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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Robin Hood, by J. Walker McSpadden
+
+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: Robin Hood
+
+Author: J. Walker McSpadden
+
+Release Date: January 21, 2006 [EBook #832]
+Last Updated: November 15, 2016
+
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBIN HOOD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joseph S. Miller and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ROBIN HOOD
+
+
+by J. Walker McSpadden
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I How Robin Hood Became an Outlaw
+
+ CHAPTER II How Robin Hood Met Little John
+
+ CHAPTER III How Robin Hood Turned Butcher, and Entered the
+ Sheriff’s Service
+
+ CHAPTER IV How Little John Entered the Sheriff’s Service
+
+ CHAPTER V How the Sheriff Lost Three Good Servants, and
+ Found Them Again
+
+ CHAPTER VI How Robin Hood Met Will Scarlett
+
+ CHAPTER VII How Robin Hood Met Friar Tuck
+
+ CHAPTER VIII How Allan-a-Dale’s Wooing Was Prospered
+
+ CHAPTER IX How the Widow’s Three Sons Were Rescued
+
+ CHAPTER X How a Beggar Filled the Public Eye
+
+ CHAPTER XI How Robin Hood Fought Guy of Gisbourne
+
+ CHAPTER XII How Maid Marion Came Back to Sherwood Forest;
+ Also, How Robin Hood Came Before Queen Eleanor
+
+ CHAPTER XIII How the Outlaws Shot in King Harry’s Tourney
+
+ CHAPTER XIV How Robin Hood Was Sought of the Tinker
+
+ CHAPTER XV How Robin Hood Was Tanned of the Tanner
+
+ CHAPTER XVI How Robin Hood Met Sir Richard of the Lea
+
+ CHAPTER XVII How the Bishop Was Dined
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII How the Bishop Went Outlaw-Hunting
+
+ CHAPTER XIX How the Sheriff Held Another Shooting Match
+
+ CHAPTER XX How Will Stutely Was Rescued
+
+ CHAPTER XXI How Sir Richard of the Lea Repaid His Debt
+
+ CHAPTER XXII How King Richard Came to Sherwood Forest
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII How Robin Hood and Maid Marion Were Wed
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV How Robin Hood Met His Death
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD BECAME AN OUTLAW
+
+ List and hearken, gentlemen,
+ That be of free-born blood,
+ I shall you tell of a good yeoman,
+ His name was Robin Hood.
+
+ Robin was a proud outlaw,
+ While as he walked on the ground.
+ So courteous an outlaw as he was one
+ Was never none else found.
+
+In the days of good King Harry the Second of England--he of the warring
+sons--there were certain forests in the north country set aside for the
+King’s hunting, and no man might shoot deer therein under penalty of
+death. These forests were guarded by the King’s Foresters, the chief
+of whom, in each wood, was no mean man but equal in authority to the
+Sheriff in his walled town, or even to my lord Bishop in his abbey.
+
+One of the greatest of royal preserves was Sherwood and Barnesdale
+forests near the two towns of Nottingham and Barnesdale. Here for some
+years dwelt one Hugh Fitzooth as Head Forester, with his good wife and
+son Robert. The boy had been born in Lockesley town--in the year 1160,
+stern records say--and was often called Lockesley, or Rob of Lockesley.
+He was a comely, well-knit stripling, and as soon as he was strong
+enough to walk his chief delight was to go with his father into the
+forest. As soon as his right arm received thew and sinew he learned to
+draw the long bow and speed a true arrow. While on winter evenings his
+greatest joy was to hear his father tell of bold Will o’ the Green, the
+outlaw, who for many summers defied the King’s Foresters and feasted
+with his men upon King’s deer. And on other stormy days the boy learned
+to whittle out a straight shaft for the long bow, and tip it with gray
+goose feathers.
+
+The fond mother sighed when she saw the boy’s face light up at these
+woodland tales. She was of gentle birth, and had hoped to see her son
+famous at court or abbey. She taught him to read and to write, to doff
+his cap without awkwardness and to answer directly and truthfully both
+lord and peasant. But the boy, although he took kindly to these lessons
+of breeding, was yet happiest when he had his beloved bow in hand and
+strolled at will, listening to the murmur of the trees.
+
+Two playmates had Rob in these gladsome early days. One was Will
+Gamewell, his father’s brother’s son, who lived at Gamewell Lodge, hard
+by Nottingham town. The other was Marian Fitzwalter, only child of the
+Earl of Huntingdon. The castle of Huntingdon could be seen from the top
+of one of the tall trees in Sherwood; and on more than one bright day
+Rob’s white signal from this tree told Marian that he awaited her there:
+for you must know that Rob did not visit her at the castle. His father
+and her father were enemies. Some people whispered that Hugh Fitzooth
+was the rightful Earl of Huntingdon, but that he had been defrauded out
+of his lands by Fitzwalter, who had won the King’s favor by a crusade to
+the Holy Land. But little cared Rob or Marian for this enmity, however
+it had arisen. They knew that the great green--wood was open to them,
+and that the wide, wide world was full of the scent of flowers and the
+song of birds.
+
+Days of youth speed all too swiftly, and troubled skies come all too
+soon. Rob’s father had two other enemies besides Fitzwalter, in
+the persons of the lean Sheriff of Nottingham and the fat Bishop of
+Hereford. These three enemies one day got possession of the King’s ear
+and whispered therein to such good--or evil--purpose that Hugh Fitzooth
+was removed from his post of King’s Forester. He and his wife and Rob,
+then a youth of nineteen, were descended upon, during a cold winter’s
+evening, and dispossessed without warning. The Sheriff arrested the
+Forester for treason--of which, poor man, he was as guiltless as you or
+I--and carried him to Nottingham jail. Rob and his mother were sheltered
+over night in the jail, also, but next morning were roughly bade to go
+about their business. Thereupon they turned for succor to their only
+kinsman, Squire George of Gamewell, who sheltered them in all kindness.
+
+But the shock, and the winter night’s journey, proved too much for
+Dame Fitzooth. She had not been strong for some time before leaving the
+forest. In less than two months she was no more. Rob felt as though his
+heart was broken at this loss. But scarcely had the first spring flowers
+begun to blossom upon her grave, when he met another crushing blow in
+the loss of his father. That stern man had died in prison before his
+accusers could agree upon the charges by which he was to be brought to
+trial.
+
+Two years passed by. Rob’s cousin Will was away at school; and Marian’s
+father, who had learned of her friendship with Rob, had sent his
+daughter to the court of Queen Eleanor. So these years were lonely ones
+to the orphaned lad. The bluff old Squire was kind to him, but secretly
+could make nothing of one who went about brooding and as though seeking
+for something he had lost. The truth is that Rob missed his old life
+in the forest no less than his mother’s gentleness, and his father’s
+companionship. Every time he twanged the string of the long bow against
+his shoulder and heard the gray goose shaft sing, it told him of happy
+days that he could not recall.
+
+One morning as Rob came in to breakfast, his uncle greeted him with, “I
+have news for you, Rob, my lad!” and the hearty old Squire finished his
+draught of ale and set his pewter tankard down with a crash.
+
+“What may that be, Uncle Gamewell?” asked the young man.
+
+“Here is a chance to exercise your good long bow and win a pretty prize.
+The Fair is on at Nottingham, and the Sheriff proclaims an archer’s
+tournament. The best fellows are to have places with the King’s
+Foresters, and the one who shoots straightest of all will win for prize
+a golden arrow--a useless bauble enough, but just the thing for your lady
+love, eh, Rob my boy?” Here the Squire laughed and whacked the table
+again with his tankard.
+
+Rob’s eyes sparkled. “‘Twere indeed worth shooting for, uncle mine,” he
+said. “I should dearly love to let arrow fly alongside another man. And
+a place among the Foresters is what I have long desired. Will you let me
+try?”
+
+“To be sure,” rejoined his uncle. “Well I know that your good mother
+would have had me make a clerk of you; but well I see that the greenwood
+is where you will pass your days. So, here’s luck to you in the bout!”
+ And the huge tankard came a third time into play.
+
+The young man thanked his uncle for his good wishes, and set about
+making preparations for the journey. He traveled lightly; but his yew
+bow must needs have a new string, and his cloth-yard arrows must be of
+the straightest and soundest.
+
+One fine morning, a few days after, Rob might have been seen passing
+by way of Lockesley through Sherwood Forest to Nottingham town. Briskly
+walked he and gaily, for his hopes were high and never an enemy had he
+in the wide world. But ‘twas the very last morning in all his life
+when he was to lack an enemy! For, as he went his way through Sherwood,
+whistling a blithe tune, he came suddenly upon a group of Foresters,
+making merry beneath the spreading branches of an oak-tree. They had a
+huge meat pie before them and were washing down prodigious slices of it
+with nut brown ale.
+
+One glance at the leader and Rob knew at once that he had found
+an enemy. ‘Twas the man who had usurped his father’s place as Head
+Forester, and who had roughly turned his mother out in the snow. But
+never a word said he for good or bad, and would have passed on his way,
+had not this man, clearing his throat with a huge gulp, bellowed out:
+“By my troth, here is a pretty little archer! Where go you, my lad, with
+that tupenny bow and toy arrows? Belike he would shoot at Nottingham
+Fair! Ho! Ho!”
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this sally. Rob flushed, for he was mightily
+proud of his shooting.
+
+“My bow is as good as yours,” he retorted, “and my shafts will carry as
+straight and as far. So I’ll not take lessons of any of ye.”
+
+They laughed again loudly at this, and the leader said with frown:
+
+“Show us some of your skill, and if you can hit the mark here’s twenty
+silver pennies for you. But if you hit it not you are in for a sound
+drubbing for your pertness.”
+
+“Pick your own target,” quoth Rob in a fine rage. “I’ll lay my head
+against that purse that I can hit it.”
+
+“It shall be as you say,” retorted the Forester angrily, “your head for
+your sauciness that you hit not my target.”
+
+Now at a little rise in the wood a herd of deer came grazing by, distant
+full fivescore yards. They were King’s deer, but at that distance seemed
+safe from any harm. The Head Forester pointed to them.
+
+“If your young arm could speed a shaft for half that distance, I’d shoot
+with you.”
+
+“Done!” cried Rob. “My head against twenty pennies I’ll cause yon fine
+fellow in the lead of them to breathe his last.”
+
+And without more ado he tried the string of his long bow, placed a shaft
+thereon, and drew it to his ear. A moment, and the quivering string sang
+death as the shaft whistled across the glade. Another moment and the
+leader of the herd leaped high in his tracks and fell prone, dyeing the
+sward with his heart’s blood.
+
+A murmur of amazement swept through the Foresters, and then a growl of
+rage. He that had wagered was angriest of all.
+
+“Know you what you have done, rash youth?” he said. “You have killed a
+King’s deer, and by the laws of King Harry your head remains forfeit.
+Talk not to me of pennies but get ye gone straight, and let me not look
+upon your face again.”
+
+Rob’s blood boiled within him, and he uttered a rash speech. “I have
+looked upon your face once too often already, my fine Forester. ‘Tis you
+who wear my father’s shoes.”
+
+And with this he turned upon his heel and strode away.
+
+The Forester heard his parting thrust with an oath. Red with rage he
+seized his bow, strung an arrow, and without warning launched it full
+af’ Rob. Well was it for the latter that the Forester’s foot turned on a
+twig at the critical instant, for as it was the arrow whizzed by his ear
+so close as to take a stray strand of his hair with it. Rob turned upon
+his assailant, now twoscore yards away.
+
+“Ha!” said he. “You shoot not so straight as I, for all your bravado.
+Take this from the tupenny bow!”
+
+Straight flew his answering shaft. The Head Forester gave one cry, then
+fell face downward and lay still. His life had avenged Rob’s father, but
+the son was outlawed. Forward he ran through the forest, before the
+band could gather their scattered wits--still forward into the great
+greenwood. The swaying trees seemed to open their arms to the wanderer,
+and to welcome him home.
+
+Toward the close of the same day, Rob paused hungry and weary at the
+cottage of a poor widow who dwelt upon the outskirts of the forest. Now
+this widow had often greeted him kindly in his boyhood days, giving him
+to eat and drink. So he boldly entered her door. The old dame was right
+glad to see him, and baked him cakes in the ashes, and had him rest and
+tell her his story. Then she shook her head.
+
+“‘Tis an evil wind that blows through Sherwood,” she said. “The poor are
+despoiled and the rich ride over their bodies. My three sons have been
+outlawed for shooting King’s deer to keep us from starving, and now hide
+in the wood. And they tell me that twoscore of as good men as ever drew
+bow are in hiding with them.”
+
+“Where are they, good mother?” cried Rob. “By my faith, I will join
+them.”
+
+“Nay, nay,” replied the old woman at first. But when she saw that there
+was no other way, she said: “My sons will visit me to-night. Stay you
+here and see them if you must.”
+
+So Rob stayed willingly to see the widow’s sons that night, for they
+were men after his own heart. And when they found that his mood was with
+them, they made him swear an oath of fealty, and told him the haunt of
+the band--a place he knew right well. Finally one of them said:
+
+“But the band lacks a leader--one who can use his head as well as
+his hand. So we have agreed that he who has skill enough to go to
+Nottingham, an outlaw, and win the prize at archery, shall be our
+chief.”
+
+Rob sprang to his feet. “Said in good time!” cried he, “for I had
+started to that self-same Fair, and all the Foresters, and all the
+Sheriff’s men in Christendom shall not stand between me and the center
+of their target!”
+
+And though he was but barely grown he stood so straight and his eye
+flashed with such fire that the three brothers seized his hand and
+shouted:
+
+“A Lockesley! a Lockesley! if you win the golden arrow you shall be
+chief of outlaws in Sherwood Forest!”
+
+So Rob fell to planning how he could disguise himself to go to
+Nottingham town; for he knew that the Foresters had even then set a
+price on his head in the market-place.
+
+It was even as Rob had surmised. The Sheriff of Nottingham posted a
+reward of two hundred pounds for the capture, dead or alive, of one
+Robert Fitzooth, outlaw. And the crowds thronging the streets upon that
+busy Fair day often paused to read the notice and talk together about
+the death of the Head Forester.
+
+But what with wrestling bouts and bouts with quarter-staves, and
+wandering minstrels, there came up so many other things to talk about,
+that the reward was forgotten for the nonce, and only the Foresters
+and Sheriff’s men watched the gates with diligence, the Sheriff indeed
+spurring them to effort by offers of largess. His hatred of the father
+had descended to the son.
+
+The great event of the day came in the afternoon. It was the archer’s
+contest for the golden arrow, and twenty men stepped forth to shoot.
+Among them was a beggar-man, a sorry looking fellow with leggings of
+different colors, and brown scratched face and hands. Over a tawny shock
+of hair he had a hood drawn, much like that of a monk. Slowly he limped
+to his place in the line, while the mob shouted in derision. But the
+contest was open to all comers, so no man said him nay.
+
+Side by side with Rob--for it was he--stood a muscular fellow of swarthy
+visage and with one eye hid by a green bandage. Him also the crowd
+jeered, but he passed them by with indifference while he tried his bow
+with practiced hand.
+
+A great crowd had assembled in the amphitheater enclosing the lists. All
+the gentry and populace of the surrounding country were gathered there
+in eager expectancy. The central box contained the lean but pompous
+Sheriff, his bejeweled wife, and their daughter, a supercilious young
+woman enough, who, it was openly hinted, was hoping to receive the
+golden arrow from the victor and thus be crowned queen of the day.
+
+Next to the Sheriff’s box was one occupied by the fat Bishop of
+Hereford; while in the other side was a box wherein sat a girl whose
+dark hair, dark eyes, and fair features caused Rob’s heart to leap.
+‘Twas Maid Marian! She had come up for a visit from the Queen’s court at
+London town, and now sat demurely by her father the Earl of Huntingdon.
+If Rob had been grimly resolved to win the arrow before, the sight of
+her sweet face multiplied his determination an hundredfold. He felt his
+muscles tightening into bands of steel, tense and true. Yet withal his
+heart would throb, making him quake in a most unaccountable way.
+
+Then the trumpet sounded, and the crowd became silent while the herald
+announced the terms of the contest. The lists were open to all comers.
+The first target was to be placed at thirty ells distance, and all those
+who hit its center were allowed to shoot at the second target, placed
+ten ells farther off. The third target was to be removed yet farther,
+until the winner was proved. The winner was to receive the golden arrow,
+and a place with the King’s Foresters. He it was also who crowned the
+queen of the day.
+
+The trumpet sounded again, and the archers prepared to shoot. Rob looked
+to his string, while the crowd smiled and whispered at the odd figure
+he cut, with his vari-colored legs and little cape. But as the first man
+shot, they grew silent.
+
+The target was not so far but that twelve out of the twenty contestants
+reached its inner circle. Rob shot sixth in the line and landed fairly,
+being rewarded by an approving grunt from the man with the green
+blinder, who shot seventh, and with apparent carelessness, yet true to
+the bull’s-eye.
+
+The mob cheered and yelled themselves hoarse at this even marksmanship.
+The trumpet sounded again, and a new target was set up at forty ells.
+
+The first three archers again struck true, amid the loud applause of the
+onlookers; for they were general favorites and expected to win. Indeed
+‘twas whispered that each was backed by one of the three dignitaries
+of the day. The fourth and fifth archers barely grazed the center. Rob
+fitted his arrow quietly and with some confidence sped it unerringly
+toward the shining circle.
+
+“The beggar! the beggar!” yelled the crowd; “another bull for the
+beggar!” In truth his shaft was nearer the center than any of the
+others. But it was not so near that “Blinder,” as the mob had promptly
+christened his neighbor, did not place his shaft just within the mark.
+Again the crowd cheered wildly. Such shooting as this was not seen every
+day in Nottingham town.
+
+The other archers in this round were disconcerted by the preceding
+shots, or unable to keep the pace. They missed one after another and
+dropped moodily back, while the trumpet sounded for the third round, and
+the target was set up fifty ells distant.
+
+“By my halidom you draw a good bow, young master,” said Rob’s queer
+comrade to him in the interval allowed for rest. “Do you wish me to
+shoot first on this trial?”
+
+“Nay,” said Rob, “but you are a good fellow by this token, and if I win
+not, I hope you may keep the prize from yon strutters.” And he nodded
+scornfully to the three other archers who were surrounded by their
+admirers, and were being made much of by retainers of the Sheriff, the
+Bishop, and the Earl. From them his eye wandered toward Maid Marian’s
+booth. She had been watching him, it seemed, for their eyes met; then
+hers were hastily averted.
+
+“Blinder’s” quick eye followed those of Rob. “A fair maid, that,” he
+said smilingly, “and one more worthy the golden arrow than the Sheriff’s
+haughty miss.”
+
+Rob looked at him swiftly, and saw naught but kindliness in his glance.
+
+“You are a shrewd fellow and I like you well,” was his only comment.
+
+Now the archers prepared to shoot again, each with some little care. The
+target seemed hardly larger than the inner ring had looked, at the first
+trial. The first three sped their shafts, and while they were fair shots
+they did not more than graze the inner circle.
+
+Rob took his stand with some misgiving. Some flecking clouds overhead
+made the light uncertain, and a handful of wind frolicked across the
+range in a way quite disturbing to a bowman’s nerves. His eyes wandered
+for a brief moment to the box wherein sat the dark-eyed girl. His heart
+leaped! she met his glance and smiled at him reassuringly. And in that
+moment he felt that she knew him despite his disguise and looked to him
+to keep the honor of old Sherwood. He drew his bow firmly and, taking
+advantage of a momentary lull in the breeze, launched the arrow straight
+and true-singing across the range to the center of the target.
+
+“The beggar! the beggar! a bull! a bull!” yelled the fickle mob,
+who from jeering him were now his warm friends. “Can you beat that,
+Blinder?”
+
+The last archer smiled scornfully and made ready. He drew his bow with
+ease and grace and, without seeming to study the course, released the
+winged arrow. Forward it leaped toward the target, and all eyes followed
+its flight. A loud uproar broke forth when it alighted, just without the
+center and grazing the shaft sent by Rob. The stranger made a gesture
+of surprise when his own eyes announced the result to him, but saw his
+error. He had not allowed for the fickle gust of wind which seized the
+arrow and carried it to one side. But for all that he was the first to
+congratulate the victor.
+
+“I hope we may shoot again,” quoth he. “In truth I care not for the
+golden bauble and wished to win it in despite of the Sheriff for whom I
+have no love. Now crown the lady of your choice.” And turning suddenly
+he was lost in the crowd, before Rob could utter what it was upon his
+lips to say, that he would shoot again with him.
+
+And now the herald summoned Rob to the Sheriff’s box to receive the
+prize.
+
+“You are a curious fellow enough,” said the Sheriff, biting his lip
+coldly; “yet you shoot well. What name go you by?”
+
+Marian sat near and was listening intently.
+
+“I am called Rob the Stroller, my Lord Sheriff,” said the archer.
+
+Marian leaned back and smiled.
+
+“Well, Rob the Stroller, with a little attention to your skin and
+clothes you would not be so bad a man,” said the Sheriff. “How like you
+the idea of entering my service.
+
+“Rob the Stroller has ever been a free man, my Lord, and desires no
+service.”
+
+The Sheriff’s brow darkened, yet for the sake of his daughter and the
+golden arrow, he dissembled.
+
+“Rob the Stroller,” said he, “here is the golden arrow which has been
+offered to the best of archers this day. You are awarded the prize. See
+that you bestow it worthily.”
+
+At this point the herald nudged Rob and half inclined his head toward
+the Sheriff’s daughter, who sat with a thin smile upon her lips. But Rob
+heeded him not. He took the arrow and strode to the next box where sat
+Maid Marian.
+
+“Lady,” he said, “pray accept this little pledge from a poor stroller
+who would devote the best shafts in his quiver to serve you.”
+
+“My thanks to you, Rob in the Hood,” replied she with a roguish twinkle
+in her eye; and she placed the gleaming arrow in her hair, while the
+people shouted, “The Queen! the Queen!”
+
+The Sheriff glowered furiously upon this ragged archer who had refused
+his service, taken his prize without a word of thanks, and snubbed his
+daughter. He would have spoken, but his proud daughter restrained him.
+He called to his guard and bade them watch the beggar. But Rob had
+already turned swiftly, lost himself in the throng, and headed straight
+for the town gate.
+
+That same evening within a forest glade a group of men--some twoscore
+clad in Lincoln green--sat round a fire roasting venison and making
+merry. Suddenly a twig crackled and they sprang to their feet and seized
+their weapons.
+
+“I look for the widow’s sons,” a clear voice said, “and I come alone.”
+
+Instantly the three men stepped forward.
+
+“Tis Rob!” they cried; “welcome to Sherwood Forest, Rob!” And all the
+men came and greeted him; for they had heard his story.
+
+Then one of the widow’s sons, Stout Will, stepped forth and said:
+
+“Comrades all, ye know that our band has sadly lacked a leader--one of
+birth, breeding, and skill. Belike we have found that leader in this
+young man. And I and my brothers have told him that the band would
+choose that one who should bring the Sheriff to shame this day and
+capture his golden arrow. Is it not so?”
+
+The band gave assent.
+
+Will turned to Rob. “What news bring you from Nottingham town?” asked
+he.
+
+Rob laughed. “In truth I brought the Sheriff to shame for mine own
+pleasure, and won his golden arrow to boot. But as to the prize ye must
+e’en take my word, for I bestowed it upon a maid.”
+
+And seeing the men stood in doubt at this, he continued: “But I’ll
+gladly join your band, and you take me, as a common archer. For there
+are others older and mayhap more skilled than I.”
+
+Then stepped one forward from the rest, a tall swarthy man. And Rob
+recognized him as the man with the green blinder; only this was now
+removed, and his freed eye gleamed as stoutly as the other one.
+
+“Rob in the Hood--for such the lady called you,” said he, “I can vouch
+for your tale. You shamed the Sheriff e’en as I had hoped to do; and we
+can forego the golden arrow since it is in such fair hands. As to your
+shooting and mine, we must let future days decide. But here I, Will
+Stutely, declare that I will serve none other chief save only you.”
+
+Then good Will Stutely told the outlaws of Rob’s deeds, and gave him his
+hand of fealty. And the widow’s sons did likewise, and the other members
+every one, right gladly; because Will Stutely had heretofore been the
+truest bow in all the company. And they toasted him in nut brown ale,
+and hailed him as their leader, by the name of Robin Hood. And he
+accepted that name because Maid Marian had said it.
+
+By the light of the camp-fire the band exchanged signs and passwords.
+They gave Robin Hood a horn upon which he was to blow to summon them.
+They swore, also, that while they might take money and goods from the
+unjust rich, they would aid and befriend the poor and the helpless; and
+that they would harm no woman, be she maid, wife, or widow. They swore
+all this with solemn oaths, while they feasted about the ruddy blaze,
+under the greenwood tree.
+
+And that is how Robin Hood became an outlaw.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET LITTLE JOHN
+
+ “O here is my hand,” the stranger reply’d,
+ “I’ll serve you with all my whole heart.
+ My name is John Little, a man of good mettle,
+ Ne’er doubt me for I’ll play my part.”
+
+ “His name shall be altered,” quoth William Stutely,
+ “And I will his godfather be:
+ Prepare then a feast, and none of the least,
+ For we will be merry,” quoth he.
+
+All that summer Robin Hood and his merry men roamed in Sherwood Forest,
+and the fame of their deeds ran abroad in the land. The Sheriff of
+Nottingham waxed wroth at the report, but all his traps and excursions
+failed to catch the outlaws. The poor people began by fearing them, but
+when they found that the men in Lincoln green who answered Robin Hood’s
+horn meant them no harm, but despoiled the oppressor to relieve the
+oppressed, they ‘gan to have great liking for them. And the band
+increased by other stout hearts till by the end of the summer fourscore
+good men and true had sworn fealty.
+
+But the days of quiet which came on grew irksome to Robin’s adventurous
+spirit. Up rose he, one gay morn, and slung his quiver over his
+shoulders.
+
+“This fresh breeze stirs the blood, my lads,” quoth he, “and I would
+be seeing what the gay world looks like in the direction of Nottingham
+town. But tarry ye behind in the borders of the forest, within earshot
+of my bugle call.”
+
+Thus saying he strode merrily forward to the edge of the wood, and
+paused there a moment, his agile form erect, his brown locks flowing
+and his brown eyes watching the road; and a goodly sight he made, as the
+wind blew the ruddy color into his cheeks.
+
+The highway led clear in the direction of the town, and thither he
+boldly directed his steps. But at a bend in the road he knew of a
+by-path leading across a brook which made the way nearer and less open,
+into which he turned. As he approached the stream he saw that it had
+become swollen by recent rains into quite a pretty torrent. The log
+foot-bridge was still there, but at this end of it a puddle intervened
+which could be crossed only with a leap, if you would not get your feet
+wet.
+
+But Robin cared little for such a handicap. Taking a running start, his
+nimble legs carried him easily over and balanced neatly upon the end of
+the broad log. But he was no sooner started across than he saw a tall
+stranger coming from the other side. Thereupon Robin quickened his pace,
+and the stranger did likewise, each thinking to cross first. Midway they
+met, and neither would yield an inch.
+
+“Give way, fellow!” roared Robin, whose leadership of a band, I am
+afraid, had not tended to mend his manners.
+
+The stranger smiled. He was almost a head taller than the other.
+
+“Nay,” he retorted, “fair and softly! I give way only to a better man
+than myself.”
+
+“Give way, I say”, repeated Robin, “or I shall have to show you a better
+man.”
+
+His opponent budged not an inch, but laughed loudly. “Now by my
+halidom!” he said good-naturedly, “I would not move after hearing that
+speech, even if minded to it before; for this better man I have sought
+my life long. Therefore show him to me, an it please you.”
+
+“That will I right soon,” quoth Robin. “Stay you here a little while,
+till I cut me a cudgel like unto that you have been twiddling in your
+fingers.” So saying he sought his own bank again with a leap, laid aside
+his long bow and arrows, and cut him a stout staff of oak, straight,
+knotless, and a good six feet in length. But still it was a full foot
+shorter than his opponent’s. Then back came he boldly.
+
+“I mind not telling you, fellow,” said he, “that a bout with archery
+would have been an easier way with me. But there are other tunes in
+England besides that the arrow sings.” Here he whirred the staff about
+his head by way of practice. “So make you ready for the tune I am about
+to play upon your ribs. Have at you! One, two--”
+
+“Three!” roared the giant smiting at him instantly.
+
+Well was it for Robin that he was quick and nimble of foot; for the blow
+that grazed a hair’s breadth from his shoulder would have felled an ox.
+Nevertheless while swerving to avoid this stroke, Robin was poising for
+his own, and back came he forthwith--whack!
+
+Whack! parried the other.
+
+Whack! whack! whack! whack!
+
+The fight waxed fast and furious. It was strength pitted against
+subtlety, and the match was a merry one. The mighty blows of the
+stranger went whistling around Robin’s ducking head, while his own swift
+undercuts were fain to give the other an attack of indigestion. Yet each
+stood firmly in his place not moving backward or forward a foot for a
+good half hour, nor thinking of crying “Enough!” though some chance blow
+seemed likely to knock one or the other off the narrow foot-bridge. The
+giant’s face was getting red, and his breath came snorting forth like
+a bull’s. He stepped forward with a furious onslaught to finish this
+audacious fellow. Robin dodged his blows lightly, then sprang in swiftly
+and unexpectedly and dealt the stranger such a blow upon the short ribs
+that you would have sworn the tanner was trimming down his hides for
+market.
+
+The stranger reeled and came within an ace of falling, but regained his
+footing right quickly.
+
+“By my life, you can hit hard!” he gasped forth, giving back a blow
+almost while he was yet staggering.
+
+This blow was a lucky one. It caught Robin off his guard. His stick had
+rested a moment while he looked to see the giant topple into the water,
+when down came the other upon his head, whack! Robin saw more stars
+in that one moment than all the astronomers have since discovered, and
+forthwith he dropped neatly into the stream.
+
+The cool rushing current quickly brought him to his senses, howbeit he
+was still so dazed that he groped blindly for the swaying reeds to
+pull himself up on the bank. His assailant could not forbear laughing
+heartily at his plight, but was also quick to lend his aid. He thrust
+down his long staff to Robin crying, “Lay hold of that, an your fists
+whirl not so much as your head!”
+
+Robin laid hold and was hauled to dry land for all the world like
+a fish, except that the fish would never have come forth so wet and
+dripping. He lay upon the warm bank for a space to regain his senses.
+Then he sat up and gravely rubbed his pate.
+
+“By all the saints!” said he, “you hit full stoutly. My head hums like a
+hive of bees on a summer morning.”
+
+Then he seized his horn, which lay near, and blew thereon three shrill
+notes that echoed against the trees. A moment of silence ensued, and
+then was heard the rustling of leaves and crackling of twigs like the
+coming of many men; and forth from the glade burst a score or two of
+stalwart yeomen, all clad in Lincoln green, like Robin, with good Will
+Stutely and the widow’s three sons at their head.
+
+“Good master,” cried Will Stutely, “how is this? In sooth there is not a
+dry thread on your body.”
+
+“Why, marry,” replied Robin, “this fellow would not let me pass the
+footbridge, and when I tickled him in the ribs, he must needs answer by
+a pat on the head which landed me overboard.”
+
+“Then shall he taste some of his own porridge,” quoth Will. “Seize him,
+lads!”
+
+“Nay, let him go free,” said Robin. “The fight was a fair one and I
+abide by it. I surmise you also are quits?” he continued, turning to the
+stranger with a twinkling eye.
+
+“I am content,” said the other, “for verily you now have the best end of
+the cudgel. Wherefore, I like you well, and would fain know your name.”
+
+“Why,” said Robin, “my men and even the Sheriff of Nottingham know me as
+Robin Hood, the outlaw.”
+
+“Then am I right sorry that I beat you,” exclaimed the man, “for I was
+on my way to seek you and to try to join your merry company. But after
+my unmannerly use of the cudgel, I fear we are still strangers.”
+
+“Nay, never say it!” cried Robin, “I am glad I fell in with you; though,
+sooth to say, I did all the falling!”
+
+And amid a general laugh the two men clasped hands, and in that clasp
+the strong friendship of a lifetime was begun.
+
+“But you have not yet told us your name,” said Robin, bethinking
+himself.
+
+“Whence I came, men call me John Little.”
+
+“Enter our company then, John Little; enter and welcome. The rites are
+few, the fee is large. We ask your whole mind and body and heart even
+unto death.”
+
+“I give the bond, upon my life,” said the tall man.
+
+Thereupon Will Stutely, who loved a good jest, spoke up and said: “The
+infant in our household must be christened, and I’ll stand godfather.
+This fair little stranger is so small of bone and sinew, that his old
+name is not to the purpose.” Here he paused long enough to fill a horn
+in the stream. “Hark ye, my son,”--standing on tiptoe to splash the
+water on the giant--“take your new name on entering the forest. I
+christen you Little John.”
+
+At this jest the men roared long and loud.
+
+“Give him a bow, and find a full sheath of arrows for Little John,”
+ said Robin joyfully. “Can you shoot as well as fence with the staff, my
+friend?”
+
+“I have hit an ash twig at forty yards,” said Little John.
+
+Thus chatting pleasantly the band turned back into the woodland and
+sought their secluded dell, where the trees were the thickest, the moss
+was the softest, and a secret path led to a cave, at once a retreat and
+a stronghold. Here under a mighty oak they found the rest of the band,
+some of whom had come in with a brace of fat does. And here they built
+a ruddy fire and sat down to the meat and ale, Robin Hood in the center
+with Will Stutely on the one hand and Little John on the other. And
+Robin was right well pleased with the day’s adventure, even though he
+had got a drubbing; for sore ribs and heads will heal, and ‘tis not
+every day that one can find a recruit as stout of bone and true of soul
+as Little John.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD TURNED BUTCHER, AND ENTERED THE SHERIFF’S SERVICE
+
+ The butcher he answered jolly Robin,
+ “No matter where I do dwell,
+ For a butcher am I, and to Nottingham
+ Am I going, my flesh to sell.”
+
+The next morning the weather had turned ill, and Robin Hood’s band
+stayed close to their dry and friendly cave. The third day brought a
+diversion in the shape of a trap by a roving party of the Sheriff’s men.
+A fine stag had been struck down by one Of Will Stutely’s fellows, and
+he and others had stepped forth from the covert to seize it, when twenty
+bowmen from Nottingham appeared at the end of the glade. Down dropped
+Will’s men on all fours, barely in time to hear a shower of arrows
+whistle above their heads. Then from behind the friendly trees they
+sent back such a welcome that the Sheriff’s men deemed it prudent not to
+tarry in their steps. Two of them, in sooth, bore back unpleasant wounds
+in their shoulders, from the encounter.
+
+When they returned to town the Sheriff waxed red with rage.
+
+“What,” he gasped, “do my men fear to fight this Robin Hood, face to
+face? Would that I could get him within my reach, once. We should see
+then; we should see!”
+
+What it was the Sheriff would see, he did not state. But he was to have
+his wish granted in short space, and you and I will see how he profited
+by it.
+
+The fourth day and the one following this friendly bout, Little John was
+missing. One of his men said that he saw him talking with a beggar, but
+did not know whither they had gone. Two more days passed. Robin grew
+uneasy. He did not doubt the faith of Little John, but he was fearful
+lest a roving band of Foresters had captured him.
+
+At last Robin could not remain quiet. Up sprang he, with bow and arrows,
+and a short sword at his side.
+
+“I must away to Nottingham town, my men,” he cried. “The goodly Sheriff
+has long desired to see me; and mayhap he can tell me tidings of the
+best quarter-staff in the shire”--meaning Little John.
+
+Others of the band besought him to let them go with him, but he would
+not.
+
+“Nay,” he said smilingly, “the Sheriff and I are too good friends to put
+doubt upon our meeting. But tarry ye in the edge of the wood opposite
+the west gate of the town, and ye may be of service ere to-morrow
+night.”
+
+So saying he strode forward to the road leading to Nottingham, and stood
+as before looking up and down to see if the way was clear. Back at a
+bend in the road he heard a rumbling and a lumbering, when up drove
+a stout butcher, whistling gaily, and driving a mare that sped slowly
+enough because of the weight of meat with which the cart was loaded.
+
+“A good morrow to you, friend,” hailed Robin. “Whence come you and where
+go you with your load of meat?”
+
+“A good morrow to you,” returned the butcher, civilly enough. “No matter
+where I dwell. I am but a simple butcher, and to Nottingham am I going,
+my flesh to sell. ‘Tis Fair week, and my beef and mutton should fetch a
+fair penny,” and he laughed loudly at his jest. “But whence come you?”
+
+“A yeoman am I, from Lockesley town. Men call me Robin Hood.”
+
+“The saints forefend that you should treat me ill!” said the butcher in
+terror. “Oft have I heard of you, and how you lighten the purses of the
+fat priests and knights. But I am naught but a poor butcher, selling
+this load of meat, perchance, for enough to pay my quarter’s rent.”
+
+“Rest you, my friend, rest you,” quoth Robin, “not so much as a silver
+penny would I take from you, for I love an honest Saxon face and a fair
+name with my neighbors. But I would strike a bargain with you.”
+
+Here he took from his girdle a well-filled purse, and continued, “I
+would fain be a butcher, this day, and sell meat at Nottingham town.
+Could you sell me your meat, your cart, your mare, and your good-will,
+without loss, for five marks?”
+
+“Heaven bless ye, good Robin,” cried the butcher right joyfully, “that
+can I!” And he leaped down forthwith from the cart, and handed Robin the
+reins in exchange for the purse.
+
+“One moment more,” laughed Robin, “we must e’en change garments for the
+nonce. Take mine and scurry home quickly lest the King’s Foresters try
+to put a hole through this Lincoln green.”
+
+So saying he donned the butcher’s blouse and apron, and, climbing into
+the cart, drove merrily down the road to the town.
+
+When he came to Nottingham he greeted the scowling gate-keeper blithely
+and proceeded to the market-place. Boldly he led his shuffling horse to
+the place where the butchers had their stalls.
+
+He had no notion of the price to ask for his meat, but put on a foolish
+and simple air as he called aloud his wares:
+
+ “Hark ye, lasses and dames, hark ye,
+ Good meat come buy, come buy,
+ Three pen’orths go for one penny,
+ And a kiss is good, say I!”
+
+Now when the folk found what a simple butcher he was, they crowded
+around his cart; for he really did sell three times as much for one
+penny as was sold by the other butchers. And one or two serving-lasses
+with twinkling eyes liked his comely face so well that they willingly
+gave boot of a kiss.
+
+But the other butchers were wroth when they found how he was taking
+their trade; and they accordingly put their heads together.
+
+One said, “He is a prodigal and has sold his father’s land, and this is
+his first venture in trading.”
+
+Another said, “He is a thief who has murdered a butcher, and stolen his
+horse and meat.”
+
+Robin heard these sayings, but only laughed merrily and sang his song
+the louder. His good-humor made the people laugh also and crowd round
+his cart closely, shouting uproariously when some buxom lass submitted
+to be kissed.
+
+Then the butchers saw that they must meet craft with craft; and they
+said to him, “Come, brother butcher, if you would sell meat with us, you
+must e’en join our guild and stand by the rules of our trade.”
+
+“We dine at the Sheriff’s mansion to-day,” said another, “and you must
+take one of our party.”
+
+ “Accurst of his heart,” said jolly Robin,
+ “That a butcher will deny.
+ I’ll go with you, my brethren true,
+ And as fast as I can hie.”
+
+Whereupon, having sold all his meat, he left his horse and cart in
+charge of a friendly hostler and prepared to follow his mates to the
+Mansion House.
+
+It was the Sheriff’s custom to dine various guilds of the trade, from
+time to time, on Fair days, for he got a pretty profit out of the fees
+they paid him for the right to trade in the market-place. The Sheriff
+was already come with great pomp into the banqueting room, when Robin
+Hood and three or four butchers entered, and he greeted them all with
+great condescension; and presently the whole of a large company was
+seated at a table groaning beneath the good cheer of the feast.
+
+Now the Sheriff bade Robin sit by his right hand, at the head of the
+board; for one or two butchers had whispered to the official, “That
+fellow is a right mad blade, who yet made us much sport to-day. He sold
+more meat for one penny than we could sell for three; and he gave extra
+weight to whatsoever lass would buss him.” And others said, “He is
+some prodigal who knows not the value of goods, and may be plucked by a
+shrewd man right closely.”
+
+The Sheriff was will to pluck a prodigal with the next man, and he was
+moreover glad to have a guest who promised to enliven the feast. So, as
+I have told you, he placed Robin by his side, and he made much of him
+and laughed boisterously at his jests; though sooth to say, the laugh
+were come by easily, for Robin had never been in merrier mood, and his
+quips and jests soon put the whole table at a roar.
+
+Then my lord Bishop of Hereford came in, last of all, to say a ponderous
+grace and take his seat on the other side of the Sheriff--the prelate’s
+fat body showing up in goodly contrast to the other’s lean bones.
+
+After grace was said, and while the servants clattered in with the meat
+platters, Robin stood up and said:
+
+“An amen say I to my lord Bishop’s thanks! How, now, my fine fellows, be
+merry and drink deep; for the shot I’ll pay ere I go my way, though it
+cost me five pounds and more. So my lords and gentlemen all, spare not
+the wine, but fall to lustily.”
+
+“Hear! hear!” shouted the butchers.
+
+“Now are you a right jolly soul,” quoth the Sheriff, “but this feast is
+mine own. Howbeit you must have many a head of horned beasts, and many
+an acre of broad land, to spend from your purse so freely.”
+
+“Aye, that have I,” returned Robin, his eyes all a twinkle, “five
+hundred horned beasts have I and my brothers, and none of them have we
+been able to sell. That is why I have turned butcher. But I know not the
+trade, and would gladly sell the whole herd, an I could find a buyer.”
+
+At this, the Sheriff’s greed ‘gan to rise. Since this fool _would_ be
+plucked, thought he, why should not he do the plucking?
+
+“Five hundred beasts, say you?” he queried sharply.
+
+“Five hundred and ten fat beasts by actual count, that I would sell for
+a just figure. Aye, to him who will pay me in right money, would I sell
+them for twenty pieces of gold. Is that too much to ask, lording?”
+
+Was there ever such an idiot butcher? thought the Sheriff; and he so far
+forgot his dignity as to nudge the Bishop in his fat ribs.
+
+“Nay, good fellow,” quoth he chuckling, “I am always ready to help
+any in my shire. An you cannot find a buyer for your herd at this just
+figure, I will e’en buy them myself.”
+
+At this generosity Robin was quite overcome, and fell to praising the
+Sheriff to the skies, and telling him that he should not have cause to
+forget the kindness.
+
+“Tut, tut,” said the Sheriff, “‘tis naught but a trade. Drive in your
+herd tomorrow to the market-place and you shall have money down.”
+
+“Nay, excellence,” said Robin, “that can I not easily do, for they are
+grazing in scattered fashion. But they are over near Gamewell, not more
+than a mile therefrom at most. Will you not come and choose your own
+beasts tomorrow?”
+
+“Aye, that I will,” said the Sheriff, his cupidity casting his caution
+to the winds. “Tarry with me over night, and I will go with you in the
+morning.”
+
+This was a poser for Robin, since he liked not the idea of staying over
+night at the Sheriff’s house. He had hoped to appoint a meeting-place
+for the other, but now saw that this might excite doubt. He looked
+around at the company. By this time, you must know, the feast had
+progressed far, and the butchers were deep in their cups. The Sheriff
+and Robin had talked in a low voice, and my lord Bishop was almost
+asleep.
+
+“Agreed,” said Robin presently, and the words were no sooner out of his
+mouth than the door opened and a serving-man entered bearing tray of
+mulled wine. At sight of the fellow’s face, Robin gave an involuntary
+start of surprise which was instantly checked. The other also saw him,
+stood still a moment, and as if forgetting something turned about and
+left the hall.
+
+It was Little John.
+
+A dozen questions flashed across Robin’s mind, and he could find answer
+for none of them. What was Little John doing in the Sheriff’s house? Why
+had he not told the band? Was he true to them? Would he betray him?
+
+But these questions of distrust were dismissed from Robin’s open mind
+as soon as they had entered. He knew that Little John was faithful and
+true.
+
+He recovered his spirits and began again upon a vein of foolish banter,
+for the amusement of the Sheriff and his guests, all being now merry
+with wine.
+
+“A song!” one of them shouted, and the cry was taken up round the table.
+Robin mounted his chair and trolled forth:
+
+ “A lass and a butcher of Nottingham
+ Agreed ‘twixt them for to wed.
+ Says he, ‘I’ll give ye the meat, fair dame,
+ And ye will give me the bread.”
+
+Then they joined in the chorus amid a pounding of cups upon the board:
+
+ “With a hey and a ho
+ And a hey nonny no,
+ A butcher of Nottingham!”
+
+While the song was at its height, Little John reappeared, with other
+servants, and refilled the cups. He came up to Robin and, as if asking
+him if he would have more wine, said softly, “Meet me in the pantry
+to-night.”
+
+Robin nodded, and sang loudly. The day was already far spent, and
+presently the company broke up with many hiccupy bows of the Sheriff and
+little notice of the drowsy Bishop.
+
+When the company was dispersed, the Sheriff bade a servant show Robin to
+his room, and promised to see him at breakfast the next day.
+
+Robin kept his word and met Little John that night, and the sheriff next
+day; but Little John has been doing so much in the meantime that he must
+be allowed a chapter to himself.
+
+So let us turn to another story that was sung of, in the ballads of
+olden time, and find out how Little John entered the Sheriff’s service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW LITTLE JOHN ENTERED THE SHERIFF’S SERVICE
+
+ List and hearken, gentlemen,
+ All ye that now be here,
+ Of Little John, that was Knight’s-man,
+ Good mirth ye now shall hear.
+
+It had come around another Fair day at Nottingham town, and folk crowded
+there by all the gates. Goods of many kinds were displayed in gaily
+colored booths, and at every cross-street a free show was in progress.
+Here and there, stages had been erected for the play at quarter-staff, a
+highly popular sport.
+
+There was a fellow, one Eric of Lincoln, who was thought to be the
+finest man with the staff for miles around. His feats were sung about in
+ballads through all the shire. A great boaster was he withal, and to-day
+he strutted about on one of these corner stages, and vaunted of his
+prowess, and offered to crack any man’s crown for a shilling. Several
+had tried their skill with Eric, but he had soon sent them spinning in
+no gentle manner, amid the jeers and laughter of the onlookers.
+
+A beggar-man sat over against Eric’s stage and grinned every time a pate
+was cracked. He was an uncouth fellow, ragged and dirty and unshaven.
+Eric caught sight of his leering face at one of his boasts--for there
+was a lull in the game, because no man else wanted to come within reach
+of Eric’s blows. Eric, I say, noticed the beggar-man grinning at him
+rather impudently, and turned toward him sharply.
+
+“How now, you dirty villain!” quoth he, “mend your manners to your
+betters, or, by our Lady, I’ll dust your rags for you.”
+
+The beggar-man still grinned. “I am always ready to mend my manners to
+my betters,” said he, “but I am afraid you cannot teach me any better
+than you can dust my jacket.”
+
+“Come up! Come up!” roared the other, flourishing his staff.
+
+“That will I,” said the beggar, getting up slowly and with difficulty.
+“It will pleasure me hugely to take a braggart down a notch, an some
+good man will lend me a stout quarter-staff.”
+
+At this a score of idlers reached him their staves--being ready enough
+to see another man have his head cracked, even if they wished to save
+their own--and he took the stoutest and heaviest of all. He made a sorry
+enough figure as he climbed awkwardly upon the stage, but when he had
+gained it, he towered full half a head above the other, for all his
+awkwardness. Nathless, he held his stick so clumsily that the crowd
+laughed in great glee.
+
+Now each man took his place and looked the other up and down, watching
+warily for an opening. Only a moment stood they thus, for Eric, intent
+on teaching this rash beggar a lesson and sweeping him speedily off the
+stage, launched forth boldly and gave the other a sounding crack on the
+shoulder. The beggar danced about, and made as though he would drop his
+staff from very pain, while the crowd roared and Eric raised himself for
+another crushing blow. But just then the awkward beggar came to life.
+Straightening himself like a flash, he dealt Eric a back-handed blow,
+the like of which he had never before seen. Down went the boaster to the
+floor with a sounding thump, and the fickle people yelled and laughed
+themselves purple; for it was a new sight to see Eric of Lincoln eating
+dust.
+
+But he was up again almost as soon as he had fallen, and right quickly
+retreated to his own ringside to gather his wits and watch for an
+opening. He saw instantly that he had no easy antagonist, and he came in
+cautiously this time.
+
+And now those who stood around saw the merriest game of quarter-staff
+that was ever played inside the walls of Nottingham town. Both men
+were on their guard and fenced with fine skill, being well matched in
+prowess. Again and again did Eric seek to force an opening under the
+other’s guard, and just as often were his blows parried. The beggar
+stood sturdily in his tracks contenting himself with beating off the
+attack. For a long time their blows met like the steady crackling of
+some huge forest fire, and Eric strove to be wary, for he now knew that
+the other had no mean wits or mettle. But he grew right mad at last, and
+began to send down blows so fierce and fast that you would have sworn
+a great hail-storm was pounding on the shingles over your head. Yet he
+never so much as entered the tall beggar’s guard.
+
+Then at last the stranger saw his chance and changed his tune of
+fighting. With one upward stroke he sent Eric’s staff whirling through
+the air. With another he tapped Eric on the head; and, with a third
+broad swing, ere the other could recover himself, he swept him clear off
+the stage, much as you would brush a fly off the window pane.
+
+Now the people danced and shouted and made so much ado that the
+shop-keepers left their stalls and others came running from every
+direction. The victory of the queer beggar made him immensely popular.
+Eric had been a great bully, and many had suffered defeat and insult
+at his hands. So the ragged stranger found money and food and drink
+everywhere at his disposal, and he feasted right comfortably till the
+afternoon.
+
+Then a long bow contest came on, and to it the beggar went with some of
+his new friends. It was held in the same arena that Robin had formerly
+entered; and again the Sheriff and lords and ladies graced the scene
+with their presence, while the people crowded to their places.
+
+When the archers had stepped forward, the herald rose and proclaimed the
+rules of the game: how that each man should shoot three shots, and to
+him who shot best the prize of a yoke of fat steers should belong.
+A dozen keen-eyed bowmen were there, and among them some of the best
+fellows in the Forester’s and Sheriff’s companies. Down at the end of
+the line towered the tall beggar-man, who must needs twang a bow-string
+with the best of them.
+
+The Sheriff noted his queer figure and asked: “Who is that ragged
+fellow?”
+
+“‘Tis he that hath but now so soundly cracked the crown of Eric of
+Lincoln,” was the reply.
+
+The shooting presently began, and the targets soon showed a fine
+reckoning. Last of all came the beggar’s turn.
+
+“By your leave,” he said loudly, “I’d like it well to shoot with any
+other man here present at a mark of my own placing.” And he strode down
+the lists with a slender peeled sapling which he stuck upright in the
+ground. “There,” said he, “is a right good mark. Will any man try it?”
+
+But not an archer would risk his reputation on so small a target.
+
+Whereupon the beggar drew his bow with seeming carelessness and split
+the wand with his shaft.
+
+“Long live the beggar!” yelled the bystanders.
+
+The Sheriff swore a full great oath, and said: “This man is the best
+archer that ever yet I saw.” And he beckoned to him, and asked him: “How
+now, good fellow, what is your name, and in what country were you born?”
+
+“In Holderness I was born,” the man replied; “men call me Reynold
+Greenleaf.”
+
+“You are a sturdy fellow, Reynold Greenleaf, and deserve better apparel
+than that you wear at present. Will you enter my service? I will give
+you twenty marks a year, above your living, and three good suits of
+clothes.”
+
+“Three good suits, say you? Then right gladly will I enter your service,
+for my back has been bare this many a long day.”
+
+Then Reynold turned him about to the crowd and shouted: “Hark ye, good
+people, I have entered the Sheriff’s service, and need not the yoke of
+steers for prize. So take them for yourselves, to feast withal.”
+
+At this the crowd shouted more merrily than ever, and threw their caps
+high into the air. And none so popular a man had come to Nottingham town
+in many a long day as this same Reynold Greenleaf.
+
+Now you may have guessed, by this time, who Reynold Greenleaf really
+was; so I shall tell you that he was none other than Little John. And
+forth went he to the Sheriff’s house, and entered his service. But it
+was a sorry day for the Sheriff when he got his new man. For Little John
+winked his shrewd eye and said softly to himself: “By my faith, I shall
+be the worst servant to him that ever yet had he!”
+
+Two days passed by. Little John, it must be confessed, did not make
+a good servant. He insisted upon eating the Sheriff’s best bread and
+drinking his best wine, so that the steward waxed wroth. Nathless the
+Sheriff held him in high esteem, and made great talk of taking him along
+on the next hunting trip.
+
+It was now the day of the banquet to the butchers, about which we have
+already heard. The banquet hall, you must know, was not in the main
+house, but connected with it by a corridor. All the servants were
+bustling about making preparations for the feast, save only Little John,
+who must needs lie abed the greater part of the day. But he presented
+himself at last, when the dinner was half over; and being desirous
+of seeing the guests for himself he went into the hall with the other
+servants to pass the wine. First, however, I am afraid that some of
+the wine passed his own lips while he went down the corridor. When he
+entered the banqueting hall, whom should he see but Robin Hood himself.
+We can imagine the start of surprise felt by each of these bold fellows
+upon seeing the other in such strange company. But they kept their
+secrets, as we have seen, and arranged to meet each other that same
+night. Meanwhile, the proud Sheriff little knew that he harbored the two
+chief outlaws of the whole countryside beneath his roof.
+
+After the feast was over and night was beginning to advance, Little John
+felt faint of stomach and remembered him that he had eaten nothing all
+that day. Back went he to the pantry to see what eatables were laid by.
+But there, locking up the stores for the night, stood the fat steward.
+
+“Good Sir Steward,” said Little John, “give me to dine, for it is long
+for Greenleaf to be fasting.”
+
+The steward looked grimly at him and rattled the keys at his girdle.
+
+“Sirrah lie-abed,” quoth he, “‘tis late in the day to be talking of
+eating. Since you have waited thus long to be hungry, you can e’en take
+your appetite back to bed again.”
+
+“Now by mine appetite, that will I not do,” cried Little John. “Your
+own paunch of fat would be enough for any bear to sleep on through the
+winter. But my stomach craves food, and food it shall have!”
+
+Saying this he brushed past the steward and tried the door, but it
+was locked fast; whereat the fat steward chuckled and jangled his keys
+again.
+
+Then was Little John right mad, and he brought down his huge fist on the
+door-panel with a sledge-hammer blow that shivered an opening you could
+thrust your hand into. Little John stooped and peered through the hole
+to see what food lay within reach, when crack! went the steward’s keys
+upon his crown, and the worthy danced around him playing a tattoo that
+made Little John’s ears ring. At this he turned upon the steward and
+gave him such a rap that his back went nigh in two, and over went the
+fat fellow rolling on the floor.
+
+“Lie there,” quoth Little John, “till ye find strength to go to bed.
+Meanwhile, I must be about my dinner.” And he kicked open the buttery
+door without ceremony and brought to light a venison pasty and cold
+roast pheasant--goodly sights to a hungry man. Placing these down on a
+convenient shelf he fell to with right good will. So Little John ate and
+drank as much as he would.
+
+Now the Sheriff had in his kitchen a cook, a stout man and bold, who
+heard the rumpus and came in to see how the land lay. There sat Little
+John eating away for dear life, while the fat steward was rolled under
+the table like a bundle of rags.
+
+“I make my vow!” said the cook, “you are a shrewd hind to dwell thus in
+a household, and ask thus to dine.” So saying he laid aside his spit and
+drew a good sword that hung at his side.
+
+“I make my vow!” said Little John, “you are a bold man and hardy to come
+thus between me and my meat. So defend yourself and see that you prove
+the better man.” And he drew his own sword and crossed weapons with the
+cook.
+
+Then back and forth they clashed with sullen sound. The old ballad which
+tells of their fight says that they thought nothing for to flee, but
+stiffly for to stand. There they fought sore together, two miles away
+and more, but neither might the other harm for the space of a full hour.
+
+“I make my vow!” cried Little John, “you are the best swordsman that
+ever yet I saw. What say you to resting a space and eating and drinking
+good health with me. Then we may fall to again with the swords.”
+
+“Agreed!” said the cook, who loved good fare as well as a good fight;
+and they both laid by their swords and fell to the food with hearty
+will. The venison pasty soon disappeared, and the roast pheasant flew
+at as lively a rate as ever the bird itself had sped. Then the warriors
+rested a space and patted their stomachs, and smiled across at
+each other like bosom friends; for a man when he as dined looks out
+pleasantly upon the world.
+
+“And now good Reynold Greenleaf,” said the cook, “we may as well settle
+this brave fight we have in hand.”
+
+“A true saying,” rejoined the other, “but first tell me, friend--for
+I protest you are my friend henceforth--what is the score we have to
+settle?”
+
+“Naught save who can handle the sword best,” said the cook. “By my troth
+I had thought to carve you like a capon ere now.”
+
+“And I had long since thought to shave your ears,” replied Little John.
+“This bout we can settle in right good time. But just now I and my
+master have need of you, and you can turn your stout blade to better
+service than that of the Sheriff.”
+
+“Whose service would that be?” asked the cook.
+
+“Mine,” answered a would-be butcher entering the room, “and I am Robin
+Hood.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HOW THE SHERIFF LOST THREE GOOD SERVANTS AND FOUND THEM AGAIN
+
+ “Make good cheer,” said Robin Hood.
+ “Sheriff! for charity!
+ And for the love of Little John
+ Thy life is granted thee!”
+
+The cook gasped in amazement. This Robin Hood! and under the Sheriff’s
+very roof!
+
+“Now by my troth you are a brave fellow,” he said. “I have heard great
+tales of your prowess, and the half has not been told. But who might
+this tall slasher be?”
+
+“Men do call me Little John, good fellow.”
+
+“Then Little John, or Reynold Greenleaf, I like you well, on my honor as
+Much the miller’s son; and you too, bold Robin Hood. An you take me, I
+will enter your service right gladly.”
+
+“Spoken like a stout man!” said Robin, seizing him by the hand. “But I
+must back to my own bed, lest some sleepy warden stumble upon me, and
+I be forced to run him through. Lucky for you twain that wine flowed
+so freely in the house to-day; else the noise of your combat would have
+brought other onlookers besides Robin Hood. Now if ye would flee the
+house to-night, I will join you in the good greenwood to-morrow.”
+
+“But, good master,” said the cook, “you would not stay here over night!
+Verily, it is running your head into a noose. Come with us. The Sheriff
+has set strict watch on all the gates, since ‘tis Fair week, but I know
+the warden at the west gate and could bring us through safely. To-morrow
+you will be stayed.” “Nay, that will I not,” laughed Robin, “for I shall
+go through with no less escort than the Sheriff himself. Now do you,
+Little John, and do you, Much the miller’s son, go right speedily. In
+the borders of the wood you will find my merry men. Tell them to kill
+two fine harts against to-morrow eve, for we shall have great company
+and lordly sport.”
+
+And Robin left them as suddenly as he had come.
+
+“Comrade,” then said Little John, “we may as well bid the Sheriff’s roof
+farewell. But ere we go, it would seem a true pity to fail to take such
+of the Sheriff’s silver plate as will cause us to remember him, and also
+grace our special feasts.”
+
+“‘Tis well said indeed,” quoth the cook.
+
+Thereupon they got a great sack and filled it with silver plate from the
+shelves where it would not at once be missed, and they swung the sack
+between them, and away they went, out of the house, out of the town, and
+into the friendly shelter of Sherwood Forest.
+
+The next morning the servants were late astir in the Sheriff’s house.
+The steward awoke from a heavy sleep, but his cracked head was still in
+such a whirl that he could not have sworn whether the Sheriff had ever
+owned so much as one silver dish. So the theft went undiscovered for the
+nonce.
+
+Robin Hood met the Sheriff at breakfast, when his host soon spoke of
+what was uppermost in his heart--the purchase of the fine herd of cattle
+near Gamewell. ‘Twas clear that a vision of them, purchased for twenty
+paltry gold pieces, had been with him all through the night, in his
+dreams. And Robin again appeared such a silly fellow that the Sheriff
+saw no need of dissembling, but said that he was ready to start at once
+to look at the herd.
+
+Accordingly they set forth, Robin in his little butcher’s cart, behind
+the lean mare, and the Sheriff mounted on a horse. Out of Nottingham
+town, through gates open wide, they proceeded, and took the hill road
+leading through Sherwood Forest. And as they went on and plunged deeper
+among the trees, Robin whistled blithely and sang snatches of tunes.
+
+“Why are you so gay, fellow?” said the Sheriff, for, sooth to say, the
+silence of the woods was making him uneasy.
+
+“I am whistling to keep my courage up,” replied Robin.
+
+“What is there to fear, when you have the Sheriff of Nottingham beside
+you?” quoth the other pompously.
+
+Robin scratched his head.
+
+“They do say that Robin Hood and his men care little for the Sheriff,”
+ he said.
+
+“Pooh!” said the Sheriff. “I would not give _that_ for their lives, if
+I could once lay hands upon them.” And he snapped his fingers angrily.
+“But Robin Hood himself was on this very road the last time I came to
+town,” said the other.
+
+The Sheriff started at the crackling of a twig under his horse’s feet,
+and looked around.
+
+“Did you see him?” he asked.
+
+“Aye, that did I! He wanted the use of this mare and cart to drive to
+Nottingham. He said he would fain turn butcher. But see!”
+
+As he spoke he came to a turn in the road, and there before them stood a
+herd of the King’s deer, feeding. Robin pointed to them and continued:
+
+“There is my herd of cattle, good Master Sheriff! How do you like them?
+Are they not fat and fair to see?”
+
+The Sheriff drew rein quickly. “Now fellow,” quoth he, “I would I were
+well out of this forest, for I care not to see such herds as these, or
+such faces as yours. Choose your own way, therefore, whoever you be, and
+let me go mine.”
+
+“Nay,” laughed Robin, seizing the Sheriff’s bridle, “I have been at too
+much pains to cultivate your company to forego it now so easily. Besides
+I wish you to meet some of my friends and dine with me, since you have
+so lately entertained me at your board.”
+
+So saying he clapped a horn on his lips and winded three merry notes.
+The deer bounded away; and before the last of them was seen, there came
+a running and a rustling, and out from behind covert and tree came full
+twoscore of men, clad in Lincoln green, and bearing good yew bows in
+their hands and short swords at their sides. Up they ran to Robin Hood
+and doffed their caps to him respectfully, while the Sheriff sat still
+from very amazement.
+
+“Welcome to the greenwood!” said one of the leaders, bending the knee
+with mock reverence before the Sheriff.
+
+The Sheriff glared. It was Little John.
+
+“Woe the worth, Reynold Greenleaf,” he said, “you have betrayed me!”
+
+“I make my vow,” said Little John, “that you are to blame, master. I was
+misserved of my dinner, when I was at your house. But we shall set you
+down to a feast we hope you will enjoy.”
+
+“Well spoken, Little John,” said Robin Hood. “Take you his bridle and
+let us do honor to the guest who has come to feast with us.”
+
+Then turning abruptly the whole company plunged into the heart of the
+forest.
+
+After twisting and turning till the Sheriff’s bewildered head sat
+dizzily upon his shoulders, the greenwood men passed through a narrow
+alley amid the trees which led to a goodly open space flanked by
+wide-spreading oaks. Under the largest of these a pleasant fire was
+crackling, and near it two fine harts lay ready for cooking. Around the
+blaze were gathered another company of yeomen quite as large as that
+which came with Robin Hood. Up sprang they as the latter advanced and
+saluted their leader with deference, but with hearty gladness to see him
+back again.
+
+That merry wag Will Stutely was in command; and when he saw the
+palefaced Sheriff being led in like any culprit, he took his cloak and
+laid it humbly upon the ground and besought the Sheriff to alight upon
+it, as the ground of Sherwood was unused to such dignitaries.
+
+“Bestir yourselves, good fellows!” cried Robin Hood; “and while our new
+cook, whom I see with us, is preparing a feast worthy of our high guest,
+let us have a few games to do him honor!”
+
+Then while the whole glade was filled with the savory smell of roasting
+venison and fat capons, and brown pasties warmed beside the blaze,
+and mulled wine sent forth a cordial fragrance, Robin Hood placed the
+Sheriff upon a knoll beneath the largest oak and sat himself down by
+him.
+
+First stepped forward several pairs of men armed with the quarter-staff,
+the widow’s sons among them, and so skilfully did they thrust and parry
+and beat down guards, that the Sheriff, who loved a good game as well as
+any man, clapped his hands, forgetting where he was, and shouted, “Well
+struck! well struck! Never have I seen such blows at all the Fairs of
+Nottingham!”
