake,
+ Full-throated, joyous clamours make;
+ And I, indeed, that love it not,
+ Do sit alone and keel the pot,
+ Whiles thus I sing thee to entreat,
+ O sleepy laggard&mdash;come and eat!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth and art sleeping yet, Joconde?&rdquo; the voice questioned. Duke
+ Jocelyn lifted woeful head and saw her standing tall and shapely amid the
+ leaves, fresh and sweet as the morn itself, with laughter within her
+ dream-soft eyes and laughter on her vivid lips and the sun bright in the
+ braided tresses of her hair wherein she had set wild flowers like jewels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande!&rdquo; he murmured, coming to his knees &ldquo;Yolande&mdash;how glorious
+ thou art!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she laughed, yet flushing to the worship of his eyes, &ldquo;and my habit
+ woefully torn of wicked bramble-thorns, and my hair ill-braided and all
+ uncombed and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Yolande, I thought thee fled and I left to loneliness, and my pain
+ was very sore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then am I avenged thy mockery, Joconde, and thy song of 'Derry down.'
+ 'Twas for this I stole away! But now, if thou 'rt hungry man, come this
+ ways.&rdquo; And she reached him her hand. So she brought him to a little dell
+ where burned a fire of sticks beneath a pot whence stole right savoury
+ odour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O most wonderful!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Whence came these goodly viands?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where but from the wallet behind thy horse's saddle, Joconde?&rdquo; Then down
+ sat they forthwith side by side and ate heartily and were very blithe
+ together; and oft-times their looks would meet and they would fall silent
+ awhile. At last, the meal ended, Jocelyn, turning from Yolande's beauty to
+ the beauty of the world around, spake soft-voiced:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande, were mine a selfish love, here, lost within these green
+ solitudes, would I keep thee for mine own&mdash;to serve and worship thee
+ unto my life's end. But, since I count thy happiness above my dearest
+ desires, now will I go saddle the horse and bear thee hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither, Joconde, whither wilt thou bear me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back to the world,&rdquo; said he ruefully, &ldquo;thy world of prideful luxury, to
+ thy kindred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I have no kindred, alas!&rdquo; sighed she, stooping to caress a
+ daisy-flower that grew adjacent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, thy friends&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My friends be very few, Joconde, and Benedicta hath her husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande,&rdquo; said he, leaning nearer, &ldquo;whither should I bear thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; saith she, patting the daisy with gentle finger-tip, &ldquo;go thou and
+ saddle thy horse, mayhap I shall know this anon. Go thou and saddle the
+ horse.&rdquo; So Jocelyn arose and having saddled and bridled the horse, back he
+ cometh to find Yolande on her knees beside the stream, and she, hearing
+ his step, bowed her head, hiding her face from him; now on the sward
+ beside her lay the picture shattered beyond repair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;hast broken the Duke's picture, lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou seest!&rdquo; she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And must thou weep therefore?&rdquo; said he a little bitterly. &ldquo;Oh, be
+ comforted; 't was but a toy&mdash;soon will I get thee another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An thou bring me another, Joconde, that will I break also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;thou didst break it&mdash;wilfully, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With this stone, Joconde.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore, O wherefore?&rdquo; he questioned eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that it was but painted toy, even as thou sayest!&rdquo; she answered.
+ &ldquo;Moreover, I&mdash;love not Duke Jocelyn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And't was for this thou didst break the picture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, 'twas because these painted features may never compare with the face
+ of him I love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And whom&mdash;whom dost thou love?&rdquo; quoth he, in voice low and unsteady.
+ Speaking not, she pointed with slender finger down into the placid,
+ stream. Wondering, he bent to look and thus from the stilly water his
+ mirrored image looked back at him; now as he stooped so stooped she, and
+ in this watery mirror their glances met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;O my lady, shall a Fool's fond dream come true,
+ or am I mad indeed? Thou in thy beauty and I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou, Joconde,&rdquo; said she, fronting him with head proudly uplift, &ldquo;to my
+ thought thou art man greater, nobler than any proud lord or mighty duke
+ soever. And thou hast loved and wooed as never man wooed, methinks. And
+ thou art so brave and strong and so very gentle and&mdash;thus it is&mdash;I
+ do love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my&mdash;my motley habit, my&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy cap of Folly, Joconde, these garments pied thou hast dignified by thy
+ very manhood, so are they dearer to me than lordly tire or knightly
+ armour. And thy jingling bells&mdash;ah, Joconde, the jingle of thy bells
+ hath waked within my heart that which shall never die&mdash;long time my
+ heart hath cried for thee, and I, to my shame, heeded not the cry,
+ wherefore here and now, thus upon my knees, I do most humbly confess my
+ love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy love, Yolande&mdash;for me? Then dost truly love me? Oh, here is
+ marvel beyond my understanding and belief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Joconde, ah, why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See!&rdquo; he cried, flinging back his head. &ldquo;Look now upon this blemished
+ face&mdash;here where the cruel sun may shew thee all my ugliness, every
+ scar&mdash;behold! How may one so beautiful as thou learn love for one so
+ lowly and with face thus hatefully marred? I have watched thee shrink from
+ me ere now! I mind how, beside the lily-pool within thy garden, thou didst
+ view me with eyes of horror! I do mind thy very words&mdash;the first that
+ e'er I heard thee utter:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show A visage that might
+ shame the gladsome day?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yolande, Yolande, this poor blemished face is nothing changed since then;
+ such as I was, such I am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Joconde!&rdquo; she cried, reaching out her hands in passionate appeal.
+ &ldquo;My words were base, cruel&mdash;and hurt me now more, ah, much more, than
+ e'er they wounded thee. For I do love thee with love as deep, as true as
+ is thine own! Wilt not believe me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that I might indeed!&rdquo; he groaned. &ldquo;But&mdash;thou'rt alone, far from
+ thy home and friends, thy wonted pride and state forgotten all&mdash;mayhap
+ thou dost pity me or mayhap 'tis thy gratitude in guise of love doth speak
+ me thus? But as thou art still thine own lovely self, so am I that same
+ poor, motley Fool whose hateful face&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;hush thee&mdash;Oh, hush thee! Thy words are whips
+ to lash me!&rdquo; and catching his hand she kissed it and cherished it 'gainst
+ tear-wet cheek. &ldquo;Ah, Joconde,&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;so wise and yet so foolish,
+ know'st thou not thy dear, scarred face is the face of him I love, for
+ love hath touched my eyes and I do see thee at last as thou truly art, a
+ man great of soul, tender and strong-hearted. So art thou a man, the only
+ man, my man. Oh, that I might but prove my love for thee, prove it to thee
+ and before all men, no matter how, so I might but banish thy cruel doubts
+ for ever. But now, for thy dear, scarred face&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her soft, round arms were about his neck; and drawing him to her lips she
+ kissed him, his scarred brow and cheek, his eyes, his lips grown dumb with
+ wondering joy. Thus, lip to lip and with arms entwined, knelt they beside
+ that slow-moving stream that whispered softly beneath the bank and gurgled
+ roguish laughter in the shallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dog barked faintly in the distance, a frog croaked hoarsely from the
+ neighbouring sedge, but lost in the wonder of their love, they heeded only
+ the beating of their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A-billing and a-cooing! A-cooing and a-billing, as I'm a tanner true!&rdquo;
+ exclaimed a hoarse voice. Up started Jocelyn, fierce-eyed and with hand on
+ dagger-hilt, to behold a man with shock of red hair, a man squat and burly
+ who, leaning on bow-stave, peered at them across the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And is it Will the Tanner?&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, loosing his dagger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None else, friend Motley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, God keep thee! And now go about thy business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, Fool, I am about my business, the which is to find thee. By Saint
+ Nick, there's mighty hue and cry for thee up and down within the
+ greenwood, aye&mdash;marry is there, as I'm a tanner tried and true. So
+ needs must thou along wi' me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With thee, Tanner? And wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I know not wherefore, Fool, but must along. Here's me and Lob and
+ the potent hag that is Mopsa the Witch, lain a-watching and a-watching ye
+ a-billing&mdash;nay, scowl not, friend Fool, on tanner trusty, tried and
+ true. For hark now, here's great stir, clamour and to-do within this
+ forest-country for thee, Fool, the which is strange, seeing thou art but a
+ motley fool. Howbeit there be many great lords and knights from beyond the
+ Southern March a-seeking of thee, Fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, frowning. &ldquo;Envoys from Brocelaunde!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Joconde, and seeking thee!&rdquo; saith Yolande in troubled voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moreover,&rdquo; continued Will, &ldquo;here's our Duke Pertinax and his lady Duchess
+ yearning for thee, here's Robin that is Sir Robert a-clamouring for thee
+ and all his goodly foresters, as myself, a-seeking thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But't is I found thee, Sir Long-legged Fool, I&mdash;I!&rdquo; croaked a voice,
+ and old Mopsa the Witch peered at them from a bush hard by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, thou hast found us!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn ruefully. &ldquo;And what now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried the Witch, cracking her finger-bones. &ldquo;Now go I hot-foot to
+ weave spells and enchantments, aha&mdash;oho! Spells that shall prove the
+ false from the true, the gold from the dross. Thou, Sir Fool, art doubting
+ lover, so art thou blind lover! I will resolve thee thy doubts, open thy
+ eyes and show thee great joy or bitter sorrow&mdash;oho! Thou, proud lady,
+ hast stooped to love a motley mountebank&mdash;nay, flash not thy bright
+ eyes nor toss haughty head at an old woman&mdash;but here is solitude with
+ none to mock thy lowly choice or cry thee shame to love a motley Fool,
+ aha! And thou would'st fain prove thy love True-love, says thou? Why, so
+ thou shalt&mdash;beyond all doubting now and for ever, aha&mdash;oho!
+ Truest of true or falsest of false. Beware. Farewell, and remember:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies,
+ Love's blind, they say; but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly, follow.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Hither-ho, Lob-Lobkyn! Lend thine old granddam thine arm. Come, my pretty
+ bantling, sweet poppet&mdash;come and&mdash;away!&rdquo; o spake old Mopsa the
+ Witch, and vanished into the green with Lobkyn, who turned to flourish his
+ club in cheery salutation ere he plunged into the underbrush. Then Jocelyn
+ smiled down on Yolande to find her pale and trembling, so would he have
+ clasped her to his heart, but a hand grasped him and, turning, he beheld
+ the Tanner at his elbow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friend Fool,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;needs must I take thee to Robin that Sir Robert
+ is, e'en as he did command, so come now thy ways with trusty tanner
+ tried.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Off, Red-head!&rdquo; saith Jocelyn, frowning a little. &ldquo;Away now, lest this my
+ dagger bite thee.&rdquo; Back leapt Will into the stream whence he had come, and
+ there standing, clapped bugle to lip and winded it lustily, whereupon came
+ divers fellows running, bow in hand, who beset Jocelyn on every side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now yield thee to Tanner, friend,&rdquo; quoth Will, knee-deep in the stream,
+ &ldquo;for no mind have I to hurt thee. So away with thy dagger like gentle,
+ kindly Fool, and away with thee to Sir Robin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now hereupon, as Jocelyn frowned upon them, Yolande, standing a-tiptoe,
+ kissed his scarred cheek and clasped his dagger-hand in soft fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she pleaded, &ldquo;they be a-many, so yield me thy dagger and let us go
+ with them, beloved!&rdquo; At the whispered word Jocelyn loosed the dagger and,
+ clasping her instead, kissed her full-lipped. Then turned he to his
+ captors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm with thee, Will, thou&mdash;tanner!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;And now bring hither
+ the horse for my lady's going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Will, scratching red head, &ldquo;Rob&mdash;Sir Robert spake
+ nothing of horse for thee, or lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor will I ride, Joconde,&rdquo; she murmured happily, &ldquo;rather will I trudge
+ beside thee, my hand in thine&mdash;thus!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, hand in hand, they went close-guarded by their captors yet heeding
+ them not at all, having eyes but for each other. And oft her cheek flushed
+ rosy beneath his look, and oft he thrilled to the warm, close pressure of
+ her fingers; and thus tramped they happy in their captivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun rose high and higher, but since for them their captors were not,
+ neither was fatigue; and, if the way was rough there was Jocelyn's ready
+ hand, while for him swamps and brooks were a joy since he might bear her
+ in his arms. Thus tramped they by shady dingle and sunny glade, through
+ marshy hollows and over laughing rills, until the men began to mutter
+ their discontent, in especial a swart, hairy wight, and Will, glancing up
+ at the sun, spake:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two hours, lads, judge I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nigher three, Tanner, nigher three!&rdquo; growled the chief mutterer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why so much the better, Rafe, though two was the word. Howbeit we be come
+ far enow, I judge, and 'tis hot I judge, so hey for Robin&mdash;and a
+ draught o' perry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou weary, my Yolande?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, is not thy dear arm about me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And&mdash;thou dost love me indeed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, Joconde! Mine is a love that ever groweth&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A horn's shrill challenge; a sound of voices, and below them opened a
+ great, green hollow, shady with trees beneath whose shade were huts of
+ wattle cunningly wrought, a brook that flowed sparkling, and beyond caves
+ hollowed in the steepy bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, Tanner Will,&rdquo; questioned Jocelyn, &ldquo;hast brought us to the
+ outlaw's refuge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, good friend-Fool, not outlaws, foresters we of Duke Pertinax, and
+ yonder, look 'ee, cometh Rob&mdash;Sir Robert to greet ye!&rdquo; And the Tanner
+ pointed where one came running, a man long of leg, long of arm and very
+ bright of eye, a goodly man clad in hood and jerkin of neat's leather as
+ aforetime, only now his bugle swung from baldrick of gold and silver and
+ in his hood was brooched a long scarlet feather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What brother!&rdquo; cried he joyously. &ldquo;By saint Nicholas, 'tis sweet to see
+ thee again, thou lovely Fool!&rdquo; And he clasped Jocelyn in brotherly
+ embrace, which done, he stood off and shook doleful head. &ldquo;Alas, brother!&rdquo;
+ quoth he. &ldquo;Alas! my prisoner art thou this day, wherefor I grieve, and
+ wherefor I know not save that it is by my lady Benedicta's strict command
+ and her I must obey.&rdquo; And now, turning to Yolande, he bared his head,
+ louting full low. &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;by thy rare and so great beauty I do
+ know thee for Yolande the Fair, so do we of the wild give thee humble
+ greeting. Here may'st thou rest awhile ere we bring thee to Canalise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, messire,&rdquo; answered Yolande, clasping Jocelyn's hand, &ldquo;no mind have I
+ to go to Canalise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then alack for me, fair lady, for needs must I carry thee there within
+ the hour along of my motley brother. Meanwhile here within yon bower thou
+ shalt find cushions to thy repose, and all things to thy comfort and
+ refreshment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Sir Robert! O for a comb!&rdquo; she sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Expectant it waiteth thee, lady, together with water cool, sweet-perfumed
+ essences, unguents and other nice, lady-like toys. Moreover, there be
+ mirrors two of Venice and in pretty coffer&mdash;&rdquo; But Yolande had
+ vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon Robin led the way into a cool, arras-hung cave where was table
+ set out with divers comfortable things both eatable and drinkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth Jocelyn, hunger and thirst appeased: &ldquo;And now good Robin, what do
+ these envoys from Brocelaunde? Why am I thy prisoner and wherefore must I
+ to Canalise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; saith Robin, cocking merry eye, &ldquo;and thy name is Joconde, the which
+ is an excellent name, brother, and suiteth thee well, and yet&mdash;hum!
+ Howbeit, friend, remember Robin loved thee for the Fool he found thee,
+ that same Fool foolish enow to spare a rogue his life. Dost mind my Song
+ o' Rogues? A good song, methinks, tripping merrily o' the tongue:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'I'll sing a song
+ Not over long,
+ A song o' roguery,
+ For I'm a rogue,
+ And thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith is he.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I mind thy fierce, hawk-nosed gossip in rusty jack and ragged cloak, his
+ curses! Troth brother, 'tis a world of change methinks, this same fierce,
+ cursing, hook-nose rogue a noble knight and to-day my lord Duke! I, that
+ was poor outlaw, knight-at-arms and lord warden, and thou&mdash;a motley
+ Fool still&mdash;and my prisoner. How say'st thou, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why I say, Robin, that my three questions wait thy answers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, brother, and for this reason. I am a knight and noble, and so
+ being have learned me policy, and my policy is, when unable to give answer
+ direct to question direct, to question myself direct thus directing
+ question to questions other or to talk of matters of interest universal,
+ so do I of thyself and myself speak. And talking of myself I have on
+ myself, of myself, of myself made a song, and these the words, hark 'ee:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Now Rob that was Robin Sir Robert is hight
+ Though Rob oft did rob when outlaw,
+ Since outlaw now in law is dubbed a good knight,
+ Robin's robbing is done, Rob robbeth no more.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Fair words brother, I think, and yet a little sad. 'But,' says you in
+ vasty amaze, 'my very noble and right potent Sir Robert,' says you, 'if
+ thou art indeed noble knight, wherefore go ye devoid of mail, surcoat,
+ cyclas, crested helm, banderol, lance, shield and the like pomps and
+ gauds?' 'Brother,' says I, 'habit is habit and habit sticketh habitual,
+ and my habit is to go habited as suiteth my habit, suiting habit o' body
+ to habit o' mind.' Thus I, though Sir Robert, am Robin still, and go in
+ soft leather 'stead of chafing steel, and my rogues, loving Robin, love
+ Sir Robert the better therefor, as sayeth my song in fashion apt and
+ pertinent:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Since habit is habit, my habit hath been
+ To wear habit habitually comely&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ha, there soundeth the mustering note, so must we away and I sing no
+ further, which is well, for 'comely' is an ill word to rhyme with. Howbeit
+ here must I, beginning my song o' Robin, of beginning must Rob make an
+ end, for duty calleth Sir Robert, so must Robin away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon he clapped horn to lip at which shrill summons came archers and
+ pikemen ranked very orderly about a fair horse-litter. But Yolande coming
+ radiant from the bower and espying the litter, shook her head. Quoth she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An thou go afoot, Joconde, so will I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was low when they came before the walls of Canalise, and passing
+ beneath grim portcullis and through frowning gateway, with ring and tramp,
+ crossed the wide market square a-throng with jostling townsfolk, who
+ laughed and pointed, cheered and hooted, staring amain at Jocelyn in his
+ threadbare motley; but Yolande, fronting all eyes with proud head aloft,
+ drew nearer and held his hand in firmer clasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus they came at last to the great courtyard before the palace, bright
+ with the glitter of steel, where men-at-arms stood mustered. Here Robin
+ halted his company, whereon rose the silvery note of a clarion, and forth
+ paced the dignified Chief Herald, who spake him full-toned and sonorous:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of our potent Duke Pertinax and his gracious lady Benedicta,
+ I greet thee well, Sir Robert-a-Forest. Now whom bring ye here?
+ Pronounce!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dan Merriment, Sir Gravity,&rdquo; answered Robin, &ldquo;a Fool valiant and wise, a
+ maker of songs, of quips and quiddities many and jocund, Joconde hight.
+ Sir Wisdom, Folly behold, himself here <i>in propriâ personâ</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chief Herald gestured haughtily with his wand whereupon forth stepped
+ a file of soldiers and surrounded Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Joconde! What meaneth this?&rdquo; said Yolande, in troubled voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, my lady, I know not!&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;But let not thy brave heart
+ fail thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Joconde, I fear for thee&mdash;whither would they lead thee? Nay,
+ sweet heaven, they shall not take thee from me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not, beloved, though they part us awhile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away with the Motley!&rdquo; thundered the Chief Herald, flourishing his wand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande&mdash;O my beloved, fear not&mdash;&rdquo; But even as he spake, the
+ pikemen closed in, and Jocelyn was hustled away; so stood she trembling,
+ hands clasped and eyes wide and fearful, until tall motley figure and
+ flaunting cock's-comb were lost to her sight and the jingle of his bells
+ had died away; then, finding herself alone and all men's eyes upon her,
+ she lifted bowed head and stood white-cheeked and proudly patient, waiting
+ for what might betide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently was distant stir that, growing nearer, swelled to the ring
+ and clash of armour and the trampling of many hoofs; and presently through
+ the great gateway rode many knights sumptuously caparisoned, their shields
+ brave with gilded 'scutcheons, pennon and bannerole a-flutter above
+ nodding plumes, and over all the Red Raven banner of Brocelaunde. So rode
+ they two-and-two until the great courtyard blazed with flashing steel and
+ broidered surcoats. And now a trumpet blared, and forth before this
+ glorious array a pursuivant rode and halted to behold Pertinax, who
+ stepped forth of the great banqueting-hall leading his fair Duchess by the
+ hand, and behind them courtiers and ladies attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again the trumpets rang, and lifting his hand, the pursuivant spake:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke Pertinax, most gracious Duchess, Jocelyn the high and mighty
+ Lord Duke of Brocelaunde greeteth you in all love and amity, and hither
+ rideth to claim a fair lady to wife. Behold our Lord Duke Jocelyn!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loud and long the trumpets blew as into the courtyard rode a single
+ horseman; tall was he and bedight in plain black armour and white surcoat
+ whereon the Red Raven glowed; but his face was hid in vizored helm. So
+ rode he through his glorious array of knights, checking his fiery steed to
+ gentle gait with practised hand, while thus spake the pursuivant:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold here Jocelyn, Duke of Brocelaunde, to claim this day in marriage
+ the Lady Yolande according to her word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, my lords!&rdquo; cried a sweet, clear voice, and forth before them all
+ stood Yolande herself, pale-cheeked but stately of bearing and very bright
+ of eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it known to all here that I, Yolande, have given neither pledge nor
+ troth unto Duke Jocelyn&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here was silence sudden and profound that none dared break saving only
+ the haughty Chief Herald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How lady, how,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;no pledge, no troth, quotha&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither one nor other, messire, nor shall there ever be&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is madness, lady, madness&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is truth, messire, truth; I may not pledge my troth with Duke
+ Jocelyn since I have this day pledged myself unto Duke Jocelyn's jester&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jester, lady, jester? Venus aid us&mdash;Cupid shield us! A jester, a
+ Fool, a motley mountebank, a&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye!&rdquo; cried Yolande. &ldquo;All this is he, my lords. Very humble and lowly&mdash;yet
+ do I love him! Oh, 'tis joy&mdash;'tis joy to thus confess my love&mdash;his
+ cap and bells and motley livery are fairer to me than velvet mantle or
+ knightly armour; he is but humble jester, a Fool for men's scorn or
+ laughter, yet is he a man, so do I love him and so am I his&mdash;unto the
+ end. My lords, I have no more to say save this&mdash;give me my jester&mdash;this
+ man I love&mdash;and suffer us to go forth hand in hand together, even as
+ we came.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duchess Benedicta uttered a soft, glad cry, and seizing her husband's
+ arm, shook it for very joy. But now, as Yolande fronted them all, pale and
+ proudly defiant, was the ring of a mailed foot, and turning, she shrank
+ trembling to see Duke Jocelyn hasting toward her, his black armour
+ glinting, his embroidered surcoat fluttering, his long arms outstretched
+ to her; thus quick-striding he came but, even as she put out shaking hands
+ to stay him, he fell upon his knee before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most brave and noble lady&mdash;beloved Yolande,&rdquo; he cried, and lifted
+ his vizor. Now beholding the scarred face of him, the tender, smiling
+ lips, the adoration in his grey eyes, she trembled amain and, swaying to
+ him, rested her hands on his mailed shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;ah, Joconde&mdash;what dream is this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, beloved, the dream is ended and findeth me here at thy feet. The
+ dream is past and we do wake at last, for thy motley Fool, thy Duke and
+ lover am I, yet lover most of all. And thou who in thy divine mercy
+ stooped to love the Fool, by that same love shalt thou lift Duke Jocelyn
+ up to thee and heaven at last. And Oh, methinks the memory of thy so great
+ and noble love shall be a memory fragrant everlastingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So speaking, Duke Jocelyn rose, and with her hand fast in his, looked from
+ her loveliness round about him, blithe of eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lords,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;behold my well-beloved, brave-hearted lady. Nobles
+ of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon was shout on shout of joyous acclaim, lost all at once in the
+ sweet, glad clamour of bells pealing near and far; so, hand in hand, while
+ the air thrilled with this merry riot, they crossed the wide courtyard,
+ and she flushed 'neath the worship of his look and he thrilled to the
+ close, warm pressure of her fingers&mdash;thus walked they betwixt the
+ ranks of men-at-arms and glittering chivalry, yet saw them not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now Yolande was aware of Benedicta's arms about her and Benedicta's
+ voice in her ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear my Yolande, so True-love hath found thee at last since thou wert
+ brave indeed and worthy. Come now and let me deck thee to thy bridal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Duke,&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, &ldquo;here methinks was notable, worthy wooing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth Mopsa the Witch, crackling her knuckle-bones. &ldquo;Here, my
+ children, is wooing that some fool shall strive to tell tale of some day,
+ mayhap; but such love is beyond words and not to be told. Thus by cunning
+ contrivement hath Mopsa the old Witch proved the true from the false, the
+ gold from the dross; thou, my lady, hast proved thy love indeed, and thou,
+ Lord Duke, may nevermore doubt such love. And now away and wed each other
+ to love's fulfilment&mdash;hark where the bells do summon ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, as evening fell, they were wed within the great Minster of
+ Canalise, and thereafter came they to the banqueting-hall with retinue of
+ knights and nobles. Last of all strode Robin with his foresters, and as
+ they marched he sang a song he had learned of Jocelyn, and these the
+ words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Ne'er to die or fade away,
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ &ldquo;Though youth alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless shall remain
+ The same to-day and ever.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <h3>
+ THE END
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
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+</pre>
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+ </body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Geste of Duke Jocelyn
+
+Author: Jeffery Farnol
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8165]
+This file was first posted on June 24, 2003
+Last Updated: May 22, 2013
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Ted Garvin and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN
+
+By Jeffery Farnol
+
+Illustrations in color by Eric Pape
+
+(Illustrations not included in this edition)
+
+
+Copyright, 1920,
+
+By Little, Brown, And Company.
+
+All rights reserved Published September, 1920
+
+Norwood Press
+
+Set up and electrotyped by J. S. Cushing Co. Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+
+
+
+ My GILLIAN, thou child that budding woman art
+ For whom to-day and yesterday lie far apart
+ Already thou, my dear, dost longer dresses wear
+ And bobbest in most strange, new-fangled ways thy hair;
+ Thou lookest on the world with eyes grown serious
+ And rul'st thy father with a sway imperious
+ Particularly as regards his socks and ties
+ Insistent that each with the other harmonise.
+ Instead of simple fairy-tales that pleased of yore
+ Romantic verse thou read'st and novels by the score
+ And very oft I've known thee sigh and call them "stuff"
+ Vowing of love romantic they've not half enough.
+ Wherefore, like fond and doting parent, I
+ Will strive this want romantic to supply.
+ I'll write for thee a book of sighing lover
+ Crammed with ROMANCE from cover unto cover;
+ A book the like of which 't were hard to find
+ Filled with ROMANCE of every sort and kind.
+ I'll write it as the Gestours wrote of old,
+ In prose, blank-verse, and rhyme it shall be told.
+ And GILLIAN--
+ Some day perhaps, my dear, when you are grown
+ A portly dame with children of your own
+ You'll gather all your troop about your knee
+ And read to them this Geste I made for thee.
+
+
+ILLUSTRATIONS
+
+"Nobles of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande"
+
+They saw afar the town of Canalise
+
+"Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!" she sighed
+
+"Hush, poor Motley!" whispered the maid.
+
+With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came
+
+The long blades whirled and flashed
+
+
+
+
+PRELUDE
+
+ Long, long ago when castles grim did frown,
+ When massy wall and gate did 'fend each town;
+ When mighty lords in armour bright were seen,
+ And stealthy outlaws lurked amid the green
+ And oft were hanged for poaching of the deer,
+ Or, gasping, died upon a hunting spear;
+ When barons bold did on their rights insist
+ And hanged or burned all rogues who dared resist;
+ When humble folk on life had no freehold
+ And were in open market bought and sold;
+ When grisly witches (lean and bony hags)
+ Cast spells most dire yet, meantime, starved in rags;
+ When kings did lightly a-crusading fare
+ And left their kingdoms to the devil's care--
+ At such a time there lived a noble knight
+ Who sweet could sing and doughtily could fight,
+ Whose lance thrust strong, whose long sword bit
+ full deep
+ With darting point or mighty two-edged sweep.
+ A duke was he, rich, powerful--and yet
+ Fate had on him a heavy burden set,
+ For, while a youth, as he did hunt the boar,
+ The savage beast his goodly steed did gore,
+ And as the young duke thus defenceless lay,
+ With cruel tusk had reft his looks away,
+ Had marred his comely features and so mauled him
+ That, 'hind his back, "The ugly Duke" folk called
+ him--
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+GILL: An ugly hero?
+
+MYSELF: That is so.
+
+GILL: An ugly hero, father? O, absurd! Whoever of an "ugly" hero heard?
+
+MYSELF: I'll own, indeed, I've come across but few--
+
+GILL: But a duke--and ugly! Father, this from you?
+
+MYSELF: My duke is ugly, very, for good reason, As shall appear in due and
+proper season!
+
+GILL: I'm sure no one will want to read him then, For "heroes" all should
+be most handsome men. So make him handsome, please, or he won't do.
+
+MYSELF: By heaven, girl--no, plain heroes are too few!
+
+GILL: Then ev'ry one will leave him on the shelf!
+
+MYSELF: Why, then, I'll read the poor fellow myself.
+
+GILL: I won't!
+
+MYSELF: Then don't! Though, I might say, since you're set on it, child, My
+duke was not so ugly when he smiled--
+
+GILL: Then make him smile as often as you can.
+
+MYSELF: I might do that, 't is none so bad a plan.
+
+GILL: And the lady--she must be a lady fair.
+
+MYSELF: My dear, she's beautiful beyond compare.
+
+GILL: Why, then--
+
+MYSELF: My pen!
+
+ So here and now I do begin
+ The tale of young Duke Jocelyn,
+ For critics, schools,
+ And cramping rules,
+ Heedless and caring not a pin.
+
+ The title here behold
+ On this fair page enrolled,
+ In letters big and bold,
+ As seemeth fit--
+ To wit:--
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE I
+
+ Upon a day, but when it matters not,
+ Nor where, but mark! the sun was plaguy hot
+ Falling athwart a long and dusty road
+ In which same dust two dusty fellows strode.
+ One was a tall, broad-shouldered, goodly wight
+ In garb of motley like a jester dight,
+ Fool's cap on head with ass's ears a-swing,
+ While, with each stride, his bells did gaily ring;
+ But, 'neath his cock's-comb showed a face so marred
+ With cheek, with brow and lip so strangely scarred
+ As might scare tender maid or timid child
+ Unless, by chance, they saw him when he smiled,
+ For then his eyes, so deeply blue and bright,
+ Did hold in them such joyous, kindly light,
+ That sorrow was from heavy hearts beguiled--
+ This jester seemed less ugly when he smiled.
+
+ Here, O my Gill, right deftly, in a trice
+ I've made him smile and made him do it--twice.
+ That 't was the Duke of course you've guessed at once
+ Since you, I know, we nothing of a dunce.
+ But, what should bring a duke in cap and bells?
+ Read on and mark, while he the reason tells.
+
+ Now, 'spite of dust and heat, his lute he strummed,
+ And snatches of a merry song he hummed,
+ The while askance full merrily he eyed
+ The dusty knave who plodded at his side.
+ A bony fellow, this, and long of limb,
+
+ His habit poor, his aspect swart and grim;
+ His belt to bear a long broad-sword did serve,
+ His eye was bold, his nose did fiercely curve
+ Down which he snorted oft and (what is worse)
+ Beneath his breath gave vent to many a curse.
+ Whereat the Duke, sly laughing, plucked lutestring
+ And thus, in voice melodious did sing:
+
+
+ "Sir Pertinax, why curse ye so?
+ Since thus in humble guise we go
+ We merry chances oft may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene."
+
+ "And chances woeful, lord, also!"
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ "To every fool that passeth by
+ These foolish bells shall testify
+ That very fool, forsooth, am I,
+ Good Pertinax of Shene!"
+
+ "And, lord, methinks they'll tell no lie!"
+ Growled Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Then spake the Knight in something of a pet,
+ "Par Dex, lord Duke--plague take it, how I sweat,
+ By Cock, messire, ye know I have small lust
+ Like hind or serf to tramp it i' the dust!
+ Per De, my lord, a parch-ed pea am I--
+ I'm all athirst! Athirst? I am so dry
+ My very bones do rattle to and fro
+ And jig about within me as I go!
+ Why tramp we thus, bereft of state and rank?
+ Why go ye, lord, like foolish mountebank?
+ And whither doth our madcap journey trend?
+ And wherefore? Why? And, prithee, to what end?"
+ Then quoth the Duke, "See yonder in the green
+ Doth run a cooling water-brook I ween,
+ Come, Pertinax, beneath yon shady trees,
+ And there whiles we do rest outstretched at ease
+ Thy 'wherefores' and thy 'whys' shall answered be,
+ And of our doings I will counsel thee."
+
+ So turned they from the hot and dusty road
+ Where, 'mid green shade, a rill soft-bubbling flowed,
+ A brook that leapt and laughed in roguish wise,
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax with scowling eyes
+ Did frown upon the rippling water clear,
+ And sware sad oaths because it was not beer;
+ Sighful he knelt beside this murmurous rill,
+ Bent steel-clad head and bravely drank his fill.
+ Then sitting down, quoth he: "By Og and Gog,
+ I'll drink no more--nor horse am I nor dog
+ To gulp down water--pest, I hate the stuff!"
+
+ "Ah!" laughed the Duke, "'tis plain hast had enough,
+ And since well filled with water thou dost lie
+ To answer thee thy questions fain am I.
+ First then--thou art in lowly guise bedight,
+ For that thou art my trusty, most-loved knight,
+ Who at my side in many a bloody fray,
+ With thy good sword hath smit grim Death away--"
+ "Lord," quoth the Knight, "what's done is past return,
+ 'Tis of our future doings I would learn."
+
+ "Aye," said the Duke, "list, Pertinax, and know
+ 'Tis on a pilgrimage of love we go:
+ Mayhap hast heard the beauty and the fame
+ Of fair Yolande, that young and peerless dame
+
+
+ "For whom so many noble lovers sigh
+ And with each other in the lists do vie?
+ Though much I've dreamed of sweet Yolanda's charms
+ My days have passed in wars and feats of arms,
+ For, Pertinax, this blemished face I bear,
+ Should fright, methinks, a lady young and fair.
+ And so it is that I have deemed it wiser
+ To hide it when I might 'neath casque and visor--"
+
+ Hereat Sir Pertinax smote hand to knee
+ And, frowning, shook his head. "Messire," said he,
+ "Thou art a man, and young, of noble race,
+ And, being duke, what matter for thy face?
+ Rank, wealth, estate--these be the things I trow
+ Can make the fairest woman tender grow.
+ Ride unto her in thy rich armour dight,
+ With archer, man-at-arms, and many a knight
+ To swell thy train with pomp and majesty,
+ That she, and all, thy might and rank may see;
+ So shall all folk thy worthiness acclaim,
+ And her maid's heart, methinks, shall do the same.
+ Thy blemished face shall matter not one jot;
+ To mount thy throne she'll think a happy lot.
+ So woo her thus--"
+
+ "So will I woo her not!"
+ Quoth Jocelyn, "For than I'd win her so,
+ Alone and loveless all my days I'd go.
+ Ha, Pertinax, 'spite all thy noble parts,
+ 'Tis sooth ye little know of women's hearts!"
+
+ "Women?" quoth Pertinax, and scratched his jaw,
+ "'Tis true of dogs and horses I know more,
+ And dogs do bite, and steeds betimes will balk,
+ And fairest women, so they say, will talk."
+
+
+
+ "And so dost thou, my Pertinax, and yet,
+ 'Spite all thy talk, my mind on this is set--
+ Thus, in all lowliness I'll e'en go to her
+ And 'neath this foolish motley I will woo her.
+ And if, despite this face, this humble guise,
+ I once may read love's message in her eyes,
+ Then Pertinax--by all the Saints, 'twill be
+ The hope of all poor lovers after me,
+ These foolish bells a deathless tale shall ring,
+ And of Love's triumph evermore shall sing.
+
+ "So, Pertinax, ne'er curse ye so
+ For that in lowly guise we go,
+ We many a merry chance may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene."
+ "And chances evil, lord, also!"
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Now on a sudden, from the thorny brake,
+ E'en as Sir Pertinax thus doleful spake,
+ Leapt lusty loons and ragged rascals four,
+ Rusty their mail, yet bright the swords they bore.
+
+ Up sprang Sir Pertinax with gleeful shout,
+ Plucked forth his blade and fiercely laid about.
+ "Ha, rogues! Ha, knaves! Most scurvy dogs!" he cried.
+ While point and edge right lustily he plied
+ And smote to earth the foremost of the crew,
+ Then, laughing, pell-mell leapt on other two.
+ The fourth rogue's thrust, Duke Joc'lyn blithely parried
+ Right featly with the quarter-staff he carried.
+ Then 'neath the fellow's guard did nimbly slip
+ And caught him in a cunning wrestler's grip.
+ Now did they reel and stagger to and fro,
+ And on the ling each other strove to throw;
+
+ Arm locked with arm they heaved, they strove and panted,
+ With mighty shoulders bowed and feet firm-planted.
+ So on the sward, with golden sunlight dappled,
+ In silence grim they tussled, fiercely grappled.
+ Thus then Duke Jocelyn wrestled joyously,
+ For this tall rogue a lusty man was he,
+ But, 'spite his tricks and all his cunning play,
+ He in the Duke had met his match this day,
+ As, with a sudden heave and mighty swing,
+ Duke Jocelyn hurled him backwards on the ling,
+ And there he breathless lay and sore amazed,
+ While on the Duke with wonderment he gazed:
+ "A Fool?" he cried. "Nay, certes fool, per De,
+ Ne'er saw I fool, a fool the like o' thee!"
+
+ But now, e'en as the Duke did breathless stand,
+ Up strode Sir Pertinax, long sword in hand:
+ "Messire," he growled, "my rogues have run away,
+ So, since you've felled this fellow, him I'll slay."
+
+ "Not so," the Duke, short-breathing, made reply,
+ "Methinks this rogue is too much man to die."
+
+ "How?" cried the Knight; "not slay a knave--a thief?
+ Such clemency is strange and past belief!
+ Mean ye to let the dog all scathless go?"
+
+ "Nay," said the Duke, square chin on fist, "not so,
+ For since the rogue is plainly in the wrong
+ The rogue shall win his freedom with a song,
+ And since forsooth a rogue ingrain is he,
+ So shall he sing a song of roguery.
+ Rise, roguish rogue, get thee thy wind and sing,
+ Pipe me thy best lest on a tree ye swing!"
+
+ Up to his feet the lusty outlaw sprang,
+ And thus, in clear melodious voice, he sang:
+
+ "I'll sing a song not over long,
+ A song of roguery.
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith, is he.
+ And we are rogues, and ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.
+
+ "As die we must and turn to dust,
+ Since each is Adam's son,
+ A rogue was he, so rogues are we,
+ And rascals every one.
+
+ "The Abbot sleek with visage meek,
+ With candle, book and bell,
+ Our souls may curse, we're none the worse,
+ Since he's a rogue as well.
+
+ "My lord aloft doth hang full oft
+ Poor rogues the like o' me,
+ But all men know where e'er he go
+ A greater rogue is he.
+
+ "The king abroad with knight and lord
+ Doth ride in majesty,
+ But strip him bare and then and there
+ A shivering rogue ye'll see,
+
+ "Sirs, if ye will my life to spill,
+ Then hang me on a tree,
+ Since rogue am I, a rogue I'll die,
+ A roguish death for me.
+
+ "But i' the wind the leaves shall find
+ Small voices for my dole,
+
+ "And when I'm dead sigh o'er my head
+ Prayers for my poor rogue soul;
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou 'rt a rogue,
+ And so in faith is he,
+ As we are rogues, so ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity."
+
+ The singing done, the Duke sat lost in thought,
+ What time Sir Pertinax did stamp and snort:
+ "Ha, by the Mass! Now, by the Holy Rood!
+ Ne'er heard I roguish rant so bold and lewd!
+ He should be whipped, hanged, quartered, flayed alive--"
+
+ "Then," quoth the Duke, "pay him gold pieces five,"
+ "How--pay a rogue?" the Knight did fierce retort.
+ "A ribald's rant--give good, gold pieces for't?
+ A plague! A pest! The knave should surely die--"
+ But here he met Duke Joc'lyn's fierce blue eye,
+ And silent fell and in his poke did dive,
+ And slowly counted thence gold pieces five,
+ Though still he muttered fiercely 'neath his breath,
+ Such baleful words as: "'S blood!" and "'S bones!" and "'S death!"
+
+ Then laughed the Duke and from the greenwood strode;
+ But scarce was he upon the dusty road,
+ Than came the rogue who, louting to his knee:
+ "O Fool! Sir Fool! Most noble Fool!" said he.
+ "Either no fool, or fool forsooth thou art,
+ That dareth thus to take an outlaw's part.
+ Yet, since this day my rogue's life ye did spare,
+ So now by oak, by ash, by thorn I swear--
+
+ "And mark, Sir Fool, and to my saying heed--
+ Shouldst e'er lack friends to aid thee in thy need
+ Come by this stream where stands a mighty oak,
+ Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning stroke,
+ Hid in this cleft a hunting-horn ye'll see,
+ Take then this horn and sound thereon notes three.
+ So shall ye find the greenwood shall repay
+ The roguish life ye spared a rogue this day."
+
+ So spake he; then, uprising from his knees,
+ Strode blithe away and vanished 'mid the trees.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax shook doleful head:
+ "There go our good gold pieces, lord!" he said.
+ "Would that yon rogue swung high upon a tree,
+ And in my poke our gold again might be.
+ Full much I marvel, lord, and fain would know
+ Wherefore and why unhanged didst let him go?"
+
+ Then answered the Duke singing on this wise:
+
+ "Good Pertinax, if on a tree
+ Yon rogue were swinging high
+ A deader rogue no man could see--
+ 'He's but a rogue!' says you to me,
+ 'But a living rogue!' says I.
+
+ "And since he now alive doth go
+ More honest he may die,
+ Yon rogue an honest man may grow,
+ If we but give him time, I trow,
+ Says I to you, says I."
+
+ At this, Sir Pertinax growled in his beard--
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: A beard? O father--beard will never do!
+ No proper knight a beard ever grew.'
+ No knight could really romantic be
+ Who wore a beard! So, father, to please me,
+ No beard; they are, I think, such scrubby things--
+
+ MYSELF: Yet they are worn, sometimes, by poets and kings.
+
+ GILL: But your knight--
+
+ MYSELF: Oh, all right,
+ My Gill, from your disparagement to save him,
+ I, like a barber, will proceed to shave him.
+
+ Sir Pertinax, then, stroked his smooth-shaved chin,
+ And thus to curse he softly did begin,
+ "Par Dex, my lord--"
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+
+ GILL: Your knight, dear father, seems to love to curse.
+
+ MYSELF: He does. A difficult matter, child, in verse--
+
+ GILL: Of verse I feel a little tired--
+
+ MYSELF: Why, if you think a change desired,
+ A change we'll have, for, truth to tell,
+ This rhyming bothers me as well.
+ So here awhile we'll sink to prose.
+ Now, are you ready? Then here goes!
+
+
+"Par Dex, my lord!" growled Sir Pertinax. "A malison on't, says I, saving
+thy lordly grace, yet a rogue is a rogue and, being rogue, should die right
+roguishly as is the custom and the law. For if, messire, if--per De and by
+Our Sweet Lady of Shene Chapel within the Wood, if, I say, in thy new and
+sudden-put-on attitude o' folly, thou wilt save alive all rogues soever,
+then by Saint Cuthbert his curse, by sweet Saint Benedict his blessed
+bones, by--"
+
+"Hold now, Pertinax," said the Duke, slipping his lute into leathern bag
+and slinging it behind wide shoulders, "list ye, Sir Knight of Shene, and
+mark this, to wit: If a rogue in roguery die then rogue is he forsooth;
+but, mark this again, if a rogue be spared his life he may perchance and
+peradventure forswear, that is, eschew or, vulgarly speaking, turn from his
+roguish ways, and die as honest as I, aye, or even--thou!"
+
+Here Sir Pertinax snorted as they strode on together, yet in a little they
+turned aside from the hot and dusty road and journeyed on beneath the trees
+that grew thereby.
+
+"By all the fiends, my lord, and speaking vulgarly in turn, this belly o'
+mine lacketh, these my bowels do yearn consumedly unto messes savoury and
+cates succulent--"
+
+Whereat the Duke, smiling merry-eyed, chanted roguishly:
+
+ "A haunch o' venison juicy from the spit now?"
+ "Aha!" groaned the Knight, "Lord, let us haste--"
+ "A larded capon to thee might seem fit now?"
+ "Saints!" sighed the Knight, "but for one little taste."
+ "Or, Pertinax, a pasty plump and deep--"
+ "Ha--pasty, by the Mass!" the Knight did cry.
+ "Or pickled tongue of neat, Sir Knight, or sheep--"
+ "Oh, for a horse! For wings wherewith to fly--"
+ "Or breast of swan--"
+
+"Stay! nay, my lord, ha' mercy!" groaned Sir Pertinax, wiping moist brow.
+"Picture no more toothsome dainties to my soul lest for desire I swoon and
+languish by the way. I pray thee, let us haste, sire, so may we reach fair
+Canalise ere sunset--yet stay! Hearken, messire, hear ye aught? Sure, afar
+the tocsin soundeth?"
+
+ Now hearkening thus, they both became aware
+ Of distant bells that throbbed upon the air,
+ A faint, insistent sound that rose and fell,
+ A clamour vague that ominous did swell.
+ As thus they stood, well hidden from the road,
+ Footsteps they heard of feet that briskly strode.
+ And, through the leaves, a small man they espied,
+ Who came apace, a great sword by his side.
+ Large bascinet upon his head he bore,
+ 'Neath which his face a scowl portentous wore;
+ While after toiled a stout but reverend friar
+ Who, scant of breath, profusely did perspire
+ And, thus perspiring, panted sad complaints
+ Thus--on the heat, his comrade and the Saints.
+
+ "O Bax, O Bax! Saint Cuthbert aid me now!
+ O Bax, see how to sweat thou'st made me now!
+ Thy speed abate! O sweet Saint Dominic!
+ Why pliest thou thy puny shanks so quick;
+ O day! O Bax! O hot, sulphurous day,
+ My flesh betwixt ye melteth fast away.
+ Come, sit ye, Bax, in shade of yon sweet tree,
+ And, sitting soft, I'll sagely counsel thee."
+
+ "Not so, in faith," the small man, scowling, said,
+ "What use for counsel since the cause be fled?
+ And since she's fled--Saints succour us!" he cried;
+ As 'mid the leaves all suddenly he spied
+ Sir Pertinax in his unlovely trim,
+ His rusty mail, his aspect swart and grim--
+ "Ha!" gasped the little man, "we are beset!"
+ And starting back, off fell his bascinet.
+ Whereat he fiercely did but scowl the more,
+
+
+ And strove amain his ponderous sword to draw.
+ "Hence, dog!" he cried, "lest, with my swashing blow,
+ I make thee food for carrion kite and crow."
+ But in swift hands Sir Pertinax fast caught him
+ And, bearing him on high, to Joc'lyn brought him,
+ Who, while the captive small strove vain aloft
+ Reproved him thus in accents sweet and soft:
+
+
+"Right puissant and potential sir, we do beseech thee check thy ferocity,
+quell now thy so great anger and swear not to give our flesh for fowls to
+tear, so shalt thou come down to earth and stand again upon thine own two
+legs. And thou, most reverend friar, invoke now thy bloody-minded comrade
+that he swear to harm us not!"
+
+The stout friar seated himself hard by beneath a tree, mopped moist brow,
+fetched his wind and smiled.
+
+"Sir Fool," said he, "I am thy security that thou and thy brawny gossip
+need quake and tremble nothing by reason of this Bax, our valiant reeve--he
+shall harm ye no whit." Here, meeting Jocelyn's eye, Sir Pertinax set
+down the small Reeve, who having taken up and put on his great bascinet,
+scowled, whereupon Duke Jocelyn questioned him full meek:
+
+"Good master Reeve, of your courtesy pray you tell us why yon bells do ring
+so wild alarm."
+
+
+ The small Reeve viewed him with disdainful eye;
+ Sniffed haughty nose and proudly made reply:
+ 'Our bells we ring and clamour make, because
+ We've lost our lady fair of Tissingors.
+ Our Duchess Benedicta hath this day
+ From all her worthy guardians stole away.
+ Thus we for her do inquisition make,
+ Nor, 'till she's found, may hope our rest to take,
+ And thus we cause such outcry as we may,
+ Since we lose not our Duchess ev'ry day.
+ So then we'd have ye speak us--aye or no,
+ Saw ye our errant lady this way go?
+ And, that ye may her know for whom we seek,
+ Her just description fully I will speak:
+ Her hair night-black, her eyes the self-same hue,
+ Her habit brown, unless 't were red or blue,
+ And if not blue why then mayhap 'tis green,
+ Since she by turns of all such hues is seen--"
+
+ "Stay, sir," quoth Jocelyn, "'tis plain to see
+ No maid but a chameleon is she,
+ For here we have her brown and green and blue,
+ And if not brown then rosy is her hue,
+ And, if not red, why then 'tis very plain
+ That brown she is or blue or green again.
+ Now fain, sir, would I ask and question whether
+ She e'er is seen these colours all together?
+
+ "O fain would I a lady spy,
+ By countryside or town,
+ Who may be seen all blue and green,
+ Unless she's red or brown."
+
+ But now, while fierce the little man did scowl,
+ The rosy Friar, sly-smiling 'neath his cowl,
+ His visage meek, spake thus in dulcet tone:
+ "Sir Fool, our Reeve is something mixed, I'll own,
+ Though he by divers colours is bemused,
+ Learn ye this truth, so shall he stand excused:
+ Our Duchess Benedicta, be it known,
+ Hath this day from her several guardians flown.
+ Ten worthy men her several guardians be,
+ Of whom the chief and worthiest ye see,
+ As first--myself, a friar of some report,
+ Well-known, methinks, in country, town and court.
+ Who as all men can unto all men speak,
+ Well read beside in Latin and in Greek,
+ A humble soul albeit goodly preacher,
+ One apt to learn and therefore learned teacher,
+ One who can laugh betimes, betimes can pray,
+ Who'll colic cure or on the bagpipe play.
+ Who'll sing--"
+
+ "Stay!" cried the Reeve. "Friar, what o'me?"
+ "Patience, O Bax, too soon I'll come to thee!
+ Who'll sing ye then blithe as a bird on bough--"
+ "Friar!" growled the Reeve, "the time for me is now!"
+ "So be it, then," the Friar did gently say,
+ "I'll speak of thee as truly as I may:
+ Here then behold our port-reeve, Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who, save for reason, naught in reason lacks,
+ Who, though he small and puny seems to shew,
+ In speech he is Goliath-like, I trow,
+ Chief Councillor of Tissingors is he,
+ And of the council second but--to me.
+ For with the townsfolk first of all come I--"
+
+ REEVE: Since thy fat finger is in every pie--
+ "Saving your reverend grace," Duke Joc'lyn said,
+ "What of this maid that turneth green and red?"
+
+ REEVE: Fool, then learn this, ere that our lord duke died,
+ Ten guardians for his child he did provide,
+ The Friar and I, with men of lesser fame,
+ Co-guardians are of this right puissant dame.
+
+ JOCELYN: Beseech ye, sir, now tell us an' ye may,
+ Why hath thy youthful Duchess run away?
+
+"Fair Fool," quoth the Friar, fanning himself with a frond of bracken,
+"'tis a hot day, a day reminiscent of the ultimate fate of graceless
+sinners, and I am like the day and languish for breath, yet, to thy so
+pertinent question I will, straightly and in few words, pronounce and
+answer thee, as followeth: Our Lady Benedicta hath run away firstly,
+brethren, for that being formed woman after Nature's goodly plan she hath
+the wherewithal to walk, to leap, to skip or eke to run, as viz.: item and
+to wit--legs. Secondly, inquisitorial brethren, she ran for an excellent
+good reason--as observe--there was none to let or stay her. And thirdly,
+gentle and eager hearers, she did flit or fly, leave, vacate, or depart
+our goodly town of Tissingors for that she had--mark me--no mind to stay,
+remain or abide therein. And this for the following express, rare and most
+curious reason as--mark now--in a word--"
+
+"Hold--hold, Friar John!" exclaimed the Reeve; "here sit ye here
+a-sermonising, venting words a-many what time our vanished Duchess fleeth.
+Knew I not the contrary I should say thou didst countenance her flight and
+spent thyself in wordy-wind wherewith to aid her!"
+
+Now here, chancing to meet Duke Jocelyn's shrewd gaze, Friar John slowly
+and ponderously winked one round, bright eye.
+
+Quoth he:
+
+ "Hark to our valiant port-reeve Greg'ry Bax
+ Who, save for reason, nought of reason lacks!"
+"Howbeit," fumed the Reeve, stamping in the dust, "here sit ye at thy
+full-bodied ease, fanning flies and animadverting--"
+
+"Animadverting!" nodded Friar John. "A good word, Reeve, a fair, sweet
+word; in verity a word full-bodied as I, wherefore it liketh me well. So
+sit I here animadverting whiles thou kicketh up a dust in fashion foolish
+and un-reeve-like."
+
+"A plague o' words!" cried the Reeve. "A pest o' wind! Enough--enough,
+contain thy prolixities and rodomontade and let me to the point explain--"
+
+"Aha!" quoth the Friar. "Good sooth, here's a noble word! A word round
+i' the mouth, rolling upon the tongue. Ha, Reeve, I give thee joy of
+rodomontade!"
+
+"Thus then," continued the Reeve, "I will, with use of no verbiage
+circumlocutory, explain."
+
+"Ho-oho!" cried Friar John, rubbing plump hands ecstatic. "Good Bax, ne'er
+have I heard thee to so great advantage--verbiage circumlocutory--and
+thou--thou such small man to boot! O most excellent, puny Reeve!"
+
+Here the little man turned his back upon the Friar and continued hastily
+thus:
+
+ "A lord there is, a lord of lofty pride,
+ Who for our lady oft hath sued and sighed--"
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Whom she as oft hath scornfully denied!
+
+ THE REEVE: A mighty lord who seeketh her to wife--
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Though he, 'tis said, doth lead most evil life!
+ THE REEVE: To which fair lord our wilful maid we'd wed--
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Since this fair lord the council holds in dread!
+
+ THE REEVE: But she, defying us, this very day
+ Like wicked thief hath stole herself away.
+ Thus this poor lord such deeps of gloom is in
+ Vows he'll not wash, nor shave again his chin
+ Till found is she: He groaneth, sheddeth tears--
+
+ THE FRIAR: And swears her guardians ten shall lose their ears!
+
+ THE REEVE: Wherefore are we in mighty perturbation,
+ Amazed, distraught and filled with consternation.
+ Thus do our bells ring out their wild alarms,
+ Our civic bands do muster under arms;
+ Drums shall be drummed the countryside around,
+ Until our truant Duchess we have found,
+ And we have wed this most elusive dame
+ Unto Sir Agramore of Biename.
+
+ THE FRIAR: And yield her thus to woes and bitter shame!
+
+ THE REEVE: So speak me, fellows; as ye came this way
+ Saw ye aught of this wilful, errant may?
+
+ Answered JOCELYN: "Neither to-day nor any other day."
+
+"Why then," fumed the Reeve, "here have we been at great expense o' breath
+and time and all to no purpose. Come, Friar, beseech thee, let us haste to
+begone."
+
+ So Friar John got slowly to his feet
+ Complaining loud of hurry and of heat,
+ But paused behind the hasteful Reeve to linger,
+ And to plump nose he slyly laid plump finger.
+
+Now stood Sir Pertinax thoughtful, chin on fist, insomuch that Jocelyn,
+thrumming his lute, questioned him:
+
+ "Good Pertinax, how now
+ What pond'rest thou
+ With furrowed brow?
+ Thy care, Sir Knight, avow!"
+
+Saith Pertinax: "I meditate the way wondrous of woman, the frowardness of
+creatures feminine. For mark me, sir, here is one hath guardians ten, yet
+despite them she is fled away and they ten!"
+
+"Why truly, Pertinax, they are ten, so is she fled."
+
+"Aye, but if they be ten that ward her and she one that would flee, how
+shall this one flee these ten?"
+
+"For that they be ten."
+
+"Nay, lord, here be twenty eyes to watch one young maid and twenty legs to
+pursue the same, yet doth she evade them one and all, and here's the wonder
+on't--she's but one maid."
+
+"Nay, there's the reason on't, Pertinax--she is a maid."
+
+"The which is great matter for wonder, lord!"
+
+"Spoke like a very Pertinax, my Pertinax, for here's no wonder at all. For
+perceive, the lady is young, her wardens ten grave seniors, worthy wights
+--solemn, sober and sedate, Pertinax, wise and wearisome, grave yet
+garrulous, and therefore they suffice not."
+
+"Aye, prithee and wherefore not?"
+
+"For their divers worthy attributes and because they be--ten. Now had these
+ten been one and this one a very man--_the_ man--here had been no running
+away on part of the lady, I 'll warrant me?"
+
+"Stay, my lord," said Pertinax, in deep perplexity, "how judge ye so--and
+wherefore--why and by what manner o' reasoning?"
+
+"Ha, Pertinax!" laughed the Duke, "my lovely, loveless numskull!" So
+saying, he kicked the good Knight full joyously and so they trudged on
+again.
+
+ Till presently, beyond the green of trees,
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise,
+ A city fair, couched on a gentle height,
+ With walls embattled and strong towers bedight.
+ Now seeing that the sun was getting low,
+ Our travellers at quicker pace did go.
+ Thus as in haste near to the gate they came,
+ Before them limped a bent and hag-like dame,
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It beak-like wished to peck sharp chin below.
+ Humbly she crept in cloak all torn and rent,
+ And o'er a staff her tottering limbs were bent.
+ So came she to the gate, then cried in fear,
+ And started back from sudden-levelled spear;
+ For 'neath the gate lounged lusty fellows three
+ Who seldom spake yet spat right frequently.
+
+ "Kind sirs, good sirs," the ancient dame did cry,
+ "In mercy's name I pray ye let me by--"
+ But, as she spoke, a black-jowled fellow laughed,
+ And, spitting, tripped her with out-thrust pike-shaft,
+
+
+ That down she fell and wailed most piteously,
+ Whereat the brawny fellows laughed all three.
+ "Ha, witch!" they cried, as thus she helpless lay,
+ "Shalt know the fire and roasted be one day!"
+ Now as the aged creature wailed and wept,
+ Forth to her side Duke Joc'lyn lightly stepped,
+ With quarter-staff a-twirl he blithely came.
+ Quoth he: "Messires, harm not this ancient dame,
+ Bethink ye how e'en old and weak as she,
+ Your wives and mothers all must one day be.
+ So here then lies your mother, and 't were meeter
+ As ye are sons that as sons ye entreat her.
+ Come, let her by and, fool-like to requite ye,
+ With merry jape and quip I will delight ye,
+ Or with sweet song I 'll charm those ass's ears,
+ And melt, belike, those bullish hearts to tears--"
+
+ Now the chief warder, big and black of jowl,
+ Upon the Duke most scurvily did scowl.
+ "How now," quoth he, "we want no fool's-heads here--"
+ "Sooth," laughed the Duke, "you're fools enow 't is clear,
+ Yet there be fools and fools, ye must allow,
+ Gay fools as I and surly fools--as thou."
+
+ "Ha, look 'ee, Fool, Black Lewin e'en am I,
+ And, by my head, an ill man to defy.
+ Now, motley rogue, wilt call me fool?" he roared,
+ And roaring fierce, clapped hairy fist on sword.
+
+ "Aye, that will I," Duke Joc'lyn soft replied,
+ And black-avised, swart, knavish rogue beside."
+
+ But now, while thus our ducal jester spoke,
+ Black Lewin sprang and fetched him such a stroke
+
+
+ That Jocelyn saw flash before his eyes,
+ More stars that e'er he'd noticed in the skies.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax did gaping stare,
+ Then ground his teeth and mighty oaths did swear,
+ And in an instant bared his trusty blade,
+ But then the Duke his fiery onslaught stayed.
+
+ "Ha!" cried the Knight, "and wilt thou smitten be
+ By such base knave, such filthy rogue as he?"
+
+ "Nay," smiled the Duke, "stand back and watch, good brother,
+ A Rogue and Fool at buffets with each other."
+
+ And speaking thus, he leapt on Black Lewin,
+ And smote him twice full hard upon the chin,
+ Two goodly blows upon that big, black jowl,
+ Whereat Black Lewin lustily did howl
+ And falling back, his polished bascinet
+ With ringing clash the cold, hard flagstones met.
+ Whereat his fellows, shouting fierce alarms,
+ Incontinent betook them to their arms;
+ And thus it seemed a fight there must have been
+ But that a horseman sudden spurred between--
+ A blue-eyed youth with yellow, curling hair,
+ Of slender shape, of face and feature fair,
+ A dainty knight was he in very truth,
+ A blue-eyed, merry, laughter-loving youth.
+
+ "Ha, knaves, what do ye with the Fool?" lisped he,
+ "Wilt strike a motley, dogs--a Fool? Let be!
+ Though faith,'t would seem, Sir Fool, thou hast a fist
+ That surly Lewin to his dole hath kissed.
+ If it can strum thy lute but half as well,
+ Then gestours all methinks thou should'st excel--
+
+
+ Ye rogues, pass Folly in, no man shall say
+ That from our town we folly turned away.
+ Come, follow, Fool, into the market-square,
+ And give us earnest of thy foolish ware."
+
+Now it was market day, and within the goodly square were people come from
+near and far, a notable concourse, country folk and folk of the town,
+farmers and merchants, rustic maids, fair ladies, knights and esquires on
+horseback or a-foot, but who, hearing the jingle of the Duke's tinkling
+bells, seeing his flaunting cock's-comb, with one accord gathered to him
+from every quarter:
+
+ For when this long-legged gestour they espied,
+ They, laughing, hemmed him in on every side,
+ And, "See, a Fool! A Fool! The Fool must sing,"
+ And "Fool! A Fool!" upon the air did ring,
+ Wherefore the Duke betook him to his lute,
+ And strummed until the chattering crowd was mute.
+ Then while all folk did hold their peace to hear,
+ In golden voice he sang, full rich and clear:
+
+ "'A fool! A fool!' ye cry,
+ A fool forsooth am I.
+ But tell me, wise ones, if ye can,
+ Where shall ye find a happy man?
+ Lived there one since the world began?
+ Come, answer ye
+ To me!
+
+ "'What of the king?' says you.
+ Says I to you--'Go to!
+ A king despite his crown and throne,
+ Hath divers troubles all his own.
+ Such woes, methinks, as are unknown
+ To such as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ "'Ha, then--the rich!' ye cry,
+ 'Not so in truth,' says I.
+ 'The rich man's gold is load of care,
+ That day and night he needs must bear;
+ Less care he'd know if poor he were,
+ As poor as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ "For, sirs, as I do guess
+ This thing called 'Happiness'
+ Man leaveth with his youth behind;
+ So keep ye all a youthful mind,
+ Thus happiness ye all shall find
+ If wit have ye,
+ Like me!
+
+ "O list ye, great and small,
+ Proud knight, free man and thrall,
+ True happiness, since life began,
+ The birthright is of every man;
+ Seize then your birthright if ye can,
+ Since men are ye--
+ Like me!
+
+ "Thus I forsooth, a Fool,
+ Do now ye wise ones school;
+ Since of my folly, full and free,
+ I wisely thus admonish ye,
+ Be wise--or eke fools learn to be
+ In verity--
+ Like me!"
+
+Now when the song was ended some there were who laughed and some looked
+grave, some talked amain and some wagged solemn heads, while many a good
+coin rang heartily at Duke Jocelyn's feet; smiling, he bade Sir Pertinax
+take them up, joying to see the proud Knight stooping thus to pouch the
+money like any beggar. But now, when he would fain have gone his way into
+the town, the people would by no means suffer it and clamoured amain on
+all sides, insistent for more; wherefore, lifting his scarred face to the
+sunset sky, Duke Jocelyn sang as here followeth:
+
+ "When man is born he doth begin
+ With right good will, to daily sin,
+ And little careth.
+ But when his grave he thinketh near,
+ Then grave he groweth in his fear
+ And sin forsweareth.
+
+ "This life that man doth cherish so,
+ Is wondrous frail and quick to go,
+ Nor will it stay.
+ Yet where's the man that will not give
+ All that he hath so he might live
+ Another day.
+
+ "Fain would I know the reason why
+ All men so fearful are to die
+ And upward go?
+ Since Death all woes and ills doth end,
+ Sure Death, methinks, should be a friend,
+ Not hated foe.
+
+ "So when Death come, as come he must,
+ Grieve not that we this sorry dust
+ Do leave behind.
+ For when this fleeting life be run,
+
+
+ By Death we all of us--each one,
+ True life shall find."
+
+ Now while he sang melodious and clear
+ Amid the throng that closer pressed to hear,
+ Duke Joc'lyn of a sudden did espy
+ The "wherefore" of his coming and the "why."
+ Yolande herself he, singing, did behold,
+ Her eyes, red lips, her hair of ruddy gold;
+ And all her warm and glowing loveliness
+ Did sudden thus his raptured vision bless;
+ While she, in gracious ease, her horse did sit
+ That pawed round hoof and champed upon his bit,
+ Arching proud neck as if indeed he were
+ Proud of the lovely burden he did bear.
+ As Joc'lyn gazed upon her thus, she seemed
+ A thousand times more fair than he had dreamed.
+ Now while he sang, she viewed him, gentle-eyed,
+ And quite forgot the gallant by her side,
+ A tall, dark-featured, comely lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ Who, when the Duke made of his song an end
+ Did from his saddle o'er Yolanda bend.
+ With eyes on her warm beauty he stooped near
+ To touch white hand and whisper in her ear;
+ Whereat she laughed and frowned with cheek flushed red
+ Then, frowning still, she turned her horse's head,
+ And rode away with dame and squire and knight,
+ Till lost she was to Joc'lyn's ravished sight.
+
+"Ha, lord!" quoth Sir Pertinax, as they came within a quiet thoroughfare,
+"this lady is grown more fair since last we saw her Queen of Beauty at
+Melloc joust, concerning whom Fame, in troth, doth breed a just report for
+once. But, messire, didst mark him beside her--with touch o' hand, lord,
+whispers i' the ear--didst mark this wolf, this Seneschal, this thrice
+accurst Sir Gui?"
+
+"Aye, forsooth," answered the Duke, "but thou'rt an hungered, methinks?"
+
+"To touch her hand, lord--aha! To whisper in her ear, lord--oho! A right
+puissant lord, Seneschal of Raddemore, Lord of Thorn and Knight of Ells! A
+lord of puissance and power potential."
+
+"And thou, my Pertinax, art but a hungry Knight, that trampeth with a
+hungry Fool, wherefore let us forthwith--"
+
+"Aye, but mark me, lord, if this puissant lord with pomp and high estate
+doth woo the lady--"
+
+"So then, my Pertinax, will I woo this lady also."
+
+"How, in this thy foolish guise?"
+
+"Aye, forsooth."
+
+"Why, then, thou art like to be whipped for froward Fool and I for ragged
+rogue, and this our adventure brought to ill and woeful end--so here now is
+folly, lord, indeed!"
+
+"Aye, forsooth!" smiled the Duke,
+
+ "Whereto these bells give heed.
+ But come, amend thy speed,
+ Methinks thy fasting-need
+ These gloomy vapours breed.
+ Thy inner man doth plead
+ Good beef with ale or mead
+ Wherein, thou Fool decreed,
+ I am right well agreed
+ 'T were goodly thing to feed,
+ Nor will I thee impede,
+ So follow Folly's lead
+ And food-wards we'll proceed."
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 2
+
+ How Pertinax mine host's large ears did wring,
+ And Jocelyn of these same ears did sing.
+
+
+Now the town was full, and every inn a-throng with company--lords, both
+great and small, knights and esquires and their several followings, as
+archers, men-at-arms, and the like, all thither come from far and near
+to joust at the great tournament soon to be, to honour the birthday of
+Benedicta, Duchess of Tissingors, Ambremont, and divers other fair cities,
+towns and villages. Thus our travellers sought lodgment in vain, whereat
+Sir Pertinax cursed beneath his breath, and Duke Jocelyn hummed, as was
+each his wont and custom; and ever the grim Knight's anger grew.
+
+ Until, at last, an humble inn they saw--
+ A sorry place, with bush above the door.
+ This evil place they straightway entered in,
+ Where riot reigned, the wild, unlovely din
+ Of archers, men-at-arms, and rogues yet worse,
+ Who drank and sang, whiles some did fight and curse.
+ An evil place indeed, a lawless crew,
+ And landlord, like his inn, looked evil too:
+ Small was his nose, small were his pig-like eyes,
+ But ears had he of most prodigious size,
+ A brawny rogue, thick-jowled and beetle-browed,
+ Who, spying out our strangers 'mid the crowd,
+
+ Beholding them in humble, mean array,
+ With gestures fierce did order them away.
+ "Nay," quoth Sir Pertinax, "here will we bide,
+ Here will we eat and drink and sleep beside.
+ Go, bring us beef, dost hear? And therewith mead,
+ And, when we've ate, good beds and clean we 'll need."
+ "Ho!" cried the host. "Naught unto ye I'll bring
+ Until yon Fool shall caper first and sing!"
+ Said Jocelyn: "I'll sing when I have fed!"
+ "And then," quoth Pertinax, "we will to bed!"
+ "And wilt thou so?" the surly host replied;
+ "No beds for likes o' ye do I provide.
+ An' ye will sleep, knave, to the stable go,
+ The straw is good enough for ye, I trow."
+
+ "Ha!" roared Sir Pertinax. "A stable? Straw?
+ This to me, thou filthy clapper-claw,
+ Thou fly-blown cod's-head, thou pestiferous thing!"
+ And, roaring, on the brawny host did spring;
+
+ By his large ears Sir Pertinax did take him,
+ And to and fro, and up and down, did shake him;
+ He shook him quick and slow, from side to side,
+ While loud for aid the shaken landlord cried.
+ Whereat the vicious crowd, in sudden wrath,
+ Shouted and cursed and plucked their daggers forth.
+ But, ere to harm our bold Knight they were able,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lightly sprang on massy table;
+ Cock's-comb a-flaunt and silver bells a-ring,
+ He laughing stood and gaily plucked lute-string,
+ And cut an antic with such merry grace
+ That angry shouts to laughter loud gave place.
+
+ Thereafter he sang as followeth:
+
+ "Bold bawcocks, brave, bibulous, babbling boys,
+ Tall tosspots, come, temper this tumult and noise;
+ So shall I sing sweetly such songs as shall sure
+ Constrain carking care and contumacy cure.
+ Thus, therefore--"
+
+But here the surly landlord raised much clamour and outcry, whiles he
+touched and caressed his great ears with rare gentleness.
+
+"Oho, my yeres!" roared he. "My yeres do be in woeful estate. Oho, what o'
+yon fierce-fingered rogue, good fellows, what o' yon knave--'a did twist my
+yeres plaguily and wring 'em roguishly, 'a did! Shall 'a not be beaten and
+drubbed out into the kennel, ha? What o' poor Nykins' yeres, says I--my
+yeres, oho!"
+
+"Thine ears, unsavoury scullion," laughed Jocelyn; "thine ears, forsooth?
+Hark ye, of thy so great, so fair, so fine ears I'll incontinent make a
+song. List ye, one and all, so shall all here now hear my song of ears!"
+Forthwith Duke Jocelyn struck his lute and sang:
+
+ "Thine ears, in sooth, are long ears,
+ Stout ears, in truth, and strong ears,
+ Full ears, I trow, and fair ears,
+ Round ears also and rare ears.
+ So here's an ear that all eyes here
+ Shall see no beauty in, 'tis clear.
+ For these o' thine be such ears,
+ Large, loose, and over-much ears,
+ Ears that do make fingers itch,
+ Ears to twist and ears to twitch.
+
+
+ If thine ears had gone unseen,
+ Pulled forsooth they had not been;
+ Yet, since pulled indeed they were,
+ Thine ears plain the blame must bear.
+ So of thine ears no more complain,
+ Lest that thine ears be pulled again.
+ So hide thine ears as best ye may,
+ Of which same ears, to end, I say
+ Thine ears indeed be like my song,
+ Of none account, yet over long!"
+
+Now hereupon was huge laughter and merriment, insomuch that the
+thick-jowled landlord betook himself otherwhere, and all men thronged upon
+our jester, vociferous for more.
+
+"Aye, but, bold tosspots," laughed Jocelyn, "how now, sit ye without wine
+in very truth?"
+
+"Not so, good Fool," they cried. "Here be wine a-plenty for us and for
+thee!"
+
+"Go to, tall topers," quoth the Duke, "ye are witless, in faith, for there
+is no man here but is without wine, as in song will I shew--mark now:
+
+ "'Tis plain that ye are wine without,
+ Since wine's within ye, topers stout.
+ Without your wine, ye whineful show,
+ Thus wine-full, wine without ye go.
+ Being then without your wine, 'tis true,
+ Wine-less, ye still are wine-full too.
+ But, mark! As thus ye wine-full sit,
+ Since wine's within, out goeth wit.
+ Thus, truth to tell, tall topers stout,
+ Both wine and wit ye go without!"
+
+By such tricks of rhyme, jugglery of words, and the like, Duke Jocelyn won
+this fierce company to great good humour and delight; insomuch that divers
+of these roysterers pressed wine upon him and money galore. But, the hour
+growing late, he contrived at last to steal away with Sir Pertinax, which
+last, having fed copiously, now yawned consumedly, eager for bed. Howbeit,
+despite the Knight's fierce threats, they found no bed was to be had in
+all the inn, and so, perforce, betook them at last to the stable.
+
+ There, while our Knight cursed softly, though full deep,
+ Soon in the straw our Duke fell fast asleep.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, dear, I greatly fear
+ You 'll never be a poet!
+ MYSELF: Don't be too hard upon the bard,
+ I know it, girl, I know it!
+ These last two lines, I quite agree,
+ Might easily much better be.
+ Though, on the whole, I think my verse,
+ When all is said, might be much worse.
+ GILL: Worse, father? Yes, perhaps you're right,
+ Upon the whole--perhaps, it might.
+ MYSELF: But hark now, miss! Attend to this!
+ Poetic flights I do not fly;
+ When I begin, like poor Lobkyn,
+ I merely rhyme and versify.
+ Since my shortcomings I avow,
+ The story now, you must allow,
+ Trips lightly and in happy vein?
+ GILL: O, yes, father, though it is rather
+ Like some parts of your "Beltane."
+ MYSELF: How, child! Dare you accuse your sire
+ Of plagiary--that sin most dire?
+ And if I do, small blame there lies;
+ It is myself I plagiarise.
+
+ GILL: Why, yes, of course! And, as you know.
+ I always loved your "Beltane" so.
+
+ MYSELF: But don't you like the "geste" I'm writing?
+
+ GILL: Of course! It's getting most exciting,
+ In spite of all the rhymes and stuff--
+
+ MYSELF: Stuff?
+ Enough!
+ My daughter, you're so sweetly frank.
+ Henceforth my verses shall be blank.
+ No other rhyme I'll rhyme for you
+ Till you politely beg me to.
+ Now then, your blank-verse doom you know,
+ Hey, presto, and away we go!
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 3
+
+ Tell'th how Duke Jocelyn of love did sing,
+ And haughty knight in lily-pool did fling.
+
+
+ Upon a morn, when dewy flowers fresh-waked
+ Filled the glad air with perfume languorous,
+ And piping birds a pretty tumult made,
+ Thrilling the day with blended ecstasy;
+ When dew in grass did light a thousand fires,
+ And gemmed the green in flashing bravery--
+ Forth of her bower the fair Yolanda came,
+ Fresh as the morn and, like the morning, young,
+ Who, as she breathed the soft and fragrant air,
+ Felt her white flesh a-thrill with joyous life,
+ And heart that leapt responsive to the joy.
+ Vivid with life she trod the flowery ways,
+ Dreaming awhile of love and love and love;
+ Unknowing all of eyes that watched unseen,
+ Viewing her body's gracious loveliness:
+ Her scarlet mouth, her deep and dreamful eyes,
+ The glowing splendour of her sun-kissed hair,
+ Which in thick braids o'er rounded bosom fell
+ Past slender waist by jewelled girdle bound.
+
+ So stood Duke Jocelyn amid the leaves,
+ And marked how, as she walked, her silken gown
+ Did cling her round in soft embrace, as though
+ Itself had sense and wit enough to love her.
+ Entranced he stood, bound by her beauty's spell,
+ Whereby it seemed he did in her behold
+ The beauty of all fair and beauteous things.
+
+
+ Now leaned she o'er a pool where lilies pale
+ Oped their shy beauties to the gladsome day,
+ Yet in their beauty none of them so fair
+ As that fair face the swooning waters held.
+ And as, glad-eyed, she viewed her loveliness,
+ She fell to singing, soft and low and sweet,
+ Clear and full-throated as a piping merle,
+ And this the manner of her singing was:
+
+ "What is love? Ah, who shall say?
+ Flower to languish in a day,
+ Bird on wing that will away.
+ Love, I do defy thee!
+
+ "What is love? A toy so vain
+ 'T is but found to lose again,
+ Painful sweet and sweetest pain;
+ Ah, love, come not nigh me.
+
+ "But, love, an thou com'st to me,
+ Wert thou as I'd have thee be,
+ Welcome sweet I'd make for thee,
+ And weary of thee never.
+
+ "If with thy heart thou could'st endure,
+ If thou wert strong and thou wert sure,
+ A master now, and now a wooer,
+ Thy slave I'd be for ever."
+
+ Thus sang she sweet beside the lily-pool,
+ Unknowing any might her singing hear,
+ When rose another voice, so rich, so full
+ As thrilled her into rapt and pleasing wonder;
+ And as she hearkened to these deep-sung words,
+ She flushed anon and dimpled to a smile:
+
+ "What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Bird of joy to sing alway,
+ Deep in the heart of me.
+
+ "What is love? A joyous pain
+ That I ne'er may lose again,
+ Since for ever I am fain
+ To think and dream of thee."
+
+ Now hasted she to part the leafy screen,
+ And one in motley habit thus beheld.
+ But when 'neath flaunting cock's-comb she did mark
+ His blemished face, she backward from him drew
+ And caught her breath, and yet upon him gazed
+ 'Neath wrinkled brow, the while Duke Jocelyn
+ Read the expected horror in her eyes:
+ Wherefore he bowed his head upon his breast
+ And plucked at belt with sudden, nervous hand
+ As, cold and proud and high, she questioned him:
+ "What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show
+ A visage that might shame the gladsome day?"
+
+ Whereto he answered, low and humble-wise:
+ "A Fool! The very fool of fools am I--
+ A Fool that fain would pluck the sun from heaven."
+
+ "Begone!" she sighed. "Thy look doth make me cold,
+ E'en as I stand thus i' the kindly sun.
+ Yet, an thou 'rt poor as thy mean habit speaks thee,
+ Take first this dole for tender Jesu's sake."
+
+ Then answered Jocelyn on lowly knee:
+ "For thy sweet bounty I do thank thee well,
+ But, in good sooth, so great a fool am I,
+ 'Stead of thy gold I rather would possess
+
+ Yon happy flower that in thy bosom bloometh.
+ Give me but this and richer fool am I
+ Than any knight-like fool that coucheth lance--
+ Greater I than any lord soever,
+ Aye--e'en Duke Jocelyn of Brocelaunde."
+
+ Smiled now Yolande with rosy lip up-curving,
+ While in soft cheek a roguish dimple played.
+ Quoth she: "Duke Jocelyn, I've heard it said,
+ Is great and rich, a mighty man-at-arms,
+ And thou but sorry Fool in mean array,
+ Yet"--from white fingers she let fall the flower--
+ "Be thou, Fool, greater than this mighty Duke!
+ And now, since mighty Fool and rich I've made thee,
+ In quittance I would win of thee a song."
+
+ Now sat Yolande, white chin on dimpled fist,
+ Viewing him o'er with cruel, maiden-eyes,
+ So swift to heed each outward mark and blemish
+ (Since maids be apt to sly disparagement,
+ And scorn of all that seems un-beautiful)
+ While he did lean him by the marble rim,
+ His wistful gaze down-bent upon the pool,
+ Feeling her look and knowing while she looked:
+ What time he touched his lute with fingers skilled,
+ And so fell singing, wonder-low and sweet:
+
+ "Though foul and harsh of face am I,
+ Lady fair--O lady!
+ Fair thoughts within my heart may lie,
+ As flowers that bloom unseen to die,
+ Lady fair--O lady!
+
+ "Though this my hateful face may fright thee,
+ Lady fair--O list!
+ My folly mayhap shall delight thee,
+ A song of fools I will recite thee,
+ Lady fair--O list!"
+
+ Herewith he sighed amain, but smiled anon,
+ And fell anon to blither, louder note:
+
+ "Sing hey, Folly--Folly ho,
+ And here's a song of Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun,
+ Will gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.
+
+ "And Fool, forsooth, a Fool am I,
+ Well learned in foolish lore:
+ For I can sing ye, laugh or sigh:
+ Can any man do more?
+ Hey, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ 'Gainst sadness bar the door.
+
+ "A Fool am I, yet by fair leave,
+ Poor Fools have hearts to feel.
+ Poor Fools, like other fools, may grieve
+ If they their woes conceal.
+ Hither, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ All Fools to Folly kneel.
+
+ "What though a Fool be melancholy,
+ Sick, sick at heart--heigho!
+ Pain must he hide 'neath laughing Folly,
+ What Fool should heed his woe!
+ Hither, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Fool must unpitied go.
+
+ "E'en though a Fool should fondly woo,
+ E'en though his love be high,
+ Poor Folly's fool must wear the rue,
+ Proud love doth pass him by.
+ Heigho, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Poor Fool may love--and die.
+
+ "Though Wisdom should in motley go,
+ And fools the wise man ape;
+ Who is there that shall Wisdom know
+ Beneath a 'scalloped cape?
+ Heigho, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ Life is but sorry jape.
+
+ "So, hey, Folly--Folly, ho!
+ And here's a song o' Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun
+ Do gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy."
+
+ The singing done, she viewed him kinder-eyed,
+ Till eyes met eyes--when she did pout and frown,
+ And chid him that his song was something sad,
+ And vowed so strange a Fool was never seen.
+ Then did she question him in idle wise
+ As, who he was and whence he came and why?
+ Whereto the Duke--
+
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ Dear father, if you're in the vein,
+ I'd like a little rhyme again;
+ For blank verse is so hard to read,
+ And yours is very blank indeed!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ Girl, when blank verse I write for thee,
+ I write it blank as blank can be.
+ Stay, I'll declare (no poet franker)
+ No blank verse, Gill, was ever blanker.
+ But:
+ Since, with your sex's sweet inconstancy,
+ Rhymes now you wish, rhymes now I'll
+ rhyme for thee:
+ As thus, my dear--
+ Give ear:
+
+Whereto the Duke did instant make reply:
+
+ "Sweet lady, since you question me,
+ Full blithely I will answer thee;
+ And, since you fain would merry be,
+ I'll sing and rhyme it merrily:
+
+ "Since Mirth's my trade and follies fond,
+ Methinks a fair name were Joconde;
+ And for thy sake
+ I travail make
+ Through briar and brake,
+ O'er fen and lake,
+ The Southward March beyond.
+
+ "For I an embassage do bear,
+ Now unto thee, Yolande the fair,
+ Which embassy,
+ Now unto thee,
+ Right soothfully,
+ And truthfully,
+ Most full, most free,
+ Explicit I 'll declare.
+
+ "Thus: videlicit and to wit,
+ Sith now thou art to wedlock fit--
+ Both day and night
+ In dark, in light
+ A worthy knight,
+ A lord of might,
+ In his own right,
+ Duke Joc'lyn hight
+ To thine his heart would knit.
+
+ "But, since the Duke may not come to thee,
+ I, in his stead, will humbly sue thee;
+ His love each day
+ I will portray
+ As best I may;
+ I'll sue, I'll pray,
+ I'll sing, I'll play,
+ Now grave, now gay,
+ And in this way,
+ I for the Duke will woo thee."
+
+ Now, fair Yolanda gazed with wide-oped eyes,
+ And checked sweet breath for wonder and surprise;
+ Then laughed full blithe and yet, anon, did frown,
+ And with slim fingers plucked at purfled gown:
+
+ "And is it thou--a sorry Fool," she cried.
+ "Art sent to win this mighty Duke a bride?"
+
+ "E'en so!" quoth he. "Whereof I token bring;
+ Behold, fair maid, Duke Joc'lyn's signet ring."
+ "Heaven's love!" she cried. "And can it truly be
+ The Duke doth send a mountebank like thee,
+ A Fool that hath nor likelihood nor grace
+ From worn-out shoon unto thy blemished face--
+ A face so scarred--so hateful that meseems
+ At night 't will haunt and fright me with ill dreams;
+ A slave so base--"
+
+ "E'en so!" Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ And his marred visage 'neath his hood did hide.
+ "But, though my motley hath thy pride distressed,
+ I am the Fool Duke Joc'lyn loveth best.
+ And--ah, my lady, thou shalt never see
+ In all this world a Fool the like of me!"
+
+ Thus spake the Duke, and then awhile stood mute,
+ And idly struck sweet chords upon his lute,
+ Watching Yolande's fair, frowning face the while,
+ With eyes that held a roguish, wistful smile.
+ She, meeting now these eyes of laughing blue,
+ Felt her cheeks burn, and sudden angry grew.
+
+ So up she rose in proud and stately fashion,
+ And stamped slim foot at him in sudden passion;
+ And vowed that of Duke Joc'lyn she cared naught;
+ That if he'd woo, by him she must be sought;
+ Vowed if he wooed his wooing should be vain,
+ And, as he came, he back should go again.
+ "For, since the Duke," she cried, "dare send to me
+ A sorry wight, a very Fool like thee,
+ By thy Fool's mouth I bid thee to him say,
+ He ne'er shall win me, woo he as he may;
+ Say that I know him not--"
+
+ "Yet," spake Duke Joc'lyn soft,
+ "E'er this, methinks, thou'st seen my lord full oft.
+ When at the joust thou wert fair Beauty's queen
+ Duke Joc'lyn by thy hand oft crowned hath been."
+ "True, Fool," she answered, 'twixt a smile and frown,
+ "I've seen him oft, but with his vizor down.
+ And verily he is a doughty knight,
+ But wherefore doth he hide his face from sight?"
+
+ "His face?" quoth Joc'lyn with a gloomy look,
+ "His face, alack!" And here his head he shook;
+ "His face, ah me!" And here Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ "His face--" "What of his face?" Yolanda cried.
+ "A mercy's name, speak--speak and do not fail."
+ "Lady," sighed Joc'lyn, "thereby hangs a tale,
+ The which, though strange it sound, is verity,
+ That here and now I will relate to thee--
+ 'T is ditty dire of dismal doating dames,
+ A lay of love-lorn, loveless languishment,
+ And ardent, amorous, anxious anguishment,
+ Full-fed forsooth of fierce and fiery flames;
+ So hark,
+ And mark:
+ In Brocelaunde not long ago,
+ Was born Duke Jocelyn. I trow
+ Not all the world a babe could show,
+ A babe so near divine:
+ For, truth to tell,
+ He waxed so well,
+ So fair o' face,
+ So gay o' grace,
+ That people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Where'er he went,
+ In wonderment
+ Would stare and stare
+ To see how fair
+ A lad was Jocelyn.
+
+ And when to man's estate he came,
+ Alack, fair lady, 't was the same!
+ And many a lovely, love-lorn dame
+ Would pitiful pant and pine.
+ These doleful dames
+ Felt forceful flames,
+ The old, the grey,
+ The young and gay,
+ Both dark and fair
+ Would rend their hair,
+ And sigh and weep
+ And seldom sleep;
+ And dames long wed
+ From spouses fled
+ For love of Jocelyn.
+
+ Therefore the Duke an oath did take
+ By one, by two, by three,
+ That for these love-lorn ladies' sake
+ No maid his face should see.
+ And thus it is, where'er he rideth
+ His love-begetting face he hideth."
+
+ Now laughed Yolande, her scorn forgotten quite,
+ "Alas!" she cried. "Poor Duke! O woeful plight!
+ And yet, O Fool, good Fool, full fain am I,
+ This ducal, love-begetting face to spy--"
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: "Then, my lady, prithee, look!"
+ And from his bosom he a picture took.
+
+ "Since this poor face of mine doth so affright thee
+ Here's one of paint that mayhap shall delight thee.
+ Take it, Yolande, for thee the craftsmen wrought it,
+ For thee I from Duke Jocelyn have brought it.
+ If day and night thou 'lt wear it, fair Yolande,"
+ And speaking thus, he gave it to her hand.
+ Its golden frame full many a jewel bore,
+ But 't was the face, the face alone she saw.
+ And viewing it, Yolanda did behold
+ A manly face, yet of a god-like mould.
+ Breathless she sate, nor moved she for a space,
+ Held by the beauty of this painted face;
+ 'Neath drooping lash she viewed it o'er and o'er,
+ And ever as she gazed new charms she saw.
+ Then, gazing yet, "Who--what is this?" she sighed.
+ "Paint, lady, paint!" Duke Joc'lyn straight replied,
+ "The painted visage of my lord it shows--
+ Item: one mouth, two eyes and eke a nose--"
+ "Nay, Fool," she murmured, "here's a face, meseems,
+ I oft have seen ere now within my dreams;
+ These dove-soft eyes in dreams have looked on me!"
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: "Yet these eyes can nothing see!"
+
+ "These tender lips in accents sweet I've heard!"
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: "Yet--they ne'er have spoke a word!
+ But here's a face at last doth please thee well
+ Yet hath no power to speak, see, sigh or smell,
+ Since tongueless, sightless, breathless 't is--thus I
+ A sorry Fool its needs must e'en supply.
+ And whiles thou doatest on yon painted head
+ My tongue I'll lend to woo thee in its stead.
+ I'll woo with wit
+ As seemeth fit,
+ Whiles there thou sit
+ And gaze on it.
+ Whiles it ye see
+ Its voice I'll be
+ And plead with thee,
+ So hark to me:
+ Yolande, I love thee in true loving way;
+ That is, I'll learn to love thee more each day,
+ Until so great my growing love shall grow,
+ This puny world in time 't will overflow.
+ To-day I love, and yet my love is such
+ That I to-morrow shall have twice as much.
+ Thus lovingly to love thee I will learn
+ Till thou shalt learn Love's lesson in thy turn,
+ And find therein how sweet this world can be
+ When as I love, thou, love, shall so love me."
+
+ "Hush, hush!" she sighed, and to her ruddy lip
+ She sudden pressed one rosy finger-tip.
+ And then, O happy picture! Swift from sight
+ She hid it in her fragrant bosom white.
+ "O Fool," she cried, "get thee behind yon tree,
+ And thou a very Fool indeed shall see,
+ A knightly fool who sighs and groans in verse
+ And oft-times woos in song, the which is worse."
+ For now they heard a voice that sung most harsh,
+ That shrilled and croaked like piping frog in marsh,
+ A voice that near and ever nearer drew
+ Until the lordly singer strode in view.
+ A noble singer he, both tall and slender,
+
+ With locks be-curled and clad in pompous splendour;
+ His mantle of rich velvet loose did flow,
+ As if his gorgeous habit he would show;
+ A jewelled bonnet on his curls he bore,
+ With nodding feather bravely decked before;
+ He was a lover very _point de vice_,
+ And all about him, save his voice, was nice.
+ Thus loudly sang, with lungs both sound and strong
+ This worthy knight, Sir Palamon of Tong.
+
+ "O must I groan
+ And make my moan
+ And live alone alway?
+ Yea, I must sigh
+ And droop and die,
+ If she reply, nay, nay!
+
+ "I groan for thee,
+ I moan for thee,
+ Alone for thee I pine.
+ All's ill for me
+ Until for me
+ She will for me be mine."
+
+But now, beholding Yolande amid her flowers, herself as sweet and fresh as
+they, he made an end of his singing and betook him, straightway, to amorous
+looks and deep-fetched sighs together with many supple bendings of
+the back, elegant posturings and motitions of slim legs, fannings and
+flauntings of be-feathered cap, and the like gallantries; and thereafter
+fell to his wooing on this fashion:
+
+"Lady, O lady of lovely ladies most loved! Fair lady of hearts, sweet dame
+of tenderness, tender me thine ears, suffer one, hath sighed and suffered
+for sake of thee, to sightful sue. Lovely thou art and therefore to be
+loved, and day and night thou and Love the sum of my excogitations art,
+wherefore I, with loving art, am hither come to woo thee, since, lady, I
+do love thee."
+
+"Alack, Sir Palamon!" she sighed, "and is it so?"
+
+"Alack!" he answered, "so it is. Yest're'en I did proclaim thee fairer than
+all fair ladies; to-day thou art yet fairer, thus this day thou art fairer
+than thyself; the which, though a paradox, is yet wittily true and truly
+witty, methinks. But as for me--for me, alas for me! I am forsooth the very
+slave of love, fettered fast by Dan Cupid, a slave grievous and woeful,
+yet, being thy slave, joying in my slavery and happy in my grievous woe.