+
+Then the best archers of the band set up a small wand at eightscore
+paces distant, and thereon they affixed a wreath of green. And the
+archers began to shoot; and he who shot not through the garland without
+disturbing its leaves and tendrils was fain to submit to a good sound
+buffet from Little John. But right cunning was the shooting, for the
+men had spent a certain time in daily practice, and many were the shafts
+which sped daintily through the circle. Nathless now and again some
+luckless fellow would shoot awry and would be sent winding from a long
+arm blow from the tall lieutenant while the glade roared with laughter.
+And none more hearty a guffaw was given than came from the Sheriff’s own
+throat, for the spirit of the greenwood was upon him.
+
+But presently his high mood was dashed. The company sat down to meat,
+and the guest was treated to two more disturbing surprise. The cook came
+forward to serve the food, when the Sheriff beheld in him his own former
+servant, and one whom he supposed was at the moment in the scullery at
+Nottingham.
+
+Much the miller’s son grinned by way of answer to the Sheriff’s
+amazement, and served the plates, and placed them before the party. Then
+did the Sheriff gasp and fairly choke with rage. The service was his own
+silverware from the Mansion House!
+
+“You rascals! you rogues!” he spluttered. “Was it not enough to defraud
+me out of three of my servants, that you must also rob me of my best
+silver service? Nay, by my life, but I will not touch your food!”
+
+But Robin Hood bade him pause.
+
+“Gramercy!” quoth he, “servants come and go, in merry England, and so
+does service. The platters are but used to do your worship honor. And as
+for your life, it is forfeit to your eagerness to buy my herd of cattle
+so cheaply. Now sit you down again and make good cheer, Sheriff, for
+charity! And for the love of Little John your life is granted you!”
+
+So the Sheriff sat him down again, with the best face he could assume,
+and soon the cook’s viands were disappearing down his gullet as rapidly
+as the next man’s. And they feasted royally and clinked each other’s
+cups until the sun had ceased to print the pattern of the leaves upon
+the forest carpet.
+
+Then the Sheriff arose and said: “I thank you, Robin Hood, one-time
+butcher, and you, Little John, one-time beggar, and you, Much, one-time
+cook, and all you good men who have entertained me in Sherwood so well.
+Promises I make not as to how I shall requite you when next you come to
+Nottingham, for I am in the King’s service. So for the present the score
+rests with you. But the shadows grow long and I must away, if you will
+be pleased to pilot me to the road.”
+
+Then Robin Hood and all his men arose and drank the Sheriff’s health,
+and Robin said: “If you must needs go at once we will not detain
+you--except that you have forgotten two things.”
+
+“What may they be?” asked the Sheriff, while his heart sank within him.
+
+“You forget that you came with me to-day to buy a herd of horned beasts;
+likewise that he who dines at the Greenwood Inn must pay the landlord.”
+
+The Sheriff fidgeted like a small boy who has forgotten his lesson.
+
+“Nay, I have but a small sum with me,” he began apologetically.
+
+“What is that sum, gossip?” questioned Little John, “for my own wage
+should also come out of it!”
+
+“And mine!” said Much.
+
+“And mine!” smiled Robin.
+
+The Sheriff caught his breath. “By my troth, are all these silver dishes
+worth anything?”
+
+The outlaws roared heartily at this.
+
+“I’ll tell you what it is, worship,” said Robin, “we three rascally
+servants will compound our back wages for those plates. And we will keep
+the herd of cattle free for our own use--and the King’s. But this little
+tavern bill should be settled! Now, what sum have you about you?”
+
+“I have only those twenty pieces of gold, and twenty others,” said the
+Sheriff: and well it was that he told the truth for once, for Robin
+said:
+
+“Count it, Little John.”
+
+Little John turned the Sheriff’s wallet inside out. “‘Tis true enough,”
+ he said.
+
+“Then you shall pay no more than twenty pieces for your entertainment,
+excellence,” decreed Robin. “Speak I soothly, men of greenwood?”
+
+“Good!” echoed the others.
+
+“The Sheriff should swear by his patron saint that he will not molest
+us,” said Will Stutely; and his addition was carried unanimously.
+
+“So be it, then,” cried Little John, approaching the sheriff. “Now swear
+by your life and your patron saint--”
+
+“I will swear it by St. George, who is patron of us all,” said the
+Sheriff vigorously, “that I will never disturb or distress the outlaws
+in Sherwood.”
+
+“But let me catch any of you _out_ of Sherwood!” thought he to himself.
+
+Then the twenty pieces of gold were paid over, and the Sheriff once more
+prepared to depart.
+
+“Never had we so worshipful a guest before,” said Robin; “and as the new
+moon is beginning to silver the leaves, I shall bear you company myself
+for part of the way. ‘Twas I who brought you into the wood.”
+
+“Nay, I protest against your going needlessly far,” said Sheriff.
+
+“But I protest that I am loath to lose your company,” replied Robin.
+“The next time I may not be so pleased.”
+
+And he took the Sheriff’s horse by the bridle rein, and led him through
+the lane and by many a thicket till the main road was reached.
+
+“Now fare you well, good Sheriff,” he said, “and when next you think to
+despoil a poor prodigal, remember the herd you would have bought over
+against Gamewell. And when next you employ a servant, make certain that
+he is not employing you.”
+
+So saying he smote the nag’s haunch, and off went the Sheriff upon the
+road to Nottingham.
+
+And that is how--you will find from many ballads that came to be sung
+at the Sheriff’s expense, and which are known even to the present
+day--that, I say, is how the Sheriff lost three good servants and found
+them again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET WILL SCARLET
+
+ The youngster was clothed in scarlet red
+ In scarlet fine and gay;
+ And he did frisk it o’er the plain,
+ And chanted a roundelay.
+
+One fine morning, soon after the proud Sheriff had been brought to
+grief, Robin Hood and Little John went strolling down a path through the
+wood. It was not far from the foot--bridge where they had fought their
+memorable battle; and by common impulse they directed their steps to
+the brook to quench their thirst and rest them in the cool bushes. The
+morning gave promise of a hot day. The road even by the brook was dusty.
+So the cooling stream was very pleasing and grateful to their senses.
+
+On each side of them, beyond the dusty highway, stretched out broad
+fields of tender young corn. On the yon side of the fields uprose the
+sturdy oaks and beeches and ashes of the forest; while at their feet
+modest violets peeped out shyly and greeted the loiterers with an odor
+which made the heart glad. Over on the far side of the brook in a tiny
+bay floated three lily-pads; and from amid some clover blossoms on the
+bank an industrious bee rose with the hum of busy contentment. It was a
+day so brimful of quiet joy that the two friends lay flat on their
+backs gazing up at the scurrying clouds, and neither caring to break the
+silence.
+
+Presently they heard some one coming up the road whistling gaily, as
+though he owned the whole world and ‘twas but made to whistle in. Anon
+he chanted a roundelay with a merry note.
+
+“By my troth, a gay bird!” quoth Robin, raising up on his elbow. “Let us
+lie still, and trust that his purse is not as light as his heart.”
+
+So they lay still, and in a minute more up came a smart stranger dressed
+in scarlet and silk and wearing a jaunty hat with a curling cock feather
+in it. His whole costume was of scarlet, from the feather to the silk
+hosen on his legs. A goodly sword hung at his side, its scabbard all
+embossed with tilting knights and weeping ladies. His hair was long and
+yellow and hung clustering about his shoulders, for all the world like a
+schoolgirl’s; and he bore himself with as mincing a gait as the pertest
+of them.
+
+Little John clucked his teeth drolly at this sight. “By my troth, a gay
+bird!” he said echoing the other’s words--then added, “But not so bad a
+build for all his prettiness. Look you, those calves and thighs are well
+rounded and straight. The arms, for all that gold-wrought cloak, hang
+stoutly from full shoulders. I warrant you the fop can use his dainty
+sword right well on occasion.”
+
+“Nay,” retorted Robin, “he is naught but a ladies’ man from court. My
+long-bow ‘gainst a plugged shilling that he would run and bellow lustily
+at sight of a quarter-staff. Stay you behind this bush and I will soon
+get some rare sport out of him. Belike his silk purse may contain more
+pennies than the law allows to one man in Sherwood or Barnesdale.”
+
+So saying Robin Hood stepped forth briskly from the covert and planted
+himself in the way of the scarlet stranger. The latter had walked
+so slowly that he was scarce come to their resting-place; and now
+on beholding Robin he neither slackened nor quickened his pace but
+sauntered idly straight ahead, looking to the right and to the left,
+with the finest air in the world, but never once at Robin.
+
+“Hold!” quoth the outlaw. “What mean ye by running thus over a wayfarer,
+rough shod?”
+
+“Wherefore should I hold, good fellow?” said the stranger in a smooth
+voice, and looking at Robin for the first time.
+
+“Because I bid you to,” replied Robin.
+
+“And who may you be?” asked the other as coolly as you please.
+
+“What my name is matters not,” said Robin; “but know that I am a public
+tax-gatherer and equalizer of shillings. If your purse have more than a
+just number of shillings or pence, I must e’en lighten it somewhat; for
+there are many worthy people round about these borders who have less
+than the just amount. Wherefore, sweet gentleman, I pray you hand over
+your purse without more ado, that I may judge of its weight in proper
+fashion.”
+
+The other smiled as sweetly as though a lady were paying him a
+compliment.
+
+“You are a droll fellow,” he said calmly. “Your speech amuses me
+mightily. Pray continue, if you have not done, for I am in no hurry this
+morning.”
+
+“I have said all with my tongue that is needful,” retorted Robin,
+beginning to grow red under the collar. “Nathless, I have other
+arguments which may not be so pleasing to your dainty skin. Prithee,
+stand and deliver. I promise to deal fairly with the purse.”
+
+“Alack-a-day!” said the stranger with a little shrug of his shoulders;
+“I am deeply sorrowful that I cannot show my purse to every rough lout
+that asks to see it. But I really could not, as I have further need of
+it myself and every farthing it contains. Wherefore, pray stand aside.”
+
+“Nay that will I not! and ‘twill go the harder with you if you do not
+yield at once.”
+
+“Good fellow,” said the other gently, “have I not heard all your speech
+with patience? Now that is all I promised to do. My conscience is salved
+and I must go on my way. To-rol-o-rol-e-loo!” he caroled, making as
+though to depart.
+
+“Hold, I say!” quoth Robin hotly; for he knew how Little John must be
+chuckling at this from behind the bushes. “Hold I say, else I shall have
+to bloody those fair locks of yours!” And he swung his quarter-staff
+threateningly.
+
+“Alas!” moaned the stranger shaking his head. “The pity of it all! Now I
+shall have to run this fellow through with my sword! And I hoped to be a
+peaceable man henceforth!” And sighing deeply he drew his shining blade
+and stood on guard.
+
+“Put by your weapon,” said Robin. “It is too pretty a piece of steel to
+get cracked with common oak cudgel; and that is what would happen on
+the first pass I made at you. Get you a stick like mine out of yon
+undergrowth, and we will fight fairly, man to man.”
+
+The stranger thought a moment with his usual slowness, and eyed Robin
+from head to foot. Then he unbuckled his scabbard, laid it and the sword
+aside, and walked deliberately over to the oak thicket. Choosing from
+among the shoots and saplings he found a stout little tree to his
+liking, when he laid hold of it, without stopping to cut it, and gave a
+tug. Up it came root and all, as though it were a stalk of corn, and the
+stranger walked back trimming it as quietly as though pulling up trees
+were the easiest thing in the world.
+
+Little John from his hiding-place saw the feat, and could hardly
+restrain a long whistle. “By our Lady!” he muttered to himself, “I would
+not be in Master Robin’s boots!”
+
+Whatever Robin thought upon seeing the stranger’s strength, he uttered
+not a word and budged not an inch. He only put his oak staff at parry as
+the other took his stand.
+
+There was a threefold surprise that day, by the brookside. The stranger
+and Robin and Little John in the bushes all found a combat that upset
+all reckoning. The stranger for all his easy strength and cool nerve
+found an antagonist who met his blows with the skill of a woodman. Robin
+found the stranger as hard to hit as though fenced in by an oak hedge.
+While Little John rolled over and over in silent joy.
+
+Back and forth swayed the fighters, their cudgels pounding this way and
+that, knocking off splinters and bark, and threatening direst damage to
+bone and muscle and skin. Back and forth they pranced kicking up a cloud
+of dust and gasping for fresh air. From a little way off you would have
+vowed that these two men were trying to put out a fire, so thickly
+hung the cloud of battle over them. Thrice did Robin smite the scarlet
+man--with such blows that a less stout fellow must have bowled over.
+Only twice did the scarlet man smite Robin, but the second blow was
+like to finish him. The first had been delivered over the knuckles, and
+though ‘twas a glancing stroke it well nigh broke Robin’s fingers, so
+that he could not easily raise his staff again. And while he was dancing
+about in pain and muttering a dust-covered oath, the other’s staff came
+swinging through the cloud at one side--zip!--and struck him under the
+arm. Down went Robin as though he were a nine-pin--flat down into the
+dust of the road. But despite the pain he was bounding up again like an
+India rubber man to renew the attack, when Little John interfered.
+
+“Hold!” said he, bursting out of the bushes and seizing the stranger’s
+weapon. “Hold, I say!”
+
+“Nay,” retorted the stranger quietly, “I was not offering to smite him
+while he was down. But if there be a whole nest of you hatching here by
+the waterside, cluck out the other chicks and I’ll make shift to fight
+them all.”
+
+“Not for all the deer in Sherwood!” cried Robin. “You are a good fellow
+and a gentleman. I’ll fight no more with you, for verily I feel sore in
+wrist and body. Nor shall any of mine molest you henceforth.”
+
+Sooth to say, Robin did not look in good fighting trim. His clothes were
+coated with dirt, one of his hosen had slipped halfway down from his
+knee, the sleeve of his jerkin was split, and his face was streaked with
+sweat and dirt. Little John eyed him drolly.
+
+“How now, good master,” quoth he, “the sport you were to kick up has
+left you in sorry plight. Let me dust your coat for you.”
+
+“Marry, it has been dusted enough already,” replied Robin; “and I now
+believe the Scripture saying that all men are but dust, for it has
+sifted me through and through and lined my gullet an inch deep. By your
+leave”--and he went to the brookside and drank deep and laved his face
+and hands.
+
+All this while the stranger had been eyeing Robin attentively and
+listening to his voice as though striving to recall it.
+
+“If I mistake not,” he said slowly at last, “you are that famous outlaw,
+Robin Hood of Barnesdale.”
+
+“You say right,” replied Robin; “but my fame has been tumbling sadly
+about in the dust to-day.”
+
+“Now why did I not know you at once?” continued the stranger. “This
+battle need not have happened, for I came abroad to find you to-day, and
+thought to have remembered your face and speech. Know you not me, Rob,
+my lad? Hast ever been to Gamewell Lodge?”
+
+“Ha! Will Gamewell! my dear old chum, Will Gamewell!” shouted Robin,
+throwing his arms about the other in sheer affection. “What an ass I was
+not to recognize you! But it has been years since we parted, and your
+gentle schooling has polished you off mightily.”
+
+Will embraced his cousin no less heartily.
+
+“We are quits on not knowing kinsmen,” he said, “for you have changed
+and strengthened much from the stripling with whom I used to run foot
+races in old Sherwood.”
+
+“But why seek you me?” asked Robin. “You know I am an outlaw and
+dangerous company. And how left you mine uncle? and have you heard aught
+of late of--of Maid Marian?”
+
+“Your last question first,” answered Will, laughing, “for I perceive
+that it lies nearest your heart. I saw Maid Marian not many weeks after
+the great shooting at Nottingham, when you won her the golden arrow. She
+prizes the bauble among her dearest possessions, though it has made her
+an enemy in the Sheriff’s proud daughter. Maid Marian bade me tell you,
+if I ever saw you, that she must return to Queen Eleanor’s court, but
+she could never forget the happy days in the greenwood. As for the old
+Squire, he is still hale and hearty, though rheumatic withal. He speaks
+of you as a sad young dog, but for all that is secretly proud of your
+skill at the bow and of the way you are pestering the Sheriff, whom
+he likes not. ‘Twas for my father’s sake that I am now in the open, an
+outlaw like yourself. He has had a steward, a surly fellow enough, who,
+while I was away at school, boot-licked his way to favor until he lorded
+it over the whole house. Then he grew right saucy and impudent, but my
+father minded it not, deeming the fellow indispensable in managing the
+estate. But when I came back it irked me sorely to see the fellow strut
+about as though he owned the place. He was sly enough with me at first,
+and would brow-beat the Squire only while I was out of earshot. It
+chanced one day, however, that I heard loud voices through an open
+window and paused to hearken. That vile servant called my father ‘a
+meddling old fool,’ ‘Fool and meddler art thou thyself, varlet,’ I
+shouted, springing through the window, ‘_that_ for thy impudence!’ and
+in my heat I smote him a blow mightier than I intended, for I have
+some strength in mine arm. The fellow rolled over and never breathed
+afterwards, I think I broke his neck or something the like. Then I knew
+that the Sheriff would use this as a pretext to hound my father, if I
+tarried. So I bade the Squire farewell and told him I would seek you in
+Sherwood.”
+
+“Now by my halidom!” said Robin Hood; “for a man escaping the law, you
+took it about as coolly as one could wish. To see you come tripping
+along decked out in all your gay plumage and trolling forth a roundelay,
+one would think you had not a care in all the world. Indeed I remarked
+to Little John here that I hoped your purse was not as light as your
+heart.”
+
+“Belike you meant _head_,” laughed Will; “and is this Little John the
+Great? Shake hands with me, an you will, and promise me to cross a staff
+with me in friendly bout some day in the forest!”
+
+“That will I!” quoth Little John heartily. “Here’s my hand on it. What
+is your last name again, say you?”
+
+“‘Tis to be changed,” interposed Robin; “then shall the men armed with
+warrants go hang for all of us. Let me bethink myself. Ah!--I have it!
+In scarlet he came to us, and that shall be his name henceforth. Welcome
+to the greenwood, Will Scarlet!”
+
+“Aye, welcome, Will Scarlet!” said Little John; and they all clasped
+hands again and swore to be true each to the other and to Robin Hood’s
+men in Sherwood Forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET FRIAR TUCK
+
+ The friar took Robin Hood on his back,
+ Deep water he did bestride,
+ And spake neither good word nor bad,
+ Till he came at the other side.
+
+In summer time when leaves grow green, and flowers are fresh and gay,
+Robin Hood and his merry men were all disposed to play. Thus runs a
+quaint old ballad which begins the next adventure. Then some would leap
+and some would run and some try archery and some ply the quarter-staff
+and some fall to with the good broad sword. Some again would try a round
+at buffet and fisticuff; and thus by every variety of sport and exercise
+they perfected themselves in skill and made the band and its prowess
+well known throughout all England.
+
+It had been a custom of Robin Hood’s to pick out the best men in all the
+countryside. Whenever he heard of one more than usually skilled in
+any feat of arms he would seek the man and test him in personal
+encounter--which did not always end happily for Robin. And when he had
+found a man to his liking he offered him service with the bold fellows
+of Sherwood Forest.
+
+Thus it came about that one day after a practice at shooting, in which
+Little John struck down a hart at five hundred feet distance, Robin Hood
+was fain to boast.
+
+“God’s blessing on your heart!” he cried, clapping the burly fellow on
+the shoulder; “I would travel an hundred miles to find one who could
+match you!”
+
+At this Will Scarlet laughed full roundly.
+
+“There lives a curtall friar in Fountain’s Abbey--Tuck, by name--who can
+beat both him and you,” he said.
+
+Robin pricked up his ears at this free speech.
+
+“By our Lady,” he said, “I’ll neither eat nor drink till I see this same
+friar.”
+
+And with his usual impetuosity he at once set about arming himself for
+the adventure. On his head he placed a cap of steel. Underneath his
+Lincoln green he wore a coat of chain metal. Then with sword and buckler
+girded at his side he made a goodly show. But he also took with him his
+stout yew bow and a sheaf of chosen arrows.
+
+So he set forth upon his way with blithe heart; for it was a day when
+the whole face of the earth seemed glad and rejoicing in pulsing life.
+Steadily he pressed forward by winding ways till he came to a green
+broad pasture land at whose edge flowed a stream dipping in and out
+among the willows and rushes on the banks. A pleasant stream it was, but
+it flowed calmly as though of some depth in the middle. Robin did not
+fancy getting his feet wet, or his fine suit of mail rusted, so he
+paused on the hither bank to rest and take his bearings.
+
+As he sat down quietly under the shade of a drooping willow he heard
+snatches of a jovial song floating to him from the farther side; then
+came a sound of two men’s voices arguing. One was upholding the
+merits of hasty pudding and the other stood out stoutly for meat pie,
+“especially”--quoth this one--“when flavored with young onions!”
+
+“Gramercy!” muttered Robin to himself, “that is a tantalizing speech to
+a hungry man! But, odds bodikins! did ever two men talk more alike than
+those two fellows yonder!”
+
+In truth Robin could well marvel at the speech, for the voices were
+curiously alike.
+
+Presently the willows parted on the other bank, and Robin could hardly
+forebear laughing out right. His mystery was explained. It was not two
+men who had done all this singing and talking, but one--and that one a
+stout curtall friar who wore a long cloak over his portly frame, tied
+with a cord in the middle. On his head was a knight’s helmet, and in his
+hand was a no more warlike weapon than a huge pasty pie, with which he
+sat down by the water’s edge. His twofold argument was finished. The
+meat pie had triumphed; and no wonder! for it was the present witness,
+soon to give its own testimony.
+
+But first the friar took off his helmet to cool his head, and a droll
+picture he made. His head was as round as an apple, and eke as smooth in
+spots. A fringe of close curling black hair grew round the base of his
+skull, but his crown was bare and shiny as an egg. His cheeks also were
+smooth and red and shiny; and his little gray eyes danced about with
+the funniest air imaginable. You would not have blamed Robin Hood for
+wanting to laugh, had you heard this serious two-faced talk and then
+seen this jovial one-faced man. Good humor and fat living stood out all
+over him; yet for all that he looked stout enough and able to take
+care of himself with any man. His short neck was thick like that of a
+Berkshire bull; his shoulders were set far back, and his arms sprouted
+therefrom like two oak limbs. As he sat him down, the cloak fell apart
+disclosing a sword and buckler as stout as Robin’s own.
+
+Nathless, Robin was not dismayed at sight of the weapons. Instead, his
+heart fell within him when he saw the meat pie which was now in fair
+way to be devoured before his very eyes; for the friar lost no time in
+thrusting one hand deep into the pie, while he crossed himself with the
+other.
+
+Thereupon Robin seized his bow and fitted a shaft.
+
+“Hey, friar!” he sang out, “carry me over the water, or else I cannot
+answer for your safety.”
+
+The other started at the unexpected greeting, and laid his hand upon
+his sword. Then he looked up and beheld Robin’s arrow pointing full upon
+him.
+
+“Put down your bow, fellow,” he shouted back, “and I will bring you over
+the brook. ‘Tis our duty in life to help each other, and your keen shaft
+shows me that you are a man worthy of some attention.” So the friar
+knight got him up gravely, though his eyes twinkled with a cunning
+light, and laid aside his beloved pie and his cloak and his sword and
+his buckler, and waded across the stream with waddling dignity. Then he
+took Robin Hood upon his back and spoke neither good word nor bad till
+he came to the other side.
+
+Lightly leaped Robin off his back, and said, “I am much beholden to you,
+good father.”
+
+“Beholden, say you!” rejoined the other drawing his sword; “then by my
+faith you shall e’en repay your score. Now mine own affairs, which are
+of a spiritual kind and much more important than yours which are carnal,
+lie on the other side of this stream. I see that you are a likely man
+and one, moreover, who would not refuse to serve the church. I must
+therefore pray of you that whatsoever I have done unto you, you will do
+also unto me. In short, my son, you must e’en carry me back again.”
+
+Courteously enough was this said; but so suddenly had the friar drawn
+his sword that Robin had no time to unsling his bow from his back,
+whither he had placed it to avoid getting it wet, or to unfasten his
+scabbard. So he was fain to temporize.
+
+“Nay, good father, but I shall get my feet wet,” he commenced.
+
+“Are your feet any better than mine?” retorted the other. “I fear me
+now that I have already wetted myself so sadly as to lay in a store of
+rheumatic pains by way of penance.”
+
+“I am not so strong as you,” continued Robin; “that helmet and sword and
+buckler would be my undoing on the uncertain footing amidstream, to say
+nothing of your holy flesh and bones.”
+
+“Then I will lighten up, somewhat,” replied the other calmly. “Promise
+to carry me across and I will lay aside my war gear.”
+
+“Agreed,” said Robin; and the friar thereupon stripped himself; and
+Robin bent his stout back and took him up even as he had promised.
+
+Now the stones at the bottom of the stream were round and slippery, and
+the current swept along strongly, waist-deep, in the middle. More-over
+Robin had a heavier load than the other had borne, nor did he know the
+ford. So he went stumbling along now stepping into a deep hole, now
+stumbling over a boulder in a manner that threatened to unseat his rider
+or plunge them both clear under current. But the fat friar hung on and
+dug his heels into his steed’s ribs in as gallant manner as if he were
+riding in a tournament; while as for poor Robin the sweat ran down him
+in torrents and he gasped like the winded horse he was. But at last he
+managed to stagger out on the bank and deposit his unwieldy load.
+
+No sooner had he set the friar down than he seized his own sword.
+
+“Now, holy friar,” quoth he, panting and wiping the sweat from his brow,
+“what say the Scriptures that you quote so glibly?--Be not weary of
+well doing. You must carry me back again or I swear that I will make a
+cheese-cloth out of your jacket!”
+
+The friar’s gray eyes once more twinkled with a cunning gleam that boded
+no good to Robin; but his voice was as calm and courteous as ever.
+
+“Your wits are keen, my son,” he said; “and I see that the waters of the
+stream have not quenched your spirit. Once more will I bend my back to
+the oppressor and carry the weight of the haughty.”
+
+So Robin mounted again in high glee, and carried his sword in his
+hand, and went prepared to tarry upon the other side. But while he
+was bethinking himself what great words to use, when he should arrive
+thither, he felt himself slipping from the friar’s broad back. He
+clutched frantically to save himself but had too round a surface to
+grasp, besides being hampered by his weapon. So down went he with a
+loud splash into the middle of the stream, where the crafty friar had
+conveyed him.
+
+“There!” quoth the holy man; “choose you, choose you, my fine fellow,
+whether you will sink or swim!” And he gained his own bank without more
+ado, while Robin thrashed and spluttered about until he made shift to
+grasp a willow wand and thus haul himself ashore on the other side.
+
+Then Robin’s rage waxed furious, despite his wetting, and he took his
+bow and his arrows and let fly one shaft after another at the worthy
+friar. But they rattled harmlessly off his steel buckler, while he
+laughed and minded them no more than if they had been hail-stones.
+
+“Shoot on, shoot on, good fellow,” he sang out; “shoot as you have
+begun; if you shoot here a summer’s day, your mark I will not shun!”
+
+So Robin shot, and passing well, till all his arrows were gone, when
+from very rage he began to revile him.
+
+“You bloody villain!” shouted he, “You psalm-singing hypocrite! You
+reviler of good hasty pudding! Come but within reach of my sword
+arm, and, friar or no friar, I’ll shave your tonsure closer than ever
+bald-pated monk was shaven before!”
+
+“Soft you and fair!” said the friar unconcernedly; “hard words are
+cheap, and you may need your wind presently. An you would like a bout
+with swords, meet me halfway i’ the stream.”
+
+And with this speech the friar waded into the brook, sword in hand,
+where he was met halfway by the impetuous outlaw.
+
+Thereupon began a fierce and mighty battle. Up and down, in and out,
+back and forth they fought. The swords flashed in the rays of the
+declining sun and then met with a clash that would have shivered less
+sturdy weapons or disarmed less sturdy wielders. Many a smart blow was
+landed, but each perceived that the other wore an undercoat of linked
+mail which might not be pierced. Nathless, their ribs ached at the force
+of the blows. Once and again they paused by mutual consent and caught
+breath and looked hard each at the other; for never had either met so
+stout a fellow.
+
+Finally in a furious onset of lunge and parry Robin’s foot stepped on a
+rolling stone, and he went down upon his knees. But his antagonist would
+not take this advantage: he paused until Robin should get upon his feet.
+
+“Now by our Lady!” cried the outlaw, using his favorite oath, “you are
+the fairest swordsman that I have met in many a long day. I would beg a
+boon of you.”
+
+“What is it?” said the other.
+
+“Give me leave to set my horn to my mouth and blow three blasts
+thereon.”
+
+“That will I do,” said the curtall friar, “blow till your breath fails,
+an it please you.”
+
+Then, says the old ballad, Robin Hood set his horn to mouth and blew
+mighty blasts; and half a hundred yeomen, bows bent, came raking over
+the lee.
+
+“Whose men are these,” said the friar, “that come so hastily?”
+
+“These men are mine,” said Robin Hood, feeling that his time to laugh
+was come at last.
+
+Then said the friar in his turn, “A boon, a boon, the like I gave to
+you. Give me leave to set my fist to my mouth and whistle three blasts
+thereon.”
+
+“That will I do,” said Robin, “or else I were lacking in courtesy.”
+
+The friar set his fist to his mouth and put the horn to shame by the
+piercing whistles he blew; whereupon half a hundred great dogs came
+running and jumping so swiftly that they had reached their bank as soon
+as Robin Hood’s men had reached his side.
+
+Then followed a rare foolish conflict. Stutely, Much, Little John
+and the other outlaws began sending their arrows whizzing toward the
+opposite bank; but the dogs, which were taught of the friar, dodged the
+missiles cleverly and ran and fetched them back again, just as the dogs
+of to-day catch sticks.
+
+“I have never seen the like of this in my days!” cried Little John,
+amazed.
+
+“‘Tis rank sorcery and witchcraft.”
+
+“Take off your dogs, Friar Tuck!” shouted Will Scarlet, who had but then
+run up, and who now stood laughing heartily at the scene.
+
+“Friar Tuck!” exclaimed Robin, astounded. “Are you Friar Tuck? Then am I
+your friend, for you are he I came to seek.”
+
+“I am but a poor anchorite, a curtall friar,” said the other, whistling
+to his pack, “by name Friar Tuck of Fountain’s Dale. For seven years
+have I tended the Abbey here, preached o’ Sundays, and married and
+christened and buried folk--and fought too, if need were; and if it
+smacks not too much of boasting, I have not yet met the knight or
+trooper or yeoman that I would yield before. But yours is a stout blade.
+I would fain know you.”
+
+“‘Tis Robin Hood, the outlaw, who has been assisting you at this
+christening,” said Will Scarlet glancing roguishly at the two opponents’
+dripping garments. And at this sally the whole bad burst into a shout of
+laughter, in which Robin and Friar Tuck joined.
+
+“Robin Hood!” cried the good friar presently, holding his sides; “are
+you indeed that famous yeoman? Then I like you well; and had I known you
+earlier, would have both carried you across and shared my pasty pie with
+you.”
+
+“To speak soothly,” replied Robin gaily, “‘twas that same pie that led
+me to be rude. Now, therefore, bring it and your dogs and repair with us
+to the greenwood. We have need of you--with this message came I to-day
+to seek you. We will build you a hermitage in Sherwood Forest, and you
+shall keep us from evil ways. Will you not join our band?”
+
+“Marry, that will I!” cried Friar Tuck jovially. “Once more will I cross
+this much beforded stream, and go with you to the good greenwood!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+HOW ALLAN-A-DALE’S WOOING WAS PROSPERED
+
+ “What is thy name?” then said Robin Hood,
+ “Come tell me, without any fail!”
+ “By the faith o’ my body,” then said the young man,
+ “My name it is Allan-a-Dale.”
+
+Friar Tuck and Much the miller’s son soon became right good friends over
+the steaming stew they jointly prepared for the merry men that evening.
+Tuck was mightily pleased when he found a man in the forest who could
+make pasties and who had cooked for no less person than the High Sheriff
+himself. While Much marveled at the friar’s knowledge of herbs and
+simples and woodland things which savored a stew greatly. So they
+gabbled together like two old gossips and, between them, made such a
+tasty mess that Robin Hood and his stout followers were like never to
+leave off eating. And the friar said grace too, with great unction, over
+the food; and Robin said Amen! and that henceforth they were always to
+have mass of Sundays.
+
+So Robin walked forth into the wood that evening with his stomach full
+and his heart, therefore, in great contentment and love for other men.
+He did not stop the first passer-by, as his manner often was, and desire
+a fight. Instead, he stepped behind a tree, when he heard a man’s voice
+in song, and waited to behold the singer. Perhaps he remembered, also,
+the merry chanting of Will Scarlet, and how he had tried to give it
+pause a few days before.
+
+Like Will, this fellow was clad in scarlet, though he did not look quite
+as fine a gentleman. Nathless, he was a sturdy yeoman of honest face and
+a voice far sweeter than Will’s. He seemed to be a strolling minstrel,
+for he bore a harp in his hand, which he thrummed, while his lusty tenor
+voice rang out with--
+
+ “Hey down, and a down, and a down!
+ I’ve a lassie back i’ the town;
+ Come day, come night, Come dark or light,
+ She will wed me, back i’ the town!”
+
+Robin let the singer pass, caroling on his way.
+
+“‘Tis not in me to disturb a light-hearted lover, this night,” he
+muttered, a memory of Marian coming back to him. “Pray heaven she may be
+true to him and the wedding be a gay one ‘back i’ the town!”’
+
+So Robin went back to his camp, where he told of the minstrel.
+
+“If any of ye set on him after this,” quoth he in ending, “bring him to
+me, for I would have speech with him.”
+
+The very next day his wish was gratified. Little John and Much the
+miller’s son were out together on a foraging expedition when they espied
+the same young man; at least, they thought it must be he, for he was
+clad in scarlet and carried a harp in his hand. But now he came drooping
+along the way; his scarlet was all in tatters; and at every step he
+fetched a sigh, “Alack and a well-a-day!”
+
+Then stepped forth Little John and Much the miller’s son.
+
+“Ho! do not wet the earth with your weeping,” said Little John, “else we
+shall all have lumbago.”
+
+No sooner did the young man catch sight of them than he bent his bow,
+and held an arrow back to his ear.
+
+“Stand off! stand off!” he said; “what is your will with me?”
+
+“Put by your weapon,” said Much, “we will not harm you. But you must
+come before our master straight, under yon greenwood tree.”
+
+So the minstrel put by his bow and suffered himself to be led before
+Robin Hood.
+
+“How now!” quoth Robin, when he beheld his sorry countenance, “are you
+not he whom I heard no longer ago than yesternight caroling so blithely
+about ‘a lassie back i’ the town’?”
+
+“The same in body, good sir,” replied the other sadly; “but my spirit is
+grievously changed.”
+
+“Tell me your tale,” said Robin courteously. “Belike I can help you.”
+
+“That can no man on earth, I fear,” said the stranger; “nathless, I’ll
+tell you the tale. Yesterday I stood pledged to a maid, and thought
+soon to wed her. But she has been taken from me and is to become an
+old knight’s bride this very day; and as for me, I care not what ending
+comes to my days, or how soon, without her.”
+
+“Marry, come up!” said Robin; “how got the old knight so sudden
+vantage?”
+
+“Look you, worship, ‘tis this way. The Normans overrun us, and are in
+such great favor that none may say them nay. This old returned Crusader
+coveted the land whereon my lady dwells. The estate is not large, but
+all in her own right; whereupon her brother says she shall wed a title,
+and he and the old knight have fixed it up for to-day.”
+
+“Nay, but surely--” began Robin.
+
+“Hear me out, worship,” said the other. “Belike you think me a sorry
+dog not to make fight of this. But the old knight, look you, is not
+come-at-able. I threw one of his varlets into a thorn hedge, and another
+into a water-butt, and a third landed head-first into a ditch. But I
+couldn’t do any fighting at all.”
+
+“‘Tis a pity!” quoth Little John gravely. He had been sitting
+cross-legged listening to this tale of woe. “What think you, Friar Tuck,
+doth not a bit of fighting ease a man’s mind?”
+
+“Blood-letting is ofttimes recommended of the leeches,” replied Tuck.
+
+“Does the maid love you?” asked Robin Hood.
+
+“By our troth, she loved me right well,” said the minstrel. “I have a
+little ring of hers by me which I have kept for seven long years.”
+
+“What is your name?” then said Robin Hood.
+
+“By the faith of my body,” replied the young man, “my name is
+Allan-a-Dale.”
+
+“What will you give me, Allan-a-Dale,” said Robin Hood, “in ready gold
+or fee, to help you to your true love again, and deliver her back unto
+you?”
+
+“I have no money, save only five shillings,” quoth Allan; “but--are you
+not Robin Hood?”
+
+Robin nodded.
+
+“Then you, if any one, can aid me!” said Allan-a-Dale eagerly. “And if
+you give me back my love, I swear upon the Book that I will be your true
+servant forever after.”
+
+“Where is this wedding to take place, and when?” asked Robin.
+
+“At Plympton Church, scarce five miles from here; and at three o’ the
+afternoon.”
+
+“Then to Plympton we will go!” cried Robin suddenly springing into
+action; and he gave out orders like a general: “Will Stutely, do you
+have four-and-twenty good men over against Plympton Church ‘gainst three
+o’ the afternoon. Much, good fellow, do you cook up some porridge for
+this youth, for he must have a good round stomach--aye, and a better
+gear! Will Scarlet, you will see to decking him out bravely for the
+nonce. And Friar Tuck, hold yourself in readiness, good book in hand, at
+the church. Mayhap you had best go ahead of us all.”
+
+The fat Bishop of Hereford was full of pomp and importance that day at
+Plympton Church. He was to celebrate the marriage of an old knight--a
+returned Crusader--and a landed young woman; and all the gentry
+thereabout were to grace the occasion with their presence. The church
+itself was gaily festooned with flowers for the ceremony, while out
+in the church-yard at one side brown ale flowed freely for all the
+servitors.
+
+Already were the guests beginning to assemble, when the Bishop, back in
+the vestry, saw a minstrel clad in green walk up boldly to the door and
+peer within. It was Robin Hood, who had borrowed Allan’s be-ribboned
+harp for the time.
+
+“Now who are you, fellow?” quoth the Bishop, “and what do you here at
+the church-door with you harp and saucy air?”
+
+“May it please your Reverence,” returned Robin bowing very humbly, “I
+am but a strolling harper, yet likened the best in the whole North
+Countree. And I had hope that my thrumming might add zest to the wedding
+to-day.”
+
+“What tune can you harp?” demanded the Bishop.
+
+“I can harp a tune so merry that a forlorn lover will forget he is
+jilted,” said Robin. “I can harp another tune that will make a bride
+forsake her lord at the altar. I can harp another tune that will bring
+loving souls together though they were up hill and down dale five good
+miles away from each other.”
+
+“Then welcome, good minstrel,” said the Bishop, “music pleases me right
+well, and if you can play up to your prattle, ‘twill indeed grace your
+ceremony. Let us have a sample of your wares.”
+
+“Nay, I must not put finger to string until the bride and groom have
+come. Such a thing would ill fortune both us and them.”
+
+“Have it as you will,” said the Bishop, “but here comes the party now.”
+
+Then up the lane to the church came the old knight, preceded by ten
+archers liveried in scarlet and gold. A brave sight the archers made,
+but their master walked slowly leaning upon a cane and shaking as though
+in a palsy.
+
+And after them came a sweet lass leaning upon her brother’s arm. Her
+hair did shine like glistering gold, and her eyes were like blue violets
+that peep out shyly at the sun. The color came and went in her cheeks
+like that tinting of a sea-shell, and her face was flushed as though
+she had been weeping. But now she walked with a proud air, as though she
+defied the world to crush her spirit. She had but two maids with her,
+finikin lasses, with black eyes and broad bosoms, who set off their
+lady’s more delicate beauty well. One held up the bride’s gown from the
+ground; the other carried flowers in plenty.
+
+“Now by all the wedding bells that ever were rung!” quoth Robin boldly,
+“this is the worst matched pair that ever mine eyes beheld!”
+
+“Silence, miscreant!” said a man who stood near.
+
+The Bishop had hurriedly donned his gown and now stood ready to meet the
+couple at the chancel.
+
+But Robin paid no heed to him. He let the knight and his ten archers
+pass by, then he strode up to the bride, and placed himself on the other
+side from her brother.
+
+“Courage, lady!” he whispered, “there is another minstrel near, who
+mayhap may play more to your liking.”
+
+The lady glanced at him with a frightened air, but read such honesty and
+kindness in his glance that she brightened and gave him a grateful look.
+
+“Stand aside, fool!” cried the brother wrathfully.
+
+“Nay, but I am to bring good fortune to the bride by accompanying her
+through the church-doors,” said Robin laughing.
+
+Thereupon he was allowed to walk by her side unmolested, up to the
+chancel with the party.
+
+“Now strike up your music, fellow!” ordered the Bishop.
+
+“Right gladly will I,” quoth Robin, “an you will let me choose my
+instrument. For sometimes I like the harp, and other times I think the
+horn makes the merriest music in all the world.”
+
+And he drew forth his bugle from underneath his green cloak and blew
+three winding notes that made the church--rafters ring again.
+
+“Seize him!” yelled the Bishop; “there’s mischief afoot! These are the
+tricks of Robin Hood!”
+
+The ten liveried archers rushed forward from the rear of the church,
+where they had been stationed. But their rush was blocked by the
+onlookers who now rose from their pews in alarm and crowded the aisles.
+Meanwhile Robin had leaped lightly over the chancel rail and stationed
+himself in a nook by the altar.
+
+“Stand where you are!” he shouted, drawing his bow, “the first man to
+pass the rail dies the death. And all ye who have come to witness a
+wedding stay in your seats. We shall e’en have one, since we are come
+into the church. But the bride shall choose her own swain!”
+
+Then up rose another great commotion at the door, and four-and-twenty
+good bowmen came marching in with Will Stutely at their head. And they
+seized the ten liveried archers and the bride’s scowling brother and the
+other men on guard and bound them prisoners.
+
+Then in came Allan-a-Dale, decked out gaily, with Will Scarlet for best
+man. And they walked gravely down the aisle and stood over against the
+chancel.
+
+“Before a maiden weds she chooses--an the laws of good King Harry be
+just ones,” said Robin. “Now, maiden, before this wedding continues,
+whom will you have to husband?”
+
+The maiden answered not in words, but smiled with a glad light in her
+eyes, and walked over to Allan and clasped her arms about his neck.
+
+“That is her true love,” said Robin. “Young Allan instead of the gouty
+knight. And the true lovers shall be married at this time before we
+depart away. Now my lord Bishop, proceed with the ceremony!”
+
+“Nay, that shall not be,” protested the Bishop; “the banns must be cried
+three times in the church. Such is the law of our land.”
+
+“Come here, Little John,” called Robin impatiently; and plucked off the
+Bishop’s frock from his back and put it on the yeoman.
+
+Now the Bishop was short and fat, and Little John was long and lean.
+The gown hung loosely over Little John’s shoulders and came only to
+his waist. He was a fine comical sight, and the people began to laugh
+consumedly at him.
+
+“By the faith o’ my body,” said Robin, “this cloth makes you a man.
+You’re the finest Bishop that ever I saw in my life. Now cry the banns.”
+
+So Little John clambered awkwardly into the quire, his short gown
+fluttering gaily; and he called the banns for the marriage of the maid
+and Allan-a-Dale once, twice, and thrice.
+
+“That’s not enough,” said Robin; “your gown is so short that you must
+talk longer.”
+
+Then Little John asked them in the church four, five, six, and seven
+times.
+
+“Good enough!” said Robin. “Now belike I see a worthy friar in the back
+of this church who can say a better service than ever my lord Bishop of
+Hereford. My lord Bishop shall be witness and seal the papers, but do
+you, good friar, bless this pair with book and candle.”
+
+So Friar Tuck, who all along had been back in one corner of the church,
+came forward; and Allan and his maid kneeled before him, while the old
+knight, held an unwilling witness, gnashed his teeth in impotent rage;
+and the friar began with the ceremony.
+
+When he asked, “Who giveth this woman?” Robin stepped up and answered in
+a clear voice:
+
+“I do! I, Robin Hood of Barnesdale and Sherwood! And he who takes her
+from Allan-a-Dale shall buy her full dearly.”
+
+So the twain were declared man and wife and duly blessed; and the bride
+was kissed by each sturdy yeoman beginning with Robin Hood.
+
+Now I cannot end this jolly tale better than in the words of the ballad
+which came out of the happening and which has been sung in the villages
+and countryside ever since:
+
+ “And thus having end of this merry wedding,
+ The bride lookt like a queen;
+ And so they returned to the merry greenwood
+ Amongst the leaves so green.”
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW THE WIDOW’S THREE SONS WERE RESCUED
+
+ Now Robin Hood is to Nottingham gone,
+ With a link a down and a down,
+ And there he met with the proud Sheriff,
+ Was walking along the town.
+
+The wedding-party was a merry one that left Plympton Church, I ween; but
+not so merry were the ones left behind. My lord Bishop of Hereford
+was stuck up in the organ-loft and left, gownless and fuming. The ten
+liveried archers were variously disposed about the church to keep him
+company; two of them being locked in a tiny crypt, three in the belfry,
+“to ring us a wedding peal,” as Robin said; and the others under
+quire seats or in the vestry. The bride’s brother at her entreaty was
+released, but bidden not to return to the church that day or interfere
+with his sister again on pain of death. While the rusty old knight was
+forced to climb a high tree, where he sat insecurely perched among the
+branches, feebly cursing the party as it departed.
+
+It was then approaching sundown, but none of the retainers or villagers
+dared rescue the imprisoned ones that night, for fear of Robin Hood’s
+men. So it was not until sunup the next day, that they were released.
+The Bishop and the old knight, stiff as they were, did not delay longer
+than for breakfast, but so great was their rage and shame--made straight
+to Nottingham and levied the Sheriff’s forces. The Sheriff himself was
+not anxious to try conclusions again with Robin in the open. Perhaps he
+had some slight scruples regarding his oath. But the others swore that
+they would go straight to the King, if he did not help them, so he was
+fain to consent.
+
+A force of an hundred picked men from the Royal Foresters and swordsmen
+of the shire was gathered together and marched straightway into the
+greenwood. There, as fortune would have it, they surprised some score of
+outlaws hunting, and instantly gave chase. But they could not surround
+the outlaws, who kept well in the lead, ever and anon dropping behind
+a log or boulder to speed back a shaft which meant mischief to the
+pursuers. One shaft indeed carried off the Sheriff’s hat and caused
+that worthy man to fall forward upon his horse’s neck from sheer terror;
+while five other arrows landed in the fleshy parts of Foresters’ arms.
+
+But the attacking party was not wholly unsuccessful. One outlaw in his
+flight stumbled and fell; when two others instantly stopped and helped
+to put him on his feet again. They were the widow’s three sons, Stout
+Will, and Lester, and John. The pause was an unlucky one for them, as
+a party of Sheriff’s men got above them and cut them off from their
+fellows. Swordsmen came up in the rear, and they were soon hemmed in on
+every side. But they gave good account of themselves, and before they
+had been overborne by force of numbers they had killed two and disabled
+three more.
+
+The infuriated attackers were almost on the point of hewing the stout
+outlaws to pieces, when the Sheriff cried:
+
+“Hold! Bind the villains! We will follow the law in this and take them
+to the town jail. But I promise ye the biggest public hanging that has
+been seen in this shire for many changes of the moon!”
+
+So they bound the widow’s three sons and carried them back speedily to
+Nottingham.
+
+Now Robin Hood had not chanced to be near the scene of the fight, or
+with his men; so for a time he heard nothing of the happening.
+
+But that evening while returning to the camp he was met by the widow
+herself, who came weeping along the way.
+
+“What news, what news, good woman?” said Robin hastily but courteously;
+for he liked her well.
+
+“God save ye, Master Robin!” said the dame wildly. “God keep ye from the
+fate that has met my three sons! The Sheriff has laid hands on them and
+they are condemned to die.”
+
+“Now, by our Lady! That cuts me to the heart! Stout Will, and Lester,
+and merry John! The earliest friends I had in the band, and still among
+the bravest! It must not be! When is this hanging set?”
+
+“Middle the tinker tells me that it is for tomorrow noon,” replied the
+dame.
+
+“By the truth o’ my body,” quoth Robin, “you could not tell me in better
+time. The memory of the old days when you freely bade me sup and dine
+would spur me on, even if three of the bravest lads in all the shire
+were not imperiled. Trust to me, good woman!”
+
+The old widow threw herself on the ground and embraced his knees.
+
+“‘Tis dire danger I am asking ye to face,” she said weeping; “and yet I
+knew your brave true heart would answer me. Heaven help ye, good Master
+Robin, to answer a poor widow’s prayers!”
+
+Then Robin Hood sped straightway to the forest-camp, where he heard the
+details of the skirmish--how that his men had been out-numbered five to
+one, but got off safely, as they thought, until a count of their members
+had shown the loss of the widow’s three sons.
+
+“We must rescue them, my men!” quoth Robin, “even from out the shadow of
+the rope itself!”
+
+Whereupon the band set to work to devise ways and means.
+
+Robin walked apart a little way with his head leaned thoughtfully upon
+his breast--for he was sore troubled--when whom should he meet but an
+old begging palmer, one of a devout order which made pilgrimages and
+wandered from place to place, supported by charity.
+
+This old fellow walked boldly up to Robin and asked alms of him; since
+Robin had been wont to aid members of his order.
+
+“What news, what news, thou foolish old man?” said Robin, “what news, I
+do thee pray?”
+
+“Three squires in Nottingham town,” quoth the palmer, “are condemned
+to die. Belike that is greater news than the shire has had in some
+Sundays.”
+
+Then Robin’s long-sought idea came to him like a flash.
+
+“Come, change thine apparel with me, old man,” he said, “and I’ll give
+thee forty shillings in good silver to spend in beer or wine.”
+
+“O, thine apparel is good,” the palmer protested, “and mine is ragged
+and torn. The holy church teaches that thou should’st ne’er laugh an old
+man to scorn.”
+
+“I am in simple earnest, I say. Come, change thine apparel with mine.
+Here are twenty pieces of good broad gold to feast they brethren right
+royally.”
+
+So the palmer was persuaded; and Robin put on the old man’s hat, which
+stood full high in the crown; and his cloak, patched with black and
+blue and red, like Joseph’s coat of many colors in its old age; and
+his breeches, which had been sewed over with so many patterns that the
+original was scarce discernible; and his tattered hose; and his shoes,
+cobbled above and below. And while as he made the change in dress he
+made so many whimsical comments also about a man’s pride and the dress
+that makes a man, that the palmer was like to choke with cackling
+laughter.
+
+I warrant you, the two were comical sights when they parted company that
+day. Nathless, Robin’s own mother would not have known him, had she been
+living.
+
+The next morning the whole town of Nottingham was early astir, and as
+soon as the gates were open country-folk began to pour in; for a triple
+hanging was not held there every day in the week, and the bustle almost
+equated a Fair day.
+
+Robin Hood in his palmer’s disguise was one of the first ones to enter
+the gates, and he strolled up and down and around the town as though he
+had never been there before in all his life. Presently he came to the
+market-place, and beheld thereon three gallows erected.
+
+“Who are these builded for, my son?” asked he of a rough soldier
+standing by.
+
+“For three of Robin Hood’s men,” answered the other. “And it were Robin
+himself, ‘twould be thrice as high I warrant ye. But Robin is too smart
+to get within the Sheriff’s clutches again.”
+
+The palmer crossed himself.
+
+“They say that he is a bold fellow,” he whined.
+
+“Ha!” said the soldier, “he may be bold enough out behind stumps i’ the
+forest, but the open market-place is another matter.”
+
+“Who is to hang these three poor wretches?” asked the palmer.
+
+“That hath the Sheriff not decided. But here he comes now to answer his
+own questions.” And the soldier came to stiff attention as the Sheriff
+and his body-guard stalked pompously up to inspect the gallows.
+
+“O, Heaven save you, worshipful Sheriff!” said the palmer. “Heaven
+protect you! What will you give a silly old man to-day to be your
+hangman?”
+
+“Who are you, fellow?” asked the Sheriff sharply.
+
+“Naught save a poor old palmer. But I can shrive their souls and hang
+their bodies most devoutly.”
+
+“Very good,” replied the other. “The fee to-day is thirteen pence; and
+I will add thereunto some suits of clothing for that ragged back of
+yours.”
+
+“God bless ye!” said the palmer. And he went with the soldier to the
+jail to prepare his three men for execution.
+
+Just before the stroke of noon the doors of the prison opened and the
+procession of the condemned came forth. Down through the long lines of
+packed people they walked to the market-place, the palmer in the lead,
+and the widow’s three sons marching firmly erect between soldiers.
+
+At the gallows foot they halted. The palmer whispered to them, as though
+offering last words of consolation; and the three men, with arms bound
+tightly behind their backs, ascended the scaffold, followed by their
+confessor.
+
+Then Robin stepped to the edge of the scaffold, while the people grew
+still as death; for they desired to hear the last words uttered to the
+victims. But Robin’s voice did not quaver forth weakly, as formerly,
+and his figure had stiffened bolt upright beneath the black robe that
+covered his rags.
+
+“Hark ye, proud Sheriff!” he cried. “I was ne’er a hangman in all my
+life, nor do I now intend to begin that trade. Accurst be he who first
+set the fashion of hanging! I have but three more words to say. Listen
+to them!”
+
+And forth from the robe he drew his horn and blew three loud blasts
+thereon. Then his keen hunting-knife flew forth and in a trice, Stout
+Will, Lester, and merry John were free men and had sprung forward and
+seized the halberds from the nearest soldiers guarding the gallows.
+
+“Seize them! ‘Tis Robin Hood!” screamed the Sheriff, “an hundred pounds
+if ye hold them, dead or alive!”
+
+“I make it two hundred!” roared the fat Bishop.
+
+But their voices were drowned in the uproar that ensued immediately
+after Robin blew his horn. He himself had drawn his sword and leaped
+down the stairs from the scaffold, followed by his three men. The guard
+had closed around them in vain effort to disarm them, when “A rescuer”
+ shouted Will Stutely’s clear voice on one side of them, and “A
+rescue!” bellowed Little John’s on the other; and down through the
+terror-stricken crowd rushed fourscore men in Lincoln green, their force
+seeming twice that number in the confusion. With swords drawn they fell
+upon the guard from every side at once. There was a brief clash of hot
+weapons, then the guard scattered wildly, and Robin Hood’s men formed in
+a compact mass around their leader and forced their way slowly down the
+market-place.
+
+“Seize them! In the King’s name!” shrieked the Sheriff. “Close the
+gates!”
+
+In truth, the peril would have been even greater, had this last order
+been carried out. But Will Scarlet and Allan-a-Dale had foreseen that
+event, and had already overpowered the two warders.
+
+So the gates stood wide open, and toward them the band of outlaws
+headed.
+
+The soldiers rallied a force of twice their number and tried resolutely
+to pierce their center. But the retreating force turned thrice and sent
+such volleys of keen arrows from their good yew bows, that they kept a
+distance between the two forces.
+
+And thus the gate was reached, and the long road leading up the hill,
+and at last the protecting greenwood itself. The soldiers dared come no
+farther. And the widow’s three sons, I warrant you, supped more heartily
+that night than ever before in their whole lives.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+HOW A BEGGAR FILLED THE PUBLIC EYE
+
+ Good Robin accost him in his way,
+ To see what he might be;
+ If any beggar had money,
+ He thought some part had he.
+
+One bright morning, soon after the stirring events told in the last
+chapter, Robin wandered forth alone down the road to Barnesdale, to see
+if aught had come of the Sheriff’s pursuit. But all was still and
+serene and peaceful. No one was in sight save a solitary beggar who came
+sturdily along his way in Robin’s direction. The beggar caught sight
+of Robin, at the same moment, as he emerged from the trees, but gave no
+sign of having seen him. He neither slackened nor quickened his pace,
+but jogged forward merrily, whistling as he came, and beating time by
+punching holes in the dusty road with the stout pike-staff in his hand.
+
+The curious look of the fellow arrested Robin’s attention, and he
+decided to stop and talk with him. The fellow was bare-legged and
+bare-armed, and wore a long shift of a shirt, fastened with a belt.
+About his neck hung a stout, bulging bag, which was buckled by a good
+piece of leather thong.
+
+ He had three hats upon his head,
+ Together sticked fast,
+ He cared neither for the wind nor wet,
+ In lands where’er he past.
+
+The fellow looked so fat and hearty, and the wallet on his shoulder
+seemed so well filled, that Robin thought within himself,
+
+“Ha! this is a lucky beggar for me! If any of them have money, this is
+the chap, and, marry, he should share it with us poorer bodies.”
+
+So he flourished his own stick and planted himself in the traveler’s
+path.
+
+“Sirrah, fellow!” quoth he; “whither away so fast? Tarry, for I would
+have speech with ye!”
+
+The beggar made as though he heard him not, and kept straight on with
+his faring.
+
+“Tarry, I say, fellow!” said Robin again; “for there’s a way to make
+folks obey!”
+
+“Nay, ‘tis not so,” answered the beggar, speaking for the first time; “I
+obey no man in all England, not even the King himself. So let me pass on
+my way, for ‘tis growing late, and I have still far to go before I can
+care for my stomach’s good.”
+
+“Now, by my troth,” said Robin, once more getting in front of the other,
+“I see well by your fat countenance, that you lack not for good food,
+while I go hungry. Therefore you must lend me of your means till we meet
+again, so that I may hie to the nearest tavern.”
+
+“I have no money to lend,” said the beggar crossly. “Methinks you are as
+young a man as I, and as well able to earn a supper. So go your way, and
+I’ll go mine. If you fast till you get aught out of me, you’ll go hungry
+for the next twelvemonth.”
+
+“Not while I have a stout stick to thwack your saucy bones!” cried
+Robin. “Stand and deliver, I say, or I’ll dust your shirt for you; and
+if that will not teach you manners, then we’ll see what a broad arrow
+can do with a beggar’s skin!”
+
+The beggar smiled, and answered boast with boast. “Come on with your
+staff, fellow! I care no more for it than for a pudding stick. And as
+for your pretty bow--_that_ for it!”
+
+And with amazing quickness, he swung his pike-staff around and knocked
+Robin’s bow clean out of his hand, so that his fingers smarted with
+pain. Robin danced and tried to bring his own staff into action; but
+the beggar never gave him a chance. Biff! whack! came the pike-staff,
+smiting him soundly and beating down his guard.
+
+There were but two things to do; either stand there and take a sound
+drubbing, or beat a hasty retreat. Robin chose the latter--as you or I
+would probably have done--and scurried back into the wood, blowing his
+horn as he went.
+
+“Fie, for shame, man!” jeered the bold beggar after him. “What is your
+haste? We had but just begun. Stay and take your money, else you will
+never be able to pay your reckoning at the tavern!”
+
+But Robin answered him never a word. He fled up hill and down dale till
+he met three of his men who were running up in answer to his summons.
+
+“What is wrong?” they asked.
+
+“‘Tis a saucy beggar,” said Robin, catching his breath. “He is back
+there on the highroad with the hardest stick I’ve met in a good many
+days. He gave me no chance to reason with him, the dirty scamp!”
+
+The men--Much and two of the widow’s sons--could scarce conceal their
+mirth at the thought of Robin Hood running from a beggar. Nathless, they
+kept grave faces, and asked their leader if he was hurt.
+
+“Nay,” he replied, “but I shall speedily feel better if you will fetch
+me that same beggar and let me have a fair chance at him.”
+
+So the three yeomen made haste and came out upon the highroad and
+followed after the beggar, who was going smoothly along his way again,
+as though he were at peace with all the world.
+
+“The easiest way to settle this beggar,” said Much, “is to surprise
+him. Let us cut through yon neck of woods and come upon him before he is
+aware.”
+
+The others agreed to this, and the three were soon close upon their
+prey.
+
+“Now!” quoth Much; and the other two sprang quickly upon the beggar’s
+back and wrested his pike-staff from his hand. At the same moment Much
+drew his dagger and flashed it before the fellow’s breast.
+
+“Yield you, my man!” cried he; “for a friend of ours awaits you in the
+wood, to teach you how to fight properly.”
+
+“Give me a fair chance,” said the beggar valiantly, “and I’ll fight you
+all at once.”
+
+But they would not listen to him. Instead, they turned him about and
+began to march him toward the forest. Seeing that it was useless to
+struggle, the beggar began to parley.
+
+“Good my masters,” quoth he, “why use this violence? I will go with ye
+safe and quietly, if ye insist, but if ye will set me free I’ll make
+it worth your while. I’ve a hundred pounds in my bag here. Let me go my
+way, and ye shall have all that’s in the bag.”
+
+The three outlaws took council together at this.
+
+“What say you?” asked Much of the others. “Our master will be more glad
+to see this beggar’s wallet than his sorry face.”
+
+The other two agreed, and the little party came to a halt and loosed
+hold of the beggar.
+
+“Count out your gold speedily, friend,” said Much. There was a brisk
+wind blowing, and the beggar turned about to face it, directly they had
+unhanded him.
+
+“It shall be done, gossips,” said he. “One of you lend me your cloak and
+we will spread it upon the ground and put the wealth upon it.”
+
+The cloak was handed him, and he placed his wallet upon it as though
+it were very heavy indeed. Then he crouched down and fumbled with
+the leather fastenings. The outlaws also bent over and watched the
+proceeding closely, lest he should hide some of the money on his person.
+Presently he got the bag unfastened and plunged his hands into it. Forth
+from it he drew--not shining gold--but handfuls of fine meal which he
+dashed into the eager faces of the men around him. The wind aided him
+in this, and soon there arose a blinding cloud which filled the eyes,
+noses, and mouths of the three outlaws till they could scarcely see or
+breathe.
+
+While they gasped and choked and sputtered and felt around wildly for
+that rogue of a beggar, he finished the job by picking up the cloak
+by its corners and shaking it vigorously in the faces of his suffering
+victims. Then he seized a stick which lay conveniently near, and began
+to rain blows down upon their heads, shoulders, and sides, all the time
+dancing first on one leg, then on the other, and crying,
+
+“Villains! rascals! here are the hundred pounds I promised. How do you
+like them? I’ faith, you’ll get all that’s in the bag.”
+
+Whack! whack! whack! whack! went the stick, emphasizing each word. Howls
+of pain might have gone up from the sufferers, but they had too much
+meal in their throats for that. Their one thought was to flee, and they
+stumbled off blindly down the road, the beggar following them a little
+way to give them a few parting love-taps.
+
+“Fare ye well, my masters,” he said finally turning the other way; “and
+when next I come along the Barnesdale road, I hope you will be able to
+tell gold from meal dust!”
+
+With this he departed, an easy victor, and again went whistling on his
+way, while the three outlaws rubbed the meal out of their eyes and began
+to catch their breath again.
+
+As soon as they could look around them clearly, they beheld Robin
+Hood leaning against a tree trunk and surveying them smilingly. He had
+recovered his own spirits in full measure, on seeing their plight.
+
+“God save ye, gossips!” he said, “ye must, in sooth, have gone the wrong
+way and been to the mill, from the looks of your clothes.”
+
+Then when they looked shamefaced and answered never a word, he went on,
+in a soft voice,
+
+“Did ye see aught of that bold beggar I sent you for, lately?”
+
+“In sooth, master,” responded Much the miller’s son, “we heard more of
+him than we saw him. He filled us so full of meal that I shall sweat
+meal for a week. I was born in a mill, and had the smell of meal in my
+nostrils from my very birth, you might say, and yet never before did I
+see such a quantity of the stuff in so small space.”
+
+And he sneezed violently.
+
+“How was that?” asked Robin demurely.
+
+“Why we laid hold of the beggar, as you did order, when he offered to
+pay for his release out of the bag he carried upon his back.”
+
+“The same I coveted,” quoth Robin as if to himself.
+
+“So we agreed to this,” went on Much, “and spread a cloak down, and he
+opened his bag and shook it thereon. Instantly a great cloud of meal
+filled the air, whereby we could neither see nor breathe; and in the
+midst of this cloud he vanished like a wizard.”
+
+“But not before he left certain black and blue spots, to be remembered
+by, I see,” commented Robin.
+
+“He was in league with the evil one,” said one of the widow’s sons,
+rubbing himself ruefully.
+
+Then Robin laughed outright, and sat him down upon the gnarled root of a
+tree, to finish his merriment.
+
+“Four bold outlaws, put to rout by a sorry beggar!” cried he. “I can
+laugh at ye, my men, for I am in the same boat with ye. But ‘twould
+never do to have this tale get abroad--even in the greenwood--how that
+we could not hold our own with the odds in our favor. So let us have
+this little laugh all to ourselves, and no one else need be the wiser!”
+
+The others saw the point of this, and felt better directly, despite
+their itching desire to get hold of the beggar again. And none of the
+four ever told of the adventure.
+
+But the beggar must have boasted of it at the next tavern; or a little
+bird perched among the branches of a neighboring oak must have sung
+of it. For it got abroad, as such tales will, and was put into a right
+droll ballad which, I warrant you, the four outlaws did not like to
+hear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD FOUGHT GUY OF GISBORNE
+
+ “I dwell by dale and down,” quoth he,
+ “And Robin to take I’m sworn;
+ And when I am called by my right name,
+ I am Guy of good Gisborne.”
+
+Some weeks passed after the rescue of the widow’s three sons; weeks
+spent by the Sheriff in the vain effort to entrap Robin Hood and his
+men. For Robin’s name and deeds had come to the King’s ears, in London
+town, and he sent word to the Sheriff to capture the outlaw, under
+penalty of losing his office. So the Sheriff tried every manner of means
+to surprise Robin Hood in the forest, but always without success. And he
+increased the price put upon Robin’s head, in the hope that the best men
+of the kingdom could be induced to try their skill at a capture.
+
+Now there was a certain Guy of Gisborne, a hireling knight of the King’s
+army, who heard of Robin and of the price upon his head. Sir Guy was one
+of the best men at the bow and the sword in all the King’s service.
+But his heart was black and treacherous. He obtained the King’s leave
+forthwith to seek out the forester; and armed with the King’s scroll he
+came before the Sheriff at Nottingham.
+
+“I have come to capture Robin Hood,” quoth he, “and mean to have him,
+dead or alive.”
+
+“Right gladly would I aid you,” answered the Sheriff, “even if the
+King’s seal were not sufficient warrant. How many men need you?”
+
+“None,” replied Sir Guy, “for I am convinced that forces of men can
+never come at the bold robber. I must needs go alone. But do you hold
+your men in readiness at Barnesdale, and when you hear a blast from this
+silver bugle, come quickly, for I shall have the sly Robin within my
+clutches.”
+
+“Very good,” said the Sheriff. “Marry, it shall be done.” And he set
+about giving orders, while Guy of Gisborne sallied forth disguised.
+
+Now as luck would have it, Will Scarlet and Little John had gone to
+Barnesdale that very day to buy suits of Lincoln green for certain of
+the yeomen who had come out at the knees and elbows. But not deeming it
+best for both of them to run their necks into a noose, together, they
+parted just outside the town, and Will went within the gates, while John
+tarried and watched at the brow of the hill on the outside.
+
+Presently whom should he see but this same Will flying madly forth from
+the gates again, closely pursued by the Sheriff and threescore men. Over
+the moat Will sprang, through the bushes and briars, across the swamp,
+over stocks and stones, up the woodland roads in long leaps like a
+scared jack rabbit. And after him puffed the Sheriff and his men, their
+force scattering out in the flight as one man would tumble head-first
+into a ditch, another mire up in the swamp, another trip over a rolling
+stone, and still others sit down on the roadside and gasp for wind like
+fish out of water.
+
+Little John could not forbear laughing heartily at the scene, though
+he knew that ‘twould be anything but a laughing matter if Will should
+stumble. And in truth one man was like to come upon him. It was
+William-a-Trent, the best runner among the Sheriff’s men. He had come
+within twenty feet of Scarlet and was leaping upon him with long bounds
+like a greyhound, when John rose up quickly, drew his bow and let fly
+one of his fatal shafts. It would have been better for William-a-Trent
+to have been abed with sorrow--says the ballad--than to be that day in
+the greenwood slade to meet with Little John’s arrow. He had run his
+last race.
+
+The others halted a moment in consternation, when the shaft came
+hurtling down from the hill; but looking up they beheld none save Little
+John, and with a cry of fierce joy they turned upon him. Meanwhile Will
+Scarlet had reached the brow of the hill and sped down the other side.
+
+“I’ll just send one more little message of regret to the Sheriff,” said
+Little John, “before I join Will.”
+
+But this foolhardy deed was his undoing, for just as the arrow left the
+string, the good yew bow that had never before failed him snapped in
+twain.
+
+“Woe worth, woe worth thee, wicked wood, that ere thou grew on a
+tree!” cursed Little John, and planted his feet resolutely in the earth
+resolved to sell the path dearly; for the soldiers were now so close
+upon him that he dared not turn.
+
+And a right good account of himself he gave that day, dealing with
+each man as he came up according to his merit. And so winded were the
+pursuers when they reached the top of the hill that he laid out the
+first ten of them right and left with huge blows of his brawny fist.
+
+But if five men can do more than three, a score can overcome one.
+
+A body of archers stood off at a prudent distance and covered Little
+John with their arrows.
+
+“Now yield you!” panted the Sheriff. “Yield you, Little John, or Reynold
+Greenleaf, or whatever else name you carry this day! Yield you, or some
+few of these shafts will reach your heart!”
+
+“Marry, my heart has been touched by your words ere now,” said Little
+John; “and I yield me.”
+
+So the Sheriff’s men laid hold of Little John and bound him fast with
+many cords, so fearful were they lest he should escape. And the Sheriff
+laughed aloud in glee, and thought of how he should avenge his stolen
+plate, and determined to make a good day’s work of it.
+
+“By the Saints!” he said, “you shall be drawn by dale and down, and
+hanged high on a hill in Barnesdale this very day.”
+
+“Hang and be hanged!” retorted the prisoner. “You may fail of your
+purpose if it be Heaven’s will.”
+
+Back down the hill and across the moor went the company speedily, for
+they feared a rescue. And as they went the stragglers joined them. Here
+a man got up feebly out of the ditch and rubbed his pate and fell in
+like a chicken with the pip going for its dinner. Yonder came hobbling
+a man with a lame ankle, or another with his shins torn by the briars or
+another with his jacket all muddy from the marsh. So in truth it was
+a tatterdemalion crew that limped and straggled and wandered back into
+Barnesdale that day. Yet all were merry, for the Sheriff had promised
+them flagons of wine, and moreover they were to hang speedily the
+boldest outlaw in England, next to Robin Hood himself.
+
+The gallows was quickly put up and a new rope provided.
+
+“Now up with you!” commanded the Sheriff, “and let us see if your
+greenwood tricks will avail you to-morrow.”
+
+“I would that I had bold Robin’s horn,” muttered poor John; “methinks
+‘tis all up with me even as the Sheriff hath spoken.”
+
+In good sooth the time was dire and pressing. The rope was placed around
+the prisoner’s neck and the men prepared to haul away.
+
+“Are you ready?” called the Sheriff. “One--two--”
+
+But before the “three” left his lips the faint sound of a silver bugle
+came floating over the hill.
+
+“By my troth, that is Sir Guy of Gisborne’s horn,” quoth the Sheriff;
+“and he bade me not to delay answering its summons. He has caught Robin
+Hood.”
+
+“Pardon, Excellency,” said one of his men; “but if he has caught Robin
+Hood, this is a merry day indeed. And let us save this fellow and build
+another gallows and hang them both together.”
+
+“That’s a brave thought!” said the Sheriff slapping his knee. “Take the
+rascal down and bind him fast to the gallows-tree against our return.”
+
+So Little John was made fast to the gallows-tree, while the Sheriff and
+all his men who could march or hobble went out to get Robin Hood and
+bring him in for the double hanging.
+
+Let us leave talking of Little John and the Sheriff, and see what has
+become of Robin Hood.
+
+In the first place, he and Little John had come near having a quarrel
+that self-same morning because both had seen a curious looking yeoman,
+and each wanted to challenge him singly. But Robin would not give way to
+his lieutenant, and that is why John, in a huff, had gone with Will to
+Barnesdale.
+
+Meanwhile Robin approached the curious looking stranger. He seemed to be
+a three-legged creature at first sight, but on coming nearer you would
+have seen that ‘twas really naught but a poorly clad man, who for a
+freak had covered up his rags with a capul-hide, nothing more nor less
+than the sun-dried skin of a horse, complete with head, tail, and mane.
+The skin of the head made a helmet; while the tail gave the curious
+three-legged appearance.
+
+“Good-morrow, good fellow,” said Robin cheerily, “methinks by the bow
+you bear in your hand that you should be a good archer.”
+
+“Indifferent good,” said the other returning his greeting; “but ‘tis not
+of archery that I am thinking this morning, for I have lost my way and
+would fain find it again.”
+
+“By my faith, I could have believed ‘twas your wits you’d lost!” thought
+Robin smiling. Then aloud: “I’ll lead you through the wood,” quoth
+he, “an you will tell me your business. For belike your speech is much
+gentler than your attire.”
+
+“Who are you to ask me my business?” asked the other roughly.
+
+“I am one of the King’s Rangers,” replied Robin, “set here to guard his
+deer against curious looking strollers.”
+
+“Curious looking I may be,” returned the other, “but no stroller. Hark
+ye, since you are a Ranger, I must e’en demand your service. I am on the
+King’s business and seek an outlaw. Men call him Robin Hood. Are you one
+of his men?”--eyeing him keenly.
+
+“Nay, God forbid!” said Robin; “but what want you with him?”
+
+“That is another tale. But I’d rather meet with that proud outlaw than
+forty good pounds of the King’s money.”
+
+Robin now saw how the land lay.
+
+“Come with me, good yeoman,” said he, “and belike, a little later in the
+day, I can show you Robin’s haunts when he is at home. Meanwhile let us
+have some pastime under the greenwood tree. Let us first try the mastery
+at shooting arrows.”
+
+The other agreed, and they cut down two willow wands of a summer’s
+growth that grew beneath a brier, and set them up at a distance of
+threescore yards.
+
+“Lead on, good fellow,” quoth Robin. “The first shot to you.”
+
+“Nay, by my faith,” said the other, “I will follow your lead.”
+
+So Robin stepped forth and bent his bow carelessly and sent his
+shaft whizzing toward the wand, missing it by a scant inch. He of the
+horse-hide followed with more care yet was a good three-fingers’ breadth
+away. On the second round, the stranger led off and landed cleverly
+within the small garland at the top of the wand; but Robin shot far
+better and clave the wand itself, clean at the middle.
+
+“A blessing on your heart!” shouted Capul-Hide; “never saw I such
+shooting as that! Belike you are better than Robin Hood himself. But you
+have not yet told me your name.”
+
+“Nay, by my faith,” quoth Robin, “I must keep it secret till you have
+told me your own.”
+
+“I do not disdain to tell it,” said the other. “I dwell by dale and
+down, and to take bold Robin am I sworn. This would I tell him to his
+face, were he not so great a craven. When I am called by my right name,
+I am Guy of Gisborne.”
+
+This he said with a great show of pride, and he strutted back and forth,
+forgetful that he had just been beaten at archery.
+
+Robin eyed him quietly. “Methinks I have heard of you elsewhere. Do you
+not bring men to the gallows for a living?”
+
+“Aye, but only outlaws such as Robin Hood.”
+
+“But pray what harm has Robin Hood done you?”
+
+“He is a highway robber,” said Sir Guy, evading the question.
+
+“Has he ever taken from the rich that he did not give again to the
+poor? Does he not protect the women and children and side with weak and
+helpless? Is not his greatest crime the shooting of a few King’s deer?”
+
+“Have done with your sophistry,” said Sir Guy impatiently. “I am more
+than ever of opinion that you are one of Robin’s men yourself.”
+
+“I have told you I am not,” quoth Robin briefly. “But if I am to help
+you catch him, what is your plan?”
+
+“Do you see this silver bugle?” said the other. “A long blast upon it
+will summon the Sheriff and all his men, when once I have Robin within
+my grasp. And if you show him to me, I’ll give you the half of my forty
+pounds reward.”
+
+“I would not help hang a man for ten times forty pounds,” said the
+outlaw. “Yet will I point out Robin to you for the reward I find at my
+sword’s point. I myself am Robin Hood of Sherwood and Barnesdale.”
+
+“Then have at you!” cried the other springing swiftly into action. His
+sword leaped forth from beneath the horse’s hide with the speed born of
+long practice, and before Robin had come to guard, the other had smitten
+at him full and foul. Robin eluded the lunge and drew his own weapon.
+
+“A scurvy trick!” quoth he grimly, “to strike at a man unprepared.”
+
+Then neither spoke more, but fell sternly to work--lunge and thrust and
+ward and parry--for two full hours the weapons smote together sullenly,
+and neither Robin Hood nor Sir Guy would yield an inch. I promise you
+that if you could have looked forth on the fight from behind the trunk
+of some friendly tree, you would have seen deadly sport such as few
+men beheld in Sherwood Forest. For the fighters glared sullenly at each
+other, the fires of hatred burning in their eyes. One was fighting for
+his life; the other for a reward and the King’s favor.
+
+Still circled the bright blades swiftly in the air--now gleaming in the
+peaceful sunlight--again hissing like maddened serpents. Neither had yet
+touched the other, until Robin, in an unlucky moment, stumbled over
+the projecting root of a tree; when Sir Guy, instead of giving him the
+chance to recover himself, as any courteous knight would have done,
+struck quickly at the falling man and wounded him in the left side.
+
+“Ah, dear Lady in Heaven,” gasped Robin uttering his favorite prayer,
+“shield me now! ‘Twas never a man’s destiny to die before his day.”
+
+And adroitly he sprang up again, and came straight at the other with an
+awkward but unexpected stroke. The knight had raised his weapon high to
+give a final blow, when Robin reached beneath and across his guard.
+One swift lunge, and Sir Guy of Gisborne staggered backward with a deep
+groan, Robin’s sword through his throat.
+
+Robin looked at the slain man regretfully.
+
+“You did bring it upon yourself,” said he; “and traitor and hireling
+though you were, I would not willingly have killed you.”
+
+He looked to his own wound. It was not serious, and he soon staunched
+the blood and bound up the cut. Then he dragged the dead body into the
+bushes, and took off the horse’s hide and put it upon himself. He placed
+his own cloak upon Sir Guy, and marked his face so none might tell who
+had been slain. Robin’s own figure and face were not unlike the other’s.
+
+Pulling the capul-hide well over himself, so that the helmet hid most
+of his face, Robin seized the silver bugle and blew a long blast. It was
+the blast that saved the life of Little John, over in Barnesdale, for
+you and I have already seen how it caused the fond Sheriff to prick up
+his ears and stay the hanging, and go scurrying up over the hill and
+into the wood with his men in search of another victim.
+
+In five-and-twenty minutes up came running a score of the Sheriff’s best
+archers.
+
+“Did you signal us, lording?” they asked, approaching Robin.
+
+“Aye,” said he, going to meet the puffing Sheriff.
+
+“What news, what news, Sir Guy?” said that officer.
+
+“Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne had a fight; and he that wears Robin’s
+cloak lies under the covert yonder.”
+
+“The best news I have heard in all my life!” exclaimed the Sheriff
+rubbing his hands. “I would that we could have saved him for the
+hanging--though I cannot now complain.”
+
+“The hanging?” repeated Robin.
+
+“Yes. This is our lucky day on the calendar. After you left me we
+narrowly missed running one of the fellows--I believe ‘twas Will
+Scarlet--to earth; and another who came to his relief we were just about
+to hang, when your horn blew.”
+
+“Who was the other?” asked the disguised outlaw.
+
+“Whom do you suppose?” laughed the Sheriff. “The best man in the
+greenwood, next to Robin Hood himself--Little John, Reynold Greenleaf!”
+ For the Sheriff could not forget the name Little John had borne under
+his own roof at Nottingham.
+
+“Little John!” thought Robin with a start. Verily that was a lucky
+blast of the bugle! “But I see you have not escaped without a scratch,”
+ continued the Sheriff, becoming talkative through pure glee. “Here, one
+of you men! Give Sir Guy of Gisborne your horse; while others of you
+bury that dog of an outlaw where he lies. And let us hasten back to
+Barnesdale and finish hanging the other.”
+
+So they put spurs to their horses, and as they rode Robin forced himself
+to talk merrily, while all the time he was planning the best way to
+succor Little John.
+
+“A boon, Sheriff,” he said as they reached the gates of the town.
+
+“What is it, worthy sir? You have but to speak.”
+
+“I do not want any of your gold, for I have had a brave fight. But now
+that I have slain the master, let me put an end to the man; so it shall
+be said that Guy of Gisborne despatched the two greatest outlaws of
+England in one day.”
+
+“Have it as you will,” said the Sheriff, “but you should have asked a
+knight’s fee and double your reward, and it would have been yours. It
+isn’t every man that can take Robin Hood.” “No, Excellency,” answered
+Robin. “I say it without boasting, that no man took Robin Hood yesterday
+and none shall take him to-morrow.”
+
+Then he approached Little John, who was still tied to the gallows-tree;
+and he said to the Sheriff’s men, “Now stand you back here till I see if
+the prisoner has been shrived.” And he stooped swiftly, and cut Little
+John’s bonds, and thrust into his hands Sir Guy’s bow and arrows, which
+he had been careful to take.
+
+“‘Tis I, Robin!” he whispered. But in truth, Little John knew it
+already, and had decided there was to be no hanging that day.
+
+Then Robin blew three loud blasts upon his own horn, and drew forth his
+own bow; and before the astonished Sheriff and his men could come to
+arms the arrows were whistling in their midst in no uncertain fashion.
+
+And look! Through the gates and over the walls came pouring another
+flight of arrows! Will Scarlet and Will Stutely had watched and planned
+a rescue ever since the Sheriff and Robin rode back down the hill. Now
+in good time they came; and the Sheriff’s demoralized force turned tail
+and ran, while Robin and Little John stood under the harmless gallows,
+and sped swift arrows after them, and laughed to see them go.
+
+Then they joined their comrades and hasted back to the good greenwood,
+and there rested. They had got enough sport for one day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+HOW MAID MARIAN CAME BACK TO SHERWOOD FOREST; ALSO, HOW ROBIN HOOD CAME
+BEFORE QUEEN ELEANOR.
+
+ But Robin Hood, he himself had disguis’d,
+ And Marian was strangely attir’d,
+ That they proved foes, and so fell to blows,
+ Whose valor bold Robin admir’d.
+
+ And when he came at London’s court,
+ He fell down on his knee.
+ “Thou art welcome, Lockesley,” said the Queen,
+ “And all thy good yeomandree.”
+
+Now it fell out that one day not long thereafter, Robin was minded to
+try his skill at hunting. And not knowing whom he might meet in his
+rambles, he stained his face and put on a sorry-looking jacket and a
+long cloak before he sallied forth. As he walked, the peacefulness of
+the morning came upon him, and brought back to his memory the early days
+so long ago when he had roamed these same glades with Marian. How sweet
+they seemed to him now, and how far away! Marian, too, the dainty friend
+of his youth--would he ever see her again? He had thought of her very
+often of late, and each time with increasing desire to hear her clear
+voice and musical laugh, and see her eyes light up at his coming.
+
+Perhaps the happiness of Allen-a-Dale and his lady had caused Robin’s
+heart-strings to vibrate more strongly; perhaps, too, the coming of
+Will Scarlet. But, certes, Robin was anything but a hunter this bright
+morning as he walked along with head drooping in a most love-lorn way.
+
+Presently a hart entered the glade in full view of him, grazing
+peacefully, and instantly the man of action awoke. His bow was drawn
+and a shaft all but loosed, when the beast fell suddenly, pierced by a
+clever arrow from the far side of the glade.
+
+Then a handsome little page sprang gleefully from the covert and ran
+toward the dying animal. This was plainly the archer, for he flourished
+his bow aloft, and likewise bore a sword at his side, though for all
+that he looked a mere lad.
+
+Robin approached the hart from the other side.
+
+“How dare you shoot the King’s beasts, stripling?” he asked severely.
+
+“I have as much right to shoot them as the King himself,” answered the
+page haughtily. “How dare you question me?”
+
+The voice stirred Robin strongly. It seemed to chime into his memories
+of the old days. He looked at the page sharply, and the other returned
+the glance, straight and unafraid.
+
+“Who are you, my lad?” Robin said more civilly.
+
+“No lad of yours, and my name’s my own,” retorted the other with spirit.
+
+“Softly! Fair and softly, sweet page, or we of the forest will have to
+teach you manners!” said Robin.
+
+“Not if _you_ stand for the forest!” cried the page, whipping out his
+sword. “Come, draw, and defend yourself!”
+
+He swung his blade valiantly; and Robin saw nothing for it but to draw
+likewise. The page thereupon engaged him quite fiercely, and Robin found
+that he had many pretty little tricks at fencing.
+
+Nathless, Robin contented himself with parrying, and was loth to exert
+all his superior strength upon the lad. So the fight lasted for above a
+quarter of an hour, at the end of which time the page was almost spent
+and the hot blood flushed his cheeks in a most charming manner.
+
+The outlaw saw his distress, and to end the fight allowed himself to be
+pricked slightly on the wrist.
+
+“Are you satisfied, fellow?” asked the page, wincing a little at sight
+of the blood.
+
+“Aye, honestly,” replied Robin; “and now perhaps you will grant me the
+honor of knowing to whom I owe this scratch?”
+
+“I am Richard Partington, page to Her Majesty, Queen Eleanor,” answered
+the lad with dignity; and again the sound of his voice troubled Robin
+sorely.
+
+“Why come you to the greenwood alone, Master Partington?”
+
+The lad considered his answer while wiping his sword with a small lace
+kerchief. The action brought a dim confused memory to Robin. The lad
+finally looked him again in the eye.
+
+“Forester, whether or no you be a King’s man, know that I seek one Robin
+Hood, an outlaw, to whom I bring amnesty from the Queen. Can you tell me
+aught of him?” And while awaiting his answer, he replaced the kerchief
+in his shirt. As he did so, the gleam of a golden trophy caught the
+outlaw’s eye.
+
+Robin started forward with a joyful cry.
+
+“Ah! I know you now! By the sight of yon golden arrow won at the
+Sheriff’s tourney, you are she on whom I bestowed it, and none other
+than Maid Marian!”
+
+“You--are--?” gasped Marian, for it was she; “not Robin!”
+
+“Robin’s self!” said he gaily; and forthwith, clad as he was in rags,
+and stained of face, he clasped the dainty page close to his breast, and
+she forsooth yielded right willingly.
+
+“But Robin!” she exclaimed presently, “I knew you not, and was rude, and
+wounded you!”
+
+“‘Twas nothing,” he replied laughingly, “so long as it brought me you.”
+
+But she made more ado over the sore wrist than Robin had received for
+all his former hurts put together. And she bound it with the little
+kerchief, and said, “Now ‘twill get well!” and Robin was convinced she
+spoke the truth, for he never felt better in all his life. The whole
+woods seemed tinged with a roseate hue, since Marian had come again.
+
+But she, while happy also, was ill at ease; and Robin with a man’s slow
+discernment at last saw that it was because of her boy’s attire. He
+thought bluntly that there was naught to be ashamed of, yet smilingly
+handed her his tattered long cloak, which she blushingly put on, and
+forthwith recovered her spirits directly.
+
+Then they began to talk of each other’s varied fortunes, and of the many
+things which had parted them; and so much did they find to tell that the
+sun had begun to decline well into the afternoon before they realized
+how the hours sped.
+
+“I am but a sorry host!” exclaimed Robin, springing to his feet. “I have
+not once invited you to my wild roof.”
+
+“And I am but a sorry page,” replied Marian; “for I had clean forgot
+that I was Richard Partington, and really did bring you a message from
+Queen Eleanor!”
+
+“Tell me on our way home, and there you shall be entrusted to Mistress
+Dale. While the first of my men we meet will I send back for your deer.”
+
+So she told him, as they walked back through the glade, how that the
+fame of his prowess had reached Queen Eleanor’s ears, in London town.
+And the Queen had said, “Fain would I see this bold yeoman, and behold
+his skill at the long-bow.” And the Queen had promised him amnesty if
+he and four of his archers would repair to London against the next
+tournament the week following, there to shoot against King Henry’s
+picked men, of whom the King was right vain. All this Marian told in
+detail, and added:
+
+“When I heard Her Majesty say she desired to see you, I asked leave
+to go in search of you, saying I had known you once. And the Queen was
+right glad, and bade me go, and sent this gold ring to you from off her
+finger, in token of her faith.”
+
+Then Robin took the ring and bowed his head and kissed it loyally. “By
+this token will I go to London town,” quoth he, “and ere I part with
+the Queen’s pledge, may the hand that bears it be stricken off at the
+wrist!” By this time they were come to the grove before the cave,
+and Robin presented Maid Marian to the band, who treated her with the
+greatest respect. Will Scarlet was especially delighted to greet again
+his old time friend, while Allan-a-Dale and his good wife bustled about
+to make her welcome in their tiny thatched cottage.
+
+That evening after they had supped royally upon the very hart that
+Marian had slain, Allan sang sweet songs of Northern minstrelsy to the
+fair guest as she sat by Robin’s side, the golden arrow gleaming in
+her dark hair. The others all joined in the chorus, from Will Scarlet’s
+baritone to Friar Tuck’s heavy bass. Even Little John essayed to sing,
+although looked at threateningly by Much the miller’s son.
+
+Then Robin bade Marian repeat her message from the Queen, which Marian
+did in a way befitting the dignity of her royal mistress. After which
+the yeomen gave three cheers for the Queen and three more for her page,
+and drank toasts to them both, rising to their feet.
+
+“Ye have heard,” quoth Robin standing forth, “how that Her Majesty--whom
+God preserve!--wishes but four men to go with me. Wherefore, I choose
+Little John and Will Stutely, my two lieutenants, Will Scarlet, my
+cousin, and Allan-a-Dale, my minstrel. Mistress Dale, also, can go with
+her husband and be company for the Queen’s page. We will depart with
+early morning, decked in our finest. So stir ye, my lads! and see that
+not only your tunics are fresh, but your swords bright and your bows
+and arrows fit. For we must be a credit to the Queen as well as the good
+greenwood. You, Much, with Stout Will, Lester, and John, the widow’s
+three sons, shall have command of the band while we are away; and Friar
+Tuck shall preside over the needs of your souls and stomachs.”
+
+The orders were received with shouts of approval, and toasts all around
+were drunk again in nut-brown ale, ere the company dispersed to rest
+after making ready for the journey.
+
+The next morning was as fine a summer’s day as ever you want to see, and
+the green leaves of the forest made a pleasing background for the gay
+picture of the yeomen setting forth. Says the old ballad--it was a
+seemly sight to see how Robin Hood himself had dressed, and all his
+yeomanry. He clothed his men in Lincoln green, and himself in scarlet
+red, with hats of black and feathers white to bravely deck each head.
+Nor were the two ladies behind-hand, I ween, at the bedecking.
+
+Thus the chosen party of seven sallied forth being accompanied to the
+edge of the wood by the whole band, who gave them a merry parting and
+Godspeed!
+
+The journey to London town was made without incident. The party
+proceeded boldly along the King’s highroad, and no man met them who was
+disposed to say them nay. Besides, the good Queen’s warrant and ring
+would have answered for them, as indeed it did at the gates of London.
+So on they sped and in due course came to the palace itself and awaited
+audience with the Queen.
+
+Now the King had gone that day to Finsbury Field, where the tourney was
+soon to be held, in order to look over the lists and see some of his
+picked men whom he expected to win against all comers. So much had he
+boasted of these men, that the Queen had secretly resolved to win a
+wager of him. She had heard of the fame of Robin Hood and his yeomen, as
+Marian had said; and Marian on her part had been overjoyed to be able to
+add a word in their favor and to set out in search of them.
+
+To-day the Queen sat in her private audience-room chatting pleasantly
+with her ladies, when in came Mistress Marian Fitzwalter attired again
+as befitted her rank of lady-in-waiting. She courtesied low to the Queen
+and awaited permission to speak.
+
+“How now!” said the Queen smiling; “is this my lady Marian, or the page,
+Richard Partington?”
+
+“Both, an it please Your Majesty. Richard found the man you sought,
+while Marian brought him to you.”
+
+“Where is he?” asked Queen Eleanor eagerly.
+
+“Awaiting your audience--he and four of his men, likewise a lady of
+whose wooing and wedding I can tell you a pretty story at another time.”
+
+“Have them admitted.”
+
+So Marian gave orders to a herald, and presently Robin Hood and his
+little party entered the room.
+
+Now the Queen had half-expected the men to be rude and uncouth in
+appearance, because of their wild life in the forest; but she was
+delightfully disappointed. Indeed she started back in surprise and
+almost clapped her hands. For, sooth to say, the yeomen made a brave
+sight, and in all the court no more gallant men could be found. Marian
+felt her cheeks glow with pride, at sight of the half-hidden looks of
+admiration sent forth by the other ladies-in-waiting.
+
+Robin had not forgot the gentle arts taught by his mother, and he wore
+his fine red velvet tunic and breeches with the grace of a courtier.
+We have seen, before, what a dandified gentleman Will Scarlet was; and
+Allan-a-Dale, the minstrel, was scarcely less goodly to look upon.
+While the giant Little John and broad-shouldered Will Stutely made up in
+stature what little they lacked in outward polish. Mistress Dale, on her
+part, looked even more charming, if possible, than on the momentous day
+when she went to Plympton Church to marry one man and found another.
+
+Thus came the people of the greenwood before Queen Eleanor, in her own
+private audience room. And Robin advanced and knelt down before her, and
+said:
+
+“Here I am, Robin Hood--I and my chosen men! At Your Majesty’s bidding
+am I come, bearing the ring of amnesty which I will protect--as I would
+protect Your Majesty’s honor--with my life!”
+
+“Thou art welcome, Lockesley,” said the Queen smiling graciously.
+
+“Thou art come in good time, thou and all thy brave yeomanry.”
+
+Then Robin presented each of his men in turn, and each fell on his
+knee and was greeted with most kindly words. And the Queen kissed fair
+Mistress Dale upon the cheek, and bade her remain in the palace with her
+ladies while she was in the city. And she made all the party be seated
+to rest themselves after their long journey. Fine wines were brought,
+and cake, and rich food, for their refreshment. And as they ate and
+drank, the Queen told them further of the tourney to be held at Finsbury
+Field, and of how she desired them to wear her colors and shoot for her.
+Meantime, she concluded, they were to lie by quietly and be known of no
+man.
+
+To do all this, Robin and his men pledged themselves full heartily. Then
+at the Queen’s request, they related to her and her ladies some of their
+merry adventures; whereat the listeners were vastly entertained, and
+laughed heartily. Then Marian, who had heard of the wedding at Plympton
+Church, told it so drolly that tears stood in the Queen’s eyes from
+merriment.
+
+“My lord Bishop of Hereford!” she said, “‘Twas indeed a comical business
+for him! I shall keep that to twit his bones, I promise you! So this is
+our minstrel?” she added presently, turning to Allan-a-Dale. “Methinks I
+have already heard of him. Will he not harp awhile for us to-day?”
+
+Allan bowed low, and took a harp which was brought to him, and he
+thrummed the strings and sang full sweetly the border songs of the North
+Countree. And the Queen and all her ladies listened in rapt silence till
+all the songs were ended.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HOW THE OUTLAWS SHOT IN KING HARRY’S TOURNEY
+
+ The King is into Finsbury Field
+ Marching in battle ‘ray,
+ And after follows bold Robin Hood,
+ And all his yeomen gay.
+
+The morning of the great archery contest dawned fair and bright,
+bringing with it a fever of impatience to every citizen of London town,
+from the proudest courtier to the lowest kitchen wench. Aye, and all the
+surrounding country was early awake, too, and began to wend their way to
+Finsbury Field, a fine broad stretch of practice ground near Moorfields.
+Around three sides of the Field were erected tier upon tier of seats,
+for the spectators, with the royal boxes and booths for the nobility
+and gentry in the center. Down along one end were pitched gaily colored
+tents for the different bands of King’s archers. There were ten of
+these bands, each containing a score of men headed by a captain of great
+renown; so to-day there were ten of the pavilions, each bearing aloft
+the Royal Arms and vari-colored pennants which fluttered lightly in the
+fresh morning breeze.
+
+Each captain’s flag was of peculiar color and device. First came the
+royal purple streamer of Tepus, own bow-bearer to the King, and esteemed
+the finest archer in all the land. Then came the yellow of Clifton of
+Buckinghamshire; and the blue of Gilbert of the White Hand--he who was
+renowned in Nottinghamshire; and the green of Elwyn the Welshman; and
+the White of Robert of Cloudesdale; and, after them, five other captains
+of bands, each a man of proved prowess. As the Queen had said aforetime,
+the King was mightily proud of his archers, and now held this tourney to
+show their skill and, mayhap, to recruit their forces.
+
+The uprising tiers of seats filled early, upon this summer morning, and
+the merry chatter of the people went abroad like the hum of bees in a
+hive. The royal party had not yet put in an appearance, nor were any
+of the King’s archers visible. So the crowd was content to hide its
+impatience by laughing jibes passed from one section to another, and
+crying the colors of their favorite archers. In and out among the seats
+went hawkers, their arms laden with small pennants to correspond with
+the rival tents. Other vendors of pie and small cakes and cider also did
+a thrifty business, for so eager had some of the people been to get good
+seats, that they had rushed away from home without their breakfast.
+
+Suddenly the gates at the far end, next the tents, opened wide, and a
+courier in scarlet and gold, mounted upon a white horse, rode in
+blowing lustily upon the trumpet at his lips; and behind him came six
+standard-bearers riding abreast. The populace arose with a mighty cheer.
+King Harry had entered the arena. He bestrode a fine white charger
+and was clad in a rich dark suit of slashed velvet with satin and gold
+facings. His hat bore a long curling ostrich plume of pure white and he
+doffed it graciously in answer to the shouts of the people. By his
+side rode Queen Eleanor, looking regal and charming in her long brocade
+riding-habit; while immediately behind them came Prince Richard and
+Prince John, each attired in knightly coats of mail and helmets. Lords
+and ladies of the realm followed; and finally, the ten companies of
+archers, whose progress round the field was greeted with hardly less
+applause than that given the King himself.
+
+The King and Queen dismounted from their steeds, ascended the steps
+of the royal box, and seated themselves upon two thrones, decked with
+purple and gold trapping, upon a dais sheltered by striped canvas. In
+the booths at each side the members of the Court took their places;
+while comely pages ran hither and thither bearing the royal commands.
+‘Twas a lordly sight, I ween, this shifting of proud courtiers, flashing
+of jeweled fans, and commingling of bright colors with costly gems!
+
+Now the herald arose to command peace, and soon the clear note of his
+bugle rose above the roar of the crowd and hushed it to silence. The
+tenscore archers ranged themselves in two long rows on each side of
+the lists--a gallant array--while their captains, as a special mark of
+favor, stood near the royal box.
+
+“Come hither, Tepus,” said the King to his bow-bearer. “Come, measure me
+out this line, how long our mark must be.”
+
+“What is the reward?” then asked the Queen.
+
+“That will the herald presently proclaim,” answered the King. “For first
+prize we have offered a purse containing twoscore golden pounds; for
+second, a purse containing twoscore silver pennies; and for third a
+silver bugle, inlaid with gold. Moreover, if the King’s companies keep
+these prizes, the winning companies shall have, first, two tuns of
+Rhenish wine; second, two tuns of English beer; and, third, five of
+the fattest harts that run on Dallom Lea. Methinks that is a princely
+wager,” added King Harry laughingly.
+
+Up spake bold Clifton, secure in the King’s favor. “Measure no marks for
+us, most sovereign liege,” quoth he; “for such largess as that, we’ll
+shoot at the sun and the moon.”
+
+“‘Twill not be so far as that,” said the King. “But get a line of good
+length, Tepus, and set up the targets at tenscore paces.”
+
+Forthwith, Tepus bowed low, and set up ten targets, each bearing the
+pennant of a different company, while the herald stood forth again and
+proclaimed the rules and prizes. The entries were open to all comers.
+Each man, also, of the King’s archers should shoot three arrows at the
+target bearing the colors of his band, until the best bowman in each
+band should be chosen. These ten chosen archers should then enter a
+contest for an open target--three shots apiece--and here any other
+bowman whatsoever was asked to try his skill. The result at the open
+targets should decide the tourney.
+
+Then all the people shouted again, in token that the terms of the
+contest pleased them; and the archers waved their bows aloft, and
+wheeled into position facing their respective targets.
+
+The shooting now began, upon all the targets at once, and the multitude
+had so much ado to watch them, that they forgot to shout. Besides,
+silence was commanded during the shooting. Of all the fine shooting that
+morning, I have not now space to tell you. The full score of men shot
+three times at each target, and then three times again to decide a tie.
+For, more than once, the arrow shot by one man would be split wide
+open by his successor. Every man’s shaft bore his number to ease the
+counting; and so close would they stick at the end of a round, that the
+target looked like a big bristle hairbrush. Then must the spectators
+relieve their tense spirits by great cheering; while the King looked
+mighty proud of his skilled bowmen.
+
+At last the company targets were decided, and Tepus, as was expected,
+led the score, having made six exact centers in succession. Gilbert
+of the White Hand followed with five, and Clifton with four. Two other
+captains had touched their center four times, but not roundly. While in
+the other companies it so chanced that the captains had been out-shot by
+some of the men under them.
+
+The winners then saluted the King and Queen, and withdrew for a space to
+rest and renew their bow-strings for the keenest contest of all; while
+the lists were cleared and a new target--the open one--was set up at
+twelvescore paces. At the bidding of the King, the herald announced
+that the open target was to be shot at, to decide the title of the best
+archer in all England; and any man there present was privileged to try
+for it. But so keen had been the previous shooting, that many yeomen who
+had come to enter the lists now would not do so; and only a dozen men
+stepped forth to give in their names.
+
+“By my halidom!” said the King, “these must be hardy men to pit
+themselves against my archers!”
+
+“Think you that your ten chosen fellows are the best bowmen in all
+England?” asked the Queen.
+
+“Aye, and in all the world beside,” answered the King; “and thereunto I
+would stake five hundred pounds.”
+
+“I am minded to take your wager,” said the Queen musingly, “and will
+e’en do so if you grant me a boon.”
+
+“What is it?” asked the King.
+
+“If I produce five archers who can out-shoot your ten, will you grant my
+men full grace and amnesty?”
+
+“Assuredly!” quoth the King in right good humor. “Nathless, I tell you
+now, your wager is in jeopardy, for there never were such bowmen as
+Tepus and Clifton and Gilbert!”
+
+“Hum!” said the Queen puckering her brow, still as though lost in
+thought. “I must see if there be none present to aid me in my wager.
+Boy, call hither Sir Richard of the Lea and my lord Bishop of Hereford!”
+
+The two summoned ones, who had been witnessing the sport, came forward.
+
+“Sir Richard,” said she, “thou art a full knight and good. Would’st
+advise me to meet a wager of the King’s, that I can produce other
+archers as good as Tepus and Gilbert and Clifton?”
+
+“Nay, Your Majesty,” he said, bending his knee. “There be none present
+that can match them. Howbeit,”--he added dropping his voice--“I have
+heard of some who lie hid in Sherwood Forest who could show them strange
+targets.”
+
+The Queen smiled and dismissed him.
+
+“Come hither, my lord Bishop of Hereford,” quoth she, “would’st thou
+advance a sum to support my wager ‘gainst the King?”
+
+“Nay, Your Majesty,” said the fat Bishop, “an you pardon me, I’d not lay
+down a penny on such a bet. For by my silver mitre, the King’s archers
+are men who have no peers.”
+
+“But suppose I found men whom _thou knewest_ to be masters at the bow,”
+ she insisted roguishly, “would’st thou not back them? Belike, I have
+heard that there be men round about Nottingham and Plympton who carry
+such matters with a high hand!”
+
+The Bishop glanced nervously around, as if half expecting to see Robin
+Hood’s men standing near; then turned to find the Queen looking at him
+with much amusement lurking in her eyes.
+
+“Odds bodikins! The story of my misadventure must have preceded me!” he
+thought, ruefully. Aloud he said, resolved to face it out,
+
+“Your Majesty, such tales are idle and exaggerated. An you pardon me, I
+would add to the King’s wager that his men are invincible.”
+
+“As it pleases thee,” replied the Queen imperturbably. “How much?”
+
+“Here is my purse,” said the Bishop uneasily. “It contains fifteen score
+nobles, or near a hundred pounds.”
+
+“I’ll take it at even money,” she said, dismissing him; “and Your
+Majesty”--turning to the King who had been conversing with the two
+princes and certain of the nobles--“I accept your wager of five hundred
+pounds.”
+
+“Very good,” said the King, laughing as though it were a great jest.
+“But what had minded you to take such interest in the sport, of a
+sudden?”
+
+“It is as I have said. I have found five men whom I will pit against any
+you may produce.”
+
+“Then we will try their skill speedily,” quoth the King. “How say you,
+if first we decide this open target and then match the five best thereat
+against your unknown champions?”
+
+“Agreed,” said the Queen. Thereupon she signed to Maid Marian to
+step forward, from a near-by booth where she sat with other
+ladies-in-waiting, and whispered something in her ear. Marian courtesied
+and withdrew.
+
+Now the ten chosen archers from the King’s bands came forth again and
+took their stand; and with them stood forth the twelve untried men from
+the open lists. Again the crowd was stilled, and every eye hung upon the
+speeding of the shafts. Slowly but skilfully each man shot, and as
+his shaft struck within the inner ring a deep breath broke from the
+multitude like the sound of the wind upon the seashore. And now Gilbert
+of the White Hand led the shooting, and ‘twas only by the space of a
+hairsbreadth upon the line that Tepus tied his score. Stout Elwyn, the
+Welshman, took third place; one of the private archers, named Geoffrey,
+come fourth; while Clifton must needs content himself with fifth.
+
+The men from the open lists shot fairly true, but nervousness and fear
+of ridicule wrought their undoing.
+
+The herald then came forward again, and, instead of announcing the
+prize-winners, proclaimed that there was to be a final contest. Two
+men had tied for first place, declared His Majesty the King, and three
+others were entitled to honors. Now all these five were to shoot
+again, and they were to be pitted against five other of the Queen’s
+choosing--men who had not yet shot upon that day.
+
+A thrill of astonishment and excitement swept around the arena. “Who
+were these men of the Queen’s choosing?” was upon every lip. The hubbub
+of eager voices grew intense; and in the midst of it all, the gate at
+the far end of the field opened and five men entered and escorted a lady
+upon horseback across the arena to the royal box. The lady was instantly
+recognized as Mistress Marian of the Queen’s household, but no one
+seemed to know the faces of her escort. Four were clad in Lincoln green,
+while the fifth, who seemed to be the leader, was dressed in a brave
+suit of scarlet red. Each man wore a close fitting cap of black, decked
+with a curling white feather. For arms, they carried simply a stout bow,
+a sheaf of new arrows, and a short hunting-knife.
+
+When the little party came before the dais on which the King and Queen
+sat, the yeomen doffed their caps humbly, while Maid Marian was assisted
+to dismount.
+
+“Your Gracious Majesty,” she said, addressing the Queen, “these be the
+men for whom you sent me, and who are now come to wear your colors and
+service you in the tourney.”
+
+The Queen leaned forward and handed them each a scarf of green and gold.
+
+“Lockesley,” she said in a clear voice, “I thank thee and thy men for
+this service. Know that I have laid a wager with the King that ye can
+outshoot the best five whom he has found in all his bowmen.” The five
+men pressed the scarfs to their lips in token of fealty.
+
+The King turned to the Queen inquiringly.
+
+“Who are these men you have brought before us?” asked he.
+
+Up came the worthy Bishop of Hereford, growing red and pale by turns.
+
+“Your pardon, my liege lord!” cried he; “But I must denounce these
+fellows as outlaws. Yon man in scarlet is none other than Robin Hood
+himself. The others are Little John and Will Stutely and Will Scarlet
+and Allan-a-Dale--all famous in the North Countree for their deeds of
+violence.”
+
+“As my lord Bishop personally knows!” added the Queen significantly.
+
+The King’s brows grew dark. The name of Robin Hood was well known to
+him, as to every man there present.
+
+“Is this true?” he demanded sternly.
+
+“Aye, my lord,” responded the Queen demurely. “But, bethink you--I have
+your royal promise of grace and amnesty.”
+
+“That will I keep,” said the King, holding in check his ire by a mighty
+effort. “But, look you! Only forty days do I grant of respite. When this
+time has elapsed, let these bold outlaws look to their safety!”
+
+Then turning to his five victorious archers, who had drawn near, he
+added, “Ye have heard, my men, how that I have a wager with the Queen
+upon your prowess. Now here be men of her choosing--certain free shafts
+of Sherwood and Barnesdale. Wherefore look well to it, Gilbert and Tepus
+and Geoffrey and Elwyn and Clifton! If ye outshoot these knaves, I will
+fill your caps with silver pennies--aye, and knight the man who stands
+first. But if ye lose, I give the prizes, for which ye have just
+striven, to Robin Hood and his men, according to my royal word.”
+
+“Robin Hood and his men!” the saying flew round the arena with the speed
+of wild-fire, and every neck craned forward to see the famous fellows
+who had dared to brave the King’s anger, because of the Queen.
+
+Another target was now set up, at the same distance as the last, and
+it was decided that the ten archers should shoot three arrows in turn.
+Gilbert and Robin tossed up a penny for the lead, and it fell to the
+King’s men. So Clifton was bidden to shoot first.
+
+Forth he stood, planting his feet firmly, and wetting his fingers before
+plucking the string. For he was resolved to better his losing score of
+that day. And in truth he did so, for the shaft he loosed sped true, and
+landed on the black bull’s-eye, though not in the exact center. Again he
+shot, and again he hit the black, on the opposite rim. The third shaft
+swerved downward and came within the second ring, some two fingers’
+breadths away. Nathless, a general cry went up, as this was the best
+shooting Clifton had done that day.
+
+Will Scarlet was chosen to follow him, and now took his place and
+carefully chose three round and full-feathered arrows.
+
+“Careful, my sweet coz!” quoth Robin in a low tone. “The knave has left
+wide space at the center for all of your darts.”
+
+But Robin gave Will the wrong caution, for over-much care spoiled
+his aim. His first shaft flew wide and lodged in the second ring even
+further away than the worst shot of Clifton.
+
+“Your pardon, coz!” quoth Robin hastily. “Bid care go to the bottom of
+the sea, and do you loose your string before it sticks to your fingers!”
+
+And Will profited by this hint, and loosed his next two shafts as
+freely as though they flew along a Sherwood glade. Each struck upon the
+bull’s-eye, and one even nearer the center than his rival’s mark. Yet
+the total score was adjudged in favor of Clifton. At this Will Scarlet
+bit his lip, but said no word, while the crowd shouted and waved yellow
+flags for very joy that the King’s man had overcome the outlaw. They
+knew, also, that this demonstration would please the King.
+
+The target was now cleared for the next two contestants--Geoffrey and
+Allan-a-Dale. Whereat, it was noticed that many ladies in the Queen’s
+booths boldly flaunted Allan’s colors, much to the honest pride which
+glowed in the cheeks of one who sat in their midst.
+
+“In good truth,” said more than one lady to Mistress Dale, “if thy
+husband can handle the longbow as skilfully as the harp, his rival has
+little show of winning!”
+
+The saying augured well. Geoffrey had shot many good shafts that day;
+and indeed had risen from the ranks by virtue of them. But now each of
+his three shots, though well placed in triangular fashion around the rim
+of the bull’s-eye, yet allowed an easy space for Allan to graze within.
+His shooting, moreover, was so prettily done, that he was right heartily
+applauded--the ladies and their gallants leading in the hand-clapping.
+
+Now you must know that there had long been a friendly rivalry in Robin
+Hood’s band as to who was the best shot, next after Robin himself. He
+and Will Stutely had lately decided their marksmanship, and Will had
+found that Robin’s skill was now so great as to place the leader at the
+head of all good bowmen in the forest. But the second place lay between
+Little John and Stutely, and neither wished to yield to the other. So
+to-day they looked narrowly at their leader to see who should shoot
+third. Robin read their faces at a glance, and laughing merrily, broke
+off two straws and held them out.
+
+“The long straw goes next!” he decided; and it fell to Stutely.
+
+Elwyn the Welshman was to precede him; and his score was no whit better
+than Geoffrey’s. But Stutely failed to profit by it. His besetting sin
+at archery had ever been an undue haste and carelessness. To-day these
+were increased by a certain moodiness, that Little John had outranked
+him. So his first two shafts flew swiftly, one after the other, to
+lodging places outside the Welshman’s mark.
+
+“Man! man!” cried Robin entreatingly, “you do forget the honor of the
+Queen, and the credit of Sherwood!”
+
+“I ask your pardon, master!” quoth Will humbly enough, and loosing as he
+spoke his last shaft. It whistled down the course unerringly and struck
+in the exact center--the best shot yet made.
+
+Now some shouted for Stutely and some shouted for Elwyn; but Elwyn’s
+total mark was declared the better. Whereupon the King turned to the
+Queen. “What say you now?” quoth he in some triumph. “Two out of the
+three first rounds have gone to my men. Your outlaws will have to shoot
+better than that in order to save your wager!”
+
+The Queen smiled gently.
+
+“Yea, my lord,” she said. “But the twain who are left are able to do the
+shooting. You forget that I still have Little John and Robin Hood.”
+
+“And you forget, my lady, that I still have Tepus and Gilbert.”
+
+So each turned again to the lists and awaited the next rounds in silent
+eagerness. I ween that King Harry had never watched the invasion of an
+enemy with more anxiety than he now felt.
+
+Tepus was chosen to go next and he fell into the same error with Will
+Scarlet. He held the string a moment too long, and both his first and
+second arrows came to grief. One of them, however, came within the black
+rim, and he followed it up by placing his third in the full center,
+just as Stutely had done in his last. These two centers were the fairest
+shots that had been made that day; and loud was the applause which
+greeted this second one. But the shouting was as nothing to the uproar
+which followed Little John’s shooting. That good-natured giant seemed
+determined to outdo Tepus by a tiny margin in each separate shot; for
+the first and the second shafts grazed his rival’s on the inner side,
+while for the third Little John did the old trick of the forest: he
+shot his own arrow in a graceful curve which descended from above upon
+Tepus’s final center shaft with a glancing blow that drove the other out
+and left the outlaw’s in its place.
+
+The King could scarce believe his eyes. “By my halidom!” quoth he, “that
+fellow deserves either a dukedom or a hanging! He must be in league with
+Satan himself! Never saw I such shooting.”
+
+“The score is tied, my lord,” said the Queen; “we have still to see
+Gilbert and Robin Hood.”
+
+Gilbert now took his stand and slowly shot his arrows, one after
+another, into the bull’s-eye. ‘Twas the best shooting he had yet
+done, but there was still the smallest of spaces left--if you looked
+closely--at the very center.
+
+“Well done, Gilbert!” spoke up Robin Hood. “You are a foeman worthy of
+being shot against.” He took his own place as he spoke. “Now if you had
+placed one of your shafts _there_”--loosing one of his own--“and another
+_there_”--out sped the second--“and another _there_”--the third was
+launched--“mayhap the King would have declared you the best bowman in
+all England!”
+
+But the last part of his merry speech was drowned in the wild tumult
+of applause which followed his exploit. His first two shafts had packed
+themselves into the small space left at the bull’s-eye; while his third
+had split down between them, taking half of each, and making all three
+appear from a distance, as one immense arrow.
+
+Up rose the King in amazement and anger.
+
+“Gilbert is not yet beaten!” he cried. “Did he not shoot within the mark
+thrice? And that is allowed a best in all the rules of archery.”
+
+Robin bowed low.
+
+“As it please Your Majesty!” quoth he. “But may I be allowed to place
+the mark for the second shooting?”
+
+The King waved his hand sullenly.. Thereupon Robin prepared another old
+trick of the greenwood, and got him a light, peeled willow wand which he
+set in the ground in place of the target.
+
+“There, friend Gilbert,” called he gaily; “belike you can hit that!”
+
+“I can scarce see it from here,” said Gilbert, “much less hit it.
+Nathless, for the King’s honor, I will try.”
+
+But this final shot proved his undoing, and his shaft flew harmlessly
+by the thin white streak. Then came Robin to his stand again, and picked
+his arrow with exceeding care, and tried his string. Amid a breathless
+pause he drew the good yew bow back to his ear, glanced along the shaft,
+and let the feathered missile fly. Straight it sped, singing a keen note
+of triumph as it went. The willow wand was split in twain, as though it
+had met a hunter’s knife.
+
+“Verily, I think your bow is armed with witchcraft!” cried Gilbert. “For
+I did not believe such shooting possible.”
+
+“You should come to see our merry lads in the greenwood,” retorted Robin
+lightly. “For willow wands do not grow upon the cobblestones of London
+town.”
+
+Meanwhile the King in great wrath had risen to depart, first signing the
+judges to distribute the prizes. Never a word said he, of good or
+ill, to the Queen, but mounted his horse and, followed by his sons and
+knights, rode off the field. The archers dropped upon one knee as he
+passed, but he gave them a single baleful look and was gone.
+
+Then the Queen beckoned the outlaws to approach, and they did so and
+knelt at her feet.
+
+“Right well have ye served me,” she said, “and sorry am I that the
+King’s anger is aroused thereby. But fear ye not. His word and grace
+hold true. As to these prizes ye have gained, I add others of mine
+own--the wagers I have won from His Majesty the King and from the lord
+Bishop of Hereford. Buy with some of these moneys the best swords ye
+can find in London, for all your band, and call them the swords of the
+Queen. And swear with them to protect all the poor and the helpless and
+the women--kind who come your way.”
+
+“We swear,” said the five yeomen solemnly.
+
+Then the Queen gave each of them her hand to kiss, and arose and
+departed with all her ladies. And after they were gone, the King’s
+archers came crowding around Robin and his men, eager to get a glimpse
+of the fellows about whom they had heard so much. And back of them came
+a great crowd of the spectators pushing and jostling in their efforts to
+come nearer.
+
+“Verily!” laughed Little John, “they must take us for a Merry Andrew
+show!”
+
+Now the judges came up, and announced each man his prize, according
+to the King’s command. To Robin was give the purse containing twoscore
+golden pounds; to Little John the twoscore silver pennies; and to
+Allan-a-Dale the fine inlaid bugle, much to his delight, for he was
+skilled at blowing sweet tunes upon the horn hardly less than handling
+the harp strings. But when the Rhenish wine and English beer and harts
+of Dallom Lea were spoken of, Robin said:
+
+“Nay, what need we of wine or beer, so far from the greenwood? And
+‘twould be like carrying coals to Newcastle, to drive those harts to
+Sherwood! Now Gilbert and Tepus and their men have shot passing well.
+Wherefore, the meat and drink must go to them, an they will accept it of
+us.”
+
+“Right gladly,” replied Gilbert grasping his hand. “Ye are good men
+all, and we will toast you every one, in memory of the greatest day at
+archery that England has ever seen, or ever will see!”
+
+Thus said all the King’s archers, and the hand of good-fellowship was
+given amid much shouting and clapping on the shoulder-blades.
+
+And so ended King Harry’s tourney, whose story has been handed down from
+sire to son, even unto the present day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS SOUGHT OF THE TINKER
+
+ And while the tinker fell asleep,
+ Robin made haste away,
+ And left the tinker in the lurch,
+ For the great shot to pay.
+
+King Henry was as good as his word. Robin Hood and his party were
+suffered to depart from London--the parting bringing keen sorrow to
+Marian--and for forty days no hand was raised against them. But at
+the end of that time, the royal word was sent to the worthy Sheriff at
+Nottingham that he must lay hold upon the outlaws without further delay,
+as he valued his office.
+
+Indeed, the exploits of Robin and his band, ending with the great
+tourney in Finsbury Field, had made a mighty stir through all England,
+and many there were to laugh boldly at the Nottingham official for his
+failures to capture the outlaws.
+
+The Sheriff thereupon planned three new expeditions into the greenwood,
+and was even brave enough to lead them, since he had fifteen-score men
+at his beck and call each time. But never the shadow of an outlaw did
+he see, for Robin’s men lay close, and the Sheriff’s men knew not how to
+come at their chief hiding-place in the cove before the cavern.
+
+Now the Sheriff’s daughter had hated Robin Hood bitterly in her heart
+ever since the day he refused to bestow upon her the golden arrow, and
+shamed her before all the company. His tricks, also, upon her father
+were not calculated to lessen her hatred, and so she sought about for
+means to aid the Sheriff in catching the enemy.
+
+“There is no need to go against this man with force of arms,” she said.
+“We must meet his tricks with other tricks of our own.”
+
+“Would that we could!” groaned the Sheriff. “The fellow is becoming a
+nightmare unto me.”
+
+“Let me plan a while,” she replied. “Belike I can cook up some scheme
+for his undoing.”
+
+“Agreed,” said the Sheriff, “and if anything comes of your planning,
+I will e’en give you an hundred silver pennies for a new gown, and a
+double reward to the man who catches the outlaws.”
+
+Now upon that same day, while the Sheriff’s daughter was racking her
+brains for a scheme, there came to the Mansion House a strolling tinker
+named Middle, a great gossip and braggart. And as he pounded away upon
+some pots and pans in the scullery, he talked loudly about what _he_
+would do, if he once came within reach of that rascal Robin Hood.
+
+“It might be that this simple fellow could do something through his
+very simplicity,” mused the Sheriff’s daughter, overhearing his prattle.
+“Odds bodikins! ‘twill do no harm to try his service, while I bethink
+myself of some better plan.”
+
+And she called him to her, and looked him over--a big brawny fellow
+enough, with an honest look about the eye, and a countenance so open
+that when he smiled his mouth seemed the only country on the map.
+
+“I am minded to try your skill at outlaw catching,” she said, “and will
+add goodly measure to the stated reward if you succeed. Do you wish to
+make good your boasted prowess?”
+
+The tinker grinned broadly.
+
+“Yes, your ladyship,” he said.
+
+“Then here is a warrant made out this morning by the Sheriff himself.
+See that you keep it safely and use it to good advantage.”
+
+And she dismissed him.
+
+Middle departed from the house mightily pleased with himself, and
+proud of his commission. He swung his crab-tree-staff recklessly in his
+glee--so recklessly that he imperiled the shins of more than one angry
+passer-by--and vowed he’d crack the ribs of Robin Hood with it, though
+he was surrounded by every outlaw in the whole greenwood.
+
+Spurred on by the thoughts of his own coming bravery, he left the town
+and proceeded toward Barnesdale. The day was hot and dusty, and at
+noontime he paused at a wayside inn to refresh himself. He began by
+eating and drinking and dozing, in turn, then sought to do all at once.
+
+Mine host of the “Seven Does” stood by, discussing the eternal Robin
+with a drover.
+
+“Folk do say that my lord Sheriff has sent into Lincoln for more
+men-at-arms and horses, and that when he has these behind him, he’ll
+soon rid the forest of these fellows.”
+
+“Of whom speak you?” asked the tinker sitting up.
+
+“Of Robin Hood and his men,” said the host; “but go to sleep again. You
+will never get the reward!”
+
+“And why not?” asked the tinker, rising with great show of dignity.
+
+“Where our Sheriff has failed, and the stout Guy of Gisborne, and many
+more beside, it behoves not a mere tinker to succeed.”
+
+The tinker laid a heavy hand upon the innkeeper’s fat shoulder, and
+tried to look impressive.
+
+“There is your reckoning, host, upon the table. I must e’en go upon my
+way, because I have more important business than to stand here gossiping
+with you. But be not surprised, if, the next time you see me, I shall
+have with me no less person than Robin Hood himself!”
+
+And he strode loftily out the door and walked up the hot white road
+toward Barnesdale.
+
+He had not gone above a quarter of a mile when he met a young man with
+curling brown hair and merry eyes. The young man carried his light cloak
+over his arm, because of the heat, and was unarmed save for a light
+sword at his side. The newcomer eyed the perspiring tinker in a friendly
+way, and seeing he was a stout fellow accosted him.
+
+“Good-day to you!” said he.
+
+“Good-day to you!” said the tinker; “and a morrow less heating.”
+
+“Aye,” laughed the other. “Whence come you? And know you the news?”
+
+“What is the news?” said the gossipy tinker, pricking up his ear; “I am
+a tinker by trade, Middle by name, and come from over against Banbury.”
+
+“Why as for the news,” laughed the stranger, “I hear that two tinkers
+were set i’ the stocks for drinking too much ale and beer.”
+
+“If that be all your news,” retorted Middle, “I can beat you clear to
+the end of the lane.”
+
+“What news have you? Seeing that you go from town to town, I ween you
+can outdo a poor country yokel at tidings.”
+
+“All I have to tell,” said the other, “is that I am especially
+commissioned”--he felt mightily proud of these big words--“especially
+commissioned to seek a bold outlaw which they call Robin Hood.”
+
+“So?” said the other arching his brows. “How ‘especially commissioned’?”
+
+“I have a warrant from the Sheriff, sealed with the King’s own seal, to
+take him where I can; and if you can tell me where he is, I will e’en
+make a man of you.”
+
+“Let me see the warrant,” said the other, “to satisfy myself if it be
+right; and I will do the best I can to bring him to you.”
+
+“That will I not,” replied the tinker; “I will trust none with it.
+And if you’ll not help me to come at him I must forsooth catch him by
+myself.”
+
+And he made his crab-tree-staff whistle shrill circles in the air.
+
+The other smiled at the tinker’s simplicity, and said:
+
+“The middle of the road on a hot July day is not a good place to talk
+things over. Now if you’re the man for me and I’m the man for you, let’s
+go back to the inn, just beyond the bend of road, and quench our thirst
+and cool our heads for thinking.”
+
+“Marry come up!” quoth the tinker. “That will I! For though I’ve just
+come from there, my thirst rises mightily at the sound of your voice.”
+
+So back he turned with the stranger and proceeded to the “Seven Does.”
+
+The landlord arched his eyebrows silently when he saw the two come in,
+but served them willingly.
+
+The tinker asked for wine, and Robin for ale. The wine was not the most
+cooling drink in the cellar, nor the clearest headed. Nathless, the
+tinker asked for it, since it was expensive and the other man had
+invited him to drink. They lingered long over their cups, Master Middle
+emptying one after another while the stranger expounded at great length
+on the best plans for coming at and capturing Robin Hood.
+
+In the end the tinker fell sound asleep while in the act of trying to
+get a tankard to his lips. Then the stranger deftly opened the snoring
+man’s pouch, took out the warrant, read it, and put it in his own
+wallet. Calling mine host to him, he winked at him with a half smile and
+told him that the tinker would pay the whole score when he awoke. Thus
+was Master Middle left in the lurch “for the great shot to pay.”
+
+Nathless, the stranger seemed in no great hurry. He had the whim to stay
+awhile and see what the droll tinker might do when he awoke. So he hid
+behind a window shutter, on the outside, and awaited events.
+
+Presently the tinker came to himself with a prodigious yawn, and reached
+at once for another drink.
+
+“What were you saying, friend, about the best plan (ya-a-a-ah!) for
+catching this fellow?--Hello!--where’s the man gone?”
+
+He had looked around and saw no one with him at the table.
+
+“Host! host!” he shouted, “where is that fellow who was to pay my
+reckoning?”
+
+“I know not,” answered the landlord sharply. “Mayhap he left the money
+in your purse.”
+
+“No he didn’t!” roared Middle, looking therein. “Help! Help! I’ve been
+robbed! Look you, host, you are liable to arrest for high treason! I am
+here upon the King’s business, as I told you earlier in the day. And yet
+while I did rest under your roof, thinking you were an honest man (hic!)
+and one loving of the King, my pouch has been opened and many matters of
+state taken from it.”
+
+“Cease your bellowing!” said the landlord. “What did you lose?”
+
+“Oh, many weighty matters, I do assure you. I had with me, item, a
+warrant, granted under the hand of my lord High Sheriff of Nottingham,
+and sealed with the Kings’s own seal, for the capture (hic!)--and
+arrest--and overcoming of a notorious rascal, one Robin Hood of
+Barnesdale. Item, one crust of bread. Item, one lump (hic!) of solder.
+Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six single keys (hic!), useful
+withal. Item, twelve silver pennies, the which I earned this week (hic!)
+in fair labor. Item--”
+
+“Have done with your items!” said the host. “And I marvel greatly to
+hear you speak in such fashion of your friend, Robin Hood of Barnesdale.
+For was he not with you in all good-fellowship?”
+
+“Wh-a-at? _That_ Robin Hood?” gasped Middle with staring eyes. “Why did
+you not tell me?”
+
+“Faith, _I_ saw no need o’ telling you! Did you not tell me the first
+time you were here to-day, that I need not be surprised if you came back
+with no less person than Robin Hood himself?”
+
+“Jesu give me pardon!” moaned the tinker. “I see it all now. He got me
+to drinking, and then took my warrant, and my pennies, and my crust--”
+
+“Yes, yes,” interrupted the host. “I know all about that. But pay me the
+score for both of you.”