+Thus it is I groan and moan, lady; I pine, repine and pine again most
+consumedly. I sleep little and eat less, I am, in fine and in all ways,
+'haviours, manners, customs, feints and fashions soever, thy lover
+manifest, confessed, subject, abject, in season and out of season, yearly,
+monthly, daily, hourly, and by the minute. Moreover--"
+
+"Beseech thee!" she cried, "Oh, beseech thee, take thy breath."
+
+"Gramercy, 'tis done, lady, 'tis done, and now forthwith resolved am I to
+sing thee--"
+
+"Nay, I pray you, sir, sing no more, but resolve me this mystery. What is
+love?"
+
+"Love, lady? Verily that will I in truth!" And herewith Sir Palamon fell
+to an attitude of thought with eyes ecstatic, with knitted brows and sage
+nodding of the head. "Love, my lady--ha! Love, lady is--hum! Love, then,
+perceive me, is of its nature elemental, being of the elements, as 'twere,
+composed and composite, as water, air and fire. For, remark me, there is no
+love but begetteth first water, which is tears; air, which is sighings and
+groanings; and fire, which is heart-burnings and the like. Thus is love a
+passion elemental. But yet, and heed me, lady, love is also metaphysical,
+being a motition of the soul and e'en the spirit, and being of the spirit
+'tis ghostly, and being ghostly 'tis--ha! Who comes hither to shatter the
+placid mirror of my thoughts?"
+
+So saying, the noble knight of Tong turned to behold one who strode towards
+them in haste, a tall man this whose black brows scowled fierce upon the
+day, and who spurned the tender flowers with foot ungentle as he came.
+
+ A tall, broad-shouldered, haughty lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ At sight of whom, Yolanda's laughter failed,
+ And in her cheek the rosy colour paled.
+
+ Quoth he: "Sir Palamon, now of thy grace,
+ And of thy courteous friendship yield me place,
+ To this fair lady I a word would say.
+ Thus do I for thy courteous-absence pray,
+ I am thy friend, Sir Knight, as thou dost know,
+ But--"
+
+ "My lord," quoth Sir Palamon, "I go--
+ Friendship methinks is a most holy bond,
+ A bond I hold all binding bonds beyond,
+ And thou 'rt a friend right potent, my lord Gui,
+ So to thy will I willingly comply.
+ Thus, since thy friendship I hold passing dear,
+ Thou need but ask--and lo! I am not here."
+ Thus having said, low bowed this courtly knight,
+ Then turned about and hasted out of sight.
+
+"And now, my lady," quoth Sir Gui, frowning upon her loveliness, "and now
+having discharged yon gaudy wind-bag, what of this letter I did receive
+but now--behold it!" and speaking, he snatched a crumpled missive from his
+bosom. "Behold it, I say!"
+
+"Indeed, my lord, I do," she answered, proud and disdainful; "it is,
+methinks, my answer to thy loathed suit--"
+
+ "Loathed!" he cried, and caught her slender wrist,
+ And held it so, crushed in his cruel fist;
+ But proud she faced him, shapely head raised high.
+ "Most loathed, my lord!" she, scornful, made reply.
+ "For rather than I'd wed myself with thee,
+ The wife of poorest, humblest slave I'd be,
+ Or sorriest fool that tramps the dusty way--"
+ "Ha! Dare thou scorn me so?" Sir Gui did say,
+ "Then I by force--by force will sudden take thee,
+ And slave of love, my very slave I 'll make thee--"
+
+ Out from the leaves Duke Joc'lyn thrust his head,
+ "O fie! Thou naughty, knavish knight!" he said.
+ "O tush! O tush! O tush again--go to!
+ 'T is windy, whining, wanton way to woo.
+ What tushful talk is this of 'force' and 'slaves',
+ Thou naughty, knavish, knightly knave of knaves?
+ Unhand the maid--loose thy offensive paw!"
+ Round sprang Sir Gui, and, all astonished, saw
+ A long-legged jester who behind him stood
+ With head out-thrust, grim-smiling 'neath his hood.
+
+ "Plague take thee, Fool! Out o' my sight!" growled he,
+ "Or cropped thine ugly nose and ears shall be.
+ Begone, base rogue! Haste, dog, and get thee hence,
+ Thy folly pleadeth this thy Fool's offence--
+
+ Yet go, or of thy motley shalt be stripped,
+ And from the town I 'll have thee shrewdly whipped,
+ For Lord of Ells and Raddemore am I,
+ Though folk, I've heard, do call me 'Red Sir Gui,'
+ Since blood is red and--I am Gui the Red."
+ "Red Gui?" quoth Joc'lyn. "Art thou Gui the dread--
+ Red Gui--in faith? Of him Dame Rumour saith,
+ His ways be vile but viler still--his breath.
+ Now though a life vile lived is thing most ill,
+ Yet some do think a vile breath viler still."
+
+ Swift, swift as lightning from a summer sky,
+ Out flashed the vengeful dagger of Sir Gui,
+ And darting with a deadly stroke and fierce,
+ Did Joc'lyn's motley habit rend and pierce,
+ Whereat with fearful cry up sprang Yolande,
+ But this strange jester did grim-smiling stand.
+ Quoth he: "Messire, a fool in very truth,
+ The fool of foolish fools he'd be, in sooth,
+ Who'd play a quip or so, my lord, with thee
+ Unless in triple armour dight were he;
+ And so it is this jester doth not fail
+ With such as thou to jest in shirt of mail.
+ Now since my heart thy foolish point hath missed
+ Thy dagger--thus I answer--with my fist!"
+ Then swift he leapt and, even as he spoke,
+ He fetched the knight so fierce and fell a stroke
+ That, reeling, on the greensward sank Sir Gui,
+ And stared, wide-eyed, unseeing, at the sky.
+ Right firmly then upon his knightly breast
+ Duke Joc'lyn's worn and dusty shoe did rest,
+ And while Yolande stood white and dumb with fear,
+ Thus sang the Duke full blithely and full clear:
+
+ "Dirt thou art since thou art dust,
+ And shalt to dust return;
+ Meanwhile Folly as he lust
+ Now thy base dust doth spurn.
+
+ "Yea, lord, though thy rank be high,
+ One day, since e'en lords must die,
+ Under all men's feet thou'lt lie."
+
+ Now, fierce, Sir Gui did curse the Fool amain,
+ And, cursing, strove his dagger to regain.
+ But Joc'lyn stooped, in mighty arms he swung him,
+ And down into the lily-pool he flung him.
+
+ With splash resounding fell the noble knight,
+ Then gurgling rose in damp and sorry plight,
+ Whiles Joc'lyn, leaning o'er the marble rim,
+ With lifted finger thus admonished him:
+
+ "Red Gui,
+ Dread Gui,
+ Lest a dead Gui,
+ Gui, I make of thee,
+ Understand, Gui,
+ Fair Yolande, Gui,
+ Humbly wooed must be.
+
+ "So, Gui,
+ Know, Gui,
+ Ere thou go, Gui,
+ Gui they call the Red;
+ And thou'lt woo, Gui,
+ Humbly sue, Gui,
+ Lest Love strike thee dead.
+
+ "Now while thou flound'rest in yon pool,
+ Learn thou this wisdom of a Fool;
+ Cold water oft can passion cool
+ And fiery ardours slake;
+ Thus, sir, since water quencheth fire,
+ So let it soothe away thine ire.
+ Then--go seek thee garments drier
+ Lest a rheum thou take."
+
+ Sir Gui did gasp, and gasping, strove to curse,
+ Whereat he, gasping, did but gasp the worse,
+ Till, finding he could gasp, but nothing say,
+ He shook clenched fist and, gasping, strode away.
+ Then Joc'lyn turned and thus beheld Yolande,
+ Who trembling all and pale of cheek did stand.
+
+ "O Fool!" she sighed. "Poor Fool, what hast
+ thou done?"
+
+ Quoth he: "Yolande, to woo thee I've begun,
+ I better might have wooed, it is most true,
+ If other wooers had not wooed thee too."
+
+ "Nay, Fool!" she whispered. "O beware--beware!
+ Death--death for thee is in the very air.
+ From Canalise, in haste, I bid thee fly,
+ For 'vengeful lord and cruel is Sir Gui.
+ Take now this gold to aid thee on thy way,
+ And for thy life upon my knees I'll pray,
+ And with the holy angels intercede
+ To comfort thee and aid thee in thy need.
+ And so--farewell! "Thus, speaking, turned Yolande.
+ But Joc'lyn stayed her there with gentle hand,
+ Whereat she viewed him o'er in mute surprise,
+ To see the radiant gladness of his eyes.
+
+ Quoth he: "Yolande, since thou wilt pray for me,
+ Of thy sweet prayers fain would I worthy be.
+ This I do know--let Death come when he may,
+ The love I bear thee shall live on alway.
+
+ Nor will I strive to leave grim Death behind me,
+ Since when Death wills methinks he sure will find me;
+ As in the world Death roameth everywhere,
+ Who flees him here perchance shall meet him there.
+ Here, then, I'll bide--let what so will betide me,
+ Thy prayers like holy angels, watch beside me.
+ So all day long and in thy pretty sleeping
+ 'Till next we meet the Saints have thee in keeping."
+
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: The last part seems to me much better.
+ I like Yolande, I hope he'll get her.
+
+ MYSELF: Patience, my dear, he's hardly met her.
+
+ GILL: I think it would be rather nice
+ To make him kiss her once or twice.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll make him kiss her well, my dear,
+ When he begins--but not just here.
+ I'll later see what I can do
+ In this matter to please you.
+
+ GILL: And then I hope, that by and by
+ He kills that frightful beast, Sir Gui.
+
+ MYSELF: Yes, I suppose, we ought to slay him,
+ For all his wickedness to pay him.
+
+ GILL: And Pertinax, I think--don't you?
+ Should have a lady fair to woo.
+ To see him in love would be perfectly clipping.
+ It's a corking idea, and quite awfully ripping--
+
+ MYSELF: If you use such vile slang, miss, I vow I will not--
+
+ GILL: O, Pax, father! I'm sorry; I almost forgot.
+
+ MYSELF: Very well, if my warning you'll bear well
+ in mind,
+ A fair damsel for Pertinax I 'll try to find.
+
+ GILL: Then make her, father, make her quick,
+ I always knew you were a brick.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 4
+
+ How Pertinax plied angle to his sport
+ And, catching him no fish, fish-like was caught.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ By sleepy stream where bending willows swayed,
+ And, from the sun, a greeny twilight made,
+ Sir Pertinax, broad back against a tree,
+ Lolled at his ease and yawned right lustily.
+ In brawny fist he grasped a rod or angle,
+ With hook wherefrom sad worm did, writhing, dangle.
+ Full well he loved the piscatorial sport,
+ Though he as yet no single fish had caught.
+ Hard by, in easy reach upon the sward,
+ Lay rusty bascinet and good broadsword.
+ Thus patiently the good Knight sat and fished,
+ Yet in his heart most heartily he wished
+ That he, instead of fishing, snug had been
+ Seated within his goodly tower of Shene.
+ And thinking thus, he needs must cast his eye
+ On rusty mail, on battered shoon, and sigh,
+ And murmur fitful curses and lament
+ That in such base, unknightly garb he went--
+ A lord of might whose broad shield bravely bore
+ Of proud and noble quarterings a score.
+ "And 't was forsooth for foolish ducal whim
+ That he must plod abroad in such vile trim!"
+ Revolving thus, his anger sudden woke,
+ And, scowling, to the unseen fish he spoke:
+
+ "A Duke! A Fool! A fool-duke, by my head!
+ Who, clad like Fool, like Fool will fain be wed,
+
+ For ass and dolt and fool of fools is he
+ Who'll live in bondage to some talk-full she.
+ Yet, if he'll wed, why i' the foul fiend's name,
+ Must he in motley seek the haughty dame?"
+
+ But now, while he did on this problem dwell,
+ Two unexpected happenings befell:
+ A fish to nibble on the worm began,
+ And to him through the green a fair maid ran.
+ Fast, fast amid the tangled brake she fled,
+ Her cheeks all pale, her dark eyes wide with dread;
+ But Pertinax her beauty nothing heeded,
+ Since both his eyes to watch his fish were needed;
+ But started round with sudden, peevish snort
+ As in slim hands his brawny fist she caught;
+ "Ha, maid!" he cried, "Why must thou come this way
+ To spoil my sport and fright mine fish away?"
+ "O man--O man, if man thou art," she gasped,
+ "Save me!" And here his hand she closer grasped,
+ But even now, as thus she breathless spake,
+ Forth of the wood three lusty fellows brake;
+ Goodly their dress and bright the mail they wore,
+ While on their breasts a falcon-badge they bore.
+ "Oho!" cried one. "Yon dirty knave she's met!"
+ Sir Pertinax here donned his bascinet.
+ "But one poor rogue shan't let us!" t' other roared.
+ Sir Pertinax here reached and drew his sword.
+ "Then," cried the third, "let's at him now all three!"
+ Quoth Pertinax: "Maid, get thee 'hind yon tree,
+ For now, methinks, hast found me better sport
+ Than if, forsooth, yon plaguy fish I'd caught."
+ So saying, up he rose and, eyes a-dance
+ He 'gainst the three did joyously advance,
+ With sword that flashed full bright, but brighter yet
+ The eyes beneath his rusty bascinet;
+
+ While aspect bold and carriage proud and high,
+ Did plainly give his mean array the lie.
+ Thus, as he gaily strode to meet the three,
+ In look and gesture all proud knight was he;
+ Beholding which, the maid forgot her dread,
+ And, 'stead of pale, her cheek glowed softly red.
+
+ Now at the three Sir Pertinax did spring,
+ And clashing steel on steel did loudly ring,
+ Yet Pertinax was one and they were three,
+ And once was, swearing, smitten to his knee,
+ Whereat the maid hid face in sudden fear,
+ And, kneeling so, fierce cries and shouts did hear,
+ The sounds of combat dire, and deadly riot
+ Lost all at once and hushed to sudden quiet,
+ And glancing up she saw to her amaze
+ Three rogues who fleetly ran three several ways,
+ Three beaten rogues who fled with one accord,
+ While Pertinax, despondent, sheathed his sword.
+ "Par Dex!" he growled, "'Tis shame that they should run
+ Ere that to fight the rogues had scarce begun!"
+ So back he came, his rod and line he took,
+ And gloomed to find no worm upon his hook.
+ But now the maiden viewed him gentle-eyed;
+ "Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!" she sighed,
+ "Thou, like true knight, hast fought for me today--"
+ "And the fish," sighed he, "have stole my worm away,
+ Which is great pity, since my worms be few!"
+ And here the Knight's despond but deeper grew.
+ "Yon rogues," he sighed, "no stomach had for fight,
+ Yet scared the fish that had a mind to bite!"
+ "But thou hast saved me, noble man!" said she.
+ "So must I use another worm!" sighed he.
+
+ And straightway with his fishing he proceeded
+ While sat the maid beside him all unheeded;
+ Whereat she frowned and, scornful, thus did speak
+ With angry colour flaming in her cheek:
+ "What man art thou that canst but fight and fish?
+ Hast thou no higher thought, no better wish?"
+ "Certes," quoth he, "I would I had indeed
+ A goodly pot of foaming ale or mead."
+ "O base, most base!" the maid did scornful cry,
+ And viewed him o'er with proud, disdainful eye.
+ "That I should owe my life to man like thee!
+ That one so base could fight and master three!
+ Who art thou, man, and what? Speak me thy name,
+ Whither ye go and why, and whence ye came,
+ Thy rank, thy state, thy worth to me impart,
+ If soldier, serf, or outlawed man thou art;
+ And why 'neath ragged habit thou dost wear
+ A chain of gold such as but knights do bear,
+ Why thou canst front three armed rogues unafraid,
+ Yet fear methinks to look upon a maid?"
+
+ But to these questions Pertinax sat dumb--
+ That is, he rubbed his chin and murmured, "Hum!"
+ Whereat she, frowning, set determined chin
+ And thus again to question did begin:
+
+SHE: What manner of man art thou?
+
+HE: A man.
+
+SHE: A soldier?
+
+HE: Thou sayest.
+
+SHE: Art in service?
+
+HE: Truly.
+
+SHE: Whom serve ye?
+
+HE: A greater than I.
+
+SHE: Art thou wed?
+
+HE: The Saints forfend!
+
+SHE: Then art a poor soldier and solitary.
+
+HE: I might be richer.
+
+SHE: What dost thou fishing here?
+
+HE: I fish.
+
+SHE: And why didst fight three men for me--a maid unknown?
+
+HE: For lack of better employ.
+
+SHE: Rude soldier--whence comest thou?
+
+HE: Fair maiden, from beyond.
+
+SHE: Gross Knight, whither goest thou?
+
+HE: Dainty damosel, back again.
+
+SHE: Dost lack aught?
+
+HE: Quiet!
+
+SHE: How, would'st have me hold my peace, ill fellow?
+
+HE: 'T would be a marvel.
+
+SHE: Wherefore?
+
+HE: Thou'rt a woman.
+
+SHE: And thou a man, ill-tongued, ill-beseen, ill-mannered, unlovely,
+and I like thee not!
+
+HE: And what is worse, the fish bite not.
+
+Now here, and very suddenly, she fell a-weeping, to the Knight's no small
+discomfiture, though she wept in fashion wondrous apt and pretty; wherefore
+Sir Pertinax glanced at her once, looked twice and, looking, scratched his
+ear, rubbed his chin and finally questioned her in turn:
+
+HE: Distressful damosel, wherefore this dole? SHE: For that I am weary,
+woeful and solitary. And thou--thou'rt harsh of look, rough of tongue,
+ungentle of--HE: Misfortunate maiden, thy loneliness is soon amended, get
+thee to thy friends--thy gossips, thy--
+
+SHE: I have none. And thou'rt fierce and ungentle of face.
+
+Here she wept the more piteously and Sir Pertinax, viewing her distress,
+forgot his hook and worm, wherefore a fish nibbled it slyly, while the
+Knight questioned her further:
+
+HE: Woeful virgin, whence comest thou?
+
+SHE: From afar. And thou art ofeatures grim and--
+
+HE: And whither would'st journey?
+
+SHE: No where! And thou art--
+
+HE: Nay, here is thing impossible, since being here thou art somewhere and
+that within three bowshots of the goodly town of Canalise wherein thou
+shalt doubtless come by comfort and succour.
+
+SHE: Never! Never! Here will I weep and moan and perish. And thou--
+
+HE: And wherefore moan and perish?
+
+SHE: For that I am so minded, being a maid forlorn and desolate, a poor
+wanderer destitute of kith, of kin, of hope, of love, and all that maketh
+life sweet. And thou art sour-faced and--
+
+HE: Grievous maid, is, among thy many wants, a lack of money?
+
+SHE: That also. And thou art cold of eye, fierce of mouth, hooked of nose,
+flinty of heart, stony of soul, and I a perishing maid.
+
+At this Sir Pertinax blinked and caught his breath; thereafter he laid down
+his rod, whereupon the fish incontinent filched his worm all unnoticed
+while the Knight opened the wallet at his girdle and took thence certain
+monies.
+
+HE: Dolorous damsel, behold six good, gold pieces! Take them and go, get
+thee to eat--eat much, so shall thy dolour wax less, eat beef--since beef
+is a rare lightener of sorrow, by beef shall thy woes be comforted.
+
+SHE: Alas! I love not beef.
+
+Now here Sir Pertinax was dumb a space for wonder at her saying, while she
+stole a glance at him betwixt slender fingers.
+
+HE (_after some while_): Maid, I tell thee beef, fairly cooked and aptly
+seasoned, is of itself a virtue whereby the body is strengthened and
+nourished, whereby cometh content, and with content kindliness, and with
+kindliness charity, and therewith all other virtues small and eke great;
+therefore eat beef, maiden, for the good of thy soul.
+
+"How?" said she, viewing him bright-eyed 'twixt her fingers again. "Dost
+think by beef one may attain to paradise?"
+
+HE: Peradventure.
+
+SHE: Then no beef, for I would not live a saint yet awhile.
+
+HE: Nathless, take thou these monies and go buy what thou wilt.
+
+So saying, Sir Pertinax set the coins beside her shapely foot and took up
+his neglected rod.
+
+SHE: And is this gold truly mine?
+
+HE: Verily.
+
+SHE: Then I pray thee keep it for me lest I lose it by the way and so--let
+us begone.
+
+Here Sir Pertinax started.
+
+"Begone?" quoth he. "Begone--in truth? Thou and I in faith? Go whither?"
+
+SHE: Any whither.
+
+HE: Alone? Thou and I?
+
+"Nay, not alone," she sighed; "let us go together."
+
+Sir Pertinax dropped his fishing-rod and watched it idly float away down
+the stream:
+
+"Together, maiden?" said he at last.
+
+"Truly!" she sighed. "For thou art lonely even as I am lonely, and thou
+art, methinks, one a lonely maid may trust."
+
+"Ha--trust!" quoth he. "And wherefore would'st trust me, maiden?"
+
+SHE: For two reasons--thou art of age mature and something ill-favoured.
+
+Now, at this Sir Pertinax grew angered, grew thoughtful, grew sad and,
+beholding his image mirrored in the waters, sighed for his grim, unlovely
+look and, in his heart, cursed his vile garb anew. At last he spoke:
+
+HE: Truly thou may'st trust me, maiden.
+
+SHE: And wherefore sighest thou, sad soldier?
+
+HE: Verily for thy two reasons. Though, for mine age, I am not forty
+turned.
+
+Saying which, he sighed again, and stared gloomily into the murmurous
+waters. But presently, chancing to look aside, he beheld a head low down
+amid the underwood, a head huge and hairy with small, fierce eyes that
+watched him right bodefully, and a great mouth that grinned evilly; and now
+as he stared, amazed by this monstrous head, it nodded grimly, speaking
+thus:
+
+ "Lob, Lobkyn he
+ Commandeth thee
+ To let her be
+ And set her free,
+ Thou scurvy, cutpurse, outlaw knave,
+ Lest hanged thou be
+ Upon a tree
+ For roguery
+ And villainy,
+ Thou knavish, misbegotten slave;
+ For proud is she
+ Of high degree,
+ As unto ye
+ Explicitly--"
+
+"Ha!" quoth Sir Pertinax, rising and drawing sword. "Now, be thou imp of
+Satan, fiend accursed, or goblin fell, come forth, and I with steel will
+try thee, Thing!"
+
+Out from the leaves forthwith crawled a dwarf bowed of leg, mighty of
+shoulder, humped of back, and with arms very long and thick and hairy. In
+one great fist he grasped a ponderous club shod with iron spikes, and now,
+resting his hands on this and his chin on his hands, he scowled at the
+Knight, yet grinned also.
+
+"Ho!" he cried, rolling big head in threatening fashion:
+
+"Vile dog, thy rogue's sconce cracked shall be, Thy base-born bones
+be-thwacked shall be. I'll deal thee many a dour ding For that thou darest
+name me--Thing!"
+
+"Now, as I live!" said Sir Pertinax, scowling also. "Here will I, and with
+great joyance, cleave me thine impish mazzard and split thee to thy beastly
+chine. And for thy ill rhyming:
+
+ "I with this goodly steel will halve thee
+ And into clammy goblets carve thee.
+ So stand, Thing, to thy club betake thee,
+ And soon, Thing, I will no-thing make thee."
+
+But, as they closed on each other with eager and deadly intent, the maid
+stepped lightly betwixt.
+
+"Stay, soldier--hold!" she commanded. "Here is none but Lobkyn Lollo--poor,
+brave Lob, nor will I suffer him to harm thee."
+
+"How, maiden?" snorted the good Knight fiercely. "Harm me, say'st thou--yon
+puny Thing?"
+
+"Truly, soldier!" said she, roguish-eyed. "For though thou art very
+ungentle, harsh of tongue, of visage grim and manners rude--I would not
+have Lob harm thee--yet!"
+
+ Now hereupon our bold Sir Pertinax
+ With indignation red of face did wax.
+ The needful word his tongue was vainly seeking,
+ Since what he felt was quite beyond the speaking.
+ Though quick his hand to ward or give a blow,
+ His tongue all times unready was and slow,
+ Therefore he speechless looked upon the maid,
+ Who viewed him 'neath her lashes' dusky shade,
+ Whence Eros launched a sudden beamy dart
+ That 'spite chain-mail did reach and pierce his heart.
+ And in that instant Pertinax grew wise,
+ And trembled 'neath this forest-maiden's eyes;
+ And trembling, knew full well, seek where he might,
+ No eyes might hold for him such magic light,
+ No lips might hold for him such sweet allure,
+ No other hand might his distresses cure,
+ No other voice might so console and cheer,
+ No foot, light-treading, be so sweet to hear
+ As the eyes, lips, hand, voice, foot of her who stood
+ Before him now, cheek flushing 'neath her hood.
+ All this Sir Pertinax had in his thought,
+ And, wishing much to say to her, said nought,
+ By reason that his tongue was something slow,
+ And of smooth phrases he did little know.
+ But yet 't is likely, though he nothing said,
+ She, maid-like, what he spake not, guessed or read
+ In his flushed brow, his sudden-gentle eyes,
+ Since in such things all maids are wondrous wise.
+
+ Now suddenly the brawny Dwarf did cry:
+ "Beware, my old great-grand-dam creepeth nigh!"
+ Thus speaking, 'mid the bushes pointed he,
+ Where crook'd old woman crouched beneath a tree
+ Whence, bowed upon a staff, she towards them came,
+ An ancient, wrinkled, ragged, hag-like dame
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below.
+ Mutt'ring she came and mowing she drew near,
+ And straightway seized the Dwarf by hairy ear:
+ Fast by the ear this ancient dame did tweak him,
+ And cuffed his head and, cuffing, thus did speak him:
+
+ "Ha, dolt! Bad elf, and wilt thou slay, indeed,
+ This goodly man did aid me in my need?
+ For this was one that fought within the gate
+ And from Black Lewin saved thy grannam's pate!
+ Down, down, fool-lad, upon thy knees, I say,
+ And full forgiveness of this soldier pray."
+
+ But Sir Pertinax, perceiving how the old dame
+ did thus tweak and wring at the Dwarf's great,
+ hairy ear even until his eyes watered, interceded,
+ saying:
+
+ "Good, ancient soul, humble not the sturdy, unlovely,
+ mis-shapen, rascally imp for such small
+ matter."
+
+ "Nay, but," croaked the old woman, tightening
+ claw-like fingers, "kind master, he would doubtless
+ have slain thee." At this, Sir Pertinax scowled,
+ and would have sworn great oath but, meeting the
+ maid's bright eyes, checked himself, though with
+ much ado:
+
+ "Art so sure," he questioned, "so sure man of
+ my inches may be slain by thing so small?"
+
+ At this the maid laughed, and the old woman,
+ sighing, loosed the ear she clutched:
+
+ "Shew thy strength, Lob," she commanded and,
+ drawing the maiden out of ear-shot, sat down beside
+ her on the sward and fell to eager, whispered talk.
+ Meantime the Dwarf, having cherished his ear,
+ sulkily though tenderly, seized hold upon his great
+ club with both hairy hands:
+
+ And whirling it aloft, with sudden might
+ A fair, young tree in sunder he did smite,
+ That 'neath the blow it swayed and crashing fell.
+ Quoth Pertinax: "Good Thing, 't is very well.
+ Par Dex, and by the Holy Rood," quoth he,
+ "'T is just as well that I was not yon tree!"
+ And whirling his long sword as thus he spoke,
+ Shore through another at a single stroke.
+ "Here's tree for tree, stout manling!" he did say.
+ "What other trick canst show to me, I pray?"
+ Then Lobkyn stooped the broken stump to seize,
+ Bowed brawny back and with a wondrous ease
+
+ Up by the roots the rugged bole he tore
+ And tossed it far as it had been a straw.
+ Sad grew our knight this mighty feat perceiving,
+ Since well he knew't was past his own achieving.
+
+But anon he smiled and clapped the mighty Dwarf on shoulder, saying:
+
+"Greeting to thee, lusty Lob, for by Our Holy Lady of Shene Chapel within
+the Wood, ne'er saw I thine equal, since thou, being man so small, may do
+what man o' my goodly inches may nowise perform. Thou should'st make a
+right doughty man-at-arms!"
+
+Hereupon the Dwarf cut a caper but sighed thereafter: quoth he:
+
+ "Aha, good master, and Oho,
+ As man-at-arms fain would I go;
+ Aye, verily, I would be so,
+ But that my grannam sayeth 'No!'
+
+ "And, sir, my grand-dam I obey
+ Since she's a potent witch, they say;
+ Can cast ye spells by night or day
+ And charmeth warts and such away.
+
+ "Love philtres too she can supply
+ For fools that fond and foolish sigh,
+ That wert thou foul as hog in sty
+ Fair women must unto thee fly.
+
+ "Then deadly potions she can make,
+ Will turn a man to wriggling snake,
+ Or slimy worm, or duck, or drake,
+ Or loathly frog that croaks in lake.
+
+ "And she can curse beyond compare,
+ Can curse ye here, or curse ye there;
+ She'll curse ye clad or curse ye bare,
+ In fine, can curse ye anywhere.
+
+ "And she can summon, so 't is said,
+ From fire and water, spirits dread,
+ Strong charms she hath can wake the dead
+ And set the living in their stead.
+
+ "So thus it is, whate'er she say,
+ My grand-dam, master, I obey."
+
+"Now by my head," quoth Sir Pertinax, "an thy grand-dam hath a potency in
+spells and such black arts--the which is an ill thing--thou hast a powerful
+gift of versification the which, methinks, is worse. How cometh this
+distemper o' the tongue, Lobkyn?"
+
+ "O master," spake the sighful Dwarf forlorn,
+ "Like many such diseases, 't is inborn.
+ For even as a baby, I
+ Did pule in rhyme and versify;
+ And the stronger that I grew,
+ My rhyming habit strengthened too,
+ Until my sad sire in despair
+ Put me beneath the Church's care.
+ The holy fathers, 't is confessed,
+ With belt and sandal did their best,
+ But, though they often whipped me sore,
+ I, weeping, did but rhyme the more,
+ Till, finding all their efforts vain,
+ They sadly sent me home again."
+
+"A parlous case, methinks!" said Sir Pertinax, staring at the Dwarf's
+rueful visage. "Learned ye aught of the holy fathers?"
+
+ "Aye, sir, they taught me truth to tell,
+ To cipher and to read right well;
+ They taught me Latin, sir, and Greek,
+ Though even then in rhyme I'd speak."
+
+"And thou canst read and write!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax. "So can not I!"
+
+Cried LOB:
+
+ "What matter that? Heaven save the mark,
+ Far better be a soldier than a clerk,
+ Far rather had I be a fighter
+ Than learned reader or a writer,
+ Since they who'd read must mope in schools,
+ And they that write be mostly fools.
+ So 'stead of pen give me a sword,
+ And set me where the battle's toward,
+ Where blood--"
+
+But the ancient dame who had risen and approached silently, now very
+suddenly took Lobkyn by the ear again.
+
+"Talk not of blood and battles, naughty one!" she cried. "Think not to
+leave thy old grannam lone and lorn and helpless--nor this our fair maid.
+Shame on thee, Lob, O shame!" saying the which she cuffed him again and
+soundly.
+
+ "Master," he sighed, "thou seest I may not go,
+ Since that my grand-dam will not have it so."
+
+"Good mother, wise mother," said the maid, viewing Sir Pertinax smilingly
+askance, "why doth poor soldier go bedight in fine linen 'neath rusty
+hauberk? Why doth poor soldier wear knightly chain about his neck and swear
+by knightly oath? Good mother, wise mother, rede me this."
+
+The old woman viewed Pertinax with her bright, quick eyes, but, ere she
+could answer, he sheathed sword, drew ragged mantle about him, and made to
+go, but, turning to the maid, bent steel-clad head.
+
+"Most fair damosel," said he gently, "evening cometh on, and now, since
+thou art no longer forlorn, I will away."
+
+"Nay, first, I pray thee, what is thy name?"
+
+"Pertinax, madam."
+
+"So then doth Melissa thank Pertinax. And now--out alas! Will Pertinax
+leave Melissa, having but found her?"
+
+Sir Pertinax looked up, looked down, fidgeted with his cloak, and knew not
+how to answer; wherefore she sighed again, though with eyes full merry
+'neath drooping lashes and reached out to him her slender hand. "Aye me,
+and shall we meet no more, poor soldier?" she questioned softly.
+
+"This I know not," he answered.
+
+"For thy brave rescue I do give thee my humble thanks, poor soldier."
+
+"Thy rescue, child?" cried the old woman. "Alack and wert thou seen? Thy
+rescue, say'st thou?"
+
+"Indeed, good mother, from Sir Agramore's rough foresters. But for thee,
+thou needy soldier, my gratitude is thine henceforth. Had I aught else to
+give thee, that were thine also. Is there aught I may? Speak."
+
+Now Sir Pertinax could not but heed all the rich, warm beauty of her--these
+eyes so sombrely sweet, her delicate nose, the temptation of her vivid
+lips--and so spake hot with impulse:
+
+"Aye, truly, sweet maid, truly I would have of thee a--" Her eyes grew
+bright with laughter, a dimple played wanton in her cheek, and Sir
+Pertinax was all suddenly abashed, faint-hearted and unsure; thus, looking
+down, he chanced to espy a strange jewel that hung tremulous upon her
+moving bosom: a crowned heart within a heart of crystal.
+
+"Well, thou staid and sorry soldier, what would'st have of me?" she
+questioned.
+
+"Verily," he muttered, "I would have of thee yon trinket from thy bosom."
+Now at his words she started, caught her breath and stared at him
+wide-eyed; but, seeing his abashment, laughed and loosed off the jewel with
+quick, small fingers.
+
+"Be it so!" said she. But hereupon the old woman reached out sudden hand.
+
+"Child!" she croaked, "Art mad? Mind ye not the prophecy? Beware the
+prophecy--beware!
+
+ 'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'
+
+Beware, I say, Oh, beware!"
+
+"Nay, good mother, have I not promised? And for this crystal it hath
+brought me nought but unease hitherto. Take it, soldier, and for the sake
+of this poor maid that giveth, break it not, dishonour it not, and give it
+to none but can define for thee the secret thereof--and so, poor, brave,
+fearful soldier--fare thee well!"
+
+Saying which this fair maiden turned, and clasping the Witch's bony arm
+about her slender loveliness, passed away into the denser wood with Lobkyn
+Lollo marching grimly behind, his mighty club across his shoulder.
+
+Long stood Sir Pertinax, staring down at the strange jewel in his hand yet
+seeing it not, for, lost in his dreams, he beheld again two eyes,
+dusky-lashed and softly bright, a slender hand, a shapelyfoot, while in
+his ears was again the soft murmur of a maid's voice, a trill of girlish
+laughter. So lost in meditation was he that becoming aware of a shadow
+athwart the level sunset-glory, he started, glanced up and into the face
+of a horseman who had ridden up unheard upon the velvet ling; and this
+man was tall and armed at points like a knight; the vizor of his plumed
+casque was lifted, and Sir Pertinax saw a ruddy face, keen-eyed,
+hawk-nosed, thin-lipped.
+
+"Fellow," questioned the haughty knight, "what hold ye there?"
+
+"Fellow," quoth Sir Pertinax, haughty and gruff also, "'t is no matter to
+thee!" And speaking, he buttoned the jewel into the wallet at his belt.
+
+"Fool!" exclaimed the Knight, staring in amaze, "wilt dare name me
+'fellow'? Tell me, didst see three foresters hereabout?"
+
+"Poltroon, I did."
+
+"Knave, wilt defy me?"
+
+"Rogue, I do!"
+
+"Slave, what did these foresters?"
+
+"Villain, they ran away!"
+
+"Ha, varlet! and wherefore?"
+
+"Caitiff, I drubbed them shrewdly."
+
+"Dared ye withstand them, dog?"
+
+"Minion, I did."
+
+"Saw ye not the badge they bore?" demanded the fierce stranger-knight.
+
+"'T was the like of that upon thy shield!" nodded Sir Pertinax grimly.
+
+"Know ye who and what I am, dunghill rogue?"
+
+"No, dog's-breakfast--nor care!" growled Sir Pertinax, whereat the
+stranger-knight grew sudden red and clenched mailed fist.
+
+"Know then, thou kennel-scourer, that I am Sir
+
+Agramore of Biename, Lord of Swanscote and Hoccom, Lord Seneschal of
+Tissingors and the March."
+
+"Ha!" quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. "So do I know thee for a very rogue
+ingrain and villain manifest."
+
+"How!" roared Sir Agramore. "This to my face, thou vile creeper of ditches,
+thou unsavoury tavern-haunter--this in my teeth!"
+
+"Heartily, heartily!" nodded Sir Pertinax. "And may it choke thee for the
+knavish carcass thou art."
+
+At this, and very suddenly, the Knight loosed mace from saddle-bow, and
+therewith smote Sir Pertinax on rusty bascinet, and tumbled him backward
+among the bracken. Which done, Sir Agramore laughed full loud and, spurring
+his charger, galloped furiously away. And after some while Sir Pertinax
+arose, albeit unsteadily, but finding his legs weak, sat him down again;
+thereafter with fumbling hands he did off dinted bascinet and viewed it
+thoughtfully, felt his head tenderly and, crawling to the stream, bathed it
+solicitously; then, being greatly heartened, he arose and drawing sword,
+set it upright in the ling and, kneeling, clasped his hands and spake as
+follows:
+
+"Here and now, upon my good cross-hilt I swear I will with joy and
+zeal unremitting, seek me out one Sir Agramore of Biename. Then will I
+incontinent with any, all, or whatsoever weapon he chooseth fall upon him
+and, for this felon stroke, for his ungentle dealing with the maid, I will
+forthwith gore, rend, tear, pierce, batter, bruise and otherwise use the
+body of the said Sir Agramore until, growing aweary of its vile tenement,
+his viler soul shall flee hence to consume evermore with such unholy knaves
+as he. And this is the oath of me, Sir Pertinax,
+
+"Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling, Bracton and Deepdene, to the
+which oath may the Saints bend gracious ear, in especial Our Holy Lady of
+Shene Chapel within the Wood--Amen!"
+
+Having registered the which most solemn oath, Sir Pertinax arose, sheathed
+his sword, and strode blithely towards the fair and prosperous town of
+Canalise. But, being come within the gate, he was aware of much riot and
+confusion in the square and streets beyond, and hasting forward, beheld a
+wild concourse, a pushing, jostling throng of people making great clamour
+and outcry, above which hubbub ever and anon rose such shouts, as:
+"Murderer! Thief! Away with him! Death to him!"
+
+By dint of sharp elbow and brawny shoulder our good knight forced himself a
+way until--surrounded by men-at-arms, his limbs fast bound, his motley torn
+and bloody, his battered fool's-cap all awry--he beheld Duke Jocelyn haled
+and dragged along by fierce hands. For a moment Sir Pertinax stood dumb
+with horror and amaze, then, roaring, clapped hand to sword. Now, hearing
+this fierce and well-known battle shout, Duke Jocelyn turned and, beholding
+the Knight, shook bloody head in warning and slowly closed one bright, blue
+eye; and so, while Sir Pertinax stood rigid and dumb, was dragged away and
+lost in the fierce, jostling throng.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, when you began this Geste, I thought
+ It was a poem of a sort.
+
+ MYSELF: A sort, Miss Pert! A sort, indeed?
+
+ GILL: Of course--the sort folks love to read.
+ But in the last part we have heard
+ Of poetry there's scarce a word.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, if you the early Geste-books read,
+ You'll find that, oft as not, indeed,
+ The wearied Gestours, when by rhyming stumped,
+ Into plain prose quite often jumped.
+
+ GILL: But, father, dear, the last part seems to me
+ All prose--as prosy as can be--
+
+ MYSELF: Ha, prosy, miss! How, do you then suggest
+ Our Geste for you lacks interest?
+
+ GILL: Not for a moment, father, though
+ Sir Pertinax was much too slow.
+ When fair Melissa "laughing stood,"
+ He should have kissed--you know he
+ should--Because, of course, she wished him to.
+
+ MYSELF: Hum! Girl, I wonder if that's true?
+
+ GILL: O father, yes! Of course I'm right,
+ And you're as slow as your slow knight.
+ Were you as slow when you were young?
+
+ MYSELF: Hush, madam! Hold that saucy tongue.
+ You may be sure, in my young days,
+ I was most dutiful always.
+ Grown up, I was, it seems to me,
+ No slower than I ought to be.
+ And now, miss, since you pine for verse,
+ Rhyme with my prose I'll intersperse;
+ And, like a doting father, I
+ To hold your interest will try.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 5
+
+
+ Which of Duke Joc'lyn's woeful plight doth tell,
+ And all that chanced him pent in dungeon cell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ In gloomy dungeon, scant of air and light,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lay in sad and woeful plight;
+ His hands and feet with massy fetters bound,
+ That clashed, whene'er he moved, with dismal sound;
+ His back against the clammy wall did rest,
+ His heavy head was bowed upon his breast,
+ But, 'neath drawn brows, he watched with wary eye
+ Three ragged 'wights who, shackled, lay hard by,
+ Three brawny rogues who, scowling, fiercely eyed him,
+ And with lewd gibes and mocking gestures plied him.
+ But Joc'lyn, huddled thus against the wall,
+ Seemed verily to heed them none at all,
+ Wherefore a red-haired rogue who thought he slept
+ With full intent upon him furtive crept.
+ But, ere he knew, right suddenly he felt
+ Duke Joc'lyn's battered shoe beneath his belt;
+ And falling back with sudden strangled cry,
+ Flat on his back awhile did breathless lie,
+ Whereat to rage his comrades did begin,
+ And clashed their fetters with such doleful din
+ That from a corner dim a fourth man sprang,
+ And laughed and laughed, until their prison rang.
+ "Well kicked, Sir Fool! Forsooth, well done!" laughed he,
+ "Ne'er saw I, Fool, a fool the like o' thee!"
+
+ Now beholding this tall fellow, Jocelyn knew him
+ for that same forest-rogue had wrestled with him
+ in the green, and sung for his life the "Song of
+ Roguery." Wherefore he smiled on the fellow and
+ the fellow on him:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: I grieve to see
+ A man like thee
+ In such a woeful plight--
+
+ Quoth the ROGUE: A Fool in fetters,
+ Like his betters,
+ Is yet a rarer sight.
+
+"Ha i' the clout, good fellow, for Folly in fetters is Folly in need, and
+Folly in need is Folly indeed! But, leaving folly awhile, who art thou and
+what thy name?"
+
+ Saith the ROGUE: Robin I'm named, Sir Fool,
+ Rob by the few,
+ Which few are right, methinks, for
+ so I do.
+
+"Then, Rob, if dost rob thou'rt a robber, and being robber thou'rt
+perchance in bonds for robbing, Robin?"
+
+"Aye, Fool, I, Rob, do rob and have robbed greater robbers that I might
+by robbery live to rob like robbers again, as thou, by thy foolish folly,
+fooleries make, befooling fools lesser than thou, that thou, Fool, by such
+fool-like fooleries may live to fool like fools again!"
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Thou robber Rob,
+ By Hob and Gob,
+ Though robber-rogue, I swear
+ That 't is great pity
+ Rogue so pretty
+ Must dance upon thin air.
+
+ Quoth ROBIN: Since I must die
+ On gallows high
+ And wriggle in a noose,
+ I'll none repine
+ Nor weep nor whine,
+ For where would be the use?
+ Yet sad am I
+ That I must die
+ With rogues so base and small,
+ Sly coney-catchers,
+ Poor girdle-snatchers,
+ That do in kennel crawl.
+
+"And yet," said Jocelyn, "thou thyself art rogue and thief confessed. How
+then art better than these thy fellows?"
+
+"By degree, Sir Fool. Even as thou'rt Fool o' folly uncommon, so am I no
+ordinary rogue, being rogue o' rare parts with power of rogues i' the wild
+wood, while these be but puny rogues of no parts soever."
+
+"No rogues are we!" the three did loudly cry,
+
+"But sad, poor souls, that perishing do lie!"
+
+ "In me," quoth one, "behold a man of worth,
+ By trade a dyer and yclepen Gurth;
+ In all this world no man, howe'er he try,
+ Could live a life so innocent as I!"
+
+ The second spake: "I am the ploughman Rick,
+ That ne'er harmed man or woman, maid or chick!
+ But here in direful dungeon doomed be I,
+ Yet cannot tell the wherefore nor the why."
+
+ Then spake Red-head, albeit gasping still:
+ "An honest tanner I, my name is Will;
+ 'T was me thou kickedst, Fool, in such ill manner,
+ Of crimes unjust accused--and I, a tanner!"
+ Here Joc'lyn smiled. "Most saintly rogues," said he;
+ "The Saints, methinks, were rogues compared with ye,
+ And one must needs in prison come who'd find
+ The noblest, worthiest, best of all mankind.
+ Poor, ill-used knaves, to lie in dungeon pent,
+ Rogues sin-less quite, and eke so innocent,
+ What though your looks another tale do tell,
+ Since I'm your fellow, fellows let us dwell,
+ For if ye're rogues that thus in bonds do lie,
+ So I'm a rogue since here in bonds am I,
+ Thus I, a rogue, do hail ye each a brother,
+ Like brethren, then, we 'll comfort one another."
+
+Thus spake Jocelyn, whereafter these "saintly rogues" all three grew
+mightily peevish and, withal, gloomy, while Robin laughed and laughed at
+them, nodding head and wagging finger.
+
+"Prithee, good Motley," he questioned, "what should bring so rare a Fool
+to lie in dungeon fettered and gyved along of innocent rogues and roguish
+robber?"
+
+ Whereto Duke Jocelyn answered on this wise:
+ "Hast heard, belike, of Gui the Red?"
+ (Here went there up a howl)
+ "A mighty lord of whom't is said,
+ That few do love and many dread."
+ (Here went there up a growl)
+
+ "This potent lord I chanced to view,
+ Behaving as no lord should do,
+ And thereupon, this lord I threw
+ In pretty, plashing pool!
+
+ "Whereon this dreadful lord did get
+ Exceeding wroth and very wet;
+ Wherefore in dungeon here I'm set,
+ For fierce and froward Fool."
+
+ Here went there up a shout of glee.
+ Cried Robin: "O sweet Fool,
+ I would I had been there to see
+ This haughty lord of high degree
+ In pretty, plashing pool."
+
+ Here shout of glee became a roar,
+ That made the dungeon ring;
+ They laughed, they rolled upon the floor,
+ Till suddenly the massy door
+ On creaking hinge did swing;
+ And to them the head jailer now appeared,
+ A sombre man who sighed through tangled beard.
+
+"How now, rogue-lads," said he, "grow ye merry in sooth by reason o' this
+Fool! Aye me, all men do grow merry save only I, Ranulph, Chief Torturer,
+Ranulph o' the Keys, o' the Gibbet, o' the City Axe--poor Ranulph the
+Headsman. Good lack! I've cut off the head o' many a man merrier than I--
+aye, that have I, and more's the pity! And now, ye that are to die so soon
+can wax joyous along o' this motley Fool! Why, 't is a manifest good Fool,
+and rare singer o' songs, 't is said, though malapert, with no respect for
+his betters and over-quick at dagger-play. So 't is a Fool must die and
+sing no more, and there's the pity on't for I do love a song, I--being a
+companionable soul and jovial withal, aye, a very bawcock of a boy, I.
+To-morrow Red Gui doth hale ye to his Castle o' the Rock, there to die all
+five for his good pleasure, as is very fitting and proper, so be merry
+whiles ye may. Meantime, behold here another rogue, a youngling imp. So is
+five become six, and six may laugh louder than five, methinks, so laugh
+your best."
+
+Then Ranulph o' the Keys sighed, closed the great door and went his way,
+leaving the new captive to their mercies. Fair he was and slender, and of
+a timid seeming, for now he crouched against the wall, his face hid 'neath
+the hood of ragged mantle; wherefore the "saintly" three incontinent
+scowled upon him, roared at him and made a horrid clashing with their
+fetters:
+
+"Ha, blood and bones!" cried Rick the Ploughman. "What murderous babe art
+thou to go unshackled in presence o' thy betters?"
+
+"Aye, forsooth," growled Will the Tanner, "who 'rt thou to come hither
+distressing the last hours o' we poor, perishing mortals? Discourse, lest I
+bite the heart o' thee!"
+
+"Pronounce, imp!" roared Gurth the Dyer, "lest I tear thy liver!"
+
+"Sit ye, here beside me, youth," said Jocelyn, "and presently thou shalt
+know these tearers of livers and biters of hearts for lambs of innocence
+and doves of gentleness--by their own confessions. For, remark now, gentle
+boy, all we are prisoners and therefore guiltless of every offence--indeed,
+where is the prisoner, but who, according to himself, is not more sinned
+against than sinner, and where the convicted rogue but, with his tongue,
+shall disprove all men's testimony? So here sit three guileless men,
+spotless of soul and beyond all thought innocent of every sin soever.
+Yonder is Rob, a robber, and here sit I, a Fool."
+
+"Ha!" cried Rick. "Yet murderous Fool art thou and apt to dagger-play!
+Belike hast slain a man this day in way o' folly--ha?"
+
+"Two!" answered Jocelyn, nodding. "These two had been more but that my
+dagger brake."
+
+Here was silence awhile what time Jocelyn hummed the line of a song and his
+companions eyed him with looks askance.
+
+"Why then, good Folly," said Rick at last, "'t is for a little spilling o'
+blood art here, a little, pretty business o' murder--ha?"
+
+"'T is so they name it," answered Jocelyn.
+
+"Bones o' me!" growled Will, "I do begin to love this Fool."
+
+"And didst pronounce thyself our brother, Fool?" questioned Gurth.
+
+"Aye, verily!"
+
+"Then brethren let us be henceforth, and comrades to boot!" cried Rick.
+"Jolly Clerks o' Saint Nicholas to share and share alike--ha? So then 't is
+accorded. And now what o' yon lily-livered imp? 'T is a sickly youth and
+I love him not. But he hath a cloak, look'ee--a cloak forsooth and poor
+Rick's a-cold! Ho, lad--throw me thy cloak!"
+
+"Beshrew me!" roared Gurth. "But he beareth belt and wallet! Ha, boy, give
+thy wallet and girdle--bestow!"
+
+"And by sweet Saint Nick," growled Will, "the dainty youngling disporteth
+himself to mine eyes in a gold finger-ring! Aha, boy! Give now thy trinket
+unto an honest tanner."
+
+Hereupon and with one accord up started the three, fierce-eyed; but
+Jocelyn, laughing, rose up also.
+
+"Back, corpses!" quoth he, swinging the heavy fetters to and fro between
+shackled wrists. "Stand, good Masters Dry-bones; of what avail cloak, or
+wallet, or ring to ye that are dead men? Now, since corpses ye are
+insomuch as concerneth this world, be ye reasonable and kindly corpses.
+Sit ye then, Masters Dust-and-Ashes, and I will incontinent sing ye, chant
+or intone ye a little song of organs and graves and the gallows-tree
+whereon we must dance anon; as, hearken:
+
+ "Sing a song of corpses three
+ That ere long shall dancing be,
+ On the merry gallows-tree--
+ High and low,
+ To and fro,
+ Leaping, skipping,
+ Turning, tripping,
+ Wriggling, whirling,
+ Twisting, twirling:
+ Sing hey for the gallows-tree."
+
+"Stint--stint thy beastly song now!" cried Will, pale of cheek. But Jocelyn
+sang the louder:
+
+ "Sing a song of dying groans,
+ Sing a song of cries and moans,
+ Sing a song of dead men's bones,
+ That shall rest,
+ All unblest,
+ To rot and rot,
+ Remembered not,
+ For dogs to gnaw
+ And battle for,
+ Sing hey for the dead rogue's bones."
+
+"Abate--ha--abate thy fiendish rant!" cried Rick, glancing fearfully over
+shoulder.
+
+"Aye, Fool--beseech thee! Fair flesh may not abide it!" cried Gurth,
+shivering, while Robin grinned no more and the fearful youth leaned
+wide-eyed to behold the singer, this strange, scarred face beneath its
+battered cock's-comb, these joyous eyes, these smiling lips as Jocelyn
+continued:
+
+ "Now ends my song with ghosts forlorn,
+ Three gibbering ghosts that mope and mourn,
+ Then shrieking, flee at breath of dawn,
+ Where creatures fell
+ In torment dwell,
+ Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl,
+ That rend and bite
+ And claw and fight.
+ Where fires red-hot
+ Consume them not,
+ And they in anguish
+ Writhe and languish
+ And groan in pain
+ For night again.
+ Sing hey for pale ghosts forlorn."
+
+Now when the song was ended, the three looked dismally on one another and,
+bethinking them of their cruel end, they groaned and sighed lamentably:
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, I like that song, it's fine;
+ But let me ask about this line:
+ "Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl."
+ Now tell me, please, if you don't mind,
+ Why were the little horrors blind?
+
+ MYSELF: The beastly things, as I surmise,
+ Had scratched out one another's eyes.
+
+ GILL:
+ I suppose this place where creatures fell
+ In torments dwell is meant for--
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Well,
+ I think, my Gill, the place you've guessed,
+ So let me get on with our Geste.
+
+... they groaned and sighed lamentably--
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interjecteth:
+
+ GILL: Father--now don't get in a huff--
+ But don't you think they've groaned enough?
+
+ MYSELF: My Gillian--no! Leave well alone;
+ This is the place for them to groan.
+
+ Lamentably they did together moan,
+ And uttered each full many a hollow groan.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: But, father, groans are so distressing,
+ And groans in verse are most depressing--
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Then peace, child, and in common prose
+ I'll let the poor rogues vent their woes:
+
+... they groaned and they sighed lamentably--
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: What, father, are they groaning still?
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Of course they are, and so they will,
+ And so shall I; so, girl, take heed,
+ And cease their groaning to impede.
+ Is it agreed?
+
+ GILL: Oh, yes, indeed!
+
+ MYSELF: Then with our Geste I will proceed.
+
+... they groaned and sighed lamentably.
+
+"Alack!" cried Gurth, "I had not greatly minded till now, but this
+vile-tongued Fool hath stirred Fear to wakefulness within me. Here's me,
+scarce thirty turned, hale and hearty, yet must die woefully and with a
+maid as do love me grievously!"
+
+"And me!" groaned Rick. "No more than twenty and five, I--a very lad--and
+with two maids as do languish for me fain and fond!"
+
+"Ha, and what o' me?" mourned dismal, redheaded Will. "A lusty, proper
+fellow I be and wi' maids a score as do sigh continual. And me to die--O
+woe! And I a tanner!"
+
+"Content ye, brothers!" said Jocelyn. "Look now, here's Gurth hath lived
+but thirty years, and now must die--good: so shall he die weighted with
+less of sin than had he lived thirty more. Be ye comforted in this,
+distressful rogues, the shorter our life the less we sin, the which is a
+fair, good thing. As for these shackles, though our bodies be 'prisoned our
+souls go free, thus, while we languish here, our souls astride a sunbeam
+may mount aloft, 'bove all pains and tribulations soever. Thus if we must
+dance together in noose, our souls, I say, escaping these fleshy bonds,
+shall wing away to freedom everlasting. Bethink ye of this, grievous
+knaves, and take heart. Regarding the which same truths I will, for thy
+greater comforting, incontinent make ye a song--hearken!
+
+ "Let Folly sing a song to cheer
+ All poor rogues that languish here,
+ Doomed in dismal dungeon drear,
+ Doomed in dungeon dim.
+
+ "Though flesh full soon beneath the sod
+ Doth perish and decay,
+ Though cherished body is but clod,
+ Yet in his soul man is a God,
+ To do and live alway.
+ So hence with gloom and banish fear,
+ Come Mirth and Jollity,
+ Since, though we pine in dungeon drear,
+ Though these, our bodies, languish here,
+ We in our minds go free."
+
+Thus cheerily sang Jocelyn until, chancing to see how the youth leaned
+forward great-eyed, watching as he sung, he broke off to question him
+blithely:
+
+"How now, good youth, hast a leaning to Folly e'en though Folly go
+fettered, and thyself in dungeon?"
+
+"Fool," answered the youth, soft-voiced, "me-thinks 't is strange Folly can
+sing thus in chains! Hast thou no fear of death?"
+
+"Why truly I love it no more than my fellow-fools. But I, being fool
+uncommon, am wise enough to know that Death, howsoe'er he come, may come
+but once--and there's a comfortable thought!"
+
+So saying, Jocelyn seated himself beside the youth and watched him
+keen-eyed.
+
+"And thou canst sing of Freedom, Fool, to the jangle of thy fetters?"
+
+"Truly, youth, 't is but my baser part lieth shackled, thus while body
+pineth here, soul walketh i' the kindly sun--aye, e'en now as I do gaze on
+thee, I, in my thought, do stand in a fair garden--beside a lily-pool,
+where she I love cometh shy-footed to meet me, tall and gracious and sweet,
+as her flowers. A dream, belike, yet in this dream she looketh on me with
+eyes of love and love is on her lips and in her heart--so is my dream very
+precious."
+
+At this, the youth shrank beneath his cloak while in an adjacent corner the
+three rolled dice with Robin and quarrelled hoarse and loud.
+
+"Youth," said Jocelyn, "I pray thee, tell me thy name."
+
+Without lifting head the youth answered:
+
+"Hugo!"
+
+"Look up, Hugo!" But Hugo bowed his head the lower.
+
+"Hast wondrous hair, Hugo--red gold 'neath thy hood!"
+
+Here came a slim, white hand to order the rebellious tress but, finding
+none, trembled and hid itself. Then very suddenly Jocelyn leaned near and
+caught this hand, clasping it fast yet with fingers very gentle, and spake
+quick and eager:
+
+"Hugo--alas, Hugo! What bringeth thee in this evil place? Art in danger?
+Speak, speak!"
+
+"Nay, here is no harm for me, Joconde. And I am hither come for sake of a
+poor Fool that is braver than the bravest--one did jeopardise his foolish
+life for sake of a maid, wherefore I, Hugo, do give him life. Take now this
+wallet, within is good store of gold and better--a potent charm to close
+all watchful eyes. Hist, Joconde, and mark me well! Ranulph o' the Axe is
+a mighty drinker--to-night, drawn by fame of thy wit, he cometh with his
+fellows. This money shall buy them wine, in the wine cast this powder so
+shall they sleep and thou go free."
+
+"Aye!" said Jocelyn, "and then?"
+
+"There will meet thee a dwarf shall free thee of thy fetters, and by secret
+ways set thee without the city--then, tarry not, but flee for thy life--"
+
+"Now by the Holy Rood!" quoth Jocelyn softly, "never in all this world was
+there prisoner so happy as this poor Fool! But, Hugo, an I win free by
+reason of a brave and noble lady, so long as she bide in Canalise, so long
+must I--"
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now I understand--
+ Of course, this Hugo is Yolande!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss, the fact is clear;
+ But how on earth did she get here?
+ I don't want her here--
+
+ GILL: Why not?
+
+ MYSELF: Because, being here, she spoils my plot,
+ Which would drive any author frantic--
+
+ GILL: I think it's fine, and most romantic.
+ Besides, you know, you wrote her there--
+
+ MYSELF: She came--before I was aware--
+
+ GILL: She couldn't, father, for just think,
+ You've made her all of pen and ink.
+ So you, of course, can make her do
+ Exactly as you want her to.
+
+ MYSELF: Dear innocent! You little know
+ The trials poor authors undergo.
+ How heroines, when they break loose,
+ Are apt to play the very deuce,
+ Dragging their authors to and fro,
+ And where he wills--they will not go.
+
+ GILL: Well, since she's here, please let her be,
+ She wants to set Duke Joc'lyn free.
+
+ MYSELF: Enough--enough, my plans are made,
+ I'll set him free without her aid,
+ And in a manner, I apprise you,
+ As will, I fancy, quite surprise you.
+ Besides, a dungeon no fit place is
+ For a dainty lady's graces.
+ So, since she's in, 't is very plain
+ I now must get her out again.
+"To bide in Canalise,'t is folly!" cried Hugo. "O,'t were a madness fond!"
+
+"Aye," sighed Jocelyn, "some do call love a madness--thus mad am I,
+forsooth!"
+
+"Hush!" whispered Hugo, as from without came the tramp of heavy feet.
+"Fare-thee-well and--ah, be not mad, Joconde!"
+
+The door creaked open, and six soldiers entered bringing a prisoner,
+chained and fettered, and therewith fast bound and gagged, whom they set
+ungently upon the stone floor; then straightway seizing upon Robin, they
+haled him to his feet.
+
+"Come, rogue," said one, "thou art to hang at cockcrow!"
+
+"Is't so, good fellows?" quoth Robin,
+
+ "Then cock be curst
+ That croweth first!
+
+As for thee, good Motley, peradventure when, by hangman's noose, our souls
+enfranchised go, they shall company together, thine and mine! Till then
+--farewell, Folly!"
+
+So Robin was led forth of the dungeon and the heavy door crashed shut; but
+when Jocelyn looked for Hugo--lo! he was gone also.
+
+Evening was come and the light began to fail, therefore Jocelyn crouched
+beneath the narrow loophole and taking from his bosom the wallet, found
+therein good store of money together with the charm or philtre: and bowing
+his head above this little wallet, he fell to profound meditation.
+
+But presently, roused by hoarse laughter, he glanced up to find the three
+plaguing the helpless prisoner with sundry kicks and buffets; so Jocelyn
+crossed the dungeon, and putting the tormentors aside, stood amazed to
+behold in this latest captive none other than Sir Pertinax. Straightway he
+loosed off the gag, whereupon the good knight incontinent swore a gasping
+oath and prayed his limbs might be loosed also; the which done, he
+forthwith sprang up, and falling on the astonished three, he beat and
+clouted them with fist and manacles, and drave them to and fro about the
+dungeon.
+
+"Ha, dogs! Wilt spurn me with they vile feet, buffet me with thy beastly
+hands, forsooth!" roared he and kicked and cuffed them so that they,
+thinking him mad, cried aloud in fear until Sir Pertinax, growing a-weary,
+seated himself against the wall, and folding his arms, scowled indignant
+upon Jocelyn who greeted him merrily:
+
+"Hail and greeting to thee, my Pertinax; thy gloomy visage is a joy!"
+
+Sir Pertinax snorted, but spake not; wherefore the Duke questioned him full
+blithe: "What fair, good wind hath blown thee dungeon-wards, sweet soul?"
+
+"Ha!" quoth the knight. "Fetters, see'st thou, a dungeon, and these foul
+knaves for company--the which cometh of thy fool's folly, messire! So
+prithee ha' done with it!"
+
+"Stay, gentle gossip, thou'rt foolish, methinks; thou frettest 'gainst
+fate, thou kickest unwisely 'gainst the pricks, thou ragest pitifully
+'gainst circumstance--in fine, thou'rt a very Pertinax, my Pertinax!"
+
+"Aye troth, that am I and no dog to lie thus chained in noisome pit, par
+Dex! So let us out, messire, and that incontinent!"
+
+"Why here is a bright thought, sweet lad, let us out forthwith--but how?"
+
+"Summon the town-reeve, messire, the burgesses, the council, declare thy
+rank, so shall we go free--none shall dare hold thus a prince of thy
+exalted state and potent might! Declare thyself, lord."
+
+"This were simple matter, Pertinax, but shall they believe us other than we
+seem, think ye?"
+
+Quoth Pertinax: "We can try!"
+
+"Verily," said Jocelyn, "this very moment!" So saying, he turned to the
+three who sat in a corner muttering together.
+
+"Good brothers, gentle rogues," said he, "behold and regard well this
+sturdy cut-throat fellow that sitteth beside me, big of body, unseemly of
+habit, fierce and unlovely of look--one to yield the wall unto, see ye! And
+yet--now heed me well, this fellow, ragged and unkempt, this ill-looking
+haunter of bye-ways, this furtive snatcher of purses (hold thy peace,
+Pertinax!). I say this unsavoury-seeming clapper-claw is yet neither one
+nor other, but a goodly knight, famous in battle, joust and tourney, a
+potent lord of noble heritage, known to the world as Sir Pertinax of Shene
+Castle and divers rich manors and demesnes. Furthermore, I that do seem a
+sorry jesting-fellow, I that in antic habit go, that cut ye capers with
+ass's ears a-dangle and languish here your fellow in bonds, am yet no
+antic, no poor, motley Fool, but a duke and lord of many fair towns
+and rich cities beyond Morfeville and the Southward March. How say ye,
+brothers?"
+
+"That thou'rt a fool!" quoth Rick.
+
+"True!" nodded Jocelyn.
+
+"Most true!" sighed Sir Pertinax.
+
+"And a liar!" growled Gurth.
+
+"And a murderous rogue!" cried Will, "and shall hang, along of us--as I'm a
+tanner!"
+
+"Alack, Sir Knight," smiled Jocelyn, "of what avail rank or fame or both
+'gainst a motley habit and a ragged mantle. Thus, Pertinax, thou art
+no more than what thou seemest, to wit--a poor, fierce rogue, and I, a
+beggarly stroller."
+
+"And like to have our necks stretched, lord, by reason of a fond and
+foolish whim!"
+
+"Unless, Pertinax, having naught to depend on but our native wit we, by our
+wit, win free. Other poor rogues in like case have broke prison ere now,
+and 'tis pity and shame in us if thou, a knight so potent and high-born,
+and I, a prince, may not do the like."
+
+"Messire, unlearned am I in the breaking o' prisons so when my time cometh
+to die in a noose I can but die as knight should--though I had rather 't
+were in honest fight."
+
+"Spoken like the very fool of a knight!" quoth Jocelyn. "So now will I
+show thee how by the wit of a brave and noble lady we may yet 'scape the
+hangman. Hearken in thine ear!"
+
+But, when Jocelyn had told him all and shown money and sleeping-charm, Sir
+Pertinax grew thoughtful, sighing deep and oft, yet speaking not, wherefore
+the Duke questioned him.
+
+"Good gossip, gasp not!" quoth he. "How think'st thou of prison-breaking
+now--expound!"
+
+ "Why, sir, I think when all do charmed and spellbound
+ snore,
+ Then will we shrewdly choke them that they wake
+ no more!"
+
+"Nay, Pertinax, here shall be no need of choking, forsooth!" Sir Pertinax
+bowed chin on fist and sighed again.
+
+"Pertinax, prithee puff not! Yet, an puff ye will, pronounce me then the
+why and wherefore of thy puffing."
+
+"Lord, here is neither gasp nor puff, here is honest sighing. I can sigh as
+well as another."
+
+"Since when hast learned this so tender art, my Pertinax?"
+
+"And I do sigh by reason of memory."
+
+"As what, Pertinax?"
+
+"Eyes, lord--her eyes so darkly bright and, as I do think--black!"
+
+"Nay, blue, Pertinax--blue as heaven!"
+
+"Black, messire, black as--as black!"
+
+"Blue, boy, blue!"
+
+"Lord, they are black!"
+
+"Speak'st thou of Yolande?"
+
+"Messire, of one I speak, but whom, I know not. She came to me i' the
+greenwood as I sat a-fishing. Her hair long and black--ay, black and
+curled, her eyes dark, and for beauty ne'er saw I her like."
+
+"And yet hast seen my Lady Yolande oft!"
+
+"Her voice, messire, her voice soft and sweet as the murmur of waters, and
+very full of allure."
+
+"Why, how now!" cried Jocelyn. "Art thou--thou, my Pertinax, become
+at last one of Cupid's humble following? All joy to thee, my lovely
+lover--here in truth is added bond betwixt us! For since thou dost love a
+maid, even as I do love a maid, so being lovers twain needs must we love
+each other the better therefore."
+
+"Nay, out alack, my lord!" sighed Sir Pertinax. "For though I do love her,
+she, by reason o' my ill-favoured looks, the which, woe's me, I may not
+alter, loveth not me, as I do judge."
+
+"How judge ye this?"
+
+"Lord, she giveth me hard names. She, all in a breath, hath pictured me
+thus: 'Hooked of nose, fierce-eyed, of aspect grim--ungentle, unlovely,
+harsh o' tongue, dour o' visage, hard o' heart, flinty o' soul and of
+manners rude.'"
+
+"Good! But was this all, my Pertinax?"
+
+"Nay, lord, and with a wannion--there was more to like purpose."
+
+"Excellent, my lovely knight--let hope sing in thee. For look now, if she
+named thee hooked of nose, fierce-eyed and of aspect grim--she speaketh
+very truth, for so thou art, my Pertinax. Now truth is a fair virtue in man
+or maid, so is she both virtuous and fair! Nay, puff not, sighful Pertinax,
+but for thy comforting mark this--she hath viewed and heeded thy outward
+man narrowly--so shall she not forget thee soon; she with woman's eye hath
+marked the great heart of thee through sorry habit and rusty mail, and
+found therein the love thy harsh tongue might not utter; and thus,
+methinks, she hath thee in mind--aye, even now, mayhap. Lastly, good,
+lovely blunderbore--mark this! 'Tis better to win a maid's anger than she
+should heed thee none at all. Let love carol i' thy heart and be ye worthy,
+so, when ye shall meet again, 'tis like enough, despite thy hooked nose,
+she shall find thine eyes gentle, thy unloveliness lovely, thy harsh tongue
+wondrous tender and thy flinty soul the soul of a man."
+
+"Why, faith, lord," quoth Pertinax, his grim lips softening to a smile,
+"despite her words, she spake in voice full sweet, and her eyes--ah,
+messire, her eyes were wondrous kind--gentle eyes--aye, her eyes were--"
+
+"Eyes, my Pertinax--black eyes!"
+
+"And gentle! By which same token, lord, she did give to me this token--this
+most strange trinket."
+
+But all at once, was the creak of hinges, and the ponderous door opening,
+Ranulph o' the Axe appeared, followed by divers of the warders bearing
+torches.
+
+"Oho!" sighed Ranulph, doleful of visage. "Aha, good bawcocks, here come
+I, and these my fellows, for love o' thee, good Fool, thy quips, thy
+quirks, thy songs and antics capersome. For troth I'm a merry dog, I--a
+wanton wag, a bully boy and jovial, though woeful o' look!"
+
+"Wherefore woeful!"
+
+"For that I am not joyous, good Motley. Look 'ee--here's me born with a
+rare, merry heart, but sad and sober of head! Here's a heart bubbling with
+kindliness and soft and tender as sucking lamb, wedded to head and face
+full o' gloom! Here's laughter within me and woe without me, so am I ever
+at odds with myself--and there's my sorrow. Regarding the which same I will
+now chaunt ye song I made on myself; 'twas meant for merry song and blithe,
+but of itself turned mournful song anon as ye shall hear."
+
+So saying, Ranulph o' the Axe threw back grim head and sang gruff, albeit
+plaintive, thus:
+
+ "O! merry I am and right merry I'll be,
+ Ho-ho for block, gibbet and rack--oho!
+ To hang or behead ye there's none like to me,
+ For I'm headsman, tormentor, and hangman, all three,
+ And never for work do I lack--oho!
+
+ "I live but to torture since torment's my trade,
+ But my torment well meant is, I trow;
+ If I hang or behead ye, it can't be gainsaid,
+ Though my head for the head of a headsman was made,
+ Still I'm all loving-kindness below.
+
+ "But if ever I strive merry story to tell,
+ Full of japeful and humorsome graces,
+ 'T is as though I were tolling a funeral bell
+ As if dismally, dolefully tolling a knell,
+ So solemn and sad grow all faces.
+
+ "I hang, burn and torture the best that I may,
+ Ho pincers and thumbscrews and rack--oho!
+ And all heads I cut off in a headsmanlike way;
+ So I'll hang, burn and torment 'till cometh the day
+ That my kind heart within me shall crack--oho!
+ Well-a-wey! Well-a-wey!
+ Woe is me for the day
+ That my poor heart inside me shall crack! Oho!
+
+"So there's my song! 'T is dull song and, striving to be merry song, is sad
+song, yet might be worse song, for I have heard a worse song, ere now--but
+'t is poor song. So come, Fool, do thou sing us merry song to cheer us
+'gainst my sad song."
+
+"Why truly, Sir Headsman," said Jocelyn, "here be songs a-many, yet if thou
+'rt for songs, songs will we sing thee, each and every of us. But first,
+behold here is money shall buy us wine in plenty that we may grow merry
+withal in very sooth."
+
+"Oho!" cried Ranulph. "Spoken like a noble Motley, a fair, sweet Fool! Go
+thou, Bertram, obey this lord-like Fool--bring wine, good wine and much,
+and haste thee, for night draweth on and at cock-crow I must away."
+
+"Aye," nodded Jocelyn, "in the matter of one--Robin?"
+
+"Verily, Fool. A cheery soul is Robin, though an outlaw, and well beloved
+in Canalise. So is he to hang at cock-crow lest folk make disturbance."
+
+"Where lieth he now?"
+
+"Where but in the watch-house beside the gallows 'neath Black Lewin's
+charge. But come, good Motley, sing--a pretty song, a merry ditty, ha!"
+
+So forthwith Jocelyn took his lute and sang:
+
+ "With dainty ditty
+ Quaint and pretty
+ I will fit ye,
+ So heed and mark me well,
+ And who we be
+ That here ye see
+ Now unto ye
+ Explicit I will tell:
+
+ "Then here first behold one Gurth, a worthy, dying
+ Dyer,
+ Since he by dyeing liveth, so to dye is his desire:
+ For being thus a very Dyer, he liveth but to dye,
+ And dyeing daily he doth all his daily wants
+ supply.
+ Full often hath he dyed ere now to earn his
+ daily bread,
+ Thus, dyeing not, this worthy Dyer must soon,
+ alas! be dead.
+
+ "Here's Rick--a saintly ploughman, he
+ Hath guided plough so well,
+ That here, with rogues the like of me,
+ He pines in dungeon cell.
+
+ "Here's Red-haired Will--O fie!
+ That Will should fettered lie
+ In such base, cruel manner!
+ For though his hair be red,
+ Brave Will, when all is said,
+ Is--hark 'ee--Will's a tanner!"
+
+"Enough, Fool!" cried Will. "An thou must sing, sing of thyself, for
+thyself, to thyself, and I will sing of myself an' need be!"
+
+Laughed JOCELYN:
+
+ Why then, brave Will,
+ Come, sing thy fill.
+
+Whereupon Will cleared his throat, squared his shoulders, and rumbling a
+note or so to fix the key, burst into songful roar:
+
+ "A tanner I, a lusty man,
+ A tanner men call Will,
+ And being tanner true, I tan,
+ Would I were tanning still;
+ Ho derry, derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ Would I were tanning still."
+
+"Aye, verily!" growled Sir Pertinax. "And choked in thy vile tan-pit, for
+scurvier song was never heard, par Dex!"
+
+"Why 'tis heard, forsooth," said Jocelyn, "and might be heard a mile hence!
+Chant on, brave Will."
+
+The Tanner, nothing loth, wiped his mouth, clenched his fists and standing
+square and rigid, continued:
+
+ "How gaily I a-tanning went,
+ No tanner blithe as I,
+ No tanner e'er so innocent,
+ Though here in chains I lie.
+ Ho derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ In grievous chains I lie.
+
+ "No more, alack, poor Will will tan,
+ Since Will will, all unwilling,
+ Though tanner he and proper man,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.
+ Hey derry down,
+ Ho derry down,
+ A gloomy grave be filling."
+
+"Now out upon thee, Tanner!" sighed Ranulph. "Here's sad song, a song o'
+graves, and therefore most unlovely, a song I--Saints and Angels!" he
+gasped:
+
+ And pointed where Sir Pertinax did stand,
+ The Heart of Crystal shining in his hand.
+ "The Heart-in-Heart! The Crystal Heart!" cried he,
+ And crying thus, sank down on bended knee,
+ While jailers all and scurvy knaves, pell-mell,
+ Betook them to their marrow-bones as well;
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax oped wond'ring eyes,
+ And questioned him 'twixt anger and surprise.
+ Then answered Ranulph, "Sir, though chained ye go,
+ Yet to thee we do all obedience owe
+ By reason of that sacred amulet,
+ That crystal heart in heart of crystal set:
+
+ 'For he that holdeth Crystal Heart
+ Holdeth all and every part,
+ And by night or eke by day
+ The Heart-in-Heart all must obey!"'
+
+ "Obey?" quoth Pertinax. "Ha! Let us see
+ If in thy vaunt there aught of virtue be:
+ For by this Heart of Crystal that I bear,
+ I charge ye loose the chains the Fool doth wear,
+ Then off with these accursed gyves of mine,
+ Or--"
+
+ Ranulph to the warders gave a sign,
+ And they to work did go with such good speed,
+ That Joc'lyn soon with Pertinax stood freed,
+ "Now by my halidome!" quoth Pertinax,
+ "This talisman methinks no magic lacks,
+ So knaves, I bid ye--by this magic Heart,
+ Draw bolt and bar that hence we may depart--"
+ But now the scurvy knaves made dismal cry.
+ "Good sir!" they wailed, "Ah, leave us not to die!"
+ "Aye, by Heav'n's light!" fierce quoth Sir Pertinax,
+ "Ye're better dead by gibbet or by axe,
+ Since naught but scurvy, coward rogues are ye,
+ And so be hanged--be hanged to ye, all three!"
+
+ "Knight!" Joc'lyn sighed, "'neath Heaven's light
+ somewhere
+ Doth live a dark-eyed maid with black-curled hair--
+ Her voice is soft and full of sweet allure,
+ And thou, perchance, one day may humbly woo her;
+ So these poor rogues now woo their lives of thee,
+ Show mercy then and mercy find of she."
+
+ At this Sir Pertinax rubbed chin and frowned,
+ Red grew his cheek, his fierce eyes sought the ground,
+ Then, even as he thus pinched chin and scowled,
+ "Loose, then, the dismal knaves!" at last he
+ growled.
+ But now grim Ranulph tangled beard tore
+ And wrung his hands and sighed and groaned and
+ swore
+ With loud complaints and woeful lamentations,
+ With muttered oaths and murmured objurgations,
+ With curses dire and impious imprecations.
+
+"Beshrew me, masters all!" quoth he. "Now here's ill prank to play a poor
+hangman, may I ne'er quaff good liquor more, let me languish o' the
+quartern ague and die o' the doleful dumps if I ever saw the like o' this!
+For look 'ee now, if I set these three rogues free, how may I hang 'em as
+hang 'em I must, since I by hanging live to hang again, and if I don't
+hang 'em whom shall I hang since hang I must, I being hangman? Bethink ye
+o' this, sirs, and show a little pity to a poor hangman."
+
+"Why then, mark ye this, hangman," said Jocelyn, "since on hanging doth thy
+hangman's reputation hang, then hang thou must; therefore, an ye lack rogue
+to hang, go hang thyself, so, hanging, shall thy hanging be done with and
+thou having lived a hangman, hangman die, thus, hangman hanging hangman,
+hangman hanging shall be hangman still, and being still, thus hanging,
+shall hang no more."
+
+"Aye, verily!" quoth Sir Pertinax, "there it is in a nutshell--hangman, be
+hanged to thee! So off with their fetters, Master Gallows, by Crystal Heart
+I charge thee!"
+
+Hereupon the scurvy knaves were freed, to their great joy, and following
+the bold knight, made haste to quit their gloomy dungeon. Reaching the
+guardroom above, Sir Pertinax called lustily for sword and bascinet, and
+thereafter chose divers likely weapons for his companions who, with axe and
+pike and guisarme on shoulder, followed him out into the free air.
+
+Now it was night and very dark, but Gurth, who was a man of the town,
+brought them by dim and lonely alleys and crooked ways until at last they
+halted within a certain dark and narrow street.
+
+"Whither now?" questioned Sir Pertinax.
+
+"Verily," said Jocelyn, "where but to the gatehouse--"
+
+"Not so," muttered Gurth, "'tis overly well guarded--"
+
+"Aye," growled Will, "which is true, as I'm a tanner!"
+
+"Howbeit," said Jocelyn, "I'm for the gatehouse!"
+
+"And wherefore?" demanded Sir Pertinax.
+
+"In cause of one Rob, a robber."
+
+"Aye, but," said Gurth, "he is to hang at crow-o'-cock and 'tis nigh
+cock-crow now."
+
+"The more need for haste," said Jocelyn.
+
+ But, even now, as they together spoke,
+ A sullen tramp the sleeping echoes woke,
+ Behind them in the gloom dim forms they saw,
+ While others grimly barred the way before;
+ And so, by reason that they could not fly,
+ They grasped their weapons and prepared to die.
+ Then in the darkness of that narrow street,
+ Broad axe and pike and flashing sword did meet.
+ Duke Jocelyn full many a thrust drave home,
+ Till whirling pike-staff smote him on cock's-comb,
+ And staggering back to an adjacent wall,
+ In deep-sunk doorway groaning he did fall.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: Now, father, please don't let him die--
+
+ MYSELF: No, no, indeed, my Gill, not I,
+ My heroes take a lot of killing--
+
+ GILL: Then go on quick, it's very thrilling!
+ I hope he vanquishes his foes,
+ And let him do it, please, in prose.
+
+"O woe!" said a quavering voice. "Alack, and well-a-wey--"
+
+My daughter GILLIAN demurreth:
+
+ GILL: No, father--that's not right at all.
+ You'd got to where you'd made him fall.
+
+ MYSELF: Well, then, Duke Joc'lyn, from his swoon awaking,
+ Found that his head confoundedly was aching;
+ Found he was bruised all down from top to toe--
+
+ GILL: A bruise, father, and he a duke? No, no!
+ Besides, you make
+ A frightful mistake--
+ A hero's head should never ache;
+ And, father, now, whoever knew
+ A hero beaten black and blue?
+ And then a bruise, it seems to me,
+ Is unromantic as can be.
+ He can't be bruised,
+ And shan't be bruised,
+ For, if you bruise him,
+ And ill-use him,
+ I'll refuse him--
+ No reader, I am sure, would choose
+ A hero any one can bruise.
+ So, father, if you want him read,
+ Don't bruise him, please--
+
+ MYSELF: Enough is said!
+
+At this, Jocelyn sat up and wondered to find himself in a small chamber
+dim-lit by a smoking cresset. On one side of him leaned an ancient woman,
+a very hag-like dame
+
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below;
+
+and upon his other side a young damsel of a wondrous dark beauty.
+
+"Lady," said he, "where am I?"
+
+"Hush, poor Motley!" whispered the maid. "Thou didst fall 'gainst the door
+yonder. But speak low, they that seek thy life may yet be nigh."
+
+"Nay, then," quoth Jocelyn, reaching for his sword, "I must out and aid my
+comrades."
+
+"Alack!" sighed the old woman. "Thy comrades do without lie all slain save
+one that groaneth--hearken!"
+
+"O, woe!" mourned a quavering voice beyond the door. "O, woe, sore hurted I
+be, and like to die--and I a tanner!"
+
+Very heedfully, Jocelyn unbarred the door, and peering into the narrow
+street, found it deserted and empty save for certain outstretched forms
+that stirred not; looking down on these dim shapes he knew one for Rick the
+Ploughman, whose ploughing days were sped and, huddled in a corner hard by,
+he found Will the Tanner, who groaned fitfully; but of Sir Pertinax and
+Gurth he saw nothing. So Jocelyn made shift to bear the Tanner within the
+house, and here Will, finding his hurts of small account, sat up, and while
+the wise old woman bandaged his wound, answered Jocelyn's eager questions,
+and told how Sir Pertinax and Gurth the Dyer had broken through their
+assailants and made good their escape.
+
+Now, when the old woman had thus cherished their hurts, Jocelyn would
+fain have given her money, but she mumbled and mowed and cracked her
+finger-joints and shook grey head.
+
+"Not so, good Fool!" she croaked, "for I do know thee for that same gentle
+Motley did save me from Black Lewin--a murrain seize him! So now will I
+save thee--behold!" So saying she set bony hand to wall; and lo! in the
+wall yawned a square opening narrow and dark, whence issued a cold wind.
+"Begone, thou brave merryman!" quoth she. "Yonder safety lieth; this
+darksome way shall carry thee out beneath the city wall!"
+
+"Gramercy, thou kindly Witch!" said Jocelyn. "Yet first must I to the
+watch-house beside the gate for one Robin that lieth 'prisoned there."
+
+"How, Fool, dost mean Robin-a-Green that is to hang?"
+
+"In truth!"
+
+"But Rob o' the Green is outlawed, banned o' Church, a very rogue!"
+
+"But a man, wherefore I would save him alive."
+
+"Nay, Fool, o' thy folly be wise and seek ye safety instead. Would'st peril
+thy body for a thief?"
+
+"Verily, dame, even as I did for a Witch."
+
+Now, here the old woman scowled and mumbled and cracked her finger-bones
+angrily. But the beauteous young maid viewed Jocelyn with bright, approving
+eyes:
+
+"But, Fool," cried she, "O wondrous Fool, wilt adventure thyself in cause
+so desperate?"
+
+"Blithely, fair lady!"
+
+"But, alas! the guards be many and thou but one--"
+
+"Nay!" cried a voice:
+
+ "For thou may'st see
+ That two are we!"
+
+And forth of the dark opening in the wall strode Lobkyn Lollo the Dwarf,
+his great, spiked club on brawny shoulder. Jocelyn viewed the monstrous
+little man in awed wonder; but beholding his mighty girth and determined
+aspect, wonder changed to kindliness; quoth he:
+
+"Fair greeting, comrade! If thou'rt for a little bickering and disputation
+with that goodly club o' thine, come thy ways for methinks I do smell the
+dawn."
+
+"Aha, thou naughty little one!" cried the Witch, shaking bony fist. "Art
+for fighting for rogue's life along of a Fool, then?"
+
+Quoth LOBKYN:
+
+ Aye, grannam, though ye slap me, still,
+ Fight and aid this Fool I will--
+
+"And talking o' Will," quoth Will, "what o' me, for though I'm a tanner I'm
+a man, aye, verily, as I'm a tanner."
+
+"And methinks a better man than tanner!" said Jocelyn. "So here we stand
+three goodly wights and well armed. Let's away--"
+
+"Nay, then, wild Madcap," croaked the Witch, "an my Lobkyn go I go, and,
+though I be old and feeble, shalt find my craft more potent than sword or
+club--wait!"
+
+Here the old woman, opening a dingy cupboard, took thence a small crock
+over which she muttered spells and incantations with look and gesture so
+evil that Lobkyn eyed her askance, Will the Tanner cowered and whispered
+fragments of prayers, and even Jocelyn crossed himself.
+
+"Come!" croaked the Witch. "Now do I go to save rogue from gallows for sake
+of thee, tall Fool. Come ye, come and do as I bid ye in all things--come!"
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 6
+
+ Tells how for Robin a good fight was fought
+ And our old Witch a spell mysterious wrought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Phoebus, the young and gladsome god of day,
+ His fiery steeds had yoked to flaming car
+ (By which, my Gill, you may surmise
+ The sun was just about to rise)
+ And that be-feathered, crook-billed harbinger,
+ The rosy-wattled herald of the dawn,
+ Red comb aflaunt, bold-eyed and spurred for strife,
+ Brave Chanticleer, his strident summons raised
+ (By which fine phrase I'd have you know,
+ The cock had just begun to crow)
+ And gentle Zephyr, child of Boreas,
+ Stole soft the hush of dewy leaves,
+ And passing kissed the flowers to wakefulness.
+ Thus, laden with their sweetness, Zephyr came
+ O'er hill and dale, o'er battlement and wall,
+ Into the sleeping town of Canalise,
+ Through open lattice and through prison-bars,
+ To kiss the cheek of sleeping Innocence
+ And fevered brows of prisoners forlorn,
+ Who, stirring 'neath sweet Zephyr's soft caress,
+ Dreamed themselves young, with all their sins unwrought.
+ So, gentle Zephyr, messenger of dawn,
+ Fresh as the day-spring, of earth redolent,
+ Through narrow loophole into dungeon stole,
+ Where Robin the bold outlaw fettered lay,
+ Who, sighing, woke to feel her fragrant kiss,
+
+
+ And, breathing in this perfume-laden air,
+ He seemed to smell those thousand woodland scents
+ He oft had known, yet, knowing, never heeded:
+ Of lofty bracken, golden in the sun,
+ Of dewy violets shy that bloomed dim-seen
+ Beside some merry-laughing, woodland brook
+ Which, bubbling, with soft music filled the air;
+ The fragrant reek of smouldering camp-fire
+ Aglow beside some dark, sequestered pool
+ Whose placid waters a dim mirror made
+ To hold the glister of some lonely star;
+ He seemed to see again in sunny glade
+ The silky coats of yellow-dappled deer,
+ With branching antlers gallantly upborne;
+ To hear the twang of bow, the whizz of shaft,
+ And cheery sound of distant-winded horn.
+ Of this and more than this, bold Robin thought,
+ And, in his dungeon's gloomy solitude,
+ He groaned full deep and, since no eye could see,
+ Shed bitter tears.
+
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN supplicateth:
+
+ GILL: Poor Robin! Father, promise me
+ To save him from the gallows-tree.
+ He's much too nice a man to kill;
+ So save him, father; say you will!
+
+ MYSELF: But think of poor Ranulph with no one to hang!
+
+ GILL: Ranulph's song was top-hole, but--
+
+ MYSELF: You know I hate slang--
+
+ GILL: Yes, father--but then I hate Ranulph much more,
+ With his nasty great beard that in tangles he wore.
+ So, father, if you must have some one to slay,
+ Instead of poor Robin, hang Ranulph--
+
+ MYSELF: Why, pray?
+
+ GILL: In nice books the nasty folks only should die;
+ Those are the kind of books nice people buy.
+ I like a book that makes me glad,
+ And loathe a book that makes me sad;
+ So, as this Geste is made for me,
+ Make it as happy as can be.
+
+ MYSELF: And is it, so far, as you'd wish?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, though it's rather swish,
+ I think it needs a deal more love--
+
+ MYSELF: Swish? How--what's this? Great heavens
+ above!
+ Will you, pray, miss, explain to me
+ How any story "swish" may be?
+ And why, my daughter, you must choose
+ A frightful word like "swish" to use?
+ What hideous language are you talking?
+
+ GILL: Sorrow, father! "Swish" means "corking."
+ I think our Geste is "out of sight,"
+ Except that, to please me, you might
+ Put in more love--
+
+ MYSELF: Now, how can Joc'lyn go love-making
+ When his head is sore and aching?
+ Besides, this is no place to woo;
+ He'll love-make when I want him to.
+
+ GILL: But, father, think--in all this time,
+ In all this blank-verse, prose and rhyme,
+ The fair Yolande he's never kissed,
+ And you've done nothing to assist;
+ And, as I'm sure they're both inclined,
+ I think your treatment most unkind.
+
+ MYSELF: This Geste I'll write in my own way,
+ That is, sweet Prattler, if I may;
+ When I'm ready for them to kiss,
+ Then kiss they shall; I promise this.
+ Now I'll to Rob return, if you,
+ My Gillian, will permit me to!
+
+ Thus in his prison pent, poor woeful Rob,
+ Since none might see or hear, scorned not to sob,
+ And mightily, in stricken heart, did grieve
+ That he so soon so fair a world must leave.
+ And all because the morning wind had brought
+ Earth's dewy fragrance with sweet mem'ries fraught.
+ So Robin wept nor sought his grief to stay,
+ Yearning amain for joys of yesterday;
+ Till, hearing nigh the warder's heavy tread,
+ He sobbed no more but strove to sing instead.
+
+ "A bow for me, a bow for me,
+ All underneath the greenwood tree,
+ Where slaves are men, and men are free;
+ Give me a bow!
+
+ "Give me a bow, a bow of yew,
+ Good hempen cord and arrows true,
+ When foes be thick and friends be few,
+ Give me a bow!"
+
+Thus cheerily sang Robin the while he dried his bitter tears, as the
+door of his prison was flung wide and Black Lewin strode in and with him
+men-at-arms bearing torches.
+
+"What ho, rogue Robin!" cried he. "The cock hath crowed. Ha! Will ye sing,
+knave, will ye sing, in faith?"
+
+"In faith, that will I!" laughed Robin.
+
+"Here come we to bring ye to the gallows, Robin--how say ye?"
+
+"The more reason for singing since my singing must soon be done!" So, with
+pikemen before him and behind, bold Robin marched forth to die, yet sang
+full blithely as he went:
+
+ "So lay my bones 'neath good yew-tree,
+ Thus Rob and yew soon one shall be,
+ Where all true men may find o' we
+ A trusty bow!"
+
+"Ha' done!" growled Black Lewin, shivering in the chilly air of dawn.
+"Quit--quit thy singing, rogue, or by the foul fiend I--"
+
+"Who dareth name the fiend?" croaked an awful voice, whereat Black Lewin
+halted, gaped and stood a-tremble, while beneath steel cap and bascinet
+all men's hair stirred and rose with horror; for before them was a ghastly
+shape, a shape that crouched in the gloom with dreadful face aflame with
+smouldering green fire.
+
+"Woe!" cried the voice. "Woe unto thee, Lewin the Black, that calleth on
+fiend o' the pit!"
+
+And now came a fiery hand that, hovering in the air, pointed lambent finger
+at gaping Lewin and at each of the shivering pike-men in turn.
+
+"Woe--sorrow and woe to one and all, ye men of blood, plague and pest, pain
+o' flesh, and grief of soul seize ye, be accursed and so--begone! Hence
+ho--away!
+
+ "Rommani hi! Avaunt, I say,
+ Prendraxon!
+ Thus direst curse on ye I lay
+ Shall make flesh shrink and bone decay,
+ To rot and rot by night and day
+ Till flesh and bone do fall away,
+ Mud unto mud and clay to clay.
+ A spell I cast,
+ Shall all men blast.
+ Hark ye,
+ Mark ye,
+ Rommani hi--prendraxon!"