+
+“But I have no money, gossip. Let me go after that vile bag-o’-bones,
+and I’ll soon get it out of him.”
+
+“Not so,” replied the other. “If I waited for you to collect from Robin
+Hood, I would soon close up shop.”
+
+“What is the account?” asked Middle.
+
+“Ten shillings, just.”
+
+“Then take here my working-bag and my good hammer too; and if I light
+upon that knave I will soon come back after them.”
+
+“Give me your leathern coat as well,” said mine host; “the hammer and
+bag of tools are as naught to me.”
+
+“Gramercy!” cried Master Middle, losing what was left of his temper.
+“It seems that I have escaped one thief only to fall into the hands of
+another. If you will but walk with me out into the middle of the road,
+I’ll give you such a crack as shall drive some honesty into your thick
+skull.”
+
+“You are wasting your breath and my time,” retorted the landlord.
+
+“Give me your things, and get you gone after your man, speedily.”
+
+Middle thought this to be good advice; so he strode forth from the
+“Seven Does” in a black mood.
+
+Ere he had gone half a mile, he saw Robin Hood walking demurely among
+the trees a little in front of him.
+
+“Ho there, you villain!” roared the tinker. “Stay your steps! I am
+desperately in need of you this day!”
+
+Robin turned about with a surprised face.
+
+“What knave is this?” he asked gently, “who comes shouting after me?”
+
+“No knave! no knave at all!” panted the other, rushing up. “But an
+honest--man--who would have--that warrant--and the money for drink!”
+
+“Why, as I live, it is our honest tinker who was seeking Robin Hood! Did
+you find him, gossip?”
+
+“Marry, that did I! and I’m now going to pay him my respects!”
+
+And he plunged at him, making a sweeping stroke with his
+crab-tree-cudgel.
+
+Robin tried to draw his sword, but could not do it for a moment through
+dodging the other’s furious blows. When he did get it in hand, the
+tinker had reached him thrice with resounding thwacks. Then the tables
+were turned, for he dashed in right manfully with his shining blade and
+made the tinker give back again.
+
+The greenwood rang with the noise of the fray. ‘Twas steel against
+wood, and they made a terrible clattering when they came together. Robin
+thought at first that he could hack the cudgel to pieces, for his blade
+was one of Toledo--finely tempered steel which the Queen had given him.
+But the crab-tree-staff had been fired and hardened and seasoned by the
+tinker’s arts until it was like a bar of iron--no pleasant neighbor for
+one’s ribs.
+
+Robin presently found this out to his sorrow. The long reach and long
+stick got to him when ‘twas impossible for him to touch his antagonist.
+So his sides began to ache sorely.
+
+“Hold your hand, tinker,” he said at length. “I cry a boon of you.”
+
+“Before I do it,” said the tinker, “I’d hang you on this tree.”
+
+But even as he spoke, Robin found the moment’s grace for which he
+longed; and immediately grasped his horn and blew the three well-known
+blasts of the greenwood.
+
+“A murrain seize you!” roared the tinker commencing afresh. “Up to your
+old tricks again, are you? Well, I’ll have time to finish my job, if I
+hurry.”
+
+But Robin was quite able to hold his own at a pinch, and they had not
+exchanged many lunges and passes when up came Little John and Will
+Scarlet and a score of yeomen at their heels. Middle was seized without
+ceremony, while Robin sat himself down to breathe. “What is the matter?”
+ quoth Little John, “that you should sit so weariedly upon the highway
+side?”
+
+“Faith, that rascally tinker yonder has paid his score well upon my
+hide,” answered Robin ruefully.
+
+“That tinker, then,” said Little John, “must be itching for more work.
+Fain would I try if he can do as much for me.”
+
+“Or me,” said Will Scarlet, who like Little John was always willing to
+swing a cudgel.
+
+“Nay,” laughed Robin. “Belike I could have done better, an he had given
+me time to pull a young tree up by the roots. But I hated to spoil
+the Queen’s blade upon his tough stick or no less tough hide. He had a
+warrant for my arrest which I stole from him.”
+
+“Also, item, twelve silver pennies,” interposed the tinker, unsubdued;
+“item, one crust of bread, ‘gainst my supper. Item, one lump of solder.
+Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six single keys. Item--”
+
+“Yes, I know,” quoth the merry Robin; “I stood outside the landlord’s
+window and heard you count over your losses. Here they are again; and
+the silver pennies are turned by magic into gold. Here also, if you
+will, is my hand.”
+
+“I take it heartily, with the pence!” cried Middle. “By my leathern coat
+and tools, which I shall presently have out of that sly host, I swear
+that I never yet met a man I liked as well as you! An you and your
+men here will take me, I swear I’ll serve you honestly. Do you want
+a tinker? Nay, but verily you must! Who else can mend and grind your
+swords and patch your pannikins--and fight, too, when occasion serve?
+Mend your pots! mend your pa-a-ans!”
+
+And he ended his speech with the sonorous cry of his craft.
+
+By this time the whole band was laughing uproariously at the tinker’s
+talk.
+
+“What say you, fellows?” asked Robin. “Would not this tinker be a good
+recruit?”
+
+“That he would!” answered Will Scarlet, clapping the new man on the
+back. “He will keep Friar Tuck and Much the miller’s son from having the
+blues.”
+
+So amid great merriment and right good fellowship the outlaws shook
+Middle by the hand, and he took oath of fealty, and thought no more of
+the Sheriff’s daughter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS TANNED OF THE TANNER
+
+ In Nottingham there lived a jolly tanner,
+ With a hey down, down, a down down!
+ His name was Arthur-a-Bland,
+ There was ne’er a squire in Nottinghamshire
+
+ Dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+ And as he went forth, in a summer’s morning,
+ With a hey down, down, a down down!
+ To the forest of merrie Sherwood,
+ To view the red deer, that range here and there,
+ There met he with bold Robin Hood.
+
+The Sheriff’s daughter bided for several days in the faint hope that she
+might hear tidings of the prattling tinker. But never a word heard she,
+and she was forced to the conclusion that her messenger had not so much
+as laid eyes upon the outlaw. Little recked she that he was, even then,
+grinding sword-points and sharpening arrows out in the good greenwood,
+while whistling blithely or chatting merrily with the good Friar Tuck.
+
+Then she bethought herself of another good man, one Arthur-a-Bland, a
+tanner who dwelt in Nottingham town and was far-famed in the tourneys
+round about. He had done some pretty tricks at archery, but was
+strongest at wrestling and the quarter-staff. For three years he had
+cast all comers to the earth in wrestling until the famous Eric
+o’ Lincoln broke a rib for him in a mighty tussle. Howsoever, at
+quarter-staff he had never yet met his match; so that there was never a
+squire in Nottinghamshire dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+
+ With a long pike-staff on his shoulder,
+ So well he could clear his way
+ That by two and three he made men flee
+ And none of them could stay.
+
+Thus at least runs the old song which tells of his might.
+
+“This is just the man for me!” thought the Sheriff’s daughter to
+herself; and she forthwith summoned him to the Mansion House and
+commissioned him to seek out Robin Hood.
+
+The warrant was quite to Arthur’s liking, for he was happiest when out
+in the forest taking a sly peep at the King’s deer; and now he reckoned
+that he could look at them boldly, instead of by the rays of the moon.
+He could say to any King’s Forester who made bold to stop him: “I am
+here on the King’s business!”
+
+“Gramercy! No more oak-bark and ditch-water and the smell of half-tanned
+hides to-day!” quoth he, gaily. “I shall e’en see what the free air of
+heaven tastes like, when it sweeps through the open wood.”
+
+So the tanner departed joyfully upon his errand, but much more
+interested in the dun deer of the forest than in any two-legged rovers
+therein. This interest had, in fact, caused the Foresters to keep a
+shrewd eye upon him in the past, for his tannery was apt to have plenty
+of meat in it that was more like venison than the law allowed. As for
+the outlaws, Arthur bore them no ill-will; indeed he had felt a secret
+envy in his heart at their free life; but he was not afraid to meet any
+two men who might come against him. Nathless, the Sheriff’s daughter did
+not choose a very good messenger, as you shall presently see.
+
+Away sped the tanner, a piece of bread and some wine in his wallet,
+a good longbow and arrows slung across his shoulder, his stout
+quarter-staff in his hand, and on his head a cap of trebled raw-hide so
+tough that it would turn the edge of a broadsword. He lost no time in
+getting out of the hot sun and into the welcome shade of the forest,
+where he stalked cautiously about seeking some sign of the dun deer.
+
+Now it so chanced that upon that very morning Robin Hood had sent Little
+John to a neighboring village to buy some cloth of Lincoln green for new
+suits for all the band. Some of the money recently won of the King
+was being spent in this fashion, ‘gainst the approach of winter. Will
+Scarlet had been sent on a similar errand to Barnesdale some time
+before, if you remember, only to be chased up the hill without his
+purchase. So to-day Little John was chosen, and for sweet company’s
+sake Robin went with him a part of the way until they came to the “Seven
+Does,” the inn where Robin had recently played his prank upon Middle the
+tinker. Here they drank a glass of ale to refresh themselves withal,
+and for good luck; and Robin tarried a bit while Little John went on his
+errand.
+
+Presently Robin entered the edge of the wood, when whom should he see
+but Arthur-a-Bland, busily creeping after a graceful deer that browsed
+alone down the glade. “Now by Saint George and the Dragon!” quoth Robin
+to himself. “I much fear that yon same fellow is a rascally poacher come
+after our own and the King’s meat!”
+
+For you must know, by a curious process of reasoning, Robin and his men
+had hunted in the royal preserves so long that they had come to consider
+themselves joint owners to every animal which roamed therein.
+
+“Nay!” he added, “this must be looked into! That cow-skin cap in sooth
+must hide a scurvy varlet!”
+
+And forthwith he crept behind a tree, and thence to another, stalking
+our friend Arthur as busily as Arthur was stalking the deer.
+
+This went on for quite a space, until the tanner began to come upon the
+deer and to draw his bow in order to tickle the victim’s ribs with a
+cloth-yard shaft. But just at this moment Robin unluckily trod upon a
+twig which snapped and caused the tanner to turn suddenly.
+
+Robin saw that he was discovered, so he determined to put a bold face on
+the matter, and went forward with some smart show of authority.
+
+“Hold!” he cried: “stay your hand! Why, who are you, bold fellow, to
+range so boldly here? In sooth, to be brief, ye look like a thief that
+has come to steal the King’s deer.”
+
+“Marry, it is scant concern of yours, what I look like!” retorted
+Arthur-a-Bland. “Who are you, who speak so bravely?”
+
+“You shall soon find out who I am!” quoth Robin, determining to find
+some sport in the matter. “I am a keeper of this forest. The King knows
+that I am looking after his deer for him; and therefore we must stay
+you.”
+
+“Have you any assistants, friend?” asked the tanner calmly. “For it is
+not one man alone who can stop me.”
+
+“Nay truly, gossip,” replied Robin. “I have a good yew bow, also a right
+sharp blade at my side. Nathless I need no better assistant than a good
+oak-graff like unto yours. Give me a baker’s dozen of minutes with
+it and it shall pleasure me to crack that pate of yours for your
+sauciness!”
+
+“Softly, my man! Fair and softly! Big words never killed so much as a
+mouse--least of all yon deer which has got away while you were filling
+all the woods with your noisy breath. So choose your own playthings. For
+your sword and your bow I care not a straw; nor for all your arrows to
+boot. If I get but a knock at you, ‘twill be as much as you’ll need.”
+
+“Now by our Lady! Will you listen to the braggart?” cried Robin in a
+fine rage. “Marry, but I’ll teach ye to be more mannerly!”
+
+So saying he unbuckled his belt; and, flinging his bow upon the ground
+he seized hold of a young sapling that was growing near by. His hunting
+knife soon had it severed and lopped into shape.
+
+“Now come, fellow!” said Arthur-a-Bland, seeing that he was ready. “And
+if I do not tan your hide for you in better shape than ever calf-skin
+was turned into top-boots, may a murrain seize me!”
+
+“Stay,” said Robin, “methinks my cudgel is half a foot longer than
+yours. I would have them of even length before you begin your tanning.”
+
+“I pass not for length,” bold Arthur replied; “my staff is long enough,
+as you will shortly find out. Eight foot and a half, and ‘twill knock
+down a calf”--here he made it whistle in the air--“and I hope it will
+knock down you.”
+
+Forthwith the two men spat on their hands, laid firm hold upon their
+cudgels and began slowly circling round each other, looking for an
+opening.
+
+Now it so chanced that Little John had fared expeditiously with his
+errand. He had met the merchant, from whom he was wont to buy Lincoln
+green, coming along the road; and had made known his wants in few words.
+The merchant readily undertook to deliver the suits by a certain day
+in the following month. So Little John, glad to get back to the cool
+shelter of the greenwood, hasted along the road lately taken by Robin.
+
+Presently he heard the sound of angry voices, one of which he recognized
+as his captain’s.
+
+“Now, Heaven forfend,” quoth he, “that Robin Hood has fallen into the
+clutches of a King’s man! I must take a peep at this fray.”
+
+So he cautiously made his way from tree to tree, as Robin had done, till
+he came to the little open space where Robin and Arthur were circling
+about each other with angry looks, like two dogs at bay.
+
+“Ha! this looks interesting!” muttered Little John to himself, for he
+loved a good quarter-staff bout above anything else in the world, and
+was the best man at it in all the greenwood. And he crawled quietly
+underneath a friendly bush--much as he had done when Robin undertook to
+teach Will Scarlet a lesson--and chuckled softly to himself and slapped
+his thigh and prepared to watch the fight at his ease.
+
+Indeed it was both exciting and laughable. You would have chuckled one
+moment and caught your breath the next, to see those two stout fellows
+swinging their sticks--each half as long again as the men were, and
+thick as their arm--and edging along sidewise, neither wishing to strike
+the first blow.
+
+At last Robin could no longer forbear, and his good right arm swung
+round like a flash. Ping! went the stick on the back of the other’s
+head, raising such a welt that the blood came. But the tanner did not
+seem to mind it at all, for bing! went his own staff in return, giving
+Robin as good as he had sent. Then the battle was on, and furiously it
+waged. Fast fell the blows, but few save the first ones landed, being
+met in mid-air by a counter-blow till the thwacking sticks sounded like
+the steady roll of a kettle-drum and the oak--bark flew as fine as it
+had ever done in Arthur-a-Bland’s tannery.
+
+Round and round they fought, digging their heels into the ground to keep
+from slipping, so that you would have vowed there had been a yoke of
+oxen ploughing a potato-patch. Round and round, up and down, in and
+out, their arms working like threshing-machines, went the yeoman and the
+tanner, for a full hour, each becoming more astonished every minute that
+the other was such a good fellow. While Little John from underneath his
+bushy covert had much ado to keep from roaring aloud in pure joy.
+
+Finally Robin saw his chance and brought a full arm blow straight down
+upon the other’s head with a force that would have felled a bullock.
+But Arthur’s trebled cow-skin cap here stood him in good stead: the blow
+glanced off without doing more than stunning him. Nathless, he reeled
+and had much ado to keep from falling; seeing which Robin stayed
+his hand--to his own sorrow, for the tanner recovered his wits in a
+marvelous quick space and sent back a sidelong blow which fairly lifted
+Robin off his feet and sent him tumbling on to the grass.
+
+“Hold your hand! hold your hand!” roared Robin with what little breath
+he had left. “Hold, I say, and I will give you the freedom of the
+greenwood.”
+
+“Why, God-a-mercy,” said Arthur; “I may thank my staff for that--not
+_you_.”
+
+“Well, well, gossip’ let be as it may. But prithee tell me your name and
+trade. I like to know fellows who can hit a blow like that same last.”
+
+“I am a tanner,” replied Arthur-a-Bland. “In Nottingham long have
+I wrought. And if you’ll come to me I swear I’ll tan your hides for
+naught.”
+
+“Odds bodikins!” quoth Robin ruefully. “Mine own hide is tanned enough
+for the present. Howsoever, there be others in this wood I would fain
+see you tackle. Harkee, if you will leave your tan-pots and come with
+me, as sure as my name is Robin Hood, you shan’t want gold or fee.”
+
+“By the breath o’ my body!” said Arthur, “that will I do!” and he
+gripped him gladly by the hand. “But I am minded that I clean forgot the
+errand that brought me to Sherwood. I was commissioned by some, under
+the Sheriff’s roof, to capture you.”
+
+“So was a certain tinker, now in our service,” said Robin smilingly.
+
+“Verily ‘tis a new way to recruit forces!” said the tanner laughing
+loudly. “But tell me, good Robin Hood, where is Little John? I fain
+would see him, for he is a kinsman on my mother’s side.”
+
+“Here am I, good Arthur-a-Bland!” said a voice; and Little John
+literally rolled out from under the bush to the sward. His eyes were
+full of tears from much laughter which had well-nigh left him powerless
+to get on his feet.
+
+As soon as the astonished tanner saw who it was, he gave Little John a
+mighty hug around the neck, and lifted him up on his feet, and the two
+pounded each other on the back soundly, so glad were they to meet again.
+
+“O, man, man!” said Little John as soon as he had got his breath. “Never
+saw I so fine a sight in all my born days. You did knock him over like
+as he were a ninepin!”
+
+“And you do joy to see me thwacked about on the ribs?” asked Robin with
+some choler.
+
+“Nay, not that, master!” said Little John. “But ‘tis the second time I
+have had special tickets to a show from beneath the bushes, and I cannot
+forbear my delight. Howsoever, take no shame unto yourself, for
+this same Arthur-a-Bland is the best man at the quarter-staff in all
+Nottinghamshire. It commonly takes two or three men to hold him.”
+
+“Unless it be Eric o’ Lincoln,” said Arthur modestly; “and I well know
+how you paid him out at the Fair.”
+
+“Say no more!” said Robin springing to his feet; “for well I know that I
+have done good business this day, and a few bruises are easy payment
+for the stout cudgel I am getting into the band. Your hand again, good
+Arthur-a-Bland! Come! let us after the deer of which I spoiled your
+stalking.”
+
+“Righty gladly!” quoth Arthur. “Come, Cousin Little John! Away with
+vats and tan-bark and vile-smelling cowhides! I’ll follow you two in the
+sweet open air to the very ends of earth!”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA
+
+ Then answered him the gentle knight
+ With words both fair and thee:
+ “God save thee, my good Robin,
+ And all thy company!”
+
+Now you must know that some months passed by. The winter dragged its
+weary length through Sherwood Forest, and Robin Hood and his merry men
+found what cheer they could in the big crackling fires before their
+woodland cave. Friar Tuck had built him a little hermitage not far away,
+where he lived comfortably with his numerous dogs.
+
+The winter, I say, reached an end at last, and the blessed spring came
+and went. Another summer passed on apace, and still neither King nor
+Sheriff nor Bishop could catch the outlaws, who, meanwhile, thrived and
+prospered mightily in their outlawry. The band had been increased
+from time to time by picked men such as Arthur-a-Bland and David of
+Doncaster--he who was the jolliest cobbler for miles around--until it
+now numbered a full sevenscore of men; seven companies each with its
+stout lieutenant serving under Robin Hood. And still they relieved the
+purses of the rich, and aided the poor, and feasted upon King’s deer
+until the lank Sheriff of Nottingham was well-nigh distracted.
+
+Indeed, that official would probable have lost his office entirely, had
+it not been for the fact of the King’s death. Henry passed away, as all
+Kings will, in common with ordinary men, and Richard of the Lion Heart
+was proclaimed as his successor.
+
+Then Robin and his men, after earnest debate, resolved to throw
+themselves upon the mercy of the new King, swear allegiance, and ask to
+be organized into Royal Foresters. So Will Scarlet and Will Stutely and
+Little John were sent to London with this message, which they were first
+to entrust privately to Maid Marian. But they soon returned with bad
+tidings. The new King had formerly set forth upon a crusade to the Holy
+Land, and Prince John, his brother, was impossible to deal with--being
+crafty, cruel and treacherous. He was laying his hands upon all the
+property which could easily be seized; among other estates, that of
+the Earl of Huntingdon, Robin’s old enemy and Marian’s father, who had
+lately died.
+
+Marian herself was in sore straits. Not only had her estates been taken
+away, and the maid been deprived of the former protection of the Queen,
+but the evil Prince John had persecuted her with his attentions. He
+thought that since the maid was defenseless he could carry her away to
+one of his castles and none could gainsay him.
+
+No word of this peril reached Robin’s ears, although his men brought
+him word of the seizure of the Huntingdon lands. Nathless he was greatly
+alarmed for the safety of Maid Marian, and his heart cried out for
+her strongly. She had been continually in his thoughts ever since the
+memorable shooting at London town.
+
+One morning in early autumn when the leaves were beginning to turn gold
+at the edges, the chestnut-pods to swell with promise of fatness, and
+the whole wide woodland was redolent with the ripe fragrance of fruit
+and flower, Robin was walking along the edge of a small open glade busy
+with his thoughts. The peace of the woods was upon him, despite his
+broodings of Marian and he paid little heed to a group of does quietly
+feeding among the trees at the far edge of the glade.
+
+But presently this sylvan picture was rudely disturbed for him. A stag,
+wild and furious, dashed suddenly forth from among the trees, scattering
+the does in swift alarm. The vicious beast eyed the green-and-gold tunic
+of Robin, and, lowering it head, charged at him impetuously. So sudden
+was its attack that Robin had no time to bend his bow. He sprang behind
+a tree while he seized his weapon.
+
+A moment later the wild stag crashed blindly into the tree-trunk with a
+shock which sent the beast reeling backward, while the dislodged leaves
+from the shivering tree fell in a small shower over Robin’s head.
+
+“By my halidom, I am glad it was not me you struck, my gentle friend!”
+ quoth Robin, fixing an arrow upon the string. “Sorry indeed would be any
+one’s plight who should encounter you in this black humor.”
+
+Scarcely had he spoken when he saw the stag veer about and fix its
+glances rigidly on the bushes to the left side of the glade. These were
+parted by a delicate hand, and through the opening appeared the slight
+figure of a page. It was Maid Marian, come back again to the greenwood!
+
+She advanced, unconscious alike of Robin’s horrified gaze and the evil
+fury of the stag.
+
+She was directly in line with the animal, so Robin dared not launch an
+arrow. Her own bow was slung across her shoulder, and her small sword
+would be useless against the beast’s charge. But now as she caught sight
+of the stag she pursed her lips as though she would whistle to it.
+
+“For the love of God, dear lady!” cried Robin; and then the words died
+in his throat.
+
+With a savage snort of rage, the beast rushed at this new and inviting
+target--rushed so swiftly and from so short a distance that she could
+not defend herself. She sprang to one side as it charged down upon her,
+but a side blow from its antlers stretched her upon the ground. The stag
+stopped, turned, and lowered its head preparing to gore her to death.
+
+Already its cruel horns were coming straight for her, while she, white
+of face and bewildered by the sudden attack, was struggling to rise
+and draw her sword. A moment more and the end would come. But the sharp
+voice of Robin and already spoken.
+
+“Down, Marian!” he cried, and the girl instinctively obeyed, just as
+the shaft from Robin’s bow went whizzing close above her head and struck
+with terrific force full in the center of the stag’s forehead.
+
+The beast stumbled in its charge and fell dead, across the body of the
+fainting maid.
+
+Robin was quickly by her side, and dragged the beast from off the girl.
+
+Picking her up in his strong arms, he bore her swiftly to the side of
+one of the many brooks which watered the vale.
+
+He dashed cool water upon her face, roughly almost, in his agony of fear
+that the she was already dead, and he could have shed tears of joy to
+see those poor, closed eyelids tremble. He redoubled his efforts; and
+presently she gave a little gasp.
+
+“Where am I? What is’t?”
+
+“You are in Sherwood, dear maid, tho’, i’ faith, we gave you a rude
+reception!”
+
+She opened her eyes and sat up. “Methinks you have rescued me from
+sudden danger, sir,” she said.
+
+Then she recognized Robin for the first time, and a radiant smile came
+over her face, together with the rare blush of returned vitality,
+and her head sank upon his shoulder with a little tremble and sigh of
+relief.
+
+“Oh, Robin, it is you!” she murmured.
+
+“Aye, ‘tis I. Thank heaven, I was at hand to do you service!” Robin’s
+tones were deep and full of feeling. “I swear, dear Marian, that I will
+not let you from my care henceforth.”
+
+Not another word was spoken for some moments, while her head still
+rested confidingly upon his breast. Then recollecting, he suddenly
+cried:
+
+“Gramercy, I make but a poor nurse! I have not even asked if any of your
+bones were broken.”
+
+“No, not any,” she answered springing lightly to her feet to show him.
+
+“That foolish dizziness o’ercame me for the nonce, but we can now
+proceed on our way.”
+
+“Nay, I meant not that,” he protested; “why should we haste? First tell
+me of the news in London town, and of yourself.”
+
+So she told him how that the Prince had seized upon her father’s lands,
+and had promised to restore them to her if she would listen to his suit;
+and how that she knew he meant her no good, for he was even then suing
+for a Princess’s hand.
+
+“That is all, Robin,” she ended simply; “and that is why I donned again
+my page’s costume and came to you in the greenwood.”
+
+Robin’s brow had grown fiercely black at the recital of her wrong; and
+he had laid stern hand upon the hilt of his sword. “By this sword which
+Queen Eleanor gave me!” he said impetuously; “and which was devoted to
+the service of all womankind, I take oath that Prince John and all his
+armies shall not harm you!”
+
+So that is how Maid Marian came to take up her abode in the greenwood,
+where the whole band of yeomen welcomed her gladly and swore fealty; and
+where the sweet lady of Allan-a-Dale made her fully at home.
+
+But this was a day of deeds in Sherwood Forest, and we ‘gan to tell you
+another happening which led to later events.
+
+While Robin and Marian were having their encounter with the stag, Little
+John, Much the miller’s son, and Will Scarlet had sallied forth to watch
+the highroad leading to Barnesdale, if perchance they might find some
+haughty knight or fat priest whose wallet needed lightening.
+
+They had scarcely watched the great road known as Watling Street which
+runs from Dover in Kent to Chester town--for many minutes, when they
+espied a knight riding by in a very forlorn and careless manner.
+
+ All dreary was his semblance,
+ And little was his pride,
+ His one
+ foot in the stirrup stood,
+ His other waved beside.
+
+ His visor hung down o’er his eyes,
+ He rode in single array,
+ A sorrier man than he was one
+ Rode never in summer’s day.
+
+Little John came up to the knight and bade him stay; for who can
+judge of a man’s wealth by his looks? The outlaw bent his knee in all
+courtesy, and prayed him to accept the hospitality of the forest.
+
+“My master expects you to dine with him, to-day,” quoth he, “and indeed
+has been fasting while awaiting your coming, these three hours.”
+
+“Who is your master?” asked the knight.
+
+“None other than Robin Hood,” replied Little John, laying his hand upon
+the knight’s bridle.
+
+Seeing the other two outlaws approaching, the knight shrugged his
+shoulders, and replied indifferently.
+
+“‘Tis clear that your invitation is too urgent to admit of refusal,”
+ quoth he, “and I go with you right willingly, my friends. My purpose
+was to have dined to-day at Blyth or Doncaster; but nothing matters
+greatly.”
+
+So in the same lackadaisical fashion which had marked all his actions
+that day, the knight suffered his horse to be led to the rendezvous of
+the band in the greenwood.
+
+Marian had not yet had time to change her page’s attire, when the three
+escorts of the knight hove in sight. She recognized their captive as Sir
+Richard of the Lea, whom she had often seen at court; and fearing lest
+he might recognize her, she would have fled. But Robin asked her, with a
+twinkle, if she would not like to play page that day, and she in roguish
+mood consented to do so.
+
+“Welcome, Sir Knight,” said Robin, courteously. “You are come in good
+time, for we were just preparing to sit down to meat.”
+
+“God save and thank you, good master Robin,” returned the knight; “and
+all your company. It likes me well to break the fast with you.”
+
+So while his horse was cared for, the knight laid aside his own heavy
+gear, and laved his face and hands, and sat down with Robin and all his
+men to a most plentiful repast of venison, swans, pheasants, various
+small birds, cake and ale. And Marian stood behind Robin and filled his
+cup and that of the guest.
+
+After eating right heartily of the good cheer, the knight brightened
+up greatly and vowed that he had not enjoyed so good a dinner for nigh
+three weeks. He also said that if ever Robin and his fellows should come
+to his domains, he would strive to set them down to as good a dinner on
+his own behalf.
+
+But this was not exactly the sort of payment which Robin had expected to
+receive. He thanked the knight, therefore, in set phrase, but reminded
+him that a yeoman like himself might hardly offer such a dinner to a
+knight as a gift of charity.
+
+“I have no money, Master Robin,” answered the knight frankly. “I have so
+little of the world’s goods, in sooth, that I should be ashamed to offer
+you the whole of it.”
+
+“Money, however little, always jingles merrily in our pockets,” said
+Robin, smiling. “Pray you tell me what you deem a little sum.”
+
+“I have of my own ten silver pennies,” said the knight. “Here they are,
+and I wish they were ten times as many.”
+
+He handed Little John his pouch, and Robin nodded carelessly.
+
+“What say you to the total, Little John?” he asked as though in jest.
+
+“‘Tis true enough, as the worthy knight hath said,” responded the big
+fellow gravely emptying the contents on his cloak.
+
+Robin signed to Marian, who filled a bumper of wine for himself and his
+guest.
+
+“Pledge me, Sir Knight!” cried the merry outlaw; “and pledge me
+heartily, for these sorry times. I see that your armor is bent and that
+your clothes are torn. Yet methinks I saw you at court, once upon a day,
+and in more prosperous guise. Tell me now, were you a yeoman and made a
+knight by force? Or, have you been a bad steward to yourself, and wasted
+your property in lawsuits and the like? Be not bashful with us. We shall
+not betray your secrets.”
+
+“I am a Saxon knight in my own right; and I have always lived a sober
+and quiet life,” the sorrowful guest replied. “‘Tis true you have seen
+me at court, mayhap, for I was an excited witness of your shooting
+before King Harry--God rest his bones! My name is Sir Richard of the
+Lea, and I dwell in a castle, not a league from one of the gates of
+Nottingham, which has belonged to my father, and his father, and his
+father’s father before him. Within two or three years ago my neighbors
+might have told you that a matter of four hundred pounds one way or
+the other was as naught to me. But now I have only these ten pennies of
+silver, and my wife and son.”
+
+“In what manner have you lost your riches?” asked Robin.
+
+“Through folly and kindness,” said the knight, sighing. “I went with
+King Richard upon a crusade, from which I am but lately returned, in
+time to find my son--a goodly youth--grown up. He was but twenty, yet he
+had achieved a squire’s training and could play prettily in jousts and
+tournaments and other knightly games. But about this time he had the ill
+luck to push his sport too far, and did accidentally kill a knight in
+the open lists. To save the boy, I had to sell my lands and mortgage my
+ancestral castle; and this not being enough, in the end I have had to
+borrow money, at a ruinous interest, from my lord of Hereford.”
+
+“A most worthy Bishop,” said Robin ironically. “What is the sum of your
+debt?”
+
+“Four hundred pounds,” said Sir Richard, “and the Bishop swears he will
+foreclose the mortgage if they are not paid promptly.”
+
+“Have you any friends who would become surety for you?”
+
+“Not one. If good King Richard were here, the tale might be otherwise.”
+
+“Fill your goblet again, Sir Knight,” said Robin; and he turned to
+whisper a word in Marian’s ear. She nodded and drew Little John and Will
+Scarlet aside and talked earnestly with them, in a low tone.
+
+“Here is health and prosperity to you, gallant Robin,” said Sir Richard,
+tilting his goblet. “I hope I may pay your cheer more worthily, the next
+time I ride by.”
+
+Will Scarlet and Little John had meanwhile fallen in with Marian’s idea,
+for they consulted the other outlaws, who nodded their heads. Thereupon
+Little John and Will Scarlet went into the cave near by and presently
+returned bearing a bag of gold. This they counted out before the
+astonished knight; and there were four times one hundred gold pieces in
+it.
+
+“Take this loan from us, Sir Knight, and pay your debt to the Bishop,”
+ then said Robin. “Nay, no thanks; you are but exchanging creditors.
+Mayhap we shall not be so hard upon you as the Christian Bishop; yet,
+again we may be harder. Who can tell?”
+
+There were actual tears in Sir Richard’s eyes, as he essayed to thank
+the foresters. But at this juncture, Much, the miller’s son, came from
+the cave dragging a bale of cloth. “The knight should have a suit worthy
+of his rank, master--think you not so?”
+
+“Measure him twenty ells of it,” ordered Robin.
+
+“Give him a good horse, also,” whispered Marian. “‘Tis a gift which will
+come back four-fold, for this is a worthy man. I know him well.”
+
+So the horse was given, also, and Robin bade Arthur-a-Bland ride with
+the knight as far as his castle, as esquire.
+
+The knight was sorrowful no longer; yet he could hardly voice his thanks
+through his broken utterance. And having spent the night in rest,
+after listening to Allan-a-Dale’s singing, he mounted his new steed the
+following morning an altogether different man.
+
+“God save you, comrades, and keep you all!” said he, with deep feeling
+in his tones; “and give me a grateful heart!”
+
+“We shall wait for you twelve months from to-day, here in this place,”
+ said Robin, shaking him by the hand; “and then you will repay us the
+loan, if you have been prospered.”
+
+“I shall return it to you within the year, upon my honor as Sir Richard
+of the Lea. And for all time, pray count on me as a steadfast friend.”
+
+So saying the knight and his esquire rode down the forest glade till
+they were lost to view.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HOW THE BISHOP WAS DINED
+
+ “O what is the matter?” then said the Bishop,
+ “Or for whom do you make this a-do?
+ Or why do you kill the King’s venison,
+ When your company is so few?”
+
+ “We are shepherds,” quoth bold Robin Hood,
+ “And we keep sheep all the year,
+ And we are disposed to be merrie this day,
+ And to kill of the King’s fat deer.”
+
+Not many days after Sir Richard of the Lea came to Sherwood Forest,
+word reached Robin Hood’s ears that my lord Bishop of Hereford would
+be riding that way betimes on that morning. ‘Twas Arthur-a-Bland, the
+knight’s quondam esquire, who brought the tidings, and Robin’s face
+brightened as he heard it.
+
+“Now, by our Lady!” quoth he, “I have long desired to entertain my lord
+in the greenwood, and this is too fair a chance to let slip. Come, my
+men, kill me a venison; kill me a good fat deer. The Bishop of Hereford
+is to dine with me today, and he shall pay well for his cheer.”
+
+“Shall we dress it here, as usual?” asked Much, the miller’s son.
+
+“Nay, we play a droll game on the churchman. We will dress it by the
+highway side, and watch for the Bishop narrowly, lest he should ride
+some other way.”
+
+So Robin gave his orders, and the main body of his men dispersed to
+different parts of the forest, under Will Stutely and Little John,
+to watch other roads; while Robin Hood himself took six of his men,
+including Will Scarlet, and Much, and posted himself in full view of the
+main road. This little company appeared funny enough, I assure you, for
+they had disguised themselves as shepherds. Robin had an old wool cap,
+with a tail to it, hanging over his ear, and a shock of hair stood
+straight up through a hole in the top. Besides there was so much dirt on
+his face that you would never have known him. An old tattered cloak over
+his hunter’s garb completed his make-up. The others were no less ragged
+and unkempt, even the foppish Will Scarlet being so badly run down at
+the heel that the court ladies would hardly have had speech with him.
+
+They quickly provided themselves with a deer and made great preparations
+to cook it over a small fire, when a little dust was seen blowing along
+the highway, and out of it came the portly Bishop cantering along with
+ten men-at-arms at his heels. As soon as he saw the fancied shepherds he
+spurred up his horse, and came straight toward them.
+
+“Who are ye, fellows, who make so free with the King’s deer?” he asked
+sharply.
+
+“We are shepherds,” answered Robin Hood, pulling at his forelock
+awkwardly.
+
+“Heaven have mercy! Ye seem a sorry lot of shepherds. But who gave you
+leave to cease eating mutton?”
+
+“‘Tis one of our feast days, lording, and we were disposed to be merry
+this day, and make free with a deer, out here where they are so many.”
+
+“By me faith, the King shall hear of this. Who killed yon beast?”
+
+“Give me first your name, excellence, so that I may speak where ‘tis
+fitting,” replied Robin stubbornly.
+
+“‘Tis my lord Bishop of Hereford, fellow!” interposed one of the guards
+fiercely. “See that you keep a civil tongue in your head.”
+
+“If ‘tis a churchman,” retorted Will Scarlet, “he would do better to
+mind his own flocks rather than concern himself with ours.”
+
+“Ye are saucy fellows, in sooth,” cried the Bishop, “and we will see if
+your heads will pay for your manners. Come! quit your stolen roast and
+march along with me, for you shall be brought before the Sheriff of
+Nottingham forthwith.”
+
+“Pardon, excellence!” said Robin, dropping on his knees. “Pardon, I pray
+you. It becomes not your lordship’s coat to take so many lives away.”
+
+“Faith, I’ll pardon you!” said the Bishop. “I’ll pardon you, when I see
+you hanged! Seize upon them, my men!”
+
+But Robin had already sprung away with his back against a tree. And
+from underneath his ragged cloak he drew his trusty horn and winded the
+piercing notes which were wont to summon the band.
+
+The Bishop no sooner saw this action than he knew his man, and that
+there was a trap set; and being an arrant coward, he wheeled his horse
+sharply and would have made off down the road; but his own men, spurred
+on the charge, blocked his way. At almost the same instant the bushes
+round about seemed literally to become alive with outlaws. Little John’s
+men came from one side and Will Stutely’s from the other. In less time
+than it takes to tell it, the worthy Bishop found himself a prisoner,
+and began to crave mercy from the men he had so lately been ready to
+sentence.
+
+ “O pardon, O pardon,” said the Bishop,
+ “O pardon, I you pray.
+ For if I had known it had been you,
+ I’d have gone some other way.”
+
+“I owe you no pardon,” retorted Robin, “but I will e’en treat you better
+than you would have treated me. Come, make haste, and go along with me.
+I have already planned that you shall dine with me this day.”
+
+So the unwilling prelate was dragged away, cheek by jowl, with the
+half-cooked venison upon the back of his own horse; and Robin and his
+band took charge of the whole company and led them through the forest
+glades till they came to an open space near Barnesdale.
+
+Here they rested, and Robin gave the Bishop a seat full courteously.
+Much the miller’s son fell to roasting the deer afresh, while another
+and fatter beast was set to frizzle on the other side of the fire.
+Presently the appetizing odor of the cooking reached the Bishop’s
+nostrils, and he sniffed it eagerly. The morning’s ride had made him
+hungry; and he was nothing loath when they bade him come to the dinner.
+Robin gave him the best place beside himself, and the Bishop prepared to
+fall to.
+
+“Nay, my lord, craving your pardon, but we are accustomed to have grace
+before meat,” said Robin decorously. “And as our own chaplain is not
+with us to-day, will you be good enough to say it for us?”
+
+The Bishop reddened, but pronounced grace in the Latin tongue hastily,
+and then settled himself to make the best of his lot. Red wines and ale
+were brought forth and poured out, each man having a horn tankard from
+which to drink.
+
+Laughter bubbled among the diners, and the Bishop caught himself smiling
+at more than one jest. But who, in sooth, could resist a freshly broiled
+venison streak eaten out in the open air to the tune of jest and good
+fellowship? Stutely filled the Bishop’s beaker with wine each time he
+emptied it, and the Bishop got mellower and mellower as the afternoon
+shades lengthened on toward sunset. Then the approaching dusk warned him
+of his position.
+
+“I wish, mine host,” quoth he gravely to Robin, who had soberly drunk
+but one cup of ale, “that you would now call a reckoning. ‘Tis late, and
+I fear the cost of this entertainment may be more than my poor purse can
+stand.”
+
+For he bethought himself of his friend, the Sheriff’s former experience.
+
+“Verily, your lordship,” said Robin, scratching his head, “I have
+enjoyed your company so much, that I scarce know how to charge for it.”
+
+“Lend me your purse, my lord,” said Little John, interposing, “and
+I’ll give you the reckoning by and by.” The Bishop shuddered. He had
+collected Sir Richard’s debt only that morning, and was even then
+carrying it home.
+
+“I have but a few silver pennies of my own,” he whined; “and as for the
+gold in my saddle-bags, ‘tis for the church. Ye surely would not levy
+upon the church, good friends.”
+
+But Little John was already gone to the saddle-bags, and returning
+he laid the Bishop’s cloak upon the ground, and poured out of the
+portmantua a matter of four hundred glittering gold pieces. ‘Twas the
+identical money which Robin had lent Sir Richard a short while before!
+
+“Ah!” said Robin, as though an idea had but just then come to him. “The
+church is always willing to aid in charity. And seeing this goodly sum
+reminds me that I have a friend who is indebted to a churchman for this
+exact amount. Now we shall charge you nothing on our own account; but
+suffer us to make use of this in aiding my good friend.”
+
+“Nay, nay,” began the Bishop with a wry face, “this is requiting me ill
+indeed. Was this not the King’s meat, after all, that we feasted upon?
+Furthermore, I am a poor man.”
+
+“Poor forsooth!” answered Robin in scorn. “You are the Bishop of
+Hereford, and does not the whole countryside speak of your oppression?
+Who does not know of your cruelty to the poor and ignorant--you who
+should use your great office to aid them, instead of oppress? Have you
+not been guilty of far greater robbery than this, even though less
+open? Of myself, and how you have pursued me, I say nothing; nor of
+your unjust enmity against my father. But on account of those you have
+despoiled and oppressed, I take this money, and will use it far more
+worthily than you would. God be my witness in this! There is an end of
+the matter, unless you will lead us in a song or dance to show that
+your body had a better spirit than your mind. Come, strike up the harp,
+Allan!”
+
+“Neither the one nor the other will I do,” snarled the Bishop.
+
+“Faith, then we must help you,” said Little John; and he and
+Arthur-a-Bland seized the fat struggling churchman and commenced to hop
+up and down. The Bishop being shorter must perforce accompany them in
+their gyrations; while the whole company sat and rolled about over the
+ground, and roared to see my lord of Hereford’s queer capers. At last he
+sank in a heap, fuddled with wine and quite exhausted.
+
+Little John picked him up as though he were a log of wood and carrying
+him to his horse, set him astride facing the animal’s tail; and thus
+fastened him, leading the animal toward the highroad and, starting the
+Bishop, more dead than alive, toward Nottingham.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HOW THE BISHOP WENT OUTLAW-HUNTING
+
+ The Bishop he came to the old woman’s house,
+ And called with furious mood,
+ “Come let me soon see, and bring unto me
+ That traitor, Robin Hood.”
+
+The easy success with which they had got the better of the good Bishop
+led Robin to be a little careless. He thought that his guest was too
+great a coward to venture back into the greenwood for many a long day;
+and so after lying quiet for one day, the outlaw ventured boldly upon
+the highway, the morning of the second. But he had gone only half a mile
+when, turning a sharp bend in the road, he plunged full upon the prelate
+himself.
+
+My lord of Hereford had been so deeply smitten in his pride, that he
+had lost no time in summoning a considerable body of the Sheriff’s men,
+offering to double the reward if Robin Hood could be come upon. This
+company was now at his heels, and after the first shock of mutual
+surprise, the Bishop gave an exultant shout and spurred upon the outlaw.
+
+It was too late for Robin to retreat by the way he had come, but quick
+as a flash he sprang to one side of the road, dodged under some bushes,
+and disappeared so suddenly that his pursuers thought he had truly been
+swallowed up by magic.
+
+“After him!” yelled the Bishop; “some of you beat up the woods around
+him, while the rest of us will keep on the main road and head him off on
+the other side!”
+
+For, truth to tell, the Bishop did not care to trust his bones away from
+the highroad.
+
+About a mile away, on the other side of this neck of woods, wherein
+Robin had been trapped, was a little tumbledown cottage. ‘Twas where
+the widow lived, whose three sons had been rescued. Robin remembered the
+cottage and saw his one chance to escape.
+
+Doubling in and out among the underbrush and heather with the agility
+of a hare, he soon came out of the wood in the rear of the cottage, and
+thrust his head through a tiny window.
+
+The widow, who had been at her spinning wheel, rose up with a cry of
+alarm.
+
+“Quiet, good mother! ‘Tis I, Robin Hood. Where are your three sons?”
+
+“They should be with you, Robin. Well do you know that. Do they not owe
+their lives to you?”
+
+“If that be so, I come to seek payment of the debt,” said Robin in a
+breath. “The Bishop is on my heels with many of his men.”
+
+“I’ll cheat the Bishop and all!” cried the woman quickly. “Here, Robin,
+change your raiment with me, and we will see if my lord knows an old
+woman when he sees her.”
+
+“Good!” said Robin. “Pass your gray cloak out the window, and also your
+spindle and twine; and I will give you my green mantle and everything
+else down to my bow and arrows.”
+
+While they were talking, Robin had been nimbly changing clothes with the
+old woman, through the window, and in a jiffy he stood forth complete,
+even to the spindle and twine.
+
+Presently up dashed the Bishop and his men, and, at sight of the
+cottage and the old woman, gave pause. The crone was hobbling along with
+difficulty, leaning heavily upon a gnarled stick and bearing the spindle
+on her other arm. She would have gone by the Bishop’s company, while
+muttering to herself, but the Bishop ordered one of his men to question
+her. The soldier laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+“Mind your business!” croaked the woman, “or I’ll curse ye!”
+
+“Come, come, my good woman,” said the soldier, who really was afraid of
+her curses. “I’ll not molest you. But my lord Bishop of Hereford wants
+to know if you have seen aught of the outlaw, Robin Hood?”
+
+“And why shouldn’t I see him?” she whined. “Where’s the King or law to
+prevent good Robin from coming to see me and bring me food and raiment?
+That’s more than my lord Bishop will do, I warrant ye!”
+
+“Peace, woman!” said the Bishop harshly. “We want none of your opinions.
+But we’ll take you to Barnesdale and burn you for a witch if you do not
+instantly tell us when you last saw Robin Hood.”
+
+“Mercy, good my lord!” chattered the crone, falling on her knees.
+
+“Robin is there in my cottage now, but you’ll never take him alive.”
+
+“We’ll see about that,” cried the Bishop triumphantly. “Enter the
+cottage, my men. Fire it, if need be. But I’ll give a purse of gold
+pieces, above the reward, to the man who captures the outlaw alive.”
+
+The old woman, being released, went on her way slowly. But it might
+have been noticed that the farther she got away from the company and
+the nearer to the edge of the woods, the swifter and straighter grew
+her pace. Once inside the shelter of the forest she broke into a run of
+surprising swiftness.
+
+“Gadzooks!” exclaimed Little John who presently spied her. “Who comes
+here? Never saw I witch or woman run so fast. Methinks I’ll send an
+arrow close over her head to see which it is.”
+
+“O hold your hand! hold your hand!” panted the supposed woman. “‘Tis I,
+Robin Hood. Summon the yeomen and return with me speedily. We have still
+another score to settle with my lord of Hereford.”
+
+When Little John could catch his breath from laughing, he winded his
+horn.
+
+“Now, mistress Robin,” quoth he, grinning. “Lead on! We’ll be close to
+your heels.”
+
+Meanwhile, back at the widow’s cottage the Bishop was growing more
+furious every moment. For all his bold words, he dared not fire the
+house, and the sturdy door had thus far resisted all his men’s efforts.
+
+“Break it down! Break it down!” he shouted, “and let me soon see who
+will fetch out that traitor, Robin Hood!”
+
+At last the door crashed in and the men stood guard on the threshold.
+But not one dared enter for fear a sharp arrow should meet him halfway.
+
+“Here he is!” cried one keen-eyed fellow, peering in. “I see him in the
+corner by the cupboard. Shall we slay him with our pikes?”
+
+“Nay,” said the Bishop, “take him alive if you can. We’ll make the
+biggest public hanging of this that the shire ever beheld.”
+
+But the joy of the Bishop over his capture was short lived. Down the
+road came striding the shabby figure of the old woman who had helped him
+set the trap; and very wrathy was she when she saw that the cottage door
+had been battered in.
+
+“Stand by, you lazy rascals!” she called to the soldiers. “May all the
+devils catch ye for hurting an old woman’s hut. Stand by, I say!”
+
+“Hold your tongue!” ordered the Bishop. “These are my men and carrying
+out my orders.”
+
+“God-mercy!” swore the beldame harshly. “Things have come to a pretty
+pass when our homes may be treated like common gaols. Couldn’t all your
+men catch one poor forester without this ado? Come! clear out, you and
+your robber, on the instant, or I’ll curse every mother’s son of ye,
+eating and drinking and sleeping!”
+
+“Seize on the hag!” shouted the Bishop, as soon as he could get in a
+word. “We’ll see about a witch’s cursing. Back to town she shall go,
+alongside of Robin Hood.”
+
+“Not so fast, your worship!” she retorted, clapping her hands.
+
+And at the signal a goodly array of greenwood men sprang forth from all
+sides of the cottage, with bows drawn back threateningly. The Bishop saw
+that his men were trapped again, for they dared not stir. Nathless, he
+determined to make a fight for it.
+
+“If one of you but budge an inch toward me, you rascals,” he cried, “it
+shall sound the death of your master, Robin Hood! My men have him here
+under their pikes, and I shall command them to kill him without mercy.”
+
+“Faith, I should like to see the Robin you have caught,” said a clear
+voice from under the widow’s cape; and the outlaw chief stood forth with
+bared head, smilingly. “Here am I, my lord, in no wise imperiled by your
+men’s fierce pikes. So let us see whom you have been guarding so well.”
+
+The old woman who, in the garb of Robin Hood, had been lying quiet in
+the cottage through all the uproar, jumped up nimbly at this. In the
+bald absurdity of her disguise she came to the doorway and bowed to the
+Bishop.
+
+“Give you good-den, my lord Bishop,” she piped in a shrill voice; “and
+what does your Grace at my humble door? Do you come to bless me and give
+me alms?”
+
+“Aye, that does he,” answered Robin. “We shall see if his saddle-bags
+contain enough to pay you for that battered door.”
+
+“Now by all the saints--” began the Bishop.
+
+“Take care; they are all watching you,” interrupted Robin; “so name them
+not upon your unchurchly lips. But I will trouble you to hand over that
+purse of gold you had saved to pay for my head.”
+
+“I’ll see you hanged first!” raged the Bishop, stating no more than
+what would have been so, if he could do the ordering of things. “Have at
+them, my men, and hew them down in their tracks!”
+
+“Hold!” retorted Robin. “See how we have you at our mercy.” And aiming a
+sudden shaft he shot so close to the Bishop’s head that it carried away
+both his hat and the skull-cap which he always wore, leaving him quite
+bald.
+
+The prelate turned as white as his shiny head and clutched wildly at his
+ears. He thought himself dead almost.
+
+“Help! Murder!” he gasped. “Do not shoot again! Here’s your purse of
+gold!”
+
+And without waiting for further parley he fairly bolted down the road.
+
+His men being left leaderless had nothing for it but to retreat after
+him, which they did in sullen order, covered by the bows of the yeomen.
+And thus ended the Bishop of Hereford’s great outlaw-hunt in the forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW THE SHERIFF HELD ANOTHER SHOOTING MATCH
+
+ “To tell the truth, I’m well informed
+ Yon match it is a wile;
+ The Sheriff, I know, devises this
+ Us archers to beguile.”
+
+Now the Sheriff was so greatly troubled in heart over the growing power
+of Robin Hood, that he did a very foolish thing. He went to London town
+to lay his troubles before the King and get another force of troops to
+cope with the outlaws. King Richard was not yet returned from the Holy
+Land, but Prince John heard him with scorn.
+
+“Pooh!” said he, shrugging his shoulders. “What have I to do with all
+this? Art thou not sheriff for me? The law is in force to take thy
+course of them that injure thee. Go, get thee gone, and by thyself
+devise some tricking game to trap these rebels; and never let me see thy
+face at court again until thou hast a better tale to tell.”
+
+So away went the Sheriff in sorrier pass than ever, and cudgeled his
+brain, on the way home, for some plan of action.
+
+His daughter met him on his return and saw at once that he had been on a
+poor mission. She was minded to upbraid him when she learned what he
+had told the Prince. But the words of the latter started her to thinking
+afresh.
+
+“I have it!” she exclaimed at length. “Why should we not hold another
+shooting-match? ‘Tis Fair year, as you know, and another tourney will
+be expected. Now we will proclaim a general amnesty, as did King Harry
+himself, and say that the field is open and unmolested to all comers.
+Belike Robin Hood’s men will be tempted to twang the bow, and then--”
+
+“And then,” said the Sheriff jumping up with alacrity, “we shall see on
+which side of the gate they stop over-night!”
+
+So the Sheriff lost no time in proclaiming a tourney, to be held that
+same Fall at the Fair. It was open to all comers, said the proclamation,
+and none should be molested in their going and coming. Furthermore, an
+arrow with a golden head and shaft of silver-white should be given to
+the winner, who would be heralded abroad as the finest archer in all the
+North Countree. Also, many rich prizes were to be given to other clever
+archers.
+
+These tidings came in due course to Robin Hood, under the greenwood
+tree, and fired his impetuous spirit.
+
+“Come, prepare ye, my merry men all,” quoth he, “and we’ll go to the
+Fair and take some part in this sport.”
+
+With that stepped forth the merry cobbler, David of Doncaster.
+
+“Master,” quoth he, “be ruled by me and stir not from the greenwood. To
+tell the truth, I’m well informed yon match is naught but a trap. I know
+the Sheriff has devised it to beguile us archers into some treachery.”
+
+“That word savors of the coward,” replied Robin, “and pleases me not.
+Let come what will, I’ll try my skill at that same archery.”
+
+Then up spoke Little John and said: “Come, listen to me how it shall be
+that we will not be discovered.”
+
+ “Our mantles all of Lincoln-green
+ Behind us we will leave;
+ We’ll dress us all so several,
+ They shall not us perceive.”
+
+ “One shall wear white, another red,
+ One yellow, another blue;
+ Thus in disguise to the exercise
+ We’ll go, whate’er ensue.”
+
+This advice met with general favor from the adventurous fellows, and
+they lost no time in putting it into practice. Maid Marian and Mistress
+Dale, assisted by Friar Tuck, prepared some vari-colored costumes, and
+‘gainst the Fair day had fitted out the sevenscore men till you would
+never have taken them for other than villagers decked for the holiday.
+
+And forth went they from the greenwood, with hearts all firm and stout,
+resolved to meet the Sheriff’s men and have a merry bout. Along the
+highway they fell in with many other bold fellows from the countryside,
+going with their ruddy-cheeked lasses toward the wide-open gates of
+Nottingham.
+
+So in through the gates trooped the whole gay company, Robin’s men
+behaving as awkwardly and laughing and talking as noisily as the rest;
+while the Sheriff’s scowling men-at-arms stood round about and sought to
+find one who looked like a forester, but without avail.
+
+The herald now set forth the terms of the contest, as on former
+occasions, and the shooting presently began. Robin had chosen five of
+his men to shoot with him, and the rest were to mingle with the crowd
+and also watch the gates. These five were Little John, Will Scarlet,
+Will Stutely, Much, and Allan-a-Dale’.
+
+The other competitors made a brave showing on the first round,
+especially Gilbert of the White Hand, who was present and never shot
+better. The contest later narrowed down between Gilbert and Robin. But
+at the first lead, when the butts were struck so truly by various well
+known archers, the Sheriff was in doubt whether to feel glad or sorry.
+He was glad to see such skill, but sorry that the outlaws were not in
+it.
+
+ Some said, “If Robin Hood were here,
+ And all his men to boot,
+ Sure none of them could pass these men,
+ So bravely do they shoot.”
+
+“Aye,” quoth the Sheriff, and scratched his head,
+
+ “I thought he would be here;
+ I thought he would, but tho’ he’s bold,
+ He durst not now appear.”
+
+This word was privately brought to Robin by David of Doncaster, and the
+saying vexed him sorely. But he bit his lip in silence.
+
+“Ere long,” he thought to himself, “we shall see whether Robin Hood be
+here or not!”
+
+Meantime the shooting had been going forward, and Robin’s men had done
+so well that the air was filled with shouts.
+
+ One cried, “Blue jacket!” another cried, “Brown!”
+ And a third cried, “Brave Yellow!”
+ But the fourth man said, “Yon man in red
+ In this place has no fellow.”
+
+ For that was Robin Hood himself,
+ For he was clothed in red,
+ At every shot the prize he got,
+ For he was both sure and dead.
+
+Thus went the second round of the shooting, and thus the third and last,
+till even Gilbert of the White Hand was fairly beaten. During all this
+shooting, Robin exchanged no word with his men, each treating the other
+as a perfect stranger. Nathless, such great shooting could not pass
+without revealing the archers.
+
+The Sheriff thought he discovered, in the winner of the golden arrow,
+the person of Robin Hood without peradventure. So he sent word privately
+for his men-at-arms to close round the group. But Robin’s men also got
+wind of the plan.
+
+To keep up appearances, the Sheriff summoned the crowd to form in a
+circle; and after as much delay as possible the arrow was presented. The
+delay gave time enough for the soldiers to close in. As Robin received
+his prize, bowed awkwardly, and turned away, the Sheriff, letting his
+zeal get the better of his discretion, grasped him about the neck and
+called upon his men to arrest the traitor.
+
+But the moment the Sheriff touched Robin, he received such a buffet
+on the side of his head that he let go instantly and fell back several
+paces. Turning to see who had struck him, he recognized Little John.
+
+“Ah, rascal Greenleaf, I have you now!” he exclaimed springing at him.
+Just then, however, he met a new check.
+
+“This is from another of your devoted servants!” said a voice which he
+knew to be that of Much the miller’s son; and “Thwack!” went his open
+palm upon the Sheriff’s cheek sending that worthy rolling over and over
+upon the ground.
+
+By this time the conflict had become general, but the Sheriff’s men
+suffered the disadvantage of being hampered by the crowd of innocent
+on-lookers, whom they could not tell from the outlaws and so dared not
+attack; while the other outlaws in the rear fell upon them and put them
+in confusion.
+
+For a moment a fierce rain of blows ensued; then the clear bugle-note
+from Robin ordered a retreat. The two warders at the nearest gate tried
+to close it, but were shot dead in their tracks. David of Doncaster
+threw a third soldier into the moat; and out through the gate went
+the foresters in good order, keeping a respectful distance between
+themselves and the advancing soldiery, by means of their well-directed
+shafts.
+
+But the fight was not to go easily this day, for the soldiery, smarting
+from their recent discomfiture at the widow’s cottage, and knowing that
+the eyes of the whole shire were upon them, fought well, and pressed
+closely after the retreating outlaws. More than one ugly wound was
+given and received. No less than five of the Sheriff’s men were killed
+outright, and a dozen others injured; while four of Robin’s men were
+bleeding from severe flesh cuts.
+
+Then Little John, who had fought by the side of his chief, suddenly fell
+forward with a slight moan. An arrow had pierced his knee. Robin seized
+the big fellow with almost superhuman strength.
+
+ Up he took him on his back,
+ And bare him well a mile;
+ Many a time he laid him down,
+ And shot another while.
+
+Meanwhile Little John grew weaker and closed his eyes; at last he sank
+to the ground, and feebly motioned Robin to let him lie. “Master
+Robin,” said he, “have I not served you well, ever since we met upon the
+bridge?”
+
+“Truer servant never man had,” answered Robin.
+
+“Then if ever you loved me, and for the sake of that service, draw your
+bright brown sword and strike off my head; never let me fall alive into
+the hand of the Sheriff of Nottingham.”
+
+“Not for all the gold in England would I do either of the things you
+suggest.”
+
+“God forbid!” cried Arthur-a-Bland, hurrying to the rescue. And packing
+his wounded kinsman upon his own broad shoulders, he soon brought him
+within the shelter of the forest.
+
+Once there, the Sheriff’s men did not follow; and Robin caused litters
+of boughs to be made for Little John and the other four wounded men.
+Quickly were they carried through the wood until the hermitage of Friar
+Tuck was reached, where their wounds were dressed. Little John’s hurt
+was pronounced to be the most serious of any, but he was assured that
+in two or three weeks’ time he could get about again; whereat the active
+giant groaned mightily.
+
+That evening consternation came upon the hearts of the band. A careful
+roll-call was taken to see it all the yeomen had escaped, when it was
+found that Will Stutely was missing, and Maid Marian also was nowhere to
+be found. Robin was seized with dread. He knew that Marian had gone to
+the Fair, but felt that she would hardly come to grief. Her absence,
+however, portended some danger, and he feared that it was connected with
+Will Stutely. The Sheriff would hang him speedily and without mercy, if
+he were captured.
+
+The rest of the band shared their leader’s uneasiness, though they said
+no word. They knew that if Will were captured, the battle must be fought
+over again the next day, and Will must be saved at any cost. But no man
+flinched from the prospect.
+
+That evening, while the Sheriff and his wife and daughter sat at meat in
+the Mansion House, the Sheriff boasted of how he would make an example
+of the captured outlaw; for Stutely had indeed fallen into his hands.
+
+“He shall be strung high,” he said, in a loud voice; “and none shall
+dare lift a finger. I now have Robin Hood’s men on the run, and we shall
+soon see who is master in this shire. I am only sorry that we let them
+have the golden arrow.”
+
+As he spoke a missive sped through a window and fell clattering upon his
+plate, causing him to spring back in alarm.
+
+It was the golden arrow, and on its feathered shaft was sewed a little
+note which read:
+
+“This from one who will take no gifts from liars; and who henceforth
+will show no mercy. Look well to yourself. R.H.”
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HOW WILL STUTELY WAS RESCUED
+
+ Forth of the greenwood are they gone,
+ Yea, all courageously,
+ Resolving to bring Stutely home,
+ Or every man to die.
+
+The next day dawned bright and sunny. The whole face of nature seemed
+gay as if in despite of the tragedy which was soon to take place in the
+walls of Nottingham town. The gates were not opened upon this day, for
+the Sheriff was determined to carry through the hanging of Will Stutely
+undisturbed. No man, therefore, was to be allowed entrance from without,
+all that morning and until after the fatal hour of noon, when Will’s
+soul was to be launched into eternity.
+
+Early in the day Robin had drawn his men to a point, as near as he
+dared, in the wood where he could watch the road leading to the East
+gate. He himself was clad in a bright scarlet dress, while his men, a
+goodly array, wore their suits of sober Lincoln green. They were armed
+with broadswords, and ‘each man carried his bow and a full quiver of new
+arrows, straightened and sharpened cunningly by Middle, the tinker. Over
+their greenwood dress, each man had thrown a rough mantle, making him
+look not unlike a friar.
+
+“I hold it good, comrades,” then said Robin Hood, “to tarry here in
+hiding for a season while we sent some one forth to obtain tidings.
+For, in sooth, ‘twill work no good to march upon the gates if they be
+closed.”
+
+“Look, master,” quoth one of the widow’s sons. “There comes a palmer
+along the road from the town. Belike he can tell us how the land ties,
+and if Stutely be really in jeopardy. Shall I go out and engage him in
+speech?”
+
+“Go,” answered Robin.
+
+So Stout Will went out from the band while the others hid themselves
+and waited. When he had come close to the palmer, who seemed a slight,
+youngish man, he doffed his hat full courteously and said,
+
+“I crave your pardon, holy man, but can you tell me tidings of
+Nottingham town? Do they intend to put an outlaw to death this day?”
+
+“Yea,” answered the palmer sadly. “‘Tis true enough, sorry be the day.
+I have passed the very spot where the gallows-tree is going up. ‘Tis out
+upon the roadway near the Sheriff’s castle. One, Will Stutely, is to be
+hung thereon at noon, and I could not bear the sight, so came away.”
+
+The palmer spoke in a muffled voice; and as his hood was pulled well
+over his head, Stout Will could not discern what manner of man he was.
+Over his shoulder he carried a long staff, with the fashion of a little
+cross at one end; and he had sandaled feet like any monk. Stout Will
+notice idly that the feet were very small and white, but gave no second
+thought to the matter.
+
+“Who will shrive the poor wretch, if you have come away from him?” he
+asked reproachfully.
+
+The question seemed to put a new idea into the palmer’s head. He turned
+so quickly that he almost dropped his hood.
+
+“Do you think that I should undertake this holy office?”
+
+“By Saint Peter and the Blessed Virgin, I do indeed! Else, who will
+do it? The Bishop and all his whining clerks may be there, but not one
+would say a prayer for his soul.”
+
+“But I am only a poor palmer,” the other began hesitatingly.
+
+“Nathless, your prayers are as good as any and better than some,”
+ replied Will.
+
+“Right gladly would I go,” then said the palmer; “but I fear me I cannot
+get into the city. You may know that the gates are fast locked, for this
+morning, to all who would come in, although they let any pass out who
+will.”
+
+“Come with me,” said Stout Will, “and my master will see that you pass
+through the gates.”
+
+So the palmer pulled his cloak still closer about him and was brought
+before Robin Hood, to whom he told all he knew of the situation. He
+ended with,
+
+“If I may make so bold, I would not try to enter the city from this
+gate, as ‘tis closely guarded since yesterday. But on the far side, no
+attack is looked for.”
+
+“My thanks, gentle palmer,” quoth Robin, “your suggestion is good, and
+we will deploy to the gate upon the far side.”
+
+So the men marched silently but quickly until they were near to the
+western gate. Then Arthur-a-Bland asked leave to go ahead as a scout,
+and quietly made his way to a point under the tower by the gate. The
+moat was dry on this side, as these were times of peace, and Arthur was
+further favored by a stout ivy vine which grew out from an upper window.
+
+Swinging himself up boldly by means of this friendly vine, he crept
+through the window and in a moment more had sprung upon the warder from
+behind and gripped him hard about the throat. The warder had no chance
+to utter the slightest sound, and soon lay bound and gagged upon the
+floor; while Arthur-a-Bland slipped himself into his uniform and got
+hold of his keys.
+
+‘Twas the work of but a few moments more to open the gates, let down the
+bridge, and admit the rest of the band; and they lot inside the town so
+quietly that none knew of their coming. Fortune also favored them in the
+fact that just at this moment the prison doors had been opened for
+the march of the condemned man, and every soldier and idle lout in the
+market-lace had trooped thither to see him pass along.
+
+Presently out came Will Stutely with firm step but dejected air. He
+looked eagerly to the right hand and to the left, but saw none of the
+band. And though more than one curious face betrayed friendship in it,
+he knew there could be no aid from such source.
+
+Will’s hands were tied behind his back. He marched between rows of
+soldiery, and the Sheriff and the Bishop brought up the rear on horses,
+looking mightily puffed up and important over the whole proceeding. He
+would show these sturdy rebels--would the Sheriff--whose word was law!
+He knew that the gates were tightly fastened; and further he believed
+that the outlaws would hardly venture again within the walls, even if
+the gates were open. And as he looked around at the fivescore archers
+and pikemen who lined the way to the gallows, he smiled with grim
+satisfaction.
+
+Seeing that no help was nigh, the prisoner paused at the foot of the
+scaffold and spoke in a firm tone to the Sheriff.
+
+“My lord Sheriff,” quoth he, “since I must needs die, grant me one boon;
+for my noble master ne’er yet had a man that was hanged on a tree:
+
+ Give me a sword all in my hand,
+ And let me be unbound,
+ And with thee and thy men will I fight
+ Till I lie dead on the ground.”
+
+But the Sheriff would by no means listen to his request; but swore
+that he should be hanged a shameful death, and not die by the sword
+valiantly.
+
+ “O no, no, no,” the Sheriff said,
+ “Thou shalt on the gallows die,
+ Aye, and so shall they master too,
+ If ever it in me lie.”
+
+ “O dastard coward!” Stutely cried,
+ “Faint-hearted peasant slave!
+ If ever my master do thee meet,
+ Thou shalt thy payment have!”
+
+ “My noble master thee doth scorn,
+ And all thy cowardly crew,
+ Such silly imps unable are
+ Bold Robin to subdue.”
+
+This brave speech was not calculated to soothe the Sheriff. “To the
+gallows with him!” he roared, giving a sign to the hangman; and Stutely
+was pushed into the rude cart which was to bear him under the gallows
+until his neck was leashed. Then the cart would be drawn roughly away
+and the unhappy man would swing out over the tail of it into another
+world.
+
+But at this moment came a slight interruption. A boyish-looking palmer
+stepped forth, and said:
+
+“Your Excellency, let me at least shrive this poor wretch’s soul ere it
+be hurled into eternity.”
+
+“No!” shouted the Sheriff, “let him die a dog’s death!”
+
+“Then his damnation will rest upon you,” said the monk firmly. “You, my
+lord Bishop, cannot stand by and see this wrong done.”
+
+The Bishop hesitated. Like the Sheriff, he wanted no delay; but
+the people were beginning to mutter among themselves and move about
+uneasily. He said a few words to the Sheriff, and the latter nodded to
+the monk ungraciously.
+
+“Perform your duty, Sir Priest,” quoth he, “and be quick about it!” Then
+turning to his soldiers. “Watch this palmer narrowly,” he commanded.
+“Belike he is in league with those rascally outlaws.”
+
+But the palmer paid no heed to his last words. He began to tell his
+beads quickly, and to speak in a low voice to the condemned man. But he
+did not touch his bonds.
+
+Then came another stir in the crowd, and one came pushing through the
+press of people and soldiery to come near to the scaffold.
+
+“I pray you, Will, before you die, take leave of all your friends!”
+ cried out the well-known voice of Much, the miller’s son.
+
+At the word the palmer stepped back suddenly and looked to one side. The
+Sheriff also knew the speaker.
+
+“Seize him!” he shouted. “‘Tis another of the crew. He is the villain
+cook who once did rob me of my silver plate. We’ll make a double hanging
+of this!”
+
+“Not so fast, good master Sheriff,” retorted Much. “First catch your man
+and then hang him. But meanwhile I would like to borrow my friend of you
+awhile.”
+
+And with one stroke of his keen hunting-knife he cut the bonds which
+fastened the prisoner’s arms, and Stutely leaped lightly from the cart.
+
+“Treason!” screamed the Sheriff, getting black with rage. “Catch the
+varlets!”
+
+So saying he spurred his horse fiercely forward, and rising in his
+stirrups brought down his sword with might and main at Much’s head. But
+his former cook dodged nimbly underneath the horse and came up on the
+other side, while the weapon whistled harmlessly in the air.
+
+“Nay, Sir Sheriff!” he cried, “I must e’en borrow your sword for the
+friend I have borrowed.”
+
+Thereupon he snatched the weapon deftly from the Sheriff’s hand.
+
+“Here, Stutely!” said he, “the Sheriff has lent you his own sword. Back
+to back with me, man, and we’ll teach these knaves a trick or two!”
+
+Meanwhile the soldiers had recovered from their momentary surprise and
+had flung themselves into the fray. A clear bugle-note had also sounded
+the same which the soldiers had learned to dread. ‘Twas the rallying
+note of the green wood men.
+
+Cloth yard shafts began to hurtle through the air, and Robin and his men
+cast aside their cloaks and sprang forward crying:
+
+“Lockesley! Lockesley! a rescue! a rescue!”
+
+On the instant, a terrible scene of hand to hand fighting followed. The
+Sheriff’s men, though once more taken by surprise, were determined to
+sell this rescue dearly. They packed in closely and stubbornly about
+the condemned man and Much and the palmer, and it was only by desperate
+rushes that the foresters made an opening in the square. Ugly cuts and
+bruises were exchanged freely; and lucky was the man who escaped with
+only these. Many of the onlookers, who had long hated the Sheriff and
+felt sympathy for Robin’s men, also plunged into the conflict--although
+they could not well keep out of it, in sooth!--and aided the rescuers no
+little.
+
+At last with a mighty onrush, Robin cleaved a way through the press to
+the scaffold itself, and not a second too soon; for two men with pikes
+had leaped upon the cart, and were in the act of thrusting down upon the
+palmer and Will Stutely. A mighty upward blow from Robin’s good blade
+sent the pike flying from the hand of one, while a well-directed arrow
+from the outskirt pierced the other fellow’s throat.
+
+“God save you, master!” cried Will Stutely joyfully. “I had begun to
+fear that I would never see your face again.”
+
+“A rescue!” shouted the outlaws afresh, and the soldiery became
+fainthearted and ‘gan to give back. But the field was not yet won, for
+they retreated in close order toward the East gate, resolved to hem
+the attackers within the city walls. Here again, however, they were in
+error, since the outlaws did not go out by their nearest gate. They
+made a sally in that direction, in order to mislead the soldiery, then
+abruptly turned and headed for the West gate, which was still guarded by
+Arthur-a-Bland.
+
+The Sheriff’s men raised an exultant shout at this, thinking they had
+the enemy trapped. Down they charged after them, but the outlaws made
+good their lead, and soon got through the gate and over the bridge which
+had been let down by Arthur-a-Bland.
+
+Close upon their heels came the soldiers--so close, that Arthur had no
+time to close the gate again or raise the bridge. So he threw away his
+key and fell in with the yeomen, who now began their retreat up the long
+hill to the woods.
+
+On this side the town, the road leading to the forest was long and
+almost unprotected. The greenwood men were therefore in some distress,
+for the archers shot at them from loop-holes in the walls, and the
+pikemen were reinforced by a company of mounted men from the castle. But
+the outlaws retreated stubbornly and now and again turned to hold their
+pursuers at bay by a volley of arrows. Stutely was in their midst,
+fighting with the energy of two; and the little palmer was there also,
+but took no part save to keep close to Robin’s side and mutter silent
+words as though in prayer.
+
+Robin put his horn to his lips to sound a rally, when a flying arrow
+from the enemy pierced his hand. The palmer gave a little cry and sprang
+forward. The Sheriff, who followed close with the men on horseback, also
+saw the wound and gave a great huzza.
+
+“Ha! you will shoot no more bows for a season, master outlaw!” he
+shouted.
+
+“You lie!” retorted Robin fiercely, wrenching the shaft from his hand
+despite the streaming blood; “I have saved one shot for you all this
+day. Here take it!”
+
+And he fitted the same arrow, which had wounded him, upon the string
+of his bow and let it fly toward the Sheriff’s head. The Sheriff fell
+forward upon his horse in mortal terror, but not so quickly as to escape
+unhurt. The sharp point laid bare a deep gash upon his scalp and must
+certainly have killed him if it had come closer.
+
+The fall of the Sheriff discomfited his followers for the moment, and
+Robin’s men took this chance to speed on up the hill. The palmer had
+whipped out a small white handkerchief and tried to staunch Robin’s
+wound as they went. At sight of the palmer’s hand, Robin turned with a
+start, and pushed back the other’s hood.
+
+“Marian!” he exclaimed, “you here!”
+
+It was indeed Maid Marian, who had helped save Will, and been in the
+stress of battle from the first. Now she hung her head as though caught
+in wrong.
+
+“I had to come, Robin,” she said simply, “and I knew you would not let
+me come, else.”
+
+Their further talk was interrupted by an exclamation from Will Scarlet.
+
+“By the saints, we are trapped!” he said, and pointed to the top of the
+hill, toward which they were pressing.
+
+There from out a gray castle poured a troop of men, armed with pikes and
+axes, who shouted and came running down upon them. At the same instant,
+the Sheriff’s men also renewed the pursuit.
+
+“Alas!” cried poor Marian, “we are undone! There is no way of escape!”
+
+“Courage, dear heart!” said Robin, drawing her close to him. But his own
+spirit sank as he looked about for some outlet.
+
+Then--oh, joyful sight!--he recognized among the foremost of those
+coming from the castle the once doleful knight, Sir Richard of the Lea.
+He was smiling now, and greatly excited.
+
+“A Hood! a Hood!” he cried; “a rescue! a rescue!” Never were there more
+welcome sights and sounds than these. With a great cheer the outlaws
+raced up the hill to meet their new friends; and soon the whole force
+had gained the shelter of the castle. Bang! went the bridge as it swung
+back, with great clanking of chains. Clash! went one great door upon the
+other, as they shut in the outlaw band, and shut out the Sheriff, who
+dashed up at the head of his men, his bandaged face streaked with blood
+and inflamed with rage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+HOW SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA REPAID HIS DEBT
+
+ The proud Sheriff loud ‘gan cry
+ And said, “Thou traitor knight,
+ Thou keepest here the king’s enemy
+ Against the laws and right.”
+
+“Open the gate!” shouted the Sheriff hoarsely, to the sentinel upon the
+walls. “Open, I say, in the king’s name!”
+
+“Why who are you to come thus brawling upon my premises?” asked a
+haughty voice; and Sir Richard himself stepped forth upon the turret.
+
+“You know me well, traitor knight!” said the Sheriff, “now give up into
+my hands the enemy of the King whom you have sheltered against the laws
+and right.”
+
+“Fair and softly, sir,” quoth the knight smoothly. “I well avow that
+I have done certain deeds this day. But I have done them upon mine
+own land, which you now trespass upon; and I shall answer only to the
+King--whom God preserve!--for my actions.”
+
+“Thou soft-spoken villain!” said the Sheriff, still in a towering
+passion. “I, also, serve the King; and if these outlaws are not given up
+to me at once, I shall lay siege to the castle and burn it with fire.”
+
+“First show me your warrants,” said Sir Richard curtly.
+
+“My word is enough! Am I not Sheriff of Nottingham?”
+
+“If you are, in sooth,” retorted the knight, “you should know that you
+have no authority within my lands unless you bear the King’s order. In
+the meantime, go mend your manners, lording.”
+
+And Sir Richard snapped his fingers and disappeared from the walls. The
+Sheriff, after lingering a few moments longer in hope of further parley,
+was forced to withdraw, swearing fiercely.
+
+“The King’s order!” muttered he. “That shall I have without delay,
+as well as this upstart knight’s estates; for King Richard is lately
+returned, I hear, from the Holy Land.”
+
+Meanwhile the knight had gone back to Robin Hood, and the two men
+greeted each other right gladly. “Well met, bold Robin!” cried he,
+taking him in his arms. “Well met, indeed! The Lord has lately prospered
+me, and I was minded this day to ride forth and repay my debt to you.”
+
+“And so you have,” answered Robin gaily.
+
+“Nay, ‘twas nothing--this small service!” said the knight. “I meant the
+moneys coming to you.”
+
+“They have all been repaid,” said Robin; “my lord of Hereford himself
+gave them to me.”
+
+“The exact sum?” asked the knight.
+
+“The exact sum,” answered Robin, winking solemnly.
+
+Sir Richard smiled, but said no more at the time. Robin was made to rest
+until dinner should be served. Meanwhile a leech bound up his hand with
+ointment, promising him that he should soon have its use again. Some
+halfscore others of the yeomen had been hurt in the fight, but luckily
+none of grave moment. They were all bandaged and made happy by bumpers
+of ale.
+
+At dinner Sir Richard presented Robin to his wife and son. The lady was
+stately and gracious, and made much of Marian, whom she had known as
+a little girl and who was now clothed more seemly for a dinner than in
+monkish garments. The young esquire was a goodly youth and bade fair to
+make as stout a knight as his father.
+
+The feast was a joyous event. There were two long tables, and two
+hundred men sat down at them, and ate and drank and afterward sang
+songs. An hundred and forty of these men wore Lincoln green and called
+Robin Hood their chief. Never, I ween, had there been a more gallant
+company at table in Lea Castle!
+
+That night the foresters tarried within the friendly walls, and the next
+day took leave; though Sir Richard protested that they should have made
+a longer stay. And he took Robin aside to his strong room and pressed
+him again to take the four hundred golden pounds. But his guest was
+firm.
+
+“Keep the money, for it is your own,” said Robin; “I have but made the
+Bishop return that which he extorted unjustly.”
+
+Sir Richard thanked him in a few earnest words, and asked him and all
+his men to visit the armory, before they departed. And therein they saw,
+placed apart, an hundred and forty stout yew bows of cunning make, with
+fine waxen silk strings; and an hundred and forty sheaves of arrows.
+Every shaft was a just ell long, set with peacock’s feathers, and
+notched with silver. And Sir Richard’s fair lady came forward and with
+her own hands gave each yeoman a bow and a sheaf.
+
+“In sooth, these are poor presents we have made you, good Robin Hood,”
+ said Sir Richard; “but they carry with them a thousand times their
+weight in gratitude.”
+
+The Sheriff made good his threat to inform the King. Forth rode he
+to London town upon the week following, his scalp wound having healed
+sufficiently to permit him to travel. This time he did not seek out
+Prince John, but asked audience with King Richard of the Lion Heart
+himself. His Majesty had but lately returned from the crusades, and was
+just then looking into the state of his kingdom. So the Sheriff found
+ready audience.
+
+Then to him the Sheriff spoke at length concerning Robin Hood; how that
+for many months the outlaws had defied the King, and slain the King’s
+deer; how Robin had gathered about him the best archers in all the
+countryside; and, finally, how the traitorous knight Sir Richard of the
+Lea had rescued the band when capture seemed certain, and refused to
+deliver them up to justice.
+
+The King heard him through with attention and quoth he:
+
+“Meseems I have heard of this same Robin Hood, and his men, and also
+seen somewhat of their prowess. Did not these same outlaws shoot in a
+royal Tourney at Finsbury field?”
+
+“They did, Your Majesty, under a royal amnesty.”
+
+In this speech the Sheriff erred, for the King asked quickly,
+
+“How came they last to the Fair at Nottingham--by stealth?”
+
+“Yes, Your Majesty.”
+
+“Did you forbid them to come?”
+
+“No, Your Majesty. That is--”
+
+“Speak out!”
+
+“For the good of the shire,” began the Sheriff again, falteringly,
+“we did proclaim an amnesty; but ‘twas because these men had proved a
+menace--”
+
+“Now by my halidom!” quoth the King, while his brow grew black. “Such
+treachery would be unknown in the camp of the Saracen; and yet we call
+ourselves a Christian people!”
+
+The Sheriff kept silence through very fear and shame; then the King
+began speech again:
+
+“Nathless, my lord Sheriff, we promise to look into this matter. Those
+outlaws must be taught that there is but one King in England, and that
+he stands for the law.”
+
+So the Sheriff was dismissed, with very mixed feelings, and went his way
+home to Nottingham town. A fortnight later the King began to make good
+his word, by riding with a small party of knights to Lea Castle. Sir
+Richard was advised of the cavalcade’s approach, and quickly recognized
+his royal master in the tall knight who rode in advance. Hasting to open
+wide his castle gates he went forth to meet the King and fell on one
+knee and kissed his stirrup. For Sir Richard, also, had been with the
+King to the Holy Land, and they had gone on many adventurous quests
+together.
+
+The King bade him rise, and dismounted from his own horse to greet him
+as a brother in arms; and arm-in-arm they went into the castle, while
+bugles and trumpets sounded forth joyous welcome in honor of the great
+occasion.
+
+After the King had rested and supped, he turned upon the knight and with
+grave face inquired:
+
+“What is this I hear about your castle’s becoming a nest and harbor for
+outlaws?”
+
+The Sir Richard of the Lea, divining that the Sheriff had been at the
+King’s ear with his story, made a clean breast of all he knew; how that
+the outlaws had befriended him in sore need--as they had befriended
+others--and how that he had given them only knightly protection in
+return.
+
+The King liked the story well, for his own soul was one of chivalry.
+And he asked other questions about Robin Hood, and heard of the ancient
+wrong done his father before him, and of Robin’s own enemies, and of his
+manner of living.
+
+“In sooth,” cried King Richard, springing up, “I must see this bold
+fellow for myself! An you will entertain my little company, and be ready
+to sally forth, upon the second day, in quest of me if need were, I
+shall e’en fare alone into the greenwood to seek an adventure with him.”
+
+But of this adventure you shall be told in the next tale; for I have
+already shown you how Sir Richard of the Lea repaid his debt, with
+interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HOW KING RICHARD CAME TO SHERWOOD FOREST
+
+ King Richard hearing of the pranks
+ Of Robin Hood and his men,
+ He much admired and more desired
+ To see both him and them.
+
+ Then Robin takes a can of ale:
+ “Come let us now begin;
+ And every man shall have his can;
+ Here’s a health unto the King!”
+
+Friar Tuck had nursed Little John’s wounded knee so skilfully that it
+was now healed. In sooth, the last part of the nursing depended more
+upon strength than skill; for it consisted chiefly of holding down the
+patient, by main force, to his cot. Little John had felt so well that he
+had insisted upon getting up before the wound was healed; and he would
+have done so, if the friar had not piled some holy books upon his legs
+and sat upon his stomach.
+
+Under this vigorous treatment Little John was constrained to lie quiet
+until the friar gave him leave to get up. At last he had this leave, and
+he and the friar went forth to join the rest of the band, who were right
+glad to see them, you may be sure. They sat around a big fire, for ‘twas
+a chilly evening, and they feasted and made merry, in great content.
+
+A cold rain set in, later, but the friar wended his way back, nathless,
+to his little hermitage. There he made himself a cheerful blaze, and
+changed his dripping robe, and had sat himself down, with a sigh of
+satisfaction, before a tankard of hot mulled wine and a pasty, when
+suddenly a voice was heard on the outside, demanding admission. His
+kennel of dogs set up furious uproar, on the instant, by way of proving
+the fact of a stranger’s presence.
+
+“Now by Saint Peter!” growled the friar, “who comes here at this
+unseemly hour? Does he take this for a hostelry? Move on, friend, else
+my mulled wine will get cold!”
+
+So saying he put the tankard to his lips, when a thundering rap sounded
+upon the door-panel, making it to quiver, and causing Tuck almost to
+drop his tankard; while an angry voice shouted, “Ho! Within there! Open,
+I say!”
+
+“Go your way in peace!” roared back the friar; “I can do nothing for
+you. ‘Tis but a few miles to Gamewell, if you know the road.”
+
+“But I do not know the road, and if I did I would not budge another
+foot. ‘Tis wet without and dry within. So open, without further parley!”
+
+“A murrain seize you for disturbing a holy man in his prayers!” muttered
+Tuck savagely. Nathless, he was fain to unbar the door in order to
+keep it from being battered down. Then lighting a torch at his fire and
+whistling for one of his dogs, he strode forth to see who his visitor
+might be.
+
+The figure of a tall knight clad in a black coat of mail, with plumed
+helmet, stood before him. By his side stood his horse, also caparisoned
+in rich armor.
+
+“Have you no supper, brother?” asked the Black Knight curtly. “I must
+beg of you a bed and a bit of roof, for this night, and fain would
+refresh my body ere I sleep.”
+
+“I have no room that even your steed would deign to accept, Sir Knight;
+and naught save a crust of bread and pitcher of water.”
+
+“I’ faith, I can smell better fare than that, brother, and must e’en
+force my company upon you, though I shall recompense it for gold in the
+name of the church. As for my horse, let him but be blanketed and put on
+the sheltered side of the house.”
+
+And without further parley the knight boldly strode past Tuck and his
+dog and entered the hermitage. Something about his masterful air pleased
+Tuck, in spite of his churlishness.
+
+“Sit you down, Sir Knight,” quoth he, “and I will fasten up up your
+steed, and find him somewhat in the shape of grain. Half, also, of my
+bed and board is yours, this night; but we shall see later who is the
+better man, and is to give the orders!”
+
+“With all my soul!” said the knight, laughing. “I can pay my keeping in
+blows or gold as you prefer.”
+
+The friar presently returned and drew up a small table near the fire.
+
+“Now, Sir Knight,” quoth he, “put off your sword and helm and such other
+war-gear as it pleases you, and help me lay this table, for I am passing
+hungry.”
+
+The knight did as he was told, and put aside the visor which had hid
+his face. He was a bronzed and bearded man with blue eyes, and hair shot
+with gold, haughty but handsome withal.
+
+Then once again the priest sat him down to his pasty and mulled wine,
+right hopefully. He spoke his grace with some haste, and was surprised
+to hear his guest respond fittingly in the Latin tongue. Then they
+attacked the wine and pasty valiantly, and the Black Knight made good
+his word of being in need of refreshment. Tuck looked ruefully at the
+rapidly disappearing food, but came to grudge it not, by reason of the
+stories with which his guest enlivened the meal. The wine and warmth of
+the room had cheered them both, and they were soon laughing uproariously
+as the best of comrades in the world. The Black Knight, it seemed, had
+traveled everywhere. He had been on crusades, had fought the courteous
+Saladin, had been in prison, and often in peril. But now he spoke of
+it lightly, and laughed it off, and made himself so friendly that Friar
+Tuck was like to choke with merriment. So passed the time till late; and
+the two fell asleep together, one on each side of the table which had
+been cleared to the platters.
+
+In the morning Friar Tuck awoke disposed to be surly, but was speedily
+mollified by the sight of the Black Knight, who had already risen gay as
+a lark, washed his face and hands, and was now stirring a hot gruel over
+the fire.
+
+“By my faith, I make a sorry host!” cried Tuck springing to his feet.
+And later as they sat at breakfast, he added, “I want not your gold, of
+which you spoke last night; but instead I will do what I can to speed
+you on your way whenever you wish to depart.”
+
+“Then tell me,” said the knight, “how I may find Robin Hood the outlaw;
+for I have a message to him from the King. All day yesterday I sought
+him, but found him not.”
+
+Friar Tuck lifted up his hands in holy horror. “I am a lover of peace,
+Sir Knight, and do not consort with Robin’s bold fellows.”
+
+“Nay, I think no harm of Master Hood,” said the knight; “but much I
+yearn to have speed with him in mine own person.”
+
+“If that be all, mayhap I can guide you to his haunts,” said Tuck, who
+foresaw in this knight a possible gold-bag for Robin. “In sooth, I could
+not well live in these woods without hearing somewhat of the outlaws;
+but matters of religion are my chief joy and occupation.”
+
+“I will go with you, brother,” said the Black Knight.
+
+So without more ado they went their way into the forest, the knight
+riding upon his charger, and Tuck pacing along demurely by his side.
+
+The day had dawned clear and bright, and now with the sun a good three
+hours high a sweet autumn fragrance was in the air. The wind had just
+that touch of coolness in it which sets the hunter’s blood to tingling;
+and every creature of nature seemed bounding with joyous life.
+
+The knight sniffed the fresh air in delight.
+
+“By my halidom!” quoth he; “but the good greenwood is the best place
+to live in, after all! What court or capital can equal this, for
+full-blooded men?”
+
+“None of this earth,” replied Tuck smilingly. And once more his heart
+warmed toward the courteous stranger.
+
+They had not proceeded more than three or four miles along the way from
+Fountain Abbey to Barnesdale, when of a sudden the bushes just ahead of
+them parted and a well-knit man with curling brown hair stepped into the
+road and laid his hand upon the knight’s bridle.
+
+It was Robin Hood. He had seen Friar Tuck, a little way back, and
+shrewdly suspected his plan. Tuck, however, feigned not to know him at
+all.
+
+“Hold!” cried Robin; “I am in charge of the highway this day, and must
+exact an accounting from all passersby.”
+
+“Who is it bids me hold?” asked the knight quietly. “I am not i’ the
+habit of yielding to one man.”
+
+“Then here are others to keep me company,” said Robin clapping his
+hands. And instantly a half-score other stalwart fellows came out of the
+bushes and stood beside him.
+
+“We be yeomen of the forest, Sir Knight,” continued Robin, “and live
+under the greenwood tree. We have no means of support--thanks to the
+tyranny of our over-lords--other than the aid which fat churchmen and
+goodly knights like yourselves can give. And as ye have churches and
+rents, both, and gold in great plenty, we beseech ye for Saint Charity
+to give us some of your spending.”
+
+“I am but a poor monk, good sir!” said Friar Tuck in a whining voice,
+“and am on my way to the shrine of Saint Dunstan, if your worshipfulness
+will permit.”
+
+“Tarry a space with us,” answered Robin, biting back a smile, “and we
+will speed you on your way.”
+
+The Black Knight now spoke again. “But we are messengers of the King,”
+ quoth he; “His Majesty himself tarries near here and would have speech
+with Robin Hood.”
+
+“God save the King!” said Robin, doffing his cap loyally; “and all that
+wish him well! I am Robin Hood, but I say cursed be the man who denies
+our liege King’s sovereignty!”
+
+“Have a care!” said the knight, “or you shall curse yourself!”
+
+“Nay, not so,” replied Robin curtly; “the King has no more devoted
+subject than I. Nor have I despoiled aught of his save, mayhap, a few
+deer for my hunger. My chief war is against the clergy and barons of the
+land who bear down upon the poor. But I am glad,” he continued, “that I
+have met you here; and before we end you shall be my friend and taste of
+our greenwood cheer.”
+
+“But what is the reckoning?” asked the knight. “For I am told that some
+of your feasts are costly.”
+
+“Nay,” responded Robin waving his hands, “you are from the King.
+Nathless--how much money is in your purse?”
+
+“I have no more than forty gold pieces, seeing that I have lain a
+fortnight at Nottingham with the King, and have spent some goodly
+amounts upon other lordings,” replied the knight.
+
+Robin took the forty pounds and gravely counted it. One half he gave to
+his men and bade them drink the King’s health with it. The other half he
+handed back to the knight.
+
+“Sir,” said he courteously, “have this for your spending. If you lie
+with kings and lordings overmuch, you are like to need it.”
+
+“Gramercy!” replied the other smiling. “And now lead on to your
+greenwood hostelry.”
+
+So Robin went on the one side of the knight’s steed, and Friar Tuck on
+the other, and the men went before and behind till they came to the open
+glade before the caves of Barnesdale. Then Robin drew forth his bugle
+and winded the three signal blasts of the band. Soon there came a
+company of yeomen with its leader, and another, and a third, and a
+fourth, till there were sevenscore yeomen in sight. All were dressed
+in new livery of Lincoln green, and carried new bows in their hands and
+bright short swords at their belts. And every man bent his knee to Robin
+Hood ere taking his place before the board, which was already set.
+
+A handsome dark-haired page stood at Robin’s right hand to pour his wine
+and that of the knightly guest; while the knight marveled much at all he
+saw, and said within himself:
+
+“These men of Robin Hood’s give him more obedience than my fellows give
+to me.”
+
+At the signal from Robin the dinner began. There was venison and fowl
+and fish and wheaten cake and ale and red wine in great plenty, and
+‘twas a goodly sight to see the smiles upon the hungry yeomen’s faces.
+
+First they listened to an unctuous grace from Friar Tuck, and then Robin
+lifted high a tankard of ale.
+
+“Come, let us now begin,” quoth he, “and every man shall have his can.
+In honor of our guest who comes with royal word, here’s a health unto
+the King!”
+
+The guest responded heartily to this toast, and round about the board it
+went, the men cheering noisily for King Richard!
+
+After the feast was over, Robin turned to his guest and said, “Now you
+shall see what life we lead, so that you may report faithfully, for good
+or bad, unto the King.”
+
+So at a signal from him, the men rose up and smartly bent their bows for
+practice, while the knight was greatly astonished at the smallness of
+the their targets. A wand was set up, far down the glade, and thereon
+was balanced a garland of roses. Whosoever failed to speed his shaft
+through the garland, without knocking it off the wand, was to submit to
+a buffet from the hand of Friar Tuck.
+
+“Ho, ho!” cried the knight, as his late traveling companion rose up and
+bared his brawny arm ready for service; “so you, my friend, are Friar
+Tuck!”
+
+“I have not gainsaid it,” replied Tuck growling at having betrayed
+himself. “But chastisement is a rule of the church, and I am seeking the
+good of these stray sheep.”
+
+The knight said no more, though his eyes twinkled; and the shooting
+began.
+
+David of Doncaster shot first and landed safely through the rose
+garland. Then came Allan-a-Dale and Little John and Stutely and Scarlet
+and many of the rest, while the knight held his breath from very
+amazement. Each fellow shot truly through the garland, until Middle the
+tinker--not to be outdone--stepped up for a trial. But alas! while
+he made a fair shot for a townsman, the arrow never came within a
+hand-breath of the outer rim of the garland.
+
+“Come hither, fellow,” said Little John coaxingly. “The priest would
+bless thee with his open hand.”
+
+Then because Middle made a wry face, as though he had already received
+the buffet, and loitered in his steps, Arthur-a-Bland and Will Stutely
+seized him by the arms and stood him before the friar. Tuck’s big arm
+flashed through the air--“whoof!” and stopped suddenly against the
+tinker’s ear; while Middle himself went rolling over and over on the
+grass. He was stopped by a small bush, and up he sat, thrusting his head
+through it, rubbing his ear and blinking up at the sky as though the
+stars had fallen and struck him. The yeomen roared with merriment, and
+as for the knight, he laughed till the tears came out of his blue eyes
+and rolled down his face.
+
+After Middle’s mishap, others of the band seemed to lose their balance,
+and fared in the same fashion. The garland would topple over in a most
+impish way at every breath, although the arrows went through it. So
+Middle ‘gan to feel better when he saw this one and that one tumbling on
+the sward.
+
+At last came Robin’s turn. He shot carefully, but as ill luck would have
+it the shaft was ill-feathered and swerved sidewise so that it missed
+the garland by full three fingers. Then a great roar went up from the
+whole company; for ‘twas rare that they saw their leader miss his mark.
+Robin flung his bow upon the ground from very vexation.
+
+“A murrain take it!” quoth he. “The arrow was sadly winged. I felt the
+poor feather upon it as it left my fingers!”
+
+Then suddenly seizing his bow again, he sped three shafts as fast as he
+could sent them, and every one went clean through the garland.
+
+“By Saint George!” muttered the knight. “Never before saw I such
+shooting in all Christendom!”
+
+The band cheered heartily at these last shots; but Will Scarlet came up
+gravely to Robin.
+
+“Pretty shooting, master!” quoth he, “but ‘twill not save you from
+paying for the bad arrow. So walk up and take your medicine!”
+
+“Nay, that may not be!” protested Robin. “The good friar belongs to
+my company and has no authority to lift hands against me. But you, Sir
+Knight, stand as it were for the King. I pray you, serve out my blow.”
+
+“Not so!” said Friar Tuck. “My son, you forget I stand for the church,
+which is greater even than the King.”
+
+“Not in merry England,” said the knight in a deep voice. Then rising to
+his feet, he added, “I stand ready to serve you, Master Hood.”
+
+“Now out upon ye for an upstart knight!” cried Friar Tuck. “I told you
+last night, sirrah, that we should yet see who was the better man! So we
+will e’en prove it now, and thus settle who is to pay Robin Hood.”
+
+“Good!” said Robin, “for I want not to start a dispute between church
+and state.”
+
+“Good!” also said the knight. “‘Tis an easy way to end prattling. Come,
+friar, strike and ye dare. I will give you first blow.”
+
+“You have the advantage of an iron pot on your head and gloves on your
+hands,” said the friar; “but have at ye! Down you shall go, if you were
+Goliath of Gath.”
+
+Once more the priest’s brawny arm flashed through the air, and struck
+with a “whoof!” But to the amazement of all, the knight did not budge
+from his tracks, though the upper half of his body swerved slightly to
+ease the force of the blow. A loud shout burst from the yeomen at this,
+for the friar’s fist was proverbial, and few of those present had not
+felt the force of it in times past.
+
+“Now ‘tis my turn,” said his antagonist coolly, casting aside his
+gauntlet. And with one blow of his fist the knight sent the friar
+spinning to the ground.
+
+If there had been uproar and shouting before, it was as naught to the
+noise which now broke forth. Every fellow held his sides or rolled upon
+the ground from laughter; every fellow, save one, and that was Robin
+Hood.
+
+“Out of the frying-pan into the fire!” thought he. “I wish I had let the
+friar box my ears, after all!”
+
+Robin’s plight did, indeed, seem a sorry one, before the steel muscles
+of his stranger. But he was saved from a tumble heels over head by
+an unlooked-for diversion. A horn winded in the glade, and a party of
+knights were seen approaching.
+
+“To your arms!” cried Robin, hurriedly seizing his sword and bow.
+
+“‘Tis Sir Richard of the Lea!” cried another, as the troop came nearer.
+
+And so it was. Sir Richard spurred forward his horse and dashed up to
+the camp while the outlaws stood at stiff attention. When he had come
+near the spot where the Black Knight stood, he dismounted and knelt
+before him.
+
+“I trust Your Majesty has not needed our arms before,” he said humbly.
+
+“It is the King!” cried Will Scarlet, falling upon his knees.
+
+“The King!” echoed Robin Hood after a moment of dumb wonderment; and he
+and all his men bent reverently upon their knees, as one man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD AND MAID MARIAN WERE WED
+
+ “Stand up again,” then said the King,
+ “I’ll thee thy pardon give;
+ Stand up, my friend, who can contend,
+ When I give leave to live?”
+
+ Then Robin Hood began a health
+ To Marian, his only dear,
+ And his yeomen all, both comely and tall,
+ Did quickly bring up the rear.
+
+“Your pardon, sire!” exclaimed Robin Hood. “Pardon, from your royal
+bounty, for these my men who stand ready to serve you all your days!”
+
+Richard of the Lion Heart looked grimly about over the kneeling band.
+
+“Is it as your leader says?” he asked.
+
+“Aye, my lord King!” burst from sevenscore throats at once.
+
+“We be not outlaws from choice alone,” continued Robin; “but have
+been driven to outlawry through oppression. Grant us grace and royal
+protection, and we will forsake the greenwood and follow the King.”
+
+Richard’s eyes sparkled as he looked from one to another of this
+stalwart band, and he thought within himself that here, indeed, was a
+royal bodyguard worth the while.
+
+“Swear!” he said in his full rich voice; “swear that you, Robin Hood,
+and all your men from this day henceforth will serve the King!”
+
+“We swear!” came once more the answering shout from the yeomen.
+
+“Arise, then,” said King Richard. “I give you all free pardon, and will
+speedily put your service to the test. For I love such archers as you
+have shown yourselves to be, and it were a sad pity to decree such men
+to death. England could not produce the like again, for many a day. But,
+in sooth, I cannot allow you to roam in the forest and shoot my deer;
+nor to take the law of the land into your own hands. Therefore, I now
+appoint you to be Royal Archers and mine own especial body-guard. There
+be one or two civil matters to settle with certain Norman noblemen,
+in which I crave your aid. Thereafter, the half of your number, as
+may later be determined, shall come back to these woodlands as Royal
+Foresters. Mayhap you will show as much zeal in protecting my preserves
+as you have formerly shown in hunting them. Where, now, is that outlaw
+known as Little John? Stand forth!”
+
+“Here, sire,” quoth the giant, doffing his cap.
+
+“Good master Little John,” said the King, looking him over approvingly.
+“Could your weak sinews stand the strain of an office in the shire? If
+so, you are this day Sheriff of Nottingham; and I trust you will make a
+better official than the man you relieve.”
+
+“I shall do my best, sire,” said Little John, great astonishment and
+gladness in his heart.
+
+“Master Scarlet, stand forth,” said the King; and then addressing him:
+“I have heard somewhat of your tale,” quoth he, “and that your father
+was the friend of my father. Now, therefore, accept the royal pardon and
+resume the care of your family estates; for your father must be growing
+old. And come you to London next Court day and we shall see if there be
+a knighthood vacant.”
+
+Likewise the King called for Will Stutely and made him Chief of the
+Royal Archers. Then he summoned Friar Tuck to draw near.
+
+“I crave my King’s pardon,” said the priest, humbly enough; “for who am
+I to lift my hand against the Lord’s anointed?”
+
+“Nay, the Lord sent the smiter to thee without delay,” returned Richard
+smiling; “and ‘tis not for me to continue a quarrel between church and
+state. So what can I do for you in payment of last night’s hospitality?
+Can I find some fat living where there are no wicked to chastise, and
+where the work is easy and comfortable?”
+
+“Not so, my lord,” replied Tuck. “I wish only for peace in this life.
+Mine is a simple nature and I care not for the fripperies and follies
+of court life. Give me a good meal and a cup of right brew, health, and
+enough for the day, and I ask no more.”
+
+Richard sighed. “You ask the greatest thing in the world,
+brother--contentment. It is not mine to give or to deny. But ask your
+God for it, an if belike he grant it, then ask it also in behalf of your
+King.” He glanced around once more at the foresters. “Which one of you
+is Allan-a-Dale?” he asked; and Allan came forward. “So,” said the King
+with sober face, “you are that errant minstrel who stole a bride at
+Plympton, despite her would-be groom and attending Bishop. I heard
+something of this in former days. Now what excuse have you to make?”
+
+“Only that I loved her, sire, and she loved me,” said Allan, simply;
+“and the Norman lord would have married her perforce, because of her
+lands.”
+
+“Which have since been forfeited by the Bishop of Hereford,” added
+Richard. “But my lord Bishop must disgorge them; and from tomorrow you
+and Mistress Dale are to return to them and live in peace and loyalty.
+And if ever I need your harp at Court, stand ready to attend me, and
+bring also the lady. Speaking of ladies,” he continued, turning to Robin
+Hood, who had stood silent, wondering if a special punishment was
+being reserved for him, “did you not have a sweetheart who was once at
+Court--one, Mistress Marian? What has become of her, that you should
+have forgotten her?”
+
+“Nay, Your Majesty,” said the black-eyed page coming forward blushingly;
+“Robin has not forgotten me!”
+
+“So!” said the King, bending to kiss her small hand in all gallantry.
+“Verily, as I have already thought within myself, this Master Hood is
+better served than the King in his palace! But are you not the only
+child of the late Earl of Huntingdon?”
+
+“I am, sire, though there be some who say that Robin Hood’s father
+was formerly the rightful Earl of Huntingdon. Nathless, neither he is
+advantaged nor I, for the estates are confiscate.”
+
+“Then they shall be restored forthwith!” cried the King; “and lest you
+two should revive the ancient quarrel over them, I bestow them upon you
+jointly. Come forward, Robin Hood.”
+
+Robin came and knelt before his king. Richard drew his sword and touched
+him upon the shoulder.
+
+“Rise, Robin Fitzooth, Earl of Huntingdon!” he exclaimed, while a mighty
+cheer arose from the band and rent the air of the forest. “The first
+command I give you, my lord Earl,” continued the King when quiet was
+restored, “is to marry Mistress Marian without delay.”
+
+“May I obey all Your Majesty’s commands as willingly!” cried the new
+Earl of Huntingdon, drawing the old Earl’s daughter close to him. “The
+ceremony shall take place to-morrow, an this maid is willing.”
+
+“She makes little protest,” said the King; “so I shall e’en give away
+the bride myself!”
+
+Then the King chatted with others of the foresters, and made himself as
+one of them for the evening, rejoicing that he could have this careless
+freedom of the woods. And Much, the miller’s son, and Arthur-a-Bland,
+and Middle, and Stutely and Scarlet and Little John and others played
+at the quarter-staff, giving and getting many lusty blows. Then as
+the shades of night drew on, the whole company--knights and
+foresters--supped and drank around a blazing fire, while Allen sang
+sweetly to the thrumming of the harp, and the others joined in the
+chorus.
+
+‘Twas a happy, care-free night--this last one together under the
+greenwood tree. Robin could not help feeling an undertone of sadness
+that it was to be the last; for the charm of the woodland was still upon
+him. But he knew ‘twas better so, and that the new life with Marian and
+in the service of his King would bring its own joys.
+
+Then the night deepened, the fire sank, but was replenished and the
+company lay down to rest. The King, at his own request, spent the night
+in the open. Thus they slept--King and subject alike--out under the
+stars, cared for lovingly by Nature, kind mother of us all.
+
+In the morning the company was early astir and on their way to
+Nottingham. It was a goodly cavalcade. First rode King Richard of the
+Lion Heart, with his tall figure set forth by the black armor and waving
+plume in his helm. Then came Sir Richard of the Lea with fourscore
+knights and men-at-arms. And after them came Robin Hood and Maid Marian
+riding upon milk-white steeds. Allan-a-Dale also escorted Mistress Dale
+on horseback, for she was to be matron-of-honor at the wedding. These
+were followed by sevenscore archers clad in their bravest Lincoln green,
+and with their new bows unstrung in token of peace.
+
+Outside the gates of Nottingham town they were halted.
+
+“Who comes here?” asked the warder’s surly voice.
+
+“Open to the King of England!” came back the clear answer, and the gates
+were opened and the bridge let down without delay.
+
+Almost before the company had crossed the moat the news spread through
+the town like wildfire.
+
+“The King is here! The King is here, and hath taken Robin Hood!”
+
+From every corner flocked the people to see the company pass; and wildly
+did they cheer for the King, who rode smilingly with bared head down
+through the market-place.
+
+At the far end of it, he was met by the Sheriff who came up puffing in
+his haste to do the King honor. He fairly turned green with rage when he
+saw Sir Richard of the Lea and Robin Hood in the royal company, but made
+low obeisance to his master.
+
+“Sir Sheriff,” quoth the King, “I have come to rid the shire of outlaws,
+according to my promise. There be none left, for all have now taken
+service with their King. And lest there should be further outbreak,
+I have determined to place in charge of this shire a man who fears
+no other man in it. Master Little John is hereby created Sheriff of
+Nottingham, and you will turn over the keys to him forthwith.”
+
+The Sheriff bowed, but dared utter no word. Then the King turned to the
+Bishop of Hereford, who had also come up to pay his respects.
+
+“Harkee, my lord Bishop,” quoth he, “the stench of your evil actions
+had reached our nostrils. We shall demand strict accounting for certain
+seizures of the lands and certain acts of oppression which ill become a
+churchman. But of this later. This afternoon you must officiate at the
+wedding of two of our company, in Nottingham Church. So make you ready.”
+
+The Bishop also bowed and departed, glad to escape a severer censure for
+the time.
+
+The company then rode on to the Mansion House, where the King held high
+levee through all the noon hours, and the whole town made a holiday.
+
+In the afternoon the way from the Mansion House to Nottingham Church was
+lined with cheering people, as the wedding party passed by. The famous
+bowmen were gazed at as curiously as though they had been wild animals,
+but were cheered none the less. Robin who had long been held in secret
+liking was now doubly popular since he had the King’s favor.
+
+Along the way ahead of the King and the smiling bride and groom to be
+ran little maids strewing flowers; while streamers floated in greeting
+from the windows. I ween, the only hearts that were not glad this day
+were those of the old Sheriff, and of his proud daughter, who peered
+between the shutters of her window and was like to eat out her heart
+from envy and hatred.
+
+At last the party reached the church, where the King dismounted lightly
+from his horse and helped the bride to alight; while Will Scarlet,
+the best man, assisted Mistress Dale. Within the church they found
+the Bishop robed in state, and by his side Friar Tuck who had been
+especially deputed to assist.
+
+The service was said in Latin, while the organ pealed forth softly. The
+King gave away the bride, as he had said, and afterwards claimed first
+kiss for his pains. Then the happy party dispersed, and Robin and Marian
+passed out again through the portal, man and wife.
+
+Out through the cheering streets they fared, while the greenwood men ran
+ahead and flung gold pennies right and left in their joy, and bade the
+people drink the health of the young couple and the King. Then the
+whole party took horse at Will Scarlet’s earnest wish, and went down to
+Gamewell Lodge, where the old Squire George wept for joy at seeing his
+son and the King and the wedding--party. That night they spent there,
+and feasted, and the next day, Sir Richard of the Lea claimed them.
+
+And thus, amid feasting and rejoicing and kingly favor, Robin Hood, the
+new Earl of Huntingdon, and his bride began their wedded life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET HIS DEATH
+
+ “Give me my bent bow in my hand,
+ And a broad arrow I’ll let flee;
+ And where this arrow is taken up,
+ There shall my grave digg’d be.”
+
+Now by good rights this story should end with the wedding of Robin Hood
+and Maid Marian; for do not many pleasant tales end with a wedding and
+the saying, “and they lived happy ever after.”
+
+But this is a true account--in so far as we can find the quaint old
+ballads which tell of it--and so we must follow one more of these songs
+and learn how Robin, after living many years longer, at last came to
+seek his grave. And the story of it runs in this wise.
+
+Robin Hood and his men, now the Royal Archers, went with King Richard of
+the Lion Heart through England settling certain private disputes which
+had arisen among the Norman barons while the King was gone to the Holy
+Land. Then the King proceeded amid great pomp and rejoicing to the
+palace at London, and Robin, the new Earl of Huntingdon, brought his
+Countess thither, where she became one of the finest ladies of the
+Court.
+
+The Royal Archers were now divided into two bands, and one-half of them
+were retained in London, while the other half returned to Sherwood and
+Barnesdale, there to guard the King’s preserves.
+
+Several months passed by, and Robin began to chafe under the restraint
+of city life. He longed for the fresh pure air of the greenwood, and
+the rollicking society of his yeomen. One day, upon seeing some lads
+at archery practice upon a green, he could not help but lament, saying,
+“Woe is me! I fear my hand is fast losing its old time cunning at the
+bow-string!”
+
+Finally he became so distraught that he asked leave to travel in foreign
+lands, and this was granted him. He took Maid Marian with him, and
+together they went through many strange countries. Finally in an Eastern
+land a great grief came upon Robin. Marian sickened of a plague and
+died. They had been married but five years, and Robin felt as though all
+the light had gone out of his life.
+
+He wandered about the world for a few months longer, trying to forget
+his grief, then came back to the court, at London, and sought some
+commission in active service. But unluckily, Richard was gone again upon
+his adventures, and Prince John, who acted as Regent, had never been
+fond of Robin. He received him with a sarcastic smile.
+
+“Go forth into the greenwood,” said he, coldly, “and kill some more of
+the King’s deer. Belike, then, the King will make you Prime Minister, at
+the very least, upon his return.”
+
+The taunt fired Robin’s blood. He had been in a morose mood, ever since
+his dear wife’s death. He answered Prince John hotly, and the Prince
+bade his guards seize him and cast him into the Tower.
+
+After lying there for a few weeks, he was released by the faithful
+Stutely and the remnant of the Royal Archers, and all together they fled
+the city and made their way to the greenwood. There Robin blew the old
+familiar call, which all had known and loved so well. Up came running
+the remainder of the band, who had been Royal Foresters, and when they
+saw their old master they embraced his knees and kissed his hands, and
+fairly cried for joy that he had come again to them. And one and all
+forswore fealty to Prince John, and lived quietly with Robin in the
+greenwood, doing harm to none and only awaiting the time when King
+Richard should come again.
+
+But King Richard came not again, and would never need his Royal Guard
+more. Tidings presently reached them, of how he had met his death in a
+foreign land, and how John reigned as King in his stead. The proof of
+these events followed soon after, when there came striding through the
+glade the big, familiar form of Little John.
+
+“Art come to arrest us?” called out Robin, as he ran forward and
+embraced his old comrade.
+
+“Nay, I am not come as the Sheriff of Nottingham, thanks be,” answered
+Little John. “The new King has deposed me, and ‘tis greatly to
+my liking, for I have long desired to join you here again in the
+greenwood.”
+
+Then were the rest of the band right glad at this news, and toasted
+Little John royally.
+
+The new King waged fierce war upon the outlaws, soon after this, and
+sent so many scouting parties into Sherwood and Barnesdale that Robin
+and his men left these woods for a time and went into Derbyshire, near
+Haddon Hall. A curious pile of stone is shown to this day as the ruins
+of Robin’s Castle, where the bold outlaw is believed to have defied his
+enemies for a year or more. At any rate King John found so many troubles
+of his own, after a time, that he ceased troubling the outlaws.
+
+But in one of the last sorties Robin was wounded. The cut did not seem
+serious, and healed over the top; but it left a lurking fever. Daily his
+strength ebbed away from him, until he was in sore distress.
+
+One day as he rode along on horseback, near Kirklees Abbey, he was
+seized with so violent a rush of blood to the head that he reeled and
+came near falling from his saddle. He dismounted weakly and knocked at
+the Abbey gate. A woman shrouded in black peered forth.
+
+“Who are you that knock here? For we allow no man within these walls,”
+ she said.
+
+“Open, for the love of Heaven!” he begged. “I am Robin Hood, ill of a
+fever and in sore straits.”
+
+At the name of Robin Hood the woman started back, and then, as though
+bethinking herself, unbarred the door and admitted him. Assisting his
+fainting frame up a flight of stairs and into a front room, she loosed
+his collar and bathed his face until he was revived. Then she spoke
+hurriedly in a low voice:
+
+“Your fever will sink, if you are bled. See, I have provided a lancet
+and will open your veins, while you lie quiet.”
+
+So she bled him, and he fell into a stupor which lasted nearly all that
+day, so that he awoke weak and exhausted from loss of blood.
+
+Now there is a dispute as to this abbess who bled him. Some say that
+she did it in all kindness of heart; while others aver that she was none
+other than the former Sheriff’s daughter, and found her revenge at last
+in this cruel deed.
+
+Be that as it may, Robin’s eyes swam from very weakness when he awoke.
+
+He called wearily for help, but there was no response. He looked
+longingly through the window at the green of the forest; but he was too
+weak to make the leap that would be needed to reach the ground.
+
+ He then bethought him of his horn,
+ Which hung down at his knee;
+ He set his horn unto his mouth,
+ And blew out weak blasts three.
+
+Little John was out in the forest near by, or the blasts would never
+have been heard. At their sound he sprang to his feet.
+
+“Woe! woe!” he cried, “I fear my master is near dead, he blows so
+wearily!”
+
+So he made haste and came running up to the door of the abbey, and
+knocked loudly for admittance. Failing to get reply, he burst in the
+door with frenzied blows of his mighty fist, and soon came running up
+to the room where Robin lay, white and faint. “Alas, dear master!” cried
+Little John in great distress; “I fear you have met with treachery! If
+that be so, grant me one last boon, I pray.”
+
+“What is it?” asked Robin.
+
+“Let me burn Kirklees-Hall with fire, and all its nunnery.”
+
+“Nay, good comrade,” answered Robin Hood gently, “I cannot grant such
+a boon. The dear Christ bade us forgive all our enemies. Moreover,
+you know I never hurt woman in all my life; nor man when in woman’s
+company.”
+
+He closed his eyes and fell back, so that his friend thought him dying.
+The great tears fell from the giant’s eyes and wet his master’s hand.
+Robin slowly rallied and seized his comrade’s outstretched arm.
+
+“Lift me up, good Little John,” he said brokenly, “I want to smell
+the air from the good greenwood once again. Give me my good yew
+bow--here--here-and fix a broad arrow upon the string. Out yonder--among
+the oaks--where this arrow shall fall--let them dig my grave.”
+
+And with one last mighty effort he sped his shaft out of the open
+window, straight and true, as in the days of old, till it struck the
+largest oak of them all and dropped in the shadow of the trees. Then he
+fell back upon the sobbing breast of his devoted friend.
+
+“‘Tis the last!” he murmured, “tell the brave hearts to lay me there
+with the green sod under my head and feet. And--let them lay--my bent
+bow at my side, for it has made sweet music in mine ears.”
+
+He rested a moment, and Little John scarce knew that he was alive. But
+on a sudden Robin’s eye brightened, and he seemed to think himself back
+once more with the band in the open forest glade. He struggled to rise.
+
+“Ha! ‘tis a fine stag, Will! And Allan, thou never didst thrum the harp
+more sweetly. How the light blazes! And Marian!--‘tis my Marian--come at
+last!”
+
+So died the body of Robin Hood; but his spirit lives on through the
+centuries in the deathless ballads which are sung of him, and in the
+hearts of men who love freedom and chivalry.
+
+They buried him where his last arrow had fallen, and they set a stone to
+mark the spot. And on the stone were graven these words:
+
+ “Here underneath his little stone
+ Lies Robert, Earl of Huntingdon;
+ Never archer as he so good,
+ And people called him Robin Hood.
+ Such outlaws as he and his men
+ Will England never see again.”
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Robin Hood, by J. Walker McSpadden
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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>
+ <title>
+ Robin Hood, by J. Walker Mcspadden
+ </title>
+ <style type="text/css" xml:space="preserve">
+
+ body { margin:5%; background:#faebd0; text-align:justify}
+ P { text-indent: 1em; margin-top: .25em; margin-bottom: .25em; }
+ 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;}
+ pre { font-style: italic; font-size: 90%; margin-left: 10%;}
+
+</style>
+ </head>
+ <body>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Robin Hood, by J. Walker McSpadden
+
+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: Robin Hood
+
+Author: J. Walker McSpadden
+
+Release Date: January 21, 2006 [EBook #832]
+Last Updated: November 15, 2016
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBIN HOOD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joseph S. Miller and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <h1>
+ ROBIN HOOD
+ </h1>
+ <p>
+ <br />
+ </p>
+ <h2>
+ by J. Walker McSpadden
+ </h2>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <blockquote>
+ <p class="toc">
+ <big><b>CONTENTS</b></big>
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0003">
+ CHAPTER III </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0006">
+ CHAPTER VI </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0010">
+ CHAPTER X </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0014">
+ CHAPTER XIV </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0018">
+ CHAPTER XVIII </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX </a><br /><br /> <a
+ href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0022">
+ CHAPTER XXII </a><br /><br /> <a href="#link2HCH0023"> CHAPTER XXIII </a><br /><br />
+ <a href="#link2HCH0024"> CHAPTER XXIV&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp; </a>
+ </p>
+ </blockquote>
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br />
+ </p>
+ <hr />
+ <p>
+ <br /> <br /> <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER I
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD BECAME AN OUTLAW
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ List and hearken, gentlemen,
+ That be of free-born blood,
+ I shall you tell of a good yeoman,
+ His name was Robin Hood.
+
+ Robin was a proud outlaw,
+ While as he walked on the ground.
+ So courteous an outlaw as he was one
+ Was never none else found.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In the days of good King Harry the Second of England&mdash;he of the
+ warring sons&mdash;there were certain forests in the north country set
+ aside for the King&rsquo;s hunting, and no man might shoot deer therein under
+ penalty of death. These forests were guarded by the King&rsquo;s Foresters, the
+ chief of whom, in each wood, was no mean man but equal in authority to the
+ Sheriff in his walled town, or even to my lord Bishop in his abbey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One of the greatest of royal preserves was Sherwood and Barnesdale forests
+ near the two towns of Nottingham and Barnesdale. Here for some years dwelt
+ one Hugh Fitzooth as Head Forester, with his good wife and son Robert. The
+ boy had been born in Lockesley town&mdash;in the year 1160, stern records
+ say&mdash;and was often called Lockesley, or Rob of Lockesley. He was a
+ comely, well-knit stripling, and as soon as he was strong enough to walk
+ his chief delight was to go with his father into the forest. As soon as
+ his right arm received thew and sinew he learned to draw the long bow and
+ speed a true arrow. While on winter evenings his greatest joy was to hear
+ his father tell of bold Will o&rsquo; the Green, the outlaw, who for many
+ summers defied the King&rsquo;s Foresters and feasted with his men upon King&rsquo;s
+ deer. And on other stormy days the boy learned to whittle out a straight
+ shaft for the long bow, and tip it with gray goose feathers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fond mother sighed when she saw the boy&rsquo;s face light up at these
+ woodland tales. She was of gentle birth, and had hoped to see her son
+ famous at court or abbey. She taught him to read and to write, to doff his
+ cap without awkwardness and to answer directly and truthfully both lord
+ and peasant. But the boy, although he took kindly to these lessons of
+ breeding, was yet happiest when he had his beloved bow in hand and
+ strolled at will, listening to the murmur of the trees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two playmates had Rob in these gladsome early days. One was Will Gamewell,
+ his father&rsquo;s brother&rsquo;s son, who lived at Gamewell Lodge, hard by
+ Nottingham town. The other was Marian Fitzwalter, only child of the Earl
+ of Huntingdon. The castle of Huntingdon could be seen from the top of one
+ of the tall trees in Sherwood; and on more than one bright day Rob&rsquo;s white
+ signal from this tree told Marian that he awaited her there: for you must
+ know that Rob did not visit her at the castle. His father and her father
+ were enemies. Some people whispered that Hugh Fitzooth was the rightful
+ Earl of Huntingdon, but that he had been defrauded out of his lands by
+ Fitzwalter, who had won the King&rsquo;s favor by a crusade to the Holy Land.
+ But little cared Rob or Marian for this enmity, however it had arisen.
+ They knew that the great green&mdash;wood was open to them, and that the
+ wide, wide world was full of the scent of flowers and the song of birds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Days of youth speed all too swiftly, and troubled skies come all too soon.
+ Rob&rsquo;s father had two other enemies besides Fitzwalter, in the persons of
+ the lean Sheriff of Nottingham and the fat Bishop of Hereford. These three
+ enemies one day got possession of the King&rsquo;s ear and whispered therein to
+ such good&mdash;or evil&mdash;purpose that Hugh Fitzooth was removed from
+ his post of King&rsquo;s Forester. He and his wife and Rob, then a youth of
+ nineteen, were descended upon, during a cold winter&rsquo;s evening, and
+ dispossessed without warning. The Sheriff arrested the Forester for
+ treason&mdash;of which, poor man, he was as guiltless as you or I&mdash;and
+ carried him to Nottingham jail. Rob and his mother were sheltered over
+ night in the jail, also, but next morning were roughly bade to go about
+ their business. Thereupon they turned for succor to their only kinsman,
+ Squire George of Gamewell, who sheltered them in all kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the shock, and the winter night&rsquo;s journey, proved too much for Dame
+ Fitzooth. She had not been strong for some time before leaving the forest.
+ In less than two months she was no more. Rob felt as though his heart was
+ broken at this loss. But scarcely had the first spring flowers begun to
+ blossom upon her grave, when he met another crushing blow in the loss of
+ his father. That stern man had died in prison before his accusers could
+ agree upon the charges by which he was to be brought to trial.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two years passed by. Rob&rsquo;s cousin Will was away at school; and Marian&rsquo;s
+ father, who had learned of her friendship with Rob, had sent his daughter
+ to the court of Queen Eleanor. So these years were lonely ones to the
+ orphaned lad. The bluff old Squire was kind to him, but secretly could
+ make nothing of one who went about brooding and as though seeking for
+ something he had lost. The truth is that Rob missed his old life in the
+ forest no less than his mother&rsquo;s gentleness, and his father&rsquo;s
+ companionship. Every time he twanged the string of the long bow against
+ his shoulder and heard the gray goose shaft sing, it told him of happy
+ days that he could not recall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning as Rob came in to breakfast, his uncle greeted him with, &ldquo;I
+ have news for you, Rob, my lad!&rdquo; and the hearty old Squire finished his
+ draught of ale and set his pewter tankard down with a crash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What may that be, Uncle Gamewell?&rdquo; asked the young man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is a chance to exercise your good long bow and win a pretty prize.
+ The Fair is on at Nottingham, and the Sheriff proclaims an archer&rsquo;s
+ tournament. The best fellows are to have places with the King&rsquo;s Foresters,
+ and the one who shoots straightest of all will win for prize a golden
+ arrow&mdash;a useless bauble enough, but just the thing for your lady
+ love, eh, Rob my boy?&rdquo; Here the Squire laughed and whacked the table again
+ with his tankard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob&rsquo;s eyes sparkled. &ldquo;&lsquo;Twere indeed worth shooting for, uncle mine,&rdquo; he
+ said. &ldquo;I should dearly love to let arrow fly alongside another man. And a
+ place among the Foresters is what I have long desired. Will you let me
+ try?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To be sure,&rdquo; rejoined his uncle. &ldquo;Well I know that your good mother would
+ have had me make a clerk of you; but well I see that the greenwood is
+ where you will pass your days. So, here&rsquo;s luck to you in the bout!&rdquo; And
+ the huge tankard came a third time into play.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The young man thanked his uncle for his good wishes, and set about making
+ preparations for the journey. He traveled lightly; but his yew bow must
+ needs have a new string, and his cloth-yard arrows must be of the
+ straightest and soundest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One fine morning, a few days after, Rob might have been seen passing by
+ way of Lockesley through Sherwood Forest to Nottingham town. Briskly
+ walked he and gaily, for his hopes were high and never an enemy had he in
+ the wide world. But &lsquo;twas the very last morning in all his life when he
+ was to lack an enemy! For, as he went his way through Sherwood, whistling
+ a blithe tune, he came suddenly upon a group of Foresters, making merry
+ beneath the spreading branches of an oak-tree. They had a huge meat pie
+ before them and were washing down prodigious slices of it with nut brown
+ ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One glance at the leader and Rob knew at once that he had found an enemy.