+
+Down fell pike and guisarme from nerveless fingers and, gasping with fear,
+Black Lewin and his fellows turned and fled nor stayed for one look
+behind; only Robin stood there (since he might not run away by reason of
+his bonds) babbling prayers between chattering teeth and with all his
+fingers crossed.
+
+"Oho, Fool, aha!" cried the voice. "Thus have I, a poor, feeble old woman,
+wrought better than all thy valiance or Lobkyn's strength. So, by potency
+of my spells and magic are we quits, thou and I. Bring, then, thy rogue
+outlaw and haste ye!"
+
+So saying the old Witch muffled her awful, fiery face in ragged mantle and
+turned away; and in that moment Robin was aware of three forms about him in
+the grey dawn-light, felt his bonds loosed off by quick, strong hands and
+drew a great, joyous breath.
+
+"How, Fool, thou brave and noble Motley," quoth he, "is it thou again? And
+I to live?"
+
+"Aye, marry, Robin! But come apace, the day breaketh and the city is
+astir--hark to yon shouts! Follow!"
+
+So with the Tanner on one side and Lobkyn on the other, Robin ran, hard on
+Jocelyn's heels; and ever the dawn brightened until up came the sun chasing
+away sullen shadow and filling street and alley with his glory.
+
+But now, and just as they reached that narrow street where safety lay,
+they heard a shout, a scream, a rush of feet and roar of fierce voices and
+beheld, amid a surge of armed men, the old woman struggling in the cruel
+grip of Black Lewin who (like many others I wot of, my Gill) was brave
+enough by daylight. Vainly the old creature strove, screaming for mercy as
+Black Lewin whirled aloft his sword; but his blade clashed upon another as
+Jocelyn sprang, and for a while the air rang with the sound of fierce-
+smiting steel until, throwing up his arms, Black Lewin fell and lay there.
+But, roaring vengeance, the soldiery closed about Jocelyn who, beset by
+blows on every side, sank in turn, yet, even as he fell, two short though
+mighty legs bestrode his prostrate form and Lobkyn Lollo, whirling huge
+club, smote down the foremost assailant and, ever as he smote, he
+versified and chanted--thus:
+
+ "I'm Lollo hight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I,
+ I'm Lollo hight,
+ 'Tis my delight
+ By day or night
+ In honest fight
+ With main and might
+ Good blows to smite,
+ And where they light
+ 'Tis sorry plight
+ For that poor wight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+
+ "Bows, swords and staves,
+ Come, lusty knaves,
+ And fit for graves
+ Brave Lobkyn soon will make ye;
+ So fight, say I,
+ Nor turn and fly,
+ Or, when ye die,
+ Then may old Horny take ye."
+
+Fierce raged the conflict, but in that narrow street they made good play
+against their many assailants, the valiant Dwarf's mighty club, backed by
+the Tanner's darting pike and Robin's flashing sword, which he had
+snatched from a loosened grasp. But Jocelyn lay prone upon his face,
+between Lobkyn's firm-planted feet, and stirred not. So club whirled,
+sword flashed and pike darted while, high above the tumult, rose Lobkyn's
+fierce chant:
+
+ "Hot blood I quaff,
+ At death I laugh,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+ Come all that may,
+ And all I'll slay,
+ And teach ye how to die."
+
+"Lob--Lobkyn!" screamed the Witch. "Thou that drinkest nought but
+milk--talk not of blood, thou naughty poppet. Back now--stand back, I do
+command thee!"
+
+Lobkyn smote a man to earth and, sighing regretful, stepped aside.
+
+ "Back!" screamed the Witch. "Stand back, I say, all three,
+ And leave this wicked rabblement to me.
+ Now shall they learn the terror of my curse,
+ Black magic shall they feel--and something worse!"
+
+ Then uttered she a sudden, hideous cry,
+ And, leaping, whirled her bony hands on high,
+ And lo! a choking dust-cloud filled the air;
+ That wreathed in whirling eddies here and there.
+
+ "Perendewix!" she cried. "Oh Radzywin--
+ Thraxa! Behold, my witchcraft doth begin!"
+ Back shrank their foes, back reeled they one and all,
+ They choked, they gasped, they let their weapons fall;
+ And some did groan, and some did fiercely sneeze,
+ And some fell prone, some writhed upon their knees;
+ Some strove to wipe the tears from blinded eyes,
+ But one and all gave voice to awful cries.
+
+"Come!" cried the Witch, "to the door--the door. Lobkyn, bear ye the brave
+Fool--and tenderly! Haste, naughty bantling, haste--I hear the tread of
+more soldiers!"
+
+So Lobkyn stooped and, lifting Jocelyn's inanimate form, tucked it beneath
+one arm, and with Robin and Will the Tanner, followed the old Witch into
+the house.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN commandeth:
+
+ GILL: Go on, father, do; why will you keep stopping?
+ I think the old Witch is just perfectly topping.
+ And what frightful words she uses for curses!
+
+ MYSELF: Very frightful, indeed, though your slang still much worse is,
+ With your "topping," "top-holing," your "swishing" and "clipping,"
+
+ GILL: Well, I merely intended to say it was ripping;
+ But, if you object to my praises--
+
+ MYSELF: I only object to your phrases,
+ For there's no author but will own
+ He "liveth not by bread alone."
+ As for myself, if what I write
+ Doth please--then praise with all your might.
+
+ GILL: Well, then, the Witch is splendid, though
+ I'm very curious to know
+ Just how her face all fiery grew,
+ And what the stuff was that she threw--
+ The stuff that made the soldiers sneeze
+ And brought them choking to their knees
+ It sounds as though it might be snuff.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, they'd not found out such stuff.
+ But grisly witches long ago
+ Did many strange devices know.
+ Indeed, my Gill, they knew much more
+ Than wise folk gave them credit for.
+
+ GILL: Well, what was it? You haven't said.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll get on with our Geste instead.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 7
+
+ That telleth to the patient reader nought,
+ Save how the Duke was to the wild-wood brought.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ With sleepy eyes Duke Jocelyn watched afar,
+ In deep, blue void a solitary star,
+ That, like some bright and wakeful eye, did seem
+ To watch him where he lay 'twixt sleep and dream.
+ And, as he viewed it winking high above,
+ He needs must think of Yolande and his love,
+ And how, while he this twinkling star did view,
+ She, wakeful lying, might behold it too,
+ Whereas she lay a spotless maid and fair,
+ Clothed in the red-gold glory of her hair;
+ And, thinking thus, needs must he fondly sigh,
+ Then frowned to hear a lusty snore hard by--
+
+--and looking whence came this sound, the Duke sat up and his wonder grew;
+for by light of a fire that glowed in a blackened fissure of rock he beheld
+himself couched on a bed of bracken within a roomy cave. Beside the fire
+leaned a mighty, iron-shod club, and beyond this, curled up like a dog,
+snored Lobkyn Lollo, the Dwarf. Hereupon Jocelyn reached out and shook Lob
+to wakefulness, who grunted sleepily, rubbed his eyes drowsily and yawned
+mightily:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Good Dwarf, where am I?
+
+ Answered LOBKYN:
+ Safe, Fool, safe art thou, I trow,
+ Where none but Lob and friends do know.
+
+ JOCELYN: But how am I hither?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, truly thou art hither, Fool,
+ Because thou art not thither, Fool!
+ In these two arms, thy life to save,
+ I bore thee to this goodly cave.
+
+ JOCELYN: How may one of thy inches bear man of mine so far?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, though I of inches lack,
+ I'm mighty strong, both arm and back,
+ Thou that art longer man than me,
+ Yet I am stronger man than thee,
+ Though, lusty Fool, big fool you be,
+ I'd bear thee, Fool, if thou wert three.
+ And mark, Fool, if my grammar seemeth weak,
+ Pray license it since I in verse must speak.
+
+ JOCELYN: And pray why must thou speak in verse?
+
+ LOBKYN: Nature hath on me laid this curse,
+ And, though to speak plain prose I yearn,
+ My prose to verse doth ever turn.
+ Therefore I grieve, as well I might,
+ Because of my poetic plight--
+ Though bards and rhymers all I scorn,
+ Alack! I was a rhymer born.
+
+ JOCELYN: Alack! poor Dwarf, as thou must versify,
+ By way of courtesy, then, so will I.
+
+ LOBKYN: How, Fool, then canst thou rhyme?
+
+ JOCELYN: Aye, Dwarf, at any time!
+ In dark, in light,
+ By day, by night,
+ Standing, sitting,
+ As be fitting,
+ Verses witty,
+ Quaint or pretty,
+ Incontinent I'll find.
+ Verses glad, Dwarf,
+ Verses sad, Dwarf,
+ Every sort, Lob,
+ Long or short, Lob
+ Or verses ill,
+ Yet verses still
+ Which might be worse,
+ I can rehearse
+ When I'm for verse inclined.
+ So, Lob, first speak me what became
+ Of our old Witch, that potent dame.
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, in faith she wrought so well
+ With direful curse and blasting spell
+ That every howling soldier-knave,
+ Every rogue and base-born slave
+ That by chance I did not slay,
+ From my grand-dam ran away.
+
+ JOCELYN: A noble Witch! Now, Lobkyn, tell
+ What hap'd when in the fight I fell,
+ And how alive I chance to be.
+
+ LOBKYN: Fool, I was there to succour thee.
+ I smote those pike-men hip and thigh,
+ That they did mangled pike-men lie;
+ Their arms, their legs, their skulls I broke,
+ Two, three, and four at every stroke.
+ I drave them here, I smote them there,
+ I smote, I slew, I none did spare,
+ I laughed, I sang, I--
+
+"Ha, Lob!" growled a sleepy voice. "Now, as I'm a tanner, here's a-many
+I's! By Saint Crispin, meseemeth thou'rt all I's--for as thou fought I
+fought, or thought I fought, forsooth!"
+
+ LOBKYN: True, Will, did'st fight in goodly manner,
+ Though fightedst, Will, like any tanner;
+ But I did fight, or I'm forsworn,
+ Like one unto the manner born.
+ I fought, forsooth, with such good will,
+ 'Tis marvel I'm not fighting still.
+ And so I should be, by my fay,
+ An I had any left to slay;
+ But since I slew them all--
+
+"Hold there!" cried the Tanner. "I slew one or two, Lob, and Robin
+likewise. Thou'rt a lusty fighter, but what o' me and Robin--ha, what o'
+we?"
+
+ LOBKYN: In faith, ye're proper men and tall,
+ And I'm squat man, my stature small,
+ Nath'less, though small and squat I be,
+ I am the best man of the three.
+
+"Why, as to that," quoth the Tanner, "'tis but you says so! As to me I
+think what I will, and I do think--"
+
+But here Lobkyn started up and seized the great club; quoth he:
+
+ "Hark and mark,
+ Heard ye nought there i' the dark?"
+
+"Not I!" answered Will.
+
+"Methought I heard an owl hoot," said Jocelyn.
+
+"Aye," nodded Lobkyn:
+
+ "Aye, Fool, and yet this owl I 'll swear,
+ Hath ne'er a feather anywhere.
+ This owl hath ne'er a wing to fly,
+ But goes afoot like thou and I.
+ Now mark,
+ And hark!"
+
+Hereupon the Dwarf laid finger to lip and uttered an owl-cry so dismal,
+so tremulous and withal so true to nature that it was wonder to hear.
+Instantly, from the dimness beyond the cavern-mouth, the cry was repeated,
+and presently was heard a panting and 'plaining, a snuffling and a
+shuffling, and into the light of the fire hobbled the old Witch. Beholding
+Jocelyn sitting cross-legged on his couch of fern, she paused and, leaning
+on her crooked stick, viewed him with her wise, old eyes.
+
+"Aha, Motley!" she croaked. "Oho, thou flaunting jackanapes, didst peril
+thy foolish flesh for me that am poor and old and feeble, and cursed by
+all for witchcraft! So have I with my potions ministered to thee in thy
+sickness, and behold thou'rt alive, hale and strong again. Give me thy
+hand! Aha, here's cool, unfevered blood! Show me thy tongue. Oho! Aha! A
+little sup o' my black decoction--roots gathered at full o' moon--a little
+sup and shall be thyself by to-morrow's dawn. But--as for thee, thou
+good-for-naught, thou wicked elf--aha! would'st dare leave thy poor old
+grannam weak and 'fenceless? Give me thy rogue-ear!" Obediently, the mighty
+Dwarf arose and sighfully suffered the old woman to grasp him by the ear
+and to tweak and wring and twist it as she would.
+
+"What dost thou here i' the wild-wood, thou imp, thou poppet o' plagues,
+thou naughty wap-de-staldees?"
+
+To which Lobkyn, writhing and watering at the eyes, answered thus:
+
+ "Stay, prithee grannam, loose thy hold!
+ I would but be an outlaw bold,
+ An outlaw fierce that men shall fear--
+ Beseech thee, grand-dam, loose mine ear!"
+
+"An outlaw, naughty one!" screeched the Witch, tweaking ear the harder.
+"Dare ye tell me so, elf?"
+
+ LOBKIN: Aye, grand-dam--cuff me an ye will,
+ Nath'less an outlaw I'll be still,
+ And many a wicked rogue I'll kill--
+ O grand-dam, loose mine ear!
+ And day and night I'll slay until
+ All rogues my name do fear.
+
+ For grand-dam, I'm a fighter--O,
+ Beseech thee, let my ear go!
+ And bones shall crack and blood shall flow,
+ If any dare resist me.
+ And all the world my name shall know,
+ Pray by the ear don't twist me!
+
+ All men before my club shall fly,
+ All on their knees shall "mercy" cry,
+ Or mangled in their gore shall lie--
+ Ah, grand-dam, pray don't clout me!
+ Don't beat me, grannam dear, but try
+ To do awhile without me--
+
+"Without thee, thou piece o' naughtiness?" screamed the old woman. "Now
+will I lay my stick about thee--hold still, Rogue!"
+
+Saying which, she proceeded to belabour the poor Dwarf with her knotted
+stick, clutching him fast by his ear the while. Thus she be-thwacked him
+soundly until he roared for mercy.
+
+"Why, how now--how now?" cried a merry voice, and Robin strode into the
+firelight. "Gentle Witch, sweet dame," quoth he, "what do ye with poor
+Lob?"
+
+"Thwack him shrewdly!"
+
+"Which is, Witch, that which none but witch the like o' thee might do, for
+lustier fighter and mightier dwarf never was. Thus, but for thy witch-like
+witcheries, the which, Witch, witch do prove thee, but for this and the
+power and potency of thy spells, now might he crack out thy life 'twixt
+finger and thumb--"
+
+"Ha, forest-rogue, 'tis a bad brat, a very naughty elf would run off into
+the wild to be rogue like thee--an outlaw, forsooth!"
+
+"Forsooth, Witch," laughed Robin, "outlaw is he in very truth, in sooth and
+by my troth! Outlaw is Lob, banned by Church and Council of Ten, and so
+proclaimed i' the market square of Canalise this very morn by sound o'
+trumpet and--"
+
+"How? How?" cried the old woman, wringing her trembling hands. "My Lobkyn
+outlawed? My babe, my lovely brat, my pretty bantling, woe and alas! My
+dear ugly one an outlaw?"
+
+"Aye, marry is he, Witch, outlaw proclaimed, acclaimed, announced,
+pronounced and denounced; as such described, ascribed and proscribed by
+Master Gregory Bax, the port-reeve, for the late slaying and maiming of
+divers of the city guard. So outlaw is Lobkyn, his life henceforth forfeit
+even as mine."
+
+"My Lobkyn an hairy outlaw i' the wild-wood! Out alas! And what of his poor
+old grannam? What o' me--?"
+
+"Content thee, sweet hag, since thou'rt outlawed along with him and, as
+witch, doomed to die unpleasantly by fire and flame and faggot, if thou'rt
+caught."
+
+"Alack! Wala-wa! Woe 's me!" groaned the Witch, cracking her finger-bones.
+"And all this by reason o' the Fool yonder."
+
+"Why, the Fool is dubbed outlaw likewise, Witch," quoth Robin. "Outlaw is
+he along o' thee and Tanner Will."
+
+"And all by reason that this Fool must needs peril our lives for sake of
+rogue-outlaw, of forest-robber, of knavish woodland-lurker--"
+
+"Hight Robin!" laughed Robin, leaning on his long bow-stave. "Now, this
+brave Fool having saved Robin his life, Witch, the which, Witch, was good
+thing for Robin, our Fool next saved thee, Witch, which was nought to
+Robin, in the which, Witch, Robin did not joy; for thou, old Witch, being
+witch, art therefore full o' witcheries which be apt to be-devil a man and
+fright his reason, for the which reason, being reasonable man, I reason,
+for this reason, that, so reasoning, I love thee not. But thou art old,
+Witch, which is good reason to reasonably reason thou art wise, Witch,
+and, being wise, I on this wise would seek counsel of thy wisdom, Witch.
+Imprimis, then--"
+
+"Hold!" commanded the Witch; "here's a whirl o' windy wind! Hast more of
+such-like, forester?"
+
+"Some little, Witch, which I will now, Witch--"
+
+"Nay, then, Robin-a-Green, suffer me to rest my old bones whiles thy mill
+clacks." Hereupon the old Witch seated herself beside the fire, with bony
+knees up-drawn to bony chin. "Speak, outlaw Robin," she croaked, blinking
+her red eyes, "and speak ye plain."
+
+"Why, then, wise Witch, look 'ee: since we be outlaws each and every, with
+all men's hands against us, with none to succour, and death watchful for
+us, 'tis plain, and very plain, we, for our harbourage and defence, must in
+the wild-wood bide--"
+
+"Ho!" cried Lobkyn:
+
+ "It soundeth good,
+ The brave wild-wood,
+ Where flowers do spring
+ And birds do sing.
+ To slay the deer
+ And make good cheer,
+ With mead and beer,
+ The livelong year,
+ And--"
+
+"Roar not, toad!" cried the Witch. "Say on--Rogue-Robin!"
+
+"Why, mark me, good Witch, here's where buskin chafeth! Not long since I
+ruled i' the wild-wood, a very king, with ten-score lusty outlaw-rogues
+to do my will. To-day is there never an one, and for this reasonable
+reason--to wit, I am hanged, and, being hanged, am dead, and, being dead,
+am not, and thus Robin is nobody; and yet again, perceive me, Witch, being
+Robin, I am therefore somebody; thus is nobody somebody, and yet somebody
+that nobody will believe anybody. The which, Witch, is a parlous case,
+methinks, for here am I, somebody, nobody and Robin altogether and at the
+same time; therefore, Witch, o' thy witchful wisdom--who am I, what and
+which, Witch?"
+
+Here the Witch blinked and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones one after
+another. Quoth she:
+
+"For thy first, thou'rt thyself; for the second, a rogue; and for the
+third, a wind-bag. I would thy second might tie up thy first in thy third."
+
+"So should Robin choke Robin with Robin. But hark 'ee again, good, patient
+dame. It seemeth that Ranulph the executioner betaketh him at cock-crow to
+hang poor me; but, finding me not, made great outcry, insomuch that the
+city guard, such as mighty Lob and Will had left alive, sought counsel
+together; and taking one of their slain fellows, Ranulph hanged him in my
+stead, and there he hangeth now, above the city gate, his face so marred
+that he might be me or any other."
+
+"Ha, Robin--well?"
+
+"This day, at sunset, came I unto the trysting-oak, and by blast of horn
+summoned me my outlaw company. They came apace and in great wonderment,
+for, seeing me, they fell to great awe and dread, thinking me dead, since
+many had seen my body a-dangle on the gallows; wherefore, seeing me
+manifestly alive, they took me for ghoulish ghost 'stead o' good flesh and
+blood, and fled from me amain. So, by reason of my dead body, that is no
+body o' mine, yet that nobody will believe is no body o' mine, they believe
+that this my body is yet no body, but a phantom; the which is out of
+reason; yet thus unreasonably do the rogues reason by reason of the body
+that hangeth in place of my body above the city gate. Wherefore I reason
+there is yet reason in their unreason, seeing this body was somebody, yet
+no body o' mine, but which nobody among them can swear to. Which, Witch,
+is a matter which none but wise witch may counsel me in. How say'st thou,
+Witch?"
+
+But for a while the old Witch scowled on the fire, bony chin on bony knees,
+and dreamily cracked her finger-joints.
+
+"Oho!" she cried suddenly. "Aha--a body that nobody's is, yet body that
+everybody knoweth for body o' thine--aha! So must nobody know that nobody's
+body is not thy body. Dost see my meaning, Robin-a-Green?"
+
+"No whit, Witch! Thou growest involved, thy talk diffuse, abstruse and
+altogether beyond one so obtuse as simple Rob--"
+
+"Then hark 'ee again, Addlepate! Everybodymust believe nobody's body thy
+body, so by dead body will I make thy live body of so great account to
+everybody that nobody henceforth shall doubt dead body made live body, by
+my witchcraft, and thou be feared, therefore, of everybody. Dost follow me
+now, numskull?"
+
+"Aye, truly, mother! And truly 'tis a rare subtlety, a notable wile, and
+thou a right cunning witch and wise. But how wilt achieve this wonder?"
+
+"Since dead thou art, I to life will bring thee. Oho, I will summon thee
+through fire and flame; aha, I will make thee more dreaded than heretofore;
+thy fame shall fill the wild-wood and beyond. Know'st thou the Haunted
+Wood, hard by Thraxby Waste?"
+
+Now here Robin's merry smile languished, and he rubbed nose with dubious
+finger.
+
+"Aye, I do," quoth he sombrely; "an ill place and--demon-rid, they say--"
+
+"Come ye there to-morrow at midnight."
+
+"Alone?" says Robin, starting.
+
+"Alone!"
+
+"Nay, good Witch, most gentle, potent dame, I--though phantom accounted, I
+love not phantoms, and Thraxby Waste--"
+
+"Come ye there--at midnight!"
+
+"Why, then, good Witch, an come I must, suffer that I bring the valiant
+Fool and mighty Lob--prithee, now!"
+
+At this the old Witch scowled and mumbled and crackled her finger-bones
+louder than ever.
+
+"Oho!" cried she at last, "thou great child, afraid-o'-the-dark, bring
+these an ye will--but none other!"
+
+"Good mother, I thank thee!"
+
+"Tchak!" cried the Witch, and, struggling to her feet, hobbled to Jocelyn
+and laid bony finger on wrist and brow, nodded, mumbled, and so, bent on
+her staff, hobbled away; but, reaching the cave-mouth, she paused, and
+smote stick to earth fiercely.
+
+"To-morrow!" she croaked. "Midnight! Re--member!"
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 8
+
+ Tells how the Witch, with incantations dire,
+ In life to life brought Robin through the fire.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ The wind was cold--indeed 'twas plaguy chill--
+ That furtive crept and crept, like something ill
+ Stealing with dreadful purpose in the dark,
+ With scarce a sound its stealthy course to mark;
+ While pallid moon did seem to swoon, as though
+ It ghastly things beheld on earth below;
+ And Robin gripped the good sword by his side,
+ And Joc'lyn looked about him watchful-eyed;
+ While Lobkyn Lollo felt and looked the bolder
+ By reason of the club across his shoulder.
+
+ "Here," whispered Robin, peering through the gloom,
+ "Is dismal place, I've heard, of death and doom.
+ Here do be ghosts and goblins, so 'tis said,
+ Demons, phantoms, spectres of the dead--"
+ "Aye, verily," quoth Lob, "and what is worse,
+ 'Tis here my grand-dam oft doth come to curse,
+ And haunteth it with spiteful toads and bats,
+ With serpents fell, with ewts and clawful cats.
+ Here doth she revel hold o' moony nights,
+ With grave-rank ghouls and moaning spectral sprites;
+ And ... Saints! what's that?
+ A hook-winged bat?
+ Not so; perchance, within its hairy body fell
+ Is man or maid transformed by magic spell.
+ O, brothers, heedful be, and careful tread
+ Lest magic gin should catch and strike us dead!
+ O would my grannam might go with us here.
+ Since, being witch, she doth no witchcraft fear."
+
+ So came the three at last to Haunted Wood,
+ Where mighty trees in gloomy grandeur stood,
+ Their wide-flung boughs so closely interweaving
+ Scarce space between for ghostly moonbeams leaving;
+ But, snake-like, round each other closely twined,
+ In shuddering wind did mournful voices find,
+ And, groaning, writhed together to and fro
+ Like souls that did the fiery torment know.
+ Thus, in the wood, 'twas dark and cold and dank,
+ And breathed an air of things long dead and rank;
+ While shapes, dim-seen, did creep and flit and fly
+ With sudden squeak, and bodeful, wailing cry.
+
+ At last they reached a clearing in the wood,
+ Where, all at once, as 'mid the leaves they stood,
+ From Lobkyn's lips, loud, tremulous, and high,
+ There rose and swelled the owlet's shuddering cry.
+ Scarce on the air this dismal sound had died,
+ When they the Witch's hobbling form espied.
+ Beholding Robin, by the arm she caught him,
+ And to a place of rocks in haste she brought him;
+ And here, where bosky thickets burgeoned round,
+ She pointed to a chasm in the ground.
+
+ "Go down!" she hissed. "Go down, thou thing of clay,
+ Thou that art dead--into thy grave I say.
+ Since thou 'rt hanged, a dead man shalt thou be
+ Till from thy grave my spells shall summon thee--"
+ "My grave?" gasped Robin, blenching from her frown.
+ "Aye, Rogue!" she croaked. "Behold thy grave! Go down!"
+ So shiv'ring Robin, in most woeful plight,
+ Crept into gloom and vanished from their sight.
+ "O, Robin, Robin!" the old Witch softly cried,
+ "Alack, I'm here!" faint voice, below, replied.
+ "Thou dead," croaked she, "thou ghostly shade forlorn,
+ From charnel-vault sound now thy spectral horn,
+ Sound now thy rallying-note, then silent be
+ Till from thy mouldering tomb I summon thee!"
+
+ Now, on the stillness rose the ghostly sound
+ Of Robin's hunting horn that through the ground
+ Rang thin and high, unearthly-shrill and clear,
+ That thrilled the shivering woodland far and near,
+ And shuddering to silence, left behind
+ A whisper as of leaves in stealthy wind.
+ A rustling 'mid the underbrush they heard
+ Where, in the gloom about them, dim things stirred--
+ Vague, stealing shapes that softly nearer drew,
+ Till from the tree-gloom crept a ragged crew,
+ Wild men and fierce, a threatening, grimly herd,
+ Who stood like shadows, speaking not a word;
+ And the pale moon in fitful flashes played
+ On sword and headpiece, pike and broad axe-blade.
+ While the old hag, o'er witch-fire crouching low,
+ Puffed at the charcoal till it was aglow;
+ Then hobbling round and round her crackling fire,
+ She thus began her incantations dire:
+
+ "Come ye long-dead,
+ Ye spirits dread,
+
+
+ Ye things of quaking fear,
+ Ye poor, lost souls,
+ Ye ghosts, ye ghouls,
+ Haxwiggin bids ye here!
+ By one by two, by two by three,
+ Spirits of Night, I summon ye,
+ By three by four, by four by five,
+ Come ye now dead that were alive,
+ Come now I bid ye
+ From grave-clods rid ye,
+ Come!
+ From South and North,
+ I bid ye forth,
+ From East, from West,
+ At my behest--
+ Come!
+ Come great, come small,
+ Come one, come all,
+ Heed ye my call,
+ List to my call, I say,
+ From pitchy gloom
+ Of mouldered tomb
+ Here find ye room
+ For sport and holiday.
+ Come grisly ghosts and goblins pale,
+ Come spirits black and grey,
+ Ye shrouded spectres--Hail, O Hail!
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday.
+ Come wriggling snakes
+ From thorny brakes,
+ Hail!
+ Come grimly things
+ With horny wings,
+ That flit, that fly,
+ That croak, that cry,
+ Hail!
+
+ "Come ghouls, come demons one and all,
+ Here revel whiles ye may;
+ Ye noisome things that creep and crawl,
+ Come, sport and round me play.
+ Ho, claw and wing and hoof and horn,
+ Here revel till the clammy dawn.
+
+ "Peeping, creeping,
+ Flying, crying,
+ Fighting, biting,
+ Groaning, moaning,
+ Ailing, wailing,
+ Spirits fell,
+ Come to my spell,
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday!
+ So, are ye there,
+ High up in air,
+ The moonbeams riding
+ 'Mid shadows hiding?
+
+ "Now gather round, ye spectral crew,
+ This night have we brave work to do--
+ Bold Robin o' the Green, 'tis said,
+ On gallows hangeth cold and dead
+ Beneath the sky
+ On gibbet high,
+ They in a noose did swing him.
+ Go, goblins, go,
+ And ere they know,
+ Unto me hither bring him."
+
+ Here paused the Witch to mend her glowing fire,
+ While each man to his neighbour shuffled nigher,
+ As witch-flame leapt and ever brighter grew,
+ Till, to their horror, sudden it burned blue;
+ Whereat each silent, fearful beholder
+ Felt in the gloom to touch his fellow's shoulder,
+ Yet, in that moment, knew an added dread
+ To see the fire from blue turn ghastly red;
+ Then, as the Witch did o'er it crooning lean,
+ Behold! it changed again to baleful green.
+ Whereat the Witch flung bony arms on high,
+ As though with claw-like hands she 'd rend the sky;
+ And while the lurid flames leapt ever higher,
+ She thus invoked the Spirit of the Fire.
+
+ "As fire doth change, yet, changed, unchanged doth burn,
+ By fiery spell shall dead to life return!
+
+ "Ho, goblins yonder--'neath the moon,
+ Have ye brought me the dead so soon?
+ Ha! is it Bxibin that ye bring,
+ That pale, that stiff, that clammy thing?
+ Now work we spell with might and main,
+ Shall make it live and breathe again.
+
+ "Now in and out,
+ And round about,
+ Ye wriggling rout,
+ With hoof and claw and wing;
+ Now high, now low,
+ Now fast, now slow,
+ Now to and fro
+ Tread we a magic ring.
+
+ "Thus, while the frighted moon doth peep,
+ We 'll wake this cold, dead thing from sleep,
+ Till Robin back to life shall leap.
+ And when he from the fire shall spring,
+ Ye outlaws hail him for your King.
+
+ "For on that wight
+ Who, day or night,
+ Shall Robin disobey
+ With purpose fell
+ I'll cast a spell
+ Shall wither him away.
+
+ "Ho, Robin! Ope thy death-cold eyes,
+ Ho, Robin! From thy grave arise,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+ Robin that doth bide so near me,
+ Robin, Robin, wake and hear me,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+
+ "Back to life I summon thee,
+ Through the fire thy path must be,
+ Through the fire that shall not harm thee,
+ Through flame that back to life shall charm thee,
+ Shall warm thy body all a-cold,
+ And make grim Death loose clammy hold.
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Leap back to life by all men seen!"
+
+ Through curling smoke-wreaths and through writhing flame,
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came,
+ And by the Witch did in the fire-light stand,
+ Sword by his side and bugle-horn in hand,
+ And laughed full blithe as he was wont to do,
+ And, joyous, hailed his wild and ragged crew:
+
+"What lads, are ye there forsooth? Is't Myles I see with lusty Watt and
+John and Hal o' the Quarterstaff? God den t' ye, friends, and merry hunting
+to one and all, for by oak and ash and thorn here stand I to live with
+thee, aye, good lads, and to die with ye here in the good greenwood--"
+
+But now and all at once from that grim and silent company a mighty shout
+went up:
+
+"'Tis Robin--'tis Robin, 'tis bold Robin-a-Green! 'Tis our Robin himself
+come back to us!"
+
+And fearful no longer, they hasted to him and clasped him in brawny arms,
+hugging him mightily and making great rejoicing over him.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 9
+
+ That tells almost as fully as it should,
+ The joys of living in the good greenwood.
+
+* * * * *
+
+Deep-hidden in the trackless wild the outlaws had made them a haven of
+refuge, a camp remote and well sequestered. Here were mossy, fern-clad
+rocks that soared aloft, and here green lawns where ran a blithesome brook;
+it was indeed a very pleasant place shut in by mighty trees. Within this
+leafy boskage stood huts of wattle, cunningly wrought; beneath the steep
+were many caves carpeted with dried fern and fragrant mosses, while
+everywhere, above and around, the trees spread mighty boughs, through which
+the sun darted golden beams be-dappling the sward, and in whose leafy
+mysteries the birds made joyous carolling.
+
+And here beneath bending willows arched over this merry brook, one
+sun-bright morning riotous with song of birds, sat Jocelyn with Robin
+a-sprawl beside him.
+
+"O brother," says Robin, "O brother, 't is a fair place the greenwood, a
+fair, sweet place to live--aye, or to die in methinks, this good greenwood,
+whereof I have made a song--hark 'ee!"
+
+ "Oho, it is a right good thing
+ When trees do bud and flowers do spring
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood,
+ To hear the birds so blithely sing,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.
+
+ "Who cometh here leaves grief behind,
+ Here broken man hath welcome kind,
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ The hopeless here new hope may find,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the kind, green wood.
+
+ "Ho, friend, 'tis pleasant life we lead,
+ No laws have we, no laws we need
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+ For every man's a man indeed,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+
+ "All travellers that come this way
+ Must something in fair tribute pay
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ Or here in bonds is like to stay,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Lost in the good, green wood.
+
+ "Full many a lord, in boastful pride,
+ This tribute, scornful, hath denied
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ And thereupon hath sudden died,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the fair, green wood.
+
+ "And when our time shall come to die
+ Methinks we here may softly lie
+ Deep in the fair, green wood.
+ With birds to sing us lullaby,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood."
+
+"So there it is, brother--and life and death in a nutshell, as 'twere. Now,
+wherefore wilt not join us and turn outlaw, good Fool?"
+
+"For that I am a fool belike, Robin. Howbeit, I'm better Fool than outlaw."
+
+"Say, rather, greater fool, Fool, for foresters' life is better than life
+o' folly, and payeth better to boot, what with booty--ha! Moreover, I do
+love thee, since, Fool, though fool, art wise in counsel and valiant beyond
+thought--so 'tis I would not lose thee. Stay, therefore, and live my
+comrade and brother, equal with me in all things. How say'st thou?"
+
+"Why, Robin, I say this: True friendship is a goodly thing and a rare in
+this world, and, therefore, to be treasured; 'tis thing no man may buy or
+seek, since itself is seeker and cometh of itself; 'tis a prop--a staff
+in stony ways, a shield 'gainst foes, a light i' the dark. So do I love
+friendship, Robin, and thou'rt my friend, yet must leave thee, though
+friendship shall abide."
+
+Quoth ROBIN: How abide an we be parted?
+
+"In heart and mind and memory, Robin. Moreover, though I go, yet will I
+return anon, an life be mine."
+
+"And wherefore go ye, brother?"
+
+"First to seek my comrade."
+
+"Thy comrade--ha! I mind him, a fierce great fellow with hawk's beak and a
+fighting eye. And whither trend ye?"
+
+"To Canalise."
+
+"Art crazed, brother? 'Tis there death waiteth thee!"
+
+"Yet must I go, Robin, since there my heart waiteth me."
+
+"A maid, brother?"
+
+"A maid, Robin."
+
+"Heigho! So wilt thou go, come joy, come pain, come life or death, since a
+maid is made to make man saint or devil, some days glad and some days sad,
+but ever and always a fool. And thou art Fool by profession, and, being
+lover professed and confessed, art doubly a fool; and since, good Folly,
+love's but folly and thou, a Fool, art deep in folly, so is thy state most
+melancholy."
+
+"And dost think love so great folly, Robin?" said a soft voice, and,
+looking round, they beheld the lovely, dark-tressed Melissa, who viewed
+them bright-eyed and pouted red mouth, frowning a little.
+
+"Aye, verily, lady," laughed Robin, as she sank on the grass beside them.
+"Forsooth, 'tis a madness fond. For see, now, a man being in love is out of
+all else."
+
+"As how, Sir Outlaw?"
+
+"Marry, on this wise--when man's in love he mopeth apart and is ill
+company, so is he out o' friends; he hangeth humble head abashed, so is he
+out o' countenance; he uttereth frequent, windy, sighful suspirations,
+so is he out o' breath; he lavisheth lucre on his love, so is he out o'
+pocket; he forsweareth food, despiseth drink, scorneth sleep, so is he
+out o' health--in fine, he is out of all things, so is he out of himself;
+therefore he is mad, and so may go hang himself!"
+
+MELISSA: And hast thou loved, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: Ever and always, and none but Robin!
+
+MELISSA: And none more worthy, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: And none more, as I am worthy Robin.
+
+MELISSA: Lovest thou not Love, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: Love, love not I.
+
+MELISSA: Then Love canst thou know not.
+
+ROBIN: Then if I love Love for Love's sake, must Love then love me,
+therefore?
+
+MELISSA: If thy love for Love be true love, so shall Love love thee true.
+
+ROBIN: Then if Love should love me for my sake, then would I love Love for
+Love's sake; but since Love ne'er hath sought me for my sake, ne'er will I
+seek Love for Love's sake for my sake, since Love, though plaguy sweet, is
+a sweet plague, I judge and, so judging, will by my judgment stand.
+
+MELISBA: And how think you, Sir Fool?
+
+JOCELYN: I think if Love find Robin and Robin, so found of Love, shall
+learn to love Love for Love's sake, Love shall teach Robin how, hi loving
+Love--Love, if a plague, doth but plague him lovingly to his better
+judgment of Love, till, being on this wise, wise--he shall judge of Love
+lovingly, loving Love at last for Love's own lovely sake, rather than for
+his own selfish self. For as there is the passion of love, the which is a
+love selfish, so there is the true Spirit of Love, the which forgetteth
+self in Love's self, thus, self-forgotten, Love is crowned by Love's true
+self.
+
+MELISSA: How think ye of this, Robin?
+
+ROBIN: By Cupid, we are so deep in love that we are like to drown of love
+and we be not wary. Here hath my lovely jowlopped-crested brother so beset
+poor Robin with Love and self and Robin, that Robin kens not which is Love,
+Love's self or himself.
+
+MELISSA: And yet I do think 'tis very plain! Yet an thou canst express this
+plainer, prithee do, Sir Fool.
+
+"Blithely, sweet lady, here will I frame my meaning in a rhyme, thus:
+
+ "Who loveth Love himself above,
+ With Love base self transcending
+ Love, Love shall teach how Love may reach
+ The Love that hath no ending.
+
+
+ "'Tis thus Love-true, Love shall renew,
+ Love's love thus waning never,
+ So love each morn of Love new-born,
+ Love shall live loving ever."
+
+ROBIN: Aye, verily, there's Love and yet such a love as no man may find
+methinks, brother.
+
+JOCELYN: Never, Robin, until it find him. For true love, like friendship,
+cometh unsought, like all other good things.
+
+ROBIN: 'Las! then needs must I be no good thing since I am sought e'en now
+of old Mopsa the Witch yonder!
+
+And he pointed where the old creature hobbled towards them bent on her
+crooked staff. Up rose Robin and, hasting to meet her, louted full low,
+since she was held in great respect of all men by reason of her potent
+spells. Chuckling evilly, she drew down Robin's tall head to whisper in his
+ear, whereupon he laughed, clapped hand to brawny thigh, and taking old
+Mopsa's feeble arm, hastened away with her. But Melissa, reclining 'neath
+the willow-shade, gazed down into the murmurous waters of the brook with
+eyes of dream whiles Jocelyn struck soft, sweet chords upon his lute. And
+presently she turned to view him thoughtfully--his strange, marred face;
+his eyes so quick and keen 'neath battered cock's-comb; his high, proud
+bearing despite his frayed and motley habit; and ever her wonder grew
+until, at last, she must needs question him:
+
+"Fools, Sir Fool, have I seen a-many, both in the motley and out, but thou
+art rare among all fools, I do think."
+
+JOCELYN: Gramercy, lady! Truly fool am I of all fools singular.
+
+MELISSA: Thou'rt he I heard, upon a day, sing strange, sweet songs, within
+the marketplace of Canalise!
+
+JOCELYN: The same, lady.
+
+MELISSA: That soused my lord Gui head over ears in a lily-pool?
+
+JOCELYN: Verily, lady.
+
+MELISSA: O! Would one might do as much for Sir Agramore of Biename!
+
+JOCELYN: One doubtless will, lady.
+
+MELISSA: Thyself?
+
+JOCELYN: Nay--one that loveth the disputatious bickering of sharp steel
+better than I--one had rather fight than eat, and rather fight three men
+than one--
+
+"Three men?" cried Melissa, starting.
+
+"Aye, lady--and six men than three!"
+
+"There was such an one, Fool, in truth a very brave man, did fight three of
+my Lord Agramore's foresters on my behalf. Dost know of such an one, Fool?"
+
+"Methinks he is my comrade, Lady."
+
+"Thy comrade--in truth? Then, pray you, speak me what seeming hath he."
+
+"Ill, lady."
+
+"How so, Fool?"
+
+"A great, fierce rogue is he, unlovely of look, bleak of eye, harsh of
+tongue, hooked of nose, flinty of soul, stony of heart, of aspect grim and
+manners rude!"
+
+"Then, verily, thy comrade have I never seen!" quoth Melissa, flushing and
+with head up-flung. "He that saved me is nothing the like of this."
+
+"And yet," said Jocelyn slyly, "'tis thus he hath been named ere now!"
+
+"Nay, Fool, indeed he that saved me was tall and seemly man, very fierce
+and strong in fight, but to me wondrous gentle--in truth, something
+timorous, and, 'spite rusty mail, spake and looked like a noble knight."
+
+"Then forsooth, lady, thy champion is no comrade of mine, for he is but a
+poor rogue, ill-beseen, ill-kempt, ill-spoken, ill-mannered and altogether
+ill, save only that he is my friend--"
+
+"And thou speakest ill of thy ill friend, the which is ill in thee--ill
+Fool!" and the fair Melissa rose.
+
+"And pray, lady, didst learn thy preserver's name?"
+
+"Indeed, for I asked him."
+
+"And it was--?"
+
+"Pertinax!" she sighed.
+
+"Pertinax!" said Jocelyn, both in the same moment; the dark-browed Melissa
+sat down again.
+
+"So thy comrade and--he are one, Fool?"
+
+"Indeed, lady. Yet here we have him, on the one hand, a man noble and
+seemly, and, on the other, a poor rogue, hook-nosed, ill-beseen, ill--"
+
+"'Tis thou hast miscalled him, Fool!" said she, frowning.
+
+"Not I, lady."
+
+"Who, then?"
+
+"A maid--"
+
+"Ah!" said Melissa, frowning blacker than ever. "A maid, Fool? What maid?"
+
+"A wandering gipsy o' the wood, lady--a dark-eyed damsel with long, black
+curling hair and 'voice of sweet allure'--'tis so he named her--"
+
+"This was belike some wicked witch!" said Melissa, clenching white fist.
+
+"Aye, belike it was, lady, for she bestowed on him a strange jewel, a heart
+in heart of crystal, that wrought for us in Canalise marvels great as our
+wondrous Witch herself."
+
+Now here the lovely Melissa's frown vanished, and her red lips curved to
+sudden smile.
+
+"Belike this was no witch after all!" said she gently.
+
+"Howbeit, lady," quoth Jocelyn slyly, "my poor comrade is surely bewitched
+by her none the less. She hath wrought on him spell so potent that he
+groweth mopish and talketh of her eyes, her hair, her sweet and gentle
+voice, her little foot, forsooth."
+
+"And doth he so, indeed?" said Melissa softly, and, twiddling one of
+her own pretty feet, she smiled at it. "Doth he sigh o'er much?" she
+questioned.
+
+"Consumedly! By the minute!"
+
+"Poor soldier!" she murmured.
+
+"Aye, poor rogue!" said Jocelyn; whereupon she frowned again, and turned
+her back upon him.
+
+"And he is thy comrade."
+
+"Even so--poor knave!"
+
+"And destitute--even as thou?"
+
+"Aye, a sorry clapper-claw--even as I, lady."
+
+"Then, pray thee, why doth he wear gold chain about his neck?"
+
+"Chain, lady--?"
+
+"Such as only knights do wear!"
+
+"Belike he stole it, lady--"
+
+"Aye--belike he did!" said she, rising; then she sighed and laughed, and so
+turned and left him.
+
+And in a while Jocelyn rose also, and went on beside the brook; but as he
+walked deep in thought, there met him Robin, he full of mirth and laughter.
+
+"Oho, brother, good brother!" cried he joyfully, clapping hand on Jocelyn's
+broad shoulder, "come away, now, and see what the good wind hath blown
+hither--come thy ways and see!"
+
+So came they where rose a great tree of huge girth, whose gnarled branches
+spread far and wide, a veryforest of leaves, beneath whose shade were many
+of the outlaws grouped about one who crouched miserably on his knees, his
+arms fast bound and a halter about his neck; and, as obedient to Robin's
+words the fierce company fell back, Jocelyn saw this torn and pallid
+captive was none other than Ranulph the Hangman.
+
+"Woe's me, my masters!" quoth he 'twixt chattering teeth. "'Tis pity poor
+Ranulph must die before his time, for ne'er shall be found hangman,
+headsman or torturer the like o' Ranulph--so dainty i' the nice adjustment
+o' noose! So clean and delicate wi' the axe! So tender and thoughtful wi'
+pincers, thumbscrew, rack or red-hot iron! A hangman so kindly o' soul, so
+merry o' heart, alack, so free, so gay, so merry--forsooth a very wanton,
+waggish, jovial bawcock-lad--"
+
+"Why, then, good, merry wag," laughed Robin, "now shalt thou cut us an
+antic aloft in air, shalt caper and dance in noose to our joyance! Up with
+him, bully lads, and gently, that he may dance the longer!"
+
+But as Ranulph was dragged, shivering, to his feet, Jocelyn stepped
+forward.
+
+"Stay!" he cried. "Look, now, here's hangman did but hang since hang he
+must; must he hang therefore?"
+
+ROBIN: Aye, marry, since hanging shall his hanging end!
+
+JOCELYN: But if to hang his duty is, must he for duty hang? Moreover, if ye
+hang this hangman, unhanged hangmen shall hang still, and since ye may not
+all hangmen hang, wherefore should this hangman hang?
+
+ROBIN: Brother, an this hangman hang, fewer hangmen shall there be to hang,
+forsooth.
+
+JOCELYN: Not so, Robin, for hangman dead begetteth hangman new; this
+hangman hanged, hangman in his place shall hang men after him. Shall this
+hangman hang for hanging as in duty bound, whiles other hangmen, unhanged,
+hang still? Here, methinks, is small wisdom, little reason, and less of
+justice, Robin.
+
+ROBIN: Beshrew me, brother--but here's so much of hanging hanging on
+hanging plaguy hangman that hang me if I get the hang on't--
+
+JOCELYN: Plainly, Robin--wilt hang a man for doing his duty?
+
+ROBIN: Plainly, brother--no. But--
+
+JOCELYN: Then canst not hang this hangman, since hanging his duty is--
+
+ROBIN: Yet 'tis base, vile duty--
+
+JOCELYN: Yet duty it is--wherefore, an there be any justice in the good
+greenwood, this hangman unhanged must go.
+
+Now here Robin scowled, and his brawny fellows scowled likewise, and began
+to mutter and murmur against Jocelyn, who, leaning back to tree, strummed
+his lute and sang:
+
+ "O, Life is sweet, but Life is fleet,
+ O'er quick to go, alack!
+ And once 'tis spilt, try as thou wilt,
+ Thou canst not call it back!
+
+"So bethink thee, bold Robin, and, as thou 'rt king o' the wild-wood, be
+thou just king and merciful--"
+
+"Now out upon thee, brother!" cried Robin, forgetting to scowl. "Out on
+thee with thy honied phrases, thy quipsome lilting rhymes! Here go I to do
+a thing I ha' no lust to do--and all by reason o' thee! Off--off wi' the
+halter, lads--loose the hangman-claws of him! Hereafter, since he can pay
+no ransom, he shall be our serf; to have a hangman fetch and carry shall
+be rare, methinks!"
+
+Quoth JOCELYN: How much should hangman's flesh be worth i' the greenwood,
+Robin?
+
+"Why, brother, 'tis poor, sad and dismal knave; five gold pieces shall buy
+him, aye--halter and all, and 'tis fair, good halter, look you!"
+
+"Why, then," said Jocelyn, opening his wallet, "behold the monies, so do I
+buy him of thee--"
+
+"Now, by Saint Nick!" cried Robin, amazed. "Nay, brother, an thou'lt buy so
+sorry a thing, give thy money to the merry lads; I'll none on't. And now,"
+said he, the money duly paid, "what wilt do wi' thy hangman?"
+
+"Sir Fool," cried Ranulph, falling on his knees at Jocelyn's feet, "fain
+would I serve thee--e'en to the peril o' the life thou hast saved. Bid me
+labour for thee and in labour shall be my joy, bid me fight for thee and I
+will fight whiles life is in me; bid me follow thee and I will follow even
+unto--"
+
+"Nay, hangman," said Jocelyn, "I bid thee rise and sing for us, and so be
+gone wheresoever thou wilt."
+
+Then Ranulph arose and glancing round upon the fierce company, from the
+noose at his feet to Jocelyn's scarred face, he drew a great breath; quoth
+he:
+
+"Sir Fool, since 'tis thy will fain would I give thee song blithe and
+joyful since joy is in my heart, but alack, though my songs begin in merry
+vein they do grow mournful anon; howbeit, for thy joy now will I sing my
+cheeriest;" whereupon Ranulph brake into song thus:
+
+ "I am forsooth a merry soul,
+ Hey deny down, ho ho!
+ I love a merry song to troll,
+ I love to quaff a cheery bowl,
+ And yet thinks I, alas!
+ Such things too soon do pass,
+ And proudest flesh is grass.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ "A goodly lover I might be,
+ Merrily, ho ho!
+ But pretty maids in terror flee,
+ When this my hangman's head they see.
+ But woe it is, thinks I,
+ All fair, sweet dames must die,
+ And pale, sad corpses lie.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ "Fairest beauty is but dust,
+ Shining armour soon will rust,
+ All good things soon perish must,
+ Look around, thinks I, and see
+ All that, one day, dead must be,
+ King and slave and you and me.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it must be so!"
+
+"Out!" cried Robin. "Here forsooth is dolorous doleful dirge--out on thee
+for sad and sorry snuffler!"
+
+"Aye, verily," sighed Ranulph, "'tis my curse. I begin with laugh and end
+in groan. I did mean this for merry song, yet it turned of itself sad song
+despite poor I, and there's the pity on't--"
+
+"Enough!" growled Robin, "away with him. Brand, do you hoodwink him in his
+'kerchief and give him safe conduct to beyond the ford, and so set Master
+Hangman Grimglum-grief on his road--"
+
+"Sir Fool," cried Ranulph, "God den t'ye and gramercy. Should it be e'er
+thy fate to die o' the gallows, may I have thy despatching--I will contrive
+it so sweetly shalt know nought of it--oho! 'twould be my joy."
+
+"Off!" cried Robin. "Off, thou pestiferous fungus lest I tread on
+thee--hence, away!"
+
+So the outlaws blindfolded Ranulph and led him off at speed.
+
+"Away," quoth Jocelyn, nodding, "so now in faith must I, Robin--"
+
+"What, is't indeed farewell, brother?"
+
+"Aye, Robin."
+
+"Why, then, what may I give thee in way o' love and friendship?"
+
+"Thy hand."
+
+"Behold it, brother! And what beside? Here is purse o' good pieces--ha?"
+
+"Nay, Robin, prithee keep them for those whose need is greater."
+
+"Can I nought bestow--dost lack for nothing, brother?"
+
+"What thou, methinks, may not supply--"
+
+"And that?"
+
+"Horse and armour!" Now at this, Robin laughed and clapped hand to thigh;
+quoth he:
+
+"Come with Robin, brother!" So he brought Jocelyn into a cave beneath the
+steep and, lighting a torch from fire that burned there, led him on through
+other caves and winding passages rough-hewn in the rock, and so at last to
+a vasty cavern.
+
+And here was great store of merchandise of every sort,--velvets, silks,
+and rich carpets from the Orient; vases of gold and silver, and coffers
+strong-clamped with many iron bands. And here also, hanging against the
+rocky walls, were many and divers suits of armour with helms and shields
+set up in gallant array; beholding all of which Jocelyn paused to eye merry
+Robin askance; quoth he soberly:
+
+"Sir Rogue, how came ye by all this goodly furniture?"
+
+"By purest chance, brolher," laughed Robin, "for hark 'ee--
+
+ "Chance is a wind to outlaws kind,
+ And many fair things blows us,
+ It--merchants, priors, lords, knights and squires,
+ And like good things bestows us--"
+
+"Aye," said Jocelyn, "but what of all those knights and squires whose
+armour hangeth here?"
+
+"Here or there, brother, they come and they go. Ha, yonder soundeth
+Ralfwyn's horn--three blasts which do signify some right fair windfall.
+Come, let us see what this jolly wind hath blown us this time!" So
+saying, Robin laughed and led the way out into the sunny green. And here,
+surrounded by a ring of merry forest rogues, they beheld a knight right
+gallantly mounted and equipped, his armour blazing in the sun, his gaudy
+bannerole a-flutter from long lance, his shield gaudy and brave with new
+paint; beholding which, Robin chuckled gleefully; quoth he:
+
+"Oho! On a field vert three falcons gules, proper, charged with heart
+ensanguined--aha, here's good booty, methinks!"
+
+Now, as this splendid knight rode nearer, contemptuous of his brawny
+captors, Robin stared to see that on his helmet he wore a wreath of
+flowers, while lance and sword, mace and battle-axe were wreathed in
+blooming roses.
+
+"Ho, Jenkyn, Cuthbert!" cried Robin, "what Sir Daintiness have ye here?"
+But ere his grinning captors could make reply, the knight himself spake
+thus:
+
+ "Behold a very gentle knight,
+ Sir Palamon of Tong,
+ A gentle knight in sorry plight,
+ That loveth love and hateth fight,
+ A knight than fight had rather write,
+ And strophes to fair dames indite,
+ Or sing a sighful song.
+
+ "By divers braggarts I'm abused,
+ 'Tis so as I've heard tell,
+ Because, since I'm to fight unused,
+ I many a fight have bold refused,
+ And, thereby, saved my bones unbruised,
+ Which pleaseth me right well.
+
+ "No joy have I in steed that prances,
+ True gentle man am I
+ To tread to lutes slow, stately dances.
+ 'Stead of your brutish swords and lances,
+ I love love's lureful looks and glances,
+ When hand to hand, unseen, advances,
+ And eye caresseth eye."
+
+"And how a plague, Sir Gentleness," questioned Robin, "may eye caress eye?"
+
+"E'en as lips voiceless may wooing speak, Sir Roguery, and tongue unwagging
+tell tales o' love, Sir Ferocity."
+
+ROBIN: Then had I the trick o' voiceless speech, now would I, with silly
+tongue, tell thee thou art our prisoner to ransom, Sir Silken Softness.
+
+SIR PALAMON: And I joy therefore, Sir Forest Fiend.
+
+ROBIN: And wherefore therefore?
+
+SIR PALAMON: For that therefore I need not to the joust, to that
+bone-shattering sport of boastful, brutal braggadocios, but here, lapped
+soft in the gentle green, woo the fair Yolande--
+
+JOCELYN: How, knight, the fair lady Yolande, say'st thou?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Even she.
+
+JOCELYN: But here she is not and thou art, how then may one that is, woo
+one is not?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Gross mountebank, by thought--I woo in thought, breathe my
+thought upon the balmy air and air beareth it to her feet.
+
+ROBIN: And she treadeth on't, so there's an end o' thy love! But pray you,
+Sir Downy Daintiness, how come ye that are so gentle so ungently dight?
+Discourse, Sir Dove!
+
+SIR PALAMON: In two words then, thou lewd lurcher o' the thickets; I ride
+thus in steely panoply--the which doth irk me sore--by reason of the tongue
+of my mother (good soul!) the which doth irk me more. For she (worthy
+lady!) full-fed o' fatuous fantasies and fables fond, fuddled i' faith
+o' faddling fictions as--gestes of jongleurs, tales told by tramping
+troubadours, ballades of babbling braggarts, romances of roysterous
+rhymers, she (good gossip!) as I say, having hearkened to and perused the
+works of such-like pelting, paltry prosers and poets wherein sweep of sword
+and lunge o' lance is accompted of worthier repute than the penning of
+dainty distich and pretty poesies pleasingly passionate. She, I say--my
+mother (God rest her!), e'en she with tongue most harsh, most bitter and
+most unwearying, hath enforced me, her son (whom Venus bless!)--e'en I that
+am soul most transcendental--I that am a very wing-ed Mercury--me, I say
+she hath, by torrential tongueful tumult (gentle lady!), constrained to don
+the habit of a base, brawling, beefy and most material Mars! Wherefore at
+my mother's behest (gracious dame!) I ride nothing joyful to be bruised and
+battered by any base, brutal braggart that hath the mind to try a tilt with
+me. Moreover--
+
+ROBIN: Hold! Take breath, gentle sir, for thine own sweet sake draw thy
+wind.
+
+SIR PALAMON: 'Tis done, fellow, 'tis done! And now in three words will
+I--
+
+ROBIN: Cry ye mercy, sir, thy two words do yet halloo "Buzz-buzz" in mine
+ears.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Faith, robber-rogue, since I a tongue possess--
+
+ROBIN: Therein thou art very son o' thy mother (whom St. Anthony cherish!).
+
+SIR PALAMON: With this rare difference, outlaw--for whereas her tongue
+(honoured relict!) is tipped with gall, wormwood, henbane, hemlock,
+bitter-aloes and verjuice, and stingeth like the adder, the asp, the toad,
+the newt, the wasp, and snaky-haired head of Medusa, mine--
+
+ROBIN: Buzzeth, buzz, O buzz!
+
+SIR PALAMON: Mine, thou paltry knave, I say mine--
+
+ROBIN: Buzz--ha--buzz!
+
+JOCELYN: I pray you, Sir Knight, doth the Red Gui tilt at to-morrow's
+joust?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Base mime, he doth! My Lord Gui of Ells, Lord Seneschal of
+Raddemore, is myfriend, a very mirror of knightly prowess, the sure might
+of whose lance none may abide. He is, in very truth, the doughtiest
+champion in all this fair country, matchless at any and every weapon,
+a-horse or a-foot, in sooth a very Ajax, Achilles, Hector, Roland and
+Oliver together and at once, one and indivisible, aye--by Cupid a very
+paladin!
+
+"'Tis so I've heard," said Jocelyn thoughtfully.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Two knights only there are might cope with him, and one Sir
+Agramore and one Jocelyn of the Helm, Duke of Brocelaunde. The fame of
+which last rumour hath so puffed up that thrice my Lord Gui hath sent his
+cartel of defiance, but the said Duke, intent on paltry battles beyond his
+marches, hath thrice refused, and wisely--so 'tis said.
+
+"Aye me, messire," quoth Jocelyn, strumming his lute, "and so bloweth the
+wind. Yet mayhap these twain shall meet one day."
+
+ROBIN: And heaven send me there to see! Now as to thee, Sir Softly Sweet,
+fair Lord of Tong, thy goodly horse and armour are mine henceforth,
+first because thy need of them is nothing, secondly because thou art my
+prisoner--
+
+SIR PALAMON: And thirdly, Sir Riotous Roughness, I do freely on thee bestow
+them, hide and hair, bolt and rivet.
+
+ROBIN: Now as to thy ransom, Sir Mildly-Meek, at what price dost rate thy
+value, spiritual and corporeal?
+
+SIR PALAMON: Fellow, though youthful, well-favoured and poet esteemed, I am
+yet marvellous modest! 'Tis true I am knight of lineage lofty, of patrimony
+proud, of manors many--
+
+ROBIN: Even as of thy words, Sir Emptiness.
+
+SIR PALAMON: 'Tis also true, thou ignorant atomy, I, like Demosthenes, am
+blessed with a wonder o' words and glory o' sweet phrase, and yet, and
+here's the enduring wonder--I am still but man, though man blessed with so
+much profundity, fecundity, and redundity of thought and expression, and
+therefore a facile scribe or speaker, able to create, relate, formulate or
+postulate any truth, axiomatic, sophistry subtle, or, in other words, I
+can narrate--
+
+ROBIN: Verily Sir Windbag thou dost, to narrate, thyself with wind
+inflate, and, being thus thyself inflate of air, thou dost thyself deflate
+of airy sounds which be words o' wind, and windy words is emptiness--thus
+by thy inflatings and deflatings cometh nought but wind bred o' wind, and
+nought is nothing, so nought is thy relation or narration; whereof make
+now a cessation, so will I, in due form, formulate, postulate and
+deliberate. Thus, with my good rogues' approbation and acclamation, I will
+of thy just valuation make tabulation, and give demonstration in relation
+to thy liberation from this thy situation, as namely, viz. and to-wit:
+First thou art a poet; in this is thy marketable value to us nought, for
+poets do go empty of aught but thought of sort when wrought, unbought;
+thus go they short which doth import they're empty, purse and belly.
+Second, upon thy testimony thou'rt a man. Go to! Here we be out again, for
+on the score of manliness thou art not. Yet thou art flesh and blood--
+good! for here we deal in such. Not that we yearn for thy flesh and blood,
+but, being thine, they are to thee dear, perchance, and thou would'st fain
+keep them alive a little longer; wherefore thou shalt for thy loved flesh
+and blood pay--purchasing the same of us. And, as flesh varies, so do our
+prices vary; we do sell a man his own flesh and blood at certain rateable
+values. Thus unto a hangman we did of late sell a hangman, in fair good
+halter, and he a hangman brawny, for no more than five gold pieces, the
+which was cheap, methinks, considering the goodly halter, and he a lusty,
+manly rogue to boot. Now as for thee, thou'rt soft and of a manlihood
+indifferent, so would I rate thee at one gold piece.
+
+SIR PALAMON: Ignorant grub! Am I less than base hangman--I, a knight--
+
+ROBIN: True, Sir Knight, thou'rt a knight for no reason but that thou
+art knight born and thus, by nought but being born, hath won to thyself
+nobility, riches and honours such as no man may win either by courage,
+skill, or learning, since highborn fool and noble rogue do rank high 'bove
+such. So _thou_ art knight, Sir Knight, and for thy knighthood, thy lineage
+lofty, thy manors many, mulcted thou shalt be in noble fashion. For thy
+manhood I assess thee at one gold piece, but, since thou'rt son o' thy dam
+(whom the Saints pity!) we do fine thee five thousand gold pieces--thy body
+ours until the purchase made. Away with him, lads; cherish him kindly,
+unarm him gently, and set him a-grinding corn till his ransom be
+paid--away!
+
+Now here was mighty roar of laughter and acclaim from all who heard,
+only Sir Palamon scowled, and, for once mute and tongue-tied, was led
+incontinent away to his labours.
+
+"And now, brother," quoth Robin, turning where Jocelyn stood smiling and
+merry-eyed, "what o' this armour dost seek, and wherefore?"
+
+"Art a lovely robber, Robin," said he; "a very various rogue, yet no rogue
+born, methinks!"
+
+"I was not always outlaw, brother--howbeit, what would a Fool with horse
+and knightly arms?"
+
+Now Jocelyn, bending close, whispered somewhatin Robin's ear, whereon he
+clapped hand to thigh, and laughed and laughed until the air rang again.
+
+"Oho, a jape--a jape indeed!" he roared. "O lovely brother, to see proud
+knight unhorsed by prancing motley Fool! Hey, how my heart doth jump for
+gladness! An thou wilt a-tilting ride, I will squire thee--a Fool of a
+knight tended by Rogue of a squire. O, rare--aha! oho! Come thy ways, sweet
+brother, and let us set about this joyous jape forthwith!"
+
+And thus it was that, as evening fell, there rode, through bowery bracken
+and grassy glade, two horsemen full blithe and merry, and the setting sun
+flashed back in glory from their glittering armour.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 10
+
+ How Red Gui sore smitten was in fight
+ By motley Fool in borrowed armour dight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Now shrill tucket and clarion, trumpet and horn
+ With their cheery summons saluted the morn,
+ Where the sun, in his splendour but newly put on,
+ Still more splendid made pennon and brave gonfalon
+ That with banners and pennoncelles fluttered and flew
+ High o'er tent and pavilion of every hue.
+ For the lists were placed here, for the tournament set,
+ Where already a bustling concourse was met;
+ Here were poor folk and rich folk, lord, lady and squire,
+ Clad in leather, in cloth and in silken attire;
+ Here folk pushed and folk jostled, as people still do
+ When the sitters be many, the seats scant and few;
+ Here was babble of voices and merry uproar,
+ For while some folk laughed loud, some lost tempers and swore.
+ Until on a sudden this tumult and riot
+ Was hushed to a murmur that sank into quiet
+ As forth into the lists, stern of air, grave of face,
+ Five fine heralds, with tabard and trumpet, did pace
+ With their Lion-at-arms, or Chief Herald, before;
+ And a look most portentous this Chief Herald wore,
+ And, though portly his shape and a little too round,
+ Sure a haughtier Chief Herald could nowhere be found.
+ So aloof was his look and so grave his demeanour,
+ Humble folk grew abashed, and mean folk felt the meaner;
+ When once more the loud clarions had all echoes woke
+ This Chief Herald in voice deep and sonorous spoke:
+
+ "Good people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Oyez!
+ Ye noble dames of high degree
+ Your pretty ears now lend to me,
+ And much I will declare to ye.
+ Oyez! Oyez!
+ Ye dainty lords of might and fame,
+ Ye potent gentles, do the same,
+ Ye puissant peers of noble name,
+ Now unto ye I do proclaim:
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!"
+
+ Here pealed the trumpets, ringing loud and clear,
+ That deafened folk who chanced to stand too near.
+ In special one--a bent and hag-like dame,
+ Who bent o'er crooked staff as she were lame;
+ Her long, sharp nose--but no, her nose none saw,
+ Since it was hidden 'neath the hood she wore
+ But from this hood she watched with glittering eye
+ Four lusty men-at-arms who lolled hard by,
+ Who, 'bove their armour, bore on back and breast
+ A bloody hand--Lord Gui's well-hated crest,
+ And who, unwitting of the hooded hag,
+ On sundry matters let their lewd tongues wag:
+
+THE FIRST SOLDIER: Why, she scorned him, 'tis well beknown!
+
+THE SECOND SOLDIER: Aye, and it doth not do to scorn the Red Gui, look 'ee!
+
+THE THIBD SOLDIER: She'll lie snug in his arms yet, her pride humbled, her
+proud spirit broke, I'll warrant me!
+
+THE FOURTH SOLDIER: She rideth hence in her litter, d'ye see; and with but
+scant few light-armed knaves attendant.
+
+THE FIRST SOLDIER: Aye, and our signal my lord's hunting-horn thrice
+winded--
+
+ Thus did they talk, with laughter loud and deep,
+ While nearer yet the hooded hag did creep;
+ But:--
+ Now blew the brazen clarions might and main,
+ Which done, the portly Herald spake again:
+
+ "Good people, all ye lords and ladies fair,
+ Oyez!
+ Now unto ye forthwith I do declare
+ The charms of two fair dames beyond compare.
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!
+ The first, our Duchess--Benedicta hight,
+ That late from Tissingors, her town, took flight,
+ To-day, returning here, doth bless our sight,
+ And view the prowess of each valiant knight;
+ Each champ-i-on, in shining armour dight,
+ With blunted weapons gallantly shall fight.
+ And, watched by eyes of ladies beamy-bright,
+ Inspired and strengthened by this sweet eye-light,
+ Shall quit themselves with very main and might;
+ The second:--in her beauty Beauty's peer,
+ Yolande the Fair, unto our Duchess dear,
+ For whose sweet charms hath splintered many a spear,
+ Throned with our lovely Duchess, sitteth here
+ With her bright charms all gallant hearts to cheer.
+ Now, ye brave knights, that nought but Cupid fear,
+ To these sweet dames give eye, to me give ear!
+ Oyez!
+ 'Tis now declared--"
+
+My daughter GILLIAN expostulateth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now
+ You must allow
+ That your herald is rather a bore.
+ He talks such a lot,
+ And it seems frightful rot--
+
+ MYSELF: I hate slang, miss! I told you before!
+ If my herald says much,
+ Yet he only says such
+ As by heralds was said in those days;
+ Though their trumpets they blew,
+ It is none the less true
+ That they blew them in other folks' praise.
+ If my herald verbose is
+ And gives us large doses
+ Of high-sounding rodomontade,
+ You'll find they spoke so
+ In the long, long ago,
+ So blame not--O, blame not the bard.
+ But while we are prating
+ Our herald stands waiting
+ In a perfectly terrible fume,
+ So, my dear, here and now,
+ The poor chap we'll allow
+ His long-winded speech to resume:
+
+ "'Tis here declared by order of the Ten,
+ Fair Benedicta's guardians--worthy men!
+ Thus they decree--ye lovers all rejoice!
+ She shall by their command, this day make choice
+ Of him--O, him! O blest, thrice blessed he
+ Who must anon her lord and husband be.
+ 'Tis so pronounced by her grave guardians ten,
+ By them made law--and they right reverend men!
+ And this the law--our lady, be it said,
+ This day shall choose the husband she must wed;
+ And he who wins our Duchess for his own
+ Crowned by her love shall mount to ducal throne,
+ So let each knight, by valiant prowess, prove
+ Himself most worthy to our lady's love.
+ Now make I here an end, and ending, pray
+ Ye quit you all like val'rous knights this day."
+
+Thus spake the Chief Herald and so paced solemnly down the lists while the
+long clarions filled the air with gallant music. But the lovely Benedicta,
+throned beneath silken canopy, knit her black brows and clenched slender
+hands and stamped dainty foot, yet laughed thereafter, whereupon Yolande,
+leaning to kiss her flushed cheek, questioned her, wondering:
+
+"How say'st thou to this, my loved Benedicta?"
+
+Quoth the DUCHESS:
+
+ "I say, my sweeting, 'tis quite plain
+ That I must run away again!
+
+Howbeit I care not one rush for their laws! Marry forsooth--a fig! Let them
+make laws an they will, these reverend, right troublesome grey-beards of
+mine, they shall never wed me but to such a man as Love shall choose me,
+and loving him--him only will I wed, be he great or lowly, rich or poor,
+worthy or unworthy, so I do love him, as is the sweet and wondrous way of
+love."
+
+"Ah, Benedicta! what is love?"
+
+
+"A joy that cometh but of itself, all unsought! This wisdom had I of a Fool
+i' the forest. Go learn you of this same Fool and sigh not, dear wench."
+
+"Nay, but," sighed Yolande, lovely cheeks a-flush, "what of Sir
+Agramore--hath he not sworn to wed thee?"
+
+"I do fear Sir Agramore no longer, Yolande, since I have found me one may
+cope with him perchance--even as did a Fool with my Lord Gui of Ells upon a
+tune. Art sighing again, sweet maid?"
+
+"Nay, indeed--and wherefore should I sigh?"
+
+"At mention of a Fool, belike."
+
+"Ah, no, no, 'twere shame in me, Benedicta! A Fool forsooth!"
+
+"Yet Fool of all fools singular, Yolande. And for all his motley a very
+man, methinks, and of a proud, high bearing."
+
+Here Yolande's soft cheek grew rosy again:
+
+"Yet is he but motley Fool--and his face--marred hatefully--"
+
+"Hast seen him smile, Yolande, for then--how, dost sigh again, my sweet?"
+
+"Nay, indeed; but talk we of other matters--thy so sudden flight--tell me
+all that chanced thee, dearest Benedicta."
+
+"Why first--in thine ear, Yolande--my jewel is not--see!"
+
+"How--how, alas! O most sweet lady--hast lost it? Thy royal amulet?"
+
+"Bestowed it, Yolande."
+
+"Benedicta! On whom?"
+
+"A poor soldier. One that saved me i' the forest from many of Sir
+Agramore's verderers--a man very tall and strong and brave, but dight in
+ragged cloak and rusty mail--"
+
+"Ragged? A thief--"
+
+"Mayhap!"
+
+"An outlaw--"
+
+"Mayhap!"
+
+"A wolf's-head--a wild man and fierce."
+
+"True he is very wild and very fierce, but very, very gentle--"
+
+"And didst give to such thy jewel? O Benedicta! The Heart-in-heart?"
+
+"Freely--gladly! He begged it of me very humbly and all unknowing what it
+signified--"
+
+"O my loved Benedicta, alas!"
+
+"O my sweet Yolande, joy!"
+
+"But if he should claim thee, and he so poor and wild and ragged--"
+
+"If he should, Yolande, if he should--
+
+ 'He that taketh Heart-in-heart,
+ Taketh all and every part.'
+
+O, if he should, Yolande, then I--must fulfil the prophecy. Nay, dear my
+friend, stare not so great and sadly-eyed, he knoweth not the virtue of the
+jewel nor have I seen him these many days."
+
+"And must thou sigh therefore, Benedicta?"
+
+But now the trumpets blew a fanfare, and forth rode divers gallant knights,
+who, spurring rearing steeds, charged amain to gore, to smite and batter
+each other with right good will while the concourse shouted, caps waved and
+scarves and ribands fluttered.
+
+ But here, methinks, it booteth not to tell
+ Of every fierce encounter that befell;
+ How knight 'gainst knight drove fierce with pointless spear
+ And met with shock that echoed far and near;
+ Or how, though they with blunted swords did smite,
+ Sore battered was full many a luckless wight.
+ But as the day advanced and sun rose high
+ Full often rose the shout: "A Gui--A Gui!"
+ For many a proud (though bruised and breathless) lord,
+ Red Gui's tough lance smote reeling on the sward;
+ And ever as these plaudits shook the air,
+ Through vizored casque at Yolande he would stare.
+
+And beholding all the beauty of her he smiled evilly and muttered to
+himself, glancing from her to certain lusty men-at-arms who, lolling
+'gainst the barriers, bore at back and breast his badge of the bloody hand.
+
+But the fair Yolande heeded him none at all, sitting with eyes a-dream
+and sighing ever and anon; insomuch that the Duchess, watching her slyly,
+sighed amain also and presently spake:
+
+"Indeed, and O verily, Yolande, meseemeth we do sigh and for ever sigh,
+thou and I, like two poor, love-sick maids. How think'st thou?"
+
+"Nay, O Benedicta, hearken! See, who rideth yonder?"
+
+ Now even as thus fair Yolanda spoke,
+ A horn's shrill note on all men's hearing broke,
+ And all eyes turned where rode a gallant knight,
+ In burnished armour sumptuously bedight.
+ His scarlet plumes 'bove gleaming helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ His gaudy shield with new-popped blazon glowed:
+ Three stooping falcons that on field vert showed;
+ But close-shut vizor hid from all his face
+ As thus he rode at easy, ambling pace.
+
+"Now as I live!" cried Benedicta. "By his device yon should be that foolish
+knight Sir Palamon of Tong!"
+
+"Aye, truly!" sighed Yolande. "Though he wear no motley hither rideth
+indeed a very fool. And look, Benedicta--look! O, sure never rode knight in
+like array--see how the very populace groweth dumb in its amaze!"
+
+ For now the crowd in wonderment grew mute,
+ To see this knight before him bare a lute,
+ While blooming roses his great helmet crowned,
+ They wreathed his sword, his mighty lance around.
+ Thus decked rode he in rosy pageantry,
+ And up the lists he ambled leisurely;
+ Till, all at once, from the astonied crowd
+ There brake a hum that swelled to laughter loud;
+ But on he rode, nor seemed to reck or heed,
+ Till 'neath the balcony he checked his steed.
+ Then, handing lance unto his tall esquire,
+ He sudden struck sweet chord upon his lyre,
+ And thus, serene, his lute he plucked until
+ The laughter died and all stood hushed and still;
+ Then, hollow in his helm, a clear voice rang,
+ As, through his lowered vizor, thus he sang:
+
+ "A gentle knight behold in me,
+ (Unless my blazon lie!)
+ For on my shield behold and see,
+ Upon field vert, gules falcons three,
+ Surcharged with heart ensanguiney,
+ To prove to one and all of ye,
+ A love-lorn knight am I."
+
+But now cometh (and almost in haste) the haughty and right dignified Chief
+Herald with pursuivants attendant, which latter having trumpeted amain,
+the Herald challenged thus:
+
+ "Messire, by the device upon thy shield,
+ We know my Lord of Tong is in the field;
+ But pray thee now declare, pronounce, expound,
+ Why thus ye ride with foolish roses crowned?"
+
+Whereto the Knight maketh answer forthwith:
+
+ "If foolish be these flowers I bear,
+ Then fool am I, I trow.
+ Yet, in my folly, fool doth swear,
+ These flowers to fool an emblem rare
+ Of one, to fool, more sweet, more fair,
+ E'en she that is beyond compare,
+ A flower perchance for fool to wear,
+ Who shall his foolish love declare
+ Till she, mayhap, fool's life may share,
+ Nor shall this fool of love despair,
+ Till foolish hie shall go.
+
+ "For life were empty, life were vain,
+ If true love come not nigh,
+ Though honours, fortune, all I gain,
+ Yet poorer I than poor remain,
+ If true-love from me fly;
+ So here I pray,
+ If that thou may,
+ Ah--never pass me by!"
+
+
+Here the Chief Herald frowned, puffing his cheeks, and waved his ebony
+staff authoritatively.
+
+Quoth he: "Enough, Sir Knight! Here is no place for love! For inasmuch as
+we--"
+
+THE KNIGHT: Gentle Herald, I being here, here is Love, since I am lover,
+therefore love-full, thus where I go goeth Love--
+
+The Herald: Apprehend me, Sir Knight! For whereas love hath no part in--
+
+The Knight: Noble Herald, Love hath every part within me and without, thus
+I, from Love apart, have no part, and my love no part apart from my every
+part; wherefore, for my part, and on my part, ne'er will I with Love part
+for thy part and this to thee do I impart--
+
+"Sweet Saints aid us!" The Chief Herald clasped his massy brow and gazed
+with eye distraught. "Sir Knight--messire--my very good and noble Lord of
+Tong--I grope! Here is that which hath a seeming ... thy so many parts
+portend somewhat ... and yet ... I excogitate ... yet grope I still ...
+impart, part ... thy part and its part ... so many parts ... and roses ...
+and songs o' love ... a lute! O, thundering Mars, I ... Sound, trumpets!"
+
+But the Duchess up-starting, silenced Herald and trumpeters with imperious
+hand.
+
+"Sir Knight of Tong," said she, "'tis told thou'rt of nimble tongue and a
+maker of songs, so we bid thee sing if thy song be of Love--for Love is
+a thing little known and seldom understood these days. Here be very many
+noble knights wondrous learned in the smiting of buffets, but little else;
+here be noble dames very apt at the play of eyes, the twining of fingers,
+the languishment of sighs, that, seeking True-love, find but its shadow;
+and here also grey beards that have forgot the very name of Love. So we bid
+thee sing us of Love--True-love, what it is. Our ears attend thee!"
+
+"Gracious lady," answered the Knight, "gladly do I obey. But Love is
+mighty and I lowly, and may speak of Love but from mine own humility. And
+though much might be said of Love since Love's empire is the universe and
+Love immortal, yet will I strive to portray this mighty thing that is
+True-love in few, poor words."
+
+Then, plucking sweet melody from his lute, the Knight sang as here
+followeth:
+
+ "What is Love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day
+ Ne'er to die or fade away
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ "Though youth, alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless doth remain
+ The same to-day and ever."
+
+Now while the clarions rang out proclaiming Sir Palamon's defiance,
+Benedicta looked on Yolande and Yolande on Benedicta:
+
+"O, wonderful!" cried the Duchess. "My Lord of Tong hath found him manhood
+and therewith a wisdom beyond most and singeth such love as methought only
+angels knew and maids might vision in their dreams. Ah, Yolande--that
+such a love could be ... e'en though he went ragged and poor in all but
+love...."
+
+"Benedicta," sighed Yolande, hands clasped on swelling bosom, "O Benedicta,
+here is no foolish Lord of Tong ... and yet ... O, I am mad!"
+
+"Why, then, 'tis sweet madness! So, my Yolande, let us be mad awhile
+together ... thou--a Fool ... and I--a beggar-rogue!"
+
+"Nay--alas, dear Benedicta! This were shame--"
+
+"And forsooth is it shame doth swell thy heart, Yolande, light the glamour
+in thine eyes and set thee a-tremble--e'en as I? Nay indeed, thou'rt
+a-thrill with Folly ... and I, with Roguery. Loved Folly! Sweet Roguery! O
+Yolande, let us fly from empty state, from this mockery of life and
+learn the sweet joys of ... of beggary, and, crowned with poverty, clasp
+life--"
+
+ MYSELF, myself interrupting:
+ By the way, my dear, you'll understand,
+ Though this is very fine,
+ Still, her Grace's counsel to Yolande
+ Must not be in your line!
+ Not that I'd have you wed for wealth,
+ Or many a beggar-man by stealth,
+ But I would have you, if you can--
+
+ GILL: Marry some strong, stern, silent man,
+ Named Mark, and with hair slightly gray by the ears!
+ Now he's just the sort who would bore me to tears.
+ If I for a husband feel ever inclined,
+ I shall choose quite an ordin'ry husband--the kind
+ With plenty of money and nothing to do,
+ With a nice, comfy house, and a motor or two--
+
+ MYSELF: That's all very fine, miss, but what would you do
+ If he, by some ill-chance, quite penniless grew?
+
+ GILL: Oh, why then--why, of course,
+ I should get a divorce--
+
+ MYSELF: A divorce? Gracious heaven! For goodness' sake--
+
+ GILL: 'Twould be the most dignified action to take!
+
+
+ MYSELF: Pray, what in the world of such things do you know?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, like you--each day older I grow.
+ But, instead of discussing poor me,
+ I think you would much nicer be
+ To get on with our Geste.
+
+ MYSELF: I obey your behest!
+
+Said Yolande to the duchess, said she:
+
+"Nay, my Benedicta, these be only dreams, but life is real and dreams a
+very emptiness!"
+
+"And is 't so, forsooth?" exclaimed the Duchess. "Then am I nought but a
+duchess and lonely, thou a maid fearful of her own heart, and yon singer of
+love only a very futile knight, Sir Palamon of Tong, nothing esteemed by
+thee for wit or valour and little by his peers--see how his challengers do
+throng. How think you?" But the lady Yolande sat very still and silent,
+only she stared, great-eyed, where danced the scarlet plume.
+
+And indeed many and divers were the knights who, beholding the blazon of
+Tong, sent the bearer their defiance, eager to cope with him; and each
+and every challenge Sir Palamon accepted by mouth of his tall esquire who
+(vizor closed, even as his lord's) spake the Chief Herald in loud, merry
+voice, thus:
+
+"Sir Herald, whereas and forinasmuch as this, my Lord of Tong himself,
+himself declaring fool, is so himself-like as to meet in combat each and
+every of his challengers--themselves ten, my lord that is fool, himself
+himself so declaring, now declareth by me that am no fool but only humble
+esquire--messire, I say, doth his esquire require that I, the said
+esquire, should on his part impart as followeth, namely and to wit: That
+these ten gentle knights, the said challengers, shall forthwith of
+themselves choose of themselves, themselves among themselves thereto
+agreeing, which of themselves, among themselves of themselves so chosen,
+shall first in combat adventure himself against my Lord of Tong himself.
+And moreover, should Fortune my lord bless with victory, the nine
+remaining shall among themselves choose, themselves agreeing, which of
+themselves shall next, thus chosen of themselves, themselves represent in
+single combat with this very noble, fool-like Lord of Tong, my master.
+Furthermore, whereas and notwithstanding--"
+
+"Hold, sir!" cried the Chief Herald, fingering harassed brow. "Pray thee
+'bate--O, abate thy speechful fervour. Here forsooth and of truth is
+notable saying--O, most infallibly--and yet perchance something discursive
+and mayhap a little involved."
+
+"Nay, Sir Herald," quoth the esquire, "if involved 'twill be resolved if
+revolved, thus: Here be ten lords would fight one, and one--that is my lord
+who is but one--ten fight one by one. But that ten, fighting one, may as
+one fight, let it be agreed that of these ten one be chosen one to fight,
+so shall one fight one and every one be satisfied--every one of these ten
+fighting one, one by one. Thus shall ten be one, and one ten fight one by
+one till one be discomfited. Shall we accord the matter simply, thus?"
+
+"Sir," quoth the Chief Herald, gasping a little, "Amen!"
+
+"O!" cried the Duchess, clapping her hands, "O Yolande, hark to this rare
+esquire! Surely, I have heard yon cunning tongue ere this?"
+
+But Yolande gazed ever where Sir Palamon, having taken his station, set
+himself in array. For now, the ten knights having chosen one to represent
+them, forth rode their champion resplendent in shining mail and green
+surcoat with heralds before to proclaim his name and rank.
+
+"Yolande," quoth the Duchess softly, "pray--pray this Lord of Tong may
+tilt as bravely as he doth sing, for Sir Thomas of Thornydyke is a notable
+jouster."
+
+The trumpets blew a fanfare and, levelling their pointless lances, both
+knights gave spur, their great horses reared, broke into a gallop and
+thundered towards each other.
+
+ But hard midway upon the green surcoat,
+ Sir Palamon's stout lance so truly smote,
+ That, 'neath the shock, the bold Sir Thomas reeled
+ And, losing stirrups, saddle, lance and shield,
+ Down, down upon the ling outstretched he fell
+ And, losing all, lost breath and speech as well.
+ Thus, silent all, the bold Sir Thomas lay,
+ Though much, and many things, he yearned to say,
+ Which things his squires and pages might surmise
+ From the expression of his fish-like eyes
+ E'en as they bore him from that doleful place;
+ While, near and far, from all the populace,
+ Rose shout on shout that echoed loud and long:
+ "Sir Palamon! Sir Palamon of Tong!"
+ So came these ten good knights, but, one by one,
+ They fell before this bold Sir Palamon,
+ Whose lance unerring smote now helm, now shield,
+ That many an one lay rolling on the field.
+ But each and all themselves did vanquished yield;
+ And loud and louder did the plaudits grow,
+ That one knight should so many overthrow.
+ Even Sir Gui, within his silken tent
+ Scowled black in ever-growing wonderment.
+
+But the Knight of Tong, his gaudy shield a little battered, his fine
+surcoat frayed and torn, leaped from his wearied steed and forthwith
+mounted one held by his tall esquire, a mighty charger that tossed proud
+head and champed his bit, pawing impatient hoof.
+
+"Aha!" quoth the esquire, pointing to ten fair steeds held by ten fair
+pages. "Oho, good brother, most puissant Knight of Tong, here is good and
+rich booty--let us begone!"
+
+"Nay," answered the Knight, tossing aside his blunt tilting-spear, "here is
+an end to sportful dalliance--reach me my lance!"
+
+"Ha, is't now the Red Gui's turn, brother? The Saints aid thee, in especial
+two, that, being women, are yet no saints yet awhile--see how they watch
+thee, sweet, gentle dames! Their prayers go with thee, methinks, brother,
+and mine also, for the Red Gui is forsooth a valiant rogue!"
+
+And now, mounted on the great black war-horse, the Knight of Tong rode up
+the lists:
+
+ His scarlet plume 'bove shining helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ Till he was come where, plain for all to spy,
+ Was hung the shield and blazon of Sir Gui,
+ With bends and bars in all their painted glory,
+ Surcharged with hand ensanguined--gules or gory.
+
+Full upon this bloody hand smote the sharp point of Sir Palamon's lance;
+whereupon the watching crowd surged and swayed and hummed expectant, since
+here was to be no play with blunted weapons but a deadly encounter.
+
+Up started Sir Gui and strode forth of his tent, grim-smiling and
+confident. Quoth he:
+
+"Ha, my Lord of Tong, thou'rt grown presumptuous and over-venturesome,
+methinks. But since life thou dost hold so cheap prepare ye for death
+forthright!"
+
+So spake the Lord of Ells and, beckoning to his esquires, did on his great
+tilting-helm and rode into the lists, whereon was mighty roar of welcome,
+for, though much hated, he was esteemed mighty at arms, and the accepted
+champion of the Duchy. So while the people thundered their acclaim the two
+knights galloped to their stations and, reining about, faced each other
+from either end of the lists,
+
+ And halted thus, their deadly spears they couched,
+ With helms stooped low, behind their shields they crouched;
+ Now rang the clarions; goading spurs struck deep,
+ The mighty chargers reared with furious leap
+ And, like two whirlwinds, met in full career,
+ To backward reel 'neath shock of splintering spear:
+ But, all unshaken, every eye might see
+ The bloody hand, the scarred gules falcons three.
+ Thrice thus they met, but at the fourth essay,
+ Rose sudden shout of wonder and dismay,
+ For, smitten sore through riven shield, Sir Gui
+ Thudded to earth there motionless to lie.
+
+Thus Sir Gui, Lord of Ells and Seneschal of Raddemore, wounded and utterly
+discomfited, was borne raging to his pavilion while the air rang with the
+blare of trumpet and clarion in honour of the victor. Thereafter, since no
+other knight thought it prudent to challenge him, Sir Palamon of Tong was
+declared champion of the tournament, and was summoned by the Chief
+Herald to receive the victor's crown. But even as he rode towards the
+silk-curtained balcony, a distant trumpet shrilled defiance, and into the
+lists galloped a solitary knight.
+
+ Well-armed was he in proud and war-like trim,
+ Of stature tall and wondrous long of limb;
+ 'Neath red surcoat black was the mail he wore;
+ His glitt'ring shield a rampant leopard bore,
+ Beholding which the crowd cried in acclaim,
+ "Ho for Sir Agramore of Biename!"
+
+But from rosy-red to pale, from pale to rosy-red flushed the Duchess
+Benedicta, and clenching white teeth, she frowned upon Sir Agramore's
+fierce and warlike figure. Quoth she:
+
+"Oh, sure there is no man so vile or so unworthy in all Christendom as this
+vile Lord of Biename!"
+
+"Unless," said Yolande, frowning also, "unless it be my Lord Gui of Ells!"
+
+"True, my Yolanda! Now, as thou dost hate Sir Gui so hate I Sir Agramore,
+therefore pray we sweet maid, petition we the good Saints our valiant
+singer shall serve my hated Sir Agramore as he did thy hated Sir Gui--may
+he be bruised, may he be battered, may--"
+
+"Oho, 'tis done, my sweeting! A-hee--a-hi, 'tis done!" croaked a voice, and
+starting about, the Duchess beheld a bent and hag-like creature,
+
+ With long, sharp nose that showed beneath her hood,
+ A nose that curved as every witch's should,
+ And glittering eye, before whose baleful light,
+ The fair Yolande shrank back in sudden fright.
+
+"Nay, my Yolande," cried the Duchess, "hast forgot old Mopsa, my
+foster-mother, that, being a wise-woman, fools decry as witch, and my
+ten grave and learned guardians have banished therefor? Hast forgot my
+loved and faithful Mopsa that is truly the dearest, gentlest, wisest
+witch that e'er witched rogue or fool? But O Mopsa, wise
+mother--would'st thou might plague and bewitch in very truth yon base
+caitiff knight, Sir Agramore of Biename!"
+
+"'Tis done, loved daughter, 'tis done!" chuckled the Witch.
+
+ "He groaneth,
+ He moaneth,
+ He aileth,
+ He waileth,
+ Lying sighing,
+ Nigh to dying,
+ Oho,
+ I know
+ 'Tis so.
+ With bones right sore,
+ Both 'hind and fore,
+ Sir Agramore
+ Doth ache all o'er.
+
+"He aileth sore yet waileth more--oho! I know, I have seen--in the chalk,
+in the ink, in the smoke--I looked and saw
+
+ "Sir Agramore,
+ By bold outlaw,
+ Bethwacked most sore
+ As told before--"
+
+"Nay, but, good Mopsa, how may this be? Sir Agramore rideth armed yonder,
+plain to my sight."
+
+"Child, I have told thee sooth," croaked the Witch. "Have patience, watch
+and be silent, and shalt grow wise as old Mopsa--mayhap--in time.
+
+ "For, 'tis written in the chalk,
+ Sore is he and may not walk.
+ O, sing heart merrily!
+ I have seen within the smoke
+ Bones bethwacked by lusty stroke,
+ Within the ink I looked and saw,
+ Swathed in clouts, Sir Agramore;
+ Dread of him for thee is o'er,
+ By reason of a bold outlaw.
+ Sing, heart, and joyful be!"
+
+"Go to, Mopsa, thou'rt mad!" quoth the Duchess. "For yonder is this hated
+lord very strong and hale, and in well-being whiles thou dost rave! Truly
+thou'rt run mad, methinks!"
+
+But the old Witch only mumbled and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones as
+is the custom of witches.
+
+Meantime, Sir Agramore, checking his fiery charger and brandishing heavy
+lance fiercely aloft, roared loud defiance:
+
+"What ho! Ye knights, lords, esquires, and lovers of lusty blows, hither
+come I with intent, sincere and hearty, to bicker with, fight, combat and
+withstand all that will--each and every, a-horse or a-foot, with sword,
+battleaxe or lance. Now all ye that love good blows--have at ye!"
+
+Here ensued great clamour and a mighty blowing of trumpets that waxed yet
+louder when it was proclaimed that Sir Palamon, as champion of the day, had
+accepted Sir Agramore's haughty challenge.
+
+And now all was hushed as these two doughty knights faced each other and,
+as the trumpets brayed, charged furiously to meet with thunderous shock of
+breaking lances and reeling horses that, rearing backwards, fell crashing
+upon the torn and trampled grass. But their riders, leaping clear of
+lashing hooves, drew their swords and, wasting no breath in words, beset
+each other forthwith, smiting with right good will.