+ &lsquo;Twas the man who had usurped his father&rsquo;s place as Head Forester, and who
+ had roughly turned his mother out in the snow. But never a word said he
+ for good or bad, and would have passed on his way, had not this man,
+ clearing his throat with a huge gulp, bellowed out: &ldquo;By my troth, here is
+ a pretty little archer! Where go you, my lad, with that tupenny bow and
+ toy arrows? Belike he would shoot at Nottingham Fair! Ho! Ho!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A roar of laughter greeted this sally. Rob flushed, for he was mightily
+ proud of his shooting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My bow is as good as yours,&rdquo; he retorted, &ldquo;and my shafts will carry as
+ straight and as far. So I&rsquo;ll not take lessons of any of ye.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They laughed again loudly at this, and the leader said with frown:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Show us some of your skill, and if you can hit the mark here&rsquo;s twenty
+ silver pennies for you. But if you hit it not you are in for a sound
+ drubbing for your pertness.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pick your own target,&rdquo; quoth Rob in a fine rage. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll lay my head
+ against that purse that I can hit it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be as you say,&rdquo; retorted the Forester angrily, &ldquo;your head for
+ your sauciness that you hit not my target.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now at a little rise in the wood a herd of deer came grazing by, distant
+ full fivescore yards. They were King&rsquo;s deer, but at that distance seemed
+ safe from any harm. The Head Forester pointed to them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If your young arm could speed a shaft for half that distance, I&rsquo;d shoot
+ with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Done!&rdquo; cried Rob. &ldquo;My head against twenty pennies I&rsquo;ll cause yon fine
+ fellow in the lead of them to breathe his last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And without more ado he tried the string of his long bow, placed a shaft
+ thereon, and drew it to his ear. A moment, and the quivering string sang
+ death as the shaft whistled across the glade. Another moment and the
+ leader of the herd leaped high in his tracks and fell prone, dyeing the
+ sward with his heart&rsquo;s blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A murmur of amazement swept through the Foresters, and then a growl of
+ rage. He that had wagered was angriest of all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Know you what you have done, rash youth?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;You have killed a
+ King&rsquo;s deer, and by the laws of King Harry your head remains forfeit. Talk
+ not to me of pennies but get ye gone straight, and let me not look upon
+ your face again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob&rsquo;s blood boiled within him, and he uttered a rash speech. &ldquo;I have
+ looked upon your face once too often already, my fine Forester. &lsquo;Tis you
+ who wear my father&rsquo;s shoes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with this he turned upon his heel and strode away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Forester heard his parting thrust with an oath. Red with rage he
+ seized his bow, strung an arrow, and without warning launched it full af&rsquo;
+ Rob. Well was it for the latter that the Forester&rsquo;s foot turned on a twig
+ at the critical instant, for as it was the arrow whizzed by his ear so
+ close as to take a stray strand of his hair with it. Rob turned upon his
+ assailant, now twoscore yards away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;You shoot not so straight as I, for all your bravado. Take
+ this from the tupenny bow!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Straight flew his answering shaft. The Head Forester gave one cry, then
+ fell face downward and lay still. His life had avenged Rob&rsquo;s father, but
+ the son was outlawed. Forward he ran through the forest, before the band
+ could gather their scattered wits&mdash;still forward into the great
+ greenwood. The swaying trees seemed to open their arms to the wanderer,
+ and to welcome him home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Toward the close of the same day, Rob paused hungry and weary at the
+ cottage of a poor widow who dwelt upon the outskirts of the forest. Now
+ this widow had often greeted him kindly in his boyhood days, giving him to
+ eat and drink. So he boldly entered her door. The old dame was right glad
+ to see him, and baked him cakes in the ashes, and had him rest and tell
+ her his story. Then she shook her head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis an evil wind that blows through Sherwood,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;The poor are
+ despoiled and the rich ride over their bodies. My three sons have been
+ outlawed for shooting King&rsquo;s deer to keep us from starving, and now hide
+ in the wood. And they tell me that twoscore of as good men as ever drew
+ bow are in hiding with them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where are they, good mother?&rdquo; cried Rob. &ldquo;By my faith, I will join them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay,&rdquo; replied the old woman at first. But when she saw that there
+ was no other way, she said: &ldquo;My sons will visit me to-night. Stay you here
+ and see them if you must.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Rob stayed willingly to see the widow&rsquo;s sons that night, for they were
+ men after his own heart. And when they found that his mood was with them,
+ they made him swear an oath of fealty, and told him the haunt of the band&mdash;a
+ place he knew right well. Finally one of them said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But the band lacks a leader&mdash;one who can use his head as well as his
+ hand. So we have agreed that he who has skill enough to go to Nottingham,
+ an outlaw, and win the prize at archery, shall be our chief.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob sprang to his feet. &ldquo;Said in good time!&rdquo; cried he, &ldquo;for I had started
+ to that self-same Fair, and all the Foresters, and all the Sheriff&rsquo;s men
+ in Christendom shall not stand between me and the center of their target!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And though he was but barely grown he stood so straight and his eye
+ flashed with such fire that the three brothers seized his hand and
+ shouted:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A Lockesley! a Lockesley! if you win the golden arrow you shall be chief
+ of outlaws in Sherwood Forest!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Rob fell to planning how he could disguise himself to go to Nottingham
+ town; for he knew that the Foresters had even then set a price on his head
+ in the market-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was even as Rob had surmised. The Sheriff of Nottingham posted a reward
+ of two hundred pounds for the capture, dead or alive, of one Robert
+ Fitzooth, outlaw. And the crowds thronging the streets upon that busy Fair
+ day often paused to read the notice and talk together about the death of
+ the Head Forester.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But what with wrestling bouts and bouts with quarter-staves, and wandering
+ minstrels, there came up so many other things to talk about, that the
+ reward was forgotten for the nonce, and only the Foresters and Sheriff&rsquo;s
+ men watched the gates with diligence, the Sheriff indeed spurring them to
+ effort by offers of largess. His hatred of the father had descended to the
+ son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The great event of the day came in the afternoon. It was the archer&rsquo;s
+ contest for the golden arrow, and twenty men stepped forth to shoot. Among
+ them was a beggar-man, a sorry looking fellow with leggings of different
+ colors, and brown scratched face and hands. Over a tawny shock of hair he
+ had a hood drawn, much like that of a monk. Slowly he limped to his place
+ in the line, while the mob shouted in derision. But the contest was open
+ to all comers, so no man said him nay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Side by side with Rob&mdash;for it was he&mdash;stood a muscular fellow of
+ swarthy visage and with one eye hid by a green bandage. Him also the crowd
+ jeered, but he passed them by with indifference while he tried his bow
+ with practiced hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A great crowd had assembled in the amphitheater enclosing the lists. All
+ the gentry and populace of the surrounding country were gathered there in
+ eager expectancy. The central box contained the lean but pompous Sheriff,
+ his bejeweled wife, and their daughter, a supercilious young woman enough,
+ who, it was openly hinted, was hoping to receive the golden arrow from the
+ victor and thus be crowned queen of the day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Next to the Sheriff&rsquo;s box was one occupied by the fat Bishop of Hereford;
+ while in the other side was a box wherein sat a girl whose dark hair, dark
+ eyes, and fair features caused Rob&rsquo;s heart to leap. &lsquo;Twas Maid Marian! She
+ had come up for a visit from the Queen&rsquo;s court at London town, and now sat
+ demurely by her father the Earl of Huntingdon. If Rob had been grimly
+ resolved to win the arrow before, the sight of her sweet face multiplied
+ his determination an hundredfold. He felt his muscles tightening into
+ bands of steel, tense and true. Yet withal his heart would throb, making
+ him quake in a most unaccountable way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the trumpet sounded, and the crowd became silent while the herald
+ announced the terms of the contest. The lists were open to all comers. The
+ first target was to be placed at thirty ells distance, and all those who
+ hit its center were allowed to shoot at the second target, placed ten ells
+ farther off. The third target was to be removed yet farther, until the
+ winner was proved. The winner was to receive the golden arrow, and a place
+ with the King&rsquo;s Foresters. He it was also who crowned the queen of the
+ day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The trumpet sounded again, and the archers prepared to shoot. Rob looked
+ to his string, while the crowd smiled and whispered at the odd figure he
+ cut, with his vari-colored legs and little cape. But as the first man
+ shot, they grew silent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The target was not so far but that twelve out of the twenty contestants
+ reached its inner circle. Rob shot sixth in the line and landed fairly,
+ being rewarded by an approving grunt from the man with the green blinder,
+ who shot seventh, and with apparent carelessness, yet true to the
+ bull&rsquo;s-eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The mob cheered and yelled themselves hoarse at this even marksmanship.
+ The trumpet sounded again, and a new target was set up at forty ells.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The first three archers again struck true, amid the loud applause of the
+ onlookers; for they were general favorites and expected to win. Indeed
+ &lsquo;twas whispered that each was backed by one of the three dignitaries of
+ the day. The fourth and fifth archers barely grazed the center. Rob fitted
+ his arrow quietly and with some confidence sped it unerringly toward the
+ shining circle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The beggar! the beggar!&rdquo; yelled the crowd; &ldquo;another bull for the beggar!&rdquo;
+ In truth his shaft was nearer the center than any of the others. But it
+ was not so near that &ldquo;Blinder,&rdquo; as the mob had promptly christened his
+ neighbor, did not place his shaft just within the mark. Again the crowd
+ cheered wildly. Such shooting as this was not seen every day in Nottingham
+ town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other archers in this round were disconcerted by the preceding shots,
+ or unable to keep the pace. They missed one after another and dropped
+ moodily back, while the trumpet sounded for the third round, and the
+ target was set up fifty ells distant.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my halidom you draw a good bow, young master,&rdquo; said Rob&rsquo;s queer
+ comrade to him in the interval allowed for rest. &ldquo;Do you wish me to shoot
+ first on this trial?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said Rob, &ldquo;but you are a good fellow by this token, and if I win
+ not, I hope you may keep the prize from yon strutters.&rdquo; And he nodded
+ scornfully to the three other archers who were surrounded by their
+ admirers, and were being made much of by retainers of the Sheriff, the
+ Bishop, and the Earl. From them his eye wandered toward Maid Marian&rsquo;s
+ booth. She had been watching him, it seemed, for their eyes met; then hers
+ were hastily averted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blinder&rsquo;s&rdquo; quick eye followed those of Rob. &ldquo;A fair maid, that,&rdquo; he said
+ smilingly, &ldquo;and one more worthy the golden arrow than the Sheriff&rsquo;s
+ haughty miss.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob looked at him swiftly, and saw naught but kindliness in his glance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a shrewd fellow and I like you well,&rdquo; was his only comment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the archers prepared to shoot again, each with some little care. The
+ target seemed hardly larger than the inner ring had looked, at the first
+ trial. The first three sped their shafts, and while they were fair shots
+ they did not more than graze the inner circle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob took his stand with some misgiving. Some flecking clouds overhead made
+ the light uncertain, and a handful of wind frolicked across the range in a
+ way quite disturbing to a bowman&rsquo;s nerves. His eyes wandered for a brief
+ moment to the box wherein sat the dark-eyed girl. His heart leaped! she
+ met his glance and smiled at him reassuringly. And in that moment he felt
+ that she knew him despite his disguise and looked to him to keep the honor
+ of old Sherwood. He drew his bow firmly and, taking advantage of a
+ momentary lull in the breeze, launched the arrow straight and true-singing
+ across the range to the center of the target.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The beggar! the beggar! a bull! a bull!&rdquo; yelled the fickle mob, who from
+ jeering him were now his warm friends. &ldquo;Can you beat that, Blinder?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The last archer smiled scornfully and made ready. He drew his bow with
+ ease and grace and, without seeming to study the course, released the
+ winged arrow. Forward it leaped toward the target, and all eyes followed
+ its flight. A loud uproar broke forth when it alighted, just without the
+ center and grazing the shaft sent by Rob. The stranger made a gesture of
+ surprise when his own eyes announced the result to him, but saw his error.
+ He had not allowed for the fickle gust of wind which seized the arrow and
+ carried it to one side. But for all that he was the first to congratulate
+ the victor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hope we may shoot again,&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;In truth I care not for the golden
+ bauble and wished to win it in despite of the Sheriff for whom I have no
+ love. Now crown the lady of your choice.&rdquo; And turning suddenly he was lost
+ in the crowd, before Rob could utter what it was upon his lips to say,
+ that he would shoot again with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now the herald summoned Rob to the Sheriff&rsquo;s box to receive the prize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a curious fellow enough,&rdquo; said the Sheriff, biting his lip
+ coldly; &ldquo;yet you shoot well. What name go you by?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marian sat near and was listening intently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am called Rob the Stroller, my Lord Sheriff,&rdquo; said the archer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marian leaned back and smiled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, Rob the Stroller, with a little attention to your skin and clothes
+ you would not be so bad a man,&rdquo; said the Sheriff. &ldquo;How like you the idea
+ of entering my service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob the Stroller has ever been a free man, my Lord, and desires no
+ service.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff&rsquo;s brow darkened, yet for the sake of his daughter and the
+ golden arrow, he dissembled.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob the Stroller,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;here is the golden arrow which has been
+ offered to the best of archers this day. You are awarded the prize. See
+ that you bestow it worthily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this point the herald nudged Rob and half inclined his head toward the
+ Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter, who sat with a thin smile upon her lips. But Rob
+ heeded him not. He took the arrow and strode to the next box where sat
+ Maid Marian.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;pray accept this little pledge from a poor stroller who
+ would devote the best shafts in his quiver to serve you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My thanks to you, Rob in the Hood,&rdquo; replied she with a roguish twinkle in
+ her eye; and she placed the gleaming arrow in her hair, while the people
+ shouted, &ldquo;The Queen! the Queen!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff glowered furiously upon this ragged archer who had refused his
+ service, taken his prize without a word of thanks, and snubbed his
+ daughter. He would have spoken, but his proud daughter restrained him. He
+ called to his guard and bade them watch the beggar. But Rob had already
+ turned swiftly, lost himself in the throng, and headed straight for the
+ town gate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That same evening within a forest glade a group of men&mdash;some twoscore
+ clad in Lincoln green&mdash;sat round a fire roasting venison and making
+ merry. Suddenly a twig crackled and they sprang to their feet and seized
+ their weapons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I look for the widow&rsquo;s sons,&rdquo; a clear voice said, &ldquo;and I come alone.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Instantly the three men stepped forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tis Rob!&rdquo; they cried; &ldquo;welcome to Sherwood Forest, Rob!&rdquo; And all the men
+ came and greeted him; for they had heard his story.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then one of the widow&rsquo;s sons, Stout Will, stepped forth and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Comrades all, ye know that our band has sadly lacked a leader&mdash;one
+ of birth, breeding, and skill. Belike we have found that leader in this
+ young man. And I and my brothers have told him that the band would choose
+ that one who should bring the Sheriff to shame this day and capture his
+ golden arrow. Is it not so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The band gave assent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will turned to Rob. &ldquo;What news bring you from Nottingham town?&rdquo; asked he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Rob laughed. &ldquo;In truth I brought the Sheriff to shame for mine own
+ pleasure, and won his golden arrow to boot. But as to the prize ye must
+ e&rsquo;en take my word, for I bestowed it upon a maid.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And seeing the men stood in doubt at this, he continued: &ldquo;But I&rsquo;ll gladly
+ join your band, and you take me, as a common archer. For there are others
+ older and mayhap more skilled than I.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then stepped one forward from the rest, a tall swarthy man. And Rob
+ recognized him as the man with the green blinder; only this was now
+ removed, and his freed eye gleamed as stoutly as the other one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rob in the Hood&mdash;for such the lady called you,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I can
+ vouch for your tale. You shamed the Sheriff e&rsquo;en as I had hoped to do; and
+ we can forego the golden arrow since it is in such fair hands. As to your
+ shooting and mine, we must let future days decide. But here I, Will
+ Stutely, declare that I will serve none other chief save only you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then good Will Stutely told the outlaws of Rob&rsquo;s deeds, and gave him his
+ hand of fealty. And the widow&rsquo;s sons did likewise, and the other members
+ every one, right gladly; because Will Stutely had heretofore been the
+ truest bow in all the company. And they toasted him in nut brown ale, and
+ hailed him as their leader, by the name of Robin Hood. And he accepted
+ that name because Maid Marian had said it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By the light of the camp-fire the band exchanged signs and passwords. They
+ gave Robin Hood a horn upon which he was to blow to summon them. They
+ swore, also, that while they might take money and goods from the unjust
+ rich, they would aid and befriend the poor and the helpless; and that they
+ would harm no woman, be she maid, wife, or widow. They swore all this with
+ solemn oaths, while they feasted about the ruddy blaze, under the
+ greenwood tree.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that is how Robin Hood became an outlaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER II
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD MET LITTLE JOHN
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O here is my hand,&rdquo; the stranger reply&rsquo;d,
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll serve you with all my whole heart.
+ My name is John Little, a man of good mettle,
+ Ne&rsquo;er doubt me for I&rsquo;ll play my part.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;His name shall be altered,&rdquo; quoth William Stutely,
+ &ldquo;And I will his godfather be:
+ Prepare then a feast, and none of the least,
+ For we will be merry,&rdquo; quoth he.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ All that summer Robin Hood and his merry men roamed in Sherwood Forest,
+ and the fame of their deeds ran abroad in the land. The Sheriff of
+ Nottingham waxed wroth at the report, but all his traps and excursions
+ failed to catch the outlaws. The poor people began by fearing them, but
+ when they found that the men in Lincoln green who answered Robin Hood&rsquo;s
+ horn meant them no harm, but despoiled the oppressor to relieve the
+ oppressed, they &lsquo;gan to have great liking for them. And the band increased
+ by other stout hearts till by the end of the summer fourscore good men and
+ true had sworn fealty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the days of quiet which came on grew irksome to Robin&rsquo;s adventurous
+ spirit. Up rose he, one gay morn, and slung his quiver over his shoulders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This fresh breeze stirs the blood, my lads,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and I would be
+ seeing what the gay world looks like in the direction of Nottingham town.
+ But tarry ye behind in the borders of the forest, within earshot of my
+ bugle call.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus saying he strode merrily forward to the edge of the wood, and paused
+ there a moment, his agile form erect, his brown locks flowing and his
+ brown eyes watching the road; and a goodly sight he made, as the wind blew
+ the ruddy color into his cheeks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The highway led clear in the direction of the town, and thither he boldly
+ directed his steps. But at a bend in the road he knew of a by-path leading
+ across a brook which made the way nearer and less open, into which he
+ turned. As he approached the stream he saw that it had become swollen by
+ recent rains into quite a pretty torrent. The log foot-bridge was still
+ there, but at this end of it a puddle intervened which could be crossed
+ only with a leap, if you would not get your feet wet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin cared little for such a handicap. Taking a running start, his
+ nimble legs carried him easily over and balanced neatly upon the end of
+ the broad log. But he was no sooner started across than he saw a tall
+ stranger coming from the other side. Thereupon Robin quickened his pace,
+ and the stranger did likewise, each thinking to cross first. Midway they
+ met, and neither would yield an inch.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give way, fellow!&rdquo; roared Robin, whose leadership of a band, I am afraid,
+ had not tended to mend his manners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger smiled. He was almost a head taller than the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he retorted, &ldquo;fair and softly! I give way only to a better man than
+ myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give way, I say&rdquo;, repeated Robin, &ldquo;or I shall have to show you a better
+ man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His opponent budged not an inch, but laughed loudly. &ldquo;Now by my halidom!&rdquo;
+ he said good-naturedly, &ldquo;I would not move after hearing that speech, even
+ if minded to it before; for this better man I have sought my life long.
+ Therefore show him to me, an it please you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I right soon,&rdquo; quoth Robin. &ldquo;Stay you here a little while, till
+ I cut me a cudgel like unto that you have been twiddling in your fingers.&rdquo;
+ So saying he sought his own bank again with a leap, laid aside his long
+ bow and arrows, and cut him a stout staff of oak, straight, knotless, and
+ a good six feet in length. But still it was a full foot shorter than his
+ opponent&rsquo;s. Then back came he boldly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I mind not telling you, fellow,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;that a bout with archery would
+ have been an easier way with me. But there are other tunes in England
+ besides that the arrow sings.&rdquo; Here he whirred the staff about his head by
+ way of practice. &ldquo;So make you ready for the tune I am about to play upon
+ your ribs. Have at you! One, two&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three!&rdquo; roared the giant smiting at him instantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Well was it for Robin that he was quick and nimble of foot; for the blow
+ that grazed a hair&rsquo;s breadth from his shoulder would have felled an ox.
+ Nevertheless while swerving to avoid this stroke, Robin was poising for
+ his own, and back came he forthwith&mdash;whack!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whack! parried the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whack! whack! whack! whack!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fight waxed fast and furious. It was strength pitted against subtlety,
+ and the match was a merry one. The mighty blows of the stranger went
+ whistling around Robin&rsquo;s ducking head, while his own swift undercuts were
+ fain to give the other an attack of indigestion. Yet each stood firmly in
+ his place not moving backward or forward a foot for a good half hour, nor
+ thinking of crying &ldquo;Enough!&rdquo; though some chance blow seemed likely to
+ knock one or the other off the narrow foot-bridge. The giant&rsquo;s face was
+ getting red, and his breath came snorting forth like a bull&rsquo;s. He stepped
+ forward with a furious onslaught to finish this audacious fellow. Robin
+ dodged his blows lightly, then sprang in swiftly and unexpectedly and
+ dealt the stranger such a blow upon the short ribs that you would have
+ sworn the tanner was trimming down his hides for market.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger reeled and came within an ace of falling, but regained his
+ footing right quickly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my life, you can hit hard!&rdquo; he gasped forth, giving back a blow almost
+ while he was yet staggering.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This blow was a lucky one. It caught Robin off his guard. His stick had
+ rested a moment while he looked to see the giant topple into the water,
+ when down came the other upon his head, whack! Robin saw more stars in
+ that one moment than all the astronomers have since discovered, and
+ forthwith he dropped neatly into the stream.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cool rushing current quickly brought him to his senses, howbeit he was
+ still so dazed that he groped blindly for the swaying reeds to pull
+ himself up on the bank. His assailant could not forbear laughing heartily
+ at his plight, but was also quick to lend his aid. He thrust down his long
+ staff to Robin crying, &ldquo;Lay hold of that, an your fists whirl not so much
+ as your head!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin laid hold and was hauled to dry land for all the world like a fish,
+ except that the fish would never have come forth so wet and dripping. He
+ lay upon the warm bank for a space to regain his senses. Then he sat up
+ and gravely rubbed his pate.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By all the saints!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you hit full stoutly. My head hums like a
+ hive of bees on a summer morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he seized his horn, which lay near, and blew thereon three shrill
+ notes that echoed against the trees. A moment of silence ensued, and then
+ was heard the rustling of leaves and crackling of twigs like the coming of
+ many men; and forth from the glade burst a score or two of stalwart
+ yeomen, all clad in Lincoln green, like Robin, with good Will Stutely and
+ the widow&rsquo;s three sons at their head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good master,&rdquo; cried Will Stutely, &ldquo;how is this? In sooth there is not a
+ dry thread on your body.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, marry,&rdquo; replied Robin, &ldquo;this fellow would not let me pass the
+ footbridge, and when I tickled him in the ribs, he must needs answer by a
+ pat on the head which landed me overboard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then shall he taste some of his own porridge,&rdquo; quoth Will. &ldquo;Seize him,
+ lads!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, let him go free,&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;The fight was a fair one and I abide
+ by it. I surmise you also are quits?&rdquo; he continued, turning to the
+ stranger with a twinkling eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am content,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;for verily you now have the best end of
+ the cudgel. Wherefore, I like you well, and would fain know your name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;my men and even the Sheriff of Nottingham know me as
+ Robin Hood, the outlaw.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then am I right sorry that I beat you,&rdquo; exclaimed the man, &ldquo;for I was on
+ my way to seek you and to try to join your merry company. But after my
+ unmannerly use of the cudgel, I fear we are still strangers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, never say it!&rdquo; cried Robin, &ldquo;I am glad I fell in with you; though,
+ sooth to say, I did all the falling!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And amid a general laugh the two men clasped hands, and in that clasp the
+ strong friendship of a lifetime was begun.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But you have not yet told us your name,&rdquo; said Robin, bethinking himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whence I came, men call me John Little.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Enter our company then, John Little; enter and welcome. The rites are
+ few, the fee is large. We ask your whole mind and body and heart even unto
+ death.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I give the bond, upon my life,&rdquo; said the tall man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon Will Stutely, who loved a good jest, spoke up and said: &ldquo;The
+ infant in our household must be christened, and I&rsquo;ll stand godfather. This
+ fair little stranger is so small of bone and sinew, that his old name is
+ not to the purpose.&rdquo; Here he paused long enough to fill a horn in the
+ stream. &ldquo;Hark ye, my son,&rdquo;&mdash;standing on tiptoe to splash the water on
+ the giant&mdash;&ldquo;take your new name on entering the forest. I christen you
+ Little John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this jest the men roared long and loud.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give him a bow, and find a full sheath of arrows for Little John,&rdquo; said
+ Robin joyfully. &ldquo;Can you shoot as well as fence with the staff, my
+ friend?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have hit an ash twig at forty yards,&rdquo; said Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus chatting pleasantly the band turned back into the woodland and sought
+ their secluded dell, where the trees were the thickest, the moss was the
+ softest, and a secret path led to a cave, at once a retreat and a
+ stronghold. Here under a mighty oak they found the rest of the band, some
+ of whom had come in with a brace of fat does. And here they built a ruddy
+ fire and sat down to the meat and ale, Robin Hood in the center with Will
+ Stutely on the one hand and Little John on the other. And Robin was right
+ well pleased with the day&rsquo;s adventure, even though he had got a drubbing;
+ for sore ribs and heads will heal, and &lsquo;tis not every day that one can
+ find a recruit as stout of bone and true of soul as Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER III
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD TURNED BUTCHER, AND ENTERED THE SHERIFF&rsquo;S SERVICE
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The butcher he answered jolly Robin,
+ &ldquo;No matter where I do dwell,
+ For a butcher am I, and to Nottingham
+ Am I going, my flesh to sell.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the weather had turned ill, and Robin Hood&rsquo;s band stayed
+ close to their dry and friendly cave. The third day brought a diversion in
+ the shape of a trap by a roving party of the Sheriff&rsquo;s men. A fine stag
+ had been struck down by one Of Will Stutely&rsquo;s fellows, and he and others
+ had stepped forth from the covert to seize it, when twenty bowmen from
+ Nottingham appeared at the end of the glade. Down dropped Will&rsquo;s men on
+ all fours, barely in time to hear a shower of arrows whistle above their
+ heads. Then from behind the friendly trees they sent back such a welcome
+ that the Sheriff&rsquo;s men deemed it prudent not to tarry in their steps. Two
+ of them, in sooth, bore back unpleasant wounds in their shoulders, from
+ the encounter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When they returned to town the Sheriff waxed red with rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;do my men fear to fight this Robin Hood, face to face?
+ Would that I could get him within my reach, once. We should see then; we
+ should see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ What it was the Sheriff would see, he did not state. But he was to have
+ his wish granted in short space, and you and I will see how he profited by
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fourth day and the one following this friendly bout, Little John was
+ missing. One of his men said that he saw him talking with a beggar, but
+ did not know whither they had gone. Two more days passed. Robin grew
+ uneasy. He did not doubt the faith of Little John, but he was fearful lest
+ a roving band of Foresters had captured him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Robin could not remain quiet. Up sprang he, with bow and arrows,
+ and a short sword at his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I must away to Nottingham town, my men,&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;The goodly Sheriff
+ has long desired to see me; and mayhap he can tell me tidings of the best
+ quarter-staff in the shire&rdquo;&mdash;meaning Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Others of the band besought him to let them go with him, but he would not.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he said smilingly, &ldquo;the Sheriff and I are too good friends to put
+ doubt upon our meeting. But tarry ye in the edge of the wood opposite the
+ west gate of the town, and ye may be of service ere to-morrow night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he strode forward to the road leading to Nottingham, and stood
+ as before looking up and down to see if the way was clear. Back at a bend
+ in the road he heard a rumbling and a lumbering, when up drove a stout
+ butcher, whistling gaily, and driving a mare that sped slowly enough
+ because of the weight of meat with which the cart was loaded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good morrow to you, friend,&rdquo; hailed Robin. &ldquo;Whence come you and where
+ go you with your load of meat?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A good morrow to you,&rdquo; returned the butcher, civilly enough. &ldquo;No matter
+ where I dwell. I am but a simple butcher, and to Nottingham am I going, my
+ flesh to sell. &lsquo;Tis Fair week, and my beef and mutton should fetch a fair
+ penny,&rdquo; and he laughed loudly at his jest. &ldquo;But whence come you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A yeoman am I, from Lockesley town. Men call me Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The saints forefend that you should treat me ill!&rdquo; said the butcher in
+ terror. &ldquo;Oft have I heard of you, and how you lighten the purses of the
+ fat priests and knights. But I am naught but a poor butcher, selling this
+ load of meat, perchance, for enough to pay my quarter&rsquo;s rent.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rest you, my friend, rest you,&rdquo; quoth Robin, &ldquo;not so much as a silver
+ penny would I take from you, for I love an honest Saxon face and a fair
+ name with my neighbors. But I would strike a bargain with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here he took from his girdle a well-filled purse, and continued, &ldquo;I would
+ fain be a butcher, this day, and sell meat at Nottingham town. Could you
+ sell me your meat, your cart, your mare, and your good-will, without loss,
+ for five marks?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven bless ye, good Robin,&rdquo; cried the butcher right joyfully, &ldquo;that can
+ I!&rdquo; And he leaped down forthwith from the cart, and handed Robin the reins
+ in exchange for the purse.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;One moment more,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;we must e&rsquo;en change garments for the
+ nonce. Take mine and scurry home quickly lest the King&rsquo;s Foresters try to
+ put a hole through this Lincoln green.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he donned the butcher&rsquo;s blouse and apron, and, climbing into the
+ cart, drove merrily down the road to the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he came to Nottingham he greeted the scowling gate-keeper blithely
+ and proceeded to the market-place. Boldly he led his shuffling horse to
+ the place where the butchers had their stalls.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had no notion of the price to ask for his meat, but put on a foolish
+ and simple air as he called aloud his wares:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hark ye, lasses and dames, hark ye,
+ Good meat come buy, come buy,
+ Three pen&rsquo;orths go for one penny,
+ And a kiss is good, say I!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now when the folk found what a simple butcher he was, they crowded around
+ his cart; for he really did sell three times as much for one penny as was
+ sold by the other butchers. And one or two serving-lasses with twinkling
+ eyes liked his comely face so well that they willingly gave boot of a
+ kiss.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the other butchers were wroth when they found how he was taking their
+ trade; and they accordingly put their heads together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One said, &ldquo;He is a prodigal and has sold his father&rsquo;s land, and this is
+ his first venture in trading.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another said, &ldquo;He is a thief who has murdered a butcher, and stolen his
+ horse and meat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin heard these sayings, but only laughed merrily and sang his song the
+ louder. His good-humor made the people laugh also and crowd round his cart
+ closely, shouting uproariously when some buxom lass submitted to be
+ kissed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the butchers saw that they must meet craft with craft; and they said
+ to him, &ldquo;Come, brother butcher, if you would sell meat with us, you must
+ e&rsquo;en join our guild and stand by the rules of our trade.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We dine at the Sheriff&rsquo;s mansion to-day,&rdquo; said another, &ldquo;and you must
+ take one of our party.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Accurst of his heart,&rdquo; said jolly Robin,
+ &ldquo;That a butcher will deny.
+ I&rsquo;ll go with you, my brethren true,
+ And as fast as I can hie.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon, having sold all his meat, he left his horse and cart in charge
+ of a friendly hostler and prepared to follow his mates to the Mansion
+ House.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the Sheriff&rsquo;s custom to dine various guilds of the trade, from time
+ to time, on Fair days, for he got a pretty profit out of the fees they
+ paid him for the right to trade in the market-place. The Sheriff was
+ already come with great pomp into the banqueting room, when Robin Hood and
+ three or four butchers entered, and he greeted them all with great
+ condescension; and presently the whole of a large company was seated at a
+ table groaning beneath the good cheer of the feast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Sheriff bade Robin sit by his right hand, at the head of the
+ board; for one or two butchers had whispered to the official, &ldquo;That fellow
+ is a right mad blade, who yet made us much sport to-day. He sold more meat
+ for one penny than we could sell for three; and he gave extra weight to
+ whatsoever lass would buss him.&rdquo; And others said, &ldquo;He is some prodigal who
+ knows not the value of goods, and may be plucked by a shrewd man right
+ closely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff was will to pluck a prodigal with the next man, and he was
+ moreover glad to have a guest who promised to enliven the feast. So, as I
+ have told you, he placed Robin by his side, and he made much of him and
+ laughed boisterously at his jests; though sooth to say, the laugh were
+ come by easily, for Robin had never been in merrier mood, and his quips
+ and jests soon put the whole table at a roar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then my lord Bishop of Hereford came in, last of all, to say a ponderous
+ grace and take his seat on the other side of the Sheriff&mdash;the
+ prelate&rsquo;s fat body showing up in goodly contrast to the other&rsquo;s lean
+ bones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After grace was said, and while the servants clattered in with the meat
+ platters, Robin stood up and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;An amen say I to my lord Bishop&rsquo;s thanks! How, now, my fine fellows, be
+ merry and drink deep; for the shot I&rsquo;ll pay ere I go my way, though it
+ cost me five pounds and more. So my lords and gentlemen all, spare not the
+ wine, but fall to lustily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear! hear!&rdquo; shouted the butchers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now are you a right jolly soul,&rdquo; quoth the Sheriff, &ldquo;but this feast is
+ mine own. Howbeit you must have many a head of horned beasts, and many an
+ acre of broad land, to spend from your purse so freely.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, that have I,&rdquo; returned Robin, his eyes all a twinkle, &ldquo;five hundred
+ horned beasts have I and my brothers, and none of them have we been able
+ to sell. That is why I have turned butcher. But I know not the trade, and
+ would gladly sell the whole herd, an I could find a buyer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this, the Sheriff&rsquo;s greed &lsquo;gan to rise. Since this fool <i>would</i> be
+ plucked, thought he, why should not he do the plucking?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Five hundred beasts, say you?&rdquo; he queried sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Five hundred and ten fat beasts by actual count, that I would sell for a
+ just figure. Aye, to him who will pay me in right money, would I sell them
+ for twenty pieces of gold. Is that too much to ask, lording?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Was there ever such an idiot butcher? thought the Sheriff; and he so far
+ forgot his dignity as to nudge the Bishop in his fat ribs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good fellow,&rdquo; quoth he chuckling, &ldquo;I am always ready to help any in
+ my shire. An you cannot find a buyer for your herd at this just figure, I
+ will e&rsquo;en buy them myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this generosity Robin was quite overcome, and fell to praising the
+ Sheriff to the skies, and telling him that he should not have cause to
+ forget the kindness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tut, tut,&rdquo; said the Sheriff, &ldquo;&lsquo;tis naught but a trade. Drive in your herd
+ tomorrow to the market-place and you shall have money down.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, excellence,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;that can I not easily do, for they are
+ grazing in scattered fashion. But they are over near Gamewell, not more
+ than a mile therefrom at most. Will you not come and choose your own
+ beasts tomorrow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, that I will,&rdquo; said the Sheriff, his cupidity casting his caution to
+ the winds. &ldquo;Tarry with me over night, and I will go with you in the
+ morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This was a poser for Robin, since he liked not the idea of staying over
+ night at the Sheriff&rsquo;s house. He had hoped to appoint a meeting-place for
+ the other, but now saw that this might excite doubt. He looked around at
+ the company. By this time, you must know, the feast had progressed far,
+ and the butchers were deep in their cups. The Sheriff and Robin had talked
+ in a low voice, and my lord Bishop was almost asleep.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said Robin presently, and the words were no sooner out of his
+ mouth than the door opened and a serving-man entered bearing tray of
+ mulled wine. At sight of the fellow&rsquo;s face, Robin gave an involuntary
+ start of surprise which was instantly checked. The other also saw him,
+ stood still a moment, and as if forgetting something turned about and left
+ the hall.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A dozen questions flashed across Robin&rsquo;s mind, and he could find answer
+ for none of them. What was Little John doing in the Sheriff&rsquo;s house? Why
+ had he not told the band? Was he true to them? Would he betray him?
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But these questions of distrust were dismissed from Robin&rsquo;s open mind as
+ soon as they had entered. He knew that Little John was faithful and true.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He recovered his spirits and began again upon a vein of foolish banter,
+ for the amusement of the Sheriff and his guests, all being now merry with
+ wine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A song!&rdquo; one of them shouted, and the cry was taken up round the table.
+ Robin mounted his chair and trolled forth:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;A lass and a butcher of Nottingham
+ Agreed &lsquo;twixt them for to wed.
+ Says he, &lsquo;I&rsquo;ll give ye the meat, fair dame,
+ And ye will give me the bread.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Then they joined in the chorus amid a pounding of cups upon the board:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;With a hey and a ho
+ And a hey nonny no,
+ A butcher of Nottingham!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ While the song was at its height, Little John reappeared, with other
+ servants, and refilled the cups. He came up to Robin and, as if asking him
+ if he would have more wine, said softly, &ldquo;Meet me in the pantry to-night.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin nodded, and sang loudly. The day was already far spent, and
+ presently the company broke up with many hiccupy bows of the Sheriff and
+ little notice of the drowsy Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the company was dispersed, the Sheriff bade a servant show Robin to
+ his room, and promised to see him at breakfast the next day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin kept his word and met Little John that night, and the sheriff next
+ day; but Little John has been doing so much in the meantime that he must
+ be allowed a chapter to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So let us turn to another story that was sung of, in the ballads of olden
+ time, and find out how Little John entered the Sheriff&rsquo;s service.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW LITTLE JOHN ENTERED THE SHERIFF&rsquo;S SERVICE
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ List and hearken, gentlemen,
+ All ye that now be here,
+ Of Little John, that was Knight&rsquo;s-man,
+ Good mirth ye now shall hear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ It had come around another Fair day at Nottingham town, and folk crowded
+ there by all the gates. Goods of many kinds were displayed in gaily
+ colored booths, and at every cross-street a free show was in progress.
+ Here and there, stages had been erected for the play at quarter-staff, a
+ highly popular sport.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a fellow, one Eric of Lincoln, who was thought to be the finest
+ man with the staff for miles around. His feats were sung about in ballads
+ through all the shire. A great boaster was he withal, and to-day he
+ strutted about on one of these corner stages, and vaunted of his prowess,
+ and offered to crack any man&rsquo;s crown for a shilling. Several had tried
+ their skill with Eric, but he had soon sent them spinning in no gentle
+ manner, amid the jeers and laughter of the onlookers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A beggar-man sat over against Eric&rsquo;s stage and grinned every time a pate
+ was cracked. He was an uncouth fellow, ragged and dirty and unshaven. Eric
+ caught sight of his leering face at one of his boasts&mdash;for there was
+ a lull in the game, because no man else wanted to come within reach of
+ Eric&rsquo;s blows. Eric, I say, noticed the beggar-man grinning at him rather
+ impudently, and turned toward him sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, you dirty villain!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;mend your manners to your
+ betters, or, by our Lady, I&rsquo;ll dust your rags for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beggar-man still grinned. &ldquo;I am always ready to mend my manners to my
+ betters,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;but I am afraid you cannot teach me any better than
+ you can dust my jacket.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come up! Come up!&rdquo; roared the other, flourishing his staff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I,&rdquo; said the beggar, getting up slowly and with difficulty. &ldquo;It
+ will pleasure me hugely to take a braggart down a notch, an some good man
+ will lend me a stout quarter-staff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this a score of idlers reached him their staves&mdash;being ready
+ enough to see another man have his head cracked, even if they wished to
+ save their own&mdash;and he took the stoutest and heaviest of all. He made
+ a sorry enough figure as he climbed awkwardly upon the stage, but when he
+ had gained it, he towered full half a head above the other, for all his
+ awkwardness. Nathless, he held his stick so clumsily that the crowd
+ laughed in great glee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now each man took his place and looked the other up and down, watching
+ warily for an opening. Only a moment stood they thus, for Eric, intent on
+ teaching this rash beggar a lesson and sweeping him speedily off the
+ stage, launched forth boldly and gave the other a sounding crack on the
+ shoulder. The beggar danced about, and made as though he would drop his
+ staff from very pain, while the crowd roared and Eric raised himself for
+ another crushing blow. But just then the awkward beggar came to life.
+ Straightening himself like a flash, he dealt Eric a back-handed blow, the
+ like of which he had never before seen. Down went the boaster to the floor
+ with a sounding thump, and the fickle people yelled and laughed themselves
+ purple; for it was a new sight to see Eric of Lincoln eating dust.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But he was up again almost as soon as he had fallen, and right quickly
+ retreated to his own ringside to gather his wits and watch for an opening.
+ He saw instantly that he had no easy antagonist, and he came in cautiously
+ this time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And now those who stood around saw the merriest game of quarter-staff that
+ was ever played inside the walls of Nottingham town. Both men were on
+ their guard and fenced with fine skill, being well matched in prowess.
+ Again and again did Eric seek to force an opening under the other&rsquo;s guard,
+ and just as often were his blows parried. The beggar stood sturdily in his
+ tracks contenting himself with beating off the attack. For a long time
+ their blows met like the steady crackling of some huge forest fire, and
+ Eric strove to be wary, for he now knew that the other had no mean wits or
+ mettle. But he grew right mad at last, and began to send down blows so
+ fierce and fast that you would have sworn a great hail-storm was pounding
+ on the shingles over your head. Yet he never so much as entered the tall
+ beggar&rsquo;s guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then at last the stranger saw his chance and changed his tune of fighting.
+ With one upward stroke he sent Eric&rsquo;s staff whirling through the air. With
+ another he tapped Eric on the head; and, with a third broad swing, ere the
+ other could recover himself, he swept him clear off the stage, much as you
+ would brush a fly off the window pane.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the people danced and shouted and made so much ado that the
+ shop-keepers left their stalls and others came running from every
+ direction. The victory of the queer beggar made him immensely popular.
+ Eric had been a great bully, and many had suffered defeat and insult at
+ his hands. So the ragged stranger found money and food and drink
+ everywhere at his disposal, and he feasted right comfortably till the
+ afternoon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a long bow contest came on, and to it the beggar went with some of
+ his new friends. It was held in the same arena that Robin had formerly
+ entered; and again the Sheriff and lords and ladies graced the scene with
+ their presence, while the people crowded to their places.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the archers had stepped forward, the herald rose and proclaimed the
+ rules of the game: how that each man should shoot three shots, and to him
+ who shot best the prize of a yoke of fat steers should belong. A dozen
+ keen-eyed bowmen were there, and among them some of the best fellows in
+ the Forester&rsquo;s and Sheriff&rsquo;s companies. Down at the end of the line
+ towered the tall beggar-man, who must needs twang a bow-string with the
+ best of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff noted his queer figure and asked: &ldquo;Who is that ragged fellow?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis he that hath but now so soundly cracked the crown of Eric of
+ Lincoln,&rdquo; was the reply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shooting presently began, and the targets soon showed a fine
+ reckoning. Last of all came the beggar&rsquo;s turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By your leave,&rdquo; he said loudly, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d like it well to shoot with any other
+ man here present at a mark of my own placing.&rdquo; And he strode down the
+ lists with a slender peeled sapling which he stuck upright in the ground.
+ &ldquo;There,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;is a right good mark. Will any man try it?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But not an archer would risk his reputation on so small a target.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon the beggar drew his bow with seeming carelessness and split the
+ wand with his shaft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Long live the beggar!&rdquo; yelled the bystanders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff swore a full great oath, and said: &ldquo;This man is the best
+ archer that ever yet I saw.&rdquo; And he beckoned to him, and asked him: &ldquo;How
+ now, good fellow, what is your name, and in what country were you born?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In Holderness I was born,&rdquo; the man replied; &ldquo;men call me Reynold
+ Greenleaf.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a sturdy fellow, Reynold Greenleaf, and deserve better apparel
+ than that you wear at present. Will you enter my service? I will give you
+ twenty marks a year, above your living, and three good suits of clothes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three good suits, say you? Then right gladly will I enter your service,
+ for my back has been bare this many a long day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Reynold turned him about to the crowd and shouted: &ldquo;Hark ye, good
+ people, I have entered the Sheriff&rsquo;s service, and need not the yoke of
+ steers for prize. So take them for yourselves, to feast withal.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this the crowd shouted more merrily than ever, and threw their caps
+ high into the air. And none so popular a man had come to Nottingham town
+ in many a long day as this same Reynold Greenleaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now you may have guessed, by this time, who Reynold Greenleaf really was;
+ so I shall tell you that he was none other than Little John. And forth
+ went he to the Sheriff&rsquo;s house, and entered his service. But it was a
+ sorry day for the Sheriff when he got his new man. For Little John winked
+ his shrewd eye and said softly to himself: &ldquo;By my faith, I shall be the
+ worst servant to him that ever yet had he!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Two days passed by. Little John, it must be confessed, did not make a good
+ servant. He insisted upon eating the Sheriff&rsquo;s best bread and drinking his
+ best wine, so that the steward waxed wroth. Nathless the Sheriff held him
+ in high esteem, and made great talk of taking him along on the next
+ hunting trip.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was now the day of the banquet to the butchers, about which we have
+ already heard. The banquet hall, you must know, was not in the main house,
+ but connected with it by a corridor. All the servants were bustling about
+ making preparations for the feast, save only Little John, who must needs
+ lie abed the greater part of the day. But he presented himself at last,
+ when the dinner was half over; and being desirous of seeing the guests for
+ himself he went into the hall with the other servants to pass the wine.
+ First, however, I am afraid that some of the wine passed his own lips
+ while he went down the corridor. When he entered the banqueting hall, whom
+ should he see but Robin Hood himself. We can imagine the start of surprise
+ felt by each of these bold fellows upon seeing the other in such strange
+ company. But they kept their secrets, as we have seen, and arranged to
+ meet each other that same night. Meanwhile, the proud Sheriff little knew
+ that he harbored the two chief outlaws of the whole countryside beneath
+ his roof.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the feast was over and night was beginning to advance, Little John
+ felt faint of stomach and remembered him that he had eaten nothing all
+ that day. Back went he to the pantry to see what eatables were laid by.
+ But there, locking up the stores for the night, stood the fat steward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good Sir Steward,&rdquo; said Little John, &ldquo;give me to dine, for it is long for
+ Greenleaf to be fasting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The steward looked grimly at him and rattled the keys at his girdle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sirrah lie-abed,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;&lsquo;tis late in the day to be talking of
+ eating. Since you have waited thus long to be hungry, you can e&rsquo;en take
+ your appetite back to bed again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by mine appetite, that will I not do,&rdquo; cried Little John. &ldquo;Your own
+ paunch of fat would be enough for any bear to sleep on through the winter.
+ But my stomach craves food, and food it shall have!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Saying this he brushed past the steward and tried the door, but it was
+ locked fast; whereat the fat steward chuckled and jangled his keys again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then was Little John right mad, and he brought down his huge fist on the
+ door-panel with a sledge-hammer blow that shivered an opening you could
+ thrust your hand into. Little John stooped and peered through the hole to
+ see what food lay within reach, when crack! went the steward&rsquo;s keys upon
+ his crown, and the worthy danced around him playing a tattoo that made
+ Little John&rsquo;s ears ring. At this he turned upon the steward and gave him
+ such a rap that his back went nigh in two, and over went the fat fellow
+ rolling on the floor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lie there,&rdquo; quoth Little John, &ldquo;till ye find strength to go to bed.
+ Meanwhile, I must be about my dinner.&rdquo; And he kicked open the buttery door
+ without ceremony and brought to light a venison pasty and cold roast
+ pheasant&mdash;goodly sights to a hungry man. Placing these down on a
+ convenient shelf he fell to with right good will. So Little John ate and
+ drank as much as he would.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Sheriff had in his kitchen a cook, a stout man and bold, who heard
+ the rumpus and came in to see how the land lay. There sat Little John
+ eating away for dear life, while the fat steward was rolled under the
+ table like a bundle of rags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I make my vow!&rdquo; said the cook, &ldquo;you are a shrewd hind to dwell thus in a
+ household, and ask thus to dine.&rdquo; So saying he laid aside his spit and
+ drew a good sword that hung at his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I make my vow!&rdquo; said Little John, &ldquo;you are a bold man and hardy to come
+ thus between me and my meat. So defend yourself and see that you prove the
+ better man.&rdquo; And he drew his own sword and crossed weapons with the cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then back and forth they clashed with sullen sound. The old ballad which
+ tells of their fight says that they thought nothing for to flee, but
+ stiffly for to stand. There they fought sore together, two miles away and
+ more, but neither might the other harm for the space of a full hour.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I make my vow!&rdquo; cried Little John, &ldquo;you are the best swordsman that ever
+ yet I saw. What say you to resting a space and eating and drinking good
+ health with me. Then we may fall to again with the swords.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed!&rdquo; said the cook, who loved good fare as well as a good fight; and
+ they both laid by their swords and fell to the food with hearty will. The
+ venison pasty soon disappeared, and the roast pheasant flew at as lively a
+ rate as ever the bird itself had sped. Then the warriors rested a space
+ and patted their stomachs, and smiled across at each other like bosom
+ friends; for a man when he as dined looks out pleasantly upon the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And now good Reynold Greenleaf,&rdquo; said the cook, &ldquo;we may as well settle
+ this brave fight we have in hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A true saying,&rdquo; rejoined the other, &ldquo;but first tell me, friend&mdash;for
+ I protest you are my friend henceforth&mdash;what is the score we have to
+ settle?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naught save who can handle the sword best,&rdquo; said the cook. &ldquo;By my troth I
+ had thought to carve you like a capon ere now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I had long since thought to shave your ears,&rdquo; replied Little John.
+ &ldquo;This bout we can settle in right good time. But just now I and my master
+ have need of you, and you can turn your stout blade to better service than
+ that of the Sheriff.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose service would that be?&rdquo; asked the cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mine,&rdquo; answered a would-be butcher entering the room, &ldquo;and I am Robin
+ Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER V
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE SHERIFF LOST THREE GOOD SERVANTS AND FOUND THEM AGAIN
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Make good cheer,&rdquo; said Robin Hood.
+ &ldquo;Sheriff! for charity!
+ And for the love of Little John
+ Thy life is granted thee!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The cook gasped in amazement. This Robin Hood! and under the Sheriff&rsquo;s
+ very roof!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by my troth you are a brave fellow,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I have heard great
+ tales of your prowess, and the half has not been told. But who might this
+ tall slasher be?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Men do call me Little John, good fellow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then Little John, or Reynold Greenleaf, I like you well, on my honor as
+ Much the miller&rsquo;s son; and you too, bold Robin Hood. An you take me, I
+ will enter your service right gladly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Spoken like a stout man!&rdquo; said Robin, seizing him by the hand. &ldquo;But I
+ must back to my own bed, lest some sleepy warden stumble upon me, and I be
+ forced to run him through. Lucky for you twain that wine flowed so freely
+ in the house to-day; else the noise of your combat would have brought
+ other onlookers besides Robin Hood. Now if ye would flee the house
+ to-night, I will join you in the good greenwood to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But, good master,&rdquo; said the cook, &ldquo;you would not stay here over night!
+ Verily, it is running your head into a noose. Come with us. The Sheriff
+ has set strict watch on all the gates, since &lsquo;tis Fair week, but I know
+ the warden at the west gate and could bring us through safely. To-morrow
+ you will be stayed.&rdquo; &ldquo;Nay, that will I not,&rdquo; laughed Robin, &ldquo;for I shall
+ go through with no less escort than the Sheriff himself. Now do you,
+ Little John, and do you, Much the miller&rsquo;s son, go right speedily. In the
+ borders of the wood you will find my merry men. Tell them to kill two fine
+ harts against to-morrow eve, for we shall have great company and lordly
+ sport.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Robin left them as suddenly as he had come.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Comrade,&rdquo; then said Little John, &ldquo;we may as well bid the Sheriff&rsquo;s roof
+ farewell. But ere we go, it would seem a true pity to fail to take such of
+ the Sheriff&rsquo;s silver plate as will cause us to remember him, and also
+ grace our special feasts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis well said indeed,&rdquo; quoth the cook.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon they got a great sack and filled it with silver plate from the
+ shelves where it would not at once be missed, and they swung the sack
+ between them, and away they went, out of the house, out of the town, and
+ into the friendly shelter of Sherwood Forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the servants were late astir in the Sheriff&rsquo;s house. The
+ steward awoke from a heavy sleep, but his cracked head was still in such a
+ whirl that he could not have sworn whether the Sheriff had ever owned so
+ much as one silver dish. So the theft went undiscovered for the nonce.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin Hood met the Sheriff at breakfast, when his host soon spoke of what
+ was uppermost in his heart&mdash;the purchase of the fine herd of cattle
+ near Gamewell. &lsquo;Twas clear that a vision of them, purchased for twenty
+ paltry gold pieces, had been with him all through the night, in his
+ dreams. And Robin again appeared such a silly fellow that the Sheriff saw
+ no need of dissembling, but said that he was ready to start at once to
+ look at the herd.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Accordingly they set forth, Robin in his little butcher&rsquo;s cart, behind the
+ lean mare, and the Sheriff mounted on a horse. Out of Nottingham town,
+ through gates open wide, they proceeded, and took the hill road leading
+ through Sherwood Forest. And as they went on and plunged deeper among the
+ trees, Robin whistled blithely and sang snatches of tunes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why are you so gay, fellow?&rdquo; said the Sheriff, for, sooth to say, the
+ silence of the woods was making him uneasy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am whistling to keep my courage up,&rdquo; replied Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is there to fear, when you have the Sheriff of Nottingham beside
+ you?&rdquo; quoth the other pompously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin scratched his head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They do say that Robin Hood and his men care little for the Sheriff,&rdquo; he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh!&rdquo; said the Sheriff. &ldquo;I would not give <i>that</i> for their lives,
+ if I could once lay hands upon them.&rdquo; And he snapped his fingers angrily.
+ &ldquo;But Robin Hood himself was on this very road the last time I came to
+ town,&rdquo; said the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff started at the crackling of a twig under his horse&rsquo;s feet, and
+ looked around.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you see him?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, that did I! He wanted the use of this mare and cart to drive to
+ Nottingham. He said he would fain turn butcher. But see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke he came to a turn in the road, and there before them stood a
+ herd of the King&rsquo;s deer, feeding. Robin pointed to them and continued:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is my herd of cattle, good Master Sheriff! How do you like them?
+ Are they not fat and fair to see?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff drew rein quickly. &ldquo;Now fellow,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;I would I were
+ well out of this forest, for I care not to see such herds as these, or
+ such faces as yours. Choose your own way, therefore, whoever you be, and
+ let me go mine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; laughed Robin, seizing the Sheriff&rsquo;s bridle, &ldquo;I have been at too
+ much pains to cultivate your company to forego it now so easily. Besides I
+ wish you to meet some of my friends and dine with me, since you have so
+ lately entertained me at your board.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he clapped a horn on his lips and winded three merry notes. The
+ deer bounded away; and before the last of them was seen, there came a
+ running and a rustling, and out from behind covert and tree came full
+ twoscore of men, clad in Lincoln green, and bearing good yew bows in their
+ hands and short swords at their sides. Up they ran to Robin Hood and
+ doffed their caps to him respectfully, while the Sheriff sat still from
+ very amazement.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Welcome to the greenwood!&rdquo; said one of the leaders, bending the knee with
+ mock reverence before the Sheriff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff glared. It was Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe the worth, Reynold Greenleaf,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you have betrayed me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I make my vow,&rdquo; said Little John, &ldquo;that you are to blame, master. I was
+ misserved of my dinner, when I was at your house. But we shall set you
+ down to a feast we hope you will enjoy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well spoken, Little John,&rdquo; said Robin Hood. &ldquo;Take you his bridle and let
+ us do honor to the guest who has come to feast with us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then turning abruptly the whole company plunged into the heart of the
+ forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After twisting and turning till the Sheriff&rsquo;s bewildered head sat dizzily
+ upon his shoulders, the greenwood men passed through a narrow alley amid
+ the trees which led to a goodly open space flanked by wide-spreading oaks.
+ Under the largest of these a pleasant fire was crackling, and near it two
+ fine harts lay ready for cooking. Around the blaze were gathered another
+ company of yeomen quite as large as that which came with Robin Hood. Up
+ sprang they as the latter advanced and saluted their leader with
+ deference, but with hearty gladness to see him back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That merry wag Will Stutely was in command; and when he saw the palefaced
+ Sheriff being led in like any culprit, he took his cloak and laid it
+ humbly upon the ground and besought the Sheriff to alight upon it, as the
+ ground of Sherwood was unused to such dignitaries.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Bestir yourselves, good fellows!&rdquo; cried Robin Hood; &ldquo;and while our new
+ cook, whom I see with us, is preparing a feast worthy of our high guest,
+ let us have a few games to do him honor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then while the whole glade was filled with the savory smell of roasting
+ venison and fat capons, and brown pasties warmed beside the blaze, and
+ mulled wine sent forth a cordial fragrance, Robin Hood placed the Sheriff
+ upon a knoll beneath the largest oak and sat himself down by him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First stepped forward several pairs of men armed with the quarter-staff,
+ the widow&rsquo;s sons among them, and so skilfully did they thrust and parry
+ and beat down guards, that the Sheriff, who loved a good game as well as
+ any man, clapped his hands, forgetting where he was, and shouted, &ldquo;Well
+ struck! well struck! Never have I seen such blows at all the Fairs of
+ Nottingham!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the best archers of the band set up a small wand at eightscore paces
+ distant, and thereon they affixed a wreath of green. And the archers began
+ to shoot; and he who shot not through the garland without disturbing its
+ leaves and tendrils was fain to submit to a good sound buffet from Little
+ John. But right cunning was the shooting, for the men had spent a certain
+ time in daily practice, and many were the shafts which sped daintily
+ through the circle. Nathless now and again some luckless fellow would
+ shoot awry and would be sent winding from a long arm blow from the tall
+ lieutenant while the glade roared with laughter. And none more hearty a
+ guffaw was given than came from the Sheriff&rsquo;s own throat, for the spirit
+ of the greenwood was upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently his high mood was dashed. The company sat down to meat, and
+ the guest was treated to two more disturbing surprise. The cook came
+ forward to serve the food, when the Sheriff beheld in him his own former
+ servant, and one whom he supposed was at the moment in the scullery at
+ Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Much the miller&rsquo;s son grinned by way of answer to the Sheriff&rsquo;s amazement,
+ and served the plates, and placed them before the party. Then did the
+ Sheriff gasp and fairly choke with rage. The service was his own
+ silverware from the Mansion House!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You rascals! you rogues!&rdquo; he spluttered. &ldquo;Was it not enough to defraud me
+ out of three of my servants, that you must also rob me of my best silver
+ service? Nay, by my life, but I will not touch your food!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin Hood bade him pause.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;servants come and go, in merry England, and so does
+ service. The platters are but used to do your worship honor. And as for
+ your life, it is forfeit to your eagerness to buy my herd of cattle so
+ cheaply. Now sit you down again and make good cheer, Sheriff, for charity!
+ And for the love of Little John your life is granted you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Sheriff sat him down again, with the best face he could assume, and
+ soon the cook&rsquo;s viands were disappearing down his gullet as rapidly as the
+ next man&rsquo;s. And they feasted royally and clinked each other&rsquo;s cups until
+ the sun had ceased to print the pattern of the leaves upon the forest
+ carpet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Sheriff arose and said: &ldquo;I thank you, Robin Hood, one-time
+ butcher, and you, Little John, one-time beggar, and you, Much, one-time
+ cook, and all you good men who have entertained me in Sherwood so well.
+ Promises I make not as to how I shall requite you when next you come to
+ Nottingham, for I am in the King&rsquo;s service. So for the present the score
+ rests with you. But the shadows grow long and I must away, if you will be
+ pleased to pilot me to the road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin Hood and all his men arose and drank the Sheriff&rsquo;s health, and
+ Robin said: &ldquo;If you must needs go at once we will not detain you&mdash;except
+ that you have forgotten two things.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What may they be?&rdquo; asked the Sheriff, while his heart sank within him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You forget that you came with me to-day to buy a herd of horned beasts;
+ likewise that he who dines at the Greenwood Inn must pay the landlord.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff fidgeted like a small boy who has forgotten his lesson.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I have but a small sum with me,&rdquo; he began apologetically.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is that sum, gossip?&rdquo; questioned Little John, &ldquo;for my own wage
+ should also come out of it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And mine!&rdquo; said Much.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And mine!&rdquo; smiled Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff caught his breath. &ldquo;By my troth, are all these silver dishes
+ worth anything?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outlaws roared heartily at this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell you what it is, worship,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;we three rascally
+ servants will compound our back wages for those plates. And we will keep
+ the herd of cattle free for our own use&mdash;and the King&rsquo;s. But this
+ little tavern bill should be settled! Now, what sum have you about you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have only those twenty pieces of gold, and twenty others,&rdquo; said the
+ Sheriff: and well it was that he told the truth for once, for Robin said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Count it, Little John.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little John turned the Sheriff&rsquo;s wallet inside out. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis true enough,&rdquo; he
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you shall pay no more than twenty pieces for your entertainment,
+ excellence,&rdquo; decreed Robin. &ldquo;Speak I soothly, men of greenwood?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; echoed the others.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The Sheriff should swear by his patron saint that he will not molest us,&rdquo;
+ said Will Stutely; and his addition was carried unanimously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So be it, then,&rdquo; cried Little John, approaching the sheriff. &ldquo;Now swear
+ by your life and your patron saint&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will swear it by St. George, who is patron of us all,&rdquo; said the Sheriff
+ vigorously, &ldquo;that I will never disturb or distress the outlaws in
+ Sherwood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But let me catch any of you <i>out</i> of Sherwood!&rdquo; thought he to
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the twenty pieces of gold were paid over, and the Sheriff once more
+ prepared to depart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Never had we so worshipful a guest before,&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;and as the new
+ moon is beginning to silver the leaves, I shall bear you company myself
+ for part of the way. &lsquo;Twas I who brought you into the wood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I protest against your going needlessly far,&rdquo; said Sheriff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I protest that I am loath to lose your company,&rdquo; replied Robin. &ldquo;The
+ next time I may not be so pleased.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he took the Sheriff&rsquo;s horse by the bridle rein, and led him through
+ the lane and by many a thicket till the main road was reached.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now fare you well, good Sheriff,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and when next you think to
+ despoil a poor prodigal, remember the herd you would have bought over
+ against Gamewell. And when next you employ a servant, make certain that he
+ is not employing you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he smote the nag&rsquo;s haunch, and off went the Sheriff upon the
+ road to Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And that is how&mdash;you will find from many ballads that came to be sung
+ at the Sheriff&rsquo;s expense, and which are known even to the present day&mdash;that,
+ I say, is how the Sheriff lost three good servants and found them again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD MET WILL SCARLET
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The youngster was clothed in scarlet red
+ In scarlet fine and gay;
+ And he did frisk it o&rsquo;er the plain,
+ And chanted a roundelay.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One fine morning, soon after the proud Sheriff had been brought to grief,
+ Robin Hood and Little John went strolling down a path through the wood. It
+ was not far from the foot&mdash;bridge where they had fought their
+ memorable battle; and by common impulse they directed their steps to the
+ brook to quench their thirst and rest them in the cool bushes. The morning
+ gave promise of a hot day. The road even by the brook was dusty. So the
+ cooling stream was very pleasing and grateful to their senses.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On each side of them, beyond the dusty highway, stretched out broad fields
+ of tender young corn. On the yon side of the fields uprose the sturdy oaks
+ and beeches and ashes of the forest; while at their feet modest violets
+ peeped out shyly and greeted the loiterers with an odor which made the
+ heart glad. Over on the far side of the brook in a tiny bay floated three
+ lily-pads; and from amid some clover blossoms on the bank an industrious
+ bee rose with the hum of busy contentment. It was a day so brimful of
+ quiet joy that the two friends lay flat on their backs gazing up at the
+ scurrying clouds, and neither caring to break the silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently they heard some one coming up the road whistling gaily, as
+ though he owned the whole world and &lsquo;twas but made to whistle in. Anon he
+ chanted a roundelay with a merry note.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my troth, a gay bird!&rdquo; quoth Robin, raising up on his elbow. &ldquo;Let us
+ lie still, and trust that his purse is not as light as his heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they lay still, and in a minute more up came a smart stranger dressed
+ in scarlet and silk and wearing a jaunty hat with a curling cock feather
+ in it. His whole costume was of scarlet, from the feather to the silk
+ hosen on his legs. A goodly sword hung at his side, its scabbard all
+ embossed with tilting knights and weeping ladies. His hair was long and
+ yellow and hung clustering about his shoulders, for all the world like a
+ schoolgirl&rsquo;s; and he bore himself with as mincing a gait as the pertest of
+ them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little John clucked his teeth drolly at this sight. &ldquo;By my troth, a gay
+ bird!&rdquo; he said echoing the other&rsquo;s words&mdash;then added, &ldquo;But not so bad
+ a build for all his prettiness. Look you, those calves and thighs are well
+ rounded and straight. The arms, for all that gold-wrought cloak, hang
+ stoutly from full shoulders. I warrant you the fop can use his dainty
+ sword right well on occasion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; retorted Robin, &ldquo;he is naught but a ladies&rsquo; man from court. My
+ long-bow &lsquo;gainst a plugged shilling that he would run and bellow lustily
+ at sight of a quarter-staff. Stay you behind this bush and I will soon get
+ some rare sport out of him. Belike his silk purse may contain more pennies
+ than the law allows to one man in Sherwood or Barnesdale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying Robin Hood stepped forth briskly from the covert and planted
+ himself in the way of the scarlet stranger. The latter had walked so
+ slowly that he was scarce come to their resting-place; and now on
+ beholding Robin he neither slackened nor quickened his pace but sauntered
+ idly straight ahead, looking to the right and to the left, with the finest
+ air in the world, but never once at Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; quoth the outlaw. &ldquo;What mean ye by running thus over a wayfarer,
+ rough shod?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wherefore should I hold, good fellow?&rdquo; said the stranger in a smooth
+ voice, and looking at Robin for the first time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Because I bid you to,&rdquo; replied Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And who may you be?&rdquo; asked the other as coolly as you please.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What my name is matters not,&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;but know that I am a public
+ tax-gatherer and equalizer of shillings. If your purse have more than a
+ just number of shillings or pence, I must e&rsquo;en lighten it somewhat; for
+ there are many worthy people round about these borders who have less than
+ the just amount. Wherefore, sweet gentleman, I pray you hand over your
+ purse without more ado, that I may judge of its weight in proper fashion.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other smiled as sweetly as though a lady were paying him a compliment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are a droll fellow,&rdquo; he said calmly. &ldquo;Your speech amuses me mightily.