+
+Sir Agramore's leopard shield was riven in twain by a single stroke, Sir
+Palamon's scarlet plume was shorn away, but they fought only the fiercer
+as, all untiring, the long blades whirled and flashed until their armour
+rang, sparks flew, and the populace rocked and swayed and roared for very
+joy. Once Sir Agramore was beaten to his knees, but rising, grasped his
+sword in two hands and smote a mighty swashing blow, a direful stroke that
+burst the lacing of Sir Palamon's great helm and sent it rolling on the
+sward. But, beholding thus his adversary's face, Sir Agramore, crying in
+sudden amaze, sprang back; for men all might see a visage framed in long,
+black-curled hair, grey-eyed, but a face so direly scarred that none,
+having seen it but once, might well forget.
+
+"Par Dex!" panted Sir Agramore, lifting his vizor.
+
+"Pertinax!" gasped Duke Jocelyn. "O Pertinax--thou loved and lovely
+smiter--ne'er have I been so sore battered ere now!"
+
+Hereupon all folk stared in hugeous wonderment to behold these two
+champions drop their swords and leap to clasp and hug each other in mighty
+arms, to pat each other's mailed shoulders and grasp each other's mailed
+hands. Quoth Sir Pertinax:
+
+"Lord, how came ye in this guise?"
+
+"My Pertinax, whence stole ye that goodly armour?"
+
+"Lord, oath made I to requite one Sir Agramore of Biename for certain felon
+blow. Him sought I latterly therefore, and this day met him journeying
+hither, and so, after some disputation, I left him lying by the way, nor
+shall he need armour awhile, methinks--wherefore I took it and rode hither
+seeking what might befall--"
+
+But here, Sir Gui, all heedless of his wound, started up from his couch,
+raising great outcry:
+
+"Ha--roguery, roguery! Ho, there, seize me yon knave that beareth the
+cognizance of Tong. Ha--treason, treason!" At this, others took up the cry
+and divers among the throng, beholding Duke Jocelyn's scarred features,
+made loud tumults: "The Fool! The Fool! 'Tis the Singing Motley! 'Tis the
+rogue-Fool that broke prison--seize him! Seize him!" And many, together
+with the soldiery, came running.
+
+"Lord," quoth Sir Pertinax, catching up his sword, "here now is like to be
+a notable, sweet affray!" But even as these twain turned to meet their many
+assailants was thunder of hoofs, a loud, merry voice reached them, and they
+saw Robin hard by who held two trampling chargers.
+
+"Mount, brothers--mount!" he cried. "Mount, then spur we for the barriers!"
+So they sprang to saddle and, spurring the rearing horses, galloped for
+the barriers, all three, nor was there any who dare stay them or abide the
+sweep of those long swords. Thus, leaping the barriers, they galloped away
+and left behind roaring tumult and dire confusion.
+
+And amid all this, hid by the silken curtains of her balcony, the Duchess
+Benedicta uttered a joyous cry and, clasping Yolande in her arms, kissed
+her rapturously.
+
+"Yolande!" she cried, "O dear my friend, thou didst see--even as did I--a
+sorry fool and a poor rogue-soldier at hand-strokes with each other--O wise
+Fool! O knightly Rogue! Come, let us fly, Yolande, let us to the wild-wood
+and, lost therein, love, True-love, methinks, shall find us. Nay--ask me
+nothing, only hear this. Be thou to thine own heart true, be thou brave and
+Shame shall fly thee since True-love out-faceth Shame! How say'st thou,
+Mopsa, thou wise witch-mother?"
+
+"Ah, sweet children!" croaked the Witch, touching each with claw-like hand
+yet hand wondrous gentle. "True-love shall indeed find ye, hide where ye
+will. For True-love, though blind, they say, hath eyes to see all that is
+good and sweet and true. A poor man-at-arms in rusty mail may yet be true
+man and a fool, for all his motley, wise. To love such seemeth great folly,
+yet to the old, love is but folly. Nath'less, being old I do love ye, and
+being wise I charge ye:
+
+ "Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies;
+ Love's blind, they say, but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly--follow!"
+
+My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: "Stop! Your tournament, father, seems too long drawn out,
+ With quite too much combating and knocking about.
+
+ MYSELF: I hope you're wrong, my dear, although
+ Who knows? Perhaps, it may be so.
+
+ GILL: And such scrappy bits of love-making you write;
+ You seem to prefer much describing a fight.
+ All authors should write what their readers like best;
+ But authors are selfish, yes--even the best
+ And you are an author!
+
+ MYSELF: Alack, that is true,
+ And, among other things, I'm the author of you.
+
+ GILL: Then, being my author, it's plain as can be
+ That you are to blame if I'm naughty--not me.
+ But, father, our Geste, though quite corking in places,
+ Has too many fights and too little embraces.
+ You've made all our lovers so frightfully slow,
+ You ought to have married them pages ago.
+ The books that are nicest are always the sort
+ That, when you have read them, seem always too short!
+ If you make all your readers impatient like me,
+ They'll buy none of your books--and then where shall we be?
+ All people like reading of love when they can,
+ So write them a lot, father, that is the plan.
+ Go on to the love, then, for every one's sake,
+ And end with a wedding--
+
+ MYSELF: Your counsel I 'll take.
+ I can woo them and wed them in less than no time,
+ I can do it in prose, in blank verse, or in rhyme;
+ But since, my dear, you are for speed,
+ To end our Geste I will proceed.
+ In many ways it may be done,
+ As I have told you--here is one:
+
+A short two years have elapsed and we find our hero Jocelyn tenderly
+playing with a golden-haired prattler, his beloved son and heir, while his
+beautiful spouse Yolande busied with her needle, smiles through happy
+tears.
+
+ GILL: O, hush, father! Of course, that is simply absurd!
+ Such terrible piffle--
+
+ MYSELF: I object to that word!
+
+ GILL: Well, then, please try a little verse.
+
+ MYSELF: With pleasure:
+
+ "My own at last!" Duke Joc'lyn fondly cried,
+ And kissed Yolande, his blooming, blushing bride.
+ "My own!" he sighed. "My own--my very own!"
+ "Thine, love!" she murmured. "Thine and thine alone,
+ Thy very own for days and months and years--"
+
+ GILL: O, stop! I think that's even worse!
+
+ MYSELF: Beyond measure.
+
+ Then here's a style may be admired
+ Since brevity is so desired:
+
+ So he married her and she married him,
+ and everybody married each other
+ and lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or again, and thus, my daughter,
+ Versified it may be shorter:
+
+ So all was marriage, joy and laughter,
+ And each lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or:
+ If for High Romance you sigh,
+ Here's Romance that's over high:
+
+ Shy summer swooned to autumn's sun-burned arms,
+ Swoon, summer, swoon!
+ While roses bloomed and blushing sighed their pain,
+ Blush, roses, blush!
+
+ Filling the world with perfume languorous,
+ Sighing forth their souls in fragrant amorousness;
+ And fair Yolande, amid these bloomful languors,
+ Blushing as they, as languorous, as sweet,
+ Sighed in the arms that passioned her around:
+ O Jocelyn, O lord of my delight,
+ See how--
+
+ GILL: Stop, father, stop, I beg of you.
+ Such awful stuff will never do,
+ I suppose you must finish it in your own way--
+
+ MYSELF: I suppose that I shall, child, that is--if I may.
+
+ GILL: But father, wait--I must insist
+ Whatever else you do
+ It's time that somebody was kissed
+ It doesn't matter who--
+ I mean either Yolande the Fair
+ Or else the Duchess--I don't care.
+
+ MYSELF: In these next two Fyttes both shall kiss
+ And be well kissed, I promise this.
+ Two Fyttes of kisses I will make
+ One after t' other, for your sake.
+ Two Fyttes of love I will invent
+ And make them both quite different,
+ Which is a trying matter rather
+ And difficult for any father--
+ But then, as well you know, my Gillian,
+ You have a father in a million;
+ And Oh, methinks 'tis very plain
+ You ne'er shall meet his like again.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 11
+
+How Pertinax fell out with Robin and with Friar, Yet, in that very hour,
+came by his heart's desire.
+
+The sinking sun had set the West aflame, When our three riders to the
+wild-wood came, Where a small wind 'mid sun-kissed branches played, And
+deep'ning shadows a soft twilight made; Where, save for leafy stirrings,
+all was still, Lulled by the murmur of a bubbling rill That flowed
+o'ershadowed by a mighty oak, Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning
+stroke. Here Robin checked his steed. "Good friends," quoth he,
+
+ My daughter Gillian suggesteth:
+
+ Gill: That's rather good,
+ But, still, I should
+ In prose prefer the rest;
+ For if this fytte
+ Has love in it,
+ Prose is for love the best.
+ All ord'nary lovers, as every one knows,
+ Make love to each other much better in prose.
+ If, at last, our Sir Pertinax means to propose,
+ Why then--just to please me,
+ Father, prose let it be.
+
+ Myself: Very well, I agree!
+
+ Then said Robin, quoth he:
+"Good friends, here are we safe!" And, checking his steed within this
+pleasant shade, he dismounted.
+
+"Safe, quotha?" said Sir Pertinax, scowling back over shoulder. "Not so!
+Surely we are close pursued--hark! Yonder be horsemen riding at speed--ha,
+we are beset!"
+
+"Content you, sir!" answered Robin. "Think you I would leave behind good
+booty? Yonder come ten noble coursers laden with ten goodly armours the
+same won a-jousting to-day by this right wondrous Fool, my good gossip--"
+
+"Thy gossip, forsooth!" snorted Sir Pertinax. "But tell me, presumptuous
+fellow, how shall these ten steeds come a-galloping hither!"
+
+"Marry, on this wise, Sir Simple Innocence--these steeds do gallop for
+sufficient reason, namely--they are to gallop bidden being ridden,
+bestridden and chidden by whip and spur applied by certain trusty men o' my
+company, which men go habited, decked, dressed, clad, guised and disguised
+as smug, sleek citizens, Sir Innocent Simplicity--"
+
+"Par Dex!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax, scowling. "And who 'rt thou, sirrah,
+with men at thy beck and call?"
+
+"Behold!" said Robin, unhelming. "Behold the king of all masterless rogues,
+and thy fellow gallow's-bird, Sir High Mightiness!"
+
+"Ha, is 't thou?" cried Sir Pertinax. "Now a plague on thy kingdom and thee
+for an unhanged, thieving rogue--"
+
+"E'en as thyself," nodded Robin, "thou that flaunted thy unlovely carcass
+in stolen armour."
+
+"Ha!" roared Sir Pertinax, clapping hand on sword. "A pest--a murrain! This
+to me, thou dog's-meat? Malediction! Now will I crack thy numbskull for a
+pestilent malapert--"
+
+"Nay, Sir Grim-and-gory," laughed Robin, "rather will I now use thee as
+thou would'st ha' served me on a day but for this generous and kindly Fool,
+my good comrade!" And speaking, Robin sprang nimbly to the great oak tree
+and thrusting long arm within the jagged fissure that gaped therein drew
+forth a hunting-horn and winded it loud and shrill. And presently was a
+stir, a rustle amid the surrounding brushwood and all about them were
+outlaws, wild men and fierce of aspect, and each and every grasped long-bow
+with arrow on string and every arrow was aimed at scowling Sir Pertinax.
+
+"Per Dex!" quoth he, "and is this death, then?"
+
+"Verily!" nodded Robin, "an I do speak the word."
+
+"So be it--speak!" growled Sir Pertinax. "Come, Death--I fear thee not!"
+And out flashed his long sword; but even then it was twisted from his
+grasp and Lobkyn Lollo, tossing the great blade aloft and, catching it
+very neatly, laughed and spake:
+
+ "Five times, five times ten
+ Are we, all lusty men.
+ An hundred twice and fifty deaths are we,
+ So, an Rob speak, dead thou 'lt as often be."
+
+"Nay, hold a while, sweet lads!" laughed Robin, "the surly rogue shall sing
+for his life and our good pleasaunce."
+
+"Sing?" roared Sir Pertinax. "I sing! I? Ha, dare ye bid me so, base dog?
+Sing, forsooth? By Og and Gog! By the Seven Champions and all the fiends,
+rather will I die!" And here, being defenceless, Sir Pertinax clenched
+mighty fists and swore until he lacked for breath.
+
+Then spake Jocelyn, gentle-voiced.
+
+"Sing, Pertinax," quoth he.
+
+"Ha--never! Not for all the--"
+
+"I do command thee, Pertinax. As Robin once sang for his life, now must
+thou sing for thine. Song for song, 't is but just! Sing, Pertinax!"
+
+"Nay," groaned the proud knight, "I had rather drink water and chew grass
+like a rabbit. Moreover I ha' no gift o' song--"
+
+"Do thy best!" quoth Robin.
+
+"I'm harsh o' voice--knave!"
+
+"Then croak--rogue!" quoth Robin.
+
+"No song have I--vermin!"
+
+"Make one--carrion! But sing thou shalt though thy song be no better than
+hog-song which is grunt. Howbeit sing thou must!"
+
+Hereupon Sir Pertinax gnashed his teeth and glaring balefully on Robin
+lifted hoarse voice and burst forth into fierce song:
+
+ "Thou base outlaw,
+ Vile clapper-claw,
+ Since I must sing a stave,
+ Then, here and now,
+ I do avow
+ Thou art a scurvy knave!
+ Thy hang-dog air
+ Doth plain declare
+ Thou 'rt very scurvy knave.
+
+ "Rogues breed apace
+ In each vile place,
+ But this I will avow,
+ Where e'er rogues be
+ No man may see
+ A viler rogue than thou,
+
+ Since it were vain
+ To meet again
+ A rogue more vile than thou.
+
+ "As rogue thou art,
+ In every part,
+ Then--"
+
+"Hold there--hold!" cried Robin, stopping his ears. "Thy voice is unlovely
+as thy look and thy song as ill as thy voice, so do we forgive thee the
+rest. Ha' done thy bellowing and begone--"
+
+"Ha--not so!" quoth Sir Pertinax. "For troth I do sing better than
+methought possible, and my rhyming is none so ill! So will I rhyme thy
+every knavish part and sing song till song and rhyme be ended. Have at thee
+again, base fellow!
+
+ Since rogue thou art
+ In every part--part--
+
+Ha, plague on't, hast put me out, rogue! I was about to hang thy every
+roguish part in rhyme, but my rhymes halt by reason o' thee, rogue."
+
+"Forsooth!" laughed Robin. "Thus stickest thou, for thy part, at my every
+part, the which is well since I am man of parts. Thus then rhyme thou
+rhymes upon thyself therefore; thus, thyself rhyming rhymes of thee, thou
+shalt thyself, rhyming of thyself, thyself pleasure thereby, thou thus
+rhyming of thee, and thee, thou. Thus thy thee and thou shall be well
+accorded. How think'st thou?"
+
+But Sir Pertinax, astride his charger that cropped joyously at sweet,
+cool grass, sat chin on fist, lost in the throes of composition, nothing
+heeding, even when came the ten steeds with the ten suits of armour.
+
+Now these ten horses bare eleven riders, tall, lusty fellows all, save one
+shrouded in hood and cloak and whom Jocelyn viewed with quick, keen eyes.
+And thus he presently whispered Robin who, laughing slyly, made signal to
+his followers, whereupon, by ones and twos they stole silently away until
+there none remained save only Sir Pertinax who, wrestling with his muse,
+stared aloft under knitted brows, all unknowing, and presently brake out
+singing on this wise:
+
+ "All men may see
+ A man in me,
+ A man who feareth no man,
+ Thus, fearless, I
+ No danger fly--"
+
+"Except it be a woman!" sang a soft, sweet voice hard by, in pretty
+mockery. Hereat Sir Pertinax started so violently that his mail clashed and
+he stared about him eager-eyed but, finding himself quite alone, sighed and
+fell to reverie.
+
+"A woman?" said he aloud. "'Except it be a woman--'"
+
+THE VOICE: Aye--a woman, O craven soldier!
+
+SIR PERTINAX: Why here is strange echo methinks and speaketh--with her
+voice!
+
+THE VOICE: 'O voice so soft and full of sweet allure!'
+
+SIR PERTINAX: O voice beloved that might my dolour cure!
+
+THE VOICE: O craven soldier! O most timid wooer! SIR PERTINAX: Craven am I,
+yet lover--'t is most sure.
+
+THE VOICE: But thou 'rt a man--at least meseemeth so.
+
+SIR PERTINAX: And, being man, myself unworthy know,
+ Yet must I love and my beloved seek
+ And, finding her, no words of love dare speak.
+ For this my love beyond all words doth reach,
+ And I'm slow-tongued and lack the trick of speech.
+ Nor hope have I that she should stoop to bless,
+ A man so full of all unworthiness.
+ So am I dumb--
+
+THE VOICE: And yet dost speak indeed,
+ Such words, methinks, as any maid might heed.
+
+"Ha, think ye so in verity, sweet voice!" cried Sir Pertinax, and springing
+lightly to earth, strode forward on eager feet. And lo! from behind a
+certain tree stepped one who, letting fall shrouding cloak and hood, stood
+there a maid, dark-haired and darkly bright of eye, very shapely and fair
+to see in her simple tire. And beholding her thus, the tender curve of
+scarlet lips, the flutter of slender hands, the languorous bewitchment of
+her eyes, Sir Pertinax halted.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN interpolateth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ What, again? Father, that will never do.
+ Don't make him halt again, I beg of you.
+ Sir Pertinax has halted much too long,
+ To make him do it here would be quite
+ wrong!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, I wish you would not interrupt
+ My halting muse in manner so abrupt--
+
+ GILL:
+
+ But here 's a chance at last to let them kiss,
+ And now you make him halt!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss!
+
+Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head abashed.
+
+My daughter GILLIAN persisteth:
+
+ GILL:
+
+ Well, father, while he halts, then tell me,
+ pray,
+ Just what you mean by that line where you
+ say,
+ 'The languorous bewitchment of her eyes'?
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, no child should authors catechise,
+ Especially, poor fellow, if, like me,
+ Father and author both at once is he.
+ Wise authors all such questions strictly ban,
+ And never answer--even if they can.
+ If of our good knight's wooing you would
+ hear,
+ Keep stilly tongue and hearken well, my
+ dear.
+
+Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head, abashed by her beauty.
+
+"Melissa!" he whispered, "O Melissa!" and so stood mute.
+
+"O Pertinax!" she sighed. "Art dumb at sight of me? O Pertinax, and
+wherefore?"
+
+"All have I forgot save only thy loveliness, Melissa!"
+
+"Methinks such--forgetfulness becometh thee well. Say on!"
+
+"Ah, Melissa, I--do love thee."
+
+"Why this I knew when thou didst sit a-fishing!"
+
+"But, indeed, then I dreamed not of loving thee or any maid."
+
+"Because thou art but a man."
+
+"Verily, and being man, now came I seeking thee for Love's sweet sake yet,
+finding thee, know not how to speak thee. Alas, I do fear I am but sorry
+wooer!"
+
+"Alas, Pertinax, I do fear thou art! Yet thou shalt learn, perchance.
+How--art dumb again, canst speak me no more?"
+
+"Nought--save only this, thou art beyond all maids fair, Melissa!"
+
+"Why, I do think thou'lt make a wooer some day mayhap, by study diligent.
+'T will take long time and yet--I would not have thee learn too soon! And
+hast thought of me? A little?"
+
+"I have borne thee ever within my heart."
+
+"And wherefore wilt love maid so lowly?"
+
+"For that thou art thyself and thyself--Melissa. And O, I love thy voice!"
+
+"My voice? And what more?"
+
+"Thine eyes. Thy little, pretty feet. Thy scarlet mouth. Thy gentle, small
+hands. Thy hair. All of thee!"
+
+"O," she murmured a little breathlessly, "if thou dost so love me--woo
+me--a little!"
+
+"Alas!" he sighed, "I know not how."
+
+"Hast ne'er wooed maid ere this, big soldier?"
+
+"Never!"
+
+"Thou poor Pertinax! How empty--how drear thy life. For this do I pity thee
+with pity kin to love--"
+
+"Love?" he whispered. "Ah, Melissa, couldst e'en learn to love one so
+unlovely, so rude, so rough and unmannered as I?"
+
+"Never!" she sighed, "O, never--unless thou teach me?"
+
+"Would indeed I might, Melissa. Ah, teach me how I may teach thee to love
+one so unworthy as Pertinax!"
+
+Now hearkening to his harsh voice grown soft and tremulous, beholding the
+truth in his honest eyes, Melissa smiled, wondrous tender, and reaching out
+took hold upon his two hands.
+
+"Kneel!" she commanded. "Kneel here upon the grass as I do kneel. Now, lay
+by thy cumbrous helmet. Now fold thy great, strong hands. Now bow thy tall,
+grim head and say in sweet, soft accents low and reverent: 'Melissa, I do
+love thee heart and soul, thee only do I love and thee only will I love now
+and for ever. So aid me, Love, amen!'" Then, closing his eyes, Sir Pertinax
+bowed reverent head, and, humbly folding his hands, spake as she bade him.
+Thereafter opening his eyes, he saw her watching him through gathering
+tears, and leaning near, he reached out eager arms, yet touched her not.
+Quoth he: "O maid beloved, what is thy sorrow?"
+
+"'Tis joy--joy, and thou--thou art so strong and fierce yet so gentle and
+simple of heart! O, may I prove worthy thy love--"
+
+"Worthy? Of my love?" he stammered. "But O Melissa, I am but he thou didst
+name harsh of tongue."
+
+"Aye, I did!" she sobbed.
+
+"Hard of heart, flinty of soul, rude, unmannered and unlovely."
+
+"Aye--I did and--loved thee the while!" she whispered. "So now do I pray
+that I prove worthy."
+
+"Worthy? Thou? O my sweet maid--thou that art kin to the holy angels, thou
+so high and far removed 'bove me that I do tremble and--fear to touch
+thee--".
+
+"Nay, fear me not, Pertinax," she sighed, "for though indeed I am all this,
+yet maid am I also and by times--very human. So Pertinax, thou great,
+fearless man-at-arms, lay by thy so great fears a while--I do beseech
+thee." Then Sir Pertinax, beholding the tender passion of her eyes, forgot
+his fear in glad wonderment and, reaching out hands that trembled for all
+their strength, drew her to his close embracement.
+
+And thus, kneeling together upon the sun-dappled sward, they forgot all
+things in this joyous world save only their love and the glory of it. And
+when they had kissed each other--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: But, wait, they haven't yet, you know!
+
+ MYSELF: Indeed, they have, I've just said so.
+
+ GILL: Then, father, please to tell me this:
+ How can a person say a kiss?
+ And so, since kisses can't be said,
+ Please make them do it now instead.
+
+Thus, cradled in his strong arms, she questioned him tenderly:
+
+"Dost mind how, upon a day, my Pertinax, didst ask of me the amulet I bore
+within my bosom?"
+
+"Aye," he answered, "and sure 'tis charm of potent magic whose spell
+brought us out of the dungeon at Canalise--the which is great matter for
+wonder! But 'tis for thy dear sake I do cherish it--"
+
+"Bear you it yet?"
+
+"Here upon my heart."
+
+"And if I should ask it of thee again--wouldst render it back to me?"
+
+"Never!" quoth he. "Never, until with it I give thee myself also!"
+
+But presently she stirred in his embrace for upon the air was an
+approaching clamour, voices, laughter and the ring of mail.
+
+"Come away!" whispered Melissa, upspringing to her feet. "Come, let thou
+and Love and I hide until these disturbers be gone and the sweet world hold
+but us three again."
+
+Now, as they stood, hand in hand, deep hidden 'mid the green, they beheld
+six merry woodland rogues who led an ambling ass whereon rode a friar
+portly and perspiring albeit he had a jovial eye. And as he rode he spake
+his captors thus in voice full-toned and deep:
+
+"Have a care, gentle rogues and brethren, hurry not this ambulant animal
+unduly, poor, much-enduring beast. Behold the pensive pendulation of these
+auriculars so forlornly a-dangle! Here is ass that doth out-patience all
+asses, both four and two-legged. Here is meek ass of leisured soul loving
+not haste--a very pensive perambulator. So hurry not the ass, my brothers,
+for these several and distinct reasons or arguments. Firstly, dearly
+beloved, because I love haste no more than the ass; secondly, brethren, 't
+is property of Holy Church which is above all argument; and, thirdly, 't
+is bestridden by one Friar John, my very self, and I am forsooth weighty
+argument. Fourthly, beloved, 'tis an ass that--ha! O sweet vision for eyes
+human or divine! Do I see thee in very truth, thou damsel of disobedience,
+dear dame of discord, sweet, witching, wilful lady--is it thou in very
+truth, most loved daughter, or wraith conjured of thy magic and my
+perfervid imaginations--speak!"
+
+"'T is I myself, Reverend Father!" laughed Melissa. "O my dear, good Friar
+John, methinks the kind Saints have brought thee to my need."
+
+"Saints, quotha!" exclaimed the Friar, rolling merry eye towards his
+several captors. "Call ye these--Saints? Long have I sought thee, thou
+naughty maid, and to-day in my quest these brawny 'saints' beset me with
+bow and quarterstaff and me constrained hither--but my blessing on them
+since they have brought me to thee. And now, sweet child and daughter,
+whiles the news yet runneth hot-foot or, like bird unseen, wingeth from lip
+to lip, I thy ghostly father have rare good news for thee--"
+
+"Nay, Friar John, I will guess thy tidings: Sir Agramore of Biename lieth
+sorry and sore of a cudgelling."
+
+"How!" cried the Friar. "Thou dost know--so soon?"
+
+"Verily, Reverend Father, nor have I or my worthy guardians aught to fear
+of him hereafter. And now have I right wondrous news for thee, news that
+none may guess. List, dear Friar John, thou the wisest and best loved of
+all my guardians ten; to-day ye are absolved henceforth all care of your
+wilful ward since to-day she passeth from the guardianship of ye ten to the
+keeping of one. Come forth, Pertinax, thou only one beloved of me for no
+reason but that thou art thou and I am I--as is ever the sweet, mad way of
+True-love--come forth, my dear-loved, poor soldier!" Out from the trees
+strode Pertinax but, beholding his face, Friar John scowled and, viewing
+his rich surcoat and goodly armour, fell to perspiring wonder and amaze.
+
+"Now by the sweet Saint Amphibalus!" quoth he. "Surely these be the arms of
+Sir Agramore, dread Lord of Biename?"
+
+"Most true, dear Friar John," answered Melissa, "and by this same token Sir
+Agramore lieth sore bruised e'en now."
+
+"Aha!" quoth the Friar, mopping moist brow. "'T is well--'t is very well,
+so shall these two ears of mine, with eighteen others of lesser account,
+scathless go and all by reason of this good, tall fellow. Howbeit, I do
+know this same fellow for fellow of none account, and no fit mate for thee,
+noble daughter, love or no. A fierce, brawling, tatterdemalion this, that
+erstwhile tramped in company with long-legged ribald--a froward jesting
+fellow. Wherefore this fellow, though fellow serviceable, no fellow is for
+thee and for these sufficing reasons. Firstly--"
+
+"Ha--enough!" quoth Sir Pertinax, chin out-thrust. "'Fellow' me no more,
+Friar--"
+
+"Firstly," continued Friar John, "because this out-at-elbows fellow is a
+rogue."
+
+"'Rogue,' in thy teeth, Churchman!" growled Sir Pertinax.
+
+"Secondly," continued Friar John, nothing abashed, "because this
+rogue-fellow is a runagate roysterer, a nameless knave, a highway-haunter,
+a filching flick-o'-the-gibbet and a--"
+
+"Friar," snorted Sir Pertinax, "thou 'rt but a very fat man scant o'
+breath, moreover thou 'rt a friar, so needs must I leave thee alive to make
+pestilent the air yet a little until thou chokest of an epithet. Meantime
+perform now one gracious act in thy so graceless life and wed me with this
+forest maiden."
+
+"Forest maiden, forsooth!" cried Friar John. "O Saints! O Martyrs! Forest
+maid, quotha! And wed her--and unto thee, presumptuous malapert! Ho,
+begone, thy base blood and nameless rank forbid--"
+
+"Hold there, shaveling!" quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. "Now mark me this!
+Though I, being very man, do know myself all unworthy maid so sweet and
+peerless, yet, and she stoop to wed me, then will I make her lady proud and
+dame of divers goodly manors and castles, of village and hamlet, pit and
+gallows, sac and soc, with powers the high, the middle and the low and
+with ten-score lances in her train. For though in humble guise I went, no
+nameless rogue am I, but Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling,
+Bracton and Deepdene--"
+
+"How!" cried Melissa, pouting rosy lip and frowning a little. "O Pertinax,
+art indeed a great lord?"
+
+"Why, sooth--forsooth and indeed," he stammered, "I do fear I am."
+
+"Then thou 'rt no poor, distressful, ragged, outlaw-soldier?"
+
+"Alack--no!" he groaned, regardful of her frown.
+
+"Then basely hast thou tricked me--O cruel!"
+
+"Nay, Melissa--hear me!" he cried, and, forgetful of friar and gaping
+outlaws, he clasped her fast 'prisoned 'gainst his heart. "Thee do I love,
+dear maid, 'bove rank, or fame, or riches, or aught this world may offer.
+So, an thou wouldst have me ragged and destitute and outlaw, all this will
+I be for thy sweet sake since life were nought without thee, O maid I do so
+love--how say'st thou?"
+
+"I say to thee, Pertinax, that thy so great love hath loosed thy tongue at
+last, Love hath touched thy lips with eloquence beyond all artifice since
+now, methinks, it is thy very soul doth speak me. And who shall resist such
+wooing? Surely not I that do--love thee beyond telling. So take me, my
+lord, thy right hand in mine, the talisman in thy left--so! Now, my
+Pertinax, speak thy heart's wish."
+
+"Friar," quoth Sir Pertinax, holding aloft the Crystal Heart, "as her love
+is mine and mine hers, wed and unite us in our love--by the magic of this
+jewel I do command thee!"
+
+Here, beholding the talisman, Friar John gasped and stared round-eyed and
+incredulous.
+
+"By Holy Rood!" he whispered, "'t is indeed the Crystal Heart!"
+
+"And O!" sighed Melissa, "O Friar John, thou dost mind the saying:
+
+ "'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'"
+
+"Aye, truly--truly!" nodded the Friar.
+
+ "'And by night, or eke by day,
+ The Crystal Heart all must obey!'"
+
+So saying he got him down from the ass and, for all his corpulence, louted
+full low.
+
+"Sir Knight of Shene," quoth he, "by reason of this jewel potential thou
+dost bear, now must I perforce obey thy behest and wed thee unto this
+our gracious lady Benedicta, Duchess of Ambremont, Canalise, Tissingors,
+Fordyngstoke and divers other towns, villages and--"
+
+"Duchess--a duchess?" exclaimed Sir Pertinax. "Duchess say'st thou--this,
+the Duchess Benedicta! O Melissa--thou--thou--a duchess!"
+
+"Sooth and forsooth," sighed she in pretty mockery, "I do fear I am!"
+
+"Then thou 'rt no humble maid, distressful and forlorn, Melissa?"
+
+"Yea, Pertinax--all this am I indeed unless thou love me, and loving me,
+wed me, and wedding me love me the better therefor, and loving me ever the
+better, thou may'st learn a little some day how a woman may love a man."
+
+"Par Dex!" mumbled Sir Pertinax, kissing her rosy finger-tips, "be thou
+duchess or witch-maid o' the wood, I do love thee heart and soul, body and
+mind, now and for ever, Melissa."
+
+Then Friar John, beholding the radiant joy of their faces, reached forth
+his hands in blessing.
+
+"Kneel ye, my children!" he sighed. "For here methinks is true-love such
+as brighteneth this world all too seldom. So here, within the forest, the
+which is surely God's cathedral, this your love shall be sanctified unto
+you and the world be the better therefor! Kneel ye, my children!"
+
+And thus, kneeling upon the flower-sprent turf hand in hand and with heads
+reverently bowed, they were wed, while the six outlaws stared in silent awe
+and the meek ass cropped the grass busily.
+
+"O Pertinax," sighed the Duchess as they rose, "so greatly happy am I that
+I will others shall be happy likewise; let us make this indeed a day of
+gladness. I pray thee sound the bugle that hangeth within the great oak,
+yonder."
+
+So Sir Pertinax took the horn and sounded thereon a mighty blast, loud and
+long and joyous. And presently came the outlaws, thronging in from all
+directions, until the sunny glade was full of their wild company, while
+in the green beyond pike-head twinkled and sword-blades glittered; and
+foremost was Robin with Lobkyn Lollo beside him.
+
+"Robin," said the Duchess, beckoning him near with white, imperious
+finger, "Robin a' Green, thou whose tongue is quick and ready as thy hand,
+hast ever been gentle to the weak and helpless as I do know, in especial
+to two women that sought thy protection of late."
+
+"Why, verily, lady, I mind them well," nodded Robin, "and one was a maid
+passing fair and one an ancient dame exceeding wise. To aid such is ever a
+man's joy--or should be."
+
+"Knew ye who and what this maid was, Robin?"
+
+"Aye, lady, I knew her then as now for that proud and noble lady the
+Duchess Benedicta."
+
+"And yet, Robin, knowing this and having me in thy power didst suffer me to
+go without let or hindrance or single penny of ransom?"
+
+"My lady Duchess," answered Robin, glancing round upon his wild company,
+"we be outlaws, 't is true, and rogues--mayhap, yet are we men and thou a
+lady passing fair, wherefore--though I knew thee for the Duchess Benedicta,
+thou wert safe with us since we war not with women and harm no maids be
+they of high or low degree!"
+
+"Spoke like a very knight!" exclaimed the Duchess. "How think'st thou, my
+lord?"
+
+"Par Dex!" quoth Sir Pertinax. "Aye, by Our Lady of Shene Chapel within the
+Wood I swear it--thou 'rt a man, Robin! So now do I sue pardon of thee for
+my song o' rogues since no rogue art thou. And thou didst aid and shield
+her--this my wife that is the very eyes of me! So, by my troth, my good
+friend art thou henceforth, Rob o' the Green!"
+
+"Nay, my lord," answered Robin slyly, "for I am but Robin, and outlaw, and
+thou art the Duke!"
+
+"Forsooth--and so I am!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax. "Ha--yet am I still a man,
+and therefore--"
+
+"Wait, my lord!" said Benedicta. "Robin, give me thy sword!" So she took
+the weapon and motioning Robin to his knees, set the blade across his
+shoulder. "Robin a' Green," said she, "since thou art knightly of word and
+deed, knight shalt thou be in very truth. Sir Robin a' Forest I make thee
+and warden over this our forest country. Rise up, Sir Robert." Then up
+sprang Robin, bright-eyed and flushed of cheek.
+
+"Dear my lady," cried he, "since knight hast made me, thy knight will I be
+henceforth in life or in death--" But here his voice was lost in the
+joyous acclamations of his followers who shouted amain until the Duchess
+quelled them with lifted hand.
+
+"Ye men of the wild-wood," said she, looking round upon them gentle-eyed,
+"all ye that be homeless and desolate, lying without the law, this day joy
+hath found me, for this is my wedding-morn. And as I am happy I would see
+ye happy also. Therefore upon this glad day do we make proclamation, my
+Lord Duke and I--this day we lift from you each and every, the ban of
+outlawry--free men are ye to go and come as ye list--free men one and all
+and good citizens henceforth I pray!" Now here was silence awhile, then a
+hoarse murmur, swelling to a jubilant shout until the sunny woodland rang
+with the joy of it, near and far.
+
+"And now, Sir Robert," laughed the Duchess, "pray you where is this noble
+Fool, this gentle Motley, this most rare singer of songs and breaker of
+lances? Bid him to us."
+
+"Ha--the Fool!" exclaimed Sir Pertinax, starting.
+
+"My lady," answered Robin, "true, he was here, but when I sought him, a
+while since, there was Sir Palamon's armour he had worn, but himself gone
+--"
+
+"Gone--gone say'st thou?" cried Sir Pertinax, glancing about. "Then needs
+must I go seek him--"
+
+"And wherefore, my lord?" cried the Duchess.
+
+"'T is my--my duty, Melissa!" stammered Sir Pertinax. "He is my--my friend
+and--sworn brother-in-arms!"
+
+"And am I not thy wife, Pertinax?"
+
+"Aye, most dearly loved, and I, thy husband--and yet--needs must I seek
+this Fool, Melissa."
+
+"O Pertinax--wilt leave me?"
+
+"Leave thee?" groaned Sir Pertinax. "Aye--for a while! Leave thee?
+Aye--though it break my heart needs must I! He, my--brother-in-arms. My
+duty calleth--"
+
+"And what of thy duty to me?"
+
+Now as Sir Pertinax wrung his hands in an agony of indecision, rose a
+whisper of sweet sound, the murmur of softly-plucked lute-strings, and into
+the glade, cock's-comb aflaunt and ass's ears a-dangle Duke Jocelyn strode
+and sang as he came a song he had made on a time, a familiar air:
+
+ "Good Pertinax, why griev'st thou so?
+ Free of all duty thou dost go,
+ Save that which thou to Love dost owe,
+ My noble Pertinax."
+
+"And love from heaven hath stooped thus low To me!" quoth Pertinax.
+
+But here came Robin with certain of his men leading a snow-white palfrey
+richly caparisoned.
+
+"Right noble lady," said he, "behold here a goodly, fair jennet to thy
+gracious acceptance."
+
+"And indeed--'t is rare, pretty beast!" exclaimed Benedicta. "But Robin,
+Robin, O Sir Robert, whence had you this?"
+
+"Lady, upon a time I was an outlaw and lived as outlaws may, taking such
+things as Fate bestowed, and, lady:
+
+ "Fate is a wind
+ To outlaws kind:
+
+But now since we be free-men all, I and my fellows, fain would we march
+hence in thy train to thy honour and our joyance. Wilt grant us this boon,
+lady?"
+
+"Freely, for 'tis rare good thought, Robin! Surely never rode duke and
+duchess so attended. How the townsfolk shall throng and stare to see our
+wild following, and my worthy guardians gape and pluck their beards for
+very amaze! How think you, good Friar John?"
+
+"Why, verily, daughter, I, that am chiefest of thy wardens ten, do think it
+wise measure; as for thy other guardians let them pluck and gape until they
+choke.
+
+ "In especial Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who both beard and wisdom lacks.
+
+I say 'tis wise, good measure, for these that were outlaws be sturdy
+fellows with many friends in town and village, so shall this thy day of
+union be for them re-union, and they joy with thee."
+
+Now being mounted the Duchess rode where stood Jocelyn, and looked down on
+him merry-eyed.
+
+"Sir Fool," said she, "who thou art I know not, but I have hunted in
+Brocelaunde ere now, and I have eyes. And as thou 'rt friend to my dear
+lord, friend art thou of mine, so do we give thee joyous welcome to our
+duchy. And, being thy friend, I pray thou may'st find that wonder of
+wonders the which hideth but to be found, and once found, shall make wise
+Fool wiser."
+
+"Sweet friend and lady," answered Jocelyn, "surely man so unlovely as I may
+not know this wonder for his very own until it first seek him. Is 't not
+so? Let now thy woman's heart counsel me."
+
+"How, Sir Wise Folly, have I not heard thee preach boldness in love ere
+now?"
+
+"Aye--for others!" sighed Jocelyn. "But for myself--I fear--behold this
+motley! This scarred face!"
+
+"Why as to thy motley it becometh thee well--"
+
+"Aye, but my face? O, 't is a hideous face!"
+
+"O Fool!" sighed Benedicta, "know'st thou not that True-love's eyes possess
+a magic whereby all loved things become fair and beauteous. So take
+courage, noble Motley, and may thy desires be crowned--even as our own."
+
+"Gramercy, thou sweet and gentle lady. Happiness companion thee alway and
+Love sing ever within thee. Now for ye twain is love's springtime, a season
+of sweet promise, may each promise find fulfilment and so farewell."
+
+"Why then, Sir Fool, an thou wilt tarry here in the good greenwood a
+while, may Love guide thee. Now here is my counsel: Follow where thy heart
+commandeth and--fear not! And now, Sir Robert a' Forest, form thy company,
+and since this is a day of gladness let them sing as they march."
+
+"In sooth, dear my lady, that will we!" cried Robin. "There is song o'
+spring and gladness I made that hath oft been our solace, and moreover it
+beginneth and endeth with jolly chorus well beknown to all. Ho, pikes
+to van and rear! Bows to the flanks--fall in! Now trusty friends o' the
+greenwood, free-men all, henceforth--now march we back to hearth and home
+and love, so sing ye--sing!"
+
+Hereupon from the ragged, close-ordered ranks burst a shout that swelled
+to rolling chorus; and these the words:
+
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily--hey!
+ And cheerily let us sing,
+ While youth is youth then youth is gay
+ And youth shall have his fling.
+
+ Robin: The merry merle on leafy spray,
+ The lark on fluttering wing
+ Do pipe a joyous roundelay,
+ To greet the blithesome spring.
+
+ Hence, hence cold Age, black Care--away!
+ Cold Age black Care doth bring;
+ When back is bowed and head is grey,
+ Black Care doth clasp and cling.
+
+ Black Care doth rosy Pleasure stay,
+ Age ageth everything;
+ 'T is farewell sport and holiday,
+ On flowery mead and ling.
+
+ If Death must come, then come he may,
+ And wed with death-cold ring,
+ Yet ere our youth and strength decay,
+ Blithe Joy shall be our king.
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily--hey!
+ And cheerily we will sing.
+
+So they marched blithely away, a right joyous company, flashing back the
+sunset glory from bright headpiece and sword-blade, while Jocelyn stood
+watching wistful-eyed until they were lost amid the green, until all sounds
+of their going grew to a hush mingling with the whisper of leaves and
+murmurous gurgle of the brook; and ever the shadows deepened about him, a
+purple solitude of misty trees and tangled thickets, depth on depth, fading
+to a glimmering mystery.
+
+Suddenly amid these glooming shadows a shadow moved, and forth into the
+darkling glade, mighty club on mighty shoulder, stepped Lobkyn Lollo the
+Dwarf, and his eyes were pensive and he sighed gustily.
+
+"Alack!" quoth he:
+
+ "So here's an end of outlawry,
+ And all along o' lady,
+ Yet still an outlaw I will be
+ Shut in o' shaws so shady.
+ And yet it is great shame, I trow,
+ That our good friends should freemen go
+ And leave us lonely to our woe,
+ And all along o' lady.
+
+ "And plague upon this love, I say,
+ For stealing thus thy friend away,
+ And since fast caught and wed is he
+ Thy friend henceforth is lost to thee,
+ And thou, poor Fool, dost mope and sigh,
+ And so a plague on love! say I."
+
+"Nay, good Lobkyn, what know you of love?" Answered LOBKYN:
+
+ "Marry, enough o' love know I
+ To steal away if love be nigh.
+
+ "For love's an ill as light as air,
+ Yet heavy as a stone;
+ O, love is joy and love is care,
+ A song and eke a groan.
+
+ "Love is a sickness, I surmise,
+ Taketh a man first by the eyes,
+ And stealing thence into his heart,
+ There gripeth him with bitter smart.
+ Alas, poor soul,
+ What bitter dole,
+ Doth plague his every part!
+
+ "From heart to liver next it goes,
+ And fills him full o' windy woes,
+ And, being full o' gusty pain,
+ He groaneth oft, and sighs amain,
+ Poor soul is he
+ In verity,
+ And for his freedom sighs in vain."
+
+ "Miscall not love, Lobkyn, for sure True-love is
+ every man's birthright."
+
+Quoth LOBKYN:
+
+ "Why then, methinks there's many a wight
+ That cheated is of his birthright,
+ As, item first, here's Lobkyn Lollo
+ To prove thine argument quite hollow.
+ Dare I at maid to cast mine eye,
+ She mocketh me, and off doth fly,
+
+
+ And all because I'm humped o' back,
+ And something to my stature lack.
+ Thus, though I'm stronger man than three,
+ No maid may love the likes o' me.
+ Next, there's thyself--a Fool, I swear,
+ At fight or song beyond compare.
+ But--thou 'rt unlovely o' thy look,
+ And this no maid will ever brook.
+ So thou and I, for weal or woe,
+ To our lives' end unloved must go.
+ But think ye that I grieve or sigh?
+ Not so! A plague on love, say I!"
+
+Now here Jocelyn sighed amain and, sitting beneath a tree, fell to sad and
+wistful thinking.
+
+ "Aye, verily," he repeated, "I am 'unlovely of my
+ look.'"
+
+ Quoth Lobkyn heartily:
+
+ "In very sooth,
+ Fool, that's the truth!"
+
+ "Alas!" sighed Jocelyn, "'And this no maid
+ will ever brook!'"
+
+ Answered Lobkyn:
+
+ "And there dost speak, wise Fool, again,
+ A truth right manifest and plain,
+ Since fairest maids have bat-like eyes,
+ And see no more than outward lies.
+ And seeing thus, they nothing see
+ Of worthiness in you or me.
+ And so, since love doth pass us by,
+ The plague o' plagues on love, say I!"
+
+"Nath'less," cried the Duke, leaping to his feet. "I will put Love to the
+test--aye, this very hour!"
+
+ Lobkyn: Wilt go, good Motley? Pray thee where?
+
+ Jocelyn: To one beyond all ladies fair.
+
+ Lobkyn: Then dost thou need a friend about thee
+ To cheer and comfort when she flout thee.
+ So, an thou wilt a-wooing wend,
+ I'll follow thee like trusty friend.
+ In love or fight thou shalt not lack
+ A sturdy arm to 'fend thy back.
+ I'll follow thee in light or dark,
+ Through good or ill--Saints shield us!
+ Hark!
+
+And Lobkyn started about, club poised for swift action, for, out-stealing
+from the shadows crept strange and dismal sound, a thin wail that sank to
+awful groaning rumble, and so died away.
+
+"O!" whispered Lobkyn:
+
+ "Pray, Fool, pray with all thy might,
+ Here's goblin foul or woodland sprite
+ Come for to steal our souls away,
+ So on thy knees quick, Fool, and pray!"
+
+But, as these dismal sounds brake forth again, Jocelyn stole forward,
+quarter-staff gripped in ready hand; thus, coming nigh the great oak, he
+espied a dim, huddled form thereby and, creeping nearer, stared in wonder
+to behold Mopsa, the old witch, striving might and main to wind the great
+hunting-horn.
+
+"What, good Witch!" quoth he, "here methinks is that beyond all thy spells
+to achieve."
+
+"O Fool," she panted, "kind Fool, sound me this horn, for I'm old and scant
+o' breath. Wind it shrill and loud, good Motley, the rallying-note, for
+there is ill work afoot this night. Sound me shrewd blast, therefore."
+
+"Nay, 't were labour in vain, Witch; there be no outlaws hereabout, free
+men are they henceforth and gone, each and every."
+
+"Out alas--alas!" cried the old woman, wringing her hands. "Then woe is me
+for the fair lady Yolande."
+
+"Ha! What of her, good Witch? Threateneth danger? Speak!"
+
+"Aye, Fool, danger most dire! My Lord Gui yet liveth, and this night divers
+of his men shall bear her away where he lieth raging for her in his black
+castle of Ells--"
+
+"Now by heaven's light!" swore Jocelyn, his eyes fierce and keen, "this
+night shall Fool be crowned of Love or sleep with kindly Death."
+
+"Stay, Fool, thy foes be a many! Wilt cope with them alone?"
+
+"Nay!" cried a voice:
+
+ "Not so, grandam
+ For here I am!"
+
+and Lobkyn stepped forward.
+
+"Aha, my pretty poppet! Loved duck, my downy chick--what wouldst?"
+
+ "Fight, grandam,
+ Smite, grandam,
+ Sweet, blood-begetting blows.
+ Where Fool goeth
+ Well Fool knoweth
+ Lobkyn likewise goes."
+
+"Why, then, my bantling--loved babe, fight thy fiercest, for these be
+wicked men and 't will be an evil fray. And she is sweet and good, so,
+Lobkyn, be thy strongest--"
+
+Saith Lobkyn:
+
+ "Aye that will I,
+ Or may I die.
+ By this good kiss
+ I vow thee this.
+
+ "And here is signal, Fool, shall shew
+ Each where the other chance to go.
+
+ "Croak like a frog,
+ Bark like a dog,
+ Grunt like a hog,
+ I'll know thee.
+
+ "Hoot like an owl,
+ Like grey wolf howl,
+ Or like bear growl,
+ 'T will shew thee--"
+
+"Then come, trusty Lob, and my thanks to thee!" cried Jocelyn, catching up
+his quarter-staff. "But haste ye, for I would be hence ere the moon get
+high. Come!"
+
+So Duke Jocelyn strode away with Lobkyn Lollo at his heels; now as they
+went, the moon began to rise.
+
+
+
+
+FYTTE 12
+
+Which being the last Fytte of our Geste I hope may please my daughter best.
+
+ "O, Wind of Night, soft-creeping,
+ Sweet charge I give to thee,
+ Steal where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me;
+ And in her dream,
+ Love, let me seem
+ All she would have me be.
+
+ "Kind sleep! By thee we may attain
+ To joys long hoped and sought in vain,
+ By thee we all may find again
+ Our lost divinity.
+
+ "So, Night-wind, softly creeping,
+ This charge I give to thee,
+ Go where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me."
+
+Hearkening to this singing Yolande shivered, yet not with cold, and casting
+a cloak about her loveliness came and leaned forth into the warm, still
+glamour of the night, and saw where stood Jocelyn tall and shapely in the
+moonlight, but with hateful cock's-comb a-flaunt and ass's ears grotesquely
+a-dangle; wherefore she sighed and frowned upon him, saying nothing.
+
+"Yolande?" he questioned. "O my lady, and wilt frown upon my singing?"
+
+Answered she, leaning dimpled chin upon white fist and frowning yet:
+
+"Nay, not--not thy--singing."
+
+"Is 't then this cap o' Folly--my ass's ears, Yolande? Then away with them!
+So shalt jester become very man as thou art very maid!" Forthwith he thrust
+back his cock's-comb and so stood gazing up at her wide-eyed.
+
+But she, beholding thus his scarred face, shivered again, shrinking a
+little, whereupon Jocelyn bowed his head, hiding his features in his long,
+black-curling hair.
+
+"Alas, my lady!" he said, "doth my ill face offend thee? This would I put
+off also for thy sake an it might be, but since this I may not do, close
+thou thine eyes a while and hear me speak. For now do I tell thee, Yolande,
+that I--e'en I that am poor jester--am yet a man loving thee with man's
+love. I that am one with face thus hatefully scarred do seek thee in thy
+beauty to my love--"
+
+"Presumptuous Fool, how darest thou speak me thus?" she whispered.
+
+"For that great love dareth greatly, Yolande."
+
+"And what of thy lord? How of Duke Jocelyn, thy master?"
+
+"He is but man, lady, even as I. Moreover for thee he existeth not since
+thou hast ne'er beheld him--to thy knowing."
+
+"Nay, then--what of this?" she questioned, drawing the jewelled picture
+from her bosom.
+
+"'T is but what it is, lady, a poor thing of paint!"
+
+"But sheweth face of noble beauty, Fool!"
+
+"Aye, nobly painted, Yolande! A thing of daubed colours, seeing naught of
+thy beauty, speaking thee no word of love, whiles here stand I, a sorry
+Fool of beauty none, yet therewithal a man to woo thee to my love--"
+
+"Thy love? Ah, wilt so betray thy lord's trust?"
+
+"Blithely, Yolande! For thee I would betray my very self."
+
+"And thyself art Fool faithless to thy lord, a rhyming jester, a sorry
+thing for scorn or laughter--and yet--thy shameful habit shames thee not,
+and thy foolish songs hold naught of idle folly! And thou--thou art the
+same I saw 'mid gloom of dungeon sing brave song in thy chains! Thou art he
+that overthrew so many in the lists! O Joconde, my world is upside down by
+reason of thee."
+
+"And thou, Yolande, didst stoop to me within my dungeon! And thou didst
+pray for me, Yolande, and now--now within this sweet night thou dost lean
+down to me through the glory of thy hair--to me in my very lowliness! And
+so it is I love thee, Yolande, love thee as none shall ever love thee, for
+man am I with heart to worship thee, tongue to woo thee, eyes to behold thy
+beauties, and arms to clasp thee. So am I richer than yon painted duke that
+needs must woo thee with my lips. And could I but win thee to love--ah,
+Yolande, could I, despite these foolish trappings, this blemished face, see
+Love look on me from thine eyes, O--then--"
+
+"How--then--Joconde?"
+
+"Then should Fool, by love exalted, change to man indeed and I--mount up to
+heaven--thus!" So saying, Jocelyn began to climb by gnarled ivy and carven
+buttress. And ever as he mounted she watched him through the silken curtain
+of her hair, wide of eye and with hands tight-clasped.
+
+"Ah, Joconde!" she whispered, "'t is madness--madness! Ah, Joconde!" But
+swift he came and swung himself upon the balcony beside her and reached out
+his arms in mute supplication, viewing her wistfully but with scarred face
+transfigured by smile ineffably tender, and when he spoke his voice was
+hushed and reverent.
+
+"I am here, Yolande, because methought to read within thy look the wonder
+of all wonders. But, O my lady, because I am but what I am, fain would I
+hear thee speak it also."
+
+"Joconde," said she in breathless voice, "wouldst shame me--?"
+
+"Shame?" he cried. "Shame? Can there be aught of shame in true love? Or is
+it that my ass's ears do shame thee, my cock's-comb and garments pied shame
+the worship of this foolish heart, and I, a Fool, worshipping thee, shame
+thee by such worship? Then--on, cock's-comb! Ring out, silly bells! Fool's
+love doth end in folly! Off love--on folly--a Fool can but love and die."
+
+"Stay, Joconde; ah, how may I tell thee--? Why dost thou start and fumble
+with thy dagger?"
+
+"Heard you aught, lady?"
+
+"I heard an owl hoot in the shadows yonder, no more."
+
+"True, lady, but now shall this owl croak like a frog--hearken! Aha--and
+now shall frog bark like dog--"
+
+"And what meaneth this?"
+
+"That thou, proud lady, must this night choose betwixt knightly rogue and
+motley Fool--here be two evils with yet a difference--"
+
+"Here is strange, wild talk, Fool!"
+
+"Here shall be wild doings anon, lady, methinks. Hush thee and listen!"
+
+A jangle of bridle-chains, a sound of voices loud and rough, and a tread of
+heavy feet that, breaking rudely upon the gentle-brooding night, drove the
+colour from Yolande's soft cheek and hushed her voice to broken whisper:
+
+"Heaven shield us, what now, Joconde?"
+
+"Wolves, lady, wolves that come to raven--see yonder!" Even as he spake
+they espied armed men who, bold and assured by reason of the solitude,
+moved in the garden below; and on back and breast of each was the sign of
+the Bloody Hand.
+
+"My Lord Gui's followers! Alas, Joconde, these mean thee ill--here is death
+for thee!" Now as she spake, Jocelyn thrilled to the touch of her hand upon
+his arm, a hand that trembled and stole to clasp his. "Alas, Joconde, they
+have tracked thee hither to slay thee--"
+
+"And were this so, wouldst fly with me, Yolande? Wouldst trust thy beauties
+to a Fool's keeping?"
+
+"Nay, nay, this were madness, Joconde; rather will I hide thee--aye, where
+none shall dare seek thee--come!"
+
+"Yolande," he questioned, "Yolande, wilt trust thyself to Love and me?"
+But seeing how she shrank away, his eager arms fell and he bowed his head.
+"Nay, I am answered," quoth he, "even while thine eyes look love, thy body
+abhorreth Fool's embrace--I am answered. Nay, 't is enough, trouble not for
+words--ha, methinks it is too late, the wolves be hard upon us--hark ye to
+their baying!"
+
+And now was sudden uproar, a raving clamour of fierce shouts, and a
+thundering of blows upon the great door below.
+
+"Yolande--ha, Yolande, yield thee! Open! Open!"
+
+"Ah--mercy of God! Is it me they seek?" she whispered.
+
+"Thee, Yolande! To bear thee to their lord's embraces--"
+
+"Rather will I die!" she cried, and snatched the dagger from his girdle.
+
+"Not so!" quoth he, wresting the weapon from her grasp. "Rather shalt thou
+live a while--for thou art mine--mine to-night, Yolande--come!" And
+he clasped her in fierce arms. "Nay, strive not lest I kiss thee to
+submission, for thou art mine, though it be for one brief hour and death
+the next!" So, as she struggled for the dagger, he kissed her on mouth and
+eyes and hair until she lay all unresisting in his embrace; while ever and
+anon above the thunder of blows the night clamoured with the fierce shout:
+
+"Open--open! Yolande, ha, Yolande!"
+
+"There is death--and worse!" she panted. "Loose me!"
+
+"Stay," he laughed, "here thou 'rt in thy rightful place at last--upon my
+heart, Yolande. Now whither shall I bear thee? Where lieth safety?"
+
+"Loose me!" she commanded.
+
+"Never! Hark, there yields the good door at last!"
+
+"Then here will we die!"
+
+"So be it, Yolande! A sweet death thus, heart to heart and lip to lip!"
+
+"O Fool--I hate thee!"
+
+"Howbeit, Yolande--I love thee!"
+
+"Yolande! Ha--Yolande!"
+
+The cry was louder now and so near that she shivered and, hiding her face,
+spake below her breath:
+
+"The turret-stair--behind the arras of my bed!"
+
+Swiftly, lightly he bore her down the winding stair and by divers
+passage-ways until, thrusting open a narrow door, he found himself within
+the garden and, keeping ever amid the darkest shadows, hasted on to the
+postern hard by the lily-pool.
+
+And now Yolande felt herself swung to lofty saddle, heard Jocelyn's warning
+shout drowned in a roar of voices and loud-trampling hoofs as the great
+horse reared, heard a fierce laugh and, looking up, saw the face above her
+grim and keen-eyed beneath its foolish cock's-comb as his vicious steel
+flashed to right and left, and ever as he smote he mocked and laughed:
+
+"Ha--well smitten, Lob! Oho, here Folly rides with pointed jest keen and
+two-edged--make way, knaves--make way for Folly--"
+
+The snorting charger, wheeled by strong hand, broke free, whereon rose an
+uproar of shouts and cries that sank to a meaningless babble swept backward
+on the rush of wind. Away, away they sped, through moonlight and shadow,
+with fast-beating hoofs that rang on paved walk, that thudded on soft
+grass, that trampled the tender flowers; and Yolande, swaying to the mighty
+arm that clasped her, saw the fierce, scarred face bent above her with eyes
+that gleamed under scowling brows and mouth grim-smiling; and shivering,
+she looked no more.
+
+On they sped with loosened rein, o'er grassy mead, through ferny hollows,
+o'erleaping chattering rill that babbled to the moon, 'mid swaying reeds
+and whispering sedge, past crouching bush and stately tree, and so at last
+they reached the woods. By shadowy brake and thicket, through pools of
+radiant moonlight, through leafy, whispering glooms they held their way,
+across broad glade and clearing, on and on until all noise of pursuit was
+lost and nought was to hear save the sounds of their going.
+
+Thus rode they, and with never a word betwixt them, deep and deeper into
+the wild until the moon was down and darkness shut them in; wherefore
+Jocelyn drew rein and sat a while to listen. He heard the good steed,
+deep-breathing, snuff at dewy grass; a stir and rustle all about him; the
+drowsy call of a bird afar; the soft ripple of water hard by and, over all,
+the deep hush of the wild-wood. Then upon this hush stole a whisper:
+
+"O, 'tis very dark!"
+
+He: Dark, Lady? Why so 'tis, and yet 'tis natural, for 'tis night,
+wherefore 'tis the bright god Phoebus is otherwhere, and Dian, sly-sweet
+goddess, hath stole her light from heaven, wherefore 'tis 'tis dark, lady.
+
+She: Where are we?
+
+He: The sweet Saints know that, lady--not I!
+
+She (_scornfully_): Verily, thou art no saint--
+
+He: Not yet, lady, not yet--witness these ass's ears.
+
+She: True, thou 'rt very Fool!
+
+He: In very truth, lady, and thou art lost with this same Fool, so art thou
+in very woeful case. As for me, a lost fool is no matter, wherefore Fool
+for himself grieveth no whit. But for thee--alas! Thou art a proud lady of
+high degree, very nice of thy dainty person, soft and delicate of body, so
+shall the greensward prove for thee uneasy couch, I judge, and thou sleep
+ill--
+
+She: Sleep? No thought have I of sleep! Ride on, therefore. Why tarry we
+here?
+
+He: Lady, for three sufficing reasons--our foes pursue not, I'm a-weary,
+and 'tis very dark--
+
+She: No matter! Ride on, I do command thee.
+
+He: Aye, but whither?
+
+She: I care not so thou leave this place; 'tis an evil place!
+
+He: Why,'tis good place, very well secluded and with stream hard by that
+bubbleth. So here will we bide till dawn. Suffer me to aid thee down.
+
+She: Touch me not! Never think I fear thee though I am alone.
+
+He: Alone? Nay, thou 'rt with me, that is--I am with thee and thou art with
+a Fool. So is Fool care-full Fool since Fool hath care of thee. Suffer me
+now to aid thee down since here will we wait the day. Come, my arm about
+thee so, thy hand in mine--
+
+She (_angrily_): O Fool most base--most vile--
+
+He: Nay, hush thee, hush! and listen to yon blithesome, bubblesome,
+babbling brook how it sigheth 'mid the willows, whispereth under reedy bank
+and laugheth, rogue-like, in the shallows! Listen how it wooeth thee:
+
+ Though, lady, hard thy couch must be,
+ If thou should'st wakeful lie,
+ Here, from the dark, I'll sing to thee
+ A drowsy lullaby.
+ O lady fair--forget thy pride
+ Whiles thou within the greenwood bide.
+
+And now suffer me to aid thee down.
+
+She: Why wilt thou stay me in this evil place?
+
+He (_patiently_): The wild is ill travelling in the dark, lady; there be
+quagmires and perilous ways--wherefore here must we bide till dawn. Suffer
+me to--
+
+SHE (_breathlessly and shrinking from his touch_): But I fear not
+quagmires--there be greater perils--more shameful and--and--'tis so dark,
+so dark! 'Tis hateful place. Ride we till it be day--
+
+He (_mockingly_): Perils, lady? Why certes there be perils--and perils.
+Perils that creep and crawl, perils that go on four legs and perils
+two-legged--e'en as I. But I, though two-legged, am but very fool of
+fools and nothing perilous in blazing day or blackest night. So stint
+thy fears, lady, for here bide we till dawn!
+
+Herewith he caught her in sudden arms and lifted her to the ground; then,
+dismounting, he set about watering and cherishing the wearied steed and
+tethered him beside a dun stream that rippled beneath shadowy willows; and
+so doing, fell a-singing on this wise:
+
+ "'Fair lady, thou 'rt lost!' quoth he,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'And O, 'tis dark--'tis dark!' quoth she,
+ 'And in the dark dire perils be,'
+ O, derry, derry down!
+
+ "Quoth he: 'Fair lady, stint thy fear,'
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'I, being Fool, will sit me here,
+ And, till the kindly sun appear,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+
+ "'I'll make for thee, like foolish wight,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A song that shall out-last dark night,
+ And put thy foolish fears to flight
+ With derry, derry down.
+
+ "'For 'tis great shame thou shouldst fear so,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A peril that two-legged doth go,
+ Since he's but humble Fool, I trow,
+ With derry, derry down.'"
+
+Thus sang he, a dim figure beside dim stream and, having secured the horse,
+sat him down thereby and took forth his lute.
+
+But Yolande, though he could not see, clenched white fists and, though he
+could not hear, stamped slim foot at him.
+
+"Joconde," quoth she, betwixt clenched teeth, "Joconde, I--scorn thee!"
+
+"Alack!" he sighed. "Alack, and my lute hath taken sore scath of a
+sword-thrust!"
+
+"Thou'rt hateful--hateful!" she cried. "Aye--hateful as thy hateful song,
+so do I contemn thee henceforth!"
+
+"Say'st thou so, lady, forsooth?" sighed he, busied with his lute. "Now
+were I other than Fool, here should I judge was hope of winning thy love.
+But being only Fool I, with aid of woe-begone lute, will sing thee merry
+song to cheer thee of thy perilous fears--"
+
+"Enough, ill Fool, I'll hear thee not!"
+
+"So be it, dear lady! Then will we sit an list to the song of yon stream,
+for streams and rivers, like the everlasting hills, are passing wise with
+length of days--"
+
+"And thou'rt a very Fool!" she cried angrily. "A fond Fool presumptuous in
+thy folly!"
+
+"As how presumptuous, proud lady?" he questioned humbly.
+
+"In that thou dreamest I--stoop to fear thee!"
+
+"Aye, verily!" sighed he. "Alas, thou poor, solitary, foolish, fearful
+maid, thou art sick with fear of me! So take now my dagger! Thus Fool
+offenceless shall lie defenceless at thy mercy and, so lying, sleep until
+joyous day shall banish thy so virginal fears!" Which saying, he tossed off
+belt and dagger and setting them beside her, rolled his weather-worn cloak
+about him, stretched himself beneath the dim willows and straightway
+fell a-snoring. And after some while she questioned him in voice low and
+troubled:
+
+"O Joconde, art truly sleeping?"
+
+"Fair lady," he answered, "let these my so loud snores answer thee."
+
+Up sprang Yolande and, coming beside him in the gloom, cast back his
+girdle, speaking quick and passionate:
+
+"Take back thy dagger lest I be tempted to smite it to the cruel, mocking
+heart of thee!" Then turned she stately back and left him, but, being hid
+from view, cast herself down full length upon the sward, her pride and
+stateliness forgotten quite. Now Jocelyn, propped on uneasy elbow, peered
+amid the gloom for sight of her and hearkened eagerly for sound of her; but
+finding this vain, arose and, creeping stealthily, presently espied her
+where she lay, face hidden in the dewy grass. Thus stood he chin in hand
+disquieted and anxious-eyed and wist not what to do.
+
+"Lady?" he questioned at last; but she stirred not nor spoke. "Yolande!"
+he murmured, drawing nearer; but still she moved not, though his quick ear
+caught a sound faint though very pitiful. "Ah, dost thou weep?" he cried.
+Yolande sobbed again, whereupon down fell he beside her on his knees, "Dear
+lady, why grievest thou?"
+
+"O Joconde," she sighed, "I am indeed solitary--and fearful! And thou--thou
+dost mock me!"
+
+"Forgive me," he pleaded humbly, "and, since thou'rt solitary, here am I.
+And, for thy fears, nought is here shall harm thee, here may'st thou sleep
+secure--"
+
+"Stay, Joconde, the forest is haunted of wolves and--worse, 'tis said!"
+
+"Then will I watch beside thee till the day. And now will I go cut bracken
+for thy bed."
+
+"Then will I aid thee." So she arose forthwith and, amid the fragrant
+gloom, they laboured together side by side; and oft in the gloom her hand
+touched his, and oft upon his cheek and brow and lip was the silken touch
+of her wind-blown hair. Then beneath arching willows they made a bed,
+high-piled of springy bracken and sweet grasses, whereon she sank nestling,
+forthwith.
+
+"O, 'tis sweet couch!" she sighed.
+
+"Yet thou'lt be cold mayhap ere dawn," quoth he, "suffer me to set my cloak
+about thee."
+
+"But how of thyself, Joconde?"
+
+"I am a Fool well seasoned of wind and rain, heat and cold, lady, and 'tis
+night of summer." So he covered her with his travel-stained cloak and,
+sitting beneath a tree, fell to his watch. And oft she stirred amid the
+fern, deep-sighing, and he, broad back against the tree, sighed oftener
+yet.
+
+"Art there, Joconde?" she questioned softly.
+
+"Here, lady."
+
+"'Tis very dark," sighed she, "and yet, methinks, 'tis sweet to lie thus
+in the greenwood so hushed and still and the stars to watch like eyes of
+angels."
+
+"Why, 'tis night of summer, lady, a night soft and languorous and fragrant
+of sleeping flowers. But how of grim winter, how of rain and wind and
+lashing tempest--how think you?"
+
+"That summer would come again, Joconde."
+
+"Truly here is brave thought, lady."
+
+"Hark, how still is the night, Joconde, and yet full of soft stir, a
+sighing amid the leaves! 'Tis like the trees whispering one another. O,
+'tis sweet night!"
+
+"Soon to pass away, alas!" he sighed, whereupon she, stirring upon her
+ferny couch, sighed also; thereafter fell they silent awhile hearkening to
+the leafy stirrings all about them in the dark, and the slumberous murmur
+of the stream that, ever and anon, brake into faint gurglings like a voice
+that laughed, soft but roguish.
+
+SHE: I pray thee talk to me.
+
+HE: Whereof, lady?
+
+SHE: Thyself.
+
+HE: I am a Fool--
+
+SHE: And why sit so mumchance?
+
+HE: I think.
+
+SHE: Of what?
+
+HE: Folly.
+
+SHE: And why dost sigh so deep and oft?
+
+HE: I grieve for thee.
+
+SHE: For me! And wherefore?
+
+HE: Being lost with a Fool thou'rt desolate, sad and woeful.
+
+SHE: Am I, Joconde? And how dost know all this?
+
+HE: 'Tis so I do think, lady.
+
+SHE: Then are thy thoughts folly indeed. If thou must sigh, sigh for
+thyself.
+
+HE: Why so I do, lady, and therewith grieve for myself and thyself, myself
+being Fool and thyself a dame of high degree, thus, betwixt whiles, I do
+fear thee also.
+
+SHE: Thou fear! Thou fear me forsooth! And wherefore fear a helpless maid?
+
+HE: There is the reason--she is helpless!
+
+SHE: Ah, there doth Fool speak like chivalrous knight.
+
+HE: Or very fool--a fool that fain would win fair Dian from high heaven.
+Alas, poor Fool, that, being fool, must needs look and sigh and sigh and
+look and leave her to the winning of some young Endymion!
+
+SHE (_dreamily_): Endymion was but lowly shepherd, yet was he loved!
+
+HE: Endymion was fair youth comely of feature, lady. Now had he worn ass's
+ears 'bove visage scarred--how then? On Ida's mount he had been sighing
+forlorn and lonely yet, methinks. For maids' hearts are ever governed by
+their eyes--
+
+SHE: Art so wise in maids' hearts, Joconde?
+
+HE: Wise am I in this: No man may ever know the heart of a woman--and woman
+herself but seldom.
+
+Now here was silence again wherein Yolande, smiling, viewed him a dim shape
+in the gloom, and he leaned back to watch a star that twinkled through the
+leafy canopy above.
+
+SHE: Thou art Duke Jocelyn's Fool at court?
+
+HE: I am Duke Jocelyn's fool here and there and everywhere, lady.
+
+SHE: Yet have I heard Duke Jocelyn was a mighty man-at-arms and, though
+youthful, sober-minded, full of cares of state and kept no Fool at court.
+
+HE: Lady, his court is filled o' fools as is the way of other courts and
+amongst these many fools first cometh the Duke himself--
+
+SHE: How, and darest thou call this mighty Duke a fool?
+
+HE: Often, lady!
+
+SHE: And what like is he?
+
+HE: Very like a man, being endowed of arms, legs, eyes, ears--of each two,
+no more and no less, as is the vulgar custom.
+
+SHE: But is he not of beauty high and noble, of god-like perfection far
+beyond poor, common flesh and blood? 'Tis so the painter has limned his
+face, 'tis so I dream him to my fancy.
+
+HE: Lady, I am but a Fool, let the picture answer thee.
+
+SHE: And he, this mighty Duke of god-like beauty doth woo me to his
+wife--
+
+HE (_bitterly_): With my tongue.
+
+SHE: Why came he not in his own glorious person?
+
+HE: Lady, though a Duke, he hath his moments of wisdom and argueth thus:
+"I, though a Duke, am yet a man. Thus, should I as Duke woo her, she may
+wed the Duke, loving not the man--"
+
+SHE: And so he sent a Fool as his ambassador! And so do I scorn this
+god-like Duke--
+
+HE: Ha! Scorn him! My lady--O Yolande, what of me?
+
+She: Thou, false to him and faithless to thy trust, didst woo me for
+thyself which was ill in thee. But thou didst throw the terrible Red Gui
+into my lily-pool which was brave in thee. Thou didst endure chains and a
+prison undaunted which was noble in thee. Thou didst this night at peril of
+thy life save me from shame, but thou didst bear me urgently here into the
+wild, and in the wild here lie I beside thee, lost, yet warm and sleepy and
+safe beneath thy cloak--and so--'tis very well--
+
+HE: Safe, Yolande? Hath thy heart told thee this at last? But thou didst
+fear me--
+
+SHE: Because to-night thou didst clasp me in cruel arms and spake me words
+of love passionate and fierce and--and--
+
+HE: Kissed thee, Yolande!
+
+SHE: Many times--O cruel! And bore me hither and lost me in these dark
+solitudes! Here was good cause for any maid to fear thee methinks.
+
+Yet thou didst basely mock my fears with thy hateful song of "Derry down."
+
+HE: Because thy fears, being unjust, hurt me, for ah, Yolande, my love for
+thee is deep and true, and True-love is ever gentle and very humble.
+
+SHE: Thus do I fear thee no more, Joconde!
+
+HE: Because I am but lowly--a Fool beneath thy proud disdain?
+
+SHE: Nay, Joconde. Because thou art indeed a very man. So now shall I sleep
+secure since nought of evil may come nigh me whiles I lie in thy care.
+
+Thus spake she softly 'mid the gloom, and turning upon her rustling couch
+sighed and presently fell to slumber.
+
+Now, sitting thus beside her as she slept, Jocelyn heard the stream ripple
+in the shadows like one that laughed soft but very joyously and, as he
+gazed up at the solitary star with eyes enraptured, this elfin laughter
+found its echo in his heart.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A bird chirped drowsily from mazy thicket where sullen shadow thinned,
+little by little, until behind leaf and twig was a glimmer of light that
+waxed ever brighter. And presently amid this growing brightness was soft
+stir and twitter, sleepy chirpings changed to notes of wistful sweetness, a
+plaintive calling that was answered from afar.
+
+Thus the birds awaking sounded pretty warnings summoning each to each for
+that the day-spring was at hand, while ever the brightness changed to
+radiance and radiance to an orient glory and up flamed the sun in majesty
+and it was day. And now, from brake and thicket, from dewy mysteries
+of green boskage burst forth the sweet, glad chorus of bird-song, full
+throated, passionate of joy.
+
+And Jocelyn, sitting broad back against a tree, felt his soul uplifted
+thereby what time his eyes missed nothing of the beauties about him: the
+rugged boles of mighty trees bedappled with sunny splendour, the
+glittering dew that gemmed leaf and twig and fronded bracken, and the
+shapely loveliness of her who slumbered couched beneath his worn cloak,
+the gentle rise and fall of rounded bosom and the tress of hair that a
+fugitive sunbeam kissed to ruddy gold. Thus sat Jocelyn regardful,
+gladness in the heart of him, and a song of gladness bubbling to his lips.
+
+Suddenly he saw her lashes quiver, her rosy lips parted to a smile and,
+stirring in her slumber, she sighed and stretched shapely arms; so waked
+she to a glory of sun and, starting to an elbow, gazed round, great-eyed,
+until espying him, she smiled again.
+
+"Good morrow, Joconde! Ne'er have I slept sweeter. But thou hast
+out-watched dark night and art a-weary, so shalt sleep awhile--"
+
+"Nay," he answered, "a plunge in the stream yonder and I shall be blithe
+for the road--an we find one. And I do fear me thou'rt hungry, Yolande, and
+I have nought to give thee--"
+
+"And what of thyself, man? Verily, I read hunger in thy look and weariness
+also, so, an thou may'st not eat, sleep thou shalt awhile here--in my
+place."
+
+"Nay, Yolande, indeed--"
+
+"Yea, but thou must indeed whiles I watch over thee. 'Tis a sweet bed--come
+thy ways."
+
+"And what wilt thou do?" he questioned.
+
+"Much!" she answered, viewing her rumpled, gown with rueful eyes. "As thou
+sayest, there is the pool yonder! So come, get thee to bed and--sleep!
+Come, let me cover thee with thy cloak and gainsay me not; sleep thou must
+and shalt."
+
+So Duke Jocelyn stretched himself obediently upon the bed of fern and
+suffered her to cover him with the cloak; but as she stooped above him
+thus, he lifted the hem of her dress to reverent lips.
+
+"My lady!" he murmured. "My dear lady!"
+
+"Now close me thine eyes, wearied child!" she commanded. And, like a child,
+in this also he obeyed her, albeit unwillingly by reason of her radiant
+beauty, but hearing her beside him, was content, and thus presently fell to
+happy sleeping.
+
+When he awoke the sun was high and he lay awhile basking in this grateful
+radiance and joying in the pervading quiet; but little by little, growing
+uneasy by reason of this stillness, he started up to glance about him and
+knew sudden dread--for the little glade was empty--Yolande had vanished;
+moreover the horse was gone also.
+
+Cold with an awful fear he got him to his feet and looked hither and yon,
+but nowhere found any sign of violence or struggle. But like one distraught
+he turned to seek her, her name upon his lips, then, checking voice and
+movement, stood rigid, smitten by hateful doubt. For now it seemed to him
+that her gentle looks and words had been but sweet deceits to blind him to
+her purpose and now, so soon as she had lulled him to sleep, she had stolen
+away, leaving him for the poor, piteous fool he was. And now his despair
+was 'whelmed in sudden anger, and anger, little by little, changed to
+grief. She was fled away and he a sorry fool and very desolate.
+
+Full of these bitter thoughts he cast himself upon his face and, lying as
+in a pit of gloom, knew a great bitterness.
+
+Slowly, slowly, borne upon the gentle wind came a fragrance strange and
+unexpected, a savour delectable of cooking meat that made him know himself
+a man vastly hungry despite his grievous woe. But, lying within the black
+gulf of bitterness, he stirred not until, of a sudden, he heard a voice,
+rich and full and very sweet, upraised in joyous singing; and these the
+words:
+
+ "Rise, O laggard! See the sun,
+ To climb in glory hath begun:
+ The flowers have oped their pretty eyes,
+ The happy lark doth songful rise,
+ And merry birds in flowery brake,
+ Full-throated, joyous clamours make;
+ And I, indeed, that love it not,
+ Do sit alone and keel the pot,
+ Whiles thus I sing thee to entreat,
+ O sleepy laggard--come and eat!"
+
+"Forsooth and art sleeping yet, Joconde?" the voice questioned. Duke
+Jocelyn lifted woeful head and saw her standing tall and shapely amid
+the leaves, fresh and sweet as the morn itself, with laughter within her
+dream-soft eyes and laughter on her vivid lips and the sun bright in the
+braided tresses of her hair wherein she had set wild flowers like jewels.
+
+"Yolande!" he murmured, coming to his knees "Yolande--how glorious thou
+art!"
+
+"Nay," she laughed, yet flushing to the worship of his eyes, "and my habit
+woefully torn of wicked bramble-thorns, and my hair ill-braided and all
+uncombed and--"
+
+"Ah, Yolande, I thought thee fled and I left to loneliness, and my pain was
+very sore."
+
+"Then am I avenged thy mockery, Joconde, and thy song of 'Derry down.'
+'Twas for this I stole away! But now, if thou 'rt hungry man, come this
+ways." And she reached him her hand. So she brought him to a little dell
+where burned a fire of sticks beneath a pot whence stole right savoury
+odour.
+
+"O most wonderful!" quoth he. "Whence came these goodly viands?"
+
+"Where but from the wallet behind thy horse's saddle, Joconde?" Then down
+sat they forthwith side by side and ate heartily and were very blithe
+together; and oft-times their looks would meet and they would fall silent
+awhile. At last, the meal ended, Jocelyn, turning from Yolande's beauty to
+the beauty of the world around, spake soft-voiced:
+
+"Yolande, were mine a selfish love, here, lost within these green
+solitudes, would I keep thee for mine own--to serve and worship thee unto
+my life's end. But, since I count thy happiness above my dearest desires,
+now will I go saddle the horse and bear thee hence."
+
+"Whither, Joconde, whither wilt thou bear me?"
+
+"Back to the world," said he ruefully, "thy world of prideful luxury, to
+thy kindred."
+
+"But I have no kindred, alas!" sighed she, stooping to caress a
+daisy-flower that grew adjacent.
+
+"Why, then, thy friends--"
+
+"My friends be very few, Joconde, and Benedicta hath her husband."
+
+"Yolande," said he, leaning nearer, "whither should I bear thee?"
+
+"Nay," saith she, patting the daisy with gentle finger-tip, "go thou and
+saddle thy horse, mayhap I shall know this anon. Go thou and saddle the
+horse." So Jocelyn arose and having saddled and bridled the horse, back he
+cometh to find Yolande on her knees beside the stream, and she, hearing
+his step, bowed her head, hiding her face from him; now on the sward
+beside her lay the picture shattered beyond repair.
+
+"How," said Jocelyn, "hast broken the Duke's picture, lady!"
+
+"Thou seest!" she answered.
+
+"And must thou weep therefore?" said he a little bitterly. "Oh, be
+comforted; 't was but a toy--soon will I get thee another."
+
+"An thou bring me another, Joconde, that will I break also."
+
+"Ha--thou didst break it--wilfully, then?"
+
+"With this stone, Joconde."
+
+"Wherefore, O wherefore?" he questioned eagerly.
+
+"For that it was but painted toy, even as thou sayest!" she answered.
+"Moreover, I--love not Duke Jocelyn."
+
+"And't was for this thou didst break the picture?"
+
+"Nay, 'twas because these painted features may never compare with the face
+of him I love."
+
+"And whom--whom dost thou love?" quoth he, in voice low and unsteady.
+Speaking not, she pointed with slender finger down into the placid, stream.
+Wondering, he bent to look and thus from the stilly water his mirrored
+image looked back at him; now as he stooped so stooped she, and in this
+watery mirror their glances met.
+
+"Yolande?" he whispered. "O my lady, shall a Fool's fond dream come true,
+or am I mad indeed? Thou in thy beauty and I--"
+
+"Thou, Joconde," said she, fronting him with head proudly uplift, "to my
+thought thou art man greater, nobler than any proud lord or mighty duke
+soever. And thou hast loved and wooed as never man wooed, methinks. And
+thou art so brave and strong and so very gentle and--thus it is--I do love
+thee."
+
+"But my--my motley habit, my--"
+
+"Thy cap of Folly, Joconde, these garments pied thou hast dignified by thy
+very manhood, so are they dearer to me than lordly tire or knightly armour.
+And thy jingling bells--ah, Joconde, the jingle of thy bells hath waked
+within my heart that which shall never die--long time my heart hath cried
+for thee, and I, to my shame, heeded not the cry, wherefore here and now,
+thus upon my knees, I do most humbly confess my love."
+
+"Thy love, Yolande--for me? Then dost truly love me? Oh, here is marvel
+beyond my understanding and belief."
+
+"Why, Joconde, ah, why?"
+
+"See!" he cried, flinging back his head. "Look now upon this blemished
+face--here where the cruel sun may shew thee all my ugliness, every
+scar--behold! How may one so beautiful as thou learn love for one so lowly
+and with face thus hatefully marred? I have watched thee shrink from me ere
+now! I mind how, beside the lily-pool within thy garden, thou didst view me
+with eyes of horror! I do mind thy very words--the first that e'er I heard
+thee utter:
+
+'What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show A visage that might
+shame the gladsome day?'
+
+Yolande, Yolande, this poor blemished face is nothing changed since then;
+such as I was, such I am!"
+
+"Alas, Joconde!" she cried, reaching out her hands in passionate appeal.
+"My words were base, cruel--and hurt me now more, ah, much more, than e'er
+they wounded thee. For I do love thee with love as deep, as true as is
+thine own! Wilt not believe me?"
+
+"Oh, that I might indeed!" he groaned. "But--thou'rt alone, far from thy
+home and friends, thy wonted pride and state forgotten all--mayhap thou
+dost pity me or mayhap 'tis thy gratitude in guise of love doth speak me
+thus? But as thou art still thine own lovely self, so am I that same poor,
+motley Fool whose hateful face--"
+
+"Joconde," she cried, "hush thee--Oh, hush thee! Thy words are whips to
+lash me!" and catching his hand she kissed it and cherished it 'gainst
+tear-wet cheek. "Ah, Joconde," she sighed, "so wise and yet so foolish,
+know'st thou not thy dear, scarred face is the face of him I love, for love
+hath touched my eyes and I do see thee at last as thou truly art, a man
+great of soul, tender and strong-hearted. So art thou a man, the only man,
+my man. Oh, that I might but prove my love for thee, prove it to thee and
+before all men, no matter how, so I might but banish thy cruel doubts for
+ever. But now, for thy dear, scarred face--"
+
+Her soft, round arms were about his neck; and drawing him to her lips she
+kissed him, his scarred brow and cheek, his eyes, his lips grown dumb with
+wondering joy. Thus, lip to lip and with arms entwined, knelt they beside
+that slow-moving stream that whispered softly beneath the bank and gurgled
+roguish laughter in the shallows.
+
+A dog barked faintly in the distance, a frog croaked hoarsely from the
+neighbouring sedge, but lost in the wonder of their love, they heeded only
+the beating of their hearts.
+
+"A-billing and a-cooing! A-cooing and a-billing, as I'm a tanner true!"
+exclaimed a hoarse voice. Up started Jocelyn, fierce-eyed and with hand on
+dagger-hilt, to behold a man with shock of red hair, a man squat and burly
+who, leaning on bow-stave, peered at them across the stream.
+
+"And is it Will the Tanner?" quoth Jocelyn, loosing his dagger.
+
+"None else, friend Motley."
+
+"Why then, God keep thee! And now go about thy business."
+
+"Marry, Fool, I am about my business, the which is to find thee. By Saint
+Nick, there's mighty hue and cry for thee up and down within the greenwood,
+aye--marry is there, as I'm a tanner tried and true. So needs must thou
+along wi' me."
+
+"With thee, Tanner? And wherefore?"
+
+"Why, I know not wherefore, Fool, but must along. Here's me and Lob and
+the potent hag that is Mopsa the Witch, lain a-watching and a-watching ye
+a-billing--nay, scowl not, friend Fool, on tanner trusty, tried and
+true. For hark now, here's great stir, clamour and to-do within this
+forest-country for thee, Fool, the which is strange, seeing thou art but a
+motley fool. Howbeit there be many great lords and knights from beyond the
+Southern March a-seeking of thee, Fool."
+
+"Ha!" quoth Jocelyn, frowning. "Envoys from Brocelaunde!"
+
+"Alas, Joconde, and seeking thee!" saith Yolande in troubled voice.
+
+"Moreover," continued Will, "here's our Duke Pertinax and his lady Duchess
+yearning for thee, here's Robin that is Sir Robert a-clamouring for thee
+and all his goodly foresters, as myself, a-seeking thee."
+
+"But't is I found thee, Sir Long-legged Fool, I--I!" croaked a voice, and
+old Mopsa the Witch peered at them from a bush hard by.
+
+"Verily, thou hast found us!" quoth Jocelyn ruefully. "And what now?"
+
+"Oho!" cried the Witch, cracking her finger-bones. "Now go I hot-foot to
+weave spells and enchantments, aha--oho! Spells that shall prove the false
+from the true, the gold from the dross. Thou, Sir Fool, art doubting lover,
+so art thou blind lover! I will resolve thee thy doubts, open thy eyes and
+show thee great joy or bitter sorrow--oho! Thou, proud lady, hast stooped
+to love a motley mountebank--nay, flash not thy bright eyes nor toss
+haughty head at an old woman--but here is solitude with none to mock
+thy lowly choice or cry thee shame to love a motley Fool, aha! And thou
+would'st fain prove thy love True-love, says thou? Why, so thou
+shalt--beyond all doubting now and for ever, aha--oho! Truest of true or
+falsest of false. Beware. Farewell, and remember:
+
+ "Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies,
+ Love's blind, they say; but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly, follow.
+
+Hither-ho, Lob-Lobkyn! Lend thine old granddam thine arm. Come, my pretty
+bantling, sweet poppet--come and--away!" o spake old Mopsa the Witch, and
+vanished into the green with Lobkyn, who turned to flourish his club in
+cheery salutation ere he plunged into the underbrush. Then Jocelyn smiled
+down on Yolande to find her pale and trembling, so would he have clasped
+her to his heart, but a hand grasped him and, turning, he beheld the Tanner
+at his elbow.
+
+"Friend Fool," quoth he, "needs must I take thee to Robin that Sir Robert
+is, e'en as he did command, so come now thy ways with trusty tanner tried."
+
+"Off, Red-head!" saith Jocelyn, frowning a little. "Away now, lest this my
+dagger bite thee." Back leapt Will into the stream whence he had come, and
+there standing, clapped bugle to lip and winded it lustily, whereupon came
+divers fellows running, bow in hand, who beset Jocelyn on every side.
+
+"Now yield thee to Tanner, friend," quoth Will, knee-deep in the stream,
+"for no mind have I to hurt thee. So away with thy dagger like gentle,
+kindly Fool, and away with thee to Sir Robin."
+
+Now hereupon, as Jocelyn frowned upon them, Yolande, standing a-tiptoe,
+kissed his scarred cheek and clasped his dagger-hand in soft fingers.
+
+"Come," she pleaded, "they be a-many, so yield me thy dagger and let us go
+with them, beloved!" At the whispered word Jocelyn loosed the dagger
+and, clasping her instead, kissed her full-lipped. Then turned he to his
+captors.
+
+"I'm with thee, Will, thou--tanner!" quoth he. "And now bring hither the
+horse for my lady's going."
+
+"Nay," answered Will, scratching red head, "Rob--Sir Robert spake nothing
+of horse for thee, or lady."
+
+"Nor will I ride, Joconde," she murmured happily, "rather will I trudge
+beside thee, my hand in thine--thus!"
+
+So, hand in hand, they went close-guarded by their captors yet heeding them
+not at all, having eyes but for each other. And oft her cheek flushed rosy
+beneath his look, and oft he thrilled to the warm, close pressure of her
+fingers; and thus tramped they happy in their captivity.
+
+The sun rose high and higher, but since for them their captors were not,
+neither was fatigue; and, if the way was rough there was Jocelyn's ready
+hand, while for him swamps and brooks were a joy since he might bear her
+in his arms. Thus tramped they by shady dingle and sunny glade, through
+marshy hollows and over laughing rills, until the men began to mutter
+their discontent, in especial a swart, hairy wight, and Will, glancing up
+at the sun, spake:
+
+"Two hours, lads, judge I."
+
+"Nigher three, Tanner, nigher three!" growled the chief mutterer.
+
+"Why so much the better, Rafe, though two was the word. Howbeit we be come
+far enow, I judge, and 'tis hot I judge, so hey for Robin--and a draught o'
+perry!"
+
+"Art thou weary, my Yolande?"
+
+"Nay, is not thy dear arm about me!"
+
+"And--thou dost love me indeed?"
+
+"Indeed, Joconde! Mine is a love that ever groweth--"
+
+A horn's shrill challenge; a sound of voices, and below them opened a
+great, green hollow, shady with trees beneath whose shade were huts of
+wattle cunningly wrought, a brook that flowed sparkling, and beyond caves
+hollowed in the steepy bank.
+
+"How now, Tanner Will," questioned Jocelyn, "hast brought us to the
+outlaw's refuge?"
+
+"Not so, good friend-Fool, not outlaws, foresters we of Duke Pertinax,
+and yonder, look 'ee, cometh Rob--Sir Robert to greet ye!" And the Tanner
+pointed where one came running, a man long of leg, long of arm and very
+bright of eye, a goodly man clad in hood and jerkin of neat's leather as
+aforetime, only now his bugle swung from baldrick of gold and silver and in
+his hood was brooched a long scarlet feather.
+
+"What brother!" cried he joyously. "By saint Nicholas,'tis sweet to see
+thee again, thou lovely Fool!" And he clasped Jocelyn in brotherly embrace,
+which done, he stood off and shook doleful head. "Alas, brother!" quoth he.
+"Alas! my prisoner art thou this day, wherefor I grieve, and wherefor I
+know not save that it is by my lady Benedicta's strict command and her I
+must obey." And now, turning to Yolande, he bared his head, louting full
+low. "Lady," quoth he, "by thy rare and so great beauty I do know thee for
+Yolande the Fair, so do we of the wild give thee humble greeting. Here
+may'st thou rest awhile ere we bring thee to Canalise."
+
+"But, messire," answered Yolande, clasping Jocelyn's hand, "no mind have I
+to go to Canalise."
+
+"Then alack for me, fair lady, for needs must I carry thee there within the
+hour along of my motley brother. Meanwhile here within yon bower thou
+shalt find cushions to thy repose, and all things to thy comfort and
+refreshment."
+
+"O Sir Robert! O for a comb!" she sighed.
+
+"Expectant it waiteth thee, lady, together with water cool, sweet-perfumed
+essences, unguents and other nice, lady-like toys. Moreover, there be
+mirrors two of Venice and in pretty coffer--" But Yolande had vanished.
+
+Hereupon Robin led the way into a cool, arras-hung cave where was table set
+out with divers comfortable things both eatable and drinkable.
+
+Quoth Jocelyn, hunger and thirst appeased: "And now good Robin, what do
+these envoys from Brocelaunde? Why am I thy prisoner and wherefore must I
+to Canalise?"
+
+"Ha!" saith Robin, cocking merry eye, "and thy name is Joconde, the which
+is an excellent name, brother, and suiteth thee well, and yet--hum!
+Howbeit, friend, remember Robin loved thee for the Fool he found thee,
+that same Fool foolish enow to spare a rogue his life. Dost mind my Song
+o' Rogues? A good song, methinks, tripping merrily o' the tongue:
+
+ "'I'll sing a song
+ Not over long,
+ A song o' roguery,
+ For I'm a rogue,
+ And thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith is he.'