+ Pray continue, if you have not done, for I am in no hurry this morning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have said all with my tongue that is needful,&rdquo; retorted Robin,
+ beginning to grow red under the collar. &ldquo;Nathless, I have other arguments
+ which may not be so pleasing to your dainty skin. Prithee, stand and
+ deliver. I promise to deal fairly with the purse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alack-a-day!&rdquo; said the stranger with a little shrug of his shoulders; &ldquo;I
+ am deeply sorrowful that I cannot show my purse to every rough lout that
+ asks to see it. But I really could not, as I have further need of it
+ myself and every farthing it contains. Wherefore, pray stand aside.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay that will I not! and &lsquo;twill go the harder with you if you do not
+ yield at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good fellow,&rdquo; said the other gently, &ldquo;have I not heard all your speech
+ with patience? Now that is all I promised to do. My conscience is salved
+ and I must go on my way. To-rol-o-rol-e-loo!&rdquo; he caroled, making as though
+ to depart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold, I say!&rdquo; quoth Robin hotly; for he knew how Little John must be
+ chuckling at this from behind the bushes. &ldquo;Hold I say, else I shall have
+ to bloody those fair locks of yours!&rdquo; And he swung his quarter-staff
+ threateningly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; moaned the stranger shaking his head. &ldquo;The pity of it all! Now I
+ shall have to run this fellow through with my sword! And I hoped to be a
+ peaceable man henceforth!&rdquo; And sighing deeply he drew his shining blade
+ and stood on guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put by your weapon,&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;It is too pretty a piece of steel to
+ get cracked with common oak cudgel; and that is what would happen on the
+ first pass I made at you. Get you a stick like mine out of yon
+ undergrowth, and we will fight fairly, man to man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The stranger thought a moment with his usual slowness, and eyed Robin from
+ head to foot. Then he unbuckled his scabbard, laid it and the sword aside,
+ and walked deliberately over to the oak thicket. Choosing from among the
+ shoots and saplings he found a stout little tree to his liking, when he
+ laid hold of it, without stopping to cut it, and gave a tug. Up it came
+ root and all, as though it were a stalk of corn, and the stranger walked
+ back trimming it as quietly as though pulling up trees were the easiest
+ thing in the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little John from his hiding-place saw the feat, and could hardly restrain
+ a long whistle. &ldquo;By our Lady!&rdquo; he muttered to himself, &ldquo;I would not be in
+ Master Robin&rsquo;s boots!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whatever Robin thought upon seeing the stranger&rsquo;s strength, he uttered not
+ a word and budged not an inch. He only put his oak staff at parry as the
+ other took his stand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There was a threefold surprise that day, by the brookside. The stranger
+ and Robin and Little John in the bushes all found a combat that upset all
+ reckoning. The stranger for all his easy strength and cool nerve found an
+ antagonist who met his blows with the skill of a woodman. Robin found the
+ stranger as hard to hit as though fenced in by an oak hedge. While Little
+ John rolled over and over in silent joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back and forth swayed the fighters, their cudgels pounding this way and
+ that, knocking off splinters and bark, and threatening direst damage to
+ bone and muscle and skin. Back and forth they pranced kicking up a cloud
+ of dust and gasping for fresh air. From a little way off you would have
+ vowed that these two men were trying to put out a fire, so thickly hung
+ the cloud of battle over them. Thrice did Robin smite the scarlet man&mdash;with
+ such blows that a less stout fellow must have bowled over. Only twice did
+ the scarlet man smite Robin, but the second blow was like to finish him.
+ The first had been delivered over the knuckles, and though &lsquo;twas a
+ glancing stroke it well nigh broke Robin&rsquo;s fingers, so that he could not
+ easily raise his staff again. And while he was dancing about in pain and
+ muttering a dust-covered oath, the other&rsquo;s staff came swinging through the
+ cloud at one side&mdash;zip!&mdash;and struck him under the arm. Down went
+ Robin as though he were a nine-pin&mdash;flat down into the dust of the
+ road. But despite the pain he was bounding up again like an India rubber
+ man to renew the attack, when Little John interfered.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; said he, bursting out of the bushes and seizing the stranger&rsquo;s
+ weapon. &ldquo;Hold, I say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; retorted the stranger quietly, &ldquo;I was not offering to smite him
+ while he was down. But if there be a whole nest of you hatching here by
+ the waterside, cluck out the other chicks and I&rsquo;ll make shift to fight
+ them all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not for all the deer in Sherwood!&rdquo; cried Robin. &ldquo;You are a good fellow
+ and a gentleman. I&rsquo;ll fight no more with you, for verily I feel sore in
+ wrist and body. Nor shall any of mine molest you henceforth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sooth to say, Robin did not look in good fighting trim. His clothes were
+ coated with dirt, one of his hosen had slipped halfway down from his knee,
+ the sleeve of his jerkin was split, and his face was streaked with sweat
+ and dirt. Little John eyed him drolly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now, good master,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;the sport you were to kick up has left
+ you in sorry plight. Let me dust your coat for you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, it has been dusted enough already,&rdquo; replied Robin; &ldquo;and I now
+ believe the Scripture saying that all men are but dust, for it has sifted
+ me through and through and lined my gullet an inch deep. By your leave&rdquo;&mdash;and
+ he went to the brookside and drank deep and laved his face and hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ All this while the stranger had been eyeing Robin attentively and
+ listening to his voice as though striving to recall it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I mistake not,&rdquo; he said slowly at last, &ldquo;you are that famous outlaw,
+ Robin Hood of Barnesdale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You say right,&rdquo; replied Robin; &ldquo;but my fame has been tumbling sadly about
+ in the dust to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now why did I not know you at once?&rdquo; continued the stranger. &ldquo;This battle
+ need not have happened, for I came abroad to find you to-day, and thought
+ to have remembered your face and speech. Know you not me, Rob, my lad?
+ Hast ever been to Gamewell Lodge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! Will Gamewell! my dear old chum, Will Gamewell!&rdquo; shouted Robin,
+ throwing his arms about the other in sheer affection. &ldquo;What an ass I was
+ not to recognize you! But it has been years since we parted, and your
+ gentle schooling has polished you off mightily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will embraced his cousin no less heartily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are quits on not knowing kinsmen,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;for you have changed and
+ strengthened much from the stripling with whom I used to run foot races in
+ old Sherwood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But why seek you me?&rdquo; asked Robin. &ldquo;You know I am an outlaw and dangerous
+ company. And how left you mine uncle? and have you heard aught of late of&mdash;of
+ Maid Marian?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your last question first,&rdquo; answered Will, laughing, &ldquo;for I perceive that
+ it lies nearest your heart. I saw Maid Marian not many weeks after the
+ great shooting at Nottingham, when you won her the golden arrow. She
+ prizes the bauble among her dearest possessions, though it has made her an
+ enemy in the Sheriff&rsquo;s proud daughter. Maid Marian bade me tell you, if I
+ ever saw you, that she must return to Queen Eleanor&rsquo;s court, but she could
+ never forget the happy days in the greenwood. As for the old Squire, he is
+ still hale and hearty, though rheumatic withal. He speaks of you as a sad
+ young dog, but for all that is secretly proud of your skill at the bow and
+ of the way you are pestering the Sheriff, whom he likes not. &lsquo;Twas for my
+ father&rsquo;s sake that I am now in the open, an outlaw like yourself. He has
+ had a steward, a surly fellow enough, who, while I was away at school,
+ boot-licked his way to favor until he lorded it over the whole house. Then
+ he grew right saucy and impudent, but my father minded it not, deeming the
+ fellow indispensable in managing the estate. But when I came back it irked
+ me sorely to see the fellow strut about as though he owned the place. He
+ was sly enough with me at first, and would brow-beat the Squire only while
+ I was out of earshot. It chanced one day, however, that I heard loud
+ voices through an open window and paused to hearken. That vile servant
+ called my father &lsquo;a meddling old fool,&rsquo; &lsquo;Fool and meddler art thou
+ thyself, varlet,&rsquo; I shouted, springing through the window, &lsquo;<i>that</i>
+ for thy impudence!&rsquo; and in my heat I smote him a blow mightier than I
+ intended, for I have some strength in mine arm. The fellow rolled over and
+ never breathed afterwards, I think I broke his neck or something the like.
+ Then I knew that the Sheriff would use this as a pretext to hound my
+ father, if I tarried. So I bade the Squire farewell and told him I would
+ seek you in Sherwood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by my halidom!&rdquo; said Robin Hood; &ldquo;for a man escaping the law, you
+ took it about as coolly as one could wish. To see you come tripping along
+ decked out in all your gay plumage and trolling forth a roundelay, one
+ would think you had not a care in all the world. Indeed I remarked to
+ Little John here that I hoped your purse was not as light as your heart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Belike you meant <i>head</i>,&rdquo; laughed Will; &ldquo;and is this Little John the
+ Great? Shake hands with me, an you will, and promise me to cross a staff
+ with me in friendly bout some day in the forest!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I!&rdquo; quoth Little John heartily. &ldquo;Here&rsquo;s my hand on it. What is
+ your last name again, say you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis to be changed,&rdquo; interposed Robin; &ldquo;then shall the men armed with
+ warrants go hang for all of us. Let me bethink myself. Ah!&mdash;I have
+ it! In scarlet he came to us, and that shall be his name henceforth.
+ Welcome to the greenwood, Will Scarlet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, welcome, Will Scarlet!&rdquo; said Little John; and they all clasped hands
+ again and swore to be true each to the other and to Robin Hood&rsquo;s men in
+ Sherwood Forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD MET FRIAR TUCK
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The friar took Robin Hood on his back,
+ Deep water he did bestride,
+ And spake neither good word nor bad,
+ Till he came at the other side.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ In summer time when leaves grow green, and flowers are fresh and gay,
+ Robin Hood and his merry men were all disposed to play. Thus runs a quaint
+ old ballad which begins the next adventure. Then some would leap and some
+ would run and some try archery and some ply the quarter-staff and some
+ fall to with the good broad sword. Some again would try a round at buffet
+ and fisticuff; and thus by every variety of sport and exercise they
+ perfected themselves in skill and made the band and its prowess well known
+ throughout all England.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It had been a custom of Robin Hood&rsquo;s to pick out the best men in all the
+ countryside. Whenever he heard of one more than usually skilled in any
+ feat of arms he would seek the man and test him in personal encounter&mdash;which
+ did not always end happily for Robin. And when he had found a man to his
+ liking he offered him service with the bold fellows of Sherwood Forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus it came about that one day after a practice at shooting, in which
+ Little John struck down a hart at five hundred feet distance, Robin Hood
+ was fain to boast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God&rsquo;s blessing on your heart!&rdquo; he cried, clapping the burly fellow on the
+ shoulder; &ldquo;I would travel an hundred miles to find one who could match
+ you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At this Will Scarlet laughed full roundly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There lives a curtall friar in Fountain&rsquo;s Abbey&mdash;Tuck, by name&mdash;who
+ can beat both him and you,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin pricked up his ears at this free speech.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By our Lady,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll neither eat nor drink till I see this same
+ friar.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with his usual impetuosity he at once set about arming himself for the
+ adventure. On his head he placed a cap of steel. Underneath his Lincoln
+ green he wore a coat of chain metal. Then with sword and buckler girded at
+ his side he made a goodly show. But he also took with him his stout yew
+ bow and a sheaf of chosen arrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he set forth upon his way with blithe heart; for it was a day when the
+ whole face of the earth seemed glad and rejoicing in pulsing life.
+ Steadily he pressed forward by winding ways till he came to a green broad
+ pasture land at whose edge flowed a stream dipping in and out among the
+ willows and rushes on the banks. A pleasant stream it was, but it flowed
+ calmly as though of some depth in the middle. Robin did not fancy getting
+ his feet wet, or his fine suit of mail rusted, so he paused on the hither
+ bank to rest and take his bearings.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he sat down quietly under the shade of a drooping willow he heard
+ snatches of a jovial song floating to him from the farther side; then came
+ a sound of two men&rsquo;s voices arguing. One was upholding the merits of hasty
+ pudding and the other stood out stoutly for meat pie, &ldquo;especially&rdquo;&mdash;quoth
+ this one&mdash;&ldquo;when flavored with young onions!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy!&rdquo; muttered Robin to himself, &ldquo;that is a tantalizing speech to a
+ hungry man! But, odds bodikins! did ever two men talk more alike than
+ those two fellows yonder!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth Robin could well marvel at the speech, for the voices were
+ curiously alike.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the willows parted on the other bank, and Robin could hardly
+ forebear laughing out right. His mystery was explained. It was not two men
+ who had done all this singing and talking, but one&mdash;and that one a
+ stout curtall friar who wore a long cloak over his portly frame, tied with
+ a cord in the middle. On his head was a knight&rsquo;s helmet, and in his hand
+ was a no more warlike weapon than a huge pasty pie, with which he sat down
+ by the water&rsquo;s edge. His twofold argument was finished. The meat pie had
+ triumphed; and no wonder! for it was the present witness, soon to give its
+ own testimony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But first the friar took off his helmet to cool his head, and a droll
+ picture he made. His head was as round as an apple, and eke as smooth in
+ spots. A fringe of close curling black hair grew round the base of his
+ skull, but his crown was bare and shiny as an egg. His cheeks also were
+ smooth and red and shiny; and his little gray eyes danced about with the
+ funniest air imaginable. You would not have blamed Robin Hood for wanting
+ to laugh, had you heard this serious two-faced talk and then seen this
+ jovial one-faced man. Good humor and fat living stood out all over him;
+ yet for all that he looked stout enough and able to take care of himself
+ with any man. His short neck was thick like that of a Berkshire bull; his
+ shoulders were set far back, and his arms sprouted therefrom like two oak
+ limbs. As he sat him down, the cloak fell apart disclosing a sword and
+ buckler as stout as Robin&rsquo;s own.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nathless, Robin was not dismayed at sight of the weapons. Instead, his
+ heart fell within him when he saw the meat pie which was now in fair way
+ to be devoured before his very eyes; for the friar lost no time in
+ thrusting one hand deep into the pie, while he crossed himself with the
+ other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon Robin seized his bow and fitted a shaft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hey, friar!&rdquo; he sang out, &ldquo;carry me over the water, or else I cannot
+ answer for your safety.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other started at the unexpected greeting, and laid his hand upon his
+ sword. Then he looked up and beheld Robin&rsquo;s arrow pointing full upon him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put down your bow, fellow,&rdquo; he shouted back, &ldquo;and I will bring you over
+ the brook. &lsquo;Tis our duty in life to help each other, and your keen shaft
+ shows me that you are a man worthy of some attention.&rdquo; So the friar knight
+ got him up gravely, though his eyes twinkled with a cunning light, and
+ laid aside his beloved pie and his cloak and his sword and his buckler,
+ and waded across the stream with waddling dignity. Then he took Robin Hood
+ upon his back and spoke neither good word nor bad till he came to the
+ other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Lightly leaped Robin off his back, and said, &ldquo;I am much beholden to you,
+ good father.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Beholden, say you!&rdquo; rejoined the other drawing his sword; &ldquo;then by my
+ faith you shall e&rsquo;en repay your score. Now mine own affairs, which are of
+ a spiritual kind and much more important than yours which are carnal, lie
+ on the other side of this stream. I see that you are a likely man and one,
+ moreover, who would not refuse to serve the church. I must therefore pray
+ of you that whatsoever I have done unto you, you will do also unto me. In
+ short, my son, you must e&rsquo;en carry me back again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Courteously enough was this said; but so suddenly had the friar drawn his
+ sword that Robin had no time to unsling his bow from his back, whither he
+ had placed it to avoid getting it wet, or to unfasten his scabbard. So he
+ was fain to temporize.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good father, but I shall get my feet wet,&rdquo; he commenced.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are your feet any better than mine?&rdquo; retorted the other. &ldquo;I fear me now
+ that I have already wetted myself so sadly as to lay in a store of
+ rheumatic pains by way of penance.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am not so strong as you,&rdquo; continued Robin; &ldquo;that helmet and sword and
+ buckler would be my undoing on the uncertain footing amidstream, to say
+ nothing of your holy flesh and bones.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then I will lighten up, somewhat,&rdquo; replied the other calmly. &ldquo;Promise to
+ carry me across and I will lay aside my war gear.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said Robin; and the friar thereupon stripped himself; and Robin
+ bent his stout back and took him up even as he had promised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the stones at the bottom of the stream were round and slippery, and
+ the current swept along strongly, waist-deep, in the middle. More-over
+ Robin had a heavier load than the other had borne, nor did he know the
+ ford. So he went stumbling along now stepping into a deep hole, now
+ stumbling over a boulder in a manner that threatened to unseat his rider
+ or plunge them both clear under current. But the fat friar hung on and dug
+ his heels into his steed&rsquo;s ribs in as gallant manner as if he were riding
+ in a tournament; while as for poor Robin the sweat ran down him in
+ torrents and he gasped like the winded horse he was. But at last he
+ managed to stagger out on the bank and deposit his unwieldy load.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner had he set the friar down than he seized his own sword.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, holy friar,&rdquo; quoth he, panting and wiping the sweat from his brow,
+ &ldquo;what say the Scriptures that you quote so glibly?&mdash;Be not weary of
+ well doing. You must carry me back again or I swear that I will make a
+ cheese-cloth out of your jacket!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friar&rsquo;s gray eyes once more twinkled with a cunning gleam that boded
+ no good to Robin; but his voice was as calm and courteous as ever.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your wits are keen, my son,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;and I see that the waters of the
+ stream have not quenched your spirit. Once more will I bend my back to the
+ oppressor and carry the weight of the haughty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin mounted again in high glee, and carried his sword in his hand,
+ and went prepared to tarry upon the other side. But while he was
+ bethinking himself what great words to use, when he should arrive thither,
+ he felt himself slipping from the friar&rsquo;s broad back. He clutched
+ frantically to save himself but had too round a surface to grasp, besides
+ being hampered by his weapon. So down went he with a loud splash into the
+ middle of the stream, where the crafty friar had conveyed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There!&rdquo; quoth the holy man; &ldquo;choose you, choose you, my fine fellow,
+ whether you will sink or swim!&rdquo; And he gained his own bank without more
+ ado, while Robin thrashed and spluttered about until he made shift to
+ grasp a willow wand and thus haul himself ashore on the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin&rsquo;s rage waxed furious, despite his wetting, and he took his bow
+ and his arrows and let fly one shaft after another at the worthy friar.
+ But they rattled harmlessly off his steel buckler, while he laughed and
+ minded them no more than if they had been hail-stones.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shoot on, shoot on, good fellow,&rdquo; he sang out; &ldquo;shoot as you have begun;
+ if you shoot here a summer&rsquo;s day, your mark I will not shun!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin shot, and passing well, till all his arrows were gone, when from
+ very rage he began to revile him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You bloody villain!&rdquo; shouted he, &ldquo;You psalm-singing hypocrite! You
+ reviler of good hasty pudding! Come but within reach of my sword arm, and,
+ friar or no friar, I&rsquo;ll shave your tonsure closer than ever bald-pated
+ monk was shaven before!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Soft you and fair!&rdquo; said the friar unconcernedly; &ldquo;hard words are cheap,
+ and you may need your wind presently. An you would like a bout with
+ swords, meet me halfway i&rsquo; the stream.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with this speech the friar waded into the brook, sword in hand, where
+ he was met halfway by the impetuous outlaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon began a fierce and mighty battle. Up and down, in and out, back
+ and forth they fought. The swords flashed in the rays of the declining sun
+ and then met with a clash that would have shivered less sturdy weapons or
+ disarmed less sturdy wielders. Many a smart blow was landed, but each
+ perceived that the other wore an undercoat of linked mail which might not
+ be pierced. Nathless, their ribs ached at the force of the blows. Once and
+ again they paused by mutual consent and caught breath and looked hard each
+ at the other; for never had either met so stout a fellow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally in a furious onset of lunge and parry Robin&rsquo;s foot stepped on a
+ rolling stone, and he went down upon his knees. But his antagonist would
+ not take this advantage: he paused until Robin should get upon his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by our Lady!&rdquo; cried the outlaw, using his favorite oath, &ldquo;you are the
+ fairest swordsman that I have met in many a long day. I would beg a boon
+ of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; said the other.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me leave to set my horn to my mouth and blow three blasts thereon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I do,&rdquo; said the curtall friar, &ldquo;blow till your breath fails, an
+ it please you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then, says the old ballad, Robin Hood set his horn to mouth and blew
+ mighty blasts; and half a hundred yeomen, bows bent, came raking over the
+ lee.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whose men are these,&rdquo; said the friar, &ldquo;that come so hastily?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These men are mine,&rdquo; said Robin Hood, feeling that his time to laugh was
+ come at last.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then said the friar in his turn, &ldquo;A boon, a boon, the like I gave to you.
+ Give me leave to set my fist to my mouth and whistle three blasts
+ thereon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I do,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;or else I were lacking in courtesy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friar set his fist to his mouth and put the horn to shame by the
+ piercing whistles he blew; whereupon half a hundred great dogs came
+ running and jumping so swiftly that they had reached their bank as soon as
+ Robin Hood&rsquo;s men had reached his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then followed a rare foolish conflict. Stutely, Much, Little John and the
+ other outlaws began sending their arrows whizzing toward the opposite
+ bank; but the dogs, which were taught of the friar, dodged the missiles
+ cleverly and ran and fetched them back again, just as the dogs of to-day
+ catch sticks.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have never seen the like of this in my days!&rdquo; cried Little John,
+ amazed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis rank sorcery and witchcraft.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take off your dogs, Friar Tuck!&rdquo; shouted Will Scarlet, who had but then
+ run up, and who now stood laughing heartily at the scene.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Friar Tuck!&rdquo; exclaimed Robin, astounded. &ldquo;Are you Friar Tuck? Then am I
+ your friend, for you are he I came to seek.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am but a poor anchorite, a curtall friar,&rdquo; said the other, whistling to
+ his pack, &ldquo;by name Friar Tuck of Fountain&rsquo;s Dale. For seven years have I
+ tended the Abbey here, preached o&rsquo; Sundays, and married and christened and
+ buried folk&mdash;and fought too, if need were; and if it smacks not too
+ much of boasting, I have not yet met the knight or trooper or yeoman that
+ I would yield before. But yours is a stout blade. I would fain know you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis Robin Hood, the outlaw, who has been assisting you at this
+ christening,&rdquo; said Will Scarlet glancing roguishly at the two opponents&rsquo;
+ dripping garments. And at this sally the whole bad burst into a shout of
+ laughter, in which Robin and Friar Tuck joined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin Hood!&rdquo; cried the good friar presently, holding his sides; &ldquo;are you
+ indeed that famous yeoman? Then I like you well; and had I known you
+ earlier, would have both carried you across and shared my pasty pie with
+ you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To speak soothly,&rdquo; replied Robin gaily, &ldquo;&lsquo;twas that same pie that led me
+ to be rude. Now, therefore, bring it and your dogs and repair with us to
+ the greenwood. We have need of you&mdash;with this message came I to-day
+ to seek you. We will build you a hermitage in Sherwood Forest, and you
+ shall keep us from evil ways. Will you not join our band?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, that will I!&rdquo; cried Friar Tuck jovially. &ldquo;Once more will I cross
+ this much beforded stream, and go with you to the good greenwood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER VIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ALLAN-A-DALE&rsquo;S WOOING WAS PROSPERED
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;What is thy name?&rdquo; then said Robin Hood,
+ &ldquo;Come tell me, without any fail!&rdquo;
+ &ldquo;By the faith o&rsquo; my body,&rdquo; then said the young man,
+ &ldquo;My name it is Allan-a-Dale.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Friar Tuck and Much the miller&rsquo;s son soon became right good friends over
+ the steaming stew they jointly prepared for the merry men that evening.
+ Tuck was mightily pleased when he found a man in the forest who could make
+ pasties and who had cooked for no less person than the High Sheriff
+ himself. While Much marveled at the friar&rsquo;s knowledge of herbs and simples
+ and woodland things which savored a stew greatly. So they gabbled together
+ like two old gossips and, between them, made such a tasty mess that Robin
+ Hood and his stout followers were like never to leave off eating. And the
+ friar said grace too, with great unction, over the food; and Robin said
+ Amen! and that henceforth they were always to have mass of Sundays.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin walked forth into the wood that evening with his stomach full and
+ his heart, therefore, in great contentment and love for other men. He did
+ not stop the first passer-by, as his manner often was, and desire a fight.
+ Instead, he stepped behind a tree, when he heard a man&rsquo;s voice in song,
+ and waited to behold the singer. Perhaps he remembered, also, the merry
+ chanting of Will Scarlet, and how he had tried to give it pause a few days
+ before.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Like Will, this fellow was clad in scarlet, though he did not look quite
+ as fine a gentleman. Nathless, he was a sturdy yeoman of honest face and a
+ voice far sweeter than Will&rsquo;s. He seemed to be a strolling minstrel, for
+ he bore a harp in his hand, which he thrummed, while his lusty tenor voice
+ rang out with&mdash;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Hey down, and a down, and a down!
+ I&rsquo;ve a lassie back i&rsquo; the town;
+ Come day, come night, Come dark or light,
+ She will wed me, back i&rsquo; the town!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Robin let the singer pass, caroling on his way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis not in me to disturb a light-hearted lover, this night,&rdquo; he
+ muttered, a memory of Marian coming back to him. &ldquo;Pray heaven she may be
+ true to him and the wedding be a gay one &lsquo;back i&rsquo; the town!&rdquo;&rsquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin went back to his camp, where he told of the minstrel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If any of ye set on him after this,&rdquo; quoth he in ending, &ldquo;bring him to
+ me, for I would have speech with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The very next day his wish was gratified. Little John and Much the
+ miller&rsquo;s son were out together on a foraging expedition when they espied
+ the same young man; at least, they thought it must be he, for he was clad
+ in scarlet and carried a harp in his hand. But now he came drooping along
+ the way; his scarlet was all in tatters; and at every step he fetched a
+ sigh, &ldquo;Alack and a well-a-day!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then stepped forth Little John and Much the miller&rsquo;s son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho! do not wet the earth with your weeping,&rdquo; said Little John, &ldquo;else we
+ shall all have lumbago.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No sooner did the young man catch sight of them than he bent his bow, and
+ held an arrow back to his ear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand off! stand off!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;what is your will with me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Put by your weapon,&rdquo; said Much, &ldquo;we will not harm you. But you must come
+ before our master straight, under yon greenwood tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the minstrel put by his bow and suffered himself to be led before Robin
+ Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now!&rdquo; quoth Robin, when he beheld his sorry countenance, &ldquo;are you not
+ he whom I heard no longer ago than yesternight caroling so blithely about
+ &lsquo;a lassie back i&rsquo; the town&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same in body, good sir,&rdquo; replied the other sadly; &ldquo;but my spirit is
+ grievously changed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me your tale,&rdquo; said Robin courteously. &ldquo;Belike I can help you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That can no man on earth, I fear,&rdquo; said the stranger; &ldquo;nathless, I&rsquo;ll
+ tell you the tale. Yesterday I stood pledged to a maid, and thought soon
+ to wed her. But she has been taken from me and is to become an old
+ knight&rsquo;s bride this very day; and as for me, I care not what ending comes
+ to my days, or how soon, without her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, come up!&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;how got the old knight so sudden vantage?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look you, worship, &lsquo;tis this way. The Normans overrun us, and are in such
+ great favor that none may say them nay. This old returned Crusader coveted
+ the land whereon my lady dwells. The estate is not large, but all in her
+ own right; whereupon her brother says she shall wed a title, and he and
+ the old knight have fixed it up for to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but surely&mdash;&rdquo; began Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hear me out, worship,&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;Belike you think me a sorry dog
+ not to make fight of this. But the old knight, look you, is not
+ come-at-able. I threw one of his varlets into a thorn hedge, and another
+ into a water-butt, and a third landed head-first into a ditch. But I
+ couldn&rsquo;t do any fighting at all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis a pity!&rdquo; quoth Little John gravely. He had been sitting cross-legged
+ listening to this tale of woe. &ldquo;What think you, Friar Tuck, doth not a bit
+ of fighting ease a man&rsquo;s mind?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Blood-letting is ofttimes recommended of the leeches,&rdquo; replied Tuck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Does the maid love you?&rdquo; asked Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By our troth, she loved me right well,&rdquo; said the minstrel. &ldquo;I have a
+ little ring of hers by me which I have kept for seven long years.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is your name?&rdquo; then said Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the faith of my body,&rdquo; replied the young man, &ldquo;my name is
+ Allan-a-Dale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What will you give me, Allan-a-Dale,&rdquo; said Robin Hood, &ldquo;in ready gold or
+ fee, to help you to your true love again, and deliver her back unto you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no money, save only five shillings,&rdquo; quoth Allan; &ldquo;but&mdash;are
+ you not Robin Hood?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin nodded.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then you, if any one, can aid me!&rdquo; said Allan-a-Dale eagerly. &ldquo;And if you
+ give me back my love, I swear upon the Book that I will be your true
+ servant forever after.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is this wedding to take place, and when?&rdquo; asked Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;At Plympton Church, scarce five miles from here; and at three o&rsquo; the
+ afternoon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then to Plympton we will go!&rdquo; cried Robin suddenly springing into action;
+ and he gave out orders like a general: &ldquo;Will Stutely, do you have
+ four-and-twenty good men over against Plympton Church &lsquo;gainst three o&rsquo; the
+ afternoon. Much, good fellow, do you cook up some porridge for this youth,
+ for he must have a good round stomach&mdash;aye, and a better gear! Will
+ Scarlet, you will see to decking him out bravely for the nonce. And Friar
+ Tuck, hold yourself in readiness, good book in hand, at the church. Mayhap
+ you had best go ahead of us all.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fat Bishop of Hereford was full of pomp and importance that day at
+ Plympton Church. He was to celebrate the marriage of an old knight&mdash;a
+ returned Crusader&mdash;and a landed young woman; and all the gentry
+ thereabout were to grace the occasion with their presence. The church
+ itself was gaily festooned with flowers for the ceremony, while out in the
+ church-yard at one side brown ale flowed freely for all the servitors.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already were the guests beginning to assemble, when the Bishop, back in
+ the vestry, saw a minstrel clad in green walk up boldly to the door and
+ peer within. It was Robin Hood, who had borrowed Allan&rsquo;s be-ribboned harp
+ for the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now who are you, fellow?&rdquo; quoth the Bishop, &ldquo;and what do you here at the
+ church-door with you harp and saucy air?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May it please your Reverence,&rdquo; returned Robin bowing very humbly, &ldquo;I am
+ but a strolling harper, yet likened the best in the whole North Countree.
+ And I had hope that my thrumming might add zest to the wedding to-day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What tune can you harp?&rdquo; demanded the Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can harp a tune so merry that a forlorn lover will forget he is
+ jilted,&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;I can harp another tune that will make a bride
+ forsake her lord at the altar. I can harp another tune that will bring
+ loving souls together though they were up hill and down dale five good
+ miles away from each other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then welcome, good minstrel,&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;music pleases me right
+ well, and if you can play up to your prattle, &lsquo;twill indeed grace your
+ ceremony. Let us have a sample of your wares.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I must not put finger to string until the bride and groom have come.
+ Such a thing would ill fortune both us and them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have it as you will,&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;but here comes the party now.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then up the lane to the church came the old knight, preceded by ten
+ archers liveried in scarlet and gold. A brave sight the archers made, but
+ their master walked slowly leaning upon a cane and shaking as though in a
+ palsy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And after them came a sweet lass leaning upon her brother&rsquo;s arm. Her hair
+ did shine like glistering gold, and her eyes were like blue violets that
+ peep out shyly at the sun. The color came and went in her cheeks like that
+ tinting of a sea-shell, and her face was flushed as though she had been
+ weeping. But now she walked with a proud air, as though she defied the
+ world to crush her spirit. She had but two maids with her, finikin lasses,
+ with black eyes and broad bosoms, who set off their lady&rsquo;s more delicate
+ beauty well. One held up the bride&rsquo;s gown from the ground; the other
+ carried flowers in plenty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by all the wedding bells that ever were rung!&rdquo; quoth Robin boldly,
+ &ldquo;this is the worst matched pair that ever mine eyes beheld!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Silence, miscreant!&rdquo; said a man who stood near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop had hurriedly donned his gown and now stood ready to meet the
+ couple at the chancel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin paid no heed to him. He let the knight and his ten archers pass
+ by, then he strode up to the bride, and placed himself on the other side
+ from her brother.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courage, lady!&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;there is another minstrel near, who mayhap
+ may play more to your liking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lady glanced at him with a frightened air, but read such honesty and
+ kindness in his glance that she brightened and gave him a grateful look.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand aside, fool!&rdquo; cried the brother wrathfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, but I am to bring good fortune to the bride by accompanying her
+ through the church-doors,&rdquo; said Robin laughing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon he was allowed to walk by her side unmolested, up to the chancel
+ with the party.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now strike up your music, fellow!&rdquo; ordered the Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right gladly will I,&rdquo; quoth Robin, &ldquo;an you will let me choose my
+ instrument. For sometimes I like the harp, and other times I think the
+ horn makes the merriest music in all the world.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he drew forth his bugle from underneath his green cloak and blew three
+ winding notes that made the church&mdash;rafters ring again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seize him!&rdquo; yelled the Bishop; &ldquo;there&rsquo;s mischief afoot! These are the
+ tricks of Robin Hood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The ten liveried archers rushed forward from the rear of the church, where
+ they had been stationed. But their rush was blocked by the onlookers who
+ now rose from their pews in alarm and crowded the aisles. Meanwhile Robin
+ had leaped lightly over the chancel rail and stationed himself in a nook
+ by the altar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand where you are!&rdquo; he shouted, drawing his bow, &ldquo;the first man to pass
+ the rail dies the death. And all ye who have come to witness a wedding
+ stay in your seats. We shall e&rsquo;en have one, since we are come into the
+ church. But the bride shall choose her own swain!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then up rose another great commotion at the door, and four-and-twenty good
+ bowmen came marching in with Will Stutely at their head. And they seized
+ the ten liveried archers and the bride&rsquo;s scowling brother and the other
+ men on guard and bound them prisoners.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then in came Allan-a-Dale, decked out gaily, with Will Scarlet for best
+ man. And they walked gravely down the aisle and stood over against the
+ chancel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before a maiden weds she chooses&mdash;an the laws of good King Harry be
+ just ones,&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;Now, maiden, before this wedding continues, whom
+ will you have to husband?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The maiden answered not in words, but smiled with a glad light in her
+ eyes, and walked over to Allan and clasped her arms about his neck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is her true love,&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;Young Allan instead of the gouty
+ knight. And the true lovers shall be married at this time before we depart
+ away. Now my lord Bishop, proceed with the ceremony!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, that shall not be,&rdquo; protested the Bishop; &ldquo;the banns must be cried
+ three times in the church. Such is the law of our land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come here, Little John,&rdquo; called Robin impatiently; and plucked off the
+ Bishop&rsquo;s frock from his back and put it on the yeoman.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Bishop was short and fat, and Little John was long and lean. The
+ gown hung loosely over Little John&rsquo;s shoulders and came only to his waist.
+ He was a fine comical sight, and the people began to laugh consumedly at
+ him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the faith o&rsquo; my body,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;this cloth makes you a man. You&rsquo;re
+ the finest Bishop that ever I saw in my life. Now cry the banns.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Little John clambered awkwardly into the quire, his short gown
+ fluttering gaily; and he called the banns for the marriage of the maid and
+ Allan-a-Dale once, twice, and thrice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s not enough,&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;your gown is so short that you must talk
+ longer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Little John asked them in the church four, five, six, and seven
+ times.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good enough!&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;Now belike I see a worthy friar in the back of
+ this church who can say a better service than ever my lord Bishop of
+ Hereford. My lord Bishop shall be witness and seal the papers, but do you,
+ good friar, bless this pair with book and candle.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Friar Tuck, who all along had been back in one corner of the church,
+ came forward; and Allan and his maid kneeled before him, while the old
+ knight, held an unwilling witness, gnashed his teeth in impotent rage; and
+ the friar began with the ceremony.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When he asked, &ldquo;Who giveth this woman?&rdquo; Robin stepped up and answered in a
+ clear voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do! I, Robin Hood of Barnesdale and Sherwood! And he who takes her from
+ Allan-a-Dale shall buy her full dearly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the twain were declared man and wife and duly blessed; and the bride
+ was kissed by each sturdy yeoman beginning with Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now I cannot end this jolly tale better than in the words of the ballad
+ which came out of the happening and which has been sung in the villages
+ and countryside ever since:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;And thus having end of this merry wedding,
+ The bride lookt like a queen;
+ And so they returned to the merry greenwood
+ Amongst the leaves so green.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER IX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE WIDOW&rsquo;S THREE SONS WERE RESCUED
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Now Robin Hood is to Nottingham gone,
+ With a link a down and a down,
+ And there he met with the proud Sheriff,
+ Was walking along the town.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The wedding-party was a merry one that left Plympton Church, I ween; but
+ not so merry were the ones left behind. My lord Bishop of Hereford was
+ stuck up in the organ-loft and left, gownless and fuming. The ten liveried
+ archers were variously disposed about the church to keep him company; two
+ of them being locked in a tiny crypt, three in the belfry, &ldquo;to ring us a
+ wedding peal,&rdquo; as Robin said; and the others under quire seats or in the
+ vestry. The bride&rsquo;s brother at her entreaty was released, but bidden not
+ to return to the church that day or interfere with his sister again on
+ pain of death. While the rusty old knight was forced to climb a high tree,
+ where he sat insecurely perched among the branches, feebly cursing the
+ party as it departed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was then approaching sundown, but none of the retainers or villagers
+ dared rescue the imprisoned ones that night, for fear of Robin Hood&rsquo;s men.
+ So it was not until sunup the next day, that they were released. The
+ Bishop and the old knight, stiff as they were, did not delay longer than
+ for breakfast, but so great was their rage and shame&mdash;made straight
+ to Nottingham and levied the Sheriff&rsquo;s forces. The Sheriff himself was not
+ anxious to try conclusions again with Robin in the open. Perhaps he had
+ some slight scruples regarding his oath. But the others swore that they
+ would go straight to the King, if he did not help them, so he was fain to
+ consent.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A force of an hundred picked men from the Royal Foresters and swordsmen of
+ the shire was gathered together and marched straightway into the
+ greenwood. There, as fortune would have it, they surprised some score of
+ outlaws hunting, and instantly gave chase. But they could not surround the
+ outlaws, who kept well in the lead, ever and anon dropping behind a log or
+ boulder to speed back a shaft which meant mischief to the pursuers. One
+ shaft indeed carried off the Sheriff&rsquo;s hat and caused that worthy man to
+ fall forward upon his horse&rsquo;s neck from sheer terror; while five other
+ arrows landed in the fleshy parts of Foresters&rsquo; arms.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the attacking party was not wholly unsuccessful. One outlaw in his
+ flight stumbled and fell; when two others instantly stopped and helped to
+ put him on his feet again. They were the widow&rsquo;s three sons, Stout Will,
+ and Lester, and John. The pause was an unlucky one for them, as a party of
+ Sheriff&rsquo;s men got above them and cut them off from their fellows.
+ Swordsmen came up in the rear, and they were soon hemmed in on every side.
+ But they gave good account of themselves, and before they had been
+ overborne by force of numbers they had killed two and disabled three more.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The infuriated attackers were almost on the point of hewing the stout
+ outlaws to pieces, when the Sheriff cried:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold! Bind the villains! We will follow the law in this and take them to
+ the town jail. But I promise ye the biggest public hanging that has been
+ seen in this shire for many changes of the moon!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they bound the widow&rsquo;s three sons and carried them back speedily to
+ Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now Robin Hood had not chanced to be near the scene of the fight, or with
+ his men; so for a time he heard nothing of the happening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But that evening while returning to the camp he was met by the widow
+ herself, who came weeping along the way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news, what news, good woman?&rdquo; said Robin hastily but courteously;
+ for he liked her well.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save ye, Master Robin!&rdquo; said the dame wildly. &ldquo;God keep ye from the
+ fate that has met my three sons! The Sheriff has laid hands on them and
+ they are condemned to die.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by our Lady! That cuts me to the heart! Stout Will, and Lester, and
+ merry John! The earliest friends I had in the band, and still among the
+ bravest! It must not be! When is this hanging set?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Middle the tinker tells me that it is for tomorrow noon,&rdquo; replied the
+ dame.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the truth o&rsquo; my body,&rdquo; quoth Robin, &ldquo;you could not tell me in better
+ time. The memory of the old days when you freely bade me sup and dine
+ would spur me on, even if three of the bravest lads in all the shire were
+ not imperiled. Trust to me, good woman!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old widow threw herself on the ground and embraced his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis dire danger I am asking ye to face,&rdquo; she said weeping; &ldquo;and yet I
+ knew your brave true heart would answer me. Heaven help ye, good Master
+ Robin, to answer a poor widow&rsquo;s prayers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin Hood sped straightway to the forest-camp, where he heard the
+ details of the skirmish&mdash;how that his men had been out-numbered five
+ to one, but got off safely, as they thought, until a count of their
+ members had shown the loss of the widow&rsquo;s three sons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We must rescue them, my men!&rdquo; quoth Robin, &ldquo;even from out the shadow of
+ the rope itself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whereupon the band set to work to devise ways and means.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin walked apart a little way with his head leaned thoughtfully upon his
+ breast&mdash;for he was sore troubled&mdash;when whom should he meet but
+ an old begging palmer, one of a devout order which made pilgrimages and
+ wandered from place to place, supported by charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This old fellow walked boldly up to Robin and asked alms of him; since
+ Robin had been wont to aid members of his order.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news, what news, thou foolish old man?&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;what news, I do
+ thee pray?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Three squires in Nottingham town,&rdquo; quoth the palmer, &ldquo;are condemned to
+ die. Belike that is greater news than the shire has had in some Sundays.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin&rsquo;s long-sought idea came to him like a flash.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, change thine apparel with me, old man,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll give
+ thee forty shillings in good silver to spend in beer or wine.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, thine apparel is good,&rdquo; the palmer protested, &ldquo;and mine is ragged and
+ torn. The holy church teaches that thou should&rsquo;st ne&rsquo;er laugh an old man
+ to scorn.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am in simple earnest, I say. Come, change thine apparel with mine. Here
+ are twenty pieces of good broad gold to feast they brethren right
+ royally.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the palmer was persuaded; and Robin put on the old man&rsquo;s hat, which
+ stood full high in the crown; and his cloak, patched with black and blue
+ and red, like Joseph&rsquo;s coat of many colors in its old age; and his
+ breeches, which had been sewed over with so many patterns that the
+ original was scarce discernible; and his tattered hose; and his shoes,
+ cobbled above and below. And while as he made the change in dress he made
+ so many whimsical comments also about a man&rsquo;s pride and the dress that
+ makes a man, that the palmer was like to choke with cackling laughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ I warrant you, the two were comical sights when they parted company that
+ day. Nathless, Robin&rsquo;s own mother would not have known him, had she been
+ living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning the whole town of Nottingham was early astir, and as soon
+ as the gates were open country-folk began to pour in; for a triple hanging
+ was not held there every day in the week, and the bustle almost equated a
+ Fair day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin Hood in his palmer&rsquo;s disguise was one of the first ones to enter the
+ gates, and he strolled up and down and around the town as though he had
+ never been there before in all his life. Presently he came to the
+ market-place, and beheld thereon three gallows erected.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are these builded for, my son?&rdquo; asked he of a rough soldier standing
+ by.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For three of Robin Hood&rsquo;s men,&rdquo; answered the other. &ldquo;And it were Robin
+ himself, &lsquo;twould be thrice as high I warrant ye. But Robin is too smart to
+ get within the Sheriff&rsquo;s clutches again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The palmer crossed himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They say that he is a bold fellow,&rdquo; he whined.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha!&rdquo; said the soldier, &ldquo;he may be bold enough out behind stumps i&rsquo; the
+ forest, but the open market-place is another matter.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is to hang these three poor wretches?&rdquo; asked the palmer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That hath the Sheriff not decided. But here he comes now to answer his
+ own questions.&rdquo; And the soldier came to stiff attention as the Sheriff and
+ his body-guard stalked pompously up to inspect the gallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, Heaven save you, worshipful Sheriff!&rdquo; said the palmer. &ldquo;Heaven protect
+ you! What will you give a silly old man to-day to be your hangman?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you, fellow?&rdquo; asked the Sheriff sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Naught save a poor old palmer. But I can shrive their souls and hang
+ their bodies most devoutly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;The fee to-day is thirteen pence; and I
+ will add thereunto some suits of clothing for that ragged back of yours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God bless ye!&rdquo; said the palmer. And he went with the soldier to the jail
+ to prepare his three men for execution.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Just before the stroke of noon the doors of the prison opened and the
+ procession of the condemned came forth. Down through the long lines of
+ packed people they walked to the market-place, the palmer in the lead, and
+ the widow&rsquo;s three sons marching firmly erect between soldiers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the gallows foot they halted. The palmer whispered to them, as though
+ offering last words of consolation; and the three men, with arms bound
+ tightly behind their backs, ascended the scaffold, followed by their
+ confessor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin stepped to the edge of the scaffold, while the people grew
+ still as death; for they desired to hear the last words uttered to the
+ victims. But Robin&rsquo;s voice did not quaver forth weakly, as formerly, and
+ his figure had stiffened bolt upright beneath the black robe that covered
+ his rags.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hark ye, proud Sheriff!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;I was ne&rsquo;er a hangman in all my life,
+ nor do I now intend to begin that trade. Accurst be he who first set the
+ fashion of hanging! I have but three more words to say. Listen to them!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And forth from the robe he drew his horn and blew three loud blasts
+ thereon. Then his keen hunting-knife flew forth and in a trice, Stout
+ Will, Lester, and merry John were free men and had sprung forward and
+ seized the halberds from the nearest soldiers guarding the gallows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seize them! &lsquo;Tis Robin Hood!&rdquo; screamed the Sheriff, &ldquo;an hundred pounds if
+ ye hold them, dead or alive!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I make it two hundred!&rdquo; roared the fat Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But their voices were drowned in the uproar that ensued immediately after
+ Robin blew his horn. He himself had drawn his sword and leaped down the
+ stairs from the scaffold, followed by his three men. The guard had closed
+ around them in vain effort to disarm them, when &ldquo;A rescuer&rdquo; shouted Will
+ Stutely&rsquo;s clear voice on one side of them, and &ldquo;A rescue!&rdquo; bellowed Little
+ John&rsquo;s on the other; and down through the terror-stricken crowd rushed
+ fourscore men in Lincoln green, their force seeming twice that number in
+ the confusion. With swords drawn they fell upon the guard from every side
+ at once. There was a brief clash of hot weapons, then the guard scattered
+ wildly, and Robin Hood&rsquo;s men formed in a compact mass around their leader
+ and forced their way slowly down the market-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seize them! In the King&rsquo;s name!&rdquo; shrieked the Sheriff. &ldquo;Close the gates!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In truth, the peril would have been even greater, had this last order been
+ carried out. But Will Scarlet and Allan-a-Dale had foreseen that event,
+ and had already overpowered the two warders.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the gates stood wide open, and toward them the band of outlaws headed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The soldiers rallied a force of twice their number and tried resolutely to
+ pierce their center. But the retreating force turned thrice and sent such
+ volleys of keen arrows from their good yew bows, that they kept a distance
+ between the two forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus the gate was reached, and the long road leading up the hill, and
+ at last the protecting greenwood itself. The soldiers dared come no
+ farther. And the widow&rsquo;s three sons, I warrant you, supped more heartily
+ that night than ever before in their whole lives.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER X
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW A BEGGAR FILLED THE PUBLIC EYE
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Good Robin accost him in his way,
+ To see what he might be;
+ If any beggar had money,
+ He thought some part had he.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ One bright morning, soon after the stirring events told in the last
+ chapter, Robin wandered forth alone down the road to Barnesdale, to see if
+ aught had come of the Sheriff&rsquo;s pursuit. But all was still and serene and
+ peaceful. No one was in sight save a solitary beggar who came sturdily
+ along his way in Robin&rsquo;s direction. The beggar caught sight of Robin, at
+ the same moment, as he emerged from the trees, but gave no sign of having
+ seen him. He neither slackened nor quickened his pace, but jogged forward
+ merrily, whistling as he came, and beating time by punching holes in the
+ dusty road with the stout pike-staff in his hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The curious look of the fellow arrested Robin&rsquo;s attention, and he decided
+ to stop and talk with him. The fellow was bare-legged and bare-armed, and
+ wore a long shift of a shirt, fastened with a belt. About his neck hung a
+ stout, bulging bag, which was buckled by a good piece of leather thong.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He had three hats upon his head,
+ Together sticked fast,
+ He cared neither for the wind nor wet,
+ In lands where&rsquo;er he past.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The fellow looked so fat and hearty, and the wallet on his shoulder seemed
+ so well filled, that Robin thought within himself,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! this is a lucky beggar for me! If any of them have money, this is the
+ chap, and, marry, he should share it with us poorer bodies.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he flourished his own stick and planted himself in the traveler&rsquo;s path.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sirrah, fellow!&rdquo; quoth he; &ldquo;whither away so fast? Tarry, for I would have
+ speech with ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beggar made as though he heard him not, and kept straight on with his
+ faring.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tarry, I say, fellow!&rdquo; said Robin again; &ldquo;for there&rsquo;s a way to make folks
+ obey!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, &lsquo;tis not so,&rdquo; answered the beggar, speaking for the first time; &ldquo;I
+ obey no man in all England, not even the King himself. So let me pass on
+ my way, for &lsquo;tis growing late, and I have still far to go before I can
+ care for my stomach&rsquo;s good.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by my troth,&rdquo; said Robin, once more getting in front of the other,
+ &ldquo;I see well by your fat countenance, that you lack not for good food,
+ while I go hungry. Therefore you must lend me of your means till we meet
+ again, so that I may hie to the nearest tavern.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no money to lend,&rdquo; said the beggar crossly. &ldquo;Methinks you are as
+ young a man as I, and as well able to earn a supper. So go your way, and
+ I&rsquo;ll go mine. If you fast till you get aught out of me, you&rsquo;ll go hungry
+ for the next twelvemonth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not while I have a stout stick to thwack your saucy bones!&rdquo; cried Robin.
+ &ldquo;Stand and deliver, I say, or I&rsquo;ll dust your shirt for you; and if that
+ will not teach you manners, then we&rsquo;ll see what a broad arrow can do with
+ a beggar&rsquo;s skin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beggar smiled, and answered boast with boast. &ldquo;Come on with your
+ staff, fellow! I care no more for it than for a pudding stick. And as for
+ your pretty bow&mdash;<i>that</i> for it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with amazing quickness, he swung his pike-staff around and knocked
+ Robin&rsquo;s bow clean out of his hand, so that his fingers smarted with pain.
+ Robin danced and tried to bring his own staff into action; but the beggar
+ never gave him a chance. Biff! whack! came the pike-staff, smiting him
+ soundly and beating down his guard.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were but two things to do; either stand there and take a sound
+ drubbing, or beat a hasty retreat. Robin chose the latter&mdash;as you or
+ I would probably have done&mdash;and scurried back into the wood, blowing
+ his horn as he went.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fie, for shame, man!&rdquo; jeered the bold beggar after him. &ldquo;What is your
+ haste? We had but just begun. Stay and take your money, else you will
+ never be able to pay your reckoning at the tavern!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin answered him never a word. He fled up hill and down dale till he
+ met three of his men who were running up in answer to his summons.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is wrong?&rdquo; they asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis a saucy beggar,&rdquo; said Robin, catching his breath. &ldquo;He is back there
+ on the highroad with the hardest stick I&rsquo;ve met in a good many days. He
+ gave me no chance to reason with him, the dirty scamp!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men&mdash;Much and two of the widow&rsquo;s sons&mdash;could scarce conceal
+ their mirth at the thought of Robin Hood running from a beggar. Nathless,
+ they kept grave faces, and asked their leader if he was hurt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; he replied, &ldquo;but I shall speedily feel better if you will fetch me
+ that same beggar and let me have a fair chance at him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the three yeomen made haste and came out upon the highroad and followed
+ after the beggar, who was going smoothly along his way again, as though he
+ were at peace with all the world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The easiest way to settle this beggar,&rdquo; said Much, &ldquo;is to surprise him.
+ Let us cut through yon neck of woods and come upon him before he is
+ aware.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others agreed to this, and the three were soon close upon their prey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now!&rdquo; quoth Much; and the other two sprang quickly upon the beggar&rsquo;s back
+ and wrested his pike-staff from his hand. At the same moment Much drew his
+ dagger and flashed it before the fellow&rsquo;s breast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yield you, my man!&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;for a friend of ours awaits you in the
+ wood, to teach you how to fight properly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me a fair chance,&rdquo; said the beggar valiantly, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll fight you
+ all at once.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But they would not listen to him. Instead, they turned him about and began
+ to march him toward the forest. Seeing that it was useless to struggle,
+ the beggar began to parley.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good my masters,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;why use this violence? I will go with ye
+ safe and quietly, if ye insist, but if ye will set me free I&rsquo;ll make it
+ worth your while. I&rsquo;ve a hundred pounds in my bag here. Let me go my way,
+ and ye shall have all that&rsquo;s in the bag.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The three outlaws took council together at this.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What say you?&rdquo; asked Much of the others. &ldquo;Our master will be more glad to
+ see this beggar&rsquo;s wallet than his sorry face.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other two agreed, and the little party came to a halt and loosed hold
+ of the beggar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Count out your gold speedily, friend,&rdquo; said Much. There was a brisk wind
+ blowing, and the beggar turned about to face it, directly they had
+ unhanded him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It shall be done, gossips,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;One of you lend me your cloak and
+ we will spread it upon the ground and put the wealth upon it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The cloak was handed him, and he placed his wallet upon it as though it
+ were very heavy indeed. Then he crouched down and fumbled with the leather
+ fastenings. The outlaws also bent over and watched the proceeding closely,
+ lest he should hide some of the money on his person. Presently he got the
+ bag unfastened and plunged his hands into it. Forth from it he drew&mdash;not
+ shining gold&mdash;but handfuls of fine meal which he dashed into the
+ eager faces of the men around him. The wind aided him in this, and soon
+ there arose a blinding cloud which filled the eyes, noses, and mouths of
+ the three outlaws till they could scarcely see or breathe.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While they gasped and choked and sputtered and felt around wildly for that
+ rogue of a beggar, he finished the job by picking up the cloak by its
+ corners and shaking it vigorously in the faces of his suffering victims.
+ Then he seized a stick which lay conveniently near, and began to rain
+ blows down upon their heads, shoulders, and sides, all the time dancing
+ first on one leg, then on the other, and crying,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Villains! rascals! here are the hundred pounds I promised. How do you
+ like them? I&rsquo; faith, you&rsquo;ll get all that&rsquo;s in the bag.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Whack! whack! whack! whack! went the stick, emphasizing each word. Howls
+ of pain might have gone up from the sufferers, but they had too much meal
+ in their throats for that. Their one thought was to flee, and they
+ stumbled off blindly down the road, the beggar following them a little way
+ to give them a few parting love-taps.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fare ye well, my masters,&rdquo; he said finally turning the other way; &ldquo;and
+ when next I come along the Barnesdale road, I hope you will be able to
+ tell gold from meal dust!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With this he departed, an easy victor, and again went whistling on his
+ way, while the three outlaws rubbed the meal out of their eyes and began
+ to catch their breath again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as they could look around them clearly, they beheld Robin Hood
+ leaning against a tree trunk and surveying them smilingly. He had
+ recovered his own spirits in full measure, on seeing their plight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save ye, gossips!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;ye must, in sooth, have gone the wrong
+ way and been to the mill, from the looks of your clothes.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then when they looked shamefaced and answered never a word, he went on, in
+ a soft voice,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did ye see aught of that bold beggar I sent you for, lately?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth, master,&rdquo; responded Much the miller&rsquo;s son, &ldquo;we heard more of him
+ than we saw him. He filled us so full of meal that I shall sweat meal for
+ a week. I was born in a mill, and had the smell of meal in my nostrils
+ from my very birth, you might say, and yet never before did I see such a
+ quantity of the stuff in so small space.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he sneezed violently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How was that?&rdquo; asked Robin demurely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why we laid hold of the beggar, as you did order, when he offered to pay
+ for his release out of the bag he carried upon his back.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The same I coveted,&rdquo; quoth Robin as if to himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So we agreed to this,&rdquo; went on Much, &ldquo;and spread a cloak down, and he
+ opened his bag and shook it thereon. Instantly a great cloud of meal
+ filled the air, whereby we could neither see nor breathe; and in the midst
+ of this cloud he vanished like a wizard.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But not before he left certain black and blue spots, to be remembered by,
+ I see,&rdquo; commented Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He was in league with the evil one,&rdquo; said one of the widow&rsquo;s sons,
+ rubbing himself ruefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin laughed outright, and sat him down upon the gnarled root of a
+ tree, to finish his merriment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Four bold outlaws, put to rout by a sorry beggar!&rdquo; cried he. &ldquo;I can laugh
+ at ye, my men, for I am in the same boat with ye. But &lsquo;twould never do to
+ have this tale get abroad&mdash;even in the greenwood&mdash;how that we
+ could not hold our own with the odds in our favor. So let us have this
+ little laugh all to ourselves, and no one else need be the wiser!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others saw the point of this, and felt better directly, despite their
+ itching desire to get hold of the beggar again. And none of the four ever
+ told of the adventure.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the beggar must have boasted of it at the next tavern; or a little
+ bird perched among the branches of a neighboring oak must have sung of it.
+ For it got abroad, as such tales will, and was put into a right droll
+ ballad which, I warrant you, the four outlaws did not like to hear.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD FOUGHT GUY OF GISBORNE
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;I dwell by dale and down,&rdquo; quoth he,
+ &ldquo;And Robin to take I&rsquo;m sworn;
+ And when I am called by my right name,
+ I am Guy of good Gisborne.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Some weeks passed after the rescue of the widow&rsquo;s three sons; weeks spent
+ by the Sheriff in the vain effort to entrap Robin Hood and his men. For
+ Robin&rsquo;s name and deeds had come to the King&rsquo;s ears, in London town, and he
+ sent word to the Sheriff to capture the outlaw, under penalty of losing
+ his office. So the Sheriff tried every manner of means to surprise Robin
+ Hood in the forest, but always without success. And he increased the price
+ put upon Robin&rsquo;s head, in the hope that the best men of the kingdom could
+ be induced to try their skill at a capture.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there was a certain Guy of Gisborne, a hireling knight of the King&rsquo;s
+ army, who heard of Robin and of the price upon his head. Sir Guy was one
+ of the best men at the bow and the sword in all the King&rsquo;s service. But
+ his heart was black and treacherous. He obtained the King&rsquo;s leave
+ forthwith to seek out the forester; and armed with the King&rsquo;s scroll he
+ came before the Sheriff at Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have come to capture Robin Hood,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and mean to have him, dead
+ or alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right gladly would I aid you,&rdquo; answered the Sheriff, &ldquo;even if the King&rsquo;s
+ seal were not sufficient warrant. How many men need you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None,&rdquo; replied Sir Guy, &ldquo;for I am convinced that forces of men can never
+ come at the bold robber. I must needs go alone. But do you hold your men
+ in readiness at Barnesdale, and when you hear a blast from this silver
+ bugle, come quickly, for I shall have the sly Robin within my clutches.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; said the Sheriff. &ldquo;Marry, it shall be done.&rdquo; And he set about
+ giving orders, while Guy of Gisborne sallied forth disguised.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now as luck would have it, Will Scarlet and Little John had gone to
+ Barnesdale that very day to buy suits of Lincoln green for certain of the
+ yeomen who had come out at the knees and elbows. But not deeming it best
+ for both of them to run their necks into a noose, together, they parted
+ just outside the town, and Will went within the gates, while John tarried
+ and watched at the brow of the hill on the outside.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently whom should he see but this same Will flying madly forth from
+ the gates again, closely pursued by the Sheriff and threescore men. Over
+ the moat Will sprang, through the bushes and briars, across the swamp,
+ over stocks and stones, up the woodland roads in long leaps like a scared
+ jack rabbit. And after him puffed the Sheriff and his men, their force
+ scattering out in the flight as one man would tumble head-first into a
+ ditch, another mire up in the swamp, another trip over a rolling stone,
+ and still others sit down on the roadside and gasp for wind like fish out
+ of water.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little John could not forbear laughing heartily at the scene, though he
+ knew that &lsquo;twould be anything but a laughing matter if Will should stumble.
+ And in truth one man was like to come upon him. It was William-a-Trent,
+ the best runner among the Sheriff&rsquo;s men. He had come within twenty feet of
+ Scarlet and was leaping upon him with long bounds like a greyhound, when
+ John rose up quickly, drew his bow and let fly one of his fatal shafts. It
+ would have been better for William-a-Trent to have been abed with sorrow&mdash;says
+ the ballad&mdash;than to be that day in the greenwood slade to meet with
+ Little John&rsquo;s arrow. He had run his last race.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The others halted a moment in consternation, when the shaft came hurtling
+ down from the hill; but looking up they beheld none save Little John, and
+ with a cry of fierce joy they turned upon him. Meanwhile Will Scarlet had
+ reached the brow of the hill and sped down the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll just send one more little message of regret to the Sheriff,&rdquo; said
+ Little John, &ldquo;before I join Will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this foolhardy deed was his undoing, for just as the arrow left the
+ string, the good yew bow that had never before failed him snapped in
+ twain.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe worth, woe worth thee, wicked wood, that ere thou grew on a tree!&rdquo;
+ cursed Little John, and planted his feet resolutely in the earth resolved
+ to sell the path dearly; for the soldiers were now so close upon him that
+ he dared not turn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And a right good account of himself he gave that day, dealing with each
+ man as he came up according to his merit. And so winded were the pursuers
+ when they reached the top of the hill that he laid out the first ten of
+ them right and left with huge blows of his brawny fist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But if five men can do more than three, a score can overcome one.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A body of archers stood off at a prudent distance and covered Little John
+ with their arrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now yield you!&rdquo; panted the Sheriff. &ldquo;Yield you, Little John, or Reynold
+ Greenleaf, or whatever else name you carry this day! Yield you, or some
+ few of these shafts will reach your heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, my heart has been touched by your words ere now,&rdquo; said Little
+ John; &ldquo;and I yield me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Sheriff&rsquo;s men laid hold of Little John and bound him fast with many
+ cords, so fearful were they lest he should escape. And the Sheriff laughed
+ aloud in glee, and thought of how he should avenge his stolen plate, and
+ determined to make a good day&rsquo;s work of it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the Saints!&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you shall be drawn by dale and down, and hanged
+ high on a hill in Barnesdale this very day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hang and be hanged!&rdquo; retorted the prisoner. &ldquo;You may fail of your purpose
+ if it be Heaven&rsquo;s will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Back down the hill and across the moor went the company speedily, for they
+ feared a rescue. And as they went the stragglers joined them. Here a man
+ got up feebly out of the ditch and rubbed his pate and fell in like a
+ chicken with the pip going for its dinner. Yonder came hobbling a man with
+ a lame ankle, or another with his shins torn by the briars or another with
+ his jacket all muddy from the marsh. So in truth it was a tatterdemalion
+ crew that limped and straggled and wandered back into Barnesdale that day.