+
+I mind thy fierce, hawk-nosed gossip in rusty jack and ragged cloak, his
+curses! Troth brother,'tis a world of change methinks, this same fierce,
+cursing, hook-nose rogue a noble knight and to-day my lord Duke! I, that
+was poor outlaw, knight-at-arms and lord warden, and thou--a motley Fool
+still--and my prisoner. How say'st thou, brother?"
+
+"Why I say, Robin, that my three questions wait thy answers!"
+
+"Verily, brother, and for this reason. I am a knight and noble, and so
+being have learned me policy, and my policy is, when unable to give answer
+direct to question direct, to question myself direct thus directing
+question to questions other or to talk of matters of interest universal, so
+do I of thyself and myself speak. And talking of myself I have on myself,
+of myself, of myself made a song, and these the words, hark 'ee:
+
+ "Now Rob that was Robin Sir Robert is hight
+ Though Rob oft did rob when outlaw,
+ Since outlaw now in law is dubbed a good knight,
+ Robin's robbing is done, Rob robbeth no more.
+
+Fair words brother, I think, and yet a little sad. 'But,' says you in vasty
+amaze, 'my very noble and right potent Sir Robert,' says you, 'if thou
+art indeed noble knight, wherefore go ye devoid of mail, surcoat, cyclas,
+crested helm, banderol, lance, shield and the like pomps and gauds?'
+'Brother,' says I, 'habit is habit and habit sticketh habitual, and my
+habit is to go habited as suiteth my habit, suiting habit o' body to habit
+o' mind.' Thus I, though Sir Robert, am Robin still, and go in soft leather
+'stead of chafing steel, and my rogues, loving Robin, love Sir Robert the
+better therefor, as sayeth my song in fashion apt and pertinent:
+
+ "Since habit is habit, my habit hath been
+ To wear habit habitually comely--
+
+Ha, there soundeth the mustering note, so must we away and I sing no
+further, which is well, for 'comely' is an ill word to rhyme with. Howbeit
+here must I, beginning my song o' Robin, of beginning must Rob make an end,
+for duty calleth Sir Robert, so must Robin away."
+
+Hereupon he clapped horn to lip at which shrill summons came archers and
+pikemen ranked very orderly about a fair horse-litter. But Yolande coming
+radiant from the bower and espying the litter, shook her head. Quoth she:
+
+"An thou go afoot, Joconde, so will I."
+
+The sun was low when they came before the walls of Canalise, and passing
+beneath grim portcullis and through frowning gateway, with ring and tramp,
+crossed the wide market square a-throng with jostling townsfolk, who
+laughed and pointed, cheered and hooted, staring amain at Jocelyn in his
+threadbare motley; but Yolande, fronting all eyes with proud head aloft,
+drew nearer and held his hand in firmer clasp.
+
+Thus they came at last to the great courtyard before the palace, bright
+with the glitter of steel, where men-at-arms stood mustered. Here Robin
+halted his company, whereon rose the silvery note of a clarion, and forth
+paced the dignified Chief Herald, who spake him full-toned and sonorous:
+
+"In the name of our potent Duke Pertinax and his gracious lady Benedicta, I
+greet thee well, Sir Robert-a-Forest. Now whom bring ye here? Pronounce!"
+
+"Dan Merriment, Sir Gravity," answered Robin, "a Fool valiant and wise, a
+maker of songs, of quips and quiddities many and jocund, Joconde hight. Sir
+Wisdom, Folly behold, himself here _in propria persona_."
+
+The Chief Herald gestured haughtily with his wand whereupon forth stepped a
+file of soldiers and surrounded Jocelyn.
+
+"Ah, Joconde! What meaneth this?" said Yolande, in troubled voice.
+
+"Indeed, my lady, I know not!" he answered. "But let not thy brave heart
+fail thee."
+
+"Ah, Joconde, I fear for thee--whither would they lead thee? Nay, sweet
+heaven, they shall not take thee from me!"
+
+"Fear not, beloved, though they part us awhile."
+
+"Away with the Motley!" thundered the Chief Herald, flourishing his wand.
+
+"Yolande--O my beloved, fear not--" But even as he spake, the pikemen
+closed in, and Jocelyn was hustled away; so stood she trembling, hands
+clasped and eyes wide and fearful, until tall motley figure and flaunting
+cock's-comb were lost to her sight and the jingle of his bells had died
+away; then, finding herself alone and all men's eyes upon her, she lifted
+bowed head and stood white-cheeked and proudly patient, waiting for what
+might betide.
+
+And presently was distant stir that, growing nearer, swelled to the ring
+and clash of armour and the trampling of many hoofs; and presently through
+the great gateway rode many knights sumptuously caparisoned, their shields
+brave with gilded 'scutcheons, pennon and bannerole a-flutter above nodding
+plumes, and over all the Red Raven banner of Brocelaunde. So rode they
+two-and-two until the great courtyard blazed with flashing steel and
+broidered surcoats. And now a trumpet blared, and forth before this
+glorious array a pursuivant rode and halted to behold Pertinax, who stepped
+forth of the great banqueting-hall leading his fair Duchess by the hand,
+and behind them courtiers and ladies attendant.
+
+Once again the trumpets rang, and lifting his hand, the pursuivant spake:
+
+"My Lord Duke Pertinax, most gracious Duchess, Jocelyn the high and mighty
+Lord Duke of Brocelaunde greeteth you in all love and amity, and hither
+rideth to claim a fair lady to wife. Behold our Lord Duke Jocelyn!"
+
+Loud and long the trumpets blew as into the courtyard rode a single
+horseman; tall was he and bedight in plain black armour and white surcoat
+whereon the Red Raven glowed; but his face was hid in vizored helm. So
+rode he through his glorious array of knights, checking his fiery steed to
+gentle gait with practised hand, while thus spake the pursuivant:
+
+"Behold here Jocelyn, Duke of Brocelaunde, to claim this day in marriage
+the Lady Yolande according to her word."
+
+"Stay, my lords!" cried a sweet, clear voice, and forth before them all
+stood Yolande herself, pale-cheeked but stately of bearing and very bright
+of eye.
+
+"Be it known to all here that I, Yolande, have given neither pledge nor
+troth unto Duke Jocelyn--"
+
+Now here was silence sudden and profound that none dared break saving only
+the haughty Chief Herald.
+
+"How lady, how," quoth he, "no pledge, no troth, quotha--"
+
+"Neither one nor other, messire, nor shall there ever be--"
+
+"Here is madness, lady, madness--"
+
+"Here is truth, messire, truth; I may not pledge my troth with Duke Jocelyn
+since I have this day pledged myself unto Duke Jocelyn's jester--"
+
+"Jester, lady, jester? Venus aid us--Cupid shield us! A jester, a Fool, a
+motley mountebank, a--"
+
+"Aye!" cried Yolande. "All this is he, my lords. Very humble and lowly--yet
+do I love him! Oh, 'tis joy--'tis joy to thus confess my love--his cap and
+bells and motley livery are fairer to me than velvet mantle or knightly
+armour; he is but humble jester, a Fool for men's scorn or laughter, yet is
+he a man, so do I love him and so am I his--unto the end. My lords, I have
+no more to say save this--give me my jester--this man I love--and suffer us
+to go forth hand in hand together, even as we came."
+
+The Duchess Benedicta uttered a soft, glad cry, and seizing her husband's
+arm, shook it for very joy. But now, as Yolande fronted them all, pale and
+proudly defiant, was the ring of a mailed foot, and turning, she shrank
+trembling to see Duke Jocelyn hasting toward her, his black armour
+glinting, his embroidered surcoat fluttering, his long arms outstretched
+to her; thus quick-striding he came but, even as she put out shaking hands
+to stay him, he fell upon his knee before her.
+
+"Most brave and noble lady--beloved Yolande," he cried, and lifted his
+vizor. Now beholding the scarred face of him, the tender, smiling lips, the
+adoration in his grey eyes, she trembled amain and, swaying to him, rested
+her hands on his mailed shoulders.
+
+"Joconde," she whispered, "ah, Joconde--what dream is this?"
+
+"Nay, beloved, the dream is ended and findeth me here at thy feet. The
+dream is past and we do wake at last, for thy motley Fool, thy Duke and
+lover am I, yet lover most of all. And thou who in thy divine mercy stooped
+to love the Fool, by that same love shalt thou lift Duke Jocelyn up to thee
+and heaven at last. And Oh, methinks the memory of thy so great and noble
+love shall be a memory fragrant everlastingly."
+
+So speaking, Duke Jocelyn rose, and with her hand fast in his, looked from
+her loveliness round about him, blithe of eye.
+
+"My lords," cried he, "behold my well-beloved, brave-hearted lady. Nobles
+of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande."
+
+Hereupon was shout on shout of joyous acclaim, lost all at once in the
+sweet, glad clamour of bells pealing near and far; so, hand in hand, while
+the air thrilled with this merry riot, they crossed the wide courtyard, and
+she flushed 'neath the worship of his look and he thrilled to the close,
+warm pressure of her fingers--thus walked they betwixt the ranks of
+men-at-arms and glittering chivalry, yet saw them not.
+
+But now Yolande was aware of Benedicta's arms about her and Benedicta's
+voice in her ear.
+
+"Dear my Yolande, so True-love hath found thee at last since thou wert
+brave indeed and worthy. Come now and let me deck thee to thy bridal."
+
+"Lord Duke," quoth Pertinax, "here methinks was notable, worthy wooing."
+
+"Aha!" quoth Mopsa the Witch, crackling her knuckle-bones. "Here, my
+children, is wooing that some fool shall strive to tell tale of some day,
+mayhap; but such love is beyond words and not to be told. Thus by cunning
+contrivement hath Mopsa the old Witch proved the true from the false, the
+gold from the dross; thou, my lady, hast proved thy love indeed, and thou,
+Lord Duke, may nevermore doubt such love. And now away and wed each other
+to love's fulfilment--hark where the bells do summon ye."
+
+And thus, as evening fell, they were wed within the great Minster of
+Canalise, and thereafter came they to the banqueting-hall with retinue of
+knights and nobles. Last of all strode Robin with his foresters, and as
+they marched he sang a song he had learned of Jocelyn, and these the words:
+
+ "What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Ne'er to die or fade away,
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ "Though youth alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless shall remain
+ The same to-day and ever."
+
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
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+ <head>
+ <title>
+ The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .75em; margin-bottom: .75em; }
+ H1,H2,H3,H4,H5,H6 { text-align: center; margin-left: 15%; margin-right: 15%; }
+ hr { width: 50%; text-align: center;}
+ .foot { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; text-indent: -3em; font-size: 90%; }
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+ .mynote {background-color: #DDE; color: #000; padding: .5em; margin-left: 10%; margin-right: 10%; font-family: sans-serif; font-size: 95%;}
+ .toc { margin-left: 10%; margin-bottom: .75em;}
+ .toc2 { margin-left: 20%;}
+ div.fig { display:block; margin:0 auto; text-align:center; }
+ div.middle { margin-left: 20%; margin-right: 20%; text-align: justify; }
+ .figleft {float: left; margin-left: 0%; margin-right: 1%;}
+ .figright {float: right; margin-right: 0%; margin-left: 1%;}
+ .pagenum {display:inline; font-size: 70%; font-style:normal;
+ margin: 0; padding: 0; position: absolute; right: 1%;
+ text-align: right;}
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+ border-left: dashed thin; margin-left: 0.8em; text-align: left;
+ text-indent: 0; font-weight: bold; font-style: italic;
+ font-weight: bold; color: black; background: #eeeeee; border: solid 1px;}
+ pre {font-family: Times New Roman; font-size: 100%; margin-left: 10%;}
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+
+
+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Geste of Duke Jocelyn
+
+Author: Jeffery Farnol
+
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8165]
+This file was first posted on June 24, 2003
+Last Updated: March 15, 2018
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN ***
+
+
+
+
+Text file produced by Ted Garvin and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team
+
+HTML file produced by David Widger
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+ <div style="height: 8em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h1>
+ THE GESTE OF DUKE JOCELYN
+ </h1>
+ <h2>
+ By Jeffery Farnol
+ </h2>
+ <h5>
+ Illustrations in color by Eric Pape <br />(Illustrations not included in
+ this edition) <br /> <br /> <br />Copyright, 1920, <br /> <br />By Little,
+ Brown, And Company. <br /> <br />All rights reserved Published September,
+ 1920 <br /> <br />Norwood Press <br /> <br />Set up and electrotyped by J. S.
+ Cushing Co. Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.
+ </h5>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <b>CONTENTS</b>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> PRELUDE </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0003"> FYTTE I </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0004"> FYTTE 2 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0005"> FYTTE 3 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0006"> FYTTE 4 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0007"> FYTTE 5 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0008"> FYTTE 6 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0009"> FYTTE 7 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0010"> FYTTE 8 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0011"> FYTTE 9 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0012"> FYTTE 10 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0013"> FYTTE 11 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <a href="#link2H_4_0014"> FYTTE 12 </a>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br /> <br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My GILLIAN, thou child that budding woman art
+ For whom to-day and yesterday lie far apart
+ Already thou, my dear, dost longer dresses wear
+ And bobbest in most strange, new-fangled ways thy hair;
+ Thou lookest on the world with eyes grown serious
+ And rul'st thy father with a sway imperious
+ Particularly as regards his socks and ties
+ Insistent that each with the other harmonise.
+ Instead of simple fairy-tales that pleased of yore
+ Romantic verse thou read'st and novels by the score
+ And very oft I've known thee sigh and call them &ldquo;stuff&rdquo;
+ Vowing of love romantic they've not half enough.
+ Wherefore, like fond and doting parent, I
+ Will strive this want romantic to supply.
+ I'll write for thee a book of sighing lover
+ Crammed with ROMANCE from cover unto cover;
+ A book the like of which 't were hard to find
+ Filled with ROMANCE of every sort and kind.
+ I'll write it as the Gestours wrote of old,
+ In prose, blank-verse, and rhyme it shall be told.
+ And GILLIAN&mdash;
+ Some day perhaps, my dear, when you are grown
+ A portly dame with children of your own
+ You'll gather all your troop about your knee
+ And read to them this Geste I made for thee.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_ILLU" id="link2H_ILLU"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <p>
+ ILLUSTRATIONS <br /> <br /> &ldquo;Nobles of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess
+ Yolande&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!&rdquo; she sighed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, poor Motley!&rdquo; whispered the maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The long blades whirled and flashed
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ PRELUDE
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Long, long ago when castles grim did frown,
+ When massy wall and gate did 'fend each town;
+ When mighty lords in armour bright were seen,
+ And stealthy outlaws lurked amid the green
+ And oft were hanged for poaching of the deer,
+ Or, gasping, died upon a hunting spear;
+ When barons bold did on their rights insist
+ And hanged or burned all rogues who dared resist;
+ When humble folk on life had no freehold
+ And were in open market bought and sold;
+ When grisly witches (lean and bony hags)
+ Cast spells most dire yet, meantime, starved in rags;
+ When kings did lightly a-crusading fare
+ And left their kingdoms to the devil's care&mdash;
+ At such a time there lived a noble knight
+ Who sweet could sing and doughtily could fight,
+ Whose lance thrust strong, whose long sword bit
+ full deep
+ With darting point or mighty two-edged sweep.
+ A duke was he, rich, powerful&mdash;and yet
+ Fate had on him a heavy burden set,
+ For, while a youth, as he did hunt the boar,
+ The savage beast his goodly steed did gore,
+ And as the young duke thus defenceless lay,
+ With cruel tusk had reft his looks away,
+ Had marred his comely features and so mauled him
+ That, 'hind his back, &ldquo;The ugly Duke&rdquo; folk called
+ him&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: An ugly hero?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: That is so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: An ugly hero, father? O, absurd! Whoever of an &ldquo;ugly&rdquo; hero heard?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: I'll own, indeed, I've come across but few&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: But a duke&mdash;and ugly! Father, this from you?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: My duke is ugly, very, for good reason, As shall appear in due and
+ proper season!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: I'm sure no one will want to read him then, For &ldquo;heroes&rdquo; all should
+ be most handsome men. So make him handsome, please, or he won't do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: By heaven, girl&mdash;no, plain heroes are too few!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: Then ev'ry one will leave him on the shelf!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: Why, then, I'll read the poor fellow myself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: I won't!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: Then don't! Though, I might say, since you're set on it, child, My
+ duke was not so ugly when he smiled&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: Then make him smile as often as you can.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: I might do that, 't is none so bad a plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: And the lady&mdash;she must be a lady fair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: My dear, she's beautiful beyond compare.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ GILL: Why, then&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MYSELF: My pen!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So here and now I do begin
+ The tale of young Duke Jocelyn,
+ For critics, schools,
+ And cramping rules,
+ Heedless and caring not a pin.
+
+ The title here behold
+ On this fair page enrolled,
+ In letters big and bold,
+ As seemeth fit&mdash;
+ To wit:&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0003" id="link2H_4_0003"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE I
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Upon a day, but when it matters not,
+ Nor where, but mark! the sun was plaguy hot
+ Falling athwart a long and dusty road
+ In which same dust two dusty fellows strode.
+ One was a tall, broad-shouldered, goodly wight
+ In garb of motley like a jester dight,
+ Fool's cap on head with ass's ears a-swing,
+ While, with each stride, his bells did gaily ring;
+ But, 'neath his cock's-comb showed a face so marred
+ With cheek, with brow and lip so strangely scarred
+ As might scare tender maid or timid child
+ Unless, by chance, they saw him when he smiled,
+ For then his eyes, so deeply blue and bright,
+ Did hold in them such joyous, kindly light,
+ That sorrow was from heavy hearts beguiled&mdash;
+ This jester seemed less ugly when he smiled.
+
+ Here, O my Gill, right deftly, in a trice
+ I've made him smile and made him do it&mdash;twice.
+ That 't was the Duke of course you've guessed at once
+ Since you, I know, we nothing of a dunce.
+ But, what should bring a duke in cap and bells?
+ Read on and mark, while he the reason tells.
+
+ Now, 'spite of dust and heat, his lute he strummed,
+ And snatches of a merry song he hummed,
+ The while askance full merrily he eyed
+ The dusty knave who plodded at his side.
+ A bony fellow, this, and long of limb,
+
+ His habit poor, his aspect swart and grim;
+ His belt to bear a long broad-sword did serve,
+ His eye was bold, his nose did fiercely curve
+ Down which he snorted oft and (what is worse)
+ Beneath his breath gave vent to many a curse.
+ Whereat the Duke, sly laughing, plucked lutestring
+ And thus, in voice melodious did sing:
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sir Pertinax, why curse ye so?
+ Since thus in humble guise we go
+ We merry chances oft may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;And chances woeful, lord, also!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ &ldquo;To every fool that passeth by
+ These foolish bells shall testify
+ That very fool, forsooth, am I,
+ Good Pertinax of Shene!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;And, lord, methinks they'll tell no lie!&rdquo;
+ Growled Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Then spake the Knight in something of a pet,
+ &ldquo;Par Dex, lord Duke&mdash;plague take it, how I sweat,
+ By Cock, messire, ye know I have small lust
+ Like hind or serf to tramp it i' the dust!
+ Per De, my lord, a parch-ed pea am I&mdash;
+ I'm all athirst! Athirst? I am so dry
+ My very bones do rattle to and fro
+ And jig about within me as I go!
+ Why tramp we thus, bereft of state and rank?
+ Why go ye, lord, like foolish mountebank?
+ And whither doth our madcap journey trend?
+ And wherefore? Why? And, prithee, to what end?&rdquo;
+ Then quoth the Duke, &ldquo;See yonder in the green
+ Doth run a cooling water-brook I ween,
+ Come, Pertinax, beneath yon shady trees,
+ And there whiles we do rest outstretched at ease
+ Thy 'wherefores' and thy 'whys' shall answered be,
+ And of our doings I will counsel thee.&rdquo;
+
+ So turned they from the hot and dusty road
+ Where, 'mid green shade, a rill soft-bubbling flowed,
+ A brook that leapt and laughed in roguish wise,
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax with scowling eyes
+ Did frown upon the rippling water clear,
+ And sware sad oaths because it was not beer;
+ Sighful he knelt beside this murmurous rill,
+ Bent steel-clad head and bravely drank his fill.
+ Then sitting down, quoth he: &ldquo;By Og and Gog,
+ I'll drink no more&mdash;nor horse am I nor dog
+ To gulp down water&mdash;pest, I hate the stuff!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; laughed the Duke, &ldquo;'tis plain hast had enough,
+ And since well filled with water thou dost lie
+ To answer thee thy questions fain am I.
+ First then&mdash;thou art in lowly guise bedight,
+ For that thou art my trusty, most-loved knight,
+ Who at my side in many a bloody fray,
+ With thy good sword hath smit grim Death away&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; quoth the Knight, &ldquo;what's done is past return,
+ 'Tis of our future doings I would learn.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said the Duke, &ldquo;list, Pertinax, and know
+ 'Tis on a pilgrimage of love we go:
+ Mayhap hast heard the beauty and the fame
+ Of fair Yolande, that young and peerless dame
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For whom so many noble lovers sigh
+ And with each other in the lists do vie?
+ Though much I've dreamed of sweet Yolanda's charms
+ My days have passed in wars and feats of arms,
+ For, Pertinax, this blemished face I bear,
+ Should fright, methinks, a lady young and fair.
+ And so it is that I have deemed it wiser
+ To hide it when I might 'neath casque and visor&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Hereat Sir Pertinax smote hand to knee
+ And, frowning, shook his head. &ldquo;Messire,&rdquo; said he,
+ &ldquo;Thou art a man, and young, of noble race,
+ And, being duke, what matter for thy face?
+ Rank, wealth, estate&mdash;these be the things I trow
+ Can make the fairest woman tender grow.
+ Ride unto her in thy rich armour dight,
+ With archer, man-at-arms, and many a knight
+ To swell thy train with pomp and majesty,
+ That she, and all, thy might and rank may see;
+ So shall all folk thy worthiness acclaim,
+ And her maid's heart, methinks, shall do the same.
+ Thy blemished face shall matter not one jot;
+ To mount thy throne she'll think a happy lot.
+ So woo her thus&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;So will I woo her not!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Jocelyn, &ldquo;For than I'd win her so,
+ Alone and loveless all my days I'd go.
+ Ha, Pertinax, 'spite all thy noble parts,
+ 'Tis sooth ye little know of women's hearts!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Women?&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, and scratched his jaw,
+ &ldquo;'Tis true of dogs and horses I know more,
+ And dogs do bite, and steeds betimes will balk,
+ And fairest women, so they say, will talk.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;And so dost thou, my Pertinax, and yet,
+ 'Spite all thy talk, my mind on this is set&mdash;
+ Thus, in all lowliness I'll e'en go to her
+ And 'neath this foolish motley I will woo her.
+ And if, despite this face, this humble guise,
+ I once may read love's message in her eyes,
+ Then Pertinax&mdash;by all the Saints, 'twill be
+ The hope of all poor lovers after me,
+ These foolish bells a deathless tale shall ring,
+ And of Love's triumph evermore shall sing.
+
+ &ldquo;So, Pertinax, ne'er curse ye so
+ For that in lowly guise we go,
+ We many a merry chance may know,
+ Sir Pertinax of Shene.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And chances evil, lord, also!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Pertinax of Shene.
+
+ Now on a sudden, from the thorny brake,
+ E'en as Sir Pertinax thus doleful spake,
+ Leapt lusty loons and ragged rascals four,
+ Rusty their mail, yet bright the swords they bore.
+
+ Up sprang Sir Pertinax with gleeful shout,
+ Plucked forth his blade and fiercely laid about.
+ &ldquo;Ha, rogues! Ha, knaves! Most scurvy dogs!&rdquo; he cried.
+ While point and edge right lustily he plied
+ And smote to earth the foremost of the crew,
+ Then, laughing, pell-mell leapt on other two.
+ The fourth rogue's thrust, Duke Joc'lyn blithely parried
+ Right featly with the quarter-staff he carried.
+ Then 'neath the fellow's guard did nimbly slip
+ And caught him in a cunning wrestler's grip.
+ Now did they reel and stagger to and fro,
+ And on the ling each other strove to throw;
+
+ Arm locked with arm they heaved, they strove and panted,
+ With mighty shoulders bowed and feet firm-planted.
+ So on the sward, with golden sunlight dappled,
+ In silence grim they tussled, fiercely grappled.
+ Thus then Duke Jocelyn wrestled joyously,
+ For this tall rogue a lusty man was he,
+ But, 'spite his tricks and all his cunning play,
+ He in the Duke had met his match this day,
+ As, with a sudden heave and mighty swing,
+ Duke Jocelyn hurled him backwards on the ling,
+ And there he breathless lay and sore amazed,
+ While on the Duke with wonderment he gazed:
+ &ldquo;A Fool?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Nay, certes fool, per De,
+ Ne'er saw I fool, a fool the like o' thee!&rdquo;
+
+ But now, e'en as the Duke did breathless stand,
+ Up strode Sir Pertinax, long sword in hand:
+ &ldquo;Messire,&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;my rogues have run away,
+ So, since you've felled this fellow, him I'll slay.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; the Duke, short-breathing, made reply,
+ &ldquo;Methinks this rogue is too much man to die.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; cried the Knight; &ldquo;not slay a knave&mdash;a thief?
+ Such clemency is strange and past belief!
+ Mean ye to let the dog all scathless go?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the Duke, square chin on fist, &ldquo;not so,
+ For since the rogue is plainly in the wrong
+ The rogue shall win his freedom with a song,
+ And since forsooth a rogue ingrain is he,
+ So shall he sing a song of roguery.
+ Rise, roguish rogue, get thee thy wind and sing,
+ Pipe me thy best lest on a tree ye swing!&rdquo;
+
+ Up to his feet the lusty outlaw sprang,
+ And thus, in clear melodious voice, he sang:
+
+ &ldquo;I'll sing a song not over long,
+ A song of roguery.
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith, is he.
+ And we are rogues, and ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.
+
+ &ldquo;As die we must and turn to dust,
+ Since each is Adam's son,
+ A rogue was he, so rogues are we,
+ And rascals every one.
+
+ &ldquo;The Abbot sleek with visage meek,
+ With candle, book and bell,
+ Our souls may curse, we're none the worse,
+ Since he's a rogue as well.
+
+ &ldquo;My lord aloft doth hang full oft
+ Poor rogues the like o' me,
+ But all men know where e'er he go
+ A greater rogue is he.
+
+ &ldquo;The king abroad with knight and lord
+ Doth ride in majesty,
+ But strip him bare and then and there
+ A shivering rogue ye'll see,
+
+ &ldquo;Sirs, if ye will my life to spill,
+ Then hang me on a tree,
+ Since rogue am I, a rogue I'll die,
+ A roguish death for me.
+
+ &ldquo;But i' the wind the leaves shall find
+ Small voices for my dole,
+
+ &ldquo;And when I'm dead sigh o'er my head
+ Prayers for my poor rogue soul;
+ For I'm a rogue, and thou 'rt a rogue,
+ And so in faith is he,
+ As we are rogues, so ye are rogues,
+ All rogues in verity.&rdquo;
+
+ The singing done, the Duke sat lost in thought,
+ What time Sir Pertinax did stamp and snort:
+ &ldquo;Ha, by the Mass! Now, by the Holy Rood!
+ Ne'er heard I roguish rant so bold and lewd!
+ He should be whipped, hanged, quartered, flayed alive&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; quoth the Duke, &ldquo;pay him gold pieces five,&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;pay a rogue?&rdquo; the Knight did fierce retort.
+ &ldquo;A ribald's rant&mdash;give good, gold pieces for't?
+ A plague! A pest! The knave should surely die&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But here he met Duke Joc'lyn's fierce blue eye,
+ And silent fell and in his poke did dive,
+ And slowly counted thence gold pieces five,
+ Though still he muttered fiercely 'neath his breath,
+ Such baleful words as: &ldquo;'S blood!&rdquo; and &ldquo;'S bones!&rdquo; and &ldquo;'S death!&rdquo;
+
+ Then laughed the Duke and from the greenwood strode;
+ But scarce was he upon the dusty road,
+ Than came the rogue who, louting to his knee:
+ &ldquo;O Fool! Sir Fool! Most noble Fool!&rdquo; said he.
+ &ldquo;Either no fool, or fool forsooth thou art,
+ That dareth thus to take an outlaw's part.
+ Yet, since this day my rogue's life ye did spare,
+ So now by oak, by ash, by thorn I swear&mdash;
+
+ &ldquo;And mark, Sir Fool, and to my saying heed&mdash;
+ Shouldst e'er lack friends to aid thee in thy need
+ Come by this stream where stands a mighty oak,
+ Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning stroke,
+ Hid in this cleft a hunting-horn ye'll see,
+ Take then this horn and sound thereon notes three.
+ So shall ye find the greenwood shall repay
+ The roguish life ye spared a rogue this day.&rdquo;
+
+ So spake he; then, uprising from his knees,
+ Strode blithe away and vanished 'mid the trees.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax shook doleful head:
+ &ldquo;There go our good gold pieces, lord!&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;Would that yon rogue swung high upon a tree,
+ And in my poke our gold again might be.
+ Full much I marvel, lord, and fain would know
+ Wherefore and why unhanged didst let him go?&rdquo;
+
+ Then answered the Duke singing on this wise:
+
+ &ldquo;Good Pertinax, if on a tree
+ Yon rogue were swinging high
+ A deader rogue no man could see&mdash;
+ 'He's but a rogue!' says you to me,
+ 'But a living rogue!' says I.
+
+ &ldquo;And since he now alive doth go
+ More honest he may die,
+ Yon rogue an honest man may grow,
+ If we but give him time, I trow,
+ Says I to you, says I.&rdquo;
+
+ At this, Sir Pertinax growled in his beard&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: A beard? O father&mdash;beard will never do!
+ No proper knight a beard ever grew.'
+ No knight could really romantic be
+ Who wore a beard! So, father, to please me,
+ No beard; they are, I think, such scrubby things&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Yet they are worn, sometimes, by poets and kings.
+
+ GILL: But your knight&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Oh, all right,
+ My Gill, from your disparagement to save him,
+ I, like a barber, will proceed to shave him.
+
+ Sir Pertinax, then, stroked his smooth-shaved chin,
+ And thus to curse he softly did begin,
+ &ldquo;Par Dex, my lord&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Your knight, dear father, seems to love to curse.
+
+ MYSELF: He does. A difficult matter, child, in verse&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Of verse I feel a little tired&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Why, if you think a change desired,
+ A change we'll have, for, truth to tell,
+ This rhyming bothers me as well.
+ So here awhile we'll sink to prose.
+ Now, are you ready? Then here goes!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex, my lord!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;A malison on't, says I, saving
+ thy lordly grace, yet a rogue is a rogue and, being rogue, should die
+ right roguishly as is the custom and the law. For if, messire, if&mdash;per
+ De and by Our Sweet Lady of Shene Chapel within the Wood, if, I say, in
+ thy new and sudden-put-on attitude o' folly, thou wilt save alive all
+ rogues soever, then by Saint Cuthbert his curse, by sweet Saint Benedict
+ his blessed bones, by&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold now, Pertinax,&rdquo; said the Duke, slipping his lute into leathern bag
+ and slinging it behind wide shoulders, &ldquo;list ye, Sir Knight of Shene, and
+ mark this, to wit: If a rogue in roguery die then rogue is he forsooth;
+ but, mark this again, if a rogue be spared his life he may perchance and
+ peradventure forswear, that is, eschew or, vulgarly speaking, turn from
+ his roguish ways, and die as honest as I, aye, or even&mdash;thou!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Pertinax snorted as they strode on together, yet in a little they
+ turned aside from the hot and dusty road and journeyed on beneath the
+ trees that grew thereby.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By all the fiends, my lord, and speaking vulgarly in turn, this belly o'
+ mine lacketh, these my bowels do yearn consumedly unto messes savoury and
+ cates succulent&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereat the Duke, smiling merry-eyed, chanted roguishly:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A haunch o' venison juicy from the spit now?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; groaned the Knight, &ldquo;Lord, let us haste&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;A larded capon to thee might seem fit now?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Saints!&rdquo; sighed the Knight, &ldquo;but for one little taste.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Or, Pertinax, a pasty plump and deep&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;pasty, by the Mass!&rdquo; the Knight did cry.
+ &ldquo;Or pickled tongue of neat, Sir Knight, or sheep&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Oh, for a horse! For wings wherewith to fly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Or breast of swan&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay! nay, my lord, ha' mercy!&rdquo; groaned Sir Pertinax, wiping moist brow.
+ &ldquo;Picture no more toothsome dainties to my soul lest for desire I swoon and
+ languish by the way. I pray thee, let us haste, sire, so may we reach fair
+ Canalise ere sunset&mdash;yet stay! Hearken, messire, hear ye aught? Sure,
+ afar the tocsin soundeth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now hearkening thus, they both became aware
+ Of distant bells that throbbed upon the air,
+ A faint, insistent sound that rose and fell,
+ A clamour vague that ominous did swell.
+ As thus they stood, well hidden from the road,
+ Footsteps they heard of feet that briskly strode.
+ And, through the leaves, a small man they espied,
+ Who came apace, a great sword by his side.
+ Large bascinet upon his head he bore,
+ 'Neath which his face a scowl portentous wore;
+ While after toiled a stout but reverend friar
+ Who, scant of breath, profusely did perspire
+ And, thus perspiring, panted sad complaints
+ Thus&mdash;on the heat, his comrade and the Saints.
+
+ &ldquo;O Bax, O Bax! Saint Cuthbert aid me now!
+ O Bax, see how to sweat thou'st made me now!
+ Thy speed abate! O sweet Saint Dominic!
+ Why pliest thou thy puny shanks so quick;
+ O day! O Bax! O hot, sulphurous day,
+ My flesh betwixt ye melteth fast away.
+ Come, sit ye, Bax, in shade of yon sweet tree,
+ And, sitting soft, I'll sagely counsel thee.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Not so, in faith,&rdquo; the small man, scowling, said,
+ &ldquo;What use for counsel since the cause be fled?
+ And since she's fled&mdash;Saints succour us!&rdquo; he cried;
+ As 'mid the leaves all suddenly he spied
+ Sir Pertinax in his unlovely trim,
+ His rusty mail, his aspect swart and grim&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; gasped the little man, &ldquo;we are beset!&rdquo;
+ And starting back, off fell his bascinet.
+ Whereat he fiercely did but scowl the more,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And strove amain his ponderous sword to draw.
+ &ldquo;Hence, dog!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;lest, with my swashing blow,
+ I make thee food for carrion kite and crow.&rdquo;
+ But in swift hands Sir Pertinax fast caught him
+ And, bearing him on high, to Joc'lyn brought him,
+ Who, while the captive small strove vain aloft
+ Reproved him thus in accents sweet and soft:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right puissant and potential sir, we do beseech thee check thy ferocity,
+ quell now thy so great anger and swear not to give our flesh for fowls to
+ tear, so shalt thou come down to earth and stand again upon thine own two
+ legs. And thou, most reverend friar, invoke now thy bloody-minded comrade
+ that he swear to harm us not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stout friar seated himself hard by beneath a tree, mopped moist brow,
+ fetched his wind and smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I am thy security that thou and thy brawny gossip
+ need quake and tremble nothing by reason of this Bax, our valiant reeve&mdash;he
+ shall harm ye no whit.&rdquo; Here, meeting Jocelyn's eye, Sir Pertinax set down
+ the small Reeve, who having taken up and put on his great bascinet,
+ scowled, whereupon Duke Jocelyn questioned him full meek:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good master Reeve, of your courtesy pray you tell us why yon bells do
+ ring so wild alarm.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The small Reeve viewed him with disdainful eye;
+ Sniffed haughty nose and proudly made reply:
+ 'Our bells we ring and clamour make, because
+ We've lost our lady fair of Tissingors.
+ Our Duchess Benedicta hath this day
+ From all her worthy guardians stole away.
+ Thus we for her do inquisition make,
+ Nor, 'till she's found, may hope our rest to take,
+ And thus we cause such outcry as we may,
+ Since we lose not our Duchess ev'ry day.
+ So then we'd have ye speak us&mdash;aye or no,
+ Saw ye our errant lady this way go?
+ And, that ye may her know for whom we seek,
+ Her just description fully I will speak:
+ Her hair night-black, her eyes the self-same hue,
+ Her habit brown, unless 't were red or blue,
+ And if not blue why then mayhap 'tis green,
+ Since she by turns of all such hues is seen&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Stay, sir,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, &ldquo;'tis plain to see
+ No maid but a chameleon is she,
+ For here we have her brown and green and blue,
+ And if not brown then rosy is her hue,
+ And, if not red, why then 'tis very plain
+ That brown she is or blue or green again.
+ Now fain, sir, would I ask and question whether
+ She e'er is seen these colours all together?
+
+ &ldquo;O fain would I a lady spy,
+ By countryside or town,
+ Who may be seen all blue and green,
+ Unless she's red or brown.&rdquo;
+
+ But now, while fierce the little man did scowl,
+ The rosy Friar, sly-smiling 'neath his cowl,
+ His visage meek, spake thus in dulcet tone:
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool, our Reeve is something mixed, I'll own,
+ Though he by divers colours is bemused,
+ Learn ye this truth, so shall he stand excused:
+ Our Duchess Benedicta, be it known,
+ Hath this day from her several guardians flown.
+ Ten worthy men her several guardians be,
+ Of whom the chief and worthiest ye see,
+ As first&mdash;myself, a friar of some report,
+ Well-known, methinks, in country, town and court.
+ Who as all men can unto all men speak,
+ Well read beside in Latin and in Greek,
+ A humble soul albeit goodly preacher,
+ One apt to learn and therefore learned teacher,
+ One who can laugh betimes, betimes can pray,
+ Who'll colic cure or on the bagpipe play.
+ Who'll sing&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; cried the Reeve. &ldquo;Friar, what o'me?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Patience, O Bax, too soon I'll come to thee!
+ Who'll sing ye then blithe as a bird on bough&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Friar!&rdquo; growled the Reeve, &ldquo;the time for me is now!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;So be it, then,&rdquo; the Friar did gently say,
+ &ldquo;I'll speak of thee as truly as I may:
+ Here then behold our port-reeve, Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who, save for reason, naught in reason lacks,
+ Who, though he small and puny seems to shew,
+ In speech he is Goliath-like, I trow,
+ Chief Councillor of Tissingors is he,
+ And of the council second but&mdash;to me.
+ For with the townsfolk first of all come I&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ REEVE: Since thy fat finger is in every pie&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Saving your reverend grace,&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn said,
+ &ldquo;What of this maid that turneth green and red?&rdquo;
+
+ REEVE: Fool, then learn this, ere that our lord duke died,
+ Ten guardians for his child he did provide,
+ The Friar and I, with men of lesser fame,
+ Co-guardians are of this right puissant dame.
+
+ JOCELYN: Beseech ye, sir, now tell us an' ye may,
+ Why hath thy youthful Duchess run away?
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair Fool,&rdquo; quoth the Friar, fanning himself with a frond of bracken,
+ &ldquo;'tis a hot day, a day reminiscent of the ultimate fate of graceless
+ sinners, and I am like the day and languish for breath, yet, to thy so
+ pertinent question I will, straightly and in few words, pronounce and
+ answer thee, as followeth: Our Lady Benedicta hath run away firstly,
+ brethren, for that being formed woman after Nature's goodly plan she hath
+ the wherewithal to walk, to leap, to skip or eke to run, as viz.: item and
+ to wit&mdash;legs. Secondly, inquisitorial brethren, she ran for an
+ excellent good reason&mdash;as observe&mdash;there was none to let or stay
+ her. And thirdly, gentle and eager hearers, she did flit or fly, leave,
+ vacate, or depart our goodly town of Tissingors for that she had&mdash;mark
+ me&mdash;no mind to stay, remain or abide therein. And this for the
+ following express, rare and most curious reason as&mdash;mark now&mdash;in
+ a word&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold&mdash;hold, Friar John!&rdquo; exclaimed the Reeve; &ldquo;here sit ye here
+ a-sermonising, venting words a-many what time our vanished Duchess fleeth.
+ Knew I not the contrary I should say thou didst countenance her flight and
+ spent thyself in wordy-wind wherewith to aid her!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here, chancing to meet Duke Jocelyn's shrewd gaze, Friar John slowly
+ and ponderously winked one round, bright eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hark to our valiant port-reeve Greg'ry Bax
+ Who, save for reason, nought of reason lacks!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Howbeit,&rdquo; fumed the Reeve, stamping in the dust, &ldquo;here sit ye at thy
+full-bodied ease, fanning flies and animadverting&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Animadverting!&rdquo; nodded Friar John. &ldquo;A good word, Reeve, a fair, sweet
+ word; in verity a word full-bodied as I, wherefore it liketh me well. So
+ sit I here animadverting whiles thou kicketh up a dust in fashion foolish
+ and un-reeve-like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A plague o' words!&rdquo; cried the Reeve. &ldquo;A pest o' wind! Enough&mdash;enough,
+ contain thy prolixities and rodomontade and let me to the point explain&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth the Friar. &ldquo;Good sooth, here's a noble word! A word round i'
+ the mouth, rolling upon the tongue. Ha, Reeve, I give thee joy of
+ rodomontade!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thus then,&rdquo; continued the Reeve, &ldquo;I will, with use of no verbiage
+ circumlocutory, explain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho-oho!&rdquo; cried Friar John, rubbing plump hands ecstatic. &ldquo;Good Bax, ne'er
+ have I heard thee to so great advantage&mdash;verbiage circumlocutory&mdash;and
+ thou&mdash;thou such small man to boot! O most excellent, puny Reeve!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the little man turned his back upon the Friar and continued hastily
+ thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A lord there is, a lord of lofty pride,
+ Who for our lady oft hath sued and sighed&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Whom she as oft hath scornfully denied!
+
+ THE REEVE: A mighty lord who seeketh her to wife&mdash;
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Though he, 'tis said, doth lead most evil life!
+ THE REEVE: To which fair lord our wilful maid we'd wed&mdash;
+
+ FRIAR JOHN: Since this fair lord the council holds in dread!
+
+ THE REEVE: But she, defying us, this very day
+ Like wicked thief hath stole herself away.
+ Thus this poor lord such deeps of gloom is in
+ Vows he'll not wash, nor shave again his chin
+ Till found is she: He groaneth, sheddeth tears&mdash;
+
+ THE FRIAR: And swears her guardians ten shall lose their ears!
+
+ THE REEVE: Wherefore are we in mighty perturbation,
+ Amazed, distraught and filled with consternation.
+ Thus do our bells ring out their wild alarms,
+ Our civic bands do muster under arms;
+ Drums shall be drummed the countryside around,
+ Until our truant Duchess we have found,
+ And we have wed this most elusive dame
+ Unto Sir Agramore of Biename.
+
+ THE FRIAR: And yield her thus to woes and bitter shame!
+
+ THE REEVE: So speak me, fellows; as ye came this way
+ Saw ye aught of this wilful, errant may?
+
+ Answered JOCELYN: &ldquo;Neither to-day nor any other day.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then,&rdquo; fumed the Reeve, &ldquo;here have we been at great expense o' breath
+ and time and all to no purpose. Come, Friar, beseech thee, let us haste to
+ begone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ So Friar John got slowly to his feet
+ Complaining loud of hurry and of heat,
+ But paused behind the hasteful Reeve to linger,
+ And to plump nose he slyly laid plump finger.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now stood Sir Pertinax thoughtful, chin on fist, insomuch that Jocelyn,
+ thrumming his lute, questioned him:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Good Pertinax, how now
+ What pond'rest thou
+ With furrowed brow?
+ Thy care, Sir Knight, avow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Saith Pertinax: &ldquo;I meditate the way wondrous of woman, the frowardness of
+ creatures feminine. For mark me, sir, here is one hath guardians ten, yet
+ despite them she is fled away and they ten!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why truly, Pertinax, they are ten, so is she fled.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but if they be ten that ward her and she one that would flee, how
+ shall this one flee these ten?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that they be ten.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, here be twenty eyes to watch one young maid and twenty legs to
+ pursue the same, yet doth she evade them one and all, and here's the
+ wonder on't&mdash;she's but one maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, there's the reason on't, Pertinax&mdash;she is a maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The which is great matter for wonder, lord!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoke like a very Pertinax, my Pertinax, for here's no wonder at all. For
+ perceive, the lady is young, her wardens ten grave seniors, worthy wights
+ &mdash;solemn, sober and sedate, Pertinax, wise and wearisome, grave yet
+ garrulous, and therefore they suffice not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, prithee and wherefore not?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For their divers worthy attributes and because they be&mdash;ten. Now had
+ these ten been one and this one a very man&mdash;<i>the</i> man&mdash;here
+ had been no running away on part of the lady, I 'll warrant me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, my lord,&rdquo; said Pertinax, in deep perplexity, &ldquo;how judge ye so&mdash;and
+ wherefore&mdash;why and by what manner o' reasoning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Pertinax!&rdquo; laughed the Duke, &ldquo;my lovely, loveless numskull!&rdquo; So
+ saying, he kicked the good Knight full joyously and so they trudged on
+ again.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Till presently, beyond the green of trees,
+ They saw afar the town of Canalise,
+ A city fair, couched on a gentle height,
+ With walls embattled and strong towers bedight.
+ Now seeing that the sun was getting low,
+ Our travellers at quicker pace did go.
+ Thus as in haste near to the gate they came,
+ Before them limped a bent and hag-like dame,
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It beak-like wished to peck sharp chin below.
+ Humbly she crept in cloak all torn and rent,
+ And o'er a staff her tottering limbs were bent.
+ So came she to the gate, then cried in fear,
+ And started back from sudden-levelled spear;
+ For 'neath the gate lounged lusty fellows three
+ Who seldom spake yet spat right frequently.
+
+ &ldquo;Kind sirs, good sirs,&rdquo; the ancient dame did cry,
+ &ldquo;In mercy's name I pray ye let me by&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But, as she spoke, a black-jowled fellow laughed,
+ And, spitting, tripped her with out-thrust pike-shaft,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That down she fell and wailed most piteously,
+ Whereat the brawny fellows laughed all three.
+ &ldquo;Ha, witch!&rdquo; they cried, as thus she helpless lay,
+ &ldquo;Shalt know the fire and roasted be one day!&rdquo;
+ Now as the aged creature wailed and wept,
+ Forth to her side Duke Joc'lyn lightly stepped,
+ With quarter-staff a-twirl he blithely came.
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Messires, harm not this ancient dame,
+ Bethink ye how e'en old and weak as she,
+ Your wives and mothers all must one day be.
+ So here then lies your mother, and 't were meeter
+ As ye are sons that as sons ye entreat her.
+ Come, let her by and, fool-like to requite ye,
+ With merry jape and quip I will delight ye,
+ Or with sweet song I 'll charm those ass's ears,
+ And melt, belike, those bullish hearts to tears&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Now the chief warder, big and black of jowl,
+ Upon the Duke most scurvily did scowl.
+ &ldquo;How now,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;we want no fool's-heads here&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Sooth,&rdquo; laughed the Duke, &ldquo;you're fools enow 't is clear,
+ Yet there be fools and fools, ye must allow,
+ Gay fools as I and surly fools&mdash;as thou.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Ha, look 'ee, Fool, Black Lewin e'en am I,
+ And, by my head, an ill man to defy.
+ Now, motley rogue, wilt call me fool?&rdquo; he roared,
+ And roaring fierce, clapped hairy fist on sword.
+
+ &ldquo;Aye, that will I,&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn soft replied,
+ And black-avised, swart, knavish rogue beside.&rdquo;
+
+ But now, while thus our ducal jester spoke,
+ Black Lewin sprang and fetched him such a stroke
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That Jocelyn saw flash before his eyes,
+ More stars that e'er he'd noticed in the skies.
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax did gaping stare,
+ Then ground his teeth and mighty oaths did swear,
+ And in an instant bared his trusty blade,
+ But then the Duke his fiery onslaught stayed.
+
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; cried the Knight, &ldquo;and wilt thou smitten be
+ By such base knave, such filthy rogue as he?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; smiled the Duke, &ldquo;stand back and watch, good brother,
+ A Rogue and Fool at buffets with each other.&rdquo;
+
+ And speaking thus, he leapt on Black Lewin,
+ And smote him twice full hard upon the chin,
+ Two goodly blows upon that big, black jowl,
+ Whereat Black Lewin lustily did howl
+ And falling back, his polished bascinet
+ With ringing clash the cold, hard flagstones met.
+ Whereat his fellows, shouting fierce alarms,
+ Incontinent betook them to their arms;
+ And thus it seemed a fight there must have been
+ But that a horseman sudden spurred between&mdash;
+ A blue-eyed youth with yellow, curling hair,
+ Of slender shape, of face and feature fair,
+ A dainty knight was he in very truth,
+ A blue-eyed, merry, laughter-loving youth.
+
+ &ldquo;Ha, knaves, what do ye with the Fool?&rdquo; lisped he,
+ &ldquo;Wilt strike a motley, dogs&mdash;a Fool? Let be!
+ Though faith, 't would seem, Sir Fool, thou hast a fist
+ That surly Lewin to his dole hath kissed.
+ If it can strum thy lute but half as well,
+ Then gestours all methinks thou should'st excel&mdash;
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ye rogues, pass Folly in, no man shall say
+ That from our town we folly turned away.
+ Come, follow, Fool, into the market-square,
+ And give us earnest of thy foolish ware.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now it was market day, and within the goodly square were people come from
+ near and far, a notable concourse, country folk and folk of the town,
+ farmers and merchants, rustic maids, fair ladies, knights and esquires on
+ horseback or a-foot, but who, hearing the jingle of the Duke's tinkling
+ bells, seeing his flaunting cock's-comb, with one accord gathered to him
+ from every quarter:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ For when this long-legged gestour they espied,
+ They, laughing, hemmed him in on every side,
+ And, &ldquo;See, a Fool! A Fool! The Fool must sing,&rdquo;
+ And &ldquo;Fool! A Fool!&rdquo; upon the air did ring,
+ Wherefore the Duke betook him to his lute,
+ And strummed until the chattering crowd was mute.
+ Then while all folk did hold their peace to hear,
+ In golden voice he sang, full rich and clear:
+
+ &ldquo;'A fool! A fool!' ye cry,
+ A fool forsooth am I.
+ But tell me, wise ones, if ye can,
+ Where shall ye find a happy man?
+ Lived there one since the world began?
+ Come, answer ye
+ To me!
+
+ &ldquo;'What of the king?' says you.
+ Says I to you&mdash;'Go to!
+ A king despite his crown and throne,
+ Hath divers troubles all his own.
+ Such woes, methinks, as are unknown
+ To such as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ &ldquo;'Ha, then&mdash;the rich!' ye cry,
+ 'Not so in truth,' says I.
+ 'The rich man's gold is load of care,
+ That day and night he needs must bear;
+ Less care he'd know if poor he were,
+ As poor as ye,
+ Or me!'
+
+ &ldquo;For, sirs, as I do guess
+ This thing called 'Happiness'
+ Man leaveth with his youth behind;
+ So keep ye all a youthful mind,
+ Thus happiness ye all shall find
+ If wit have ye,
+ Like me!
+
+ &ldquo;O list ye, great and small,
+ Proud knight, free man and thrall,
+ True happiness, since life began,
+ The birthright is of every man;
+ Seize then your birthright if ye can,
+ Since men are ye&mdash;
+ Like me!
+
+ &ldquo;Thus I forsooth, a Fool,
+ Do now ye wise ones school;
+ Since of my folly, full and free,
+ I wisely thus admonish ye,
+ Be wise&mdash;or eke fools learn to be
+ In verity&mdash;
+ Like me!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now when the song was ended some there were who laughed and some looked
+ grave, some talked amain and some wagged solemn heads, while many a good
+ coin rang heartily at Duke Jocelyn's feet; smiling, he bade Sir Pertinax
+ take them up, joying to see the proud Knight stooping thus to pouch the
+ money like any beggar. But now, when he would fain have gone his way into
+ the town, the people would by no means suffer it and clamoured amain on
+ all sides, insistent for more; wherefore, lifting his scarred face to the
+ sunset sky, Duke Jocelyn sang as here followeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;When man is born he doth begin
+ With right good will, to daily sin,
+ And little careth.
+ But when his grave he thinketh near,
+ Then grave he groweth in his fear
+ And sin forsweareth.
+
+ &ldquo;This life that man doth cherish so,
+ Is wondrous frail and quick to go,
+ Nor will it stay.
+ Yet where's the man that will not give
+ All that he hath so he might live
+ Another day.
+
+ &ldquo;Fain would I know the reason why
+ All men so fearful are to die
+ And upward go?
+ Since Death all woes and ills doth end,
+ Sure Death, methinks, should be a friend,
+ Not hated foe.
+
+ &ldquo;So when Death come, as come he must,
+ Grieve not that we this sorry dust
+ Do leave behind.
+ For when this fleeting life be run,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ By Death we all of us&mdash;each one,
+ True life shall find.&rdquo;
+
+ Now while he sang melodious and clear
+ Amid the throng that closer pressed to hear,
+ Duke Joc'lyn of a sudden did espy
+ The &ldquo;wherefore&rdquo; of his coming and the &ldquo;why.&rdquo;
+ Yolande herself he, singing, did behold,
+ Her eyes, red lips, her hair of ruddy gold;
+ And all her warm and glowing loveliness
+ Did sudden thus his raptured vision bless;
+ While she, in gracious ease, her horse did sit
+ That pawed round hoof and champed upon his bit,
+ Arching proud neck as if indeed he were
+ Proud of the lovely burden he did bear.
+ As Joc'lyn gazed upon her thus, she seemed
+ A thousand times more fair than he had dreamed.
+ Now while he sang, she viewed him, gentle-eyed,
+ And quite forgot the gallant by her side,
+ A tall, dark-featured, comely lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ Who, when the Duke made of his song an end
+ Did from his saddle o'er Yolanda bend.
+ With eyes on her warm beauty he stooped near
+ To touch white hand and whisper in her ear;
+ Whereat she laughed and frowned with cheek flushed red
+ Then, frowning still, she turned her horse's head,
+ And rode away with dame and squire and knight,
+ Till lost she was to Joc'lyn's ravished sight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, lord!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, as they came within a quiet thoroughfare,
+ &ldquo;this lady is grown more fair since last we saw her Queen of Beauty at
+ Melloc joust, concerning whom Fame, in troth, doth breed a just report for
+ once. But, messire, didst mark him beside her&mdash;with touch o' hand,
+ lord, whispers i' the ear&mdash;didst mark this wolf, this Seneschal, this
+ thrice accurst Sir Gui?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth,&rdquo; answered the Duke, &ldquo;but thou'rt an hungered, methinks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To touch her hand, lord&mdash;aha! To whisper in her ear, lord&mdash;oho!
+ A right puissant lord, Seneschal of Raddemore, Lord of Thorn and Knight of
+ Ells! A lord of puissance and power potential.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou, my Pertinax, art but a hungry Knight, that trampeth with a
+ hungry Fool, wherefore let us forthwith&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but mark me, lord, if this puissant lord with pomp and high estate
+ doth woo the lady&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So then, my Pertinax, will I woo this lady also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, in this thy foolish guise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, thou art like to be whipped for froward Fool and I for ragged
+ rogue, and this our adventure brought to ill and woeful end&mdash;so here
+ now is folly, lord, indeed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth!&rdquo; smiled the Duke,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Whereto these bells give heed.
+ But come, amend thy speed,
+ Methinks thy fasting-need
+ These gloomy vapours breed.
+ Thy inner man doth plead
+ Good beef with ale or mead
+ Wherein, thou Fool decreed,
+ I am right well agreed
+ 'T were goodly thing to feed,
+ Nor will I thee impede,
+ So follow Folly's lead
+ And food-wards we'll proceed.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0004" id="link2H_4_0004"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 2
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How Pertinax mine host's large ears did wring,
+ And Jocelyn of these same ears did sing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Now the town was full, and every inn a-throng with company&mdash;lords,
+ both great and small, knights and esquires and their several followings,
+ as archers, men-at-arms, and the like, all thither come from far and near
+ to joust at the great tournament soon to be, to honour the birthday of
+ Benedicta, Duchess of Tissingors, Ambremont, and divers other fair cities,
+ towns and villages. Thus our travellers sought lodgment in vain, whereat
+ Sir Pertinax cursed beneath his breath, and Duke Jocelyn hummed, as was
+ each his wont and custom; and ever the grim Knight's anger grew.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Until, at last, an humble inn they saw&mdash;
+ A sorry place, with bush above the door.
+ This evil place they straightway entered in,
+ Where riot reigned, the wild, unlovely din
+ Of archers, men-at-arms, and rogues yet worse,
+ Who drank and sang, whiles some did fight and curse.
+ An evil place indeed, a lawless crew,
+ And landlord, like his inn, looked evil too:
+ Small was his nose, small were his pig-like eyes,
+ But ears had he of most prodigious size,
+ A brawny rogue, thick-jowled and beetle-browed,
+ Who, spying out our strangers 'mid the crowd,
+
+ Beholding them in humble, mean array,
+ With gestures fierce did order them away.
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;here will we bide,
+ Here will we eat and drink and sleep beside.
+ Go, bring us beef, dost hear? And therewith mead,
+ And, when we've ate, good beds and clean we 'll need.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; cried the host. &ldquo;Naught unto ye I'll bring
+ Until yon Fool shall caper first and sing!&rdquo;
+ Said Jocelyn: &ldquo;I'll sing when I have fed!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, &ldquo;we will to bed!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And wilt thou so?&rdquo; the surly host replied;
+ &ldquo;No beds for likes o' ye do I provide.
+ An' ye will sleep, knave, to the stable go,
+ The straw is good enough for ye, I trow.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; roared Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;A stable? Straw?
+ This to me, thou filthy clapper-claw,
+ Thou fly-blown cod's-head, thou pestiferous thing!&rdquo;
+ And, roaring, on the brawny host did spring;
+
+ By his large ears Sir Pertinax did take him,
+ And to and fro, and up and down, did shake him;
+ He shook him quick and slow, from side to side,
+ While loud for aid the shaken landlord cried.
+ Whereat the vicious crowd, in sudden wrath,
+ Shouted and cursed and plucked their daggers forth.
+ But, ere to harm our bold Knight they were able,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lightly sprang on massy table;
+ Cock's-comb a-flaunt and silver bells a-ring,
+ He laughing stood and gaily plucked lute-string,
+ And cut an antic with such merry grace
+ That angry shouts to laughter loud gave place.
+
+ Thereafter he sang as followeth:
+
+ &ldquo;Bold bawcocks, brave, bibulous, babbling boys,
+ Tall tosspots, come, temper this tumult and noise;
+ So shall I sing sweetly such songs as shall sure
+ Constrain carking care and contumacy cure.
+ Thus, therefore&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But here the surly landlord raised much clamour and outcry, whiles he
+ touched and caressed his great ears with rare gentleness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, my yeres!&rdquo; roared he. &ldquo;My yeres do be in woeful estate. Oho, what o'
+ yon fierce-fingered rogue, good fellows, what o' yon knave&mdash;'a did
+ twist my yeres plaguily and wring 'em roguishly, 'a did! Shall 'a not be
+ beaten and drubbed out into the kennel, ha? What o' poor Nykins' yeres,
+ says I&mdash;my yeres, oho!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thine ears, unsavoury scullion,&rdquo; laughed Jocelyn; &ldquo;thine ears, forsooth?
+ Hark ye, of thy so great, so fair, so fine ears I'll incontinent make a
+ song. List ye, one and all, so shall all here now hear my song of ears!&rdquo;
+ Forthwith Duke Jocelyn struck his lute and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Thine ears, in sooth, are long ears,
+ Stout ears, in truth, and strong ears,
+ Full ears, I trow, and fair ears,
+ Round ears also and rare ears.
+ So here's an ear that all eyes here
+ Shall see no beauty in, 'tis clear.
+ For these o' thine be such ears,
+ Large, loose, and over-much ears,
+ Ears that do make fingers itch,
+ Ears to twist and ears to twitch.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ If thine ears had gone unseen,
+ Pulled forsooth they had not been;
+ Yet, since pulled indeed they were,
+ Thine ears plain the blame must bear.
+ So of thine ears no more complain,
+ Lest that thine ears be pulled again.
+ So hide thine ears as best ye may,
+ Of which same ears, to end, I say
+ Thine ears indeed be like my song,
+ Of none account, yet over long!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now hereupon was huge laughter and merriment, insomuch that the
+ thick-jowled landlord betook himself otherwhere, and all men thronged upon
+ our jester, vociferous for more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but, bold tosspots,&rdquo; laughed Jocelyn, &ldquo;how now, sit ye without wine
+ in very truth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, good Fool,&rdquo; they cried. &ldquo;Here be wine a-plenty for us and for
+ thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go to, tall topers,&rdquo; quoth the Duke, &ldquo;ye are witless, in faith, for there
+ is no man here but is without wine, as in song will I shew&mdash;mark now:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Tis plain that ye are wine without,
+ Since wine's within ye, topers stout.
+ Without your wine, ye whineful show,
+ Thus wine-full, wine without ye go.
+ Being then without your wine, 'tis true,
+ Wine-less, ye still are wine-full too.
+ But, mark! As thus ye wine-full sit,
+ Since wine's within, out goeth wit.
+ Thus, truth to tell, tall topers stout,
+ Both wine and wit ye go without!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ By such tricks of rhyme, jugglery of words, and the like, Duke Jocelyn won
+ this fierce company to great good humour and delight; insomuch that divers
+ of these roysterers pressed wine upon him and money galore. But, the hour
+ growing late, he contrived at last to steal away with Sir Pertinax, which
+ last, having fed copiously, now yawned consumedly, eager for bed. Howbeit,
+ despite the Knight's fierce threats, they found no bed was to be had in
+ all the inn, and so, perforce, betook them at last to the stable.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ There, while our Knight cursed softly, though full deep,
+ Soon in the straw our Duke fell fast asleep.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, dear, I greatly fear
+ You 'll never be a poet!
+ MYSELF: Don't be too hard upon the bard,
+ I know it, girl, I know it!
+ These last two lines, I quite agree,
+ Might easily much better be.
+ Though, on the whole, I think my verse,
+ When all is said, might be much worse.
+ GILL: Worse, father? Yes, perhaps you're right,
+ Upon the whole&mdash;perhaps, it might.
+ MYSELF: But hark now, miss! Attend to this!
+ Poetic flights I do not fly;
+ When I begin, like poor Lobkyn,
+ I merely rhyme and versify.
+ Since my shortcomings I avow,
+ The story now, you must allow,
+ Trips lightly and in happy vein?
+ GILL: O, yes, father, though it is rather
+ Like some parts of your &ldquo;Beltane.&rdquo;
+ MYSELF: How, child! Dare you accuse your sire
+ Of plagiary&mdash;that sin most dire?
+ And if I do, small blame there lies;
+ It is myself I plagiarise.
+
+ GILL: Why, yes, of course! And, as you know.
+ I always loved your &ldquo;Beltane&rdquo; so.
+
+ MYSELF: But don't you like the &ldquo;geste&rdquo; I'm writing?
+
+ GILL: Of course! It's getting most exciting,
+ In spite of all the rhymes and stuff&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Stuff?
+ Enough!
+ My daughter, you're so sweetly frank.
+ Henceforth my verses shall be blank.
+ No other rhyme I'll rhyme for you
+ Till you politely beg me to.
+ Now then, your blank-verse doom you know,
+ Hey, presto, and away we go!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0005" id="link2H_4_0005"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 3
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tell'th how Duke Jocelyn of love did sing,
+ And haughty knight in lily-pool did fling.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Upon a morn, when dewy flowers fresh-waked
+ Filled the glad air with perfume languorous,
+ And piping birds a pretty tumult made,
+ Thrilling the day with blended ecstasy;
+ When dew in grass did light a thousand fires,
+ And gemmed the green in flashing bravery&mdash;
+ Forth of her bower the fair Yolanda came,
+ Fresh as the morn and, like the morning, young,
+ Who, as she breathed the soft and fragrant air,
+ Felt her white flesh a-thrill with joyous life,
+ And heart that leapt responsive to the joy.
+ Vivid with life she trod the flowery ways,
+ Dreaming awhile of love and love and love;
+ Unknowing all of eyes that watched unseen,
+ Viewing her body's gracious loveliness:
+ Her scarlet mouth, her deep and dreamful eyes,
+ The glowing splendour of her sun-kissed hair,
+ Which in thick braids o'er rounded bosom fell
+ Past slender waist by jewelled girdle bound.
+
+ So stood Duke Jocelyn amid the leaves,
+ And marked how, as she walked, her silken gown
+ Did cling her round in soft embrace, as though
+ Itself had sense and wit enough to love her.
+ Entranced he stood, bound by her beauty's spell,
+ Whereby it seemed he did in her behold
+ The beauty of all fair and beauteous things.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now leaned she o'er a pool where lilies pale
+ Oped their shy beauties to the gladsome day,
+ Yet in their beauty none of them so fair
+ As that fair face the swooning waters held.
+ And as, glad-eyed, she viewed her loveliness,
+ She fell to singing, soft and low and sweet,
+ Clear and full-throated as a piping merle,
+ And this the manner of her singing was:
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? Ah, who shall say?
+ Flower to languish in a day,
+ Bird on wing that will away.
+ Love, I do defy thee!
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? A toy so vain
+ 'T is but found to lose again,
+ Painful sweet and sweetest pain;
+ Ah, love, come not nigh me.
+
+ &ldquo;But, love, an thou com'st to me,
+ Wert thou as I'd have thee be,
+ Welcome sweet I'd make for thee,
+ And weary of thee never.
+
+ &ldquo;If with thy heart thou could'st endure,
+ If thou wert strong and thou wert sure,
+ A master now, and now a wooer,
+ Thy slave I'd be for ever.&rdquo;
+
+ Thus sang she sweet beside the lily-pool,
+ Unknowing any might her singing hear,
+ When rose another voice, so rich, so full
+ As thrilled her into rapt and pleasing wonder;
+ And as she hearkened to these deep-sung words,
+ She flushed anon and dimpled to a smile:
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Bird of joy to sing alway,
+ Deep in the heart of me.
+
+ &ldquo;What is love? A joyous pain
+ That I ne'er may lose again,
+ Since for ever I am fain
+ To think and dream of thee.&rdquo;
+
+ Now hasted she to part the leafy screen,
+ And one in motley habit thus beheld.
+ But when 'neath flaunting cock's-comb she did mark
+ His blemished face, she backward from him drew
+ And caught her breath, and yet upon him gazed
+ 'Neath wrinkled brow, the while Duke Jocelyn
+ Read the expected horror in her eyes:
+ Wherefore he bowed his head upon his breast
+ And plucked at belt with sudden, nervous hand
+ As, cold and proud and high, she questioned him:
+ &ldquo;What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show
+ A visage that might shame the gladsome day?&rdquo;
+
+ Whereto he answered, low and humble-wise:
+ &ldquo;A Fool! The very fool of fools am I&mdash;
+ A Fool that fain would pluck the sun from heaven.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Begone!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;Thy look doth make me cold,
+ E'en as I stand thus i' the kindly sun.
+ Yet, an thou 'rt poor as thy mean habit speaks thee,
+ Take first this dole for tender Jesu's sake.&rdquo;
+
+ Then answered Jocelyn on lowly knee:
+ &ldquo;For thy sweet bounty I do thank thee well,
+ But, in good sooth, so great a fool am I,
+ 'Stead of thy gold I rather would possess
+
+ Yon happy flower that in thy bosom bloometh.
+ Give me but this and richer fool am I
+ Than any knight-like fool that coucheth lance&mdash;
+ Greater I than any lord soever,
+ Aye&mdash;e'en Duke Jocelyn of Brocelaunde.&rdquo;
+
+ Smiled now Yolande with rosy lip up-curving,
+ While in soft cheek a roguish dimple played.
+ Quoth she: &ldquo;Duke Jocelyn, I've heard it said,
+ Is great and rich, a mighty man-at-arms,
+ And thou but sorry Fool in mean array,
+ Yet&rdquo;&mdash;from white fingers she let fall the flower&mdash;
+ &ldquo;Be thou, Fool, greater than this mighty Duke!
+ And now, since mighty Fool and rich I've made thee,
+ In quittance I would win of thee a song.&rdquo;
+
+ Now sat Yolande, white chin on dimpled fist,
+ Viewing him o'er with cruel, maiden-eyes,
+ So swift to heed each outward mark and blemish
+ (Since maids be apt to sly disparagement,
+ And scorn of all that seems un-beautiful)
+ While he did lean him by the marble rim,
+ His wistful gaze down-bent upon the pool,
+ Feeling her look and knowing while she looked:
+ What time he touched his lute with fingers skilled,
+ And so fell singing, wonder-low and sweet:
+
+ &ldquo;Though foul and harsh of face am I,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O lady!
+ Fair thoughts within my heart may lie,
+ As flowers that bloom unseen to die,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O lady!
+
+ &ldquo;Though this my hateful face may fright thee,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O list!
+ My folly mayhap shall delight thee,
+ A song of fools I will recite thee,
+ Lady fair&mdash;O list!&rdquo;
+
+ Herewith he sighed amain, but smiled anon,
+ And fell anon to blither, louder note:
+
+ &ldquo;Sing hey, Folly&mdash;Folly ho,
+ And here's a song of Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun,
+ Will gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.
+
+ &ldquo;And Fool, forsooth, a Fool am I,
+ Well learned in foolish lore:
+ For I can sing ye, laugh or sigh:
+ Can any man do more?
+ Hey, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ 'Gainst sadness bar the door.
+
+ &ldquo;A Fool am I, yet by fair leave,
+ Poor Fools have hearts to feel.
+ Poor Fools, like other fools, may grieve
+ If they their woes conceal.
+ Hither, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ All Fools to Folly kneel.
+
+ &ldquo;What though a Fool be melancholy,
+ Sick, sick at heart&mdash;heigho!
+ Pain must he hide 'neath laughing Folly,
+ What Fool should heed his woe!
+ Hither, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ Fool must unpitied go.
+
+ &ldquo;E'en though a Fool should fondly woo,
+ E'en though his love be high,
+ Poor Folly's fool must wear the rue,
+ Proud love doth pass him by.
+ Heigho, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ Poor Fool may love&mdash;and die.
+
+ &ldquo;Though Wisdom should in motley go,
+ And fools the wise man ape;
+ Who is there that shall Wisdom know
+ Beneath a 'scalloped cape?
+ Heigho, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ Life is but sorry jape.
+
+ &ldquo;So, hey, Folly&mdash;Folly, ho!
+ And here's a song o' Folly,
+ All 'neath the sun
+ Do gladly run
+ Away from Melancholy.&rdquo;
+
+ The singing done, she viewed him kinder-eyed,
+ Till eyes met eyes&mdash;when she did pout and frown,
+ And chid him that his song was something sad,
+ And vowed so strange a Fool was never seen.
+ Then did she question him in idle wise
+ As, who he was and whence he came and why?
+ Whereto the Duke&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL:
+
+ Dear father, if you're in the vein,
+ I'd like a little rhyme again;
+ For blank verse is so hard to read,
+ And yours is very blank indeed!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ Girl, when blank verse I write for thee,
+ I write it blank as blank can be.
+ Stay, I'll declare (no poet franker)
+ No blank verse, Gill, was ever blanker.
+ But:
+ Since, with your sex's sweet inconstancy,
+ Rhymes now you wish, rhymes now I'll
+ rhyme for thee:
+ As thus, my dear&mdash;
+ Give ear:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereto the Duke did instant make reply:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sweet lady, since you question me,
+ Full blithely I will answer thee;
+ And, since you fain would merry be,
+ I'll sing and rhyme it merrily:
+
+ &ldquo;Since Mirth's my trade and follies fond,
+ Methinks a fair name were Joconde;
+ And for thy sake
+ I travail make
+ Through briar and brake,
+ O'er fen and lake,
+ The Southward March beyond.
+
+ &ldquo;For I an embassage do bear,
+ Now unto thee, Yolande the fair,
+ Which embassy,
+ Now unto thee,
+ Right soothfully,
+ And truthfully,
+ Most full, most free,
+ Explicit I 'll declare.
+
+ &ldquo;Thus: videlicit and to wit,
+ Sith now thou art to wedlock fit&mdash;
+ Both day and night
+ In dark, in light
+ A worthy knight,
+ A lord of might,
+ In his own right,
+ Duke Joc'lyn hight
+ To thine his heart would knit.
+
+ &ldquo;But, since the Duke may not come to thee,
+ I, in his stead, will humbly sue thee;
+ His love each day
+ I will portray
+ As best I may;
+ I'll sue, I'll pray,
+ I'll sing, I'll play,
+ Now grave, now gay,
+ And in this way,
+ I for the Duke will woo thee.&rdquo;
+
+ Now, fair Yolanda gazed with wide-oped eyes,
+ And checked sweet breath for wonder and surprise;
+ Then laughed full blithe and yet, anon, did frown,
+ And with slim fingers plucked at purfled gown:
+
+ &ldquo;And is it thou&mdash;a sorry Fool,&rdquo; she cried.
+ &ldquo;Art sent to win this mighty Duke a bride?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;E'en so!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Whereof I token bring;
+ Behold, fair maid, Duke Joc'lyn's signet ring.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Heaven's love!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;And can it truly be
+ The Duke doth send a mountebank like thee,
+ A Fool that hath nor likelihood nor grace
+ From worn-out shoon unto thy blemished face&mdash;
+ A face so scarred&mdash;so hateful that meseems
+ At night 't will haunt and fright me with ill dreams;
+ A slave so base&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;E'en so!&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ And his marred visage 'neath his hood did hide.
+ &ldquo;But, though my motley hath thy pride distressed,
+ I am the Fool Duke Joc'lyn loveth best.
+ And&mdash;ah, my lady, thou shalt never see
+ In all this world a Fool the like of me!&rdquo;
+
+ Thus spake the Duke, and then awhile stood mute,
+ And idly struck sweet chords upon his lute,
+ Watching Yolande's fair, frowning face the while,
+ With eyes that held a roguish, wistful smile.
+ She, meeting now these eyes of laughing blue,
+ Felt her cheeks burn, and sudden angry grew.
+
+ So up she rose in proud and stately fashion,
+ And stamped slim foot at him in sudden passion;
+ And vowed that of Duke Joc'lyn she cared naught;
+ That if he'd woo, by him she must be sought;
+ Vowed if he wooed his wooing should be vain,
+ And, as he came, he back should go again.
+ &ldquo;For, since the Duke,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;dare send to me
+ A sorry wight, a very Fool like thee,
+ By thy Fool's mouth I bid thee to him say,
+ He ne'er shall win me, woo he as he may;
+ Say that I know him not&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Yet,&rdquo; spake Duke Joc'lyn soft,
+ &ldquo;E'er this, methinks, thou'st seen my lord full oft.
+ When at the joust thou wert fair Beauty's queen
+ Duke Joc'lyn by thy hand oft crowned hath been.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;True, Fool,&rdquo; she answered, 'twixt a smile and frown,
+ &ldquo;I've seen him oft, but with his vizor down.
+ And verily he is a doughty knight,
+ But wherefore doth he hide his face from sight?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;His face?&rdquo; quoth Joc'lyn with a gloomy look,
+ &ldquo;His face, alack!&rdquo; And here his head he shook;
+ &ldquo;His face, ah me!&rdquo; And here Duke Joc'lyn sighed,
+ &ldquo;His face&mdash;&rdquo; &ldquo;What of his face?&rdquo; Yolanda cried.
+ &ldquo;A mercy's name, speak&mdash;speak and do not fail.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; sighed Joc'lyn, &ldquo;thereby hangs a tale,
+ The which, though strange it sound, is verity,
+ That here and now I will relate to thee&mdash;
+ 'T is ditty dire of dismal doating dames,
+ A lay of love-lorn, loveless languishment,
+ And ardent, amorous, anxious anguishment,
+ Full-fed forsooth of fierce and fiery flames;
+ So hark,
+ And mark:
+ In Brocelaunde not long ago,
+ Was born Duke Jocelyn. I trow
+ Not all the world a babe could show,
+ A babe so near divine:
+ For, truth to tell,
+ He waxed so well,
+ So fair o' face,
+ So gay o' grace,
+ That people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Where'er he went,
+ In wonderment
+ Would stare and stare
+ To see how fair
+ A lad was Jocelyn.
+
+ And when to man's estate he came,
+ Alack, fair lady, 't was the same!
+ And many a lovely, love-lorn dame
+ Would pitiful pant and pine.
+ These doleful dames
+ Felt forceful flames,
+ The old, the grey,
+ The young and gay,
+ Both dark and fair
+ Would rend their hair,
+ And sigh and weep
+ And seldom sleep;
+ And dames long wed
+ From spouses fled
+ For love of Jocelyn.
+
+ Therefore the Duke an oath did take
+ By one, by two, by three,
+ That for these love-lorn ladies' sake
+ No maid his face should see.
+ And thus it is, where'er he rideth
+ His love-begetting face he hideth.&rdquo;
+
+ Now laughed Yolande, her scorn forgotten quite,
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Poor Duke! O woeful plight!
+ And yet, O Fool, good Fool, full fain am I,
+ This ducal, love-begetting face to spy&mdash;&rdquo;
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: &ldquo;Then, my lady, prithee, look!&rdquo;
+ And from his bosom he a picture took.
+
+ &ldquo;Since this poor face of mine doth so affright thee
+ Here's one of paint that mayhap shall delight thee.
+ Take it, Yolande, for thee the craftsmen wrought it,
+ For thee I from Duke Jocelyn have brought it.
+ If day and night thou 'lt wear it, fair Yolande,&rdquo;
+ And speaking thus, he gave it to her hand.
+ Its golden frame full many a jewel bore,
+ But 't was the face, the face alone she saw.
+ And viewing it, Yolanda did behold
+ A manly face, yet of a god-like mould.
+ Breathless she sate, nor moved she for a space,
+ Held by the beauty of this painted face;
+ 'Neath drooping lash she viewed it o'er and o'er,
+ And ever as she gazed new charms she saw.
+ Then, gazing yet, &ldquo;Who&mdash;what is this?&rdquo; she sighed.
+ &ldquo;Paint, lady, paint!&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn straight replied,
+ &ldquo;The painted visage of my lord it shows&mdash;
+ Item: one mouth, two eyes and eke a nose&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool,&rdquo; she murmured, &ldquo;here's a face, meseems,
+ I oft have seen ere now within my dreams;
+ These dove-soft eyes in dreams have looked on me!&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: &ldquo;Yet these eyes can nothing see!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;These tender lips in accents sweet I've heard!&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth Joc'lyn: &ldquo;Yet&mdash;they ne'er have spoke a word!
+ But here's a face at last doth please thee well
+ Yet hath no power to speak, see, sigh or smell,
+ Since tongueless, sightless, breathless 't is&mdash;thus I
+ A sorry Fool its needs must e'en supply.
+ And whiles thou doatest on yon painted head
+ My tongue I'll lend to woo thee in its stead.
+ I'll woo with wit
+ As seemeth fit,
+ Whiles there thou sit
+ And gaze on it.
+ Whiles it ye see
+ Its voice I'll be
+ And plead with thee,
+ So hark to me:
+ Yolande, I love thee in true loving way;
+ That is, I'll learn to love thee more each day,
+ Until so great my growing love shall grow,
+ This puny world in time 't will overflow.
+ To-day I love, and yet my love is such
+ That I to-morrow shall have twice as much.
+ Thus lovingly to love thee I will learn
+ Till thou shalt learn Love's lesson in thy turn,
+ And find therein how sweet this world can be
+ When as I love, thou, love, shall so love me.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Hush, hush!&rdquo; she sighed, and to her ruddy lip
+ She sudden pressed one rosy finger-tip.
+ And then, O happy picture! Swift from sight
+ She hid it in her fragrant bosom white.
+ &ldquo;O Fool,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;get thee behind yon tree,
+ And thou a very Fool indeed shall see,
+ A knightly fool who sighs and groans in verse
+ And oft-times woos in song, the which is worse.&rdquo;
+ For now they heard a voice that sung most harsh,
+ That shrilled and croaked like piping frog in marsh,
+ A voice that near and ever nearer drew
+ Until the lordly singer strode in view.
+ A noble singer he, both tall and slender,
+
+ With locks be-curled and clad in pompous splendour;
+ His mantle of rich velvet loose did flow,
+ As if his gorgeous habit he would show;
+ A jewelled bonnet on his curls he bore,
+ With nodding feather bravely decked before;
+ He was a lover very <i>point de vice</i>,
+ And all about him, save his voice, was nice.
+ Thus loudly sang, with lungs both sound and strong
+ This worthy knight, Sir Palamon of Tong.
+
+ &ldquo;O must I groan
+ And make my moan
+ And live alone alway?
+ Yea, I must sigh
+ And droop and die,
+ If she reply, nay, nay!
+
+ &ldquo;I groan for thee,
+ I moan for thee,
+ Alone for thee I pine.
+ All's ill for me
+ Until for me
+ She will for me be mine.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But now, beholding Yolande amid her flowers, herself as sweet and fresh as
+ they, he made an end of his singing and betook him, straightway, to
+ amorous looks and deep-fetched sighs together with many supple bendings of
+ the back, elegant posturings and motitions of slim legs, fannings and
+ flauntings of be-feathered cap, and the like gallantries; and thereafter
+ fell to his wooing on this fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady, O lady of lovely ladies most loved! Fair lady of hearts, sweet dame
+ of tenderness, tender me thine ears, suffer one, hath sighed and suffered
+ for sake of thee, to sightful sue. Lovely thou art and therefore to be
+ loved, and day and night thou and Love the sum of my excogitations art,
+ wherefore I, with loving art, am hither come to woo thee, since, lady, I
+ do love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack, Sir Palamon!&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;and is it so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;so it is. Yest're'en I did proclaim thee fairer
+ than all fair ladies; to-day thou art yet fairer, thus this day thou art
+ fairer than thyself; the which, though a paradox, is yet wittily true and
+ truly witty, methinks. But as for me&mdash;for me, alas for me! I am
+ forsooth the very slave of love, fettered fast by Dan Cupid, a slave
+ grievous and woeful, yet, being thy slave, joying in my slavery and happy
+ in my grievous woe. Thus it is I groan and moan, lady; I pine, repine and
+ pine again most consumedly. I sleep little and eat less, I am, in fine and
+ in all ways, 'haviours, manners, customs, feints and fashions soever, thy
+ lover manifest, confessed, subject, abject, in season and out of season,
+ yearly, monthly, daily, hourly, and by the minute. Moreover&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beseech thee!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;Oh, beseech thee, take thy breath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, 'tis done, lady, 'tis done, and now forthwith resolved am I to
+ sing thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I pray you, sir, sing no more, but resolve me this mystery. What is
+ love?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love, lady? Verily that will I in truth!&rdquo; And herewith Sir Palamon fell
+ to an attitude of thought with eyes ecstatic, with knitted brows and sage
+ nodding of the head. &ldquo;Love, my lady&mdash;ha! Love, lady is&mdash;hum!
+ Love, then, perceive me, is of its nature elemental, being of the
+ elements, as 'twere, composed and composite, as water, air and fire. For,
+ remark me, there is no love but begetteth first water, which is tears;
+ air, which is sighings and groanings; and fire, which is heart-burnings
+ and the like. Thus is love a passion elemental. But yet, and heed me,
+ lady, love is also metaphysical, being a motition of the soul and e'en the
+ spirit, and being of the spirit 'tis ghostly, and being ghostly 'tis&mdash;ha!
+ Who comes hither to shatter the placid mirror of my thoughts?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, the noble knight of Tong turned to behold one who strode
+ towards them in haste, a tall man this whose black brows scowled fierce
+ upon the day, and who spurned the tender flowers with foot ungentle as he
+ came.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ A tall, broad-shouldered, haughty lord was he,
+ With chin full square and eyes of mastery,
+ At sight of whom, Yolanda's laughter failed,
+ And in her cheek the rosy colour paled.
+
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Sir Palamon, now of thy grace,
+ And of thy courteous friendship yield me place,
+ To this fair lady I a word would say.
+ Thus do I for thy courteous-absence pray,
+ I am thy friend, Sir Knight, as thou dost know,
+ But&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;My lord,&rdquo; quoth Sir Palamon, &ldquo;I go&mdash;
+ Friendship methinks is a most holy bond,
+ A bond I hold all binding bonds beyond,
+ And thou 'rt a friend right potent, my lord Gui,
+ So to thy will I willingly comply.
+ Thus, since thy friendship I hold passing dear,
+ Thou need but ask&mdash;and lo! I am not here.&rdquo;
+ Thus having said, low bowed this courtly knight,
+ Then turned about and hasted out of sight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, my lady,&rdquo; quoth Sir Gui, frowning upon her loveliness, &ldquo;and now
+ having discharged yon gaudy wind-bag, what of this letter I did receive
+ but now&mdash;behold it!&rdquo; and speaking, he snatched a crumpled missive
+ from his bosom. &ldquo;Behold it, I say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, my lord, I do,&rdquo; she answered, proud and disdainful; &ldquo;it is,
+ methinks, my answer to thy loathèd suit&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Loathèd!&rdquo; he cried, and caught her slender wrist,
+ And held it so, crushed in his cruel fist;
+ But proud she faced him, shapely head raised high.
+ &ldquo;Most loathèd, my lord!&rdquo; she, scornful, made reply.
+ &ldquo;For rather than I'd wed myself with thee,
+ The wife of poorest, humblest slave I'd be,
+ Or sorriest fool that tramps the dusty way&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Ha! Dare thou scorn me so?&rdquo; Sir Gui did say,
+ &ldquo;Then I by force&mdash;by force will sudden take thee,
+ And slave of love, my very slave I 'll make thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Out from the leaves Duke Joc'lyn thrust his head,
+ &ldquo;O fie! Thou naughty, knavish knight!&rdquo; he said.
+ &ldquo;O tush! O tush! O tush again&mdash;go to!
+ 'T is windy, whining, wanton way to woo.
+ What tushful talk is this of 'force' and 'slaves',
+ Thou naughty, knavish, knightly knave of knaves?
+ Unhand the maid&mdash;loose thy offensive paw!&rdquo;
+ Round sprang Sir Gui, and, all astonished, saw
+ A long-legged jester who behind him stood
+ With head out-thrust, grim-smiling 'neath his hood.
+
+ &ldquo;Plague take thee, Fool! Out o' my sight!&rdquo; growled he,
+ &ldquo;Or cropped thine ugly nose and ears shall be.
+ Begone, base rogue! Haste, dog, and get thee hence,
+ Thy folly pleadeth this thy Fool's offence&mdash;
+
+ Yet go, or of thy motley shalt be stripped,
+ And from the town I 'll have thee shrewdly whipped,
+ For Lord of Ells and Raddemore am I,
+ Though folk, I've heard, do call me 'Red Sir Gui,'
+ Since blood is red and&mdash;I am Gui the Red.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Red Gui?&rdquo; quoth Joc'lyn. &ldquo;Art thou Gui the dread&mdash;
+ Red Gui&mdash;in faith? Of him Dame Rumour saith,
+ His ways be vile but viler still&mdash;his breath.
+ Now though a life vile lived is thing most ill,
+ Yet some do think a vile breath viler still.&rdquo;
+
+ Swift, swift as lightning from a summer sky,
+ Out flashed the vengeful dagger of Sir Gui,
+ And darting with a deadly stroke and fierce,
+ Did Joc'lyn's motley habit rend and pierce,
+ Whereat with fearful cry up sprang Yolande,
+ But this strange jester did grim-smiling stand.
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Messire, a fool in very truth,
+ The fool of foolish fools he'd be, in sooth,
+ Who'd play a quip or so, my lord, with thee
+ Unless in triple armour dight were he;
+ And so it is this jester doth not fail
+ With such as thou to jest in shirt of mail.
+ Now since my heart thy foolish point hath missed
+ Thy dagger&mdash;thus I answer&mdash;with my fist!&rdquo;
+ Then swift he leapt and, even as he spoke,
+ He fetched the knight so fierce and fell a stroke
+ That, reeling, on the greensward sank Sir Gui,
+ And stared, wide-eyed, unseeing, at the sky.
+ Right firmly then upon his knightly breast
+ Duke Joc'lyn's worn and dusty shoe did rest,
+ And while Yolande stood white and dumb with fear,
+ Thus sang the Duke full blithely and full clear:
+
+ &ldquo;Dirt thou art since thou art dust,
+ And shalt to dust return;
+ Meanwhile Folly as he lust
+ Now thy base dust doth spurn.
+
+ &ldquo;Yea, lord, though thy rank be high,
+ One day, since e'en lords must die,
+ Under all men's feet thou'lt lie.&rdquo;
+
+ Now, fierce, Sir Gui did curse the Fool amain,
+ And, cursing, strove his dagger to regain.
+ But Joc'lyn stooped, in mighty arms he swung him,
+ And down into the lily-pool he flung him.
+
+ With splash resounding fell the noble knight,
+ Then gurgling rose in damp and sorry plight,
+ Whiles Joc'lyn, leaning o'er the marble rim,
+ With lifted finger thus admonished him:
+
+ &ldquo;Red Gui,
+ Dread Gui,
+ Lest a dead Gui,
+ Gui, I make of thee,
+ Understand, Gui,
+ Fair Yolande, Gui,
+ Humbly wooed must be.
+
+ &ldquo;So, Gui,
+ Know, Gui,
+ Ere thou go, Gui,
+ Gui they call the Red;
+ And thou'lt woo, Gui,
+ Humbly sue, Gui,
+ Lest Love strike thee dead.
+
+ &ldquo;Now while thou flound'rest in yon pool,
+ Learn thou this wisdom of a Fool;
+ Cold water oft can passion cool
+ And fiery ardours slake;
+ Thus, sir, since water quencheth fire,
+ So let it soothe away thine ire.
+ Then&mdash;go seek thee garments drier
+ Lest a rheum thou take.&rdquo;
+
+ Sir Gui did gasp, and gasping, strove to curse,
+ Whereat he, gasping, did but gasp the worse,
+ Till, finding he could gasp, but nothing say,
+ He shook clenched fist and, gasping, strode away.
+ Then Joc'lyn turned and thus beheld Yolande,
+ Who trembling all and pale of cheek did stand.
+
+ &ldquo;O Fool!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;Poor Fool, what hast
+ thou done?&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Yolande, to woo thee I've begun,
+ I better might have wooed, it is most true,
+ If other wooers had not wooed thee too.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;O beware&mdash;beware!
+ Death&mdash;death for thee is in the very air.
+ From Canalise, in haste, I bid thee fly,
+ For 'vengeful lord and cruel is Sir Gui.
+ Take now this gold to aid thee on thy way,
+ And for thy life upon my knees I'll pray,
+ And with the holy angels intercede
+ To comfort thee and aid thee in thy need.
+ And so&mdash;farewell! &ldquo;Thus, speaking, turned Yolande.
+ But Joc'lyn stayed her there with gentle hand,
+ Whereat she viewed him o'er in mute surprise,
+ To see the radiant gladness of his eyes.
+
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Yolande, since thou wilt pray for me,
+ Of thy sweet prayers fain would I worthy be.
+ This I do know&mdash;let Death come when he may,
+ The love I bear thee shall live on alway.
+
+ Nor will I strive to leave grim Death behind me,
+ Since when Death wills methinks he sure will find me;
+ As in the world Death roameth everywhere,
+ Who flees him here perchance shall meet him there.
+ Here, then, I'll bide&mdash;let what so will betide me,
+ Thy prayers like holy angels, watch beside me.
+ So all day long and in thy pretty sleeping
+ 'Till next we meet the Saints have thee in keeping.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+
+ GILL: The last part seems to me much better.
+ I like Yolande, I hope he'll get her.
+
+ MYSELF: Patience, my dear, he's hardly met her.
+
+ GILL: I think it would be rather nice
+ To make him kiss her once or twice.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll make him kiss her well, my dear,
+ When he begins&mdash;but not just here.
+ I'll later see what I can do
+ In this matter to please you.
+
+ GILL: And then I hope, that by and by
+ He kills that frightful beast, Sir Gui.
+
+ MYSELF: Yes, I suppose, we ought to slay him,
+ For all his wickedness to pay him.
+
+ GILL: And Pertinax, I think&mdash;don't you?
+ Should have a lady fair to woo.
+ To see him in love would be perfectly clipping.
+ It's a corking idea, and quite awfully ripping&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: If you use such vile slang, miss, I vow I will not&mdash;
+
+ GILL: O, Pax, father! I'm sorry; I almost forgot.
+
+ MYSELF: Very well, if my warning you'll bear well
+ in mind,
+ A fair damsel for Pertinax I 'll try to find.
+
+ GILL: Then make her, father, make her quick,
+ I always knew you were a brick.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0006" id="link2H_4_0006"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 4
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How Pertinax plied angle to his sport
+ And, catching him no fish, fish-like was caught.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ By sleepy stream where bending willows swayed,
+ And, from the sun, a greeny twilight made,
+ Sir Pertinax, broad back against a tree,
+ Lolled at his ease and yawned right lustily.
+ In brawny fist he grasped a rod or angle,
+ With hook wherefrom sad worm did, writhing, dangle.
+ Full well he loved the piscatorial sport,
+ Though he as yet no single fish had caught.
+ Hard by, in easy reach upon the sward,
+ Lay rusty bascinet and good broadsword.
+ Thus patiently the good Knight sat and fished,
+ Yet in his heart most heartily he wished
+ That he, instead of fishing, snug had been
+ Seated within his goodly tower of Shene.
+ And thinking thus, he needs must cast his eye
+ On rusty mail, on battered shoon, and sigh,
+ And murmur fitful curses and lament
+ That in such base, unknightly garb he went&mdash;
+ A lord of might whose broad shield bravely bore
+ Of proud and noble quarterings a score.
+ &ldquo;And 't was forsooth for foolish ducal whim
+ That he must plod abroad in such vile trim!&rdquo;
+ Revolving thus, his anger sudden woke,
+ And, scowling, to the unseen fish he spoke:
+
+ &ldquo;A Duke! A Fool! A fool-duke, by my head!
+ Who, clad like Fool, like Fool will fain be wed,
+
+ For ass and dolt and fool of fools is he
+ Who'll live in bondage to some talk-full she.
+ Yet, if he'll wed, why i' the foul fiend's name,
+ Must he in motley seek the haughty dame?&rdquo;
+
+ But now, while he did on this problem dwell,
+ Two unexpected happenings befell:
+ A fish to nibble on the worm began,
+ And to him through the green a fair maid ran.
+ Fast, fast amid the tangled brake she fled,
+ Her cheeks all pale, her dark eyes wide with dread;
+ But Pertinax her beauty nothing heeded,
+ Since both his eyes to watch his fish were needed;
+ But started round with sudden, peevish snort
+ As in slim hands his brawny fist she caught;
+ &ldquo;Ha, maid!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;Why must thou come this way
+ To spoil my sport and fright mine fish away?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;O man&mdash;O man, if man thou art,&rdquo; she gasped,
+ &ldquo;Save me!&rdquo; And here his hand she closer grasped,
+ But even now, as thus she breathless spake,
+ Forth of the wood three lusty fellows brake;
+ Goodly their dress and bright the mail they wore,
+ While on their breasts a falcon-badge they bore.
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried one. &ldquo;Yon dirty knave she's met!&rdquo;
+ Sir Pertinax here donned his bascinet.
+ &ldquo;But one poor rogue shan't let us!&rdquo; t' other roared.
+ Sir Pertinax here reached and drew his sword.
+ &ldquo;Then,&rdquo; cried the third, &ldquo;let's at him now all three!&rdquo;
+ Quoth Pertinax: &ldquo;Maid, get thee 'hind yon tree,
+ For now, methinks, hast found me better sport
+ Than if, forsooth, yon plaguy fish I'd caught.&rdquo;
+ So saying, up he rose and, eyes a-dance
+ He 'gainst the three did joyously advance,
+ With sword that flashed full bright, but brighter yet
+ The eyes beneath his rusty bascinet;
+
+ While aspect bold and carriage proud and high,
+ Did plainly give his mean array the lie.
+ Thus, as he gaily strode to meet the three,
+ In look and gesture all proud knight was he;
+ Beholding which, the maid forgot her dread,
+ And, 'stead of pale, her cheek glowed softly red.
+
+ Now at the three Sir Pertinax did spring,
+ And clashing steel on steel did loudly ring,
+ Yet Pertinax was one and they were three,
+ And once was, swearing, smitten to his knee,
+ Whereat the maid hid face in sudden fear,
+ And, kneeling so, fierce cries and shouts did hear,
+ The sounds of combat dire, and deadly riot
+ Lost all at once and hushed to sudden quiet,
+ And glancing up she saw to her amaze
+ Three rogues who fleetly ran three several ways,
+ Three beaten rogues who fled with one accord,
+ While Pertinax, despondent, sheathed his sword.
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; he growled, &ldquo;'Tis shame that they should run
+ Ere that to fight the rogues had scarce begun!&rdquo;
+ So back he came, his rod and line he took,
+ And gloomed to find no worm upon his hook.
+ But now the maiden viewed him gentle-eyed;
+ &ldquo;Brave soldier, I do thank thee well!&rdquo; she sighed,
+ &ldquo;Thou, like true knight, hast fought for me today&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;And the fish,&rdquo; sighed he, &ldquo;have stole my worm away,
+ Which is great pity, since my worms be few!&rdquo;
+ And here the Knight's despond but deeper grew.
+ &ldquo;Yon rogues,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;no stomach had for fight,
+ Yet scared the fish that had a mind to bite!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;But thou hast saved me, noble man!&rdquo; said she.
+ &ldquo;So must I use another worm!&rdquo; sighed he.
+
+ And straightway with his fishing he proceeded
+ While sat the maid beside him all unheeded;
+ Whereat she frowned and, scornful, thus did speak
+ With angry colour flaming in her cheek:
+ &ldquo;What man art thou that canst but fight and fish?
+ Hast thou no higher thought, no better wish?&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Certes,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;I would I had indeed
+ A goodly pot of foaming ale or mead.&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;O base, most base!&rdquo; the maid did scornful cry,
+ And viewed him o'er with proud, disdainful eye.
+ &ldquo;That I should owe my life to man like thee!
+ That one so base could fight and master three!
+ Who art thou, man, and what? Speak me thy name,
+ Whither ye go and why, and whence ye came,
+ Thy rank, thy state, thy worth to me impart,
+ If soldier, serf, or outlawed man thou art;
+ And why 'neath ragged habit thou dost wear
+ A chain of gold such as but knights do bear,
+ Why thou canst front three armed rogues unafraid,
+ Yet fear methinks to look upon a maid?&rdquo;
+
+ But to these questions Pertinax sat dumb&mdash;
+ That is, he rubbed his chin and murmured, &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo;
+ Whereat she, frowning, set determined chin
+ And thus again to question did begin:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ SHE: What manner of man art thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: A man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: A soldier?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Thou sayest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Art in service?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Truly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Whom serve ye?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: A greater than I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Art thou wed?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: The Saints forfend!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then art a poor soldier and solitary.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I might be richer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: What dost thou fishing here?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I fish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And why didst fight three men for me&mdash;a maid unknown?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: For lack of better employ.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Rude soldier&mdash;whence comest thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Fair maiden, from beyond.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Gross Knight, whither goest thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Dainty damosel, back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Dost lack aught?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Quiet!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: How, would'st have me hold my peace, ill fellow?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: 'T would be a marvel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Wherefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Thou'rt a woman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And thou a man, ill-tongued, ill-beseen, ill-mannered, unlovely, and
+ I like thee not!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: And what is worse, the fish bite not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here, and very suddenly, she fell a-weeping, to the Knight's no small
+ discomfiture, though she wept in fashion wondrous apt and pretty;
+ wherefore Sir Pertinax glanced at her once, looked twice and, looking,
+ scratched his ear, rubbed his chin and finally questioned her in turn:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Distressful damosel, wherefore this dole? SHE: For that I am weary,
+ woeful and solitary. And thou&mdash;thou'rt harsh of look, rough of
+ tongue, ungentle of&mdash;HE: Misfortunate maiden, thy loneliness is soon
+ amended, get thee to thy friends&mdash;thy gossips, thy&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: I have none. And thou'rt fierce and ungentle of face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here she wept the more piteously and Sir Pertinax, viewing her distress,
+ forgot his hook and worm, wherefore a fish nibbled it slyly, while the
+ Knight questioned her further:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Woeful virgin, whence comest thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: From afar. And thou art ofeatures grim and&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: And whither would'st journey?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: No where! And thou art&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Nay, here is thing impossible, since being here thou art somewhere and
+ that within three bowshots of the goodly town of Canalise wherein thou
+ shalt doubtless come by comfort and succour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Never! Never! Here will I weep and moan and perish. And thou&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: And wherefore moan and perish?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: For that I am so minded, being a maid forlorn and desolate, a poor
+ wanderer destitute of kith, of kin, of hope, of love, and all that maketh
+ life sweet. And thou art sour-faced and&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Grievous maid, is, among thy many wants, a lack of money?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: That also. And thou art cold of eye, fierce of mouth, hooked of nose,
+ flinty of heart, stony of soul, and I a perishing maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Sir Pertinax blinked and caught his breath; thereafter he laid
+ down his rod, whereupon the fish incontinent filched his worm all
+ unnoticed while the Knight opened the wallet at his girdle and took thence
+ certain monies.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Dolorous damsel, behold six good, gold pieces! Take them and go, get
+ thee to eat&mdash;eat much, so shall thy dolour wax less, eat beef&mdash;since
+ beef is a rare lightener of sorrow, by beef shall thy woes be comforted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Alas! I love not beef.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here Sir Pertinax was dumb a space for wonder at her saying, while she
+ stole a glance at him betwixt slender fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE (<i>after some while</i>): Maid, I tell thee beef, fairly cooked and
+ aptly seasoned, is of itself a virtue whereby the body is strengthened and
+ nourished, whereby cometh content, and with content kindliness, and with
+ kindliness charity, and therewith all other virtues small and eke great;
+ therefore eat beef, maiden, for the good of thy soul.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How?&rdquo; said she, viewing him bright-eyed 'twixt her fingers again. &ldquo;Dost
+ think by beef one may attain to paradise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Peradventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then no beef, for I would not live a saint yet awhile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Nathless, take thou these monies and go buy what thou wilt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Sir Pertinax set the coins beside her shapely foot and took up
+ his neglected rod.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And is this gold truly mine?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Verily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then I pray thee keep it for me lest I lose it by the way and so&mdash;let
+ us begone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Sir Pertinax started.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Begone?&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Begone&mdash;in truth? Thou and I in faith? Go
+ whither?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Any whither.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Alone? Thou and I?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not alone,&rdquo; she sighed; &ldquo;let us go together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax dropped his fishing-rod and watched it idly float away down
+ the stream:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Together, maiden?&rdquo; said he at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;For thou art lonely even as I am lonely, and thou
+ art, methinks, one a lonely maid may trust.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;trust!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;And wherefore would'st trust me, maiden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: For two reasons&mdash;thou art of age mature and something
+ ill-favoured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, at this Sir Pertinax grew angered, grew thoughtful, grew sad and,
+ beholding his image mirrored in the waters, sighed for his grim, unlovely
+ look and, in his heart, cursed his vile garb anew. At last he spoke:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Truly thou may'st trust me, maiden.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And wherefore sighest thou, sad soldier?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Verily for thy two reasons. Though, for mine age, I am not forty
+ turned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying which, he sighed again, and stared gloomily into the murmurous
+ waters. But presently, chancing to look aside, he beheld a head low down
+ amid the underwood, a head huge and hairy with small, fierce eyes that
+ watched him right bodefully, and a great mouth that grinned evilly; and
+ now as he stared, amazed by this monstrous head, it nodded grimly,
+ speaking thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Lob, Lobkyn he
+ Commandeth thee
+ To let her be
+ And set her free,
+ Thou scurvy, cutpurse, outlaw knave,
+ Lest hanged thou be
+ Upon a tree
+ For roguery
+ And villainy,
+ Thou knavish, misbegotten slave;
+ For proud is she
+ Of high degree,
+ As unto ye
+ Explicitly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, rising and drawing sword. &ldquo;Now, be thou imp of
+ Satan, fiend accursed, or goblin fell, come forth, and I with steel will
+ try thee, Thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out from the leaves forthwith crawled a dwarf bowed of leg, mighty of
+ shoulder, humped of back, and with arms very long and thick and hairy. In
+ one great fist he grasped a ponderous club shod with iron spikes, and now,
+ resting his hands on this and his chin on his hands, he scowled at the
+ Knight, yet grinned also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; he cried, rolling big head in threatening fashion:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Vile dog, thy rogue's sconce cracked shall be, Thy base-born bones
+ be-thwacked shall be. I'll deal thee many a dour ding For that thou darest
+ name me&mdash;Thing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, as I live!&rdquo; said Sir Pertinax, scowling also. &ldquo;Here will I, and with
+ great joyance, cleave me thine impish mazzard and split thee to thy
+ beastly chine. And for thy ill rhyming:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I with this goodly steel will halve thee
+ And into clammy goblets carve thee.
+ So stand, Thing, to thy club betake thee,
+ And soon, Thing, I will no-thing make thee.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But, as they closed on each other with eager and deadly intent, the maid
+ stepped lightly betwixt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, soldier&mdash;hold!&rdquo; she commanded. &ldquo;Here is none but Lobkyn Lollo&mdash;poor,
+ brave Lob, nor will I suffer him to harm thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, maiden?&rdquo; snorted the good Knight fiercely. &ldquo;Harm me, say'st thou&mdash;yon
+ puny Thing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly, soldier!&rdquo; said she, roguish-eyed. &ldquo;For though thou art very
+ ungentle, harsh of tongue, of visage grim and manners rude&mdash;I would
+ not have Lob harm thee&mdash;yet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now hereupon our bold Sir Pertinax
+ With indignation red of face did wax.
+ The needful word his tongue was vainly seeking,
+ Since what he felt was quite beyond the speaking.
+ Though quick his hand to ward or give a blow,
+ His tongue all times unready was and slow,
+ Therefore he speechless looked upon the maid,
+ Who viewed him 'neath her lashes' dusky shade,
+ Whence Eros launched a sudden beamy dart
+ That 'spite chain-mail did reach and pierce his heart.
+ And in that instant Pertinax grew wise,
+ And trembled 'neath this forest-maiden's eyes;
+ And trembling, knew full well, seek where he might,
+ No eyes might hold for him such magic light,
+ No lips might hold for him such sweet allure,
+ No other hand might his distresses cure,
+ No other voice might so console and cheer,
+ No foot, light-treading, be so sweet to hear
+ As the eyes, lips, hand, voice, foot of her who stood
+ Before him now, cheek flushing 'neath her hood.
+ All this Sir Pertinax had in his thought,
+ And, wishing much to say to her, said nought,
+ By reason that his tongue was something slow,
+ And of smooth phrases he did little know.
+ But yet 't is likely, though he nothing said,
+ She, maid-like, what he spake not, guessed or read
+ In his flushed brow, his sudden-gentle eyes,
+ Since in such things all maids are wondrous wise.
+
+ Now suddenly the brawny Dwarf did cry:
+ &ldquo;Beware, my old great-grand-dam creepeth nigh!&rdquo;
+ Thus speaking, 'mid the bushes pointed he,
+ Where crook'd old woman crouched beneath a tree
+ Whence, bowed upon a staff, she towards them came,
+ An ancient, wrinkled, ragged, hag-like dame
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below.
+ Mutt'ring she came and mowing she drew near,
+ And straightway seized the Dwarf by hairy ear:
+ Fast by the ear this ancient dame did tweak him,
+ And cuffed his head and, cuffing, thus did speak him:
+
+ &ldquo;Ha, dolt! Bad elf, and wilt thou slay, indeed,
+ This goodly man did aid me in my need?
+ For this was one that fought within the gate
+ And from Black Lewin saved thy grannam's pate!
+ Down, down, fool-lad, upon thy knees, I say,
+ And full forgiveness of this soldier pray.&rdquo;
+
+ But Sir Pertinax, perceiving how the old dame
+ did thus tweak and wring at the Dwarf's great,
+ hairy ear even until his eyes watered, interceded,
+ saying:
+
+ &ldquo;Good, ancient soul, humble not the sturdy, unlovely,
+ mis-shapen, rascally imp for such small
+ matter.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; croaked the old woman, tightening
+ claw-like fingers, &ldquo;kind master, he would doubtless
+ have slain thee.&rdquo; At this, Sir Pertinax scowled,
+ and would have sworn great oath but, meeting the
+ maid's bright eyes, checked himself, though with
+ much ado:
+
+ &ldquo;Art so sure,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;so sure man of
+ my inches may be slain by thing so small?&rdquo;
+
+ At this the maid laughed, and the old woman,
+ sighing, loosed the ear she clutched:
+
+ &ldquo;Shew thy strength, Lob,&rdquo; she commanded and,
+ drawing the maiden out of ear-shot, sat down beside
+ her on the sward and fell to eager, whispered talk.
+ Meantime the Dwarf, having cherished his ear,
+ sulkily though tenderly, seized hold upon his great
+ club with both hairy hands:
+
+ And whirling it aloft, with sudden might
+ A fair, young tree in sunder he did smite,
+ That 'neath the blow it swayed and crashing fell.
+ Quoth Pertinax: &ldquo;Good Thing, 't is very well.
+ Par Dex, and by the Holy Rood,&rdquo; quoth he,
+ &ldquo;'T is just as well that I was not yon tree!&rdquo;
+ And whirling his long sword as thus he spoke,
+ Shore through another at a single stroke.
+ &ldquo;Here's tree for tree, stout manling!&rdquo; he did say.
+ &ldquo;What other trick canst show to me, I pray?&rdquo;
+ Then Lobkyn stooped the broken stump to seize,
+ Bowed brawny back and with a wondrous ease
+
+ Up by the roots the rugged bole he tore
+ And tossed it far as it had been a straw.
+ Sad grew our knight this mighty feat perceiving,
+ Since well he knew't was past his own achieving.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But anon he smiled and clapped the mighty Dwarf on shoulder, saying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Greeting to thee, lusty Lob, for by Our Holy Lady of Shene Chapel within
+ the Wood, ne'er saw I thine equal, since thou, being man so small, may do
+ what man o' my goodly inches may nowise perform. Thou should'st make a
+ right doughty man-at-arms!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon the Dwarf cut a caper but sighed thereafter: quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aha, good master, and Oho,
+ As man-at-arms fain would I go;
+ Aye, verily, I would be so,
+ But that my grannam sayeth 'No!'
+
+ &ldquo;And, sir, my grand-dam I obey
+ Since she's a potent witch, they say;
+ Can cast ye spells by night or day
+ And charmeth warts and such away.
+
+ &ldquo;Love philtres too she can supply
+ For fools that fond and foolish sigh,
+ That wert thou foul as hog in sty
+ Fair women must unto thee fly.
+
+ &ldquo;Then deadly potions she can make,
+ Will turn a man to wriggling snake,
+ Or slimy worm, or duck, or drake,
+ Or loathly frog that croaks in lake.
+
+ &ldquo;And she can curse beyond compare,
+ Can curse ye here, or curse ye there;
+ She'll curse ye clad or curse ye bare,
+ In fine, can curse ye anywhere.
+
+ &ldquo;And she can summon, so 't is said,
+ From fire and water, spirits dread,
+ Strong charms she hath can wake the dead
+ And set the living in their stead.
+
+ &ldquo;So thus it is, whate'er she say,
+ My grand-dam, master, I obey.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by my head,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;an thy grand-dam hath a potency in
+ spells and such black arts&mdash;the which is an ill thing&mdash;thou hast
+ a powerful gift of versification the which, methinks, is worse. How cometh
+ this distemper o' the tongue, Lobkyn?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O master,&rdquo; spake the sighful Dwarf forlorn,
+ &ldquo;Like many such diseases, 't is inborn.
+ For even as a baby, I
+ Did pule in rhyme and versify;
+ And the stronger that I grew,
+ My rhyming habit strengthened too,
+ Until my sad sire in despair
+ Put me beneath the Church's care.
+ The holy fathers, 't is confessed,
+ With belt and sandal did their best,
+ But, though they often whipped me sore,
+ I, weeping, did but rhyme the more,
+ Till, finding all their efforts vain,
+ They sadly sent me home again.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A parlous case, methinks!&rdquo; said Sir Pertinax, staring at the Dwarf's
+ rueful visage. &ldquo;Learned ye aught of the holy fathers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye, sir, they taught me truth to tell,
+ To cipher and to read right well;
+ They taught me Latin, sir, and Greek,
+ Though even then in rhyme I'd speak.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou canst read and write!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;So can not I!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cried LOB:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What matter that? Heaven save the mark,
+ Far better be a soldier than a clerk,
+ Far rather had I be a fighter
+ Than learned reader or a writer,
+ Since they who'd read must mope in schools,
+ And they that write be mostly fools.
+ So 'stead of pen give me a sword,
+ And set me where the battle's toward,
+ Where blood&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But the ancient dame who had risen and approached silently, now very
+ suddenly took Lobkyn by the ear again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Talk not of blood and battles, naughty one!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Think not to
+ leave thy old grannam lone and lorn and helpless&mdash;nor this our fair
+ maid. Shame on thee, Lob, O shame!&rdquo; saying the which she cuffed him again
+ and soundly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Master,&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;thou seest I may not go,
+ Since that my grand-dam will not have it so.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good mother, wise mother,&rdquo; said the maid, viewing Sir Pertinax smilingly
+ askance, &ldquo;why doth poor soldier go bedight in fine linen 'neath rusty
+ hauberk? Why doth poor soldier wear knightly chain about his neck and
+ swear by knightly oath? Good mother, wise mother, rede me this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old woman viewed Pertinax with her bright, quick eyes, but, ere she
+ could answer, he sheathed sword, drew ragged mantle about him, and made to
+ go, but, turning to the maid, bent steel-clad head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most fair damosel,&rdquo; said he gently, &ldquo;evening cometh on, and now, since
+ thou art no longer forlorn, I will away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, first, I pray thee, what is thy name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax, madam.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So then doth Melissa thank Pertinax. And now&mdash;out alas! Will
+ Pertinax leave Melissa, having but found her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax looked up, looked down, fidgeted with his cloak, and knew not
+ how to answer; wherefore she sighed again, though with eyes full merry
+ 'neath drooping lashes and reached out to him her slender hand. &ldquo;Aye me,
+ and shall we meet no more, poor soldier?&rdquo; she questioned softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This I know not,&rdquo; he answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For thy brave rescue I do give thee my humble thanks, poor soldier.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy rescue, child?&rdquo; cried the old woman. &ldquo;Alack and wert thou seen? Thy
+ rescue, say'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, good mother, from Sir Agramore's rough foresters. But for thee,
+ thou needy soldier, my gratitude is thine henceforth. Had I aught else to
+ give thee, that were thine also. Is there aught I may? Speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Sir Pertinax could not but heed all the rich, warm beauty of her&mdash;these
+ eyes so sombrely sweet, her delicate nose, the temptation of her vivid
+ lips&mdash;and so spake hot with impulse:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly, sweet maid, truly I would have of thee a&mdash;&rdquo; Her eyes
+ grew bright with laughter, a dimple played wanton in her cheek, and Sir
+ Pertinax was all suddenly abashed, faint-hearted and unsure; thus, looking
+ down, he chanced to espy a strange jewel that hung tremulous upon her
+ moving bosom: a crowned heart within a heart of crystal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, thou staid and sorry soldier, what would'st have of me?&rdquo; she
+ questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily,&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;I would have of thee yon trinket from thy bosom.&rdquo;
+ Now at his words she started, caught her breath and stared at him
+ wide-eyed; but, seeing his abashment, laughed and loosed off the jewel
+ with quick, small fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it so!&rdquo; said she. But hereupon the old woman reached out sudden hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child!&rdquo; she croaked, &ldquo;Art mad? Mind ye not the prophecy? Beware the
+ prophecy&mdash;beware!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Beware, I say, Oh, beware!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good mother, have I not promised? And for this crystal it hath
+ brought me nought but unease hitherto. Take it, soldier, and for the sake
+ of this poor maid that giveth, break it not, dishonour it not, and give it
+ to none but can define for thee the secret thereof&mdash;and so, poor,
+ brave, fearful soldier&mdash;fare thee well!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying which this fair maiden turned, and clasping the Witch's bony arm
+ about her slender loveliness, passed away into the denser wood with Lobkyn
+ Lollo marching grimly behind, his mighty club across his shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Long stood Sir Pertinax, staring down at the strange jewel in his hand yet
+ seeing it not, for, lost in his dreams, he beheld again two eyes,
+ dusky-lashed and softly bright, a slender hand, a shapelyfoot, while in
+ his ears was again the soft murmur of a maid's voice, a trill of girlish
+ laughter. So lost in meditation was he that becoming aware of a shadow
+ athwart the level sunset-glory, he started, glanced up and into the face
+ of a horseman who had ridden up unheard upon the velvet ling; and this man
+ was tall and armed at points like a knight; the vizor of his plumed casque
+ was lifted, and Sir Pertinax saw a ruddy face, keen-eyed, hawk-nosed,
+ thin-lipped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow,&rdquo; questioned the haughty knight, &ldquo;what hold ye there?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fellow,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, haughty and gruff also, &ldquo;'t is no matter to
+ thee!&rdquo; And speaking, he buttoned the jewel into the wallet at his belt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool!&rdquo; exclaimed the Knight, staring in amaze, &ldquo;wilt dare name me
+ 'fellow'? Tell me, didst see three foresters hereabout?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poltroon, I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knave, wilt defy me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rogue, I do!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Slave, what did these foresters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villain, they ran away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, varlet! and wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Caitiff, I drubbed them shrewdly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dared ye withstand them, dog?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Minion, I did.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saw ye not the badge they bore?&rdquo; demanded the fierce stranger-knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T was the like of that upon thy shield!&rdquo; nodded Sir Pertinax grimly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know ye who and what I am, dunghill rogue?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, dog's-breakfast&mdash;nor care!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax, whereat the
+ stranger-knight grew sudden red and clenched mailed fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know then, thou kennel-scourer, that I am Sir
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Agramore of Biename, Lord of Swanscote and Hoccom, Lord Seneschal of
+ Tissingors and the March.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. &ldquo;So do I know thee for a very rogue
+ ingrain and villain manifest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How!&rdquo; roared Sir Agramore. &ldquo;This to my face, thou vile creeper of
+ ditches, thou unsavoury tavern-haunter&mdash;this in my teeth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heartily, heartily!&rdquo; nodded Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;And may it choke thee for the
+ knavish carcass thou art.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, and very suddenly, the Knight loosed mace from saddle-bow, and
+ therewith smote Sir Pertinax on rusty bascinet, and tumbled him backward
+ among the bracken. Which done, Sir Agramore laughed full loud and,
+ spurring his charger, galloped furiously away. And after some while Sir
+ Pertinax arose, albeit unsteadily, but finding his legs weak, sat him down
+ again; thereafter with fumbling hands he did off dinted bascinet and
+ viewed it thoughtfully, felt his head tenderly and, crawling to the
+ stream, bathed it solicitously; then, being greatly heartened, he arose
+ and drawing sword, set it upright in the ling and, kneeling, clasped his
+ hands and spake as follows:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here and now, upon my good cross-hilt I swear I will with joy and zeal
+ unremitting, seek me out one Sir Agramore of Biename. Then will I
+ incontinent with any, all, or whatsoever weapon he chooseth fall upon him
+ and, for this felon stroke, for his ungentle dealing with the maid, I will
+ forthwith gore, rend, tear, pierce, batter, bruise and otherwise use the
+ body of the said Sir Agramore until, growing aweary of its vile tenement,
+ his viler soul shall flee hence to consume evermore with such unholy
+ knaves as he. And this is the oath of me, Sir Pertinax,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling, Bracton and Deepdene, to the
+ which oath may the Saints bend gracious ear, in especial Our Holy Lady of
+ Shene Chapel within the Wood&mdash;Amen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Having registered the which most solemn oath, Sir Pertinax arose, sheathed
+ his sword, and strode blithely towards the fair and prosperous town of
+ Canalise. But, being come within the gate, he was aware of much riot and
+ confusion in the square and streets beyond, and hasting forward, beheld a
+ wild concourse, a pushing, jostling throng of people making great clamour
+ and outcry, above which hubbub ever and anon rose such shouts, as:
+ &ldquo;Murderer! Thief! Away with him! Death to him!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By dint of sharp elbow and brawny shoulder our good knight forced himself
+ a way until&mdash;surrounded by men-at-arms, his limbs fast bound, his
+ motley torn and bloody, his battered fool's-cap all awry&mdash;he beheld
+ Duke Jocelyn haled and dragged along by fierce hands. For a moment Sir
+ Pertinax stood dumb with horror and amaze, then, roaring, clapped hand to
+ sword. Now, hearing this fierce and well-known battle shout, Duke Jocelyn
+ turned and, beholding the Knight, shook bloody head in warning and slowly
+ closed one bright, blue eye; and so, while Sir Pertinax stood rigid and
+ dumb, was dragged away and lost in the fierce, jostling throng.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN propoundeth:
+
+ GILL: Father, when you began this Geste, I thought
+ It was a poem of a sort.
+
+ MYSELF: A sort, Miss Pert! A sort, indeed?
+
+ GILL: Of course&mdash;the sort folks love to read.
+ But in the last part we have heard
+ Of poetry there's scarce a word.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, if you the early Geste-books read,
+ You'll find that, oft as not, indeed,
+ The wearied Gestours, when by rhyming stumped,
+ Into plain prose quite often jumped.
+
+ GILL: But, father, dear, the last part seems to me
+ All prose&mdash;as prosy as can be&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Ha, prosy, miss! How, do you then suggest
+ Our Geste for you lacks interest?
+
+ GILL: Not for a moment, father, though
+ Sir Pertinax was much too slow.
+ When fair Melissa &ldquo;laughing stood,&rdquo;
+ He should have kissed&mdash;you know he
+ should&mdash;Because, of course, she wished him to.
+
+ MYSELF: Hum! Girl, I wonder if that's true?
+
+ GILL: O father, yes! Of course I'm right,
+ And you're as slow as your slow knight.
+ Were you as slow when you were young?
+
+ MYSELF: Hush, madam! Hold that saucy tongue.
+ You may be sure, in my young days,
+ I was most dutiful always.
+ Grown up, I was, it seems to me,
+ No slower than I ought to be.
+ And now, miss, since you pine for verse,
+ Rhyme with my prose I'll intersperse;
+ And, like a doting father, I
+ To hold your interest will try.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0007" id="link2H_4_0007"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 5
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Which of Duke Joc'lyn's woeful plight doth tell,
+ And all that chanced him pent in dungeon cell.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In gloomy dungeon, scant of air and light,
+ Duke Joc'lyn lay in sad and woeful plight;
+ His hands and feet with massy fetters bound,
+ That clashed, whene'er he moved, with dismal sound;
+ His back against the clammy wall did rest,
+ His heavy head was bowed upon his breast,
+ But, 'neath drawn brows, he watched with wary eye
+ Three ragged 'wights who, shackled, lay hard by,
+ Three brawny rogues who, scowling, fiercely eyed him,
+ And with lewd gibes and mocking gestures plied him.
+ But Joc'lyn, huddled thus against the wall,
+ Seemed verily to heed them none at all,
+ Wherefore a red-haired rogue who thought he slept
+ With full intent upon him furtive crept.
+ But, ere he knew, right suddenly he felt
+ Duke Joc'lyn's battered shoe beneath his belt;
+ And falling back with sudden strangled cry,
+ Flat on his back awhile did breathless lie,
+ Whereat to rage his comrades did begin,
+ And clashed their fetters with such doleful din
+ That from a corner dim a fourth man sprang,
+ And laughed and laughed, until their prison rang.
+ &ldquo;Well kicked, Sir Fool! Forsooth, well done!&rdquo; laughed he,
+ &ldquo;Ne'er saw I, Fool, a fool the like o' thee!&rdquo;
+
+ Now beholding this tall fellow, Jocelyn knew him
+ for that same forest-rogue had wrestled with him
+ in the green, and sung for his life the &ldquo;Song of
+ Roguery.&rdquo; Wherefore he smiled on the fellow and
+ the fellow on him:
+
+ Quoth JOCELYN: I grieve to see
+ A man like thee
+ In such a woeful plight&mdash;
+
+ Quoth the ROGUE: A Fool in fetters,
+ Like his betters,
+ Is yet a rarer sight.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha i' the clout, good fellow, for Folly in fetters is Folly in need, and
+ Folly in need is Folly indeed! But, leaving folly awhile, who art thou and
+ what thy name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Saith the ROGUE: Robin I'm named, Sir Fool,
+ Rob by the few,
+ Which few are right, methinks, for
+ so I do.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, Rob, if dost rob thou'rt a robber, and being robber thou'rt
+ perchance in bonds for robbing, Robin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool, I, Rob, do rob and have robbed greater robbers that I might by
+ robbery live to rob like robbers again, as thou, by thy foolish folly,
+ fooleries make, befooling fools lesser than thou, that thou, Fool, by such
+ fool-like fooleries may live to fool like fools again!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Thou robber Rob,
+ By Hob and Gob,
+ Though robber-rogue, I swear
+ That 't is great pity
+ Rogue so pretty
+ Must dance upon thin air.
+
+ Quoth ROBIN: Since I must die
+ On gallows high
+ And wriggle in a noose,
+ I'll none repine
+ Nor weep nor whine,
+ For where would be the use?
+ Yet sad am I
+ That I must die
+ With rogues so base and small,
+ Sly coney-catchers,
+ Poor girdle-snatchers,
+ That do in kennel crawl.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;thou thyself art rogue and thief confessed. How
+ then art better than these thy fellows?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By degree, Sir Fool. Even as thou'rt Fool o' folly uncommon, so am I no
+ ordinary rogue, being rogue o' rare parts with power of rogues i' the wild
+ wood, while these be but puny rogues of no parts soever.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No rogues are we!&rdquo; the three did loudly cry,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But sad, poor souls, that perishing do lie!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In me,&rdquo; quoth one, &ldquo;behold a man of worth,
+ By trade a dyer and yclepen Gurth;
+ In all this world no man, howe'er he try,
+ Could live a life so innocent as I!&rdquo;
+
+ The second spake: &ldquo;I am the ploughman Rick,
+ That ne'er harmed man or woman, maid or chick!
+ But here in direful dungeon doomed be I,
+ Yet cannot tell the wherefore nor the why.&rdquo;
+
+ Then spake Red-head, albeit gasping still:
+ &ldquo;An honest tanner I, my name is Will;
+ 'T was me thou kickedst, Fool, in such ill manner,
+ Of crimes unjust accused&mdash;and I, a tanner!&rdquo;
+ Here Joc'lyn smiled. &ldquo;Most saintly rogues,&rdquo; said he;
+ &ldquo;The Saints, methinks, were rogues compared with ye,
+ And one must needs in prison come who'd find
+ The noblest, worthiest, best of all mankind.
+ Poor, ill-used knaves, to lie in dungeon pent,
+ Rogues sin-less quite, and eke so innocent,
+ What though your looks another tale do tell,
+ Since I'm your fellow, fellows let us dwell,
+ For if ye're rogues that thus in bonds do lie,
+ So I'm a rogue since here in bonds am I,
+ Thus I, a rogue, do hail ye each a brother,
+ Like brethren, then, we 'll comfort one another.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake Jocelyn, whereafter these &ldquo;saintly rogues&rdquo; all three grew
+ mightily peevish and, withal, gloomy, while Robin laughed and laughed at
+ them, nodding head and wagging finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Prithee, good Motley,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;what should bring so rare a Fool
+ to lie in dungeon fettered and gyved along of innocent rogues and roguish
+ robber?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Whereto Duke Jocelyn answered on this wise:
+ &ldquo;Hast heard, belike, of Gui the Red?&rdquo;
+ (Here went there up a howl)
+ &ldquo;A mighty lord of whom't is said,
+ That few do love and many dread.&rdquo;
+ (Here went there up a growl)
+
+ &ldquo;This potent lord I chanced to view,
+ Behaving as no lord should do,
+ And thereupon, this lord I threw
+ In pretty, plashing pool!
+
+ &ldquo;Whereon this dreadful lord did get
+ Exceeding wroth and very wet;
+ Wherefore in dungeon here I'm set,
+ For fierce and froward Fool.&rdquo;
+
+ Here went there up a shout of glee.
+ Cried Robin: &ldquo;O sweet Fool,
+ I would I had been there to see
+ This haughty lord of high degree
+ In pretty, plashing pool.&rdquo;
+
+ Here shout of glee became a roar,
+ That made the dungeon ring;
+ They laughed, they rolled upon the floor,
+ Till suddenly the massy door
+ On creaking hinge did swing;
+ And to them the head jailer now appeared,
+ A sombre man who sighed through tangled beard.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, rogue-lads,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;grow ye merry in sooth by reason o' this
+ Fool! Aye me, all men do grow merry save only I, Ranulph, Chief Torturer,
+ Ranulph o' the Keys, o' the Gibbet, o' the City Axe&mdash;poor Ranulph the
+ Headsman. Good lack! I've cut off the head o' many a man merrier than I&mdash;
+ aye, that have I, and more's the pity! And now, ye that are to die so soon
+ can wax joyous along o' this motley Fool! Why, 't is a manifest good Fool,
+ and rare singer o' songs, 't is said, though malapert, with no respect for
+ his betters and over-quick at dagger-play. So 't is a Fool must die and
+ sing no more, and there's the pity on't for I do love a song, I&mdash;being
+ a companionable soul and jovial withal, aye, a very bawcock of a boy, I.
+ To-morrow Red Gui doth hale ye to his Castle o' the Rock, there to die all
+ five for his good pleasure, as is very fitting and proper, so be merry
+ whiles ye may. Meantime, behold here another rogue, a youngling imp. So is
+ five become six, and six may laugh louder than five, methinks, so laugh
+ your best.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ranulph o' the Keys sighed, closed the great door and went his way,
+ leaving the new captive to their mercies. Fair he was and slender, and of
+ a timid seeming, for now he crouched against the wall, his face hid 'neath
+ the hood of ragged mantle; wherefore the &ldquo;saintly&rdquo; three incontinent
+ scowled upon him, roared at him and made a horrid clashing with their
+ fetters:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, blood and bones!&rdquo; cried Rick the Ploughman. &ldquo;What murderous babe art
+ thou to go unshackled in presence o' thy betters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, forsooth,&rdquo; growled Will the Tanner, &ldquo;who 'rt thou to come hither
+ distressing the last hours o' we poor, perishing mortals? Discourse, lest
+ I bite the heart o' thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pronounce, imp!&rdquo; roared Gurth the Dyer, &ldquo;lest I tear thy liver!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit ye, here beside me, youth,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;and presently thou shalt
+ know these tearers of livers and biters of hearts for lambs of innocence
+ and doves of gentleness&mdash;by their own confessions. For, remark now,
+ gentle boy, all we are prisoners and therefore guiltless of every offence&mdash;indeed,
+ where is the prisoner, but who, according to himself, is not more sinned
+ against than sinner, and where the convicted rogue but, with his tongue,
+ shall disprove all men's testimony? So here sit three guileless men,
+ spotless of soul and beyond all thought innocent of every sin soever.
+ Yonder is Rob, a robber, and here sit I, a Fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; cried Rick. &ldquo;Yet murderous Fool art thou and apt to dagger-play!
+ Belike hast slain a man this day in way o' folly&mdash;ha?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two!&rdquo; answered Jocelyn, nodding. &ldquo;These two had been more but that my
+ dagger brake.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here was silence awhile what time Jocelyn hummed the line of a song and
+ his companions eyed him with looks askance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, good Folly,&rdquo; said Rick at last, &ldquo;'t is for a little spilling o'
+ blood art here, a little, pretty business o' murder&mdash;ha?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is so they name it,&rdquo; answered Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bones o' me!&rdquo; growled Will, &ldquo;I do begin to love this Fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And didst pronounce thyself our brother, Fool?&rdquo; questioned Gurth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then brethren let us be henceforth, and comrades to boot!&rdquo; cried Rick.
+ &ldquo;Jolly Clerks o' Saint Nicholas to share and share alike&mdash;ha? So then
+ 't is accorded. And now what o' yon lily-livered imp? 'T is a sickly youth
+ and I love him not. But he hath a cloak, look'ee&mdash;a cloak forsooth
+ and poor Rick's a-cold! Ho, lad&mdash;throw me thy cloak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beshrew me!&rdquo; roared Gurth. &ldquo;But he beareth belt and wallet! Ha, boy, give
+ thy wallet and girdle&mdash;bestow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And by sweet Saint Nick,&rdquo; growled Will, &ldquo;the dainty youngling disporteth
+ himself to mine eyes in a gold finger-ring! Aha, boy! Give now thy trinket
+ unto an honest tanner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon and with one accord up started the three, fierce-eyed; but
+ Jocelyn, laughing, rose up also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back, corpses!&rdquo; quoth he, swinging the heavy fetters to and fro between
+ shackled wrists. &ldquo;Stand, good Masters Dry-bones; of what avail cloak, or
+ wallet, or ring to ye that are dead men? Now, since corpses ye are
+ insomuch as concerneth this world, be ye reasonable and kindly corpses.
+ Sit ye then, Masters Dust-and-Ashes, and I will incontinent sing ye, chant
+ or intone ye a little song of organs and graves and the gallows-tree
+ whereon we must dance anon; as, hearken:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sing a song of corpses three
+ That ere long shall dancing be,
+ On the merry gallows-tree&mdash;
+ High and low,
+ To and fro,
+ Leaping, skipping,
+ Turning, tripping,
+ Wriggling, whirling,
+ Twisting, twirling:
+ Sing hey for the gallows-tree.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stint&mdash;stint thy beastly song now!&rdquo; cried Will, pale of cheek. But
+ Jocelyn sang the louder:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sing a song of dying groans,
+ Sing a song of cries and moans,
+ Sing a song of dead men's bones,
+ That shall rest,
+ All unblest,
+ To rot and rot,
+ Remembered not,
+ For dogs to gnaw
+ And battle for,
+ Sing hey for the dead rogue's bones.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Abate&mdash;ha&mdash;abate thy fiendish rant!&rdquo; cried Rick, glancing
+ fearfully over shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool&mdash;beseech thee! Fair flesh may not abide it!&rdquo; cried Gurth,
+ shivering, while Robin grinned no more and the fearful youth leaned
+ wide-eyed to behold the singer, this strange, scarred face beneath its
+ battered cock's-comb, these joyous eyes, these smiling lips as Jocelyn
+ continued:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Now ends my song with ghosts forlorn,
+ Three gibbering ghosts that mope and mourn,
+ Then shrieking, flee at breath of dawn,
+ Where creatures fell
+ In torment dwell,
+ Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl,
+ That rend and bite
+ And claw and fight.
+ Where fires red-hot
+ Consume them not,
+ And they in anguish
+ Writhe and languish
+ And groan in pain
+ For night again.
+ Sing hey for pale ghosts forlorn.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now when the song was ended, the three looked dismally on one another and,
+ bethinking them of their cruel end, they groaned and sighed lamentably:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Father, I like that song, it's fine;
+ But let me ask about this line:
+ &ldquo;Blind things and foul,
+ That creep and howl.&rdquo;
+ Now tell me, please, if you don't mind,
+ Why were the little horrors blind?
+
+ MYSELF: The beastly things, as I surmise,
+ Had scratched out one another's eyes.
+
+ GILL:
+ I suppose this place where creatures fell
+ In torments dwell is meant for&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Well,
+ I think, my Gill, the place you've guessed,
+ So let me get on with our Geste.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ... they groaned and sighed lamentably&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interjecteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Father&mdash;now don't get in a huff&mdash;
+ But don't you think they've groaned enough?
+
+ MYSELF: My Gillian&mdash;no! Leave well alone;
+ This is the place for them to groan.
+
+ Lamentably they did together moan,
+ And uttered each full many a hollow groan.
+
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: But, father, groans are so distressing,
+ And groans in verse are most depressing&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Then peace, child, and in common prose
+ I'll let the poor rogues vent their woes:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ... they groaned and they sighed lamentably&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN interrupteth:
+
+ GILL: What, father, are they groaning still?
+
+ MYSELF:
+ Of course they are, and so they will,
+ And so shall I; so, girl, take heed,
+ And cease their groaning to impede.
+ Is it agreed?
+
+ GILL: Oh, yes, indeed!
+
+ MYSELF: Then with our Geste I will proceed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ ... they groaned and sighed lamentably.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; cried Gurth, &ldquo;I had not greatly minded till now, but this
+ vile-tongued Fool hath stirred Fear to wakefulness within me. Here's me,
+ scarce thirty turned, hale and hearty, yet must die woefully and with a
+ maid as do love me grievously!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And me!&rdquo; groaned Rick. &ldquo;No more than twenty and five, I&mdash;a very lad&mdash;and
+ with two maids as do languish for me fain and fond!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, and what o' me?&rdquo; mourned dismal, redheaded Will. &ldquo;A lusty, proper
+ fellow I be and wi' maids a score as do sigh continual. And me to die&mdash;O
+ woe! And I a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content ye, brothers!&rdquo; said Jocelyn. &ldquo;Look now, here's Gurth hath lived
+ but thirty years, and now must die&mdash;good: so shall he die weighted
+ with less of sin than had he lived thirty more. Be ye comforted in this,
+ distressful rogues, the shorter our life the less we sin, the which is a
+ fair, good thing. As for these shackles, though our bodies be 'prisoned
+ our souls go free, thus, while we languish here, our souls astride a
+ sunbeam may mount aloft, 'bove all pains and tribulations soever. Thus if
+ we must dance together in noose, our souls, I say, escaping these fleshy
+ bonds, shall wing away to freedom everlasting. Bethink ye of this,
+ grievous knaves, and take heart. Regarding the which same truths I will,
+ for thy greater comforting, incontinent make ye a song&mdash;hearken!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Let Folly sing a song to cheer
+ All poor rogues that languish here,
+ Doomed in dismal dungeon drear,
+ Doomed in dungeon dim.
+
+ &ldquo;Though flesh full soon beneath the sod
+ Doth perish and decay,
+ Though cherished body is but clod,
+ Yet in his soul man is a God,
+ To do and live alway.
+ So hence with gloom and banish fear,
+ Come Mirth and Jollity,
+ Since, though we pine in dungeon drear,
+ Though these, our bodies, languish here,
+ We in our minds go free.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus cheerily sang Jocelyn until, chancing to see how the youth leaned
+ forward great-eyed, watching as he sung, he broke off to question him
+ blithely:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, good youth, hast a leaning to Folly e'en though Folly go
+ fettered, and thyself in dungeon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fool,&rdquo; answered the youth, soft-voiced, &ldquo;me-thinks 't is strange Folly
+ can sing thus in chains! Hast thou no fear of death?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why truly I love it no more than my fellow-fools. But I, being fool
+ uncommon, am wise enough to know that Death, howsoe'er he come, may come
+ but once&mdash;and there's a comfortable thought!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Jocelyn seated himself beside the youth and watched him
+ keen-eyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou canst sing of Freedom, Fool, to the jangle of thy fetters?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly, youth, 't is but my baser part lieth shackled, thus while body
+ pineth here, soul walketh i' the kindly sun&mdash;aye, e'en now as I do
+ gaze on thee, I, in my thought, do stand in a fair garden&mdash;beside a
+ lily-pool, where she I love cometh shy-footed to meet me, tall and
+ gracious and sweet, as her flowers. A dream, belike, yet in this dream she
+ looketh on me with eyes of love and love is on her lips and in her heart&mdash;so
+ is my dream very precious.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, the youth shrank beneath his cloak while in an adjacent corner
+ the three rolled dice with Robin and quarrelled hoarse and loud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Youth,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;I pray thee, tell me thy name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Without lifting head the youth answered:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hugo!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look up, Hugo!&rdquo; But Hugo bowed his head the lower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast wondrous hair, Hugo&mdash;red gold 'neath thy hood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here came a slim, white hand to order the rebellious tress but, finding
+ none, trembled and hid itself. Then very suddenly Jocelyn leaned near and
+ caught this hand, clasping it fast yet with fingers very gentle, and spake
+ quick and eager:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hugo&mdash;alas, Hugo! What bringeth thee in this evil place? Art in
+ danger? Speak, speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, here is no harm for me, Joconde. And I am hither come for sake of a
+ poor Fool that is braver than the bravest&mdash;one did jeopardise his
+ foolish life for sake of a maid, wherefore I, Hugo, do give him life. Take
+ now this wallet, within is good store of gold and better&mdash;a potent
+ charm to close all watchful eyes. Hist, Joconde, and mark me well! Ranulph
+ o' the Axe is a mighty drinker&mdash;to-night, drawn by fame of thy wit,
+ he cometh with his fellows. This money shall buy them wine, in the wine
+ cast this powder so shall they sleep and thou go free.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye!&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;and then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There will meet thee a dwarf shall free thee of thy fetters, and by
+ secret ways set thee without the city&mdash;then, tarry not, but flee for
+ thy life&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by the Holy Rood!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn softly, &ldquo;never in all this world was
+ there prisoner so happy as this poor Fool! But, Hugo, an I win free by
+ reason of a brave and noble lady, so long as she bide in Canalise, so long
+ must I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN interposeth:
+
+ GILL: O, father, now I understand&mdash;
+ Of course, this Hugo is Yolande!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss, the fact is clear;
+ But how on earth did she get here?
+ I don't want her here&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Why not?
+
+ MYSELF: Because, being here, she spoils my plot,
+ Which would drive any author frantic&mdash;
+
+ GILL: I think it's fine, and most romantic.
+ Besides, you know, you wrote her there&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: She came&mdash;before I was aware&mdash;
+
+ GILL: She couldn't, father, for just think,
+ You've made her all of pen and ink.
+ So you, of course, can make her do
+ Exactly as you want her to.
+
+ MYSELF: Dear innocent! You little know
+ The trials poor authors undergo.
+ How heroines, when they break loose,
+ Are apt to play the very deuce,
+ Dragging their authors to and fro,
+ And where he wills&mdash;they will not go.
+
+ GILL: Well, since she's here, please let her be,
+ She wants to set Duke Joc'lyn free.
+
+ MYSELF: Enough&mdash;enough, my plans are made,
+ I'll set him free without her aid,
+ And in a manner, I apprise you,
+ As will, I fancy, quite surprise you.
+ Besides, a dungeon no fit place is
+ For a dainty lady's graces.
+ So, since she's in, 't is very plain
+ I now must get her out again.
+&ldquo;To bide in Canalise, 't is folly!&rdquo; cried Hugo. &ldquo;O, 't were a madness fond!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; sighed Jocelyn, &ldquo;some do call love a madness&mdash;thus mad am I,
+ forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; whispered Hugo, as from without came the tramp of heavy feet.
+ &ldquo;Fare-thee-well and&mdash;ah, be not mad, Joconde!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The door creaked open, and six soldiers entered bringing a prisoner,
+ chained and fettered, and therewith fast bound and gagged, whom they set
+ ungently upon the stone floor; then straightway seizing upon Robin, they
+ haled him to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, rogue,&rdquo; said one, &ldquo;thou art to hang at cockcrow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is't so, good fellows?&rdquo; quoth Robin,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Then cock be curst
+ That croweth first!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ As for thee, good Motley, peradventure when, by hangman's noose, our souls
+ enfranchised go, they shall company together, thine and mine! Till then
+ &mdash;farewell, Folly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin was led forth of the dungeon and the heavy door crashed shut; but
+ when Jocelyn looked for Hugo&mdash;lo! he was gone also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Evening was come and the light began to fail, therefore Jocelyn crouched
+ beneath the narrow loophole and taking from his bosom the wallet, found
+ therein good store of money together with the charm or philtre: and bowing
+ his head above this little wallet, he fell to profound meditation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently, roused by hoarse laughter, he glanced up to find the three
+ plaguing the helpless prisoner with sundry kicks and buffets; so Jocelyn
+ crossed the dungeon, and putting the tormentors aside, stood amazed to
+ behold in this latest captive none other than Sir Pertinax. Straightway he
+ loosed off the gag, whereupon the good knight incontinent swore a gasping
+ oath and prayed his limbs might be loosed also; the which done, he
+ forthwith sprang up, and falling on the astonished three, he beat and
+ clouted them with fist and manacles, and drave them to and fro about the
+ dungeon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, dogs! Wilt spurn me with they vile feet, buffet me with thy beastly
+ hands, forsooth!&rdquo; roared he and kicked and cuffed them so that they,
+ thinking him mad, cried aloud in fear until Sir Pertinax, growing a-weary,
+ seated himself against the wall, and folding his arms, scowled indignant
+ upon Jocelyn who greeted him merrily:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hail and greeting to thee, my Pertinax; thy gloomy visage is a joy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax snorted, but spake not; wherefore the Duke questioned him
+ full blithe: &ldquo;What fair, good wind hath blown thee dungeon-wards, sweet
+ soul?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth the knight. &ldquo;Fetters, see'st thou, a dungeon, and these foul
+ knaves for company&mdash;the which cometh of thy fool's folly, messire! So
+ prithee ha' done with it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, gentle gossip, thou'rt foolish, methinks; thou frettest 'gainst
+ fate, thou kickest unwisely 'gainst the pricks, thou ragest pitifully
+ 'gainst circumstance&mdash;in fine, thou'rt a very Pertinax, my Pertinax!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye troth, that am I and no dog to lie thus chained in noisome pit, par
+ Dex! So let us out, messire, and that incontinent!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why here is a bright thought, sweet lad, let us out forthwith&mdash;but
+ how?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Summon the town-reeve, messire, the burgesses, the council, declare thy
+ rank, so shall we go free&mdash;none shall dare hold thus a prince of thy
+ exalted state and potent might! Declare thyself, lord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This were simple matter, Pertinax, but shall they believe us other than
+ we seem, think ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth Pertinax: &ldquo;We can try!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;this very moment!&rdquo; So saying, he turned to the
+ three who sat in a corner muttering together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good brothers, gentle rogues,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;behold and regard well this
+ sturdy cut-throat fellow that sitteth beside me, big of body, unseemly of
+ habit, fierce and unlovely of look&mdash;one to yield the wall unto, see
+ ye! And yet&mdash;now heed me well, this fellow, ragged and unkempt, this
+ ill-looking haunter of bye-ways, this furtive snatcher of purses (hold thy
+ peace, Pertinax!). I say this unsavoury-seeming clapper-claw is yet
+ neither one nor other, but a goodly knight, famous in battle, joust and
+ tourney, a potent lord of noble heritage, known to the world as Sir
+ Pertinax of Shene Castle and divers rich manors and demesnes. Furthermore,
+ I that do seem a sorry jesting-fellow, I that in antic habit go, that cut
+ ye capers with ass's ears a-dangle and languish here your fellow in bonds,
+ am yet no antic, no poor, motley Fool, but a duke and lord of many fair
+ towns and rich cities beyond Morfeville and the Southward March. How say
+ ye, brothers?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That thou'rt a fool!&rdquo; quoth Rick.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True!&rdquo; nodded Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most true!&rdquo; sighed Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a liar!&rdquo; growled Gurth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And a murderous rogue!&rdquo; cried Will, &ldquo;and shall hang, along of us&mdash;as
+ I'm a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack, Sir Knight,&rdquo; smiled Jocelyn, &ldquo;of what avail rank or fame or both
+ 'gainst a motley habit and a ragged mantle. Thus, Pertinax, thou art no
+ more than what thou seemest, to wit&mdash;a poor, fierce rogue, and I, a
+ beggarly stroller.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And like to have our necks stretched, lord, by reason of a fond and
+ foolish whim!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless, Pertinax, having naught to depend on but our native wit we, by
+ our wit, win free. Other poor rogues in like case have broke prison ere
+ now, and 'tis pity and shame in us if thou, a knight so potent and
+ high-born, and I, a prince, may not do the like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Messire, unlearned am I in the breaking o' prisons so when my time cometh
+ to die in a noose I can but die as knight should&mdash;though I had rather
+ 't were in honest fight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoken like the very fool of a knight!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn. &ldquo;So now will I
+ show thee how by the wit of a brave and noble lady we may yet 'scape the
+ hangman. Hearken in thine ear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But, when Jocelyn had told him all and shown money and sleeping-charm, Sir
+ Pertinax grew thoughtful, sighing deep and oft, yet speaking not,
+ wherefore the Duke questioned him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good gossip, gasp not!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;How think'st thou of prison-breaking
+ now&mdash;expound!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Why, sir, I think when all do charmed and spellbound
+ snore,
+ Then will we shrewdly choke them that they wake
+ no more!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Pertinax, here shall be no need of choking, forsooth!&rdquo; Sir Pertinax
+ bowed chin on fist and sighed again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax, prithee puff not! Yet, an puff ye will, pronounce me then the
+ why and wherefore of thy puffing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, here is neither gasp nor puff, here is honest sighing. I can sigh
+ as well as another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since when hast learned this so tender art, my Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I do sigh by reason of memory.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As what, Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eyes, lord&mdash;her eyes so darkly bright and, as I do think&mdash;black!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, blue, Pertinax&mdash;blue as heaven!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Black, messire, black as&mdash;as black!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blue, boy, blue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, they are black!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak'st thou of Yolande?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Messire, of one I speak, but whom, I know not. She came to me i' the
+ greenwood as I sat a-fishing. Her hair long and black&mdash;ay, black and
+ curled, her eyes dark, and for beauty ne'er saw I her like.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet hast seen my Lady Yolande oft!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Her voice, messire, her voice soft and sweet as the murmur of waters, and
+ very full of allure.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how now!&rdquo; cried Jocelyn. &ldquo;Art thou&mdash;thou, my Pertinax, become
+ at last one of Cupid's humble following? All joy to thee, my lovely lover&mdash;here
+ in truth is added bond betwixt us! For since thou dost love a maid, even
+ as I do love a maid, so being lovers twain needs must we love each other
+ the better therefore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, out alack, my lord!&rdquo; sighed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;For though I do love her,
+ she, by reason o' my ill-favoured looks, the which, woe's me, I may not
+ alter, loveth not me, as I do judge.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How judge ye this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, she giveth me hard names. She, all in a breath, hath pictured me
+ thus: 'Hooked of nose, fierce-eyed, of aspect grim&mdash;ungentle,
+ unlovely, harsh o' tongue, dour o' visage, hard o' heart, flinty o' soul
+ and of manners rude.'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good! But was this all, my Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, lord, and with a wannion&mdash;there was more to like purpose.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Excellent, my lovely knight&mdash;let hope sing in thee. For look now, if
+ she named thee hooked of nose, fierce-eyed and of aspect grim&mdash;she
+ speaketh very truth, for so thou art, my Pertinax. Now truth is a fair
+ virtue in man or maid, so is she both virtuous and fair! Nay, puff not,
+ sighful Pertinax, but for thy comforting mark this&mdash;she hath viewed
+ and heeded thy outward man narrowly&mdash;so shall she not forget thee
+ soon; she with woman's eye hath marked the great heart of thee through
+ sorry habit and rusty mail, and found therein the love thy harsh tongue
+ might not utter; and thus, methinks, she hath thee in mind&mdash;aye, even
+ now, mayhap. Lastly, good, lovely blunderbore&mdash;mark this! 'Tis better
+ to win a maid's anger than she should heed thee none at all. Let love
+ carol i' thy heart and be ye worthy, so, when ye shall meet again, 'tis
+ like enough, despite thy hooked nose, she shall find thine eyes gentle,
+ thy unloveliness lovely, thy harsh tongue wondrous tender and thy flinty
+ soul the soul of a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, faith, lord,&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, his grim lips softening to a smile,
+ &ldquo;despite her words, she spake in voice full sweet, and her eyes&mdash;ah,
+ messire, her eyes were wondrous kind&mdash;gentle eyes&mdash;aye, her eyes
+ were&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Eyes, my Pertinax&mdash;black eyes!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And gentle! By which same token, lord, she did give to me this token&mdash;this
+ most strange trinket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But all at once, was the creak of hinges, and the ponderous door opening,
+ Ranulph o' the Axe appeared, followed by divers of the warders bearing
+ torches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; sighed Ranulph, doleful of visage. &ldquo;Aha, good bawcocks, here come
+ I, and these my fellows, for love o' thee, good Fool, thy quips, thy
+ quirks, thy songs and antics capersome. For troth I'm a merry dog, I&mdash;a
+ wanton wag, a bully boy and jovial, though woeful o' look!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore woeful!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that I am not joyous, good Motley. Look 'ee&mdash;here's me born with
+ a rare, merry heart, but sad and sober of head! Here's a heart bubbling
+ with kindliness and soft and tender as sucking lamb, wedded to head and
+ face full o' gloom! Here's laughter within me and woe without me, so am I
+ ever at odds with myself&mdash;and there's my sorrow. Regarding the which
+ same I will now chaunt ye song I made on myself; 'twas meant for merry
+ song and blithe, but of itself turned mournful song anon as ye shall
+ hear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying, Ranulph o' the Axe threw back grim head and sang gruff, albeit
+ plaintive, thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O! merry I am and right merry I'll be,
+ Ho-ho for block, gibbet and rack&mdash;oho!
+ To hang or behead ye there's none like to me,
+ For I'm headsman, tormentor, and hangman, all three,
+ And never for work do I lack&mdash;oho!
+
+ &ldquo;I live but to torture since torment's my trade,
+ But my torment well meant is, I trow;
+ If I hang or behead ye, it can't be gainsaid,
+ Though my head for the head of a headsman was made,
+ Still I'm all loving-kindness below.
+
+ &ldquo;But if ever I strive merry story to tell,
+ Full of japeful and humorsome graces,
+ 'T is as though I were tolling a funeral bell
+ As if dismally, dolefully tolling a knell,
+ So solemn and sad grow all faces.
+
+ &ldquo;I hang, burn and torture the best that I may,
+ Ho pincers and thumbscrews and rack&mdash;oho!
+ And all heads I cut off in a headsmanlike way;
+ So I'll hang, burn and torment 'till cometh the day
+ That my kind heart within me shall crack&mdash;oho!
+ Well-a-wey! Well-a-wey!
+ Woe is me for the day
+ That my poor heart inside me shall crack! Oho!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So there's my song! 'T is dull song and, striving to be merry song, is
+ sad song, yet might be worse song, for I have heard a worse song, ere now&mdash;but
+ 't is poor song. So come, Fool, do thou sing us merry song to cheer us
+ 'gainst my sad song.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why truly, Sir Headsman,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;here be songs a-many, yet if
+ thou 'rt for songs, songs will we sing thee, each and every of us. But
+ first, behold here is money shall buy us wine in plenty that we may grow
+ merry withal in very sooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried Ranulph. &ldquo;Spoken like a noble Motley, a fair, sweet Fool! Go
+ thou, Bertram, obey this lord-like Fool&mdash;bring wine, good wine and
+ much, and haste thee, for night draweth on and at cock-crow I must away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; nodded Jocelyn, &ldquo;in the matter of one&mdash;Robin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, Fool. A cheery soul is Robin, though an outlaw, and well beloved
+ in Canalise. So is he to hang at cock-crow lest folk make disturbance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where lieth he now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where but in the watch-house beside the gallows 'neath Black Lewin's
+ charge. But come, good Motley, sing&mdash;a pretty song, a merry ditty,
+ ha!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So forthwith Jocelyn took his lute and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;With dainty ditty
+ Quaint and pretty
+ I will fit ye,
+ So heed and mark me well,
+ And who we be
+ That here ye see
+ Now unto ye
+ Explicit I will tell:
+
+ &ldquo;Then here first behold one Gurth, a worthy, dying
+ Dyer,
+ Since he by dyeing liveth, so to dye is his desire:
+ For being thus a very Dyer, he liveth but to dye,
+ And dyeing daily he doth all his daily wants
+ supply.
+ Full often hath he dyed ere now to earn his
+ daily bread,
+ Thus, dyeing not, this worthy Dyer must soon,
+ alas! be dead.
+
+ &ldquo;Here's Rick&mdash;a saintly ploughman, he
+ Hath guided plough so well,
+ That here, with rogues the like of me,
+ He pines in dungeon cell.
+
+ &ldquo;Here's Red-haired Will&mdash;O fie!
+ That Will should fettered lie
+ In such base, cruel manner!
+ For though his hair be red,
+ Brave Will, when all is said,
+ Is&mdash;hark 'ee&mdash;Will's a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough, Fool!&rdquo; cried Will. &ldquo;An thou must sing, sing of thyself, for
+ thyself, to thyself, and I will sing of myself an' need be!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laughed JOCELYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Why then, brave Will,
+ Come, sing thy fill.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon Will cleared his throat, squared his shoulders, and rumbling a
+ note or so to fix the key, burst into songful roar:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A tanner I, a lusty man,
+ A tanner men call Will,
+ And being tanner true, I tan,
+ Would I were tanning still;
+ Ho derry, derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ Would I were tanning still.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;And choked in thy vile tan-pit, for
+ scurvier song was never heard, par Dex!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why 'tis heard, forsooth,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;and might be heard a mile
+ hence! Chant on, brave Will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Tanner, nothing loth, wiped his mouth, clenched his fists and standing
+ square and rigid, continued:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;How gaily I a-tanning went,
+ No tanner blithe as I,
+ No tanner e'er so innocent,
+ Though here in chains I lie.
+ Ho derry down,
+ Hey derry down,
+ In grievous chains I lie.
+
+ &ldquo;No more, alack, poor Will will tan,
+ Since Will will, all unwilling,
+ Though tanner he and proper man,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.
+ Hey derry down,
+ Ho derry down,
+ A gloomy grave be filling.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now out upon thee, Tanner!&rdquo; sighed Ranulph. &ldquo;Here's sad song, a song o'
+ graves, and therefore most unlovely, a song I&mdash;Saints and Angels!&rdquo; he
+ gasped:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And pointed where Sir Pertinax did stand,
+ The Heart of Crystal shining in his hand.
+ &ldquo;The Heart-in-Heart! The Crystal Heart!&rdquo; cried he,
+ And crying thus, sank down on bended knee,
+ While jailers all and scurvy knaves, pell-mell,
+ Betook them to their marrow-bones as well;
+ Whereat Sir Pertinax oped wond'ring eyes,
+ And questioned him 'twixt anger and surprise.
+ Then answered Ranulph, &ldquo;Sir, though chained ye go,
+ Yet to thee we do all obedience owe
+ By reason of that sacred amulet,
+ That crystal heart in heart of crystal set:
+
+ 'For he that holdeth Crystal Heart
+ Holdeth all and every part,
+ And by night or eke by day
+ The Heart-in-Heart all must obey!&rdquo;'
+
+ &ldquo;Obey?&rdquo; quoth Pertinax. &ldquo;Ha! Let us see
+ If in thy vaunt there aught of virtue be:
+ For by this Heart of Crystal that I bear,
+ I charge ye loose the chains the Fool doth wear,
+ Then off with these accursèd gyves of mine,
+ Or&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ Ranulph to the warders gave a sign,
+ And they to work did go with such good speed,
+ That Joc'lyn soon with Pertinax stood freed,
+ &ldquo;Now by my halidome!&rdquo; quoth Pertinax,
+ &ldquo;This talisman methinks no magic lacks,
+ So knaves, I bid ye&mdash;by this magic Heart,
+ Draw bolt and bar that hence we may depart&mdash;&rdquo;
+ But now the scurvy knaves made dismal cry.
+ &ldquo;Good sir!&rdquo; they wailed, &ldquo;Ah, leave us not to die!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Aye, by Heav'n's light!&rdquo; fierce quoth Sir Pertinax,
+ &ldquo;Ye're better dead by gibbet or by axe,
+ Since naught but scurvy, coward rogues are ye,
+ And so be hanged&mdash;be hanged to ye, all three!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Knight!&rdquo; Joc'lyn sighed, &ldquo;'neath Heaven's light
+ somewhere
+ Doth live a dark-eyed maid with black-curled hair&mdash;
+ Her voice is soft and full of sweet allure,
+ And thou, perchance, one day may humbly woo her;
+ So these poor rogues now woo their lives of thee,
+ Show mercy then and mercy find of she.&rdquo;
+
+ At this Sir Pertinax rubbed chin and frowned,
+ Red grew his cheek, his fierce eyes sought the ground,
+ Then, even as he thus pinched chin and scowled,
+ &ldquo;Loose, then, the dismal knaves!&rdquo; at last he
+ growled.
+ But now grim Ranulph tangled beard tore
+ And wrung his hands and sighed and groaned and
+ swore
+ With loud complaints and woeful lamentations,
+ With muttered oaths and murmured objurgations,
+ With curses dire and impious imprecations.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beshrew me, masters all!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Now here's ill prank to play a poor
+ hangman, may I ne'er quaff good liquor more, let me languish o' the
+ quartern ague and die o' the doleful dumps if I ever saw the like o' this!
+ For look 'ee now, if I set these three rogues free, how may I hang 'em as
+ hang 'em I must, since I by hanging live to hang again, and if I don't
+ hang 'em whom shall I hang since hang I must, I being hangman? Bethink ye
+ o' this, sirs, and show a little pity to a poor hangman.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, mark ye this, hangman,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;since on hanging doth
+ thy hangman's reputation hang, then hang thou must; therefore, an ye lack
+ rogue to hang, go hang thyself, so, hanging, shall thy hanging be done
+ with and thou having lived a hangman, hangman die, thus, hangman hanging
+ hangman, hangman hanging shall be hangman still, and being still, thus
+ hanging, shall hang no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;there it is in a nutshell&mdash;hangman,
+ be hanged to thee! So off with their fetters, Master Gallows, by Crystal
+ Heart I charge thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon the scurvy knaves were freed, to their great joy, and following
+ the bold knight, made haste to quit their gloomy dungeon. Reaching the
+ guardroom above, Sir Pertinax called lustily for sword and bascinet, and
+ thereafter chose divers likely weapons for his companions who, with axe
+ and pike and guisarme on shoulder, followed him out into the free air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it was night and very dark, but Gurth, who was a man of the town,
+ brought them by dim and lonely alleys and crooked ways until at last they
+ halted within a certain dark and narrow street.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither now?&rdquo; questioned Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;where but to the gatehouse&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; muttered Gurth, &ldquo;'tis overly well guarded&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; growled Will, &ldquo;which is true, as I'm a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howbeit,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;I'm for the gatehouse!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore?&rdquo; demanded Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In cause of one Rob, a robber.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but,&rdquo; said Gurth, &ldquo;he is to hang at crow-o'-cock and 'tis nigh
+ cock-crow now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The more need for haste,&rdquo; said Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But, even now, as they together spoke,
+ A sullen tramp the sleeping echoes woke,
+ Behind them in the gloom dim forms they saw,
+ While others grimly barred the way before;
+ And so, by reason that they could not fly,
+ They grasped their weapons and prepared to die.
+ Then in the darkness of that narrow street,
+ Broad axe and pike and flashing sword did meet.
+ Duke Jocelyn full many a thrust drave home,
+ Till whirling pike-staff smote him on cock's-comb,
+ And staggering back to an adjacent wall,
+ In deep-sunk doorway groaning he did fall.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Now, father, please don't let him die&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: No, no, indeed, my Gill, not I,
+ My heroes take a lot of killing&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Then go on quick, it's very thrilling!
+ I hope he vanquishes his foes,
+ And let him do it, please, in prose.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O woe!&rdquo; said a quavering voice. &ldquo;Alack, and well-a-wey&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN demurreth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: No, father&mdash;that's not right at all.
+ You'd got to where you'd made him fall.
+
+ MYSELF: Well, then, Duke Joc'lyn, from his swoon awaking,
+ Found that his head confoundedly was aching;
+ Found he was bruised all down from top to toe&mdash;
+
+ GILL: A bruise, father, and he a duke? No, no!
+ Besides, you make
+ A frightful mistake&mdash;
+ A hero's head should never ache;
+ And, father, now, whoever knew
+ A hero beaten black and blue?
+ And then a bruise, it seems to me,
+ Is unromantic as can be.
+ He can't be bruised,
+ And shan't be bruised,
+ For, if you bruise him,
+ And ill-use him,
+ I'll refuse him&mdash;
+ No reader, I am sure, would choose
+ A hero any one can bruise.
+ So, father, if you want him read,
+ Don't bruise him, please&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Enough is said!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ At this, Jocelyn sat up and wondered to find himself in a small chamber
+ dim-lit by a smoking cresset. On one side of him leaned an ancient woman,
+ a very hag-like dame
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With long, sharp nose that downward curved as though
+ It fain would, beak-like, peck sharp chin below;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ and upon his other side a young damsel of a wondrous dark beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;where am I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hush, poor Motley!&rdquo; whispered the maid. &ldquo;Thou didst fall 'gainst the door
+ yonder. But speak low, they that seek thy life may yet be nigh.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, reaching for his sword, &ldquo;I must out and aid my
+ comrades.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; sighed the old woman. &ldquo;Thy comrades do without lie all slain save
+ one that groaneth&mdash;hearken!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, woe!&rdquo; mourned a quavering voice beyond the door. &ldquo;O, woe, sore hurted
+ I be, and like to die&mdash;and I a tanner!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Very heedfully, Jocelyn unbarred the door, and peering into the narrow
+ street, found it deserted and empty save for certain outstretched forms
+ that stirred not; looking down on these dim shapes he knew one for Rick
+ the Ploughman, whose ploughing days were sped and, huddled in a corner
+ hard by, he found Will the Tanner, who groaned fitfully; but of Sir
+ Pertinax and Gurth he saw nothing. So Jocelyn made shift to bear the
+ Tanner within the house, and here Will, finding his hurts of small
+ account, sat up, and while the wise old woman bandaged his wound, answered
+ Jocelyn's eager questions, and told how Sir Pertinax and Gurth the Dyer
+ had broken through their assailants and made good their escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, when the old woman had thus cherished their hurts, Jocelyn would fain
+ have given her money, but she mumbled and mowed and cracked her
+ finger-joints and shook grey head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, good Fool!&rdquo; she croaked, &ldquo;for I do know thee for that same gentle
+ Motley did save me from Black Lewin&mdash;a murrain seize him! So now will
+ I save thee&mdash;behold!&rdquo; So saying she set bony hand to wall; and lo! in
+ the wall yawned a square opening narrow and dark, whence issued a cold
+ wind. &ldquo;Begone, thou brave merryman!&rdquo; quoth she. &ldquo;Yonder safety lieth; this
+ darksome way shall carry thee out beneath the city wall!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, thou kindly Witch!&rdquo; said Jocelyn. &ldquo;Yet first must I to the
+ watch-house beside the gate for one Robin that lieth 'prisoned there.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, Fool, dost mean Robin-a-Green that is to hang?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In truth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Rob o' the Green is outlawed, banned o' Church, a very rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But a man, wherefore I would save him alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool, o' thy folly be wise and seek ye safety instead. Would'st
+ peril thy body for a thief?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, dame, even as I did for a Witch.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, here the old woman scowled and mumbled and cracked her finger-bones
+ angrily. But the beauteous young maid viewed Jocelyn with bright,
+ approving eyes:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, Fool,&rdquo; cried she, &ldquo;O wondrous Fool, wilt adventure thyself in cause
+ so desperate?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blithely, fair lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, alas! the guards be many and thou but one&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay!&rdquo; cried a voice:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For thou may'st see
+ That two are we!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ And forth of the dark opening in the wall strode Lobkyn Lollo the Dwarf,
+ his great, spiked club on brawny shoulder. Jocelyn viewed the monstrous
+ little man in awed wonder; but beholding his mighty girth and determined
+ aspect, wonder changed to kindliness; quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair greeting, comrade! If thou'rt for a little bickering and disputation
+ with that goodly club o' thine, come thy ways for methinks I do smell the
+ dawn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, thou naughty little one!&rdquo; cried the Witch, shaking bony fist. &ldquo;Art
+ for fighting for rogue's life along of a Fool, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth LOBKYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Aye, grannam, though ye slap me, still,
+ Fight and aid this Fool I will&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And talking o' Will,&rdquo; quoth Will, &ldquo;what o' me, for though I'm a tanner
+ I'm a man, aye, verily, as I'm a tanner.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And methinks a better man than tanner!&rdquo; said Jocelyn. &ldquo;So here we stand
+ three goodly wights and well armed. Let's away&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, wild Madcap,&rdquo; croaked the Witch, &ldquo;an my Lobkyn go I go, and,
+ though I be old and feeble, shalt find my craft more potent than sword or
+ club&mdash;wait!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the old woman, opening a dingy cupboard, took thence a small crock
+ over which she muttered spells and incantations with look and gesture so
+ evil that Lobkyn eyed her askance, Will the Tanner cowered and whispered
+ fragments of prayers, and even Jocelyn crossed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; croaked the Witch. &ldquo;Now do I go to save rogue from gallows for
+ sake of thee, tall Fool. Come ye, come and do as I bid ye in all things&mdash;come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0008" id="link2H_4_0008"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 6
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tells how for Robin a good fight was fought
+ And our old Witch a spell mysterious wrought.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Phoebus, the young and gladsome god of day,
+ His fiery steeds had yoked to flaming car
+ (By which, my Gill, you may surmise
+ The sun was just about to rise)
+ And that be-feathered, crook-billed harbinger,
+ The rosy-wattled herald of the dawn,
+ Red comb aflaunt, bold-eyed and spurred for strife,
+ Brave Chanticleer, his strident summons raised
+ (By which fine phrase I'd have you know,
+ The cock had just begun to crow)
+ And gentle Zephyr, child of Boreas,
+ Stole soft the hush of dewy leaves,
+ And passing kissed the flowers to wakefulness.
+ Thus, laden with their sweetness, Zephyr came
+ O'er hill and dale, o'er battlement and wall,
+ Into the sleeping town of Canalise,
+ Through open lattice and through prison-bars,
+ To kiss the cheek of sleeping Innocence
+ And fevered brows of prisoners forlorn,
+ Who, stirring 'neath sweet Zephyr's soft caress,
+ Dreamed themselves young, with all their sins unwrought.
+ So, gentle Zephyr, messenger of dawn,
+ Fresh as the day-spring, of earth redolent,
+ Through narrow loophole into dungeon stole,
+ Where Robin the bold outlaw fettered lay,
+ Who, sighing, woke to feel her fragrant kiss,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And, breathing in this perfume-laden air,
+ He seemed to smell those thousand woodland scents
+ He oft had known, yet, knowing, never heeded:
+ Of lofty bracken, golden in the sun,
+ Of dewy violets shy that bloomed dim-seen
+ Beside some merry-laughing, woodland brook
+ Which, bubbling, with soft music filled the air;
+ The fragrant reek of smouldering camp-fire
+ Aglow beside some dark, sequestered pool
+ Whose placid waters a dim mirror made
+ To hold the glister of some lonely star;
+ He seemed to see again in sunny glade
+ The silky coats of yellow-dappled deer,
+ With branching antlers gallantly upborne;
+ To hear the twang of bow, the whizz of shaft,
+ And cheery sound of distant-winded horn.
+ Of this and more than this, bold Robin thought,
+ And, in his dungeon's gloomy solitude,
+ He groaned full deep and, since no eye could see,
+ Shed bitter tears.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN supplicateth:
+
+ GILL: Poor Robin! Father, promise me
+ To save him from the gallows-tree.
+ He's much too nice a man to kill;
+ So save him, father; say you will!
+
+ MYSELF: But think of poor Ranulph with no one to hang!
+
+ GILL: Ranulph's song was top-hole, but&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: You know I hate slang&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Yes, father&mdash;but then I hate Ranulph much more,
+ With his nasty great beard that in tangles he wore.
+ So, father, if you must have some one to slay,
+ Instead of poor Robin, hang Ranulph&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Why, pray?
+
+ GILL: In nice books the nasty folks only should die;
+ Those are the kind of books nice people buy.
+ I like a book that makes me glad,
+ And loathe a book that makes me sad;
+ So, as this Geste is made for me,
+ Make it as happy as can be.
+
+ MYSELF: And is it, so far, as you'd wish?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, though it's rather swish,
+ I think it needs a deal more love&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Swish? How&mdash;what's this? Great heavens
+ above!
+ Will you, pray, miss, explain to me
+ How any story &ldquo;swish&rdquo; may be?
+ And why, my daughter, you must choose
+ A frightful word like &ldquo;swish&rdquo; to use?
+ What hideous language are you talking?
+
+ GILL: Sorrow, father! &ldquo;Swish&rdquo; means &ldquo;corking.&rdquo;
+ I think our Geste is &ldquo;out of sight,&rdquo;
+ Except that, to please me, you might
+ Put in more love&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Now, how can Joc'lyn go love-making
+ When his head is sore and aching?
+ Besides, this is no place to woo;
+ He'll love-make when I want him to.
+
+ GILL: But, father, think&mdash;in all this time,
+ In all this blank-verse, prose and rhyme,
+ The fair Yolande he's never kissed,
+ And you've done nothing to assist;
+ And, as I'm sure they're both inclined,
+ I think your treatment most unkind.
+
+ MYSELF: This Geste I'll write in my own way,
+ That is, sweet Prattler, if I may;
+ When I'm ready for them to kiss,
+ Then kiss they shall; I promise this.
+ Now I'll to Rob return, if you,
+ My Gillian, will permit me to!
+
+ Thus in his prison pent, poor woeful Rob,
+ Since none might see or hear, scorned not to sob,
+ And mightily, in stricken heart, did grieve
+ That he so soon so fair a world must leave.
+ And all because the morning wind had brought
+ Earth's dewy fragrance with sweet mem'ries fraught.
+ So Robin wept nor sought his grief to stay,
+ Yearning amain for joys of yesterday;
+ Till, hearing nigh the warder's heavy tread,
+ He sobbed no more but strove to sing instead.
+
+ &ldquo;A bow for me, a bow for me,
+ All underneath the greenwood tree,
+ Where slaves are men, and men are free;
+ Give me a bow!
+
+ &ldquo;Give me a bow, a bow of yew,
+ Good hempen cord and arrows true,
+ When foes be thick and friends be few,
+ Give me a bow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus cheerily sang Robin the while he dried his bitter tears, as the door
+ of his prison was flung wide and Black Lewin strode in and with him
+ men-at-arms bearing torches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What ho, rogue Robin!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;The cock hath crowed. Ha! Will ye sing,
+ knave, will ye sing, in faith?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In faith, that will I!&rdquo; laughed Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here come we to bring ye to the gallows, Robin&mdash;how say ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The more reason for singing since my singing must soon be done!&rdquo; So, with
+ pikemen before him and behind, bold Robin marched forth to die, yet sang
+ full blithely as he went:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;So lay my bones 'neath good yew-tree,
+ Thus Rob and yew soon one shall be,
+ Where all true men may find o' we
+ A trusty bow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha' done!&rdquo; growled Black Lewin, shivering in the chilly air of dawn.
+ &ldquo;Quit&mdash;quit thy singing, rogue, or by the foul fiend I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who dareth name the fiend?&rdquo; croaked an awful voice, whereat Black Lewin
+ halted, gaped and stood a-tremble, while beneath steel cap and bascinet
+ all men's hair stirred and rose with horror; for before them was a ghastly
+ shape, a shape that crouched in the gloom with dreadful face aflame with
+ smouldering green fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe!&rdquo; cried the voice. &ldquo;Woe unto thee, Lewin the Black, that calleth on
+ fiend o' the pit!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now came a fiery hand that, hovering in the air, pointed lambent
+ finger at gaping Lewin and at each of the shivering pike-men in turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe&mdash;sorrow and woe to one and all, ye men of blood, plague and
+ pest, pain o' flesh, and grief of soul seize ye, be accursed and so&mdash;begone!
+ Hence ho&mdash;away!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Rommani hi! Avaunt, I say,
+ Prendraxon!
+ Thus direst curse on ye I lay
+ Shall make flesh shrink and bone decay,
+ To rot and rot by night and day
+ Till flesh and bone do fall away,
+ Mud unto mud and clay to clay.
+ A spell I cast,
+ Shall all men blast.
+ Hark ye,
+ Mark ye,
+ Rommani hi&mdash;prendraxon!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Down fell pike and guisarme from nerveless fingers and, gasping with fear,
+ Black Lewin and his fellows turned and fled nor stayed for one look
+ behind; only Robin stood there (since he might not run away by reason of
+ his bonds) babbling prayers between chattering teeth and with all his
+ fingers crossed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, Fool, aha!&rdquo; cried the voice. &ldquo;Thus have I, a poor, feeble old woman,
+ wrought better than all thy valiance or Lobkyn's strength. So, by potency
+ of my spells and magic are we quits, thou and I. Bring, then, thy rogue
+ outlaw and haste ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying the old Witch muffled her awful, fiery face in ragged mantle and
+ turned away; and in that moment Robin was aware of three forms about him
+ in the grey dawn-light, felt his bonds loosed off by quick, strong hands
+ and drew a great, joyous breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, Fool, thou brave and noble Motley,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;is it thou again? And
+ I to live?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, marry, Robin! But come apace, the day breaketh and the city is astir&mdash;hark
+ to yon shouts! Follow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So with the Tanner on one side and Lobkyn on the other, Robin ran, hard on
+ Jocelyn's heels; and ever the dawn brightened until up came the sun
+ chasing away sullen shadow and filling street and alley with his glory.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now, and just as they reached that narrow street where safety lay,
+ they heard a shout, a scream, a rush of feet and roar of fierce voices and
+ beheld, amid a surge of armed men, the old woman struggling in the cruel
+ grip of Black Lewin who (like many others I wot of, my Gill) was brave
+ enough by daylight. Vainly the old creature strove, screaming for mercy as
+ Black Lewin whirled aloft his sword; but his blade clashed upon another as
+ Jocelyn sprang, and for a while the air rang with the sound of fierce-
+ smiting steel until, throwing up his arms, Black Lewin fell and lay there.
+ But, roaring vengeance, the soldiery closed about Jocelyn who, beset by
+ blows on every side, sank in turn, yet, even as he fell, two short though
+ mighty legs bestrode his prostrate form and Lobkyn Lollo, whirling huge
+ club, smote down the foremost assailant and, ever as he smote, he
+ versified and chanted&mdash;thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I'm Lollo hight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I,
+ I'm Lollo hight,
+ 'Tis my delight
+ By day or night
+ In honest fight
+ With main and might
+ Good blows to smite,
+ And where they light
+ 'Tis sorry plight
+ For that poor wight,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+
+ &ldquo;Bows, swords and staves,
+ Come, lusty knaves,
+ And fit for graves
+ Brave Lobkyn soon will make ye;
+ So fight, say I,
+ Nor turn and fly,
+ Or, when ye die,
+ Then may old Horny take ye.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Fierce raged the conflict, but in that narrow street they made good play
+ against their many assailants, the valiant Dwarf's mighty club, backed by
+ the Tanner's darting pike and Robin's flashing sword, which he had
+ snatched from a loosened grasp. But Jocelyn lay prone upon his face,
+ between Lobkyn's firm-planted feet, and stirred not. So club whirled,
+ sword flashed and pike darted while, high above the tumult, rose Lobkyn's
+ fierce chant:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hot blood I quaff,
+ At death I laugh,
+ Brave Lobkyn Lollo, I.
+ Come all that may,
+ And all I'll slay,
+ And teach ye how to die.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lob&mdash;Lobkyn!&rdquo; screamed the Witch. &ldquo;Thou that drinkest nought but
+ milk&mdash;talk not of blood, thou naughty poppet. Back now&mdash;stand
+ back, I do command thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lobkyn smote a man to earth and, sighing regretful, stepped aside.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Back!&rdquo; screamed the Witch. &ldquo;Stand back, I say, all three,
+ And leave this wicked rabblement to me.
+ Now shall they learn the terror of my curse,
+ Black magic shall they feel&mdash;and something worse!&rdquo;
+
+ Then uttered she a sudden, hideous cry,
+ And, leaping, whirled her bony hands on high,
+ And lo! a choking dust-cloud filled the air;
+ That wreathed in whirling eddies here and there.
+
+ &ldquo;Perendewix!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Oh Radzywin&mdash;
+ Thraxa! Behold, my witchcraft doth begin!&rdquo;
+ Back shrank their foes, back reeled they one and all,
+ They choked, they gasped, they let their weapons fall;
+ And some did groan, and some did fiercely sneeze,
+ And some fell prone, some writhed upon their knees;
+ Some strove to wipe the tears from blinded eyes,
+ But one and all gave voice to awful cries.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come!&rdquo; cried the Witch, &ldquo;to the door&mdash;the door. Lobkyn, bear ye the
+ brave Fool&mdash;and tenderly! Haste, naughty bantling, haste&mdash;I hear
+ the tread of more soldiers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Lobkyn stooped and, lifting Jocelyn's inanimate form, tucked it beneath
+ one arm, and with Robin and Will the Tanner, followed the old Witch into
+ the house.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN commandeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: Go on, father, do; why will you keep stopping?
+ I think the old Witch is just perfectly topping.
+ And what frightful words she uses for curses!
+
+ MYSELF: Very frightful, indeed, though your slang still much worse is,
+ With your &ldquo;topping,&rdquo; &ldquo;top-holing,&rdquo; your &ldquo;swishing&rdquo; and &ldquo;clipping,&rdquo;
+
+ GILL: Well, I merely intended to say it was ripping;
+ But, if you object to my praises&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I only object to your phrases,
+ For there's no author but will own
+ He &ldquo;liveth not by bread alone.&rdquo;
+ As for myself, if what I write
+ Doth please&mdash;then praise with all your might.
+
+ GILL: Well, then, the Witch is splendid, though
+ I'm very curious to know
+ Just how her face all fiery grew,
+ And what the stuff was that she threw&mdash;
+ The stuff that made the soldiers sneeze
+ And brought them choking to their knees
+ It sounds as though it might be snuff.
+
+ MYSELF: My dear, they'd not found out such stuff.
+ But grisly witches long ago
+ Did many strange devices know.
+ Indeed, my Gill, they knew much more
+ Than wise folk gave them credit for.
+
+ GILL: Well, what was it? You haven't said.
+
+ MYSELF: I'll get on with our Geste instead.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0009" id="link2H_4_0009"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 7
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That telleth to the patient reader nought,
+ Save how the Duke was to the wild-wood brought.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With sleepy eyes Duke Jocelyn watched afar,
+ In deep, blue void a solitary star,
+ That, like some bright and wakeful eye, did seem
+ To watch him where he lay 'twixt sleep and dream.
+ And, as he viewed it winking high above,
+ He needs must think of Yolande and his love,
+ And how, while he this twinkling star did view,
+ She, wakeful lying, might behold it too,
+ Whereas she lay a spotless maid and fair,
+ Clothed in the red-gold glory of her hair;
+ And, thinking thus, needs must he fondly sigh,
+ Then frowned to hear a lusty snore hard by&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &mdash;and looking whence came this sound, the Duke sat up and his wonder
+ grew; for by light of a fire that glowed in a blackened fissure of rock he
+ beheld himself couched on a bed of bracken within a roomy cave. Beside the
+ fire leaned a mighty, iron-shod club, and beyond this, curled up like a
+ dog, snored Lobkyn Lollo, the Dwarf. Hereupon Jocelyn reached out and
+ shook Lob to wakefulness, who grunted sleepily, rubbed his eyes drowsily
+ and yawned mightily:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Quoth JOCELYN: Good Dwarf, where am I?
+
+ Answered LOBKYN:
+ Safe, Fool, safe art thou, I trow,
+ Where none but Lob and friends do know.
+
+ JOCELYN: But how am I hither?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, truly thou art hither, Fool,
+ Because thou art not thither, Fool!
+ In these two arms, thy life to save,
+ I bore thee to this goodly cave.
+
+ JOCELYN: How may one of thy inches bear man of mine so far?
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, though I of inches lack,
+ I'm mighty strong, both arm and back,
+ Thou that art longer man than me,
+ Yet I am stronger man than thee,
+ Though, lusty Fool, big fool you be,
+ I'd bear thee, Fool, if thou wert three.
+ And mark, Fool, if my grammar seemeth weak,
+ Pray license it since I in verse must speak.
+
+ JOCELYN: And pray why must thou speak in verse?
+
+ LOBKYN: Nature hath on me laid this curse,
+ And, though to speak plain prose I yearn,
+ My prose to verse doth ever turn.
+ Therefore I grieve, as well I might,
+ Because of my poetic plight&mdash;
+ Though bards and rhymers all I scorn,
+ Alack! I was a rhymer born.
+
+ JOCELYN: Alack! poor Dwarf, as thou must versify,
+ By way of courtesy, then, so will I.
+
+ LOBKYN: How, Fool, then canst thou rhyme?
+
+ JOCELYN: Aye, Dwarf, at any time!
+ In dark, in light,
+ By day, by night,
+ Standing, sitting,
+ As be fitting,
+ Verses witty,
+ Quaint or pretty,
+ Incontinent I'll find.
+ Verses glad, Dwarf,
+ Verses sad, Dwarf,
+ Every sort, Lob,
+ Long or short, Lob
+ Or verses ill,
+ Yet verses still
+ Which might be worse,
+ I can rehearse
+ When I'm for verse inclined.
+ So, Lob, first speak me what became
+ Of our old Witch, that potent dame.
+
+ LOBKYN: Why, Fool, in faith she wrought so well
+ With direful curse and blasting spell
+ That every howling soldier-knave,
+ Every rogue and base-born slave
+ That by chance I did not slay,
+ From my grand-dam ran away.
+
+ JOCELYN: A noble Witch! Now, Lobkyn, tell
+ What hap'd when in the fight I fell,
+ And how alive I chance to be.
+
+ LOBKYN: Fool, I was there to succour thee.
+ I smote those pike-men hip and thigh,
+ That they did mangled pike-men lie;
+ Their arms, their legs, their skulls I broke,
+ Two, three, and four at every stroke.
+ I drave them here, I smote them there,
+ I smote, I slew, I none did spare,
+ I laughed, I sang, I&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Lob!&rdquo; growled a sleepy voice. &ldquo;Now, as I'm a tanner, here's a-many
+ I's! By Saint Crispin, meseemeth thou'rt all I's&mdash;for as thou fought
+ I fought, or thought I fought, forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOBKYN: True, Will, did'st fight in goodly manner,
+ Though fightedst, Will, like any tanner;
+ But I did fight, or I'm forsworn,
+ Like one unto the manner born.
+ I fought, forsooth, with such good will,
+ 'Tis marvel I'm not fighting still.
+ And so I should be, by my fay,
+ An I had any left to slay;
+ But since I slew them all&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold there!&rdquo; cried the Tanner. &ldquo;I slew one or two, Lob, and Robin
+ likewise. Thou'rt a lusty fighter, but what o' me and Robin&mdash;ha, what
+ o' we?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOBKYN: In faith, ye're proper men and tall,
+ And I'm squat man, my stature small,
+ Nath'less, though small and squat I be,
+ I am the best man of the three.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, as to that,&rdquo; quoth the Tanner, &ldquo;'tis but you says so! As to me I
+ think what I will, and I do think&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here Lobkyn started up and seized the great club; quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hark and mark,
+ Heard ye nought there i' the dark?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I!&rdquo; answered Will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methought I heard an owl hoot,&rdquo; said Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; nodded Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool, and yet this owl I 'll swear,
+ Hath ne'er a feather anywhere.
+ This owl hath ne'er a wing to fly,
+ But goes afoot like thou and I.
+ Now mark,
+ And hark!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon the Dwarf laid finger to lip and uttered an owl-cry so dismal, so
+ tremulous and withal so true to nature that it was wonder to hear.
+ Instantly, from the dimness beyond the cavern-mouth, the cry was repeated,
+ and presently was heard a panting and 'plaining, a snuffling and a
+ shuffling, and into the light of the fire hobbled the old Witch. Beholding
+ Jocelyn sitting cross-legged on his couch of fern, she paused and, leaning
+ on her crooked stick, viewed him with her wise, old eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, Motley!&rdquo; she croaked. &ldquo;Oho, thou flaunting jackanapes, didst peril
+ thy foolish flesh for me that am poor and old and feeble, and cursed by
+ all for witchcraft! So have I with my potions ministered to thee in thy
+ sickness, and behold thou'rt alive, hale and strong again. Give me thy
+ hand! Aha, here's cool, unfevered blood! Show me thy tongue. Oho! Aha! A
+ little sup o' my black decoction&mdash;roots gathered at full o' moon&mdash;a
+ little sup and shall be thyself by to-morrow's dawn. But&mdash;as for
+ thee, thou good-for-naught, thou wicked elf&mdash;aha! would'st dare leave
+ thy poor old grannam weak and 'fenceless? Give me thy rogue-ear!&rdquo;
+ Obediently, the mighty Dwarf arose and sighfully suffered the old woman to
+ grasp him by the ear and to tweak and wring and twist it as she would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What dost thou here i' the wild-wood, thou imp, thou poppet o' plagues,
+ thou naughty wap-de-staldees?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To which Lobkyn, writhing and watering at the eyes, answered thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Stay, prithee grannam, loose thy hold!
+ I would but be an outlaw bold,
+ An outlaw fierce that men shall fear&mdash;
+ Beseech thee, grand-dam, loose mine ear!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An outlaw, naughty one!&rdquo; screeched the Witch, tweaking ear the harder.
+ &ldquo;Dare ye tell me so, elf?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ LOBKIN: Aye, grand-dam&mdash;cuff me an ye will,
+ Nath'less an outlaw I'll be still,
+ And many a wicked rogue I'll kill&mdash;
+ O grand-dam, loose mine ear!
+ And day and night I'll slay until
+ All rogues my name do fear.
+
+ For grand-dam, I'm a fighter&mdash;O,
+ Beseech thee, let my ear go!
+ And bones shall crack and blood shall flow,
+ If any dare resist me.
+ And all the world my name shall know,
+ Pray by the ear don't twist me!
+
+ All men before my club shall fly,
+ All on their knees shall &ldquo;mercy&rdquo; cry,
+ Or mangled in their gore shall lie&mdash;
+ Ah, grand-dam, pray don't clout me!
+ Don't beat me, grannam dear, but try
+ To do awhile without me&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Without thee, thou piece o' naughtiness?&rdquo; screamed the old woman. &ldquo;Now
+ will I lay my stick about thee&mdash;hold still, Rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying which, she proceeded to belabour the poor Dwarf with her knotted
+ stick, clutching him fast by his ear the while. Thus she be-thwacked him
+ soundly until he roared for mercy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, how now&mdash;how now?&rdquo; cried a merry voice, and Robin strode into
+ the firelight. &ldquo;Gentle Witch, sweet dame,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;what do ye with poor
+ Lob?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thwack him shrewdly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which is, Witch, that which none but witch the like o' thee might do, for
+ lustier fighter and mightier dwarf never was. Thus, but for thy witch-like
+ witcheries, the which, Witch, witch do prove thee, but for this and the
+ power and potency of thy spells, now might he crack out thy life 'twixt
+ finger and thumb&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, forest-rogue, 'tis a bad brat, a very naughty elf would run off into
+ the wild to be rogue like thee&mdash;an outlaw, forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth, Witch,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;outlaw is he in very truth, in sooth
+ and by my troth! Outlaw is Lob, banned by Church and Council of Ten, and
+ so proclaimed i' the market square of Canalise this very morn by sound o'
+ trumpet and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How? How?&rdquo; cried the old woman, wringing her trembling hands. &ldquo;My Lobkyn
+ outlawed? My babe, my lovely brat, my pretty bantling, woe and alas! My
+ dear ugly one an outlaw?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, marry is he, Witch, outlaw proclaimed, acclaimed, announced,
+ pronounced and denounced; as such described, ascribed and proscribed by
+ Master Gregory Bax, the port-reeve, for the late slaying and maiming of
+ divers of the city guard. So outlaw is Lobkyn, his life henceforth forfeit
+ even as mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lobkyn an hairy outlaw i' the wild-wood! Out alas! And what of his
+ poor old grannam? What o' me&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content thee, sweet hag, since thou'rt outlawed along with him and, as
+ witch, doomed to die unpleasantly by fire and flame and faggot, if thou'rt
+ caught.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack! Wala-wa! Woe 's me!&rdquo; groaned the Witch, cracking her finger-bones.
+ &ldquo;And all this by reason o' the Fool yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, the Fool is dubbed outlaw likewise, Witch,&rdquo; quoth Robin. &ldquo;Outlaw is
+ he along o' thee and Tanner Will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And all by reason that this Fool must needs peril our lives for sake of
+ rogue-outlaw, of forest-robber, of knavish woodland-lurker&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hight Robin!&rdquo; laughed Robin, leaning on his long bow-stave. &ldquo;Now, this
+ brave Fool having saved Robin his life, Witch, the which, Witch, was good
+ thing for Robin, our Fool next saved thee, Witch, which was nought to
+ Robin, in the which, Witch, Robin did not joy; for thou, old Witch, being
+ witch, art therefore full o' witcheries which be apt to be-devil a man and
+ fright his reason, for the which reason, being reasonable man, I reason,
+ for this reason, that, so reasoning, I love thee not. But thou art old,
+ Witch, which is good reason to reasonably reason thou art wise, Witch,
+ and, being wise, I on this wise would seek counsel of thy wisdom, Witch.
+ Imprimis, then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; commanded the Witch; &ldquo;here's a whirl o' windy wind! Hast more of
+ such-like, forester?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Some little, Witch, which I will now, Witch&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then, Robin-a-Green, suffer me to rest my old bones whiles thy mill
+ clacks.&rdquo; Hereupon the old Witch seated herself beside the fire, with bony
+ knees up-drawn to bony chin. &ldquo;Speak, outlaw Robin,&rdquo; she croaked, blinking
+ her red eyes, &ldquo;and speak ye plain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, wise Witch, look 'ee: since we be outlaws each and every, with
+ all men's hands against us, with none to succour, and death watchful for
+ us, 'tis plain, and very plain, we, for our harbourage and defence, must
+ in the wild-wood bide&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho!&rdquo; cried Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;It soundeth good,
+ The brave wild-wood,
+ Where flowers do spring
+ And birds do sing.
+ To slay the deer
+ And make good cheer,
+ With mead and beer,
+ The livelong year,
+ And&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Roar not, toad!&rdquo; cried the Witch. &ldquo;Say on&mdash;Rogue-Robin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, mark me, good Witch, here's where buskin chafeth! Not long since I
+ ruled i' the wild-wood, a very king, with ten-score lusty outlaw-rogues to
+ do my will. To-day is there never an one, and for this reasonable reason&mdash;to
+ wit, I am hanged, and, being hanged, am dead, and, being dead, am not, and
+ thus Robin is nobody; and yet again, perceive me, Witch, being Robin, I am
+ therefore somebody; thus is nobody somebody, and yet somebody that nobody
+ will believe anybody. The which, Witch, is a parlous case, methinks, for
+ here am I, somebody, nobody and Robin altogether and at the same time;
+ therefore, Witch, o' thy witchful wisdom&mdash;who am I, what and which,
+ Witch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here the Witch blinked and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones one after
+ another. Quoth she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For thy first, thou'rt thyself; for the second, a rogue; and for the
+ third, a wind-bag. I would thy second might tie up thy first in thy
+ third.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So should Robin choke Robin with Robin. But hark 'ee again, good, patient
+ dame. It seemeth that Ranulph the executioner betaketh him at cock-crow to
+ hang poor me; but, finding me not, made great outcry, insomuch that the
+ city guard, such as mighty Lob and Will had left alive, sought counsel
+ together; and taking one of their slain fellows, Ranulph hanged him in my
+ stead, and there he hangeth now, above the city gate, his face so marred
+ that he might be me or any other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, Robin&mdash;well?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This day, at sunset, came I unto the trysting-oak, and by blast of horn
+ summoned me my outlaw company. They came apace and in great wonderment,
+ for, seeing me, they fell to great awe and dread, thinking me dead, since
+ many had seen my body a-dangle on the gallows; wherefore, seeing me
+ manifestly alive, they took me for ghoulish ghost 'stead o' good flesh and
+ blood, and fled from me amain. So, by reason of my dead body, that is no
+ body o' mine, yet that nobody will believe is no body o' mine, they
+ believe that this my body is yet no body, but a phantom; the which is out
+ of reason; yet thus unreasonably do the rogues reason by reason of the
+ body that hangeth in place of my body above the city gate. Wherefore I
+ reason there is yet reason in their unreason, seeing this body was
+ somebody, yet no body o' mine, but which nobody among them can swear to.
+ Which, Witch, is a matter which none but wise witch may counsel me in. How
+ say'st thou, Witch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But for a while the old Witch scowled on the fire, bony chin on bony
+ knees, and dreamily cracked her finger-joints.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; she cried suddenly. &ldquo;Aha&mdash;a body that nobody's is, yet body
+ that everybody knoweth for body o' thine&mdash;aha! So must nobody know
+ that nobody's body is not thy body. Dost see my meaning, Robin-a-Green?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No whit, Witch! Thou growest involved, thy talk diffuse, abstruse and
+ altogether beyond one so obtuse as simple Rob&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then hark 'ee again, Addlepate! Everybodymust believe nobody's body thy
+ body, so by dead body will I make thy live body of so great account to
+ everybody that nobody henceforth shall doubt dead body made live body, by
+ my witchcraft, and thou be feared, therefore, of everybody. Dost follow me
+ now, numskull?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly, mother! And truly 'tis a rare subtlety, a notable wile, and
+ thou a right cunning witch and wise. But how wilt achieve this wonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Since dead thou art, I to life will bring thee. Oho, I will summon thee
+ through fire and flame; aha, I will make thee more dreaded than
+ heretofore; thy fame shall fill the wild-wood and beyond. Know'st thou the
+ Haunted Wood, hard by Thraxby Waste?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here Robin's merry smile languished, and he rubbed nose with dubious
+ finger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, I do,&rdquo; quoth he sombrely; &ldquo;an ill place and&mdash;demon-rid, they
+ say&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come ye there to-morrow at midnight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alone?&rdquo; says Robin, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good Witch, most gentle, potent dame, I&mdash;though phantom
+ accounted, I love not phantoms, and Thraxby Waste&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come ye there&mdash;at midnight!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, good Witch, an come I must, suffer that I bring the valiant
+ Fool and mighty Lob&mdash;prithee, now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this the old Witch scowled and mumbled and crackled her finger-bones
+ louder than ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried she at last, &ldquo;thou great child, afraid-o'-the-dark, bring
+ these an ye will&mdash;but none other!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good mother, I thank thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tchak!&rdquo; cried the Witch, and, struggling to her feet, hobbled to Jocelyn
+ and laid bony finger on wrist and brow, nodded, mumbled, and so, bent on
+ her staff, hobbled away; but, reaching the cave-mouth, she paused, and
+ smote stick to earth fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To-morrow!&rdquo; she croaked. &ldquo;Midnight! Re&mdash;member!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0010" id="link2H_4_0010"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 8
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Tells how the Witch, with incantations dire,
+ In life to life brought Robin through the fire.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The wind was cold&mdash;indeed 'twas plaguy chill&mdash;
+ That furtive crept and crept, like something ill
+ Stealing with dreadful purpose in the dark,
+ With scarce a sound its stealthy course to mark;
+ While pallid moon did seem to swoon, as though
+ It ghastly things beheld on earth below;
+ And Robin gripped the good sword by his side,
+ And Joc'lyn looked about him watchful-eyed;
+ While Lobkyn Lollo felt and looked the bolder
+ By reason of the club across his shoulder.
+
+ &ldquo;Here,&rdquo; whispered Robin, peering through the gloom,
+ &ldquo;Is dismal place, I've heard, of death and doom.
+ Here do be ghosts and goblins, so 'tis said,
+ Demons, phantoms, spectres of the dead&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily,&rdquo; quoth Lob, &ldquo;and what is worse,
+ 'Tis here my grand-dam oft doth come to curse,
+ And haunteth it with spiteful toads and bats,
+ With serpents fell, with ewts and clawful cats.
+ Here doth she revel hold o' moony nights,
+ With grave-rank ghouls and moaning spectral sprites;
+ And ... Saints! what's that?
+ A hook-winged bat?
+ Not so; perchance, within its hairy body fell
+ Is man or maid transformed by magic spell.
+ O, brothers, heedful be, and careful tread
+ Lest magic gin should catch and strike us dead!
+ O would my grannam might go with us here.
+ Since, being witch, she doth no witchcraft fear.&rdquo;
+
+ So came the three at last to Haunted Wood,
+ Where mighty trees in gloomy grandeur stood,
+ Their wide-flung boughs so closely interweaving
+ Scarce space between for ghostly moonbeams leaving;
+ But, snake-like, round each other closely twined,
+ In shuddering wind did mournful voices find,
+ And, groaning, writhed together to and fro
+ Like souls that did the fiery torment know.
+ Thus, in the wood, 'twas dark and cold and dank,
+ And breathed an air of things long dead and rank;
+ While shapes, dim-seen, did creep and flit and fly
+ With sudden squeak, and bodeful, wailing cry.
+
+ At last they reached a clearing in the wood,
+ Where, all at once, as 'mid the leaves they stood,
+ From Lobkyn's lips, loud, tremulous, and high,
+ There rose and swelled the owlet's shuddering cry.
+ Scarce on the air this dismal sound had died,
+ When they the Witch's hobbling form espied.
+ Beholding Robin, by the arm she caught him,
+ And to a place of rocks in haste she brought him;
+ And here, where bosky thickets burgeoned round,
+ She pointed to a chasm in the ground.
+
+ &ldquo;Go down!&rdquo; she hissed. &ldquo;Go down, thou thing of clay,
+ Thou that art dead&mdash;into thy grave I say.
+ Since thou 'rt hanged, a dead man shalt thou be
+ Till from thy grave my spells shall summon thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;My grave?&rdquo; gasped Robin, blenching from her frown.
+ &ldquo;Aye, Rogue!&rdquo; she croaked. &ldquo;Behold thy grave! Go down!&rdquo;
+ So shiv'ring Robin, in most woeful plight,
+ Crept into gloom and vanished from their sight.
+ &ldquo;O, Robin, Robin!&rdquo; the old Witch softly cried,
+ &ldquo;Alack, I'm here!&rdquo; faint voice, below, replied.
+ &ldquo;Thou dead,&rdquo; croaked she, &ldquo;thou ghostly shade forlorn,
+ From charnel-vault sound now thy spectral horn,
+ Sound now thy rallying-note, then silent be
+ Till from thy mouldering tomb I summon thee!&rdquo;
+
+ Now, on the stillness rose the ghostly sound
+ Of Robin's hunting horn that through the ground
+ Rang thin and high, unearthly-shrill and clear,
+ That thrilled the shivering woodland far and near,
+ And shuddering to silence, left behind
+ A whisper as of leaves in stealthy wind.
+ A rustling 'mid the underbrush they heard
+ Where, in the gloom about them, dim things stirred&mdash;
+ Vague, stealing shapes that softly nearer drew,
+ Till from the tree-gloom crept a ragged crew,
+ Wild men and fierce, a threatening, grimly herd,
+ Who stood like shadows, speaking not a word;
+ And the pale moon in fitful flashes played
+ On sword and headpiece, pike and broad axe-blade.
+ While the old hag, o'er witch-fire crouching low,
+ Puffed at the charcoal till it was aglow;
+ Then hobbling round and round her crackling fire,
+ She thus began her incantations dire:
+
+ &ldquo;Come ye long-dead,
+ Ye spirits dread,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Ye things of quaking fear,
+ Ye poor, lost souls,
+ Ye ghosts, ye ghouls,
+ Haxwiggin bids ye here!
+ By one by two, by two by three,
+ Spirits of Night, I summon ye,
+ By three by four, by four by five,
+ Come ye now dead that were alive,
+ Come now I bid ye
+ From grave-clods rid ye,
+ Come!
+ From South and North,
+ I bid ye forth,
+ From East, from West,
+ At my behest&mdash;
+ Come!
+ Come great, come small,
+ Come one, come all,
+ Heed ye my call,
+ List to my call, I say,
+ From pitchy gloom
+ Of mouldered tomb
+ Here find ye room
+ For sport and holiday.
+ Come grisly ghosts and goblins pale,
+ Come spirits black and grey,
+ Ye shrouded spectres&mdash;Hail, O Hail!
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday.
+ Come wriggling snakes
+ From thorny brakes,
+ Hail!
+ Come grimly things
+ With horny wings,
+ That flit, that fly,
+ That croak, that cry,
+ Hail!
+
+ &ldquo;Come ghouls, come demons one and all,
+ Here revel whiles ye may;
+ Ye noisome things that creep and crawl,
+ Come, sport and round me play.
+ Ho, claw and wing and hoof and horn,
+ Here revel till the clammy dawn.
+
+ &ldquo;Peeping, creeping,
+ Flying, crying,
+ Fighting, biting,
+ Groaning, moaning,
+ Ailing, wailing,
+ Spirits fell,
+ Come to my spell,
+ Ho! 'tis your holiday!
+ So, are ye there,
+ High up in air,
+ The moonbeams riding
+ 'Mid shadows hiding?
+
+ &ldquo;Now gather round, ye spectral crew,
+ This night have we brave work to do&mdash;
+ Bold Robin o' the Green, 'tis said,
+ On gallows hangeth cold and dead
+ Beneath the sky
+ On gibbet high,
+ They in a noose did swing him.
+ Go, goblins, go,
+ And ere they know,
+ Unto me hither bring him.&rdquo;
+
+ Here paused the Witch to mend her glowing fire,
+ While each man to his neighbour shuffled nigher,
+ As witch-flame leapt and ever brighter grew,
+ Till, to their horror, sudden it burned blue;
+ Whereat each silent, fearful beholder
+ Felt in the gloom to touch his fellow's shoulder,
+ Yet, in that moment, knew an added dread
+ To see the fire from blue turn ghastly red;
+ Then, as the Witch did o'er it crooning lean,
+ Behold! it changed again to baleful green.
+ Whereat the Witch flung bony arms on high,
+ As though with claw-like hands she 'd rend the sky;
+ And while the lurid flames leapt ever higher,
+ She thus invoked the Spirit of the Fire.
+
+ &ldquo;As fire doth change, yet, changed, unchanged doth burn,
+ By fiery spell shall dead to life return!
+
+ &ldquo;Ho, goblins yonder&mdash;'neath the moon,
+ Have ye brought me the dead so soon?
+ Ha! is it Bxibin that ye bring,
+ That pale, that stiff, that clammy thing?
+ Now work we spell with might and main,
+ Shall make it live and breathe again.
+
+ &ldquo;Now in and out,
+ And round about,
+ Ye wriggling rout,
+ With hoof and claw and wing;
+ Now high, now low,
+ Now fast, now slow,
+ Now to and fro
+ Tread we a magic ring.
+
+ &ldquo;Thus, while the frighted moon doth peep,
+ We 'll wake this cold, dead thing from sleep,
+ Till Robin back to life shall leap.
+ And when he from the fire shall spring,
+ Ye outlaws hail him for your King.
+
+ &ldquo;For on that wight
+ Who, day or night,
+ Shall Robin disobey
+ With purpose fell
+ I'll cast a spell
+ Shall wither him away.
+
+ &ldquo;Ho, Robin! Ope thy death-cold eyes,
+ Ho, Robin! From thy grave arise,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+ Robin that doth bide so near me,
+ Robin, Robin, wake and hear me,
+ Ho, Robin! Robin, ho!
+
+ &ldquo;Back to life I summon thee,
+ Through the fire thy path must be,
+ Through the fire that shall not harm thee,
+ Through flame that back to life shall charm thee,
+ Shall warm thy body all a-cold,
+ And make grim Death loose clammy hold.
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Ho, Robin-a-Green,
+ Leap back to life by all men seen!&rdquo;
+
+ Through curling smoke-wreaths and through writhing flame,
+ With mighty bound, bold Robin leaping came,
+ And by the Witch did in the fire-light stand,
+ Sword by his side and bugle-horn in hand,
+ And laughed full blithe as he was wont to do,
+ And, joyous, hailed his wild and ragged crew:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What lads, are ye there forsooth? Is't Myles I see with lusty Watt and
+ John and Hal o' the Quarterstaff? God den t' ye, friends, and merry
+ hunting to one and all, for by oak and ash and thorn here stand I to live
+ with thee, aye, good lads, and to die with ye here in the good greenwood&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now and all at once from that grim and silent company a mighty shout
+ went up:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis Robin&mdash;'tis Robin, 'tis bold Robin-a-Green! 'Tis our Robin
+ himself come back to us!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And fearful no longer, they hasted to him and clasped him in brawny arms,
+ hugging him mightily and making great rejoicing over him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0011" id="link2H_4_0011"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 9
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ That tells almost as fully as it should,
+ The joys of living in the good greenwood.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Deep-hidden in the trackless wild the outlaws had made them a haven of
+ refuge, a camp remote and well sequestered. Here were mossy, fern-clad
+ rocks that soared aloft, and here green lawns where ran a blithesome
+ brook; it was indeed a very pleasant place shut in by mighty trees. Within
+ this leafy boskage stood huts of wattle, cunningly wrought; beneath the
+ steep were many caves carpeted with dried fern and fragrant mosses, while
+ everywhere, above and around, the trees spread mighty boughs, through
+ which the sun darted golden beams be-dappling the sward, and in whose
+ leafy mysteries the birds made joyous carolling.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here beneath bending willows arched over this merry brook, one
+ sun-bright morning riotous with song of birds, sat Jocelyn with Robin
+ a-sprawl beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O brother,&rdquo; says Robin, &ldquo;O brother, 't is a fair place the greenwood, a
+ fair, sweet place to live&mdash;aye, or to die in methinks, this good
+ greenwood, whereof I have made a song&mdash;hark 'ee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Oho, it is a right good thing
+ When trees do bud and flowers do spring
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood,
+ To hear the birds so blithely sing,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;Who cometh here leaves grief behind,
+ Here broken man hath welcome kind,
+ All in the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ The hopeless here new hope may find,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the kind, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;Ho, friend, 'tis pleasant life we lead,
+ No laws have we, no laws we need
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+ For every man's a man indeed,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Here i' the good, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;All travellers that come this way
+ Must something in fair tribute pay
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ Or here in bonds is like to stay,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ Lost in the good, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;Full many a lord, in boastful pride,
+ This tribute, scornful, hath denied
+ Unto the wood, the fair, green wood.
+ And thereupon hath sudden died,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the fair, green wood.
+
+ &ldquo;And when our time shall come to die
+ Methinks we here may softly lie
+ Deep in the fair, green wood.
+ With birds to sing us lullaby,
+ Adown, adown, hey derry down,
+ All in the good, green wood.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So there it is, brother&mdash;and life and death in a nutshell, as
+ 'twere. Now, wherefore wilt not join us and turn outlaw, good Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that I am a fool belike, Robin. Howbeit, I'm better Fool than
+ outlaw.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say, rather, greater fool, Fool, for foresters' life is better than life
+ o' folly, and payeth better to boot, what with booty&mdash;ha! Moreover, I
+ do love thee, since, Fool, though fool, art wise in counsel and valiant
+ beyond thought&mdash;so 'tis I would not lose thee. Stay, therefore, and
+ live my comrade and brother, equal with me in all things. How say'st
+ thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Robin, I say this: True friendship is a goodly thing and a rare in
+ this world, and, therefore, to be treasured; 'tis thing no man may buy or
+ seek, since itself is seeker and cometh of itself; 'tis a prop&mdash;a
+ staff in stony ways, a shield 'gainst foes, a light i' the dark. So do I
+ love friendship, Robin, and thou'rt my friend, yet must leave thee, though
+ friendship shall abide.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth ROBIN: How abide an we be parted?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In heart and mind and memory, Robin. Moreover, though I go, yet will I
+ return anon, an life be mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore go ye, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First to seek my comrade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy comrade&mdash;ha! I mind him, a fierce great fellow with hawk's beak
+ and a fighting eye. And whither trend ye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To Canalise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art crazed, brother? 'Tis there death waiteth thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet must I go, Robin, since there my heart waiteth me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A maid, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A maid, Robin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heigho! So wilt thou go, come joy, come pain, come life or death, since a
+ maid is made to make man saint or devil, some days glad and some days sad,
+ but ever and always a fool. And thou art Fool by profession, and, being
+ lover professed and confessed, art doubly a fool; and since, good Folly,
+ love's but folly and thou, a Fool, art deep in folly, so is thy state most
+ melancholy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And dost think love so great folly, Robin?&rdquo; said a soft voice, and,
+ looking round, they beheld the lovely, dark-tressed Melissa, who viewed
+ them bright-eyed and pouted red mouth, frowning a little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily, lady,&rdquo; laughed Robin, as she sank on the grass beside them.
+ &ldquo;Forsooth, 'tis a madness fond. For see, now, a man being in love is out
+ of all else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As how, Sir Outlaw?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, on this wise&mdash;when man's in love he mopeth apart and is ill
+ company, so is he out o' friends; he hangeth humble head abashed, so is he
+ out o' countenance; he uttereth frequent, windy, sighful suspirations, so
+ is he out o' breath; he lavisheth lucre on his love, so is he out o'
+ pocket; he forsweareth food, despiseth drink, scorneth sleep, so is he out
+ o' health&mdash;in fine, he is out of all things, so is he out of himself;
+ therefore he is mad, and so may go hang himself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: And hast thou loved, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Ever and always, and none but Robin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: And none more worthy, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And none more, as I am worthy Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Lovest thou not Love, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Love, love not I.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Then Love canst thou know not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Then if I love Love for Love's sake, must Love then love me,
+ therefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: If thy love for Love be true love, so shall Love love thee true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Then if Love should love me for my sake, then would I love Love for
+ Love's sake; but since Love ne'er hath sought me for my sake, ne'er will I
+ seek Love for Love's sake for my sake, since Love, though plaguy sweet, is
+ a sweet plague, I judge and, so judging, will by my judgment stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISBA: And how think you, Sir Fool?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: I think if Love find Robin and Robin, so found of Love, shall
+ learn to love Love for Love's sake, Love shall teach Robin how, hi loving
+ Love&mdash;Love, if a plague, doth but plague him lovingly to his better
+ judgment of Love, till, being on this wise, wise&mdash;he shall judge of
+ Love lovingly, loving Love at last for Love's own lovely sake, rather than
+ for his own selfish self. For as there is the passion of love, the which
+ is a love selfish, so there is the true Spirit of Love, the which
+ forgetteth self in Love's self, thus, self-forgotten, Love is crowned by
+ Love's true self.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: How think ye of this, Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: By Cupid, we are so deep in love that we are like to drown of love
+ and we be not wary. Here hath my lovely jowlopped-crested brother so beset
+ poor Robin with Love and self and Robin, that Robin kens not which is
+ Love, Love's self or himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: And yet I do think 'tis very plain! Yet an thou canst express
+ this plainer, prithee do, Sir Fool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blithely, sweet lady, here will I frame my meaning in a rhyme, thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Who loveth Love himself above,
+ With Love base self transcending
+ Love, Love shall teach how Love may reach
+ The Love that hath no ending.
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Tis thus Love-true, Love shall renew,
+ Love's love thus waning never,
+ So love each morn of Love new-born,
+ Love shall live loving ever.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Aye, verily, there's Love and yet such a love as no man may find
+ methinks, brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Never, Robin, until it find him. For true love, like friendship,
+ cometh unsought, like all other good things.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: 'Las! then needs must I be no good thing since I am sought e'en now
+ of old Mopsa the Witch yonder!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he pointed where the old creature hobbled towards them bent on her
+ crooked staff. Up rose Robin and, hasting to meet her, louted full low,
+ since she was held in great respect of all men by reason of her potent
+ spells. Chuckling evilly, she drew down Robin's tall head to whisper in
+ his ear, whereupon he laughed, clapped hand to brawny thigh, and taking
+ old Mopsa's feeble arm, hastened away with her. But Melissa, reclining
+ 'neath the willow-shade, gazed down into the murmurous waters of the brook
+ with eyes of dream whiles Jocelyn struck soft, sweet chords upon his lute.
+ And presently she turned to view him thoughtfully&mdash;his strange,
+ marred face; his eyes so quick and keen 'neath battered cock's-comb; his
+ high, proud bearing despite his frayed and motley habit; and ever her
+ wonder grew until, at last, she must needs question him:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fools, Sir Fool, have I seen a-many, both in the motley and out, but thou
+ art rare among all fools, I do think.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Gramercy, lady! Truly fool am I of all fools singular.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Thou'rt he I heard, upon a day, sing strange, sweet songs, within
+ the marketplace of Canalise!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: The same, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: That soused my lord Gui head over ears in a lily-pool?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Verily, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: O! Would one might do as much for Sir Agramore of Biename!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: One doubtless will, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ MELISSA: Thyself?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Nay&mdash;one that loveth the disputatious bickering of sharp
+ steel better than I&mdash;one had rather fight than eat, and rather fight
+ three men than one&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three men?&rdquo; cried Melissa, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, lady&mdash;and six men than three!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There was such an one, Fool, in truth a very brave man, did fight three
+ of my Lord Agramore's foresters on my behalf. Dost know of such an one,
+ Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks he is my comrade, Lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy comrade&mdash;in truth? Then, pray you, speak me what seeming hath
+ he.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ill, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How so, Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A great, fierce rogue is he, unlovely of look, bleak of eye, harsh of
+ tongue, hooked of nose, flinty of soul, stony of heart, of aspect grim and
+ manners rude!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, verily, thy comrade have I never seen!&rdquo; quoth Melissa, flushing and
+ with head up-flung. &ldquo;He that saved me is nothing the like of this.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; said Jocelyn slyly, &ldquo;'tis thus he hath been named ere now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Fool, indeed he that saved me was tall and seemly man, very fierce
+ and strong in fight, but to me wondrous gentle&mdash;in truth, something
+ timorous, and, 'spite rusty mail, spake and looked like a noble knight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then forsooth, lady, thy champion is no comrade of mine, for he is but a
+ poor rogue, ill-beseen, ill-kempt, ill-spoken, ill-mannered and altogether
+ ill, save only that he is my friend&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou speakest ill of thy ill friend, the which is ill in thee&mdash;ill
+ Fool!&rdquo; and the fair Melissa rose.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And pray, lady, didst learn thy preserver's name?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, for I asked him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And it was&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax!&rdquo; she sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax!&rdquo; said Jocelyn, both in the same moment; the dark-browed Melissa
+ sat down again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So thy comrade and&mdash;he are one, Fool?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, lady. Yet here we have him, on the one hand, a man noble and
+ seemly, and, on the other, a poor rogue, hook-nosed, ill-beseen, ill&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis thou hast miscalled him, Fool!&rdquo; said she, frowning.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not I, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A maid&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Melissa, frowning blacker than ever. &ldquo;A maid, Fool? What maid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wandering gipsy o' the wood, lady&mdash;a dark-eyed damsel with long,
+ black curling hair and 'voice of sweet allure'&mdash;'tis so he named her&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This was belike some wicked witch!&rdquo; said Melissa, clenching white fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, belike it was, lady, for she bestowed on him a strange jewel, a
+ heart in heart of crystal, that wrought for us in Canalise marvels great
+ as our wondrous Witch herself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here the lovely Melissa's frown vanished, and her red lips curved to
+ sudden smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Belike this was no witch after all!&rdquo; said she gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howbeit, lady,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn slyly, &ldquo;my poor comrade is surely bewitched
+ by her none the less. She hath wrought on him spell so potent that he
+ groweth mopish and talketh of her eyes, her hair, her sweet and gentle
+ voice, her little foot, forsooth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And doth he so, indeed?&rdquo; said Melissa softly, and, twiddling one of her
+ own pretty feet, she smiled at it. &ldquo;Doth he sigh o'er much?&rdquo; she
+ questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Consumedly! By the minute!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor soldier!&rdquo; she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, poor rogue!&rdquo; said Jocelyn; whereupon she frowned again, and turned
+ her back upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And he is thy comrade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Even so&mdash;poor knave!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And destitute&mdash;even as thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, a sorry clapper-claw&mdash;even as I, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then, pray thee, why doth he wear gold chain about his neck?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Chain, lady&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Such as only knights do wear!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Belike he stole it, lady&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye&mdash;belike he did!&rdquo; said she, rising; then she sighed and laughed,
+ and so turned and left him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And in a while Jocelyn rose also, and went on beside the brook; but as he
+ walked deep in thought, there met him Robin, he full of mirth and
+ laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, brother, good brother!&rdquo; cried he joyfully, clapping hand on
+ Jocelyn's broad shoulder, &ldquo;come away, now, and see what the good wind hath
+ blown hither&mdash;come thy ways and see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So came they where rose a great tree of huge girth, whose gnarled branches
+ spread far and wide, a veryforest of leaves, beneath whose shade were many
+ of the outlaws grouped about one who crouched miserably on his knees, his
+ arms fast bound and a halter about his neck; and, as obedient to Robin's
+ words the fierce company fell back, Jocelyn saw this torn and pallid
+ captive was none other than Ranulph the Hangman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe's me, my masters!&rdquo; quoth he 'twixt chattering teeth. &ldquo;'Tis pity poor
+ Ranulph must die before his time, for ne'er shall be found hangman,
+ headsman or torturer the like o' Ranulph&mdash;so dainty i' the nice
+ adjustment o' noose! So clean and delicate wi' the axe! So tender and
+ thoughtful wi' pincers, thumbscrew, rack or red-hot iron! A hangman so
+ kindly o' soul, so merry o' heart, alack, so free, so gay, so merry&mdash;forsooth
+ a very wanton, waggish, jovial bawcock-lad&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, good, merry wag,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;now shalt thou cut us an
+ antic aloft in air, shalt caper and dance in noose to our joyance! Up with
+ him, bully lads, and gently, that he may dance the longer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But as Ranulph was dragged, shivering, to his feet, Jocelyn stepped
+ forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Look, now, here's hangman did but hang since hang he
+ must; must he hang therefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Aye, marry, since hanging shall his hanging end!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: But if to hang his duty is, must he for duty hang? Moreover, if
+ ye hang this hangman, unhanged hangmen shall hang still, and since ye may
+ not all hangmen hang, wherefore should this hangman hang?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Brother, an this hangman hang, fewer hangmen shall there be to
+ hang, forsooth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Not so, Robin, for hangman dead begetteth hangman new; this
+ hangman hanged, hangman in his place shall hang men after him. Shall this
+ hangman hang for hanging as in duty bound, whiles other hangmen, unhanged,
+ hang still? Here, methinks, is small wisdom, little reason, and less of
+ justice, Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Beshrew me, brother&mdash;but here's so much of hanging hanging on
+ hanging plaguy hangman that hang me if I get the hang on't&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Plainly, Robin&mdash;wilt hang a man for doing his duty?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Plainly, brother&mdash;no. But&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Then canst not hang this hangman, since hanging his duty is&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Yet 'tis base, vile duty&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: Yet duty it is&mdash;wherefore, an there be any justice in the
+ good greenwood, this hangman unhanged must go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here Robin scowled, and his brawny fellows scowled likewise, and began
+ to mutter and murmur against Jocelyn, who, leaning back to tree, strummed
+ his lute and sang:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O, Life is sweet, but Life is fleet,
+ O'er quick to go, alack!
+ And once 'tis spilt, try as thou wilt,
+ Thou canst not call it back!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So bethink thee, bold Robin, and, as thou 'rt king o' the wild-wood, be
+ thou just king and merciful&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now out upon thee, brother!&rdquo; cried Robin, forgetting to scowl. &ldquo;Out on
+ thee with thy honied phrases, thy quipsome lilting rhymes! Here go I to do
+ a thing I ha' no lust to do&mdash;and all by reason o' thee! Off&mdash;off
+ wi' the halter, lads&mdash;loose the hangman-claws of him! Hereafter,
+ since he can pay no ransom, he shall be our serf; to have a hangman fetch
+ and carry shall be rare, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth JOCELYN: How much should hangman's flesh be worth i' the greenwood,
+ Robin?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, brother, 'tis poor, sad and dismal knave; five gold pieces shall buy
+ him, aye&mdash;halter and all, and 'tis fair, good halter, look you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, opening his wallet, &ldquo;behold the monies, so do I
+ buy him of thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by Saint Nick!&rdquo; cried Robin, amazed. &ldquo;Nay, brother, an thou'lt buy
+ so sorry a thing, give thy money to the merry lads; I'll none on't. And
+ now,&rdquo; said he, the money duly paid, &ldquo;what wilt do wi' thy hangman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; cried Ranulph, falling on his knees at Jocelyn's feet, &ldquo;fain
+ would I serve thee&mdash;e'en to the peril o' the life thou hast saved.
+ Bid me labour for thee and in labour shall be my joy, bid me fight for
+ thee and I will fight whiles life is in me; bid me follow thee and I will
+ follow even unto&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, hangman,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;I bid thee rise and sing for us, and so be
+ gone wheresoever thou wilt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Ranulph arose and glancing round upon the fierce company, from the
+ noose at his feet to Jocelyn's scarred face, he drew a great breath; quoth
+ he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool, since 'tis thy will fain would I give thee song blithe and
+ joyful since joy is in my heart, but alack, though my songs begin in merry
+ vein they do grow mournful anon; howbeit, for thy joy now will I sing my
+ cheeriest;&rdquo; whereupon Ranulph brake into song thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I am forsooth a merry soul,
+ Hey deny down, ho ho!
+ I love a merry song to troll,
+ I love to quaff a cheery bowl,
+ And yet thinks I, alas!
+ Such things too soon do pass,
+ And proudest flesh is grass.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ &ldquo;A goodly lover I might be,
+ Merrily, ho ho!
+ But pretty maids in terror flee,
+ When this my hangman's head they see.
+ But woe it is, thinks I,
+ All fair, sweet dames must die,
+ And pale, sad corpses lie.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it should be so!
+
+ &ldquo;Fairest beauty is but dust,
+ Shining armour soon will rust,
+ All good things soon perish must,
+ Look around, thinks I, and see
+ All that, one day, dead must be,
+ King and slave and you and me.
+ Alack-a-day and woe,
+ Alack it must be so!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;Here forsooth is dolorous doleful dirge&mdash;out on
+ thee for sad and sorry snuffler!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily,&rdquo; sighed Ranulph, &ldquo;'tis my curse. I begin with laugh and end
+ in groan. I did mean this for merry song, yet it turned of itself sad song
+ despite poor I, and there's the pity on't&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough!&rdquo; growled Robin, &ldquo;away with him. Brand, do you hoodwink him in his
+ 'kerchief and give him safe conduct to beyond the ford, and so set Master
+ Hangman Grimglum-grief on his road&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; cried Ranulph, &ldquo;God den t'ye and gramercy. Should it be e'er
+ thy fate to die o' the gallows, may I have thy despatching&mdash;I will
+ contrive it so sweetly shalt know nought of it&mdash;oho! 'twould be my
+ joy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Off!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;Off, thou pestiferous fungus lest I tread on thee&mdash;hence,
+ away!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the outlaws blindfolded Ranulph and led him off at speed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, nodding, &ldquo;so now in faith must I, Robin&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, is't indeed farewell, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Robin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, what may I give thee in way o' love and friendship?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold it, brother! And what beside? Here is purse o' good pieces&mdash;ha?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Robin, prithee keep them for those whose need is greater.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Can I nought bestow&mdash;dost lack for nothing, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What thou, methinks, may not supply&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And that?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Horse and armour!&rdquo; Now at this, Robin laughed and clapped hand to thigh;
+ quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with Robin, brother!&rdquo; So he brought Jocelyn into a cave beneath the
+ steep and, lighting a torch from fire that burned there, led him on
+ through other caves and winding passages rough-hewn in the rock, and so at
+ last to a vasty cavern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And here was great store of merchandise of every sort,&mdash;velvets,
+ silks, and rich carpets from the Orient; vases of gold and silver, and
+ coffers strong-clamped with many iron bands. And here also, hanging
+ against the rocky walls, were many and divers suits of armour with helms
+ and shields set up in gallant array; beholding all of which Jocelyn paused
+ to eye merry Robin askance; quoth he soberly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Rogue, how came ye by all this goodly furniture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By purest chance, brolher,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;for hark 'ee&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Chance is a wind to outlaws kind,
+ And many fair things blows us,
+ It&mdash;merchants, priors, lords, knights and squires,
+ And like good things bestows us&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;but what of all those knights and squires whose
+ armour hangeth here?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here or there, brother, they come and they go. Ha, yonder soundeth
+ Ralfwyn's horn&mdash;three blasts which do signify some right fair
+ windfall. Come, let us see what this jolly wind hath blown us this time!&rdquo;
+ So saying, Robin laughed and led the way out into the sunny green. And
+ here, surrounded by a ring of merry forest rogues, they beheld a knight
+ right gallantly mounted and equipped, his armour blazing in the sun, his
+ gaudy bannerole a-flutter from long lance, his shield gaudy and brave with
+ new paint; beholding which, Robin chuckled gleefully; quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho! On a field vert three falcons gules, proper, charged with heart
+ ensanguined&mdash;aha, here's good booty, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as this splendid knight rode nearer, contemptuous of his brawny
+ captors, Robin stared to see that on his helmet he wore a wreath of
+ flowers, while lance and sword, mace and battle-axe were wreathed in
+ blooming roses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho, Jenkyn, Cuthbert!&rdquo; cried Robin, &ldquo;what Sir Daintiness have ye here?&rdquo;
+ But ere his grinning captors could make reply, the knight himself spake
+ thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Behold a very gentle knight,
+ Sir Palamon of Tong,
+ A gentle knight in sorry plight,
+ That loveth love and hateth fight,
+ A knight than fight had rather write,
+ And strophes to fair dames indite,
+ Or sing a sighful song.
+
+ &ldquo;By divers braggarts I'm abused,
+ 'Tis so as I've heard tell,
+ Because, since I'm to fight unused,
+ I many a fight have bold refused,
+ And, thereby, saved my bones unbruised,
+ Which pleaseth me right well.
+
+ &ldquo;No joy have I in steed that prances,
+ True gentle man am I
+ To tread to lutes slow, stately dances.
+ 'Stead of your brutish swords and lances,
+ I love love's lureful looks and glances,
+ When hand to hand, unseen, advances,
+ And eye caresseth eye.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And how a plague, Sir Gentleness,&rdquo; questioned Robin, &ldquo;may eye caress
+ eye?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E'en as lips voiceless may wooing speak, Sir Roguery, and tongue
+ unwagging tell tales o' love, Sir Ferocity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Then had I the trick o' voiceless speech, now would I, with silly
+ tongue, tell thee thou art our prisoner to ransom, Sir Silken Softness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: And I joy therefore, Sir Forest Fiend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And wherefore therefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: For that therefore I need not to the joust, to that
+ bone-shattering sport of boastful, brutal braggadocios, but here, lapped
+ soft in the gentle green, woo the fair Yolande&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: How, knight, the fair lady Yolande, say'st thou?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Even she.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: But here she is not and thou art, how then may one that is, woo
+ one is not?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Gross mountebank, by thought&mdash;I woo in thought, breathe
+ my thought upon the balmy air and air beareth it to her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And she treadeth on't, so there's an end o' thy love! But pray you,
+ Sir Downy Daintiness, how come ye that are so gentle so ungently dight?
+ Discourse, Sir Dove!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: In two words then, thou lewd lurcher o' the thickets; I ride
+ thus in steely panoply&mdash;the which doth irk me sore&mdash;by reason of
+ the tongue of my mother (good soul!) the which doth irk me more. For she
+ (worthy lady!) full-fed o' fatuous fantasies and fables fond, fuddled i'
+ faith o' faddling fictions as&mdash;gestes of jongleurs, tales told by
+ tramping troubadours, ballades of babbling braggarts, romances of
+ roysterous rhymers, she (good gossip!) as I say, having hearkened to and
+ perused the works of such-like pelting, paltry prosers and poets wherein
+ sweep of sword and lunge o' lance is accompted of worthier repute than the
+ penning of dainty distich and pretty poesies pleasingly passionate. She, I
+ say&mdash;my mother (God rest her!), e'en she with tongue most harsh, most
+ bitter and most unwearying, hath enforced me, her son (whom Venus bless!)&mdash;e'en
+ I that am soul most transcendental&mdash;I that am a very wing-ed Mercury&mdash;me,
+ I say she hath, by torrential tongueful tumult (gentle lady!), constrained
+ to don the habit of a base, brawling, beefy and most material Mars!
+ Wherefore at my mother's behest (gracious dame!) I ride nothing joyful to
+ be bruised and battered by any base, brutal braggart that hath the mind to
+ try a tilt with me. Moreover&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Hold! Take breath, gentle sir, for thine own sweet sake draw thy
+ wind.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: 'Tis done, fellow, 'tis done! And now in three words will I&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Cry ye mercy, sir, thy two words do yet halloo &ldquo;Buzz-buzz&rdquo; in mine
+ ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Faith, robber-rogue, since I a tongue possess&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Therein thou art very son o' thy mother (whom St. Anthony
+ cherish!).
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: With this rare difference, outlaw&mdash;for whereas her
+ tongue (honoured relict!) is tipped with gall, wormwood, henbane, hemlock,
+ bitter-aloes and verjuice, and stingeth like the adder, the asp, the toad,
+ the newt, the wasp, and snaky-haired head of Medusa, mine&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Buzzeth, buzz, O buzz!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Mine, thou paltry knave, I say mine&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Buzz&mdash;ha&mdash;buzz!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ JOCELYN: I pray you, Sir Knight, doth the Red Gui tilt at to-morrow's
+ joust?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Base mime, he doth! My Lord Gui of Ells, Lord Seneschal of
+ Raddemore, is myfriend, a very mirror of knightly prowess, the sure might
+ of whose lance none may abide. He is, in very truth, the doughtiest
+ champion in all this fair country, matchless at any and every weapon,
+ a-horse or a-foot, in sooth a very Ajax, Achilles, Hector, Roland and
+ Oliver together and at once, one and indivisible, aye&mdash;by Cupid a
+ very paladin!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis so I've heard,&rdquo; said Jocelyn thoughtfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Two knights only there are might cope with him, and one Sir
+ Agramore and one Jocelyn of the Helm, Duke of Brocelaunde. The fame of
+ which last rumour hath so puffed up that thrice my Lord Gui hath sent his
+ cartel of defiance, but the said Duke, intent on paltry battles beyond his
+ marches, hath thrice refused, and wisely&mdash;so 'tis said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye me, messire,&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, strumming his lute, &ldquo;and so bloweth the
+ wind. Yet mayhap these twain shall meet one day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: And heaven send me there to see! Now as to thee, Sir Softly Sweet,
+ fair Lord of Tong, thy goodly horse and armour are mine henceforth, first
+ because thy need of them is nothing, secondly because thou art my prisoner&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: And thirdly, Sir Riotous Roughness, I do freely on thee
+ bestow them, hide and hair, bolt and rivet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Now as to thy ransom, Sir Mildly-Meek, at what price dost rate thy
+ value, spiritual and corporeal?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Fellow, though youthful, well-favoured and poet esteemed, I
+ am yet marvellous modest! 'Tis true I am knight of lineage lofty, of
+ patrimony proud, of manors many&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Even as of thy words, Sir Emptiness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: 'Tis also true, thou ignorant atomy, I, like Demosthenes, am
+ blessed with a wonder o' words and glory o' sweet phrase, and yet, and
+ here's the enduring wonder&mdash;I am still but man, though man blessed
+ with so much profundity, fecundity, and redundity of thought and
+ expression, and therefore a facile scribe or speaker, able to create,
+ relate, formulate or postulate any truth, axiomatic, sophistry subtle, or,
+ in other words, I can narrate&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: Verily Sir Windbag thou dost, to narrate, thyself with wind
+ inflate, and, being thus thyself inflate of air, thou dost thyself deflate
+ of airy sounds which be words o' wind, and windy words is emptiness&mdash;thus
+ by thy inflatings and deflatings cometh nought but wind bred o' wind, and
+ nought is nothing, so nought is thy relation or narration; whereof make
+ now a cessation, so will I, in due form, formulate, postulate and
+ deliberate. Thus, with my good rogues' approbation and acclamation, I will
+ of thy just valuation make tabulation, and give demonstration in relation
+ to thy liberation from this thy situation, as namely, viz. and to-wit:
+ First thou art a poet; in this is thy marketable value to us nought, for
+ poets do go empty of aught but thought of sort when wrought, unbought;
+ thus go they short which doth import they're empty, purse and belly.
+ Second, upon thy testimony thou'rt a man. Go to! Here we be out again, for
+ on the score of manliness thou art not. Yet thou art flesh and blood&mdash;
+ good! for here we deal in such. Not that we yearn for thy flesh and blood,
+ but, being thine, they are to thee dear, perchance, and thou would'st fain
+ keep them alive a little longer; wherefore thou shalt for thy loved flesh
+ and blood pay&mdash;purchasing the same of us. And, as flesh varies, so do
+ our prices vary; we do sell a man his own flesh and blood at certain
+ rateable values. Thus unto a hangman we did of late sell a hangman, in
+ fair good halter, and he a hangman brawny, for no more than five gold
+ pieces, the which was cheap, methinks, considering the goodly halter, and
+ he a lusty, manly rogue to boot. Now as for thee, thou'rt soft and of a
+ manlihood indifferent, so would I rate thee at one gold piece.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PALAMON: Ignorant grub! Am I less than base hangman&mdash;I, a knight&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ ROBIN: True, Sir Knight, thou'rt a knight for no reason but that thou art
+ knight born and thus, by nought but being born, hath won to thyself
+ nobility, riches and honours such as no man may win either by courage,
+ skill, or learning, since highborn fool and noble rogue do rank high 'bove
+ such. So <i>thou</i> art knight, Sir Knight, and for thy knighthood, thy
+ lineage lofty, thy manors many, mulcted thou shalt be in noble fashion.
+ For thy manhood I assess thee at one gold piece, but, since thou'rt son o'
+ thy dam (whom the Saints pity!) we do fine thee five thousand gold pieces&mdash;thy
+ body ours until the purchase made. Away with him, lads; cherish him
+ kindly, unarm him gently, and set him a-grinding corn till his ransom be
+ paid&mdash;away!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here was mighty roar of laughter and acclaim from all who heard, only
+ Sir Palamon scowled, and, for once mute and tongue-tied, was led
+ incontinent away to his labours.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, brother,&rdquo; quoth Robin, turning where Jocelyn stood smiling and
+ merry-eyed, &ldquo;what o' this armour dost seek, and wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art a lovely robber, Robin,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;a very various rogue, yet no rogue
+ born, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I was not always outlaw, brother&mdash;howbeit, what would a Fool with
+ horse and knightly arms?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Jocelyn, bending close, whispered somewhatin Robin's ear, whereon he
+ clapped hand to thigh, and laughed and laughed until the air rang again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, a jape&mdash;a jape indeed!&rdquo; he roared. &ldquo;O lovely brother, to see
+ proud knight unhorsed by prancing motley Fool! Hey, how my heart doth jump
+ for gladness! An thou wilt a-tilting ride, I will squire thee&mdash;a Fool
+ of a knight tended by Rogue of a squire. O, rare&mdash;aha! oho! Come thy
+ ways, sweet brother, and let us set about this joyous jape forthwith!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus it was that, as evening fell, there rode, through bowery bracken
+ and grassy glade, two horsemen full blithe and merry, and the setting sun
+ flashed back in glory from their glittering armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0012" id="link2H_4_0012"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 10
+ </h2>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ How Red Gui sore smitten was in fight
+ By motley Fool in borrowed armour dight.
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now shrill tucket and clarion, trumpet and horn
+ With their cheery summons saluted the morn,
+ Where the sun, in his splendour but newly put on,
+ Still more splendid made pennon and brave gonfalon
+ That with banners and pennoncelles fluttered and flew
+ High o'er tent and pavilion of every hue.
+ For the lists were placed here, for the tournament set,
+ Where already a bustling concourse was met;
+ Here were poor folk and rich folk, lord, lady and squire,
+ Clad in leather, in cloth and in silken attire;
+ Here folk pushed and folk jostled, as people still do
+ When the sitters be many, the seats scant and few;
+ Here was babble of voices and merry uproar,
+ For while some folk laughed loud, some lost tempers and swore.
+ Until on a sudden this tumult and riot
+ Was hushed to a murmur that sank into quiet
+ As forth into the lists, stern of air, grave of face,
+ Five fine heralds, with tabard and trumpet, did pace
+ With their Lion-at-arms, or Chief Herald, before;
+ And a look most portentous this Chief Herald wore,
+ And, though portly his shape and a little too round,
+ Sure a haughtier Chief Herald could nowhere be found.
+ So aloof was his look and so grave his demeanour,
+ Humble folk grew abashed, and mean folk felt the meaner;
+ When once more the loud clarions had all echoes woke
+ This Chief Herald in voice deep and sonorous spoke:
+
+ &ldquo;Good people all,
+ Both great and small,
+ Oyez!
+ Ye noble dames of high degree
+ Your pretty ears now lend to me,
+ And much I will declare to ye.
+ Oyez! Oyez!
+ Ye dainty lords of might and fame,
+ Ye potent gentles, do the same,
+ Ye puissant peers of noble name,
+ Now unto ye I do proclaim:
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!&rdquo;
+
+ Here pealed the trumpets, ringing loud and clear,
+ That deafened folk who chanced to stand too near.
+ In special one&mdash;a bent and hag-like dame,
+ Who bent o'er crooked staff as she were lame;
+ Her long, sharp nose&mdash;but no, her nose none saw,
+ Since it was hidden 'neath the hood she wore
+ But from this hood she watched with glittering eye
+ Four lusty men-at-arms who lolled hard by,
+ Who, 'bove their armour, bore on back and breast
+ A bloody hand&mdash;Lord Gui's well-hated crest,
+ And who, unwitting of the hooded hag,
+ On sundry matters let their lewd tongues wag:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ THE FIRST SOLDIER: Why, she scorned him, 'tis well beknown!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE SECOND SOLDIER: Aye, and it doth not do to scorn the Red Gui, look
+ 'ee!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE THIBD SOLDIER: She'll lie snug in his arms yet, her pride humbled, her
+ proud spirit broke, I'll warrant me!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE FOURTH SOLDIER: She rideth hence in her litter, d'ye see; and with but
+ scant few light-armed knaves attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE FIRST SOLDIER: Aye, and our signal my lord's hunting-horn thrice
+ winded&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Thus did they talk, with laughter loud and deep,
+ While nearer yet the hooded hag did creep;
+ But:&mdash;
+ Now blew the brazen clarions might and main,
+ Which done, the portly Herald spake again:
+
+ &ldquo;Good people, all ye lords and ladies fair,
+ Oyez!
+ Now unto ye forthwith I do declare
+ The charms of two fair dames beyond compare.
+ Oyez! Oyez! Oyez!
+ The first, our Duchess&mdash;Benedicta hight,
+ That late from Tissingors, her town, took flight,
+ To-day, returning here, doth bless our sight,
+ And view the prowess of each valiant knight;
+ Each champ-i-on, in shining armour dight,
+ With blunted weapons gallantly shall fight.
+ And, watched by eyes of ladies beamy-bright,
+ Inspired and strengthened by this sweet eye-light,
+ Shall quit themselves with very main and might;
+ The second:&mdash;in her beauty Beauty's peer,
+ Yolande the Fair, unto our Duchess dear,
+ For whose sweet charms hath splintered many a spear,
+ Throned with our lovely Duchess, sitteth here
+ With her bright charms all gallant hearts to cheer.
+ Now, ye brave knights, that nought but Cupid fear,
+ To these sweet dames give eye, to me give ear!
+ Oyez!
+ 'Tis now declared&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN expostulateth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: O, father, now
+ You must allow
+ That your herald is rather a bore.
+ He talks such a lot,
+ And it seems frightful rot&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I hate slang, miss! I told you before!
+ If my herald says much,
+ Yet he only says such
+ As by heralds was said in those days;
+ Though their trumpets they blew,
+ It is none the less true
+ That they blew them in other folks' praise.
+ If my herald verbose is
+ And gives us large doses
+ Of high-sounding rodomontade,
+ You'll find they spoke so
+ In the long, long ago,
+ So blame not&mdash;O, blame not the bard.
+ But while we are prating
+ Our herald stands waiting
+ In a perfectly terrible fume,
+ So, my dear, here and now,
+ The poor chap we'll allow
+ His long-winded speech to resume:
+
+ &ldquo;'Tis here declared by order of the Ten,
+ Fair Benedicta's guardians&mdash;worthy men!
+ Thus they decree&mdash;ye lovers all rejoice!
+ She shall by their command, this day make choice
+ Of him&mdash;O, him! O blest, thrice blessed he
+ Who must anon her lord and husband be.
+ 'Tis so pronounced by her grave guardians ten,
+ By them made law&mdash;and they right reverend men!
+ And this the law&mdash;our lady, be it said,
+ This day shall choose the husband she must wed;
+ And he who wins our Duchess for his own
+ Crowned by her love shall mount to ducal throne,
+ So let each knight, by valiant prowess, prove
+ Himself most worthy to our lady's love.
+ Now make I here an end, and ending, pray
+ Ye quit you all like val'rous knights this day.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake the Chief Herald and so paced solemnly down the lists while the
+ long clarions filled the air with gallant music. But the lovely Benedicta,
+ throned beneath silken canopy, knit her black brows and clenched slender
+ hands and stamped dainty foot, yet laughed thereafter, whereupon Yolande,
+ leaning to kiss her flushed cheek, questioned her, wondering:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How say'st thou to this, my loved Benedicta?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth the DUCHESS:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I say, my sweeting, 'tis quite plain
+ That I must run away again!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Howbeit I care not one rush for their laws! Marry forsooth&mdash;a fig!
+ Let them make laws an they will, these reverend, right troublesome
+ grey-beards of mine, they shall never wed me but to such a man as Love
+ shall choose me, and loving him&mdash;him only will I wed, be he great or
+ lowly, rich or poor, worthy or unworthy, so I do love him, as is the sweet
+ and wondrous way of love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Benedicta! what is love?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A joy that cometh but of itself, all unsought! This wisdom had I of a
+ Fool i' the forest. Go learn you of this same Fool and sigh not, dear
+ wench.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but,&rdquo; sighed Yolande, lovely cheeks a-flush, &ldquo;what of Sir Agramore&mdash;hath
+ he not sworn to wed thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do fear Sir Agramore no longer, Yolande, since I have found me one may
+ cope with him perchance&mdash;even as did a Fool with my Lord Gui of Ells
+ upon a tune. Art sighing again, sweet maid?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, indeed&mdash;and wherefore should I sigh?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At mention of a Fool, belike.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, no, no, 'twere shame in me, Benedicta! A Fool forsooth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet Fool of all fools singular, Yolande. And for all his motley a very
+ man, methinks, and of a proud, high bearing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here Yolande's soft cheek grew rosy again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet is he but motley Fool&mdash;and his face&mdash;marred hatefully&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast seen him smile, Yolande, for then&mdash;how, dost sigh again, my
+ sweet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, indeed; but talk we of other matters&mdash;thy so sudden flight&mdash;tell
+ me all that chanced thee, dearest Benedicta.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why first&mdash;in thine ear, Yolande&mdash;my jewel is not&mdash;see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;how, alas! O most sweet lady&mdash;hast lost it? Thy royal
+ amulet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bestowed it, Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Benedicta! On whom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A poor soldier. One that saved me i' the forest from many of Sir
+ Agramore's verderers&mdash;a man very tall and strong and brave, but dight
+ in ragged cloak and rusty mail&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ragged? A thief&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An outlaw&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mayhap!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A wolf's-head&mdash;a wild man and fierce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True he is very wild and very fierce, but very, very gentle&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And didst give to such thy jewel? O Benedicta! The Heart-in-heart?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freely&mdash;gladly! He begged it of me very humbly and all unknowing
+ what it signified&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O my loved Benedicta, alas!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O my sweet Yolande, joy!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But if he should claim thee, and he so poor and wild and ragged&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If he should, Yolande, if he should&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ 'He that taketh Heart-in-heart,
+ Taketh all and every part.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ O, if he should, Yolande, then I&mdash;must fulfil the prophecy. Nay, dear
+ my friend, stare not so great and sadly-eyed, he knoweth not the virtue of
+ the jewel nor have I seen him these many days.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And must thou sigh therefore, Benedicta?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now the trumpets blew a fanfare, and forth rode divers gallant
+ knights, who, spurring rearing steeds, charged amain to gore, to smite and
+ batter each other with right good will while the concourse shouted, caps
+ waved and scarves and ribands fluttered.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But here, methinks, it booteth not to tell
+ Of every fierce encounter that befell;
+ How knight 'gainst knight drove fierce with pointless spear
+ And met with shock that echoed far and near;
+ Or how, though they with blunted swords did smite,
+ Sore battered was full many a luckless wight.
+ But as the day advanced and sun rose high
+ Full often rose the shout: &ldquo;A Gui&mdash;A Gui!&rdquo;
+ For many a proud (though bruised and breathless) lord,
+ Red Gui's tough lance smote reeling on the sward;
+ And ever as these plaudits shook the air,
+ Through vizored casque at Yolande he would stare.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And beholding all the beauty of her he smiled evilly and muttered to
+ himself, glancing from her to certain lusty men-at-arms who, lolling
+ 'gainst the barriers, bore at back and breast his badge of the bloody
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fair Yolande heeded him none at all, sitting with eyes a-dream and
+ sighing ever and anon; insomuch that the Duchess, watching her slyly,
+ sighed amain also and presently spake:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, and O verily, Yolande, meseemeth we do sigh and for ever sigh,
+ thou and I, like two poor, love-sick maids. How think'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, O Benedicta, hearken! See, who rideth yonder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now even as thus fair Yolanda spoke,
+ A horn's shrill note on all men's hearing broke,
+ And all eyes turned where rode a gallant knight,
+ In burnished armour sumptuously bedight.
+ His scarlet plumes 'bove gleaming helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ His gaudy shield with new-popped blazon glowed:
+ Three stooping falcons that on field vert showed;
+ But close-shut vizor hid from all his face
+ As thus he rode at easy, ambling pace.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now as I live!&rdquo; cried Benedicta. &ldquo;By his device yon should be that
+ foolish knight Sir Palamon of Tong!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly!&rdquo; sighed Yolande. &ldquo;Though he wear no motley hither rideth
+ indeed a very fool. And look, Benedicta&mdash;look! O, sure never rode
+ knight in like array&mdash;see how the very populace groweth dumb in its
+ amaze!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ For now the crowd in wonderment grew mute,
+ To see this knight before him bare a lute,
+ While blooming roses his great helmet crowned,
+ They wreathed his sword, his mighty lance around.
+ Thus decked rode he in rosy pageantry,
+ And up the lists he ambled leisurely;
+ Till, all at once, from the astonied crowd
+ There brake a hum that swelled to laughter loud;
+ But on he rode, nor seemed to reck or heed,
+ Till 'neath the balcony he checked his steed.
+ Then, handing lance unto his tall esquire,
+ He sudden struck sweet chord upon his lyre,
+ And thus, serene, his lute he plucked until
+ The laughter died and all stood hushed and still;
+ Then, hollow in his helm, a clear voice rang,
+ As, through his lowered vizor, thus he sang:
+
+ &ldquo;A gentle knight behold in me,
+ (Unless my blazon lie!)
+ For on my shield behold and see,
+ Upon field vert, gules falcons three,
+ Surcharged with heart ensanguiney,
+ To prove to one and all of ye,
+ A love-lorn knight am I.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But now cometh (and almost in haste) the haughty and right dignified Chief
+ Herald with pursuivants attendant, which latter having trumpeted amain,
+ the Herald challenged thus:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Messire, by the device upon thy shield,
+ We know my Lord of Tong is in the field;
+ But pray thee now declare, pronounce, expound,
+ Why thus ye ride with foolish roses crowned?&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereto the Knight maketh answer forthwith:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;If foolish be these flowers I bear,
+ Then fool am I, I trow.
+ Yet, in my folly, fool doth swear,
+ These flowers to fool an emblem rare
+ Of one, to fool, more sweet, more fair,
+ E'en she that is beyond compare,
+ A flower perchance for fool to wear,
+ Who shall his foolish love declare
+ Till she, mayhap, fool's life may share,
+ Nor shall this fool of love despair,
+ Till foolish hie shall go.
+
+ &ldquo;For life were empty, life were vain,
+ If true love come not nigh,
+ Though honours, fortune, all I gain,
+ Yet poorer I than poor remain,
+ If true-love from me fly;
+ So here I pray,
+ If that thou may,
+ Ah&mdash;never pass me by!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Here the Chief Herald frowned, puffing his cheeks, and waved his ebony
+ staff authoritatively.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth he: &ldquo;Enough, Sir Knight! Here is no place for love! For inasmuch as
+ we&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE KNIGHT: Gentle Herald, I being here, here is Love, since I am lover,
+ therefore love-full, thus where I go goeth Love&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Herald: Apprehend me, Sir Knight! For whereas love hath no part in&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Knight: Noble Herald, Love hath every part within me and without, thus
+ I, from Love apart, have no part, and my love no part apart from my every
+ part; wherefore, for my part, and on my part, ne'er will I with Love part
+ for thy part and this to thee do I impart&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet Saints aid us!&rdquo; The Chief Herald clasped his massy brow and gazed
+ with eye distraught. &ldquo;Sir Knight&mdash;messire&mdash;my very good and
+ noble Lord of Tong&mdash;I grope! Here is that which hath a seeming ...
+ thy so many parts portend somewhat ... and yet ... I excogitate ... yet
+ grope I still ... impart, part ... thy part and its part ... so many parts
+ ... and roses ... and songs o' love ... a lute! O, thundering Mars, I ...
+ Sound, trumpets!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the Duchess up-starting, silenced Herald and trumpeters with imperious
+ hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Knight of Tong,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;'tis told thou'rt of nimble tongue and a
+ maker of songs, so we bid thee sing if thy song be of Love&mdash;for Love
+ is a thing little known and seldom understood these days. Here be very
+ many noble knights wondrous learned in the smiting of buffets, but little
+ else; here be noble dames very apt at the play of eyes, the twining of
+ fingers, the languishment of sighs, that, seeking True-love, find but its
+ shadow; and here also grey beards that have forgot the very name of Love.
+ So we bid thee sing us of Love&mdash;True-love, what it is. Our ears
+ attend thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gracious lady,&rdquo; answered the Knight, &ldquo;gladly do I obey. But Love is
+ mighty and I lowly, and may speak of Love but from mine own humility. And
+ though much might be said of Love since Love's empire is the universe and
+ Love immortal, yet will I strive to portray this mighty thing that is
+ True-love in few, poor words.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, plucking sweet melody from his lute, the Knight sang as here
+ followeth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What is Love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day
+ Ne'er to die or fade away
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ &ldquo;Though youth, alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless doth remain
+ The same to-day and ever.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now while the clarions rang out proclaiming Sir Palamon's defiance,
+ Benedicta looked on Yolande and Yolande on Benedicta:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, wonderful!&rdquo; cried the Duchess. &ldquo;My Lord of Tong hath found him manhood
+ and therewith a wisdom beyond most and singeth such love as methought only
+ angels knew and maids might vision in their dreams. Ah, Yolande&mdash;that
+ such a love could be ... e'en though he went ragged and poor in all but
+ love....&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Benedicta,&rdquo; sighed Yolande, hands clasped on swelling bosom, &ldquo;O
+ Benedicta, here is no foolish Lord of Tong ... and yet ... O, I am mad!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, 'tis sweet madness! So, my Yolande, let us be mad awhile
+ together ... thou&mdash;a Fool ... and I&mdash;a beggar-rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay&mdash;alas, dear Benedicta! This were shame&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And forsooth is it shame doth swell thy heart, Yolande, light the glamour
+ in thine eyes and set thee a-tremble&mdash;e'en as I? Nay indeed, thou'rt
+ a-thrill with Folly ... and I, with Roguery. Loved Folly! Sweet Roguery! O
+ Yolande, let us fly from empty state, from this mockery of life and learn
+ the sweet joys of ... of beggary, and, crowned with poverty, clasp life&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MYSELF, myself interrupting:
+ By the way, my dear, you'll understand,
+ Though this is very fine,
+ Still, her Grace's counsel to Yolande
+ Must not be in your line!
+ Not that I'd have you wed for wealth,
+ Or many a beggar-man by stealth,
+ But I would have you, if you can&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Marry some strong, stern, silent man,
+ Named Mark, and with hair slightly gray by the ears!
+ Now he's just the sort who would bore me to tears.
+ If I for a husband feel ever inclined,
+ I shall choose quite an ordin'ry husband&mdash;the kind
+ With plenty of money and nothing to do,
+ With a nice, comfy house, and a motor or two&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: That's all very fine, miss, but what would you do
+ If he, by some ill-chance, quite penniless grew?
+
+ GILL: Oh, why then&mdash;why, of course,
+ I should get a divorce&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: A divorce? Gracious heaven! For goodness' sake&mdash;
+
+ GILL: 'Twould be the most dignified action to take!
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ MYSELF: Pray, what in the world of such things do you know?
+
+ GILL: Well, father, like you&mdash;each day older I grow.
+ But, instead of discussing poor me,
+ I think you would much nicer be
+ To get on with our Geste.
+
+ MYSELF: I obey your behest!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Said Yolande to the duchess, said she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my Benedicta, these be only dreams, but life is real and dreams a
+ very emptiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And is 't so, forsooth?&rdquo; exclaimed the Duchess. &ldquo;Then am I nought but a
+ duchess and lonely, thou a maid fearful of her own heart, and yon singer
+ of love only a very futile knight, Sir Palamon of Tong, nothing esteemed
+ by thee for wit or valour and little by his peers&mdash;see how his
+ challengers do throng. How think you?&rdquo; But the lady Yolande sat very still
+ and silent, only she stared, great-eyed, where danced the scarlet plume.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And indeed many and divers were the knights who, beholding the blazon of
+ Tong, sent the bearer their defiance, eager to cope with him; and each and
+ every challenge Sir Palamon accepted by mouth of his tall esquire who
+ (vizor closed, even as his lord's) spake the Chief Herald in loud, merry
+ voice, thus:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Herald, whereas and forinasmuch as this, my Lord of Tong himself,
+ himself declaring fool, is so himself-like as to meet in combat each and
+ every of his challengers&mdash;themselves ten, my lord that is fool,
+ himself himself so declaring, now declareth by me that am no fool but only
+ humble esquire&mdash;messire, I say, doth his esquire require that I, the
+ said esquire, should on his part impart as followeth, namely and to wit:
+ That these ten gentle knights, the said challengers, shall forthwith of
+ themselves choose of themselves, themselves among themselves thereto
+ agreeing, which of themselves, among themselves of themselves so chosen,
+ shall first in combat adventure himself against my Lord of Tong himself.
+ And moreover, should Fortune my lord bless with victory, the nine
+ remaining shall among themselves choose, themselves agreeing, which of
+ themselves shall next, thus chosen of themselves, themselves represent in
+ single combat with this very noble, fool-like Lord of Tong, my master.
+ Furthermore, whereas and notwithstanding&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, sir!&rdquo; cried the Chief Herald, fingering harassed brow. &ldquo;Pray thee
+ 'bate&mdash;O, abate thy speechful fervour. Here forsooth and of truth is
+ notable saying&mdash;O, most infallibly&mdash;and yet perchance something
+ discursive and mayhap a little involved.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Sir Herald,&rdquo; quoth the esquire, &ldquo;if involved 'twill be resolved if
+ revolved, thus: Here be ten lords would fight one, and one&mdash;that is
+ my lord who is but one&mdash;ten fight one by one. But that ten, fighting
+ one, may as one fight, let it be agreed that of these ten one be chosen
+ one to fight, so shall one fight one and every one be satisfied&mdash;every
+ one of these ten fighting one, one by one. Thus shall ten be one, and one
+ ten fight one by one till one be discomfited. Shall we accord the matter
+ simply, thus?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; quoth the Chief Herald, gasping a little, &ldquo;Amen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; cried the Duchess, clapping her hands, &ldquo;O Yolande, hark to this rare
+ esquire! Surely, I have heard yon cunning tongue ere this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Yolande gazed ever where Sir Palamon, having taken his station, set
+ himself in array. For now, the ten knights having chosen one to represent
+ them, forth rode their champion resplendent in shining mail and green
+ surcoat with heralds before to proclaim his name and rank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande,&rdquo; quoth the Duchess softly, &ldquo;pray&mdash;pray this Lord of Tong
+ may tilt as bravely as he doth sing, for Sir Thomas of Thornydyke is a
+ notable jouster.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trumpets blew a fanfare and, levelling their pointless lances, both
+ knights gave spur, their great horses reared, broke into a gallop and
+ thundered towards each other.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But hard midway upon the green surcoat,
+ Sir Palamon's stout lance so truly smote,
+ That, 'neath the shock, the bold Sir Thomas reeled
+ And, losing stirrups, saddle, lance and shield,
+ Down, down upon the ling outstretched he fell
+ And, losing all, lost breath and speech as well.
+ Thus, silent all, the bold Sir Thomas lay,
+ Though much, and many things, he yearned to say,
+ Which things his squires and pages might surmise
+ From the expression of his fish-like eyes
+ E'en as they bore him from that doleful place;
+ While, near and far, from all the populace,
+ Rose shout on shout that echoed loud and long:
+ &ldquo;Sir Palamon! Sir Palamon of Tong!&rdquo;
+ So came these ten good knights, but, one by one,
+ They fell before this bold Sir Palamon,
+ Whose lance unerring smote now helm, now shield,
+ That many an one lay rolling on the field.
+ But each and all themselves did vanquished yield;
+ And loud and louder did the plaudits grow,
+ That one knight should so many overthrow.
+ Even Sir Gui, within his silken tent
+ Scowled black in ever-growing wonderment.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But the Knight of Tong, his gaudy shield a little battered, his fine
+ surcoat frayed and torn, leaped from his wearied steed and forthwith
+ mounted one held by his tall esquire, a mighty charger that tossed proud
+ head and champed his bit, pawing impatient hoof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth the esquire, pointing to ten fair steeds held by ten fair
+ pages. &ldquo;Oho, good brother, most puissant Knight of Tong, here is good and
+ rich booty&mdash;let us begone!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered the Knight, tossing aside his blunt tilting-spear, &ldquo;here
+ is an end to sportful dalliance&mdash;reach me my lance!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, is't now the Red Gui's turn, brother? The Saints aid thee, in
+ especial two, that, being women, are yet no saints yet awhile&mdash;see
+ how they watch thee, sweet, gentle dames! Their prayers go with thee,
+ methinks, brother, and mine also, for the Red Gui is forsooth a valiant
+ rogue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now, mounted on the great black war-horse, the Knight of Tong rode up
+ the lists:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ His scarlet plume 'bove shining helm a-dance,
+ His bannerole a-flutter from long lance,
+ Till he was come where, plain for all to spy,
+ Was hung the shield and blazon of Sir Gui,
+ With bends and bars in all their painted glory,
+ Surcharged with hand ensanguined&mdash;gules or gory.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Full upon this bloody hand smote the sharp point of Sir Palamon's lance;
+ whereupon the watching crowd surged and swayed and hummed expectant, since
+ here was to be no play with blunted weapons but a deadly encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up started Sir Gui and strode forth of his tent, grim-smiling and
+ confident. Quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, my Lord of Tong, thou'rt grown presumptuous and over-venturesome,
+ methinks. But since life thou dost hold so cheap prepare ye for death
+ forthright!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So spake the Lord of Ells and, beckoning to his esquires, did on his great
+ tilting-helm and rode into the lists, whereon was mighty roar of welcome,
+ for, though much hated, he was esteemed mighty at arms, and the accepted
+ champion of the Duchy. So while the people thundered their acclaim the two
+ knights galloped to their stations and, reining about, faced each other
+ from either end of the lists,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And halted thus, their deadly spears they couched,
+ With helms stooped low, behind their shields they crouched;
+ Now rang the clarions; goading spurs struck deep,
+ The mighty chargers reared with furious leap
+ And, like two whirlwinds, met in full career,
+ To backward reel 'neath shock of splintering spear:
+ But, all unshaken, every eye might see
+ The bloody hand, the scarred gules falcons three.
+ Thrice thus they met, but at the fourth essay,
+ Rose sudden shout of wonder and dismay,
+ For, smitten sore through riven shield, Sir Gui
+ Thudded to earth there motionless to lie.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus Sir Gui, Lord of Ells and Seneschal of Raddemore, wounded and utterly
+ discomfited, was borne raging to his pavilion while the air rang with the
+ blare of trumpet and clarion in honour of the victor. Thereafter, since no
+ other knight thought it prudent to challenge him, Sir Palamon of Tong was
+ declared champion of the tournament, and was summoned by the Chief Herald
+ to receive the victor's crown. But even as he rode towards the
+ silk-curtained balcony, a distant trumpet shrilled defiance, and into the
+ lists galloped a solitary knight.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Well-armed was he in proud and war-like trim,
+ Of stature tall and wondrous long of limb;
+ 'Neath red surcoat black was the mail he wore;
+ His glitt'ring shield a rampant leopard bore,
+ Beholding which the crowd cried in acclaim,
+ &ldquo;Ho for Sir Agramore of Biename!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But from rosy-red to pale, from pale to rosy-red flushed the Duchess
+ Benedicta, and clenching white teeth, she frowned upon Sir Agramore's
+ fierce and warlike figure. Quoth she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, sure there is no man so vile or so unworthy in all Christendom as
+ this vile Lord of Biename!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless,&rdquo; said Yolande, frowning also, &ldquo;unless it be my Lord Gui of Ells!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, my Yolanda! Now, as thou dost hate Sir Gui so hate I Sir Agramore,
+ therefore pray we sweet maid, petition we the good Saints our valiant
+ singer shall serve my hated Sir Agramore as he did thy hated Sir Gui&mdash;may
+ he be bruised, may he be battered, may&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho, 'tis done, my sweeting! A-hee&mdash;a-hi, 'tis done!&rdquo; croaked a
+ voice, and starting about, the Duchess beheld a bent and hag-like
+ creature,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With long, sharp nose that showed beneath her hood,
+ A nose that curved as every witch's should,
+ And glittering eye, before whose baleful light,
+ The fair Yolande shrank back in sudden fright.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my Yolande,&rdquo; cried the Duchess, &ldquo;hast forgot old Mopsa, my
+ foster-mother, that, being a wise-woman, fools decry as witch, and my ten
+ grave and learned guardians have banished therefor? Hast forgot my loved
+ and faithful Mopsa that is truly the dearest, gentlest, wisest witch that
+ e'er witched rogue or fool? But O Mopsa, wise mother&mdash;would'st thou
+ might plague and bewitch in very truth yon base caitiff knight, Sir
+ Agramore of Biename!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis done, loved daughter, 'tis done!&rdquo; chuckled the Witch.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;He groaneth,
+ He moaneth,
+ He aileth,
+ He waileth,
+ Lying sighing,
+ Nigh to dying,
+ Oho,
+ I know
+ 'Tis so.
+ With bones right sore,
+ Both 'hind and fore,
+ Sir Agramore
+ Doth ache all o'er.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He aileth sore yet waileth more&mdash;oho! I know, I have seen&mdash;in
+ the chalk, in the ink, in the smoke&mdash;I looked and saw
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Sir Agramore,
+ By bold outlaw,
+ Bethwacked most sore
+ As told before&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but, good Mopsa, how may this be? Sir Agramore rideth armed yonder,
+ plain to my sight.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Child, I have told thee sooth,&rdquo; croaked the Witch. &ldquo;Have patience, watch
+ and be silent, and shalt grow wise as old Mopsa&mdash;mayhap&mdash;in
+ time.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;For, 'tis written in the chalk,
+ Sore is he and may not walk.
+ O, sing heart merrily!
+ I have seen within the smoke
+ Bones bethwacked by lusty stroke,
+ Within the ink I looked and saw,
+ Swathed in clouts, Sir Agramore;
+ Dread of him for thee is o'er,
+ By reason of a bold outlaw.
+ Sing, heart, and joyful be!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go to, Mopsa, thou'rt mad!&rdquo; quoth the Duchess. &ldquo;For yonder is this hated
+ lord very strong and hale, and in well-being whiles thou dost rave! Truly
+ thou'rt run mad, methinks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the old Witch only mumbled and mowed, and cracked her finger-bones as
+ is the custom of witches.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime, Sir Agramore, checking his fiery charger and brandishing heavy
+ lance fiercely aloft, roared loud defiance:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What ho! Ye knights, lords, esquires, and lovers of lusty blows, hither
+ come I with intent, sincere and hearty, to bicker with, fight, combat and
+ withstand all that will&mdash;each and every, a-horse or a-foot, with
+ sword, battleaxe or lance. Now all ye that love good blows&mdash;have at
+ ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here ensued great clamour and a mighty blowing of trumpets that waxed yet
+ louder when it was proclaimed that Sir Palamon, as champion of the day,
+ had accepted Sir Agramore's haughty challenge.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now all was hushed as these two doughty knights faced each other and,
+ as the trumpets brayed, charged furiously to meet with thunderous shock of
+ breaking lances and reeling horses that, rearing backwards, fell crashing
+ upon the torn and trampled grass. But their riders, leaping clear of
+ lashing hooves, drew their swords and, wasting no breath in words, beset
+ each other forthwith, smiting with right good will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Agramore's leopard shield was riven in twain by a single stroke, Sir
+ Palamon's scarlet plume was shorn away, but they fought only the fiercer
+ as, all untiring, the long blades whirled and flashed until their armour
+ rang, sparks flew, and the populace rocked and swayed and roared for very
+ joy. Once Sir Agramore was beaten to his knees, but rising, grasped his
+ sword in two hands and smote a mighty swashing blow, a direful stroke that
+ burst the lacing of Sir Palamon's great helm and sent it rolling on the
+ sward. But, beholding thus his adversary's face, Sir Agramore, crying in
+ sudden amaze, sprang back; for men all might see a visage framed in long,
+ black-curled hair, grey-eyed, but a face so direly scarred that none,
+ having seen it but once, might well forget.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; panted Sir Agramore, lifting his vizor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pertinax!&rdquo; gasped Duke Jocelyn. &ldquo;O Pertinax&mdash;thou loved and lovely
+ smiter&mdash;ne'er have I been so sore battered ere now!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon all folk stared in hugeous wonderment to behold these two
+ champions drop their swords and leap to clasp and hug each other in mighty
+ arms, to pat each other's mailed shoulders and grasp each other's mailed
+ hands. Quoth Sir Pertinax:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, how came ye in this guise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Pertinax, whence stole ye that goodly armour?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord, oath made I to requite one Sir Agramore of Biename for certain
+ felon blow. Him sought I latterly therefore, and this day met him
+ journeying hither, and so, after some disputation, I left him lying by the
+ way, nor shall he need armour awhile, methinks&mdash;wherefore I took it
+ and rode hither seeking what might befall&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here, Sir Gui, all heedless of his wound, started up from his couch,
+ raising great outcry:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;roguery, roguery! Ho, there, seize me yon knave that beareth the
+ cognizance of Tong. Ha&mdash;treason, treason!&rdquo; At this, others took up
+ the cry and divers among the throng, beholding Duke Jocelyn's scarred
+ features, made loud tumults: &ldquo;The Fool! The Fool! 'Tis the Singing Motley!
+ 'Tis the rogue-Fool that broke prison&mdash;seize him! Seize him!&rdquo; And
+ many, together with the soldiery, came running.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, catching up his sword, &ldquo;here now is like to be
+ a notable, sweet affray!&rdquo; But even as these twain turned to meet their
+ many assailants was thunder of hoofs, a loud, merry voice reached them,
+ and they saw Robin hard by who held two trampling chargers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mount, brothers&mdash;mount!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Mount, then spur we for the
+ barriers!&rdquo; So they sprang to saddle and, spurring the rearing horses,
+ galloped for the barriers, all three, nor was there any who dare stay them
+ or abide the sweep of those long swords. Thus, leaping the barriers, they
+ galloped away and left behind roaring tumult and dire confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And amid all this, hid by the silken curtains of her balcony, the Duchess
+ Benedicta uttered a joyous cry and, clasping Yolande in her arms, kissed
+ her rapturously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande!&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;O dear my friend, thou didst see&mdash;even as did
+ I&mdash;a sorry fool and a poor rogue-soldier at hand-strokes with each
+ other&mdash;O wise Fool! O knightly Rogue! Come, let us fly, Yolande, let
+ us to the wild-wood and, lost therein, love, True-love, methinks, shall
+ find us. Nay&mdash;ask me nothing, only hear this. Be thou to thine own
+ heart true, be thou brave and Shame shall fly thee since True-love
+ out-faceth Shame! How say'st thou, Mopsa, thou wise witch-mother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, sweet children!&rdquo; croaked the Witch, touching each with claw-like hand
+ yet hand wondrous gentle. &ldquo;True-love shall indeed find ye, hide where ye
+ will. For True-love, though blind, they say, hath eyes to see all that is
+ good and sweet and true. A poor man-at-arms in rusty mail may yet be true
+ man and a fool, for all his motley, wise. To love such seemeth great
+ folly, yet to the old, love is but folly. Nath'less, being old I do love
+ ye, and being wise I charge ye:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies;
+ Love's blind, they say, but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly&mdash;follow!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN animadverteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: &ldquo;Stop! Your tournament, father, seems too long drawn out,
+ With quite too much combating and knocking about.
+
+ MYSELF: I hope you're wrong, my dear, although
+ Who knows? Perhaps, it may be so.
+
+ GILL: And such scrappy bits of love-making you write;
+ You seem to prefer much describing a fight.
+ All authors should write what their readers like best;
+ But authors are selfish, yes&mdash;even the best
+ And you are an author!
+
+ MYSELF: Alack, that is true,
+ And, among other things, I'm the author of you.
+
+ GILL: Then, being my author, it's plain as can be
+ That you are to blame if I'm naughty&mdash;not me.
+ But, father, our Geste, though quite corking in places,
+ Has too many fights and too little embraces.
+ You've made all our lovers so frightfully slow,
+ You ought to have married them pages ago.
+ The books that are nicest are always the sort
+ That, when you have read them, seem always too short!
+ If you make all your readers impatient like me,
+ They'll buy none of your books&mdash;and then where shall we be?
+ All people like reading of love when they can,
+ So write them a lot, father, that is the plan.
+ Go on to the love, then, for every one's sake,
+ And end with a wedding&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: Your counsel I 'll take.
+ I can woo them and wed them in less than no time,
+ I can do it in prose, in blank verse, or in rhyme;
+ But since, my dear, you are for speed,
+ To end our Geste I will proceed.
+ In many ways it may be done,
+ As I have told you&mdash;here is one:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ A short two years have elapsed and we find our hero Jocelyn tenderly
+ playing with a golden-haired prattler, his beloved son and heir, while his
+ beautiful spouse Yolande busied with her needle, smiles through happy
+ tears.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL: O, hush, father! Of course, that is simply absurd!
+ Such terrible piffle&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I object to that word!
+
+ GILL: Well, then, please try a little verse.
+
+ MYSELF: With pleasure:
+
+ &ldquo;My own at last!&rdquo; Duke Joc'lyn fondly cried,
+ And kissed Yolande, his blooming, blushing bride.
+ &ldquo;My own!&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;My own&mdash;my very own!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;Thine, love!&rdquo; she murmured. &ldquo;Thine and thine alone,
+ Thy very own for days and months and years&mdash;&rdquo;
+
+ GILL: O, stop! I think that's even worse!
+
+ MYSELF: Beyond measure.
+
+ Then here's a style may be admired
+ Since brevity is so desired:
+
+ So he married her and she married him,
+ and everybody married each other
+ and lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or again, and thus, my daughter,
+ Versified it may be shorter:
+
+ So all was marriage, joy and laughter,
+ And each lived happy ever after.
+
+ Or:
+ If for High Romance you sigh,
+ Here's Romance that's over high:
+
+ Shy summer swooned to autumn's sun-burned arms,
+ Swoon, summer, swoon!
+ While roses bloomed and blushing sighed their pain,
+ Blush, roses, blush!
+
+ Filling the world with perfume languorous,
+ Sighing forth their souls in fragrant amorousness;
+ And fair Yolande, amid these bloomful languors,
+ Blushing as they, as languorous, as sweet,
+ Sighed in the arms that passioned her around:
+ O Jocelyn, O lord of my delight,
+ See how&mdash;
+
+ GILL: Stop, father, stop, I beg of you.
+ Such awful stuff will never do,
+ I suppose you must finish it in your own way&mdash;
+
+ MYSELF: I suppose that I shall, child, that is&mdash;if I may.
+
+ GILL: But father, wait&mdash;I must insist
+ Whatever else you do
+ It's time that somebody was kissed
+ It doesn't matter who&mdash;
+ I mean either Yolande the Fair
+ Or else the Duchess&mdash;I don't care.
+
+ MYSELF: In these next two Fyttes both shall kiss
+ And be well kissed, I promise this.
+ Two Fyttes of kisses I will make
+ One after t' other, for your sake.
+ Two Fyttes of love I will invent
+ And make them both quite different,
+ Which is a trying matter rather
+ And difficult for any father&mdash;
+ But then, as well you know, my Gillian,
+ You have a father in a million;
+ And Oh, methinks 'tis very plain
+ You ne'er shall meet his like again.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0013" id="link2H_4_0013"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 11
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ How Pertinax fell out with Robin and with Friar, Yet, in that very hour,
+ came by his heart's desire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sinking sun had set the West aflame, When our three riders to the
+ wild-wood came, Where a small wind 'mid sun-kissed branches played, And
+ deep'ning shadows a soft twilight made; Where, save for leafy stirrings,
+ all was still, Lulled by the murmur of a bubbling rill That flowed
+ o'ershadowed by a mighty oak, Its massy bole deep-cleft by lightning
+ stroke. Here Robin checked his steed. &ldquo;Good friends,&rdquo; quoth he,
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter Gillian suggesteth:
+
+ Gill: That's rather good,
+ But, still, I should
+ In prose prefer the rest;
+ For if this fytte
+ Has love in it,
+ Prose is for love the best.
+ All ord'nary lovers, as every one knows,
+ Make love to each other much better in prose.
+ If, at last, our Sir Pertinax means to propose,
+ Why then&mdash;just to please me,
+ Father, prose let it be.
+
+ Myself: Very well, I agree!
+
+ Then said Robin, quoth he:
+&ldquo;Good friends, here are we safe!&rdquo; And, checking his steed within this
+pleasant shade, he dismounted.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Safe, quotha?&rdquo; said Sir Pertinax, scowling back over shoulder. &ldquo;Not so!
+ Surely we are close pursued&mdash;hark! Yonder be horsemen riding at speed&mdash;ha,
+ we are beset!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Content you, sir!&rdquo; answered Robin. &ldquo;Think you I would leave behind good
+ booty? Yonder come ten noble coursers laden with ten goodly armours the
+ same won a-jousting to-day by this right wondrous Fool, my good gossip&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy gossip, forsooth!&rdquo; snorted Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;But tell me, presumptuous
+ fellow, how shall these ten steeds come a-galloping hither!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, on this wise, Sir Simple Innocence&mdash;these steeds do gallop
+ for sufficient reason, namely&mdash;they are to gallop bidden being
+ ridden, bestridden and chidden by whip and spur applied by certain trusty
+ men o' my company, which men go habited, decked, dressed, clad, guised and
+ disguised as smug, sleek citizens, Sir Innocent Simplicity&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax, scowling. &ldquo;And who 'rt thou, sirrah,
+ with men at thy beck and call?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold!&rdquo; said Robin, unhelming. &ldquo;Behold the king of all masterless
+ rogues, and thy fellow gallow's-bird, Sir High Mightiness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, is 't thou?&rdquo; cried Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Now a plague on thy kingdom and
+ thee for an unhanged, thieving rogue&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;E'en as thyself,&rdquo; nodded Robin, &ldquo;thou that flaunted thy unlovely carcass
+ in stolen armour.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; roared Sir Pertinax, clapping hand on sword. &ldquo;A pest&mdash;a
+ murrain! This to me, thou dog's-meat? Malediction! Now will I crack thy
+ numbskull for a pestilent malapert&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Sir Grim-and-gory,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;rather will I now use thee as
+ thou would'st ha' served me on a day but for this generous and kindly
+ Fool, my good comrade!&rdquo; And speaking, Robin sprang nimbly to the great oak
+ tree and thrusting long arm within the jagged fissure that gaped therein
+ drew forth a hunting-horn and winded it loud and shrill. And presently was
+ a stir, a rustle amid the surrounding brushwood and all about them were
+ outlaws, wild men and fierce of aspect, and each and every grasped
+ long-bow with arrow on string and every arrow was aimed at scowling Sir
+ Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Per Dex!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and is this death, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily!&rdquo; nodded Robin, &ldquo;an I do speak the word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it&mdash;speak!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Come, Death&mdash;I fear
+ thee not!&rdquo; And out flashed his long sword; but even then it was twisted
+ from his grasp and Lobkyn Lollo, tossing the great blade aloft and,
+ catching it very neatly, laughed and spake:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Five times, five times ten
+ Are we, all lusty men.
+ An hundred twice and fifty deaths are we,
+ So, an Rob speak, dead thou 'lt as often be.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, hold a while, sweet lads!&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;the surly rogue shall
+ sing for his life and our good pleasaunce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sing?&rdquo; roared Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;I sing! I? Ha, dare ye bid me so, base dog?
+ Sing, forsooth? By Og and Gog! By the Seven Champions and all the fiends,
+ rather will I die!&rdquo; And here, being defenceless, Sir Pertinax clenched
+ mighty fists and swore until he lacked for breath.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then spake Jocelyn, gentle-voiced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sing, Pertinax,&rdquo; quoth he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;never! Not for all the&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do command thee, Pertinax. As Robin once sang for his life, now must
+ thou sing for thine. Song for song, 't is but just! Sing, Pertinax!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; groaned the proud knight, &ldquo;I had rather drink water and chew grass
+ like a rabbit. Moreover I ha' no gift o' song&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do thy best!&rdquo; quoth Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm harsh o' voice&mdash;knave!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then croak&mdash;rogue!&rdquo; quoth Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No song have I&mdash;vermin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Make one&mdash;carrion! But sing thou shalt though thy song be no better
+ than hog-song which is grunt. Howbeit sing thou must!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon Sir Pertinax gnashed his teeth and glaring balefully on Robin
+ lifted hoarse voice and burst forth into fierce song:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Thou base outlaw,
+ Vile clapper-claw,
+ Since I must sing a stave,
+ Then, here and now,
+ I do avow
+ Thou art a scurvy knave!
+ Thy hang-dog air
+ Doth plain declare
+ Thou 'rt very scurvy knave.
+
+ &ldquo;Rogues breed apace
+ In each vile place,
+ But this I will avow,
+ Where e'er rogues be
+ No man may see
+ A viler rogue than thou,
+
+ Since it were vain
+ To meet again
+ A rogue more vile than thou.
+
+ &ldquo;As rogue thou art,
+ In every part,
+ Then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold there&mdash;hold!&rdquo; cried Robin, stopping his ears. &ldquo;Thy voice is
+ unlovely as thy look and thy song as ill as thy voice, so do we forgive
+ thee the rest. Ha' done thy bellowing and begone&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;not so!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;For troth I do sing better than
+ methought possible, and my rhyming is none so ill! So will I rhyme thy
+ every knavish part and sing song till song and rhyme be ended. Have at
+ thee again, base fellow!
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Since rogue thou art
+ In every part&mdash;part&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ha, plague on't, hast put me out, rogue! I was about to hang thy every
+ roguish part in rhyme, but my rhymes halt by reason o' thee, rogue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth!&rdquo; laughed Robin. &ldquo;Thus stickest thou, for thy part, at my every
+ part, the which is well since I am man of parts. Thus then rhyme thou
+ rhymes upon thyself therefore; thus, thyself rhyming rhymes of thee, thou
+ shalt thyself, rhyming of thyself, thyself pleasure thereby, thou thus
+ rhyming of thee, and thee, thou. Thus thy thee and thou shall be well
+ accorded. How think'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Sir Pertinax, astride his charger that cropped joyously at sweet, cool
+ grass, sat chin on fist, lost in the throes of composition, nothing
+ heeding, even when came the ten steeds with the ten suits of armour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now these ten horses bare eleven riders, tall, lusty fellows all, save one
+ shrouded in hood and cloak and whom Jocelyn viewed with quick, keen eyes.
+ And thus he presently whispered Robin who, laughing slyly, made signal to
+ his followers, whereupon, by ones and twos they stole silently away until
+ there none remained save only Sir Pertinax who, wrestling with his muse,
+ stared aloft under knitted brows, all unknowing, and presently brake out
+ singing on this wise:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;All men may see
+ A man in me,
+ A man who feareth no man,
+ Thus, fearless, I
+ No danger fly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Except it be a woman!&rdquo; sang a soft, sweet voice hard by, in pretty
+ mockery. Hereat Sir Pertinax started so violently that his mail clashed
+ and he stared about him eager-eyed but, finding himself quite alone,
+ sighed and fell to reverie.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A woman?&rdquo; said he aloud. &ldquo;'Except it be a woman&mdash;'&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: Aye&mdash;a woman, O craven soldier!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PERTINAX: Why here is strange echo methinks and speaketh&mdash;with
+ her voice!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: 'O voice so soft and full of sweet allure!'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SIR PERTINAX: O voice beloved that might my dolour cure!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: O craven soldier! O most timid wooer! SIR PERTINAX: Craven am
+ I, yet lover&mdash;'t is most sure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ THE VOICE: But thou 'rt a man&mdash;at least meseemeth so.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+SIR PERTINAX: And, being man, myself unworthy know,
+ Yet must I love and my belovèd seek
+ And, finding her, no words of love dare speak.
+ For this my love beyond all words doth reach,
+ And I'm slow-tongued and lack the trick of speech.
+ Nor hope have I that she should stoop to bless,
+ A man so full of all unworthiness.
+ So am I dumb&mdash;
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+THE VOICE: And yet dost speak indeed,
+ Such words, methinks, as any maid might heed.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha, think ye so in verity, sweet voice!&rdquo; cried Sir Pertinax, and
+ springing lightly to earth, strode forward on eager feet. And lo! from
+ behind a certain tree stepped one who, letting fall shrouding cloak and
+ hood, stood there a maid, dark-haired and darkly bright of eye, very
+ shapely and fair to see in her simple tire. And beholding her thus, the
+ tender curve of scarlet lips, the flutter of slender hands, the languorous
+ bewitchment of her eyes, Sir Pertinax halted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN interpolateth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL:
+
+ What, again? Father, that will never do.
+ Don't make him halt again, I beg of you.
+ Sir Pertinax has halted much too long,
+ To make him do it here would be quite
+ wrong!
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, I wish you would not interrupt
+ My halting muse in manner so abrupt&mdash;
+
+ GILL:
+
+ But here 's a chance at last to let them kiss,
+ And now you make him halt!
+
+ MYSELF: Exactly, miss!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head abashed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My daughter GILLIAN persisteth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ GILL:
+
+ Well, father, while he halts, then tell me,
+ pray,
+ Just what you mean by that line where you
+ say,
+ 'The languorous bewitchment of her eyes'?
+
+ MYSELF:
+
+ My child, no child should authors catechise,
+ Especially, poor fellow, if, like me,
+ Father and author both at once is he.
+ Wise authors all such questions strictly ban,
+ And never answer&mdash;even if they can.
+ If of our good knight's wooing you would
+ hear,
+ Keep stilly tongue and hearken well, my
+ dear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Sir Pertinax halted and bowed his head, abashed by her beauty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Melissa!&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;O Melissa!&rdquo; and so stood mute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Pertinax!&rdquo; she sighed. &ldquo;Art dumb at sight of me? O Pertinax, and
+ wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All have I forgot save only thy loveliness, Melissa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Methinks such&mdash;forgetfulness becometh thee well. Say on!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Melissa, I&mdash;do love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why this I knew when thou didst sit a-fishing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, indeed, then I dreamed not of loving thee or any maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because thou art but a man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, and being man, now came I seeking thee for Love's sweet sake yet,
+ finding thee, know not how to speak thee. Alas, I do fear I am but sorry
+ wooer!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Pertinax, I do fear thou art! Yet thou shalt learn, perchance. How&mdash;art
+ dumb again, canst speak me no more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nought&mdash;save only this, thou art beyond all maids fair, Melissa!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I do think thou'lt make a wooer some day mayhap, by study diligent.
+ 'T will take long time and yet&mdash;I would not have thee learn too soon!
+ And hast thought of me? A little?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have borne thee ever within my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore wilt love maid so lowly?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that thou art thyself and thyself&mdash;Melissa. And O, I love thy
+ voice!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My voice? And what more?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thine eyes. Thy little, pretty feet. Thy scarlet mouth. Thy gentle, small
+ hands. Thy hair. All of thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O,&rdquo; she murmured a little breathlessly, &ldquo;if thou dost so love me&mdash;woo
+ me&mdash;a little!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; he sighed, &ldquo;I know not how.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hast ne'er wooed maid ere this, big soldier?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou poor Pertinax! How empty&mdash;how drear thy life. For this do I
+ pity thee with pity kin to love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Love?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;Ah, Melissa, couldst e'en learn to love one so
+ unlovely, so rude, so rough and unmannered as I?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;O, never&mdash;unless thou teach me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would indeed I might, Melissa. Ah, teach me how I may teach thee to love
+ one so unworthy as Pertinax!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now hearkening to his harsh voice grown soft and tremulous, beholding the
+ truth in his honest eyes, Melissa smiled, wondrous tender, and reaching
+ out took hold upon his two hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kneel!&rdquo; she commanded. &ldquo;Kneel here upon the grass as I do kneel. Now, lay
+ by thy cumbrous helmet. Now fold thy great, strong hands. Now bow thy
+ tall, grim head and say in sweet, soft accents low and reverent: 'Melissa,
+ I do love thee heart and soul, thee only do I love and thee only will I
+ love now and for ever. So aid me, Love, amen!'&rdquo; Then, closing his eyes,
+ Sir Pertinax bowed reverent head, and, humbly folding his hands, spake as
+ she bade him. Thereafter opening his eyes, he saw her watching him through
+ gathering tears, and leaning near, he reached out eager arms, yet touched
+ her not. Quoth he: &ldquo;O maid beloved, what is thy sorrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis joy&mdash;joy, and thou&mdash;thou art so strong and fierce yet so
+ gentle and simple of heart! O, may I prove worthy thy love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Worthy? Of my love?&rdquo; he stammered. &ldquo;But O Melissa, I am but he thou didst
+ name harsh of tongue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, I did!&rdquo; she sobbed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hard of heart, flinty of soul, rude, unmannered and unlovely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye&mdash;I did and&mdash;loved thee the while!&rdquo; she whispered. &ldquo;So now
+ do I pray that I prove worthy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Worthy? Thou? O my sweet maid&mdash;thou that art kin to the holy angels,
+ thou so high and far removed 'bove me that I do tremble and&mdash;fear to
+ touch thee&mdash;&ldquo;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, fear me not, Pertinax,&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;for though indeed I am all
+ this, yet maid am I also and by times&mdash;very human. So Pertinax, thou
+ great, fearless man-at-arms, lay by thy so great fears a while&mdash;I do
+ beseech thee.&rdquo; Then Sir Pertinax, beholding the tender passion of her
+ eyes, forgot his fear in glad wonderment and, reaching out hands that
+ trembled for all their strength, drew her to his close embracement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, kneeling together upon the sun-dappled sward, they forgot all
+ things in this joyous world save only their love and the glory of it. And
+ when they had kissed each other&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ My daughter GILLIAN remonstrateth:
+
+ GILL: But, wait, they haven't yet, you know!
+
+ MYSELF: Indeed, they have, I've just said so.
+
+ GILL: Then, father, please to tell me this:
+ How can a person say a kiss?
+ And so, since kisses can't be said,
+ Please make them do it now instead.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus, cradled in his strong arms, she questioned him tenderly:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dost mind how, upon a day, my Pertinax, didst ask of me the amulet I bore
+ within my bosom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;and sure 'tis charm of potent magic whose spell
+ brought us out of the dungeon at Canalise&mdash;the which is great matter
+ for wonder! But 'tis for thy dear sake I do cherish it&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bear you it yet?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here upon my heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And if I should ask it of thee again&mdash;wouldst render it back to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Never, until with it I give thee myself also!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently she stirred in his embrace for upon the air was an
+ approaching clamour, voices, laughter and the ring of mail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come away!&rdquo; whispered Melissa, upspringing to her feet. &ldquo;Come, let thou
+ and Love and I hide until these disturbers be gone and the sweet world
+ hold but us three again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, as they stood, hand in hand, deep hidden 'mid the green, they beheld
+ six merry woodland rogues who led an ambling ass whereon rode a friar
+ portly and perspiring albeit he had a jovial eye. And as he rode he spake
+ his captors thus in voice full-toned and deep:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care, gentle rogues and brethren, hurry not this ambulant animal
+ unduly, poor, much-enduring beast. Behold the pensive pendulation of these
+ auriculars so forlornly a-dangle! Here is ass that doth out-patience all
+ asses, both four and two-legged. Here is meek ass of leisured soul loving
+ not haste&mdash;a very pensive perambulator. So hurry not the ass, my
+ brothers, for these several and distinct reasons or arguments. Firstly,
+ dearly beloved, because I love haste no more than the ass; secondly,
+ brethren, 't is property of Holy Church which is above all argument; and,
+ thirdly, 't is bestridden by one Friar John, my very self, and I am
+ forsooth weighty argument. Fourthly, beloved, 'tis an ass that&mdash;ha! O
+ sweet vision for eyes human or divine! Do I see thee in very truth, thou
+ damsel of disobedience, dear dame of discord, sweet, witching, wilful lady&mdash;is
+ it thou in very truth, most loved daughter, or wraith conjured of thy
+ magic and my perfervid imaginations&mdash;speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is I myself, Reverend Father!&rdquo; laughed Melissa. &ldquo;O my dear, good Friar
+ John, methinks the kind Saints have brought thee to my need.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Saints, quotha!&rdquo; exclaimed the Friar, rolling merry eye towards his
+ several captors. &ldquo;Call ye these&mdash;Saints? Long have I sought thee,
+ thou naughty maid, and to-day in my quest these brawny 'saints' beset me
+ with bow and quarterstaff and me constrained hither&mdash;but my blessing
+ on them since they have brought me to thee. And now, sweet child and
+ daughter, whiles the news yet runneth hot-foot or, like bird unseen,
+ wingeth from lip to lip, I thy ghostly father have rare good news for thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Friar John, I will guess thy tidings: Sir Agramore of Biename lieth
+ sorry and sore of a cudgelling.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How!&rdquo; cried the Friar. &ldquo;Thou dost know&mdash;so soon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, Reverend Father, nor have I or my worthy guardians aught to fear
+ of him hereafter. And now have I right wondrous news for thee, news that
+ none may guess. List, dear Friar John, thou the wisest and best loved of
+ all my guardians ten; to-day ye are absolved henceforth all care of your
+ wilful ward since to-day she passeth from the guardianship of ye ten to
+ the keeping of one. Come forth, Pertinax, thou only one beloved of me for
+ no reason but that thou art thou and I am I&mdash;as is ever the sweet,
+ mad way of True-love&mdash;come forth, my dear-loved, poor soldier!&rdquo; Out
+ from the trees strode Pertinax but, beholding his face, Friar John scowled
+ and, viewing his rich surcoat and goodly armour, fell to perspiring wonder
+ and amaze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by the sweet Saint Amphibalus!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Surely these be the arms
+ of Sir Agramore, dread Lord of Biename?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most true, dear Friar John,&rdquo; answered Melissa, &ldquo;and by this same token
+ Sir Agramore lieth sore bruised e'en now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth the Friar, mopping moist brow. &ldquo;'T is well&mdash;'t is very
+ well, so shall these two ears of mine, with eighteen others of lesser
+ account, scathless go and all by reason of this good, tall fellow.
+ Howbeit, I do know this same fellow for fellow of none account, and no fit
+ mate for thee, noble daughter, love or no. A fierce, brawling,
+ tatterdemalion this, that erstwhile tramped in company with long-legged
+ ribald&mdash;a froward jesting fellow. Wherefore this fellow, though
+ fellow serviceable, no fellow is for thee and for these sufficing reasons.
+ Firstly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;enough!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, chin out-thrust. &ldquo;'Fellow' me no
+ more, Friar&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Firstly,&rdquo; continued Friar John, &ldquo;because this out-at-elbows fellow is a
+ rogue.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Rogue,' in thy teeth, Churchman!&rdquo; growled Sir Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Secondly,&rdquo; continued Friar John, nothing abashed, &ldquo;because this
+ rogue-fellow is a runagate roysterer, a nameless knave, a highway-haunter,
+ a filching flick-o'-the-gibbet and a&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friar,&rdquo; snorted Sir Pertinax, &ldquo;thou 'rt but a very fat man scant o'
+ breath, moreover thou 'rt a friar, so needs must I leave thee alive to
+ make pestilent the air yet a little until thou chokest of an epithet.
+ Meantime perform now one gracious act in thy so graceless life and wed me
+ with this forest maiden.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forest maiden, forsooth!&rdquo; cried Friar John. &ldquo;O Saints! O Martyrs! Forest
+ maid, quotha! And wed her&mdash;and unto thee, presumptuous malapert! Ho,
+ begone, thy base blood and nameless rank forbid&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold there, shaveling!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, scowling. &ldquo;Now mark me this!
+ Though I, being very man, do know myself all unworthy maid so sweet and
+ peerless, yet, and she stoop to wed me, then will I make her lady proud
+ and dame of divers goodly manors and castles, of village and hamlet, pit
+ and gallows, sac and soc, with powers the high, the middle and the low and
+ with ten-score lances in her train. For though in humble guise I went, no
+ nameless rogue am I, but Knight of Shene, Lord of Westover, Framling,
+ Bracton and Deepdene&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How!&rdquo; cried Melissa, pouting rosy lip and frowning a little. &ldquo;O Pertinax,
+ art indeed a great lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, sooth&mdash;forsooth and indeed,&rdquo; he stammered, &ldquo;I do fear I am.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou 'rt no poor, distressful, ragged, outlaw-soldier?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack&mdash;no!&rdquo; he groaned, regardful of her frown.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then basely hast thou tricked me&mdash;O cruel!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Melissa&mdash;hear me!&rdquo; he cried, and, forgetful of friar and gaping
+ outlaws, he clasped her fast 'prisoned 'gainst his heart. &ldquo;Thee do I love,
+ dear maid, 'bove rank, or fame, or riches, or aught this world may offer.
+ So, an thou wouldst have me ragged and destitute and outlaw, all this will
+ I be for thy sweet sake since life were nought without thee, O maid I do
+ so love&mdash;how say'st thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I say to thee, Pertinax, that thy so great love hath loosed thy tongue at
+ last, Love hath touched thy lips with eloquence beyond all artifice since
+ now, methinks, it is thy very soul doth speak me. And who shall resist
+ such wooing? Surely not I that do&mdash;love thee beyond telling. So take
+ me, my lord, thy right hand in mine, the talisman in thy left&mdash;so!
+ Now, my Pertinax, speak thy heart's wish.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friar,&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax, holding aloft the Crystal Heart, &ldquo;as her love
+ is mine and mine hers, wed and unite us in our love&mdash;by the magic of
+ this jewel I do command thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here, beholding the talisman, Friar John gasped and stared round-eyed and
+ incredulous.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Holy Rood!&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;'t is indeed the Crystal Heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And O!&rdquo; sighed Melissa, &ldquo;O Friar John, thou dost mind the saying:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'He that taketh Crystal Heart,
+ Taketh all and every part!'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, truly&mdash;truly!&rdquo; nodded the Friar.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'And by night, or eke by day,
+ The Crystal Heart all must obey!'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ So saying he got him down from the ass and, for all his corpulence, louted
+ full low.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Knight of Shene,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;by reason of this jewel potential thou
+ dost bear, now must I perforce obey thy behest and wed thee unto this our
+ gracious lady Benedicta, Duchess of Ambremont, Canalise, Tissingors,
+ Fordyngstoke and divers other towns, villages and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Duchess&mdash;a duchess?&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Duchess say'st thou&mdash;this,
+ the Duchess Benedicta! O Melissa&mdash;thou&mdash;thou&mdash;a duchess!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sooth and forsooth,&rdquo; sighed she in pretty mockery, &ldquo;I do fear I am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then thou 'rt no humble maid, distressful and forlorn, Melissa?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, Pertinax&mdash;all this am I indeed unless thou love me, and loving
+ me, wed me, and wedding me love me the better therefor, and loving me ever
+ the better, thou may'st learn a little some day how a woman may love a
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; mumbled Sir Pertinax, kissing her rosy finger-tips, &ldquo;be thou
+ duchess or witch-maid o' the wood, I do love thee heart and soul, body and
+ mind, now and for ever, Melissa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Friar John, beholding the radiant joy of their faces, reached forth
+ his hands in blessing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Kneel ye, my children!&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;For here methinks is true-love such
+ as brighteneth this world all too seldom. So here, within the forest, the
+ which is surely God's cathedral, this your love shall be sanctified unto
+ you and the world be the better therefor! Kneel ye, my children!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, kneeling upon the flower-sprent turf hand in hand and with heads
+ reverently bowed, they were wed, while the six outlaws stared in silent
+ awe and the meek ass cropped the grass busily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Pertinax,&rdquo; sighed the Duchess as they rose, &ldquo;so greatly happy am I that
+ I will others shall be happy likewise; let us make this indeed a day of
+ gladness. I pray thee sound the bugle that hangeth within the great oak,
+ yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Sir Pertinax took the horn and sounded thereon a mighty blast, loud and
+ long and joyous. And presently came the outlaws, thronging in from all
+ directions, until the sunny glade was full of their wild company, while in
+ the green beyond pike-head twinkled and sword-blades glittered; and
+ foremost was Robin with Lobkyn Lollo beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin,&rdquo; said the Duchess, beckoning him near with white, imperious
+ finger, &ldquo;Robin a' Green, thou whose tongue is quick and ready as thy hand,
+ hast ever been gentle to the weak and helpless as I do know, in especial
+ to two women that sought thy protection of late.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, verily, lady, I mind them well,&rdquo; nodded Robin, &ldquo;and one was a maid
+ passing fair and one an ancient dame exceeding wise. To aid such is ever a
+ man's joy&mdash;or should be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Knew ye who and what this maid was, Robin?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, lady, I knew her then as now for that proud and noble lady the
+ Duchess Benedicta.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And yet, Robin, knowing this and having me in thy power didst suffer me
+ to go without let or hindrance or single penny of ransom?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady Duchess,&rdquo; answered Robin, glancing round upon his wild company,
+ &ldquo;we be outlaws, 't is true, and rogues&mdash;mayhap, yet are we men and
+ thou a lady passing fair, wherefore&mdash;though I knew thee for the
+ Duchess Benedicta, thou wert safe with us since we war not with women and
+ harm no maids be they of high or low degree!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoke like a very knight!&rdquo; exclaimed the Duchess. &ldquo;How think'st thou, my
+ lord?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Par Dex!&rdquo; quoth Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Aye, by Our Lady of Shene Chapel within
+ the Wood I swear it&mdash;thou 'rt a man, Robin! So now do I sue pardon of
+ thee for my song o' rogues since no rogue art thou. And thou didst aid and
+ shield her&mdash;this my wife that is the very eyes of me! So, by my
+ troth, my good friend art thou henceforth, Rob o' the Green!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lord,&rdquo; answered Robin slyly, &ldquo;for I am but Robin, and outlaw, and
+ thou art the Duke!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth&mdash;and so I am!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Ha&mdash;yet am I
+ still a man, and therefore&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wait, my lord!&rdquo; said Benedicta. &ldquo;Robin, give me thy sword!&rdquo; So she took
+ the weapon and motioning Robin to his knees, set the blade across his
+ shoulder. &ldquo;Robin a' Green,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;since thou art knightly of word and
+ deed, knight shalt thou be in very truth. Sir Robin a' Forest I make thee
+ and warden over this our forest country. Rise up, Sir Robert.&rdquo; Then up
+ sprang Robin, bright-eyed and flushed of cheek.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear my lady,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;since knight hast made me, thy knight will I be
+ henceforth in life or in death&mdash;&rdquo; But here his voice was lost in the
+ joyous acclamations of his followers who shouted amain until the Duchess
+ quelled them with lifted hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye men of the wild-wood,&rdquo; said she, looking round upon them gentle-eyed,
+ &ldquo;all ye that be homeless and desolate, lying without the law, this day joy
+ hath found me, for this is my wedding-morn. And as I am happy I would see
+ ye happy also. Therefore upon this glad day do we make proclamation, my
+ Lord Duke and I&mdash;this day we lift from you each and every, the ban of
+ outlawry&mdash;free men are ye to go and come as ye list&mdash;free men
+ one and all and good citizens henceforth I pray!&rdquo; Now here was silence
+ awhile, then a hoarse murmur, swelling to a jubilant shout until the sunny
+ woodland rang with the joy of it, near and far.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now, Sir Robert,&rdquo; laughed the Duchess, &ldquo;pray you where is this noble
+ Fool, this gentle Motley, this most rare singer of songs and breaker of
+ lances? Bid him to us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;the Fool!&rdquo; exclaimed Sir Pertinax, starting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady,&rdquo; answered Robin, &ldquo;true, he was here, but when I sought him, a
+ while since, there was Sir Palamon's armour he had worn, but himself gone
+ &mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gone&mdash;gone say'st thou?&rdquo; cried Sir Pertinax, glancing about. &ldquo;Then
+ needs must I go seek him&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And wherefore, my lord?&rdquo; cried the Duchess.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is my&mdash;my duty, Melissa!&rdquo; stammered Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;He is my&mdash;my
+ friend and&mdash;sworn brother-in-arms!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And am I not thy wife, Pertinax?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, most dearly loved, and I, thy husband&mdash;and yet&mdash;needs must
+ I seek this Fool, Melissa.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Pertinax&mdash;wilt leave me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Leave thee?&rdquo; groaned Sir Pertinax. &ldquo;Aye&mdash;for a while! Leave thee?
+ Aye&mdash;though it break my heart needs must I! He, my&mdash;brother-in-arms.
+ My duty calleth&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what of thy duty to me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as Sir Pertinax wrung his hands in an agony of indecision, rose a
+ whisper of sweet sound, the murmur of softly-plucked lute-strings, and
+ into the glade, cock's-comb aflaunt and ass's ears a-dangle Duke Jocelyn
+ strode and sang as he came a song he had made on a time, a familiar air:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Good Pertinax, why griev'st thou so?
+ Free of all duty thou dost go,
+ Save that which thou to Love dost owe,
+ My noble Pertinax.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And love from heaven hath stooped thus low To me!&rdquo; quoth Pertinax.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But here came Robin with certain of his men leading a snow-white palfrey
+ richly caparisoned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right noble lady,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;behold here a goodly, fair jennet to thy
+ gracious acceptance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And indeed&mdash;'t is rare, pretty beast!&rdquo; exclaimed Benedicta. &ldquo;But
+ Robin, Robin, O Sir Robert, whence had you this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady, upon a time I was an outlaw and lived as outlaws may, taking such
+ things as Fate bestowed, and, lady:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Fate is a wind
+ To outlaws kind:
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ But now since we be free-men all, I and my fellows, fain would we march
+ hence in thy train to thy honour and our joyance. Wilt grant us this boon,
+ lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Freely, for 'tis rare good thought, Robin! Surely never rode duke and
+ duchess so attended. How the townsfolk shall throng and stare to see our
+ wild following, and my worthy guardians gape and pluck their beards for
+ very amaze! How think you, good Friar John?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, verily, daughter, I, that am chiefest of thy wardens ten, do think
+ it wise measure; as for thy other guardians let them pluck and gape until
+ they choke.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;In especial Greg'ry Bax,
+ Who both beard and wisdom lacks.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I say 'tis wise, good measure, for these that were outlaws be sturdy
+ fellows with many friends in town and village, so shall this thy day of
+ union be for them re-union, and they joy with thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now being mounted the Duchess rode where stood Jocelyn, and looked down on
+ him merry-eyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Fool,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;who thou art I know not, but I have hunted in
+ Brocelaunde ere now, and I have eyes. And as thou 'rt friend to my dear
+ lord, friend art thou of mine, so do we give thee joyous welcome to our
+ duchy. And, being thy friend, I pray thou may'st find that wonder of
+ wonders the which hideth but to be found, and once found, shall make wise
+ Fool wiser.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sweet friend and lady,&rdquo; answered Jocelyn, &ldquo;surely man so unlovely as I
+ may not know this wonder for his very own until it first seek him. Is 't
+ not so? Let now thy woman's heart counsel me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How, Sir Wise Folly, have I not heard thee preach boldness in love ere
+ now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye&mdash;for others!&rdquo; sighed Jocelyn. &ldquo;But for myself&mdash;I fear&mdash;behold
+ this motley! This scarred face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why as to thy motley it becometh thee well&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but my face? O, 't is a hideous face!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Fool!&rdquo; sighed Benedicta, &ldquo;know'st thou not that True-love's eyes
+ possess a magic whereby all loved things become fair and beauteous. So
+ take courage, noble Motley, and may thy desires be crowned&mdash;even as
+ our own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, thou sweet and gentle lady. Happiness companion thee alway and
+ Love sing ever within thee. Now for ye twain is love's springtime, a
+ season of sweet promise, may each promise find fulfilment and so
+ farewell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, Sir Fool, an thou wilt tarry here in the good greenwood a
+ while, may Love guide thee. Now here is my counsel: Follow where thy heart
+ commandeth and&mdash;fear not! And now, Sir Robert a' Forest, form thy
+ company, and since this is a day of gladness let them sing as they march.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth, dear my lady, that will we!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;There is song o'
+ spring and gladness I made that hath oft been our solace, and moreover it
+ beginneth and endeth with jolly chorus well beknown to all. Ho, pikes to
+ van and rear! Bows to the flanks&mdash;fall in! Now trusty friends o' the
+ greenwood, free-men all, henceforth&mdash;now march we back to hearth and
+ home and love, so sing ye&mdash;sing!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon from the ragged, close-ordered ranks burst a shout that swelled
+ to rolling chorus; and these the words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily&mdash;hey!
+ And cheerily let us sing,
+ While youth is youth then youth is gay
+ And youth shall have his fling.
+
+ Robin: The merry merle on leafy spray,
+ The lark on fluttering wing
+ Do pipe a joyous roundelay,
+ To greet the blithesome spring.
+
+ Hence, hence cold Age, black Care&mdash;away!
+ Cold Age black Care doth bring;
+ When back is bowed and head is grey,
+ Black Care doth clasp and cling.
+
+ Black Care doth rosy Pleasure stay,
+ Age ageth everything;
+ 'T is farewell sport and holiday,
+ On flowery mead and ling.
+
+ If Death must come, then come he may,
+ And wed with death-cold ring,
+ Yet ere our youth and strength decay,
+ Blithe Joy shall be our king.
+ The Men: Sing high, sing low, sing merrily&mdash;hey!
+ And cheerily we will sing.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ So they marched blithely away, a right joyous company, flashing back the
+ sunset glory from bright headpiece and sword-blade, while Jocelyn stood
+ watching wistful-eyed until they were lost amid the green, until all
+ sounds of their going grew to a hush mingling with the whisper of leaves
+ and murmurous gurgle of the brook; and ever the shadows deepened about
+ him, a purple solitude of misty trees and tangled thickets, depth on
+ depth, fading to a glimmering mystery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly amid these glooming shadows a shadow moved, and forth into the
+ darkling glade, mighty club on mighty shoulder, stepped Lobkyn Lollo the
+ Dwarf, and his eyes were pensive and he sighed gustily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; quoth he:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;So here's an end of outlawry,
+ And all along o' lady,
+ Yet still an outlaw I will be
+ Shut in o' shaws so shady.
+ And yet it is great shame, I trow,
+ That our good friends should freemen go
+ And leave us lonely to our woe,
+ And all along o' lady.
+
+ &ldquo;And plague upon this love, I say,
+ For stealing thus thy friend away,
+ And since fast caught and wed is he
+ Thy friend henceforth is lost to thee,
+ And thou, poor Fool, dost mope and sigh,
+ And so a plague on love! say I.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good Lobkyn, what know you of love?&rdquo; Answered LOBKYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Marry, enough o' love know I
+ To steal away if love be nigh.
+
+ &ldquo;For love's an ill as light as air,
+ Yet heavy as a stone;
+ O, love is joy and love is care,
+ A song and eke a groan.
+
+ &ldquo;Love is a sickness, I surmise,
+ Taketh a man first by the eyes,
+ And stealing thence into his heart,
+ There gripeth him with bitter smart.
+ Alas, poor soul,
+ What bitter dole,
+ Doth plague his every part!
+
+ &ldquo;From heart to liver next it goes,
+ And fills him full o' windy woes,
+ And, being full o' gusty pain,
+ He groaneth oft, and sighs amain,
+ Poor soul is he
+ In verity,
+ And for his freedom sighs in vain.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Miscall not love, Lobkyn, for sure True-love is
+ every man's birthright.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Quoth LOBKYN:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Why then, methinks there's many a wight
+ That cheated is of his birthright,
+ As, item first, here's Lobkyn Lollo
+ To prove thine argument quite hollow.
+ Dare I at maid to cast mine eye,
+ She mocketh me, and off doth fly,
+</pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And all because I'm humped o' back,
+ And something to my stature lack.
+ Thus, though I'm stronger man than three,
+ No maid may love the likes o' me.
+ Next, there's thyself&mdash;a Fool, I swear,
+ At fight or song beyond compare.
+ But&mdash;thou 'rt unlovely o' thy look,
+ And this no maid will ever brook.
+ So thou and I, for weal or woe,
+ To our lives' end unloved must go.
+ But think ye that I grieve or sigh?
+ Not so! A plague on love, say I!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now here Jocelyn sighed amain and, sitting beneath a tree, fell to sad and
+ wistful thinking.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily,&rdquo; he repeated, &ldquo;I am 'unlovely of my
+ look.'&rdquo;
+
+ Quoth Lobkyn heartily:
+
+ &ldquo;In very sooth,
+ Fool, that's the truth!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; sighed Jocelyn, &ldquo;'And this no maid
+ will ever brook!'&rdquo;
+
+ Answered Lobkyn:
+
+ &ldquo;And there dost speak, wise Fool, again,
+ A truth right manifest and plain,
+ Since fairest maids have bat-like eyes,
+ And see no more than outward lies.
+ And seeing thus, they nothing see
+ Of worthiness in you or me.
+ And so, since love doth pass us by,
+ The plague o' plagues on love, say I!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nath'less,&rdquo; cried the Duke, leaping to his feet. &ldquo;I will put Love to the
+ test&mdash;aye, this very hour!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Lobkyn: Wilt go, good Motley? Pray thee where?
+
+ Jocelyn: To one beyond all ladies fair.
+
+ Lobkyn: Then dost thou need a friend about thee
+ To cheer and comfort when she flout thee.
+ So, an thou wilt a-wooing wend,
+ I'll follow thee like trusty friend.
+ In love or fight thou shalt not lack
+ A sturdy arm to 'fend thy back.
+ I'll follow thee in light or dark,
+ Through good or ill&mdash;Saints shield us!
+ Hark!
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And Lobkyn started about, club poised for swift action, for, out-stealing
+ from the shadows crept strange and dismal sound, a thin wail that sank to
+ awful groaning rumble, and so died away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O!&rdquo; whispered Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Pray, Fool, pray with all thy might,
+ Here's goblin foul or woodland sprite
+ Come for to steal our souls away,
+ So on thy knees quick, Fool, and pray!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But, as these dismal sounds brake forth again, Jocelyn stole forward,
+ quarter-staff gripped in ready hand; thus, coming nigh the great oak, he
+ espied a dim, huddled form thereby and, creeping nearer, stared in wonder
+ to behold Mopsa, the old witch, striving might and main to wind the great
+ hunting-horn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What, good Witch!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;here methinks is that beyond all thy spells
+ to achieve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Fool,&rdquo; she panted, &ldquo;kind Fool, sound me this horn, for I'm old and
+ scant o' breath. Wind it shrill and loud, good Motley, the rallying-note,
+ for there is ill work afoot this night. Sound me shrewd blast, therefore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, 't were labour in vain, Witch; there be no outlaws hereabout, free
+ men are they henceforth and gone, each and every.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out alas&mdash;alas!&rdquo; cried the old woman, wringing her hands. &ldquo;Then woe
+ is me for the fair lady Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! What of her, good Witch? Threateneth danger? Speak!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, Fool, danger most dire! My Lord Gui yet liveth, and this night
+ divers of his men shall bear her away where he lieth raging for her in his
+ black castle of Ells&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by heaven's light!&rdquo; swore Jocelyn, his eyes fierce and keen, &ldquo;this
+ night shall Fool be crowned of Love or sleep with kindly Death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Fool, thy foes be a many! Wilt cope with them alone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay!&rdquo; cried a voice:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Not so, grandam
+ For here I am!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ and Lobkyn stepped forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha, my pretty poppet! Loved duck, my downy chick&mdash;what wouldst?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Fight, grandam,
+ Smite, grandam,
+ Sweet, blood-begetting blows.
+ Where Fool goeth
+ Well Fool knoweth
+ Lobkyn likewise goes.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, my bantling&mdash;loved babe, fight thy fiercest, for these be
+ wicked men and 't will be an evil fray. And she is sweet and good, so,
+ Lobkyn, be thy strongest&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saith Lobkyn:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Aye that will I,
+ Or may I die.
+ By this good kiss
+ I vow thee this.
+
+ &ldquo;And here is signal, Fool, shall shew
+ Each where the other chance to go.
+
+ &ldquo;Croak like a frog,
+ Bark like a dog,
+ Grunt like a hog,
+ I'll know thee.
+
+ &ldquo;Hoot like an owl,
+ Like grey wolf howl,
+ Or like bear growl,
+ 'T will shew thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then come, trusty Lob, and my thanks to thee!&rdquo; cried Jocelyn, catching up
+ his quarter-staff. &ldquo;But haste ye, for I would be hence ere the moon get
+ high. Come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Duke Jocelyn strode away with Lobkyn Lollo at his heels; now as they
+ went, the moon began to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2H_4_0014" id="link2H_4_0014"> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ FYTTE 12
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ Which being the last Fytte of our Geste I hope may please my daughter
+ best.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O, Wind of Night, soft-creeping,
+ Sweet charge I give to thee,
+ Steal where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me;
+ And in her dream,
+ Love, let me seem
+ All she would have me be.
+
+ &ldquo;Kind sleep! By thee we may attain
+ To joys long hoped and sought in vain,
+ By thee we all may find again
+ Our lost divinity.
+
+ &ldquo;So, Night-wind, softly creeping,
+ This charge I give to thee,
+ Go where my love lies sleeping
+ And bear her dreams of me.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Hearkening to this singing Yolande shivered, yet not with cold, and
+ casting a cloak about her loveliness came and leaned forth into the warm,
+ still glamour of the night, and saw where stood Jocelyn tall and shapely
+ in the moonlight, but with hateful cock's-comb a-flaunt and ass's ears
+ grotesquely a-dangle; wherefore she sighed and frowned upon him, saying
+ nothing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande?&rdquo; he questioned. &ldquo;O my lady, and wilt frown upon my singing?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Answered she, leaning dimpled chin upon white fist and frowning yet:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not&mdash;not thy&mdash;singing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is 't then this cap o' Folly&mdash;my ass's ears, Yolande? Then away with
+ them! So shalt jester become very man as thou art very maid!&rdquo; Forthwith he
+ thrust back his cock's-comb and so stood gazing up at her wide-eyed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she, beholding thus his scarred face, shivered again, shrinking a
+ little, whereupon Jocelyn bowed his head, hiding his features in his long,
+ black-curling hair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, my lady!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;doth my ill face offend thee? This would I put
+ off also for thy sake an it might be, but since this I may not do, close
+ thou thine eyes a while and hear me speak. For now do I tell thee,
+ Yolande, that I&mdash;e'en I that am poor jester&mdash;am yet a man loving
+ thee with man's love. I that am one with face thus hatefully scarred do
+ seek thee in thy beauty to my love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Presumptuous Fool, how darest thou speak me thus?&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that great love dareth greatly, Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what of thy lord? How of Duke Jocelyn, thy master?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is but man, lady, even as I. Moreover for thee he existeth not since
+ thou hast ne'er beheld him&mdash;to thy knowing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, then&mdash;what of this?&rdquo; she questioned, drawing the jewelled
+ picture from her bosom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'T is but what it is, lady, a poor thing of paint!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But sheweth face of noble beauty, Fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, nobly painted, Yolande! A thing of daubed colours, seeing naught of
+ thy beauty, speaking thee no word of love, whiles here stand I, a sorry
+ Fool of beauty none, yet therewithal a man to woo thee to my love&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy love? Ah, wilt so betray thy lord's trust?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blithely, Yolande! For thee I would betray my very self.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thyself art Fool faithless to thy lord, a rhyming jester, a sorry
+ thing for scorn or laughter&mdash;and yet&mdash;thy shameful habit shames
+ thee not, and thy foolish songs hold naught of idle folly! And thou&mdash;thou
+ art the same I saw 'mid gloom of dungeon sing brave song in thy chains!
+ Thou art he that overthrew so many in the lists! O Joconde, my world is
+ upside down by reason of thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou, Yolande, didst stoop to me within my dungeon! And thou didst
+ pray for me, Yolande, and now&mdash;now within this sweet night thou dost
+ lean down to me through the glory of thy hair&mdash;to me in my very
+ lowliness! And so it is I love thee, Yolande, love thee as none shall ever
+ love thee, for man am I with heart to worship thee, tongue to woo thee,
+ eyes to behold thy beauties, and arms to clasp thee. So am I richer than
+ yon painted duke that needs must woo thee with my lips. And could I but
+ win thee to love&mdash;ah, Yolande, could I, despite these foolish
+ trappings, this blemished face, see Love look on me from thine eyes, O&mdash;then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How&mdash;then&mdash;Joconde?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then should Fool, by love exalted, change to man indeed and I&mdash;mount
+ up to heaven&mdash;thus!&rdquo; So saying, Jocelyn began to climb by gnarled ivy
+ and carven buttress. And ever as he mounted she watched him through the
+ silken curtain of her hair, wide of eye and with hands tight-clasped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Joconde!&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;'t is madness&mdash;madness! Ah, Joconde!&rdquo;
+ But swift he came and swung himself upon the balcony beside her and
+ reached out his arms in mute supplication, viewing her wistfully but with
+ scarred face transfigured by smile ineffably tender, and when he spoke his
+ voice was hushed and reverent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am here, Yolande, because methought to read within thy look the wonder
+ of all wonders. But, O my lady, because I am but what I am, fain would I
+ hear thee speak it also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; said she in breathless voice, &ldquo;wouldst shame me&mdash;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shame?&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Shame? Can there be aught of shame in true love? Or is
+ it that my ass's ears do shame thee, my cock's-comb and garments pied
+ shame the worship of this foolish heart, and I, a Fool, worshipping thee,
+ shame thee by such worship? Then&mdash;on, cock's-comb! Ring out, silly
+ bells! Fool's love doth end in folly! Off love&mdash;on folly&mdash;a Fool
+ can but love and die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Joconde; ah, how may I tell thee&mdash;? Why dost thou start and
+ fumble with thy dagger?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heard you aught, lady?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I heard an owl hoot in the shadows yonder, no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;True, lady, but now shall this owl croak like a frog&mdash;hearken! Aha&mdash;and
+ now shall frog bark like dog&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what meaneth this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That thou, proud lady, must this night choose betwixt knightly rogue and
+ motley Fool&mdash;here be two evils with yet a difference&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is strange, wild talk, Fool!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here shall be wild doings anon, lady, methinks. Hush thee and listen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A jangle of bridle-chains, a sound of voices loud and rough, and a tread
+ of heavy feet that, breaking rudely upon the gentle-brooding night, drove
+ the colour from Yolande's soft cheek and hushed her voice to broken
+ whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven shield us, what now, Joconde?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wolves, lady, wolves that come to raven&mdash;see yonder!&rdquo; Even as he
+ spake they espied armed men who, bold and assured by reason of the
+ solitude, moved in the garden below; and on back and breast of each was
+ the sign of the Bloody Hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Gui's followers! Alas, Joconde, these mean thee ill&mdash;here is
+ death for thee!&rdquo; Now as she spake, Jocelyn thrilled to the touch of her
+ hand upon his arm, a hand that trembled and stole to clasp his. &ldquo;Alas,
+ Joconde, they have tracked thee hither to slay thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And were this so, wouldst fly with me, Yolande? Wouldst trust thy
+ beauties to a Fool's keeping?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay, this were madness, Joconde; rather will I hide thee&mdash;aye,
+ where none shall dare seek thee&mdash;come!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande,&rdquo; he questioned, &ldquo;Yolande, wilt trust thyself to Love and me?&rdquo;
+ But seeing how she shrank away, his eager arms fell and he bowed his head.
+ &ldquo;Nay, I am answered,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;even while thine eyes look love, thy body
+ abhorreth Fool's embrace&mdash;I am answered. Nay, 't is enough, trouble
+ not for words&mdash;ha, methinks it is too late, the wolves be hard upon
+ us&mdash;hark ye to their baying!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now was sudden uproar, a raving clamour of fierce shouts, and a
+ thundering of blows upon the great door below.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande&mdash;ha, Yolande, yield thee! Open! Open!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah&mdash;mercy of God! Is it me they seek?&rdquo; she whispered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thee, Yolande! To bear thee to their lord's embraces&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rather will I die!&rdquo; she cried, and snatched the dagger from his girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so!&rdquo; quoth he, wresting the weapon from her grasp. &ldquo;Rather shalt thou
+ live a while&mdash;for thou art mine&mdash;mine to-night, Yolande&mdash;come!&rdquo;
+ And he clasped her in fierce arms. &ldquo;Nay, strive not lest I kiss thee to
+ submission, for thou art mine, though it be for one brief hour and death
+ the next!&rdquo; So, as she struggled for the dagger, he kissed her on mouth and
+ eyes and hair until she lay all unresisting in his embrace; while ever and
+ anon above the thunder of blows the night clamoured with the fierce shout:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open&mdash;open! Yolande, ha, Yolande!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is death&mdash;and worse!&rdquo; she panted. &ldquo;Loose me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; he laughed, &ldquo;here thou 'rt in thy rightful place at last&mdash;upon
+ my heart, Yolande. Now whither shall I bear thee? Where lieth safety?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Loose me!&rdquo; she commanded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never! Hark, there yields the good door at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then here will we die!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, Yolande! A sweet death thus, heart to heart and lip to lip!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Fool&mdash;I hate thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Howbeit, Yolande&mdash;I love thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande! Ha&mdash;Yolande!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cry was louder now and so near that she shivered and, hiding her face,
+ spake below her breath:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The turret-stair&mdash;behind the arras of my bed!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swiftly, lightly he bore her down the winding stair and by divers
+ passage-ways until, thrusting open a narrow door, he found himself within
+ the garden and, keeping ever amid the darkest shadows, hasted on to the
+ postern hard by the lily-pool.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now Yolande felt herself swung to lofty saddle, heard Jocelyn's
+ warning shout drowned in a roar of voices and loud-trampling hoofs as the
+ great horse reared, heard a fierce laugh and, looking up, saw the face
+ above her grim and keen-eyed beneath its foolish cock's-comb as his
+ vicious steel flashed to right and left, and ever as he smote he mocked
+ and laughed:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;well smitten, Lob! Oho, here Folly rides with pointed jest keen
+ and two-edged&mdash;make way, knaves&mdash;make way for Folly&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The snorting charger, wheeled by strong hand, broke free, whereon rose an
+ uproar of shouts and cries that sank to a meaningless babble swept
+ backward on the rush of wind. Away, away they sped, through moonlight and
+ shadow, with fast-beating hoofs that rang on paved walk, that thudded on
+ soft grass, that trampled the tender flowers; and Yolande, swaying to the
+ mighty arm that clasped her, saw the fierce, scarred face bent above her
+ with eyes that gleamed under scowling brows and mouth grim-smiling; and
+ shivering, she looked no more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On they sped with loosened rein, o'er grassy mead, through ferny hollows,
+ o'erleaping chattering rill that babbled to the moon, 'mid swaying reeds
+ and whispering sedge, past crouching bush and stately tree, and so at last
+ they reached the woods. By shadowy brake and thicket, through pools of
+ radiant moonlight, through leafy, whispering glooms they held their way,
+ across broad glade and clearing, on and on until all noise of pursuit was
+ lost and nought was to hear save the sounds of their going.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus rode they, and with never a word betwixt them, deep and deeper into
+ the wild until the moon was down and darkness shut them in; wherefore
+ Jocelyn drew rein and sat a while to listen. He heard the good steed,
+ deep-breathing, snuff at dewy grass; a stir and rustle all about him; the
+ drowsy call of a bird afar; the soft ripple of water hard by and, over
+ all, the deep hush of the wild-wood. Then upon this hush stole a whisper:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, 'tis very dark!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Dark, Lady? Why so 'tis, and yet 'tis natural, for 'tis night,
+ wherefore 'tis the bright god Phoebus is otherwhere, and Dian, sly-sweet
+ goddess, hath stole her light from heaven, wherefore 'tis 'tis dark, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Where are we?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: The sweet Saints know that, lady&mdash;not I!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She (<i>scornfully</i>): Verily, thou art no saint&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Not yet, lady, not yet&mdash;witness these ass's ears.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: True, thou 'rt very Fool!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: In very truth, lady, and thou art lost with this same Fool, so art
+ thou in very woeful case. As for me, a lost fool is no matter, wherefore
+ Fool for himself grieveth no whit. But for thee&mdash;alas! Thou art a
+ proud lady of high degree, very nice of thy dainty person, soft and
+ delicate of body, so shall the greensward prove for thee uneasy couch, I
+ judge, and thou sleep ill&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Sleep? No thought have I of sleep! Ride on, therefore. Why tarry we
+ here?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Lady, for three sufficing reasons&mdash;our foes pursue not, I'm
+ a-weary, and 'tis very dark&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: No matter! Ride on, I do command thee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Aye, but whither?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: I care not so thou leave this place; 'tis an evil place!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Why, 'tis good place, very well secluded and with stream hard by that
+ bubbleth. So here will we bide till dawn. Suffer me to aid thee down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Touch me not! Never think I fear thee though I am alone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Alone? Nay, thou 'rt with me, that is&mdash;I am with thee and thou
+ art with a Fool. So is Fool care-full Fool since Fool hath care of thee.
+ Suffer me now to aid thee down since here will we wait the day. Come, my
+ arm about thee so, thy hand in mine&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She (<i>angrily</i>): O Fool most base&mdash;most vile&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He: Nay, hush thee, hush! and listen to yon blithesome, bubblesome,
+ babbling brook how it sigheth 'mid the willows, whispereth under reedy
+ bank and laugheth, rogue-like, in the shallows! Listen how it wooeth thee:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Though, lady, hard thy couch must be,
+ If thou should'st wakeful lie,
+ Here, from the dark, I'll sing to thee
+ A drowsy lullaby.
+ O lady fair&mdash;forget thy pride
+ Whiles thou within the greenwood bide.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ And now suffer me to aid thee down.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Why wilt thou stay me in this evil place?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He (<i>patiently</i>): The wild is ill travelling in the dark, lady; there
+ be quagmires and perilous ways&mdash;wherefore here must we bide till
+ dawn. Suffer me to&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE (<i>breathlessly and shrinking from his touch</i>): But I fear not
+ quagmires&mdash;there be greater perils&mdash;more shameful and&mdash;and&mdash;'tis
+ so dark, so dark! 'Tis hateful place. Ride we till it be day&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He (<i>mockingly</i>): Perils, lady? Why certes there be perils&mdash;and
+ perils. Perils that creep and crawl, perils that go on four legs and
+ perils two-legged&mdash;e'en as I. But I, though two-legged, am but very
+ fool of fools and nothing perilous in blazing day or blackest night. So
+ stint thy fears, lady, for here bide we till dawn!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Herewith he caught her in sudden arms and lifted her to the ground; then,
+ dismounting, he set about watering and cherishing the wearied steed and
+ tethered him beside a dun stream that rippled beneath shadowy willows; and
+ so doing, fell a-singing on this wise:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'Fair lady, thou 'rt lost!' quoth he,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'And O, 'tis dark&mdash;'tis dark!' quoth she,
+ 'And in the dark dire perils be,'
+ O, derry, derry down!
+
+ &ldquo;Quoth he: 'Fair lady, stint thy fear,'
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+ 'I, being Fool, will sit me here,
+ And, till the kindly sun appear,
+ Sing derry, derry down.
+
+ &ldquo;'I'll make for thee, like foolish wight,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A song that shall out-last dark night,
+ And put thy foolish fears to flight
+ With derry, derry down.
+
+ &ldquo;'For 'tis great shame thou shouldst fear so,
+ Hey, derry, derry down,
+ A peril that two-legged doth go,
+ Since he's but humble Fool, I trow,
+ With derry, derry down.'&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus sang he, a dim figure beside dim stream and, having secured the
+ horse, sat him down thereby and took forth his lute.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Yolande, though he could not see, clenched white fists and, though he
+ could not hear, stamped slim foot at him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; quoth she, betwixt clenched teeth, &ldquo;Joconde, I&mdash;scorn
+ thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack!&rdquo; he sighed. &ldquo;Alack, and my lute hath taken sore scath of a
+ sword-thrust!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou'rt hateful&mdash;hateful!&rdquo; she cried. &ldquo;Aye&mdash;hateful as thy
+ hateful song, so do I contemn thee henceforth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say'st thou so, lady, forsooth?&rdquo; sighed he, busied with his lute. &ldquo;Now
+ were I other than Fool, here should I judge was hope of winning thy love.
+ But being only Fool I, with aid of woe-begone lute, will sing thee merry
+ song to cheer thee of thy perilous fears&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enough, ill Fool, I'll hear thee not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, dear lady! Then will we sit an list to the song of yon stream,
+ for streams and rivers, like the everlasting hills, are passing wise with
+ length of days&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And thou'rt a very Fool!&rdquo; she cried angrily. &ldquo;A fond Fool presumptuous in
+ thy folly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As how presumptuous, proud lady?&rdquo; he questioned humbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In that thou dreamest I&mdash;stoop to fear thee!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, verily!&rdquo; sighed he. &ldquo;Alas, thou poor, solitary, foolish, fearful
+ maid, thou art sick with fear of me! So take now my dagger! Thus Fool
+ offenceless shall lie defenceless at thy mercy and, so lying, sleep until
+ joyous day shall banish thy so virginal fears!&rdquo; Which saying, he tossed
+ off belt and dagger and setting them beside her, rolled his weather-worn
+ cloak about him, stretched himself beneath the dim willows and straightway
+ fell a-snoring. And after some while she questioned him in voice low and
+ troubled:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Joconde, art truly sleeping?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair lady,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;let these my so loud snores answer thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up sprang Yolande and, coming beside him in the gloom, cast back his
+ girdle, speaking quick and passionate:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take back thy dagger lest I be tempted to smite it to the cruel, mocking
+ heart of thee!&rdquo; Then turned she stately back and left him, but, being hid
+ from view, cast herself down full length upon the sward, her pride and
+ stateliness forgotten quite. Now Jocelyn, propped on uneasy elbow, peered
+ amid the gloom for sight of her and hearkened eagerly for sound of her;
+ but finding this vain, arose and, creeping stealthily, presently espied
+ her where she lay, face hidden in the dewy grass. Thus stood he chin in
+ hand disquieted and anxious-eyed and wist not what to do.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady?&rdquo; he questioned at last; but she stirred not nor spoke. &ldquo;Yolande!&rdquo;
+ he murmured, drawing nearer; but still she moved not, though his quick ear
+ caught a sound faint though very pitiful. &ldquo;Ah, dost thou weep?&rdquo; he cried.
+ Yolande sobbed again, whereupon down fell he beside her on his knees,
+ &ldquo;Dear lady, why grievest thou?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Joconde,&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;I am indeed solitary&mdash;and fearful! And thou&mdash;thou
+ dost mock me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forgive me,&rdquo; he pleaded humbly, &ldquo;and, since thou'rt solitary, here am I.
+ And, for thy fears, nought is here shall harm thee, here may'st thou sleep
+ secure&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, Joconde, the forest is haunted of wolves and&mdash;worse, 'tis
+ said!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then will I watch beside thee till the day. And now will I go cut bracken
+ for thy bed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then will I aid thee.&rdquo; So she arose forthwith and, amid the fragrant
+ gloom, they laboured together side by side; and oft in the gloom her hand
+ touched his, and oft upon his cheek and brow and lip was the silken touch
+ of her wind-blown hair. Then beneath arching willows they made a bed,
+ high-piled of springy bracken and sweet grasses, whereon she sank
+ nestling, forthwith.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, 'tis sweet couch!&rdquo; she sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yet thou'lt be cold mayhap ere dawn,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;suffer me to set my
+ cloak about thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But how of thyself, Joconde?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a Fool well seasoned of wind and rain, heat and cold, lady, and 'tis
+ night of summer.&rdquo; So he covered her with his travel-stained cloak and,
+ sitting beneath a tree, fell to his watch. And oft she stirred amid the
+ fern, deep-sighing, and he, broad back against the tree, sighed oftener
+ yet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art there, Joconde?&rdquo; she questioned softly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;'Tis very dark,&rdquo; sighed she, &ldquo;and yet, methinks, 'tis sweet to lie thus
+ in the greenwood so hushed and still and the stars to watch like eyes of
+ angels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, 'tis night of summer, lady, a night soft and languorous and fragrant
+ of sleeping flowers. But how of grim winter, how of rain and wind and
+ lashing tempest&mdash;how think you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That summer would come again, Joconde.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truly here is brave thought, lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark, how still is the night, Joconde, and yet full of soft stir, a
+ sighing amid the leaves! 'Tis like the trees whispering one another. O,
+ 'tis sweet night!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soon to pass away, alas!&rdquo; he sighed, whereupon she, stirring upon her
+ ferny couch, sighed also; thereafter fell they silent awhile hearkening to
+ the leafy stirrings all about them in the dark, and the slumberous murmur
+ of the stream that, ever and anon, brake into faint gurglings like a voice
+ that laughed, soft but roguish.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: I pray thee talk to me.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Whereof, lady?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thyself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I am a Fool&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And why sit so mumchance?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I think.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Of what?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Folly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And why dost sigh so deep and oft?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I grieve for thee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: For me! And wherefore?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Being lost with a Fool thou'rt desolate, sad and woeful.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Am I, Joconde? And how dost know all this?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: 'Tis so I do think, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Then are thy thoughts folly indeed. If thou must sigh, sigh for
+ thyself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Why so I do, lady, and therewith grieve for myself and thyself, myself
+ being Fool and thyself a dame of high degree, thus, betwixt whiles, I do
+ fear thee also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thou fear! Thou fear me forsooth! And wherefore fear a helpless maid?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: There is the reason&mdash;she is helpless!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Ah, there doth Fool speak like chivalrous knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Or very fool&mdash;a fool that fain would win fair Dian from high
+ heaven. Alas, poor Fool, that, being fool, must needs look and sigh and
+ sigh and look and leave her to the winning of some young Endymion!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE (<i>dreamily</i>): Endymion was but lowly shepherd, yet was he loved!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Endymion was fair youth comely of feature, lady. Now had he worn ass's
+ ears 'bove visage scarred&mdash;how then? On Ida's mount he had been
+ sighing forlorn and lonely yet, methinks. For maids' hearts are ever
+ governed by their eyes&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Art so wise in maids' hearts, Joconde?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Wise am I in this: No man may ever know the heart of a woman&mdash;and
+ woman herself but seldom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here was silence again wherein Yolande, smiling, viewed him a dim
+ shape in the gloom, and he leaned back to watch a star that twinkled
+ through the leafy canopy above.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thou art Duke Jocelyn's Fool at court?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: I am Duke Jocelyn's fool here and there and everywhere, lady.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Yet have I heard Duke Jocelyn was a mighty man-at-arms and, though
+ youthful, sober-minded, full of cares of state and kept no Fool at court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Lady, his court is filled o' fools as is the way of other courts and
+ amongst these many fools first cometh the Duke himself&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: How, and darest thou call this mighty Duke a fool?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Often, lady!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And what like is he?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Very like a man, being endowed of arms, legs, eyes, ears&mdash;of each
+ two, no more and no less, as is the vulgar custom.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: But is he not of beauty high and noble, of god-like perfection far
+ beyond poor, common flesh and blood? 'Tis so the painter has limned his
+ face, 'tis so I dream him to my fancy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Lady, I am but a Fool, let the picture answer thee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And he, this mighty Duke of god-like beauty doth woo me to his wife&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE (<i>bitterly</i>): With my tongue.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Why came he not in his own glorious person?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Lady, though a Duke, he hath his moments of wisdom and argueth thus:
+ &ldquo;I, though a Duke, am yet a man. Thus, should I as Duke woo her, she may
+ wed the Duke, loving not the man&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: And so he sent a Fool as his ambassador! And so do I scorn this
+ god-like Duke&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Ha! Scorn him! My lady&mdash;O Yolande, what of me?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She: Thou, false to him and faithless to thy trust, didst woo me for
+ thyself which was ill in thee. But thou didst throw the terrible Red Gui
+ into my lily-pool which was brave in thee. Thou didst endure chains and a
+ prison undaunted which was noble in thee. Thou didst this night at peril
+ of thy life save me from shame, but thou didst bear me urgently here into
+ the wild, and in the wild here lie I beside thee, lost, yet warm and
+ sleepy and safe beneath thy cloak&mdash;and so&mdash;'tis very well&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Safe, Yolande? Hath thy heart told thee this at last? But thou didst
+ fear me&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Because to-night thou didst clasp me in cruel arms and spake me words
+ of love passionate and fierce and&mdash;and&mdash;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Kissed thee, Yolande!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Many times&mdash;O cruel! And bore me hither and lost me in these
+ dark solitudes! Here was good cause for any maid to fear thee methinks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yet thou didst basely mock my fears with thy hateful song of &ldquo;Derry down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Because thy fears, being unjust, hurt me, for ah, Yolande, my love for
+ thee is deep and true, and True-love is ever gentle and very humble.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Thus do I fear thee no more, Joconde!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ HE: Because I am but lowly&mdash;a Fool beneath thy proud disdain?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ SHE: Nay, Joconde. Because thou art indeed a very man. So now shall I
+ sleep secure since nought of evil may come nigh me whiles I lie in thy
+ care.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus spake she softly 'mid the gloom, and turning upon her rustling couch
+ sighed and presently fell to slumber.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now, sitting thus beside her as she slept, Jocelyn heard the stream ripple
+ in the shadows like one that laughed soft but very joyously and, as he
+ gazed up at the solitary star with eyes enraptured, this elfin laughter
+ found its echo in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /><br />
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A bird chirped drowsily from mazy thicket where sullen shadow thinned,
+ little by little, until behind leaf and twig was a glimmer of light that
+ waxed ever brighter. And presently amid this growing brightness was soft
+ stir and twitter, sleepy chirpings changed to notes of wistful sweetness,
+ a plaintive calling that was answered from afar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the birds awaking sounded pretty warnings summoning each to each for
+ that the day-spring was at hand, while ever the brightness changed to
+ radiance and radiance to an orient glory and up flamed the sun in majesty
+ and it was day. And now, from brake and thicket, from dewy mysteries of
+ green boskage burst forth the sweet, glad chorus of bird-song, full
+ throated, passionate of joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Jocelyn, sitting broad back against a tree, felt his soul uplifted
+ thereby what time his eyes missed nothing of the beauties about him: the
+ rugged boles of mighty trees bedappled with sunny splendour, the
+ glittering dew that gemmed leaf and twig and fronded bracken, and the
+ shapely loveliness of her who slumbered couched beneath his worn cloak,
+ the gentle rise and fall of rounded bosom and the tress of hair that a
+ fugitive sunbeam kissed to ruddy gold. Thus sat Jocelyn regardful,
+ gladness in the heart of him, and a song of gladness bubbling to his lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly he saw her lashes quiver, her rosy lips parted to a smile and,
+ stirring in her slumber, she sighed and stretched shapely arms; so waked
+ she to a glory of sun and, starting to an elbow, gazed round, great-eyed,
+ until espying him, she smiled again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good morrow, Joconde! Ne'er have I slept sweeter. But thou hast
+ out-watched dark night and art a-weary, so shalt sleep awhile&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he answered, &ldquo;a plunge in the stream yonder and I shall be blithe
+ for the road&mdash;an we find one. And I do fear me thou'rt hungry,
+ Yolande, and I have nought to give thee&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what of thyself, man? Verily, I read hunger in thy look and weariness
+ also, so, an thou may'st not eat, sleep thou shalt awhile here&mdash;in my
+ place.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Yolande, indeed&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, but thou must indeed whiles I watch over thee. 'Tis a sweet bed&mdash;come
+ thy ways.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And what wilt thou do?&rdquo; he questioned.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Much!&rdquo; she answered, viewing her rumpled, gown with rueful eyes. &ldquo;As thou
+ sayest, there is the pool yonder! So come, get thee to bed and&mdash;sleep!
+ Come, let me cover thee with thy cloak and gainsay me not; sleep thou must
+ and shalt.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Duke Jocelyn stretched himself obediently upon the bed of fern and
+ suffered her to cover him with the cloak; but as she stooped above him
+ thus, he lifted the hem of her dress to reverent lips.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lady!&rdquo; he murmured. &ldquo;My dear lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now close me thine eyes, wearied child!&rdquo; she commanded. And, like a
+ child, in this also he obeyed her, albeit unwillingly by reason of her
+ radiant beauty, but hearing her beside him, was content, and thus
+ presently fell to happy sleeping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he awoke the sun was high and he lay awhile basking in this grateful
+ radiance and joying in the pervading quiet; but little by little, growing
+ uneasy by reason of this stillness, he started up to glance about him and
+ knew sudden dread&mdash;for the little glade was empty&mdash;Yolande had
+ vanished; moreover the horse was gone also.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cold with an awful fear he got him to his feet and looked hither and yon,
+ but nowhere found any sign of violence or struggle. But like one
+ distraught he turned to seek her, her name upon his lips, then, checking
+ voice and movement, stood rigid, smitten by hateful doubt. For now it
+ seemed to him that her gentle looks and words had been but sweet deceits
+ to blind him to her purpose and now, so soon as she had lulled him to
+ sleep, she had stolen away, leaving him for the poor, piteous fool he was.
+ And now his despair was 'whelmed in sudden anger, and anger, little by
+ little, changed to grief. She was fled away and he a sorry fool and very
+ desolate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Full of these bitter thoughts he cast himself upon his face and, lying as
+ in a pit of gloom, knew a great bitterness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Slowly, slowly, borne upon the gentle wind came a fragrance strange and
+ unexpected, a savour delectable of cooking meat that made him know himself
+ a man vastly hungry despite his grievous woe. But, lying within the black
+ gulf of bitterness, he stirred not until, of a sudden, he heard a voice,
+ rich and full and very sweet, upraised in joyous singing; and these the
+ words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Rise, O laggard! See the sun,
+ To climb in glory hath begun:
+ The flowers have oped their pretty eyes,
+ The happy lark doth songful rise,
+ And merry birds in flowery brake,
+ Full-throated, joyous clamours make;
+ And I, indeed, that love it not,
+ Do sit alone and keel the pot,
+ Whiles thus I sing thee to entreat,
+ O sleepy laggard&mdash;come and eat!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forsooth and art sleeping yet, Joconde?&rdquo; the voice questioned. Duke
+ Jocelyn lifted woeful head and saw her standing tall and shapely amid the
+ leaves, fresh and sweet as the morn itself, with laughter within her
+ dream-soft eyes and laughter on her vivid lips and the sun bright in the
+ braided tresses of her hair wherein she had set wild flowers like jewels.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande!&rdquo; he murmured, coming to his knees &ldquo;Yolande&mdash;how glorious
+ thou art!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; she laughed, yet flushing to the worship of his eyes, &ldquo;and my habit
+ woefully torn of wicked bramble-thorns, and my hair ill-braided and all
+ uncombed and&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Yolande, I thought thee fled and I left to loneliness, and my pain
+ was very sore.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then am I avenged thy mockery, Joconde, and thy song of 'Derry down.'
+ 'Twas for this I stole away! But now, if thou 'rt hungry man, come this
+ ways.&rdquo; And she reached him her hand. So she brought him to a little dell
+ where burned a fire of sticks beneath a pot whence stole right savoury
+ odour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O most wonderful!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;Whence came these goodly viands?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where but from the wallet behind thy horse's saddle, Joconde?&rdquo; Then down
+ sat they forthwith side by side and ate heartily and were very blithe
+ together; and oft-times their looks would meet and they would fall silent
+ awhile. At last, the meal ended, Jocelyn, turning from Yolande's beauty to
+ the beauty of the world around, spake soft-voiced:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande, were mine a selfish love, here, lost within these green
+ solitudes, would I keep thee for mine own&mdash;to serve and worship thee
+ unto my life's end. But, since I count thy happiness above my dearest
+ desires, now will I go saddle the horse and bear thee hence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whither, Joconde, whither wilt thou bear me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Back to the world,&rdquo; said he ruefully, &ldquo;thy world of prideful luxury, to
+ thy kindred.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I have no kindred, alas!&rdquo; sighed she, stooping to caress a
+ daisy-flower that grew adjacent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, then, thy friends&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My friends be very few, Joconde, and Benedicta hath her husband.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande,&rdquo; said he, leaning nearer, &ldquo;whither should I bear thee?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; saith she, patting the daisy with gentle finger-tip, &ldquo;go thou and
+ saddle thy horse, mayhap I shall know this anon. Go thou and saddle the
+ horse.&rdquo; So Jocelyn arose and having saddled and bridled the horse, back he
+ cometh to find Yolande on her knees beside the stream, and she, hearing
+ his step, bowed her head, hiding her face from him; now on the sward
+ beside her lay the picture shattered beyond repair.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How,&rdquo; said Jocelyn, &ldquo;hast broken the Duke's picture, lady!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou seest!&rdquo; she answered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And must thou weep therefore?&rdquo; said he a little bitterly. &ldquo;Oh, be
+ comforted; 't was but a toy&mdash;soon will I get thee another.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An thou bring me another, Joconde, that will I break also.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha&mdash;thou didst break it&mdash;wilfully, then?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With this stone, Joconde.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore, O wherefore?&rdquo; he questioned eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For that it was but painted toy, even as thou sayest!&rdquo; she answered.
+ &ldquo;Moreover, I&mdash;love not Duke Jocelyn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And't was for this thou didst break the picture?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, 'twas because these painted features may never compare with the face
+ of him I love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And whom&mdash;whom dost thou love?&rdquo; quoth he, in voice low and unsteady.
+ Speaking not, she pointed with slender finger down into the placid,
+ stream. Wondering, he bent to look and thus from the stilly water his
+ mirrored image looked back at him; now as he stooped so stooped she, and
+ in this watery mirror their glances met.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande?&rdquo; he whispered. &ldquo;O my lady, shall a Fool's fond dream come true,
+ or am I mad indeed? Thou in thy beauty and I&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou, Joconde,&rdquo; said she, fronting him with head proudly uplift, &ldquo;to my
+ thought thou art man greater, nobler than any proud lord or mighty duke
+ soever. And thou hast loved and wooed as never man wooed, methinks. And
+ thou art so brave and strong and so very gentle and&mdash;thus it is&mdash;I
+ do love thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But my&mdash;my motley habit, my&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy cap of Folly, Joconde, these garments pied thou hast dignified by thy
+ very manhood, so are they dearer to me than lordly tire or knightly
+ armour. And thy jingling bells&mdash;ah, Joconde, the jingle of thy bells
+ hath waked within my heart that which shall never die&mdash;long time my
+ heart hath cried for thee, and I, to my shame, heeded not the cry,
+ wherefore here and now, thus upon my knees, I do most humbly confess my
+ love.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thy love, Yolande&mdash;for me? Then dost truly love me? Oh, here is
+ marvel beyond my understanding and belief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, Joconde, ah, why?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;See!&rdquo; he cried, flinging back his head. &ldquo;Look now upon this blemished
+ face&mdash;here where the cruel sun may shew thee all my ugliness, every
+ scar&mdash;behold! How may one so beautiful as thou learn love for one so
+ lowly and with face thus hatefully marred? I have watched thee shrink from
+ me ere now! I mind how, beside the lily-pool within thy garden, thou didst
+ view me with eyes of horror! I do mind thy very words&mdash;the first that
+ e'er I heard thee utter:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ 'What thing art thou that 'neath thy hood doth show A visage that might
+ shame the gladsome day?'
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Yolande, Yolande, this poor blemished face is nothing changed since then;
+ such as I was, such I am!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Joconde!&rdquo; she cried, reaching out her hands in passionate appeal.
+ &ldquo;My words were base, cruel&mdash;and hurt me now more, ah, much more, than
+ e'er they wounded thee. For I do love thee with love as deep, as true as
+ is thine own! Wilt not believe me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, that I might indeed!&rdquo; he groaned. &ldquo;But&mdash;thou'rt alone, far from
+ thy home and friends, thy wonted pride and state forgotten all&mdash;mayhap
+ thou dost pity me or mayhap 'tis thy gratitude in guise of love doth speak
+ me thus? But as thou art still thine own lovely self, so am I that same
+ poor, motley Fool whose hateful face&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; she cried, &ldquo;hush thee&mdash;Oh, hush thee! Thy words are whips
+ to lash me!&rdquo; and catching his hand she kissed it and cherished it 'gainst
+ tear-wet cheek. &ldquo;Ah, Joconde,&rdquo; she sighed, &ldquo;so wise and yet so foolish,
+ know'st thou not thy dear, scarred face is the face of him I love, for
+ love hath touched my eyes and I do see thee at last as thou truly art, a
+ man great of soul, tender and strong-hearted. So art thou a man, the only
+ man, my man. Oh, that I might but prove my love for thee, prove it to thee
+ and before all men, no matter how, so I might but banish thy cruel doubts
+ for ever. But now, for thy dear, scarred face&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Her soft, round arms were about his neck; and drawing him to her lips she
+ kissed him, his scarred brow and cheek, his eyes, his lips grown dumb with
+ wondering joy. Thus, lip to lip and with arms entwined, knelt they beside
+ that slow-moving stream that whispered softly beneath the bank and gurgled
+ roguish laughter in the shallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dog barked faintly in the distance, a frog croaked hoarsely from the
+ neighbouring sedge, but lost in the wonder of their love, they heeded only
+ the beating of their hearts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A-billing and a-cooing! A-cooing and a-billing, as I'm a tanner true!&rdquo;
+ exclaimed a hoarse voice. Up started Jocelyn, fierce-eyed and with hand on
+ dagger-hilt, to behold a man with shock of red hair, a man squat and burly
+ who, leaning on bow-stave, peered at them across the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And is it Will the Tanner?&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, loosing his dagger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None else, friend Motley.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why then, God keep thee! And now go about thy business.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, Fool, I am about my business, the which is to find thee. By Saint
+ Nick, there's mighty hue and cry for thee up and down within the
+ greenwood, aye&mdash;marry is there, as I'm a tanner tried and true. So
+ needs must thou along wi' me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With thee, Tanner? And wherefore?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, I know not wherefore, Fool, but must along. Here's me and Lob and
+ the potent hag that is Mopsa the Witch, lain a-watching and a-watching ye
+ a-billing&mdash;nay, scowl not, friend Fool, on tanner trusty, tried and
+ true. For hark now, here's great stir, clamour and to-do within this
+ forest-country for thee, Fool, the which is strange, seeing thou art but a
+ motley fool. Howbeit there be many great lords and knights from beyond the
+ Southern March a-seeking of thee, Fool.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn, frowning. &ldquo;Envoys from Brocelaunde!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas, Joconde, and seeking thee!&rdquo; saith Yolande in troubled voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Moreover,&rdquo; continued Will, &ldquo;here's our Duke Pertinax and his lady Duchess
+ yearning for thee, here's Robin that is Sir Robert a-clamouring for thee
+ and all his goodly foresters, as myself, a-seeking thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But't is I found thee, Sir Long-legged Fool, I&mdash;I!&rdquo; croaked a voice,
+ and old Mopsa the Witch peered at them from a bush hard by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, thou hast found us!&rdquo; quoth Jocelyn ruefully. &ldquo;And what now?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oho!&rdquo; cried the Witch, cracking her finger-bones. &ldquo;Now go I hot-foot to
+ weave spells and enchantments, aha&mdash;oho! Spells that shall prove the
+ false from the true, the gold from the dross. Thou, Sir Fool, art doubting
+ lover, so art thou blind lover! I will resolve thee thy doubts, open thy
+ eyes and show thee great joy or bitter sorrow&mdash;oho! Thou, proud lady,
+ hast stooped to love a motley mountebank&mdash;nay, flash not thy bright
+ eyes nor toss haughty head at an old woman&mdash;but here is solitude with
+ none to mock thy lowly choice or cry thee shame to love a motley Fool,
+ aha! And thou would'st fain prove thy love True-love, says thou? Why, so
+ thou shalt&mdash;beyond all doubting now and for ever, aha&mdash;oho!
+ Truest of true or falsest of false. Beware. Farewell, and remember:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Follow Folly and be wise,
+ In such folly wisdom lies,
+ Love's blind, they say; but Love hath eyes,
+ So follow Folly, follow.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Hither-ho, Lob-Lobkyn! Lend thine old granddam thine arm. Come, my pretty
+ bantling, sweet poppet&mdash;come and&mdash;away!&rdquo; o spake old Mopsa the
+ Witch, and vanished into the green with Lobkyn, who turned to flourish his
+ club in cheery salutation ere he plunged into the underbrush. Then Jocelyn
+ smiled down on Yolande to find her pale and trembling, so would he have
+ clasped her to his heart, but a hand grasped him and, turning, he beheld
+ the Tanner at his elbow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friend Fool,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;needs must I take thee to Robin that Sir Robert
+ is, e'en as he did command, so come now thy ways with trusty tanner
+ tried.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Off, Red-head!&rdquo; saith Jocelyn, frowning a little. &ldquo;Away now, lest this my
+ dagger bite thee.&rdquo; Back leapt Will into the stream whence he had come, and
+ there standing, clapped bugle to lip and winded it lustily, whereupon came
+ divers fellows running, bow in hand, who beset Jocelyn on every side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now yield thee to Tanner, friend,&rdquo; quoth Will, knee-deep in the stream,
+ &ldquo;for no mind have I to hurt thee. So away with thy dagger like gentle,
+ kindly Fool, and away with thee to Sir Robin.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now hereupon, as Jocelyn frowned upon them, Yolande, standing a-tiptoe,
+ kissed his scarred cheek and clasped his dagger-hand in soft fingers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come,&rdquo; she pleaded, &ldquo;they be a-many, so yield me thy dagger and let us go
+ with them, beloved!&rdquo; At the whispered word Jocelyn loosed the dagger and,
+ clasping her instead, kissed her full-lipped. Then turned he to his
+ captors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I'm with thee, Will, thou&mdash;tanner!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;And now bring hither
+ the horse for my lady's going.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; answered Will, scratching red head, &ldquo;Rob&mdash;Sir Robert spake
+ nothing of horse for thee, or lady.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nor will I ride, Joconde,&rdquo; she murmured happily, &ldquo;rather will I trudge
+ beside thee, my hand in thine&mdash;thus!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So, hand in hand, they went close-guarded by their captors yet heeding
+ them not at all, having eyes but for each other. And oft her cheek flushed
+ rosy beneath his look, and oft he thrilled to the warm, close pressure of
+ her fingers; and thus tramped they happy in their captivity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun rose high and higher, but since for them their captors were not,
+ neither was fatigue; and, if the way was rough there was Jocelyn's ready
+ hand, while for him swamps and brooks were a joy since he might bear her
+ in his arms. Thus tramped they by shady dingle and sunny glade, through
+ marshy hollows and over laughing rills, until the men began to mutter
+ their discontent, in especial a swart, hairy wight, and Will, glancing up
+ at the sun, spake:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Two hours, lads, judge I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nigher three, Tanner, nigher three!&rdquo; growled the chief mutterer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why so much the better, Rafe, though two was the word. Howbeit we be come
+ far enow, I judge, and 'tis hot I judge, so hey for Robin&mdash;and a
+ draught o' perry!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art thou weary, my Yolande?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, is not thy dear arm about me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And&mdash;thou dost love me indeed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, Joconde! Mine is a love that ever groweth&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A horn's shrill challenge; a sound of voices, and below them opened a
+ great, green hollow, shady with trees beneath whose shade were huts of
+ wattle cunningly wrought, a brook that flowed sparkling, and beyond caves
+ hollowed in the steepy bank.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, Tanner Will,&rdquo; questioned Jocelyn, &ldquo;hast brought us to the
+ outlaw's refuge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, good friend-Fool, not outlaws, foresters we of Duke Pertinax, and
+ yonder, look 'ee, cometh Rob&mdash;Sir Robert to greet ye!&rdquo; And the Tanner
+ pointed where one came running, a man long of leg, long of arm and very
+ bright of eye, a goodly man clad in hood and jerkin of neat's leather as
+ aforetime, only now his bugle swung from baldrick of gold and silver and
+ in his hood was brooched a long scarlet feather.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What brother!&rdquo; cried he joyously. &ldquo;By saint Nicholas, 'tis sweet to see
+ thee again, thou lovely Fool!&rdquo; And he clasped Jocelyn in brotherly
+ embrace, which done, he stood off and shook doleful head. &ldquo;Alas, brother!&rdquo;
+ quoth he. &ldquo;Alas! my prisoner art thou this day, wherefor I grieve, and
+ wherefor I know not save that it is by my lady Benedicta's strict command
+ and her I must obey.&rdquo; And now, turning to Yolande, he bared his head,
+ louting full low. &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;by thy rare and so great beauty I do
+ know thee for Yolande the Fair, so do we of the wild give thee humble
+ greeting. Here may'st thou rest awhile ere we bring thee to Canalise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, messire,&rdquo; answered Yolande, clasping Jocelyn's hand, &ldquo;no mind have I
+ to go to Canalise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then alack for me, fair lady, for needs must I carry thee there within
+ the hour along of my motley brother. Meanwhile here within yon bower thou
+ shalt find cushions to thy repose, and all things to thy comfort and
+ refreshment.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O Sir Robert! O for a comb!&rdquo; she sighed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Expectant it waiteth thee, lady, together with water cool, sweet-perfumed
+ essences, unguents and other nice, lady-like toys. Moreover, there be
+ mirrors two of Venice and in pretty coffer&mdash;&rdquo; But Yolande had
+ vanished.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon Robin led the way into a cool, arras-hung cave where was table
+ set out with divers comfortable things both eatable and drinkable.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Quoth Jocelyn, hunger and thirst appeased: &ldquo;And now good Robin, what do
+ these envoys from Brocelaunde? Why am I thy prisoner and wherefore must I
+ to Canalise?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; saith Robin, cocking merry eye, &ldquo;and thy name is Joconde, the which
+ is an excellent name, brother, and suiteth thee well, and yet&mdash;hum!
+ Howbeit, friend, remember Robin loved thee for the Fool he found thee,
+ that same Fool foolish enow to spare a rogue his life. Dost mind my Song
+ o' Rogues? A good song, methinks, tripping merrily o' the tongue:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;'I'll sing a song
+ Not over long,
+ A song o' roguery,
+ For I'm a rogue,
+ And thou'rt a rogue,
+ And so, in faith is he.'
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ I mind thy fierce, hawk-nosed gossip in rusty jack and ragged cloak, his
+ curses! Troth brother, 'tis a world of change methinks, this same fierce,
+ cursing, hook-nose rogue a noble knight and to-day my lord Duke! I, that
+ was poor outlaw, knight-at-arms and lord warden, and thou&mdash;a motley
+ Fool still&mdash;and my prisoner. How say'st thou, brother?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why I say, Robin, that my three questions wait thy answers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, brother, and for this reason. I am a knight and noble, and so
+ being have learned me policy, and my policy is, when unable to give answer
+ direct to question direct, to question myself direct thus directing
+ question to questions other or to talk of matters of interest universal,
+ so do I of thyself and myself speak. And talking of myself I have on
+ myself, of myself, of myself made a song, and these the words, hark 'ee:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Now Rob that was Robin Sir Robert is hight
+ Though Rob oft did rob when outlaw,
+ Since outlaw now in law is dubbed a good knight,
+ Robin's robbing is done, Rob robbeth no more.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Fair words brother, I think, and yet a little sad. 'But,' says you in
+ vasty amaze, 'my very noble and right potent Sir Robert,' says you, 'if
+ thou art indeed noble knight, wherefore go ye devoid of mail, surcoat,
+ cyclas, crested helm, banderol, lance, shield and the like pomps and
+ gauds?' 'Brother,' says I, 'habit is habit and habit sticketh habitual,
+ and my habit is to go habited as suiteth my habit, suiting habit o' body
+ to habit o' mind.' Thus I, though Sir Robert, am Robin still, and go in
+ soft leather 'stead of chafing steel, and my rogues, loving Robin, love
+ Sir Robert the better therefor, as sayeth my song in fashion apt and
+ pertinent:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Since habit is habit, my habit hath been
+ To wear habit habitually comely&mdash;
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Ha, there soundeth the mustering note, so must we away and I sing no
+ further, which is well, for 'comely' is an ill word to rhyme with. Howbeit
+ here must I, beginning my song o' Robin, of beginning must Rob make an
+ end, for duty calleth Sir Robert, so must Robin away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon he clapped horn to lip at which shrill summons came archers and
+ pikemen ranked very orderly about a fair horse-litter. But Yolande coming
+ radiant from the bower and espying the litter, shook her head. Quoth she:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An thou go afoot, Joconde, so will I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The sun was low when they came before the walls of Canalise, and passing
+ beneath grim portcullis and through frowning gateway, with ring and tramp,
+ crossed the wide market square a-throng with jostling townsfolk, who
+ laughed and pointed, cheered and hooted, staring amain at Jocelyn in his
+ threadbare motley; but Yolande, fronting all eyes with proud head aloft,
+ drew nearer and held his hand in firmer clasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus they came at last to the great courtyard before the palace, bright
+ with the glitter of steel, where men-at-arms stood mustered. Here Robin
+ halted his company, whereon rose the silvery note of a clarion, and forth
+ paced the dignified Chief Herald, who spake him full-toned and sonorous:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In the name of our potent Duke Pertinax and his gracious lady Benedicta,
+ I greet thee well, Sir Robert-a-Forest. Now whom bring ye here?
+ Pronounce!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dan Merriment, Sir Gravity,&rdquo; answered Robin, &ldquo;a Fool valiant and wise, a
+ maker of songs, of quips and quiddities many and jocund, Joconde hight.
+ Sir Wisdom, Folly behold, himself here <i>in propriâ personâ</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Chief Herald gestured haughtily with his wand whereupon forth stepped
+ a file of soldiers and surrounded Jocelyn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Joconde! What meaneth this?&rdquo; said Yolande, in troubled voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indeed, my lady, I know not!&rdquo; he answered. &ldquo;But let not thy brave heart
+ fail thee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, Joconde, I fear for thee&mdash;whither would they lead thee? Nay,
+ sweet heaven, they shall not take thee from me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fear not, beloved, though they part us awhile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Away with the Motley!&rdquo; thundered the Chief Herald, flourishing his wand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yolande&mdash;O my beloved, fear not&mdash;&rdquo; But even as he spake, the
+ pikemen closed in, and Jocelyn was hustled away; so stood she trembling,
+ hands clasped and eyes wide and fearful, until tall motley figure and
+ flaunting cock's-comb were lost to her sight and the jingle of his bells
+ had died away; then, finding herself alone and all men's eyes upon her,
+ she lifted bowed head and stood white-cheeked and proudly patient, waiting
+ for what might betide.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And presently was distant stir that, growing nearer, swelled to the ring
+ and clash of armour and the trampling of many hoofs; and presently through
+ the great gateway rode many knights sumptuously caparisoned, their shields
+ brave with gilded 'scutcheons, pennon and bannerole a-flutter above
+ nodding plumes, and over all the Red Raven banner of Brocelaunde. So rode
+ they two-and-two until the great courtyard blazed with flashing steel and
+ broidered surcoats. And now a trumpet blared, and forth before this
+ glorious array a pursuivant rode and halted to behold Pertinax, who
+ stepped forth of the great banqueting-hall leading his fair Duchess by the
+ hand, and behind them courtiers and ladies attendant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once again the trumpets rang, and lifting his hand, the pursuivant spake:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My Lord Duke Pertinax, most gracious Duchess, Jocelyn the high and mighty
+ Lord Duke of Brocelaunde greeteth you in all love and amity, and hither
+ rideth to claim a fair lady to wife. Behold our Lord Duke Jocelyn!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Loud and long the trumpets blew as into the courtyard rode a single
+ horseman; tall was he and bedight in plain black armour and white surcoat
+ whereon the Red Raven glowed; but his face was hid in vizored helm. So
+ rode he through his glorious array of knights, checking his fiery steed to
+ gentle gait with practised hand, while thus spake the pursuivant:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Behold here Jocelyn, Duke of Brocelaunde, to claim this day in marriage
+ the Lady Yolande according to her word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay, my lords!&rdquo; cried a sweet, clear voice, and forth before them all
+ stood Yolande herself, pale-cheeked but stately of bearing and very bright
+ of eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Be it known to all here that I, Yolande, have given neither pledge nor
+ troth unto Duke Jocelyn&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now here was silence sudden and profound that none dared break saving only
+ the haughty Chief Herald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How lady, how,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;no pledge, no troth, quotha&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither one nor other, messire, nor shall there ever be&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is madness, lady, madness&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is truth, messire, truth; I may not pledge my troth with Duke
+ Jocelyn since I have this day pledged myself unto Duke Jocelyn's jester&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jester, lady, jester? Venus aid us&mdash;Cupid shield us! A jester, a
+ Fool, a motley mountebank, a&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye!&rdquo; cried Yolande. &ldquo;All this is he, my lords. Very humble and lowly&mdash;yet
+ do I love him! Oh, 'tis joy&mdash;'tis joy to thus confess my love&mdash;his
+ cap and bells and motley livery are fairer to me than velvet mantle or
+ knightly armour; he is but humble jester, a Fool for men's scorn or
+ laughter, yet is he a man, so do I love him and so am I his&mdash;unto the
+ end. My lords, I have no more to say save this&mdash;give me my jester&mdash;this
+ man I love&mdash;and suffer us to go forth hand in hand together, even as
+ we came.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Duchess Benedicta uttered a soft, glad cry, and seizing her husband's
+ arm, shook it for very joy. But now, as Yolande fronted them all, pale and
+ proudly defiant, was the ring of a mailed foot, and turning, she shrank
+ trembling to see Duke Jocelyn hasting toward her, his black armour
+ glinting, his embroidered surcoat fluttering, his long arms outstretched
+ to her; thus quick-striding he came but, even as she put out shaking hands
+ to stay him, he fell upon his knee before her.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Most brave and noble lady&mdash;beloved Yolande,&rdquo; he cried, and lifted
+ his vizor. Now beholding the scarred face of him, the tender, smiling
+ lips, the adoration in his grey eyes, she trembled amain and, swaying to
+ him, rested her hands on his mailed shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Joconde,&rdquo; she whispered, &ldquo;ah, Joconde&mdash;what dream is this?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, beloved, the dream is ended and findeth me here at thy feet. The
+ dream is past and we do wake at last, for thy motley Fool, thy Duke and
+ lover am I, yet lover most of all. And thou who in thy divine mercy
+ stooped to love the Fool, by that same love shalt thou lift Duke Jocelyn
+ up to thee and heaven at last. And Oh, methinks the memory of thy so great
+ and noble love shall be a memory fragrant everlastingly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So speaking, Duke Jocelyn rose, and with her hand fast in his, looked from
+ her loveliness round about him, blithe of eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lords,&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;behold my well-beloved, brave-hearted lady. Nobles
+ of Brocelaunde, salute your Duchess Yolande.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Hereupon was shout on shout of joyous acclaim, lost all at once in the
+ sweet, glad clamour of bells pealing near and far; so, hand in hand, while
+ the air thrilled with this merry riot, they crossed the wide courtyard,
+ and she flushed 'neath the worship of his look and he thrilled to the
+ close, warm pressure of her fingers&mdash;thus walked they betwixt the
+ ranks of men-at-arms and glittering chivalry, yet saw them not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But now Yolande was aware of Benedicta's arms about her and Benedicta's
+ voice in her ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Dear my Yolande, so True-love hath found thee at last since thou wert
+ brave indeed and worthy. Come now and let me deck thee to thy bridal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lord Duke,&rdquo; quoth Pertinax, &ldquo;here methinks was notable, worthy wooing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aha!&rdquo; quoth Mopsa the Witch, crackling her knuckle-bones. &ldquo;Here, my
+ children, is wooing that some fool shall strive to tell tale of some day,
+ mayhap; but such love is beyond words and not to be told. Thus by cunning
+ contrivement hath Mopsa the old Witch proved the true from the false, the
+ gold from the dross; thou, my lady, hast proved thy love indeed, and thou,
+ Lord Duke, may nevermore doubt such love. And now away and wed each other
+ to love's fulfilment&mdash;hark where the bells do summon ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, as evening fell, they were wed within the great Minster of
+ Canalise, and thereafter came they to the banqueting-hall with retinue of
+ knights and nobles. Last of all strode Robin with his foresters, and as
+ they marched he sang a song he had learned of Jocelyn, and these the
+ words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What is love? 'Tis this, I say,
+ Flower that springeth in a day,
+ Ne'er to die or fade away,
+ Since True-love dieth never.
+
+ &ldquo;Though youth alas! too soon shall wane,
+ Though friend prove false and effort vain,
+ True-love all changeless shall remain
+ The same to-day and ever.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <h3>
+ THE END
+ </h3>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's The Geste of Duke Jocelyn, by Jeffery Farnol
+
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+</pre>
+
+ </body>
+</html>
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