+ Yet all were merry, for the Sheriff had promised them flagons of wine, and
+ moreover they were to hang speedily the boldest outlaw in England, next to
+ Robin Hood himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The gallows was quickly put up and a new rope provided.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now up with you!&rdquo; commanded the Sheriff, &ldquo;and let us see if your
+ greenwood tricks will avail you to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would that I had bold Robin&rsquo;s horn,&rdquo; muttered poor John; &ldquo;methinks &lsquo;tis
+ all up with me even as the Sheriff hath spoken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In good sooth the time was dire and pressing. The rope was placed around
+ the prisoner&rsquo;s neck and the men prepared to haul away.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you ready?&rdquo; called the Sheriff. &ldquo;One&mdash;two&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But before the &ldquo;three&rdquo; left his lips the faint sound of a silver bugle
+ came floating over the hill.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my troth, that is Sir Guy of Gisborne&rsquo;s horn,&rdquo; quoth the Sheriff; &ldquo;and
+ he bade me not to delay answering its summons. He has caught Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon, Excellency,&rdquo; said one of his men; &ldquo;but if he has caught Robin
+ Hood, this is a merry day indeed. And let us save this fellow and build
+ another gallows and hang them both together.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That&rsquo;s a brave thought!&rdquo; said the Sheriff slapping his knee. &ldquo;Take the
+ rascal down and bind him fast to the gallows-tree against our return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Little John was made fast to the gallows-tree, while the Sheriff and
+ all his men who could march or hobble went out to get Robin Hood and bring
+ him in for the double hanging.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Let us leave talking of Little John and the Sheriff, and see what has
+ become of Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the first place, he and Little John had come near having a quarrel that
+ self-same morning because both had seen a curious looking yeoman, and each
+ wanted to challenge him singly. But Robin would not give way to his
+ lieutenant, and that is why John, in a huff, had gone with Will to
+ Barnesdale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Robin approached the curious looking stranger. He seemed to be a
+ three-legged creature at first sight, but on coming nearer you would have
+ seen that &lsquo;twas really naught but a poorly clad man, who for a freak had
+ covered up his rags with a capul-hide, nothing more nor less than the
+ sun-dried skin of a horse, complete with head, tail, and mane. The skin of
+ the head made a helmet; while the tail gave the curious three-legged
+ appearance.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-morrow, good fellow,&rdquo; said Robin cheerily, &ldquo;methinks by the bow you
+ bear in your hand that you should be a good archer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Indifferent good,&rdquo; said the other returning his greeting; &ldquo;but &lsquo;tis not
+ of archery that I am thinking this morning, for I have lost my way and
+ would fain find it again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith, I could have believed &lsquo;twas your wits you&rsquo;d lost!&rdquo; thought
+ Robin smiling. Then aloud: &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll lead you through the wood,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;an
+ you will tell me your business. For belike your speech is much gentler
+ than your attire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you to ask me my business?&rdquo; asked the other roughly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am one of the King&rsquo;s Rangers,&rdquo; replied Robin, &ldquo;set here to guard his
+ deer against curious looking strollers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Curious looking I may be,&rdquo; returned the other, &ldquo;but no stroller. Hark ye,
+ since you are a Ranger, I must e&rsquo;en demand your service. I am on the
+ King&rsquo;s business and seek an outlaw. Men call him Robin Hood. Are you one
+ of his men?&rdquo;&mdash;eyeing him keenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, God forbid!&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;but what want you with him?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is another tale. But I&rsquo;d rather meet with that proud outlaw than
+ forty good pounds of the King&rsquo;s money.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin now saw how the land lay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with me, good yeoman,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;and belike, a little later in the
+ day, I can show you Robin&rsquo;s haunts when he is at home. Meanwhile let us
+ have some pastime under the greenwood tree. Let us first try the mastery
+ at shooting arrows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other agreed, and they cut down two willow wands of a summer&rsquo;s growth
+ that grew beneath a brier, and set them up at a distance of threescore
+ yards.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lead on, good fellow,&rdquo; quoth Robin. &ldquo;The first shot to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, by my faith,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;I will follow your lead.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin stepped forth and bent his bow carelessly and sent his shaft
+ whizzing toward the wand, missing it by a scant inch. He of the horse-hide
+ followed with more care yet was a good three-fingers&rsquo; breadth away. On the
+ second round, the stranger led off and landed cleverly within the small
+ garland at the top of the wand; but Robin shot far better and clave the
+ wand itself, clean at the middle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A blessing on your heart!&rdquo; shouted Capul-Hide; &ldquo;never saw I such shooting
+ as that! Belike you are better than Robin Hood himself. But you have not
+ yet told me your name.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, by my faith,&rdquo; quoth Robin, &ldquo;I must keep it secret till you have told
+ me your own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not disdain to tell it,&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;I dwell by dale and down,
+ and to take bold Robin am I sworn. This would I tell him to his face, were
+ he not so great a craven. When I am called by my right name, I am Guy of
+ Gisborne.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This he said with a great show of pride, and he strutted back and forth,
+ forgetful that he had just been beaten at archery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin eyed him quietly. &ldquo;Methinks I have heard of you elsewhere. Do you
+ not bring men to the gallows for a living?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, but only outlaws such as Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But pray what harm has Robin Hood done you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He is a highway robber,&rdquo; said Sir Guy, evading the question.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Has he ever taken from the rich that he did not give again to the poor?
+ Does he not protect the women and children and side with weak and
+ helpless? Is not his greatest crime the shooting of a few King&rsquo;s deer?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have done with your sophistry,&rdquo; said Sir Guy impatiently. &ldquo;I am more than
+ ever of opinion that you are one of Robin&rsquo;s men yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have told you I am not,&rdquo; quoth Robin briefly. &ldquo;But if I am to help you
+ catch him, what is your plan?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you see this silver bugle?&rdquo; said the other. &ldquo;A long blast upon it will
+ summon the Sheriff and all his men, when once I have Robin within my
+ grasp. And if you show him to me, I&rsquo;ll give you the half of my forty
+ pounds reward.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I would not help hang a man for ten times forty pounds,&rdquo; said the outlaw.
+ &ldquo;Yet will I point out Robin to you for the reward I find at my sword&rsquo;s
+ point. I myself am Robin Hood of Sherwood and Barnesdale.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then have at you!&rdquo; cried the other springing swiftly into action. His
+ sword leaped forth from beneath the horse&rsquo;s hide with the speed born of
+ long practice, and before Robin had come to guard, the other had smitten
+ at him full and foul. Robin eluded the lunge and drew his own weapon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A scurvy trick!&rdquo; quoth he grimly, &ldquo;to strike at a man unprepared.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then neither spoke more, but fell sternly to work&mdash;lunge and thrust
+ and ward and parry&mdash;for two full hours the weapons smote together
+ sullenly, and neither Robin Hood nor Sir Guy would yield an inch. I
+ promise you that if you could have looked forth on the fight from behind
+ the trunk of some friendly tree, you would have seen deadly sport such as
+ few men beheld in Sherwood Forest. For the fighters glared sullenly at
+ each other, the fires of hatred burning in their eyes. One was fighting
+ for his life; the other for a reward and the King&rsquo;s favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Still circled the bright blades swiftly in the air&mdash;now gleaming in
+ the peaceful sunlight&mdash;again hissing like maddened serpents. Neither
+ had yet touched the other, until Robin, in an unlucky moment, stumbled
+ over the projecting root of a tree; when Sir Guy, instead of giving him
+ the chance to recover himself, as any courteous knight would have done,
+ struck quickly at the falling man and wounded him in the left side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, dear Lady in Heaven,&rdquo; gasped Robin uttering his favorite prayer,
+ &ldquo;shield me now! &lsquo;Twas never a man&rsquo;s destiny to die before his day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And adroitly he sprang up again, and came straight at the other with an
+ awkward but unexpected stroke. The knight had raised his weapon high to
+ give a final blow, when Robin reached beneath and across his guard. One
+ swift lunge, and Sir Guy of Gisborne staggered backward with a deep groan,
+ Robin&rsquo;s sword through his throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin looked at the slain man regretfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You did bring it upon yourself,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;and traitor and hireling
+ though you were, I would not willingly have killed you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He looked to his own wound. It was not serious, and he soon staunched the
+ blood and bound up the cut. Then he dragged the dead body into the bushes,
+ and took off the horse&rsquo;s hide and put it upon himself. He placed his own
+ cloak upon Sir Guy, and marked his face so none might tell who had been
+ slain. Robin&rsquo;s own figure and face were not unlike the other&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Pulling the capul-hide well over himself, so that the helmet hid most of
+ his face, Robin seized the silver bugle and blew a long blast. It was the
+ blast that saved the life of Little John, over in Barnesdale, for you and
+ I have already seen how it caused the fond Sheriff to prick up his ears
+ and stay the hanging, and go scurrying up over the hill and into the wood
+ with his men in search of another victim.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In five-and-twenty minutes up came running a score of the Sheriff&rsquo;s best
+ archers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you signal us, lording?&rdquo; they asked, approaching Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; said he, going to meet the puffing Sheriff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news, what news, Sir Guy?&rdquo; said that officer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne had a fight; and he that wears Robin&rsquo;s
+ cloak lies under the covert yonder.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The best news I have heard in all my life!&rdquo; exclaimed the Sheriff rubbing
+ his hands. &ldquo;I would that we could have saved him for the hanging&mdash;though
+ I cannot now complain.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The hanging?&rdquo; repeated Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes. This is our lucky day on the calendar. After you left me we narrowly
+ missed running one of the fellows&mdash;I believe &lsquo;twas Will Scarlet&mdash;to
+ earth; and another who came to his relief we were just about to hang, when
+ your horn blew.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who was the other?&rdquo; asked the disguised outlaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Whom do you suppose?&rdquo; laughed the Sheriff. &ldquo;The best man in the
+ greenwood, next to Robin Hood himself&mdash;Little John, Reynold
+ Greenleaf!&rdquo; For the Sheriff could not forget the name Little John had
+ borne under his own roof at Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Little John!&rdquo; thought Robin with a start. Verily that was a lucky blast
+ of the bugle! &ldquo;But I see you have not escaped without a scratch,&rdquo;
+ continued the Sheriff, becoming talkative through pure glee. &ldquo;Here, one of
+ you men! Give Sir Guy of Gisborne your horse; while others of you bury
+ that dog of an outlaw where he lies. And let us hasten back to Barnesdale
+ and finish hanging the other.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So they put spurs to their horses, and as they rode Robin forced himself
+ to talk merrily, while all the time he was planning the best way to succor
+ Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A boon, Sheriff,&rdquo; he said as they reached the gates of the town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it, worthy sir? You have but to speak.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I do not want any of your gold, for I have had a brave fight. But now
+ that I have slain the master, let me put an end to the man; so it shall be
+ said that Guy of Gisborne despatched the two greatest outlaws of England
+ in one day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have it as you will,&rdquo; said the Sheriff, &ldquo;but you should have asked a
+ knight&rsquo;s fee and double your reward, and it would have been yours. It
+ isn&rsquo;t every man that can take Robin Hood.&rdquo; &ldquo;No, Excellency,&rdquo; answered
+ Robin. &ldquo;I say it without boasting, that no man took Robin Hood yesterday
+ and none shall take him to-morrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then he approached Little John, who was still tied to the gallows-tree;
+ and he said to the Sheriff&rsquo;s men, &ldquo;Now stand you back here till I see if
+ the prisoner has been shrived.&rdquo; And he stooped swiftly, and cut Little
+ John&rsquo;s bonds, and thrust into his hands Sir Guy&rsquo;s bow and arrows, which he
+ had been careful to take.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis I, Robin!&rdquo; he whispered. But in truth, Little John knew it already,
+ and had decided there was to be no hanging that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin blew three loud blasts upon his own horn, and drew forth his
+ own bow; and before the astonished Sheriff and his men could come to arms
+ the arrows were whistling in their midst in no uncertain fashion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And look! Through the gates and over the walls came pouring another flight
+ of arrows! Will Scarlet and Will Stutely had watched and planned a rescue
+ ever since the Sheriff and Robin rode back down the hill. Now in good time
+ they came; and the Sheriff&rsquo;s demoralized force turned tail and ran, while
+ Robin and Little John stood under the harmless gallows, and sped swift
+ arrows after them, and laughed to see them go.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they joined their comrades and hasted back to the good greenwood, and
+ there rested. They had got enough sport for one day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW MAID MARIAN CAME BACK TO SHERWOOD FOREST; ALSO, HOW ROBIN HOOD CAME
+ BEFORE QUEEN ELEANOR.
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ But Robin Hood, he himself had disguis&rsquo;d,
+ And Marian was strangely attir&rsquo;d,
+ That they proved foes, and so fell to blows,
+ Whose valor bold Robin admir&rsquo;d.
+
+ And when he came at London&rsquo;s court,
+ He fell down on his knee.
+ &ldquo;Thou art welcome, Lockesley,&rdquo; said the Queen,
+ &ldquo;And all thy good yeomandree.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now it fell out that one day not long thereafter, Robin was minded to try
+ his skill at hunting. And not knowing whom he might meet in his rambles,
+ he stained his face and put on a sorry-looking jacket and a long cloak
+ before he sallied forth. As he walked, the peacefulness of the morning
+ came upon him, and brought back to his memory the early days so long ago
+ when he had roamed these same glades with Marian. How sweet they seemed to
+ him now, and how far away! Marian, too, the dainty friend of his youth&mdash;would
+ he ever see her again? He had thought of her very often of late, and each
+ time with increasing desire to hear her clear voice and musical laugh, and
+ see her eyes light up at his coming.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Perhaps the happiness of Allen-a-Dale and his lady had caused Robin&rsquo;s
+ heart-strings to vibrate more strongly; perhaps, too, the coming of Will
+ Scarlet. But, certes, Robin was anything but a hunter this bright morning
+ as he walked along with head drooping in a most love-lorn way.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently a hart entered the glade in full view of him, grazing
+ peacefully, and instantly the man of action awoke. His bow was drawn and a
+ shaft all but loosed, when the beast fell suddenly, pierced by a clever
+ arrow from the far side of the glade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then a handsome little page sprang gleefully from the covert and ran
+ toward the dying animal. This was plainly the archer, for he flourished
+ his bow aloft, and likewise bore a sword at his side, though for all that
+ he looked a mere lad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin approached the hart from the other side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How dare you shoot the King&rsquo;s beasts, stripling?&rdquo; he asked severely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have as much right to shoot them as the King himself,&rdquo; answered the
+ page haughtily. &ldquo;How dare you question me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The voice stirred Robin strongly. It seemed to chime into his memories of
+ the old days. He looked at the page sharply, and the other returned the
+ glance, straight and unafraid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you, my lad?&rdquo; Robin said more civilly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No lad of yours, and my name&rsquo;s my own,&rdquo; retorted the other with spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Softly! Fair and softly, sweet page, or we of the forest will have to
+ teach you manners!&rdquo; said Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not if <i>you</i> stand for the forest!&rdquo; cried the page, whipping out his
+ sword. &ldquo;Come, draw, and defend yourself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He swung his blade valiantly; and Robin saw nothing for it but to draw
+ likewise. The page thereupon engaged him quite fiercely, and Robin found
+ that he had many pretty little tricks at fencing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nathless, Robin contented himself with parrying, and was loth to exert all
+ his superior strength upon the lad. So the fight lasted for above a
+ quarter of an hour, at the end of which time the page was almost spent and
+ the hot blood flushed his cheeks in a most charming manner.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The outlaw saw his distress, and to end the fight allowed himself to be
+ pricked slightly on the wrist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Are you satisfied, fellow?&rdquo; asked the page, wincing a little at sight of
+ the blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, honestly,&rdquo; replied Robin; &ldquo;and now perhaps you will grant me the
+ honor of knowing to whom I owe this scratch?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am Richard Partington, page to Her Majesty, Queen Eleanor,&rdquo; answered
+ the lad with dignity; and again the sound of his voice troubled Robin
+ sorely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why come you to the greenwood alone, Master Partington?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The lad considered his answer while wiping his sword with a small lace
+ kerchief. The action brought a dim confused memory to Robin. The lad
+ finally looked him again in the eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Forester, whether or no you be a King&rsquo;s man, know that I seek one Robin
+ Hood, an outlaw, to whom I bring amnesty from the Queen. Can you tell me
+ aught of him?&rdquo; And while awaiting his answer, he replaced the kerchief in
+ his shirt. As he did so, the gleam of a golden trophy caught the outlaw&rsquo;s
+ eye.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin started forward with a joyful cry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah! I know you now! By the sight of yon golden arrow won at the Sheriff&rsquo;s
+ tourney, you are she on whom I bestowed it, and none other than Maid
+ Marian!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You&mdash;are&mdash;?&rdquo; gasped Marian, for it was she; &ldquo;not Robin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin&rsquo;s self!&rdquo; said he gaily; and forthwith, clad as he was in rags, and
+ stained of face, he clasped the dainty page close to his breast, and she
+ forsooth yielded right willingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But Robin!&rdquo; she exclaimed presently, &ldquo;I knew you not, and was rude, and
+ wounded you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Twas nothing,&rdquo; he replied laughingly, &ldquo;so long as it brought me you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she made more ado over the sore wrist than Robin had received for all
+ his former hurts put together. And she bound it with the little kerchief,
+ and said, &ldquo;Now &lsquo;twill get well!&rdquo; and Robin was convinced she spoke the
+ truth, for he never felt better in all his life. The whole woods seemed
+ tinged with a roseate hue, since Marian had come again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But she, while happy also, was ill at ease; and Robin with a man&rsquo;s slow
+ discernment at last saw that it was because of her boy&rsquo;s attire. He
+ thought bluntly that there was naught to be ashamed of, yet smilingly
+ handed her his tattered long cloak, which she blushingly put on, and
+ forthwith recovered her spirits directly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then they began to talk of each other&rsquo;s varied fortunes, and of the many
+ things which had parted them; and so much did they find to tell that the
+ sun had begun to decline well into the afternoon before they realized how
+ the hours sped.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am but a sorry host!&rdquo; exclaimed Robin, springing to his feet. &ldquo;I have
+ not once invited you to my wild roof.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And I am but a sorry page,&rdquo; replied Marian; &ldquo;for I had clean forgot that
+ I was Richard Partington, and really did bring you a message from Queen
+ Eleanor!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tell me on our way home, and there you shall be entrusted to Mistress
+ Dale. While the first of my men we meet will I send back for your deer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she told him, as they walked back through the glade, how that the fame
+ of his prowess had reached Queen Eleanor&rsquo;s ears, in London town. And the
+ Queen had said, &ldquo;Fain would I see this bold yeoman, and behold his skill
+ at the long-bow.&rdquo; And the Queen had promised him amnesty if he and four of
+ his archers would repair to London against the next tournament the week
+ following, there to shoot against King Henry&rsquo;s picked men, of whom the
+ King was right vain. All this Marian told in detail, and added:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;When I heard Her Majesty say she desired to see you, I asked leave to go
+ in search of you, saying I had known you once. And the Queen was right
+ glad, and bade me go, and sent this gold ring to you from off her finger,
+ in token of her faith.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin took the ring and bowed his head and kissed it loyally. &ldquo;By
+ this token will I go to London town,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and ere I part with the
+ Queen&rsquo;s pledge, may the hand that bears it be stricken off at the wrist!&rdquo;
+ By this time they were come to the grove before the cave, and Robin
+ presented Maid Marian to the band, who treated her with the greatest
+ respect. Will Scarlet was especially delighted to greet again his old time
+ friend, while Allan-a-Dale and his good wife bustled about to make her
+ welcome in their tiny thatched cottage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening after they had supped royally upon the very hart that Marian
+ had slain, Allan sang sweet songs of Northern minstrelsy to the fair guest
+ as she sat by Robin&rsquo;s side, the golden arrow gleaming in her dark hair.
+ The others all joined in the chorus, from Will Scarlet&rsquo;s baritone to Friar
+ Tuck&rsquo;s heavy bass. Even Little John essayed to sing, although looked at
+ threateningly by Much the miller&rsquo;s son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin bade Marian repeat her message from the Queen, which Marian did
+ in a way befitting the dignity of her royal mistress. After which the
+ yeomen gave three cheers for the Queen and three more for her page, and
+ drank toasts to them both, rising to their feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye have heard,&rdquo; quoth Robin standing forth, &ldquo;how that Her Majesty&mdash;whom
+ God preserve!&mdash;wishes but four men to go with me. Wherefore, I choose
+ Little John and Will Stutely, my two lieutenants, Will Scarlet, my cousin,
+ and Allan-a-Dale, my minstrel. Mistress Dale, also, can go with her
+ husband and be company for the Queen&rsquo;s page. We will depart with early
+ morning, decked in our finest. So stir ye, my lads! and see that not only
+ your tunics are fresh, but your swords bright and your bows and arrows
+ fit. For we must be a credit to the Queen as well as the good greenwood.
+ You, Much, with Stout Will, Lester, and John, the widow&rsquo;s three sons,
+ shall have command of the band while we are away; and Friar Tuck shall
+ preside over the needs of your souls and stomachs.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The orders were received with shouts of approval, and toasts all around
+ were drunk again in nut-brown ale, ere the company dispersed to rest after
+ making ready for the journey.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The next morning was as fine a summer&rsquo;s day as ever you want to see, and
+ the green leaves of the forest made a pleasing background for the gay
+ picture of the yeomen setting forth. Says the old ballad&mdash;it was a
+ seemly sight to see how Robin Hood himself had dressed, and all his
+ yeomanry. He clothed his men in Lincoln green, and himself in scarlet red,
+ with hats of black and feathers white to bravely deck each head. Nor were
+ the two ladies behind-hand, I ween, at the bedecking.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus the chosen party of seven sallied forth being accompanied to the edge
+ of the wood by the whole band, who gave them a merry parting and Godspeed!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The journey to London town was made without incident. The party proceeded
+ boldly along the King&rsquo;s highroad, and no man met them who was disposed to
+ say them nay. Besides, the good Queen&rsquo;s warrant and ring would have
+ answered for them, as indeed it did at the gates of London. So on they
+ sped and in due course came to the palace itself and awaited audience with
+ the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the King had gone that day to Finsbury Field, where the tourney was
+ soon to be held, in order to look over the lists and see some of his
+ picked men whom he expected to win against all comers. So much had he
+ boasted of these men, that the Queen had secretly resolved to win a wager
+ of him. She had heard of the fame of Robin Hood and his yeomen, as Marian
+ had said; and Marian on her part had been overjoyed to be able to add a
+ word in their favor and to set out in search of them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To-day the Queen sat in her private audience-room chatting pleasantly with
+ her ladies, when in came Mistress Marian Fitzwalter attired again as
+ befitted her rank of lady-in-waiting. She courtesied low to the Queen and
+ awaited permission to speak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How now!&rdquo; said the Queen smiling; &ldquo;is this my lady Marian, or the page,
+ Richard Partington?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Both, an it please Your Majesty. Richard found the man you sought, while
+ Marian brought him to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo; asked Queen Eleanor eagerly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Awaiting your audience&mdash;he and four of his men, likewise a lady of
+ whose wooing and wedding I can tell you a pretty story at another time.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have them admitted.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Marian gave orders to a herald, and presently Robin Hood and his little
+ party entered the room.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Queen had half-expected the men to be rude and uncouth in
+ appearance, because of their wild life in the forest; but she was
+ delightfully disappointed. Indeed she started back in surprise and almost
+ clapped her hands. For, sooth to say, the yeomen made a brave sight, and
+ in all the court no more gallant men could be found. Marian felt her
+ cheeks glow with pride, at sight of the half-hidden looks of admiration
+ sent forth by the other ladies-in-waiting.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin had not forgot the gentle arts taught by his mother, and he wore his
+ fine red velvet tunic and breeches with the grace of a courtier. We have
+ seen, before, what a dandified gentleman Will Scarlet was; and
+ Allan-a-Dale, the minstrel, was scarcely less goodly to look upon. While
+ the giant Little John and broad-shouldered Will Stutely made up in stature
+ what little they lacked in outward polish. Mistress Dale, on her part,
+ looked even more charming, if possible, than on the momentous day when she
+ went to Plympton Church to marry one man and found another.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus came the people of the greenwood before Queen Eleanor, in her own
+ private audience room. And Robin advanced and knelt down before her, and
+ said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here I am, Robin Hood&mdash;I and my chosen men! At Your Majesty&rsquo;s
+ bidding am I come, bearing the ring of amnesty which I will protect&mdash;as
+ I would protect Your Majesty&rsquo;s honor&mdash;with my life!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art welcome, Lockesley,&rdquo; said the Queen smiling graciously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou art come in good time, thou and all thy brave yeomanry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin presented each of his men in turn, and each fell on his knee
+ and was greeted with most kindly words. And the Queen kissed fair Mistress
+ Dale upon the cheek, and bade her remain in the palace with her ladies
+ while she was in the city. And she made all the party be seated to rest
+ themselves after their long journey. Fine wines were brought, and cake,
+ and rich food, for their refreshment. And as they ate and drank, the Queen
+ told them further of the tourney to be held at Finsbury Field, and of how
+ she desired them to wear her colors and shoot for her. Meantime, she
+ concluded, they were to lie by quietly and be known of no man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To do all this, Robin and his men pledged themselves full heartily. Then
+ at the Queen&rsquo;s request, they related to her and her ladies some of their
+ merry adventures; whereat the listeners were vastly entertained, and
+ laughed heartily. Then Marian, who had heard of the wedding at Plympton
+ Church, told it so drolly that tears stood in the Queen&rsquo;s eyes from
+ merriment.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord Bishop of Hereford!&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;&lsquo;Twas indeed a comical business
+ for him! I shall keep that to twit his bones, I promise you! So this is
+ our minstrel?&rdquo; she added presently, turning to Allan-a-Dale. &ldquo;Methinks I
+ have already heard of him. Will he not harp awhile for us to-day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Allan bowed low, and took a harp which was brought to him, and he thrummed
+ the strings and sang full sweetly the border songs of the North Countree.
+ And the Queen and all her ladies listened in rapt silence till all the
+ songs were ended.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE OUTLAWS SHOT IN KING HARRY&rsquo;S TOURNEY
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The King is into Finsbury Field
+ Marching in battle &lsquo;ray,
+ And after follows bold Robin Hood,
+ And all his yeomen gay.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The morning of the great archery contest dawned fair and bright, bringing
+ with it a fever of impatience to every citizen of London town, from the
+ proudest courtier to the lowest kitchen wench. Aye, and all the
+ surrounding country was early awake, too, and began to wend their way to
+ Finsbury Field, a fine broad stretch of practice ground near Moorfields.
+ Around three sides of the Field were erected tier upon tier of seats, for
+ the spectators, with the royal boxes and booths for the nobility and
+ gentry in the center. Down along one end were pitched gaily colored tents
+ for the different bands of King&rsquo;s archers. There were ten of these bands,
+ each containing a score of men headed by a captain of great renown; so
+ to-day there were ten of the pavilions, each bearing aloft the Royal Arms
+ and vari-colored pennants which fluttered lightly in the fresh morning
+ breeze.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Each captain&rsquo;s flag was of peculiar color and device. First came the royal
+ purple streamer of Tepus, own bow-bearer to the King, and esteemed the
+ finest archer in all the land. Then came the yellow of Clifton of
+ Buckinghamshire; and the blue of Gilbert of the White Hand&mdash;he who
+ was renowned in Nottinghamshire; and the green of Elwyn the Welshman; and
+ the White of Robert of Cloudesdale; and, after them, five other captains
+ of bands, each a man of proved prowess. As the Queen had said aforetime,
+ the King was mightily proud of his archers, and now held this tourney to
+ show their skill and, mayhap, to recruit their forces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The uprising tiers of seats filled early, upon this summer morning, and
+ the merry chatter of the people went abroad like the hum of bees in a
+ hive. The royal party had not yet put in an appearance, nor were any of
+ the King&rsquo;s archers visible. So the crowd was content to hide its
+ impatience by laughing jibes passed from one section to another, and
+ crying the colors of their favorite archers. In and out among the seats
+ went hawkers, their arms laden with small pennants to correspond with the
+ rival tents. Other vendors of pie and small cakes and cider also did a
+ thrifty business, for so eager had some of the people been to get good
+ seats, that they had rushed away from home without their breakfast.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Suddenly the gates at the far end, next the tents, opened wide, and a
+ courier in scarlet and gold, mounted upon a white horse, rode in blowing
+ lustily upon the trumpet at his lips; and behind him came six
+ standard-bearers riding abreast. The populace arose with a mighty cheer.
+ King Harry had entered the arena. He bestrode a fine white charger and was
+ clad in a rich dark suit of slashed velvet with satin and gold facings.
+ His hat bore a long curling ostrich plume of pure white and he doffed it
+ graciously in answer to the shouts of the people. By his side rode Queen
+ Eleanor, looking regal and charming in her long brocade riding-habit;
+ while immediately behind them came Prince Richard and Prince John, each
+ attired in knightly coats of mail and helmets. Lords and ladies of the
+ realm followed; and finally, the ten companies of archers, whose progress
+ round the field was greeted with hardly less applause than that given the
+ King himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King and Queen dismounted from their steeds, ascended the steps of the
+ royal box, and seated themselves upon two thrones, decked with purple and
+ gold trapping, upon a dais sheltered by striped canvas. In the booths at
+ each side the members of the Court took their places; while comely pages
+ ran hither and thither bearing the royal commands. &lsquo;Twas a lordly sight, I
+ ween, this shifting of proud courtiers, flashing of jeweled fans, and
+ commingling of bright colors with costly gems!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the herald arose to command peace, and soon the clear note of his
+ bugle rose above the roar of the crowd and hushed it to silence. The
+ tenscore archers ranged themselves in two long rows on each side of the
+ lists&mdash;a gallant array&mdash;while their captains, as a special mark
+ of favor, stood near the royal box.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come hither, Tepus,&rdquo; said the King to his bow-bearer. &ldquo;Come, measure me
+ out this line, how long our mark must be.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the reward?&rdquo; then asked the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will the herald presently proclaim,&rdquo; answered the King. &ldquo;For first
+ prize we have offered a purse containing twoscore golden pounds; for
+ second, a purse containing twoscore silver pennies; and for third a silver
+ bugle, inlaid with gold. Moreover, if the King&rsquo;s companies keep these
+ prizes, the winning companies shall have, first, two tuns of Rhenish wine;
+ second, two tuns of English beer; and, third, five of the fattest harts
+ that run on Dallom Lea. Methinks that is a princely wager,&rdquo; added King
+ Harry laughingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up spake bold Clifton, secure in the King&rsquo;s favor. &ldquo;Measure no marks for
+ us, most sovereign liege,&rdquo; quoth he; &ldquo;for such largess as that, we&rsquo;ll
+ shoot at the sun and the moon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Twill not be so far as that,&rdquo; said the King. &ldquo;But get a line of good
+ length, Tepus, and set up the targets at tenscore paces.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forthwith, Tepus bowed low, and set up ten targets, each bearing the
+ pennant of a different company, while the herald stood forth again and
+ proclaimed the rules and prizes. The entries were open to all comers. Each
+ man, also, of the King&rsquo;s archers should shoot three arrows at the target
+ bearing the colors of his band, until the best bowman in each band should
+ be chosen. These ten chosen archers should then enter a contest for an
+ open target&mdash;three shots apiece&mdash;and here any other bowman
+ whatsoever was asked to try his skill. The result at the open targets
+ should decide the tourney.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then all the people shouted again, in token that the terms of the contest
+ pleased them; and the archers waved their bows aloft, and wheeled into
+ position facing their respective targets.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The shooting now began, upon all the targets at once, and the multitude
+ had so much ado to watch them, that they forgot to shout. Besides, silence
+ was commanded during the shooting. Of all the fine shooting that morning,
+ I have not now space to tell you. The full score of men shot three times
+ at each target, and then three times again to decide a tie. For, more than
+ once, the arrow shot by one man would be split wide open by his successor.
+ Every man&rsquo;s shaft bore his number to ease the counting; and so close would
+ they stick at the end of a round, that the target looked like a big
+ bristle hairbrush. Then must the spectators relieve their tense spirits by
+ great cheering; while the King looked mighty proud of his skilled bowmen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the company targets were decided, and Tepus, as was expected, led
+ the score, having made six exact centers in succession. Gilbert of the
+ White Hand followed with five, and Clifton with four. Two other captains
+ had touched their center four times, but not roundly. While in the other
+ companies it so chanced that the captains had been out-shot by some of the
+ men under them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winners then saluted the King and Queen, and withdrew for a space to
+ rest and renew their bow-strings for the keenest contest of all; while the
+ lists were cleared and a new target&mdash;the open one&mdash;was set up at
+ twelvescore paces. At the bidding of the King, the herald announced that
+ the open target was to be shot at, to decide the title of the best archer
+ in all England; and any man there present was privileged to try for it.
+ But so keen had been the previous shooting, that many yeomen who had come
+ to enter the lists now would not do so; and only a dozen men stepped forth
+ to give in their names.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my halidom!&rdquo; said the King, &ldquo;these must be hardy men to pit themselves
+ against my archers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Think you that your ten chosen fellows are the best bowmen in all
+ England?&rdquo; asked the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, and in all the world beside,&rdquo; answered the King; &ldquo;and thereunto I
+ would stake five hundred pounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am minded to take your wager,&rdquo; said the Queen musingly, &ldquo;and will e&rsquo;en
+ do so if you grant me a boon.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; asked the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I produce five archers who can out-shoot your ten, will you grant my
+ men full grace and amnesty?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Assuredly!&rdquo; quoth the King in right good humor. &ldquo;Nathless, I tell you
+ now, your wager is in jeopardy, for there never were such bowmen as Tepus
+ and Clifton and Gilbert!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hum!&rdquo; said the Queen puckering her brow, still as though lost in thought.
+ &ldquo;I must see if there be none present to aid me in my wager. Boy, call
+ hither Sir Richard of the Lea and my lord Bishop of Hereford!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The two summoned ones, who had been witnessing the sport, came forward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Richard,&rdquo; said she, &ldquo;thou art a full knight and good. Would&rsquo;st advise
+ me to meet a wager of the King&rsquo;s, that I can produce other archers as good
+ as Tepus and Gilbert and Clifton?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Your Majesty,&rdquo; he said, bending his knee. &ldquo;There be none present
+ that can match them. Howbeit,&rdquo;&mdash;he added dropping his voice&mdash;&ldquo;I
+ have heard of some who lie hid in Sherwood Forest who could show them
+ strange targets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen smiled and dismissed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come hither, my lord Bishop of Hereford,&rdquo; quoth she, &ldquo;would&rsquo;st thou
+ advance a sum to support my wager &lsquo;gainst the King?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Your Majesty,&rdquo; said the fat Bishop, &ldquo;an you pardon me, I&rsquo;d not lay
+ down a penny on such a bet. For by my silver mitre, the King&rsquo;s archers are
+ men who have no peers.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But suppose I found men whom <i>thou knewest</i> to be masters at the
+ bow,&rdquo; she insisted roguishly, &ldquo;would&rsquo;st thou not back them? Belike, I have
+ heard that there be men round about Nottingham and Plympton who carry such
+ matters with a high hand!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop glanced nervously around, as if half expecting to see Robin
+ Hood&rsquo;s men standing near; then turned to find the Queen looking at him
+ with much amusement lurking in her eyes.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Odds bodikins! The story of my misadventure must have preceded me!&rdquo; he
+ thought, ruefully. Aloud he said, resolved to face it out,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Majesty, such tales are idle and exaggerated. An you pardon me, I
+ would add to the King&rsquo;s wager that his men are invincible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As it pleases thee,&rdquo; replied the Queen imperturbably. &ldquo;How much?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is my purse,&rdquo; said the Bishop uneasily. &ldquo;It contains fifteen score
+ nobles, or near a hundred pounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll take it at even money,&rdquo; she said, dismissing him; &ldquo;and Your Majesty&rdquo;&mdash;turning
+ to the King who had been conversing with the two princes and certain of
+ the nobles&mdash;&ldquo;I accept your wager of five hundred pounds.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; said the King, laughing as though it were a great jest. &ldquo;But
+ what had minded you to take such interest in the sport, of a sudden?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is as I have said. I have found five men whom I will pit against any
+ you may produce.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then we will try their skill speedily,&rdquo; quoth the King. &ldquo;How say you, if
+ first we decide this open target and then match the five best thereat
+ against your unknown champions?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said the Queen. Thereupon she signed to Maid Marian to step
+ forward, from a near-by booth where she sat with other ladies-in-waiting,
+ and whispered something in her ear. Marian courtesied and withdrew.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the ten chosen archers from the King&rsquo;s bands came forth again and took
+ their stand; and with them stood forth the twelve untried men from the
+ open lists. Again the crowd was stilled, and every eye hung upon the
+ speeding of the shafts. Slowly but skilfully each man shot, and as his
+ shaft struck within the inner ring a deep breath broke from the multitude
+ like the sound of the wind upon the seashore. And now Gilbert of the White
+ Hand led the shooting, and &lsquo;twas only by the space of a hairsbreadth upon
+ the line that Tepus tied his score. Stout Elwyn, the Welshman, took third
+ place; one of the private archers, named Geoffrey, come fourth; while
+ Clifton must needs content himself with fifth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The men from the open lists shot fairly true, but nervousness and fear of
+ ridicule wrought their undoing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The herald then came forward again, and, instead of announcing the
+ prize-winners, proclaimed that there was to be a final contest. Two men
+ had tied for first place, declared His Majesty the King, and three others
+ were entitled to honors. Now all these five were to shoot again, and they
+ were to be pitted against five other of the Queen&rsquo;s choosing&mdash;men who
+ had not yet shot upon that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A thrill of astonishment and excitement swept around the arena. &ldquo;Who were
+ these men of the Queen&rsquo;s choosing?&rdquo; was upon every lip. The hubbub of
+ eager voices grew intense; and in the midst of it all, the gate at the far
+ end of the field opened and five men entered and escorted a lady upon
+ horseback across the arena to the royal box. The lady was instantly
+ recognized as Mistress Marian of the Queen&rsquo;s household, but no one seemed
+ to know the faces of her escort. Four were clad in Lincoln green, while
+ the fifth, who seemed to be the leader, was dressed in a brave suit of
+ scarlet red. Each man wore a close fitting cap of black, decked with a
+ curling white feather. For arms, they carried simply a stout bow, a sheaf
+ of new arrows, and a short hunting-knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When the little party came before the dais on which the King and Queen
+ sat, the yeomen doffed their caps humbly, while Maid Marian was assisted
+ to dismount.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Gracious Majesty,&rdquo; she said, addressing the Queen, &ldquo;these be the men
+ for whom you sent me, and who are now come to wear your colors and service
+ you in the tourney.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen leaned forward and handed them each a scarf of green and gold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lockesley,&rdquo; she said in a clear voice, &ldquo;I thank thee and thy men for this
+ service. Know that I have laid a wager with the King that ye can outshoot
+ the best five whom he has found in all his bowmen.&rdquo; The five men pressed
+ the scarfs to their lips in token of fealty.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King turned to the Queen inquiringly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are these men you have brought before us?&rdquo; asked he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up came the worthy Bishop of Hereford, growing red and pale by turns.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your pardon, my liege lord!&rdquo; cried he; &ldquo;But I must denounce these fellows
+ as outlaws. Yon man in scarlet is none other than Robin Hood himself. The
+ others are Little John and Will Stutely and Will Scarlet and Allan-a-Dale&mdash;all
+ famous in the North Countree for their deeds of violence.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As my lord Bishop personally knows!&rdquo; added the Queen significantly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King&rsquo;s brows grew dark. The name of Robin Hood was well known to him,
+ as to every man there present.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is this true?&rdquo; he demanded sternly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, my lord,&rdquo; responded the Queen demurely. &ldquo;But, bethink you&mdash;I
+ have your royal promise of grace and amnesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I keep,&rdquo; said the King, holding in check his ire by a mighty
+ effort. &ldquo;But, look you! Only forty days do I grant of respite. When this
+ time has elapsed, let these bold outlaws look to their safety!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then turning to his five victorious archers, who had drawn near, he added,
+ &ldquo;Ye have heard, my men, how that I have a wager with the Queen upon your
+ prowess. Now here be men of her choosing&mdash;certain free shafts of
+ Sherwood and Barnesdale. Wherefore look well to it, Gilbert and Tepus and
+ Geoffrey and Elwyn and Clifton! If ye outshoot these knaves, I will fill
+ your caps with silver pennies&mdash;aye, and knight the man who stands
+ first. But if ye lose, I give the prizes, for which ye have just striven,
+ to Robin Hood and his men, according to my royal word.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin Hood and his men!&rdquo; the saying flew round the arena with the speed
+ of wild-fire, and every neck craned forward to see the famous fellows who
+ had dared to brave the King&rsquo;s anger, because of the Queen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Another target was now set up, at the same distance as the last, and it
+ was decided that the ten archers should shoot three arrows in turn.
+ Gilbert and Robin tossed up a penny for the lead, and it fell to the
+ King&rsquo;s men. So Clifton was bidden to shoot first.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forth he stood, planting his feet firmly, and wetting his fingers before
+ plucking the string. For he was resolved to better his losing score of
+ that day. And in truth he did so, for the shaft he loosed sped true, and
+ landed on the black bull&rsquo;s-eye, though not in the exact center. Again he
+ shot, and again he hit the black, on the opposite rim. The third shaft
+ swerved downward and came within the second ring, some two fingers&rsquo;
+ breadths away. Nathless, a general cry went up, as this was the best
+ shooting Clifton had done that day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will Scarlet was chosen to follow him, and now took his place and
+ carefully chose three round and full-feathered arrows.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Careful, my sweet coz!&rdquo; quoth Robin in a low tone. &ldquo;The knave has left
+ wide space at the center for all of your darts.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin gave Will the wrong caution, for over-much care spoiled his aim.
+ His first shaft flew wide and lodged in the second ring even further away
+ than the worst shot of Clifton.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your pardon, coz!&rdquo; quoth Robin hastily. &ldquo;Bid care go to the bottom of the
+ sea, and do you loose your string before it sticks to your fingers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Will profited by this hint, and loosed his next two shafts as freely
+ as though they flew along a Sherwood glade. Each struck upon the
+ bull&rsquo;s-eye, and one even nearer the center than his rival&rsquo;s mark. Yet the
+ total score was adjudged in favor of Clifton. At this Will Scarlet bit his
+ lip, but said no word, while the crowd shouted and waved yellow flags for
+ very joy that the King&rsquo;s man had overcome the outlaw. They knew, also,
+ that this demonstration would please the King.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The target was now cleared for the next two contestants&mdash;Geoffrey and
+ Allan-a-Dale. Whereat, it was noticed that many ladies in the Queen&rsquo;s
+ booths boldly flaunted Allan&rsquo;s colors, much to the honest pride which
+ glowed in the cheeks of one who sat in their midst.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In good truth,&rdquo; said more than one lady to Mistress Dale, &ldquo;if thy husband
+ can handle the longbow as skilfully as the harp, his rival has little show
+ of winning!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The saying augured well. Geoffrey had shot many good shafts that day; and
+ indeed had risen from the ranks by virtue of them. But now each of his
+ three shots, though well placed in triangular fashion around the rim of
+ the bull&rsquo;s-eye, yet allowed an easy space for Allan to graze within. His
+ shooting, moreover, was so prettily done, that he was right heartily
+ applauded&mdash;the ladies and their gallants leading in the
+ hand-clapping.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now you must know that there had long been a friendly rivalry in Robin
+ Hood&rsquo;s band as to who was the best shot, next after Robin himself. He and
+ Will Stutely had lately decided their marksmanship, and Will had found
+ that Robin&rsquo;s skill was now so great as to place the leader at the head of
+ all good bowmen in the forest. But the second place lay between Little
+ John and Stutely, and neither wished to yield to the other. So to-day they
+ looked narrowly at their leader to see who should shoot third. Robin read
+ their faces at a glance, and laughing merrily, broke off two straws and
+ held them out.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The long straw goes next!&rdquo; he decided; and it fell to Stutely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Elwyn the Welshman was to precede him; and his score was no whit better
+ than Geoffrey&rsquo;s. But Stutely failed to profit by it. His besetting sin at
+ archery had ever been an undue haste and carelessness. To-day these were
+ increased by a certain moodiness, that Little John had outranked him. So
+ his first two shafts flew swiftly, one after the other, to lodging places
+ outside the Welshman&rsquo;s mark.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Man! man!&rdquo; cried Robin entreatingly, &ldquo;you do forget the honor of the
+ Queen, and the credit of Sherwood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I ask your pardon, master!&rdquo; quoth Will humbly enough, and loosing as he
+ spoke his last shaft. It whistled down the course unerringly and struck in
+ the exact center&mdash;the best shot yet made.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now some shouted for Stutely and some shouted for Elwyn; but Elwyn&rsquo;s total
+ mark was declared the better. Whereupon the King turned to the Queen.
+ &ldquo;What say you now?&rdquo; quoth he in some triumph. &ldquo;Two out of the three first
+ rounds have gone to my men. Your outlaws will have to shoot better than
+ that in order to save your wager!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Queen smiled gently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea, my lord,&rdquo; she said. &ldquo;But the twain who are left are able to do the
+ shooting. You forget that I still have Little John and Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you forget, my lady, that I still have Tepus and Gilbert.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So each turned again to the lists and awaited the next rounds in silent
+ eagerness. I ween that King Harry had never watched the invasion of an
+ enemy with more anxiety than he now felt.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Tepus was chosen to go next and he fell into the same error with Will
+ Scarlet. He held the string a moment too long, and both his first and
+ second arrows came to grief. One of them, however, came within the black
+ rim, and he followed it up by placing his third in the full center, just
+ as Stutely had done in his last. These two centers were the fairest shots
+ that had been made that day; and loud was the applause which greeted this
+ second one. But the shouting was as nothing to the uproar which followed
+ Little John&rsquo;s shooting. That good-natured giant seemed determined to outdo
+ Tepus by a tiny margin in each separate shot; for the first and the second
+ shafts grazed his rival&rsquo;s on the inner side, while for the third Little
+ John did the old trick of the forest: he shot his own arrow in a graceful
+ curve which descended from above upon Tepus&rsquo;s final center shaft with a
+ glancing blow that drove the other out and left the outlaw&rsquo;s in its place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King could scarce believe his eyes. &ldquo;By my halidom!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;that
+ fellow deserves either a dukedom or a hanging! He must be in league with
+ Satan himself! Never saw I such shooting.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The score is tied, my lord,&rdquo; said the Queen; &ldquo;we have still to see
+ Gilbert and Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Gilbert now took his stand and slowly shot his arrows, one after another,
+ into the bull&rsquo;s-eye. &lsquo;Twas the best shooting he had yet done, but there
+ was still the smallest of spaces left&mdash;if you looked closely&mdash;at
+ the very center.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well done, Gilbert!&rdquo; spoke up Robin Hood. &ldquo;You are a foeman worthy of
+ being shot against.&rdquo; He took his own place as he spoke. &ldquo;Now if you had
+ placed one of your shafts <i>there</i>&rdquo;&mdash;loosing one of his own&mdash;&ldquo;and
+ another <i>there</i>&rdquo;&mdash;out sped the second&mdash;&ldquo;and another <i>there</i>&rdquo;&mdash;the
+ third was launched&mdash;&ldquo;mayhap the King would have declared you the best
+ bowman in all England!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the last part of his merry speech was drowned in the wild tumult of
+ applause which followed his exploit. His first two shafts had packed
+ themselves into the small space left at the bull&rsquo;s-eye; while his third
+ had split down between them, taking half of each, and making all three
+ appear from a distance, as one immense arrow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Up rose the King in amazement and anger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gilbert is not yet beaten!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Did he not shoot within the mark
+ thrice? And that is allowed a best in all the rules of archery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin bowed low.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;As it please Your Majesty!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;But may I be allowed to place the
+ mark for the second shooting?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King waved his hand sullenly.. Thereupon Robin prepared another old
+ trick of the greenwood, and got him a light, peeled willow wand which he
+ set in the ground in place of the target.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There, friend Gilbert,&rdquo; called he gaily; &ldquo;belike you can hit that!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I can scarce see it from here,&rdquo; said Gilbert, &ldquo;much less hit it.
+ Nathless, for the King&rsquo;s honor, I will try.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this final shot proved his undoing, and his shaft flew harmlessly by
+ the thin white streak. Then came Robin to his stand again, and picked his
+ arrow with exceeding care, and tried his string. Amid a breathless pause
+ he drew the good yew bow back to his ear, glanced along the shaft, and let
+ the feathered missile fly. Straight it sped, singing a keen note of
+ triumph as it went. The willow wand was split in twain, as though it had
+ met a hunter&rsquo;s knife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, I think your bow is armed with witchcraft!&rdquo; cried Gilbert. &ldquo;For I
+ did not believe such shooting possible.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You should come to see our merry lads in the greenwood,&rdquo; retorted Robin
+ lightly. &ldquo;For willow wands do not grow upon the cobblestones of London
+ town.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the King in great wrath had risen to depart, first signing the
+ judges to distribute the prizes. Never a word said he, of good or ill, to
+ the Queen, but mounted his horse and, followed by his sons and knights,
+ rode off the field. The archers dropped upon one knee as he passed, but he
+ gave them a single baleful look and was gone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Queen beckoned the outlaws to approach, and they did so and knelt
+ at her feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right well have ye served me,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and sorry am I that the King&rsquo;s
+ anger is aroused thereby. But fear ye not. His word and grace hold true.
+ As to these prizes ye have gained, I add others of mine own&mdash;the
+ wagers I have won from His Majesty the King and from the lord Bishop of
+ Hereford. Buy with some of these moneys the best swords ye can find in
+ London, for all your band, and call them the swords of the Queen. And
+ swear with them to protect all the poor and the helpless and the women&mdash;kind
+ who come your way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We swear,&rdquo; said the five yeomen solemnly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the Queen gave each of them her hand to kiss, and arose and departed
+ with all her ladies. And after they were gone, the King&rsquo;s archers came
+ crowding around Robin and his men, eager to get a glimpse of the fellows
+ about whom they had heard so much. And back of them came a great crowd of
+ the spectators pushing and jostling in their efforts to come nearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily!&rdquo; laughed Little John, &ldquo;they must take us for a Merry Andrew
+ show!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the judges came up, and announced each man his prize, according to the
+ King&rsquo;s command. To Robin was give the purse containing twoscore golden
+ pounds; to Little John the twoscore silver pennies; and to Allan-a-Dale
+ the fine inlaid bugle, much to his delight, for he was skilled at blowing
+ sweet tunes upon the horn hardly less than handling the harp strings. But
+ when the Rhenish wine and English beer and harts of Dallom Lea were spoken
+ of, Robin said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, what need we of wine or beer, so far from the greenwood? And &lsquo;twould
+ be like carrying coals to Newcastle, to drive those harts to Sherwood! Now
+ Gilbert and Tepus and their men have shot passing well. Wherefore, the
+ meat and drink must go to them, an they will accept it of us.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right gladly,&rdquo; replied Gilbert grasping his hand. &ldquo;Ye are good men all,
+ and we will toast you every one, in memory of the greatest day at archery
+ that England has ever seen, or ever will see!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thus said all the King&rsquo;s archers, and the hand of good-fellowship was
+ given amid much shouting and clapping on the shoulder-blades.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so ended King Harry&rsquo;s tourney, whose story has been handed down from
+ sire to son, even unto the present day.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS SOUGHT OF THE TINKER
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ And while the tinker fell asleep,
+ Robin made haste away,
+ And left the tinker in the lurch,
+ For the great shot to pay.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ King Henry was as good as his word. Robin Hood and his party were suffered
+ to depart from London&mdash;the parting bringing keen sorrow to Marian&mdash;and
+ for forty days no hand was raised against them. But at the end of that
+ time, the royal word was sent to the worthy Sheriff at Nottingham that he
+ must lay hold upon the outlaws without further delay, as he valued his
+ office.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, the exploits of Robin and his band, ending with the great tourney
+ in Finsbury Field, had made a mighty stir through all England, and many
+ there were to laugh boldly at the Nottingham official for his failures to
+ capture the outlaws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff thereupon planned three new expeditions into the greenwood,
+ and was even brave enough to lead them, since he had fifteen-score men at
+ his beck and call each time. But never the shadow of an outlaw did he see,
+ for Robin&rsquo;s men lay close, and the Sheriff&rsquo;s men knew not how to come at
+ their chief hiding-place in the cove before the cavern.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now the Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter had hated Robin Hood bitterly in her heart ever
+ since the day he refused to bestow upon her the golden arrow, and shamed
+ her before all the company. His tricks, also, upon her father were not
+ calculated to lessen her hatred, and so she sought about for means to aid
+ the Sheriff in catching the enemy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is no need to go against this man with force of arms,&rdquo; she said.
+ &ldquo;We must meet his tricks with other tricks of our own.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Would that we could!&rdquo; groaned the Sheriff. &ldquo;The fellow is becoming a
+ nightmare unto me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me plan a while,&rdquo; she replied. &ldquo;Belike I can cook up some scheme for
+ his undoing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Agreed,&rdquo; said the Sheriff, &ldquo;and if anything comes of your planning, I
+ will e&rsquo;en give you an hundred silver pennies for a new gown, and a double
+ reward to the man who catches the outlaws.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now upon that same day, while the Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter was racking her
+ brains for a scheme, there came to the Mansion House a strolling tinker
+ named Middle, a great gossip and braggart. And as he pounded away upon
+ some pots and pans in the scullery, he talked loudly about what <i>he</i>
+ would do, if he once came within reach of that rascal Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It might be that this simple fellow could do something through his very
+ simplicity,&rdquo; mused the Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter, overhearing his prattle. &ldquo;Odds
+ bodikins! &lsquo;twill do no harm to try his service, while I bethink myself of
+ some better plan.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she called him to her, and looked him over&mdash;a big brawny fellow
+ enough, with an honest look about the eye, and a countenance so open that
+ when he smiled his mouth seemed the only country on the map.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am minded to try your skill at outlaw catching,&rdquo; she said, &ldquo;and will
+ add goodly measure to the stated reward if you succeed. Do you wish to
+ make good your boasted prowess?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tinker grinned broadly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, your ladyship,&rdquo; he said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then here is a warrant made out this morning by the Sheriff himself. See
+ that you keep it safely and use it to good advantage.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And she dismissed him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middle departed from the house mightily pleased with himself, and proud of
+ his commission. He swung his crab-tree-staff recklessly in his glee&mdash;so
+ recklessly that he imperiled the shins of more than one angry passer-by&mdash;and
+ vowed he&rsquo;d crack the ribs of Robin Hood with it, though he was surrounded
+ by every outlaw in the whole greenwood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Spurred on by the thoughts of his own coming bravery, he left the town and
+ proceeded toward Barnesdale. The day was hot and dusty, and at noontime he
+ paused at a wayside inn to refresh himself. He began by eating and
+ drinking and dozing, in turn, then sought to do all at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Mine host of the &ldquo;Seven Does&rdquo; stood by, discussing the eternal Robin with
+ a drover.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Folk do say that my lord Sheriff has sent into Lincoln for more
+ men-at-arms and horses, and that when he has these behind him, he&rsquo;ll soon
+ rid the forest of these fellows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of whom speak you?&rdquo; asked the tinker sitting up.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Of Robin Hood and his men,&rdquo; said the host; &ldquo;but go to sleep again. You
+ will never get the reward!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why not?&rdquo; asked the tinker, rising with great show of dignity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where our Sheriff has failed, and the stout Guy of Gisborne, and many
+ more beside, it behoves not a mere tinker to succeed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tinker laid a heavy hand upon the innkeeper&rsquo;s fat shoulder, and tried
+ to look impressive.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;There is your reckoning, host, upon the table. I must e&rsquo;en go upon my
+ way, because I have more important business than to stand here gossiping
+ with you. But be not surprised, if, the next time you see me, I shall have
+ with me no less person than Robin Hood himself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he strode loftily out the door and walked up the hot white road toward
+ Barnesdale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had not gone above a quarter of a mile when he met a young man with
+ curling brown hair and merry eyes. The young man carried his light cloak
+ over his arm, because of the heat, and was unarmed save for a light sword
+ at his side. The newcomer eyed the perspiring tinker in a friendly way,
+ and seeing he was a stout fellow accosted him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-day to you!&rdquo; said he.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good-day to you!&rdquo; said the tinker; &ldquo;and a morrow less heating.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; laughed the other. &ldquo;Whence come you? And know you the news?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the news?&rdquo; said the gossipy tinker, pricking up his ear; &ldquo;I am a
+ tinker by trade, Middle by name, and come from over against Banbury.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why as for the news,&rdquo; laughed the stranger, &ldquo;I hear that two tinkers were
+ set i&rsquo; the stocks for drinking too much ale and beer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that be all your news,&rdquo; retorted Middle, &ldquo;I can beat you clear to the
+ end of the lane.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What news have you? Seeing that you go from town to town, I ween you can
+ outdo a poor country yokel at tidings.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;All I have to tell,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;is that I am especially
+ commissioned&rdquo;&mdash;he felt mightily proud of these big words&mdash;&ldquo;especially
+ commissioned to seek a bold outlaw which they call Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So?&rdquo; said the other arching his brows. &ldquo;How &lsquo;especially commissioned&rsquo;?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have a warrant from the Sheriff, sealed with the King&rsquo;s own seal, to
+ take him where I can; and if you can tell me where he is, I will e&rsquo;en make
+ a man of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me see the warrant,&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;to satisfy myself if it be
+ right; and I will do the best I can to bring him to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That will I not,&rdquo; replied the tinker; &ldquo;I will trust none with it. And if
+ you&rsquo;ll not help me to come at him I must forsooth catch him by myself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he made his crab-tree-staff whistle shrill circles in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other smiled at the tinker&rsquo;s simplicity, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The middle of the road on a hot July day is not a good place to talk
+ things over. Now if you&rsquo;re the man for me and I&rsquo;m the man for you, let&rsquo;s
+ go back to the inn, just beyond the bend of road, and quench our thirst
+ and cool our heads for thinking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry come up!&rdquo; quoth the tinker. &ldquo;That will I! For though I&rsquo;ve just come
+ from there, my thirst rises mightily at the sound of your voice.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So back he turned with the stranger and proceeded to the &ldquo;Seven Does.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The landlord arched his eyebrows silently when he saw the two come in, but
+ served them willingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The tinker asked for wine, and Robin for ale. The wine was not the most
+ cooling drink in the cellar, nor the clearest headed. Nathless, the tinker
+ asked for it, since it was expensive and the other man had invited him to
+ drink. They lingered long over their cups, Master Middle emptying one
+ after another while the stranger expounded at great length on the best
+ plans for coming at and capturing Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the end the tinker fell sound asleep while in the act of trying to get
+ a tankard to his lips. Then the stranger deftly opened the snoring man&rsquo;s
+ pouch, took out the warrant, read it, and put it in his own wallet.
+ Calling mine host to him, he winked at him with a half smile and told him
+ that the tinker would pay the whole score when he awoke. Thus was Master
+ Middle left in the lurch &ldquo;for the great shot to pay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Nathless, the stranger seemed in no great hurry. He had the whim to stay
+ awhile and see what the droll tinker might do when he awoke. So he hid
+ behind a window shutter, on the outside, and awaited events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently the tinker came to himself with a prodigious yawn, and reached
+ at once for another drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What were you saying, friend, about the best plan (ya-a-a-ah!) for
+ catching this fellow?&mdash;Hello!&mdash;where&rsquo;s the man gone?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He had looked around and saw no one with him at the table.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Host! host!&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;where is that fellow who was to pay my
+ reckoning?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I know not,&rdquo; answered the landlord sharply. &ldquo;Mayhap he left the money in
+ your purse.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No he didn&rsquo;t!&rdquo; roared Middle, looking therein. &ldquo;Help! Help! I&rsquo;ve been
+ robbed! Look you, host, you are liable to arrest for high treason! I am
+ here upon the King&rsquo;s business, as I told you earlier in the day. And yet
+ while I did rest under your roof, thinking you were an honest man (hic!)
+ and one loving of the King, my pouch has been opened and many matters of
+ state taken from it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Cease your bellowing!&rdquo; said the landlord. &ldquo;What did you lose?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, many weighty matters, I do assure you. I had with me, item, a
+ warrant, granted under the hand of my lord High Sheriff of Nottingham, and
+ sealed with the Kings&rsquo;s own seal, for the capture (hic!)&mdash;and arrest&mdash;and
+ overcoming of a notorious rascal, one Robin Hood of Barnesdale. Item, one
+ crust of bread. Item, one lump (hic!) of solder. Item, three pieces of
+ twine. Item, six single keys (hic!), useful withal. Item, twelve silver
+ pennies, the which I earned this week (hic!) in fair labor. Item&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have done with your items!&rdquo; said the host. &ldquo;And I marvel greatly to hear
+ you speak in such fashion of your friend, Robin Hood of Barnesdale. For
+ was he not with you in all good-fellowship?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Wh-a-at? <i>That</i> Robin Hood?&rdquo; gasped Middle with staring eyes. &ldquo;Why
+ did you not tell me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, <i>I</i> saw no need o&rsquo; telling you! Did you not tell me the first
+ time you were here to-day, that I need not be surprised if you came back
+ with no less person than Robin Hood himself?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Jesu give me pardon!&rdquo; moaned the tinker. &ldquo;I see it all now. He got me to
+ drinking, and then took my warrant, and my pennies, and my crust&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, yes,&rdquo; interrupted the host. &ldquo;I know all about that. But pay me the
+ score for both of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I have no money, gossip. Let me go after that vile bag-o&rsquo;-bones, and
+ I&rsquo;ll soon get it out of him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so,&rdquo; replied the other. &ldquo;If I waited for you to collect from Robin
+ Hood, I would soon close up shop.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is the account?&rdquo; asked Middle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ten shillings, just.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then take here my working-bag and my good hammer too; and if I light upon
+ that knave I will soon come back after them.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your leathern coat as well,&rdquo; said mine host; &ldquo;the hammer and bag
+ of tools are as naught to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy!&rdquo; cried Master Middle, losing what was left of his temper. &ldquo;It
+ seems that I have escaped one thief only to fall into the hands of
+ another. If you will but walk with me out into the middle of the road,
+ I&rsquo;ll give you such a crack as shall drive some honesty into your thick
+ skull.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are wasting your breath and my time,&rdquo; retorted the landlord.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me your things, and get you gone after your man, speedily.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Middle thought this to be good advice; so he strode forth from the &ldquo;Seven
+ Does&rdquo; in a black mood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Ere he had gone half a mile, he saw Robin Hood walking demurely among the
+ trees a little in front of him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho there, you villain!&rdquo; roared the tinker. &ldquo;Stay your steps! I am
+ desperately in need of you this day!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin turned about with a surprised face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What knave is this?&rdquo; he asked gently, &ldquo;who comes shouting after me?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No knave! no knave at all!&rdquo; panted the other, rushing up. &ldquo;But an honest&mdash;man&mdash;who
+ would have&mdash;that warrant&mdash;and the money for drink!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, as I live, it is our honest tinker who was seeking Robin Hood! Did
+ you find him, gossip?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, that did I! and I&rsquo;m now going to pay him my respects!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he plunged at him, making a sweeping stroke with his crab-tree-cudgel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin tried to draw his sword, but could not do it for a moment through
+ dodging the other&rsquo;s furious blows. When he did get it in hand, the tinker
+ had reached him thrice with resounding thwacks. Then the tables were
+ turned, for he dashed in right manfully with his shining blade and made
+ the tinker give back again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The greenwood rang with the noise of the fray. &lsquo;Twas steel against wood,
+ and they made a terrible clattering when they came together. Robin thought
+ at first that he could hack the cudgel to pieces, for his blade was one of
+ Toledo&mdash;finely tempered steel which the Queen had given him. But the
+ crab-tree-staff had been fired and hardened and seasoned by the tinker&rsquo;s
+ arts until it was like a bar of iron&mdash;no pleasant neighbor for one&rsquo;s
+ ribs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin presently found this out to his sorrow. The long reach and long
+ stick got to him when &lsquo;twas impossible for him to touch his antagonist. So
+ his sides began to ache sorely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your hand, tinker,&rdquo; he said at length. &ldquo;I cry a boon of you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Before I do it,&rdquo; said the tinker, &ldquo;I&rsquo;d hang you on this tree.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But even as he spoke, Robin found the moment&rsquo;s grace for which he longed;
+ and immediately grasped his horn and blew the three well-known blasts of
+ the greenwood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A murrain seize you!&rdquo; roared the tinker commencing afresh. &ldquo;Up to your
+ old tricks again, are you? Well, I&rsquo;ll have time to finish my job, if I
+ hurry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin was quite able to hold his own at a pinch, and they had not
+ exchanged many lunges and passes when up came Little John and Will Scarlet
+ and a score of yeomen at their heels. Middle was seized without ceremony,
+ while Robin sat himself down to breathe. &ldquo;What is the matter?&rdquo; quoth
+ Little John, &ldquo;that you should sit so weariedly upon the highway side?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, that rascally tinker yonder has paid his score well upon my hide,&rdquo;
+ answered Robin ruefully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That tinker, then,&rdquo; said Little John, &ldquo;must be itching for more work.
+ Fain would I try if he can do as much for me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Or me,&rdquo; said Will Scarlet, who like Little John was always willing to
+ swing a cudgel.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; laughed Robin. &ldquo;Belike I could have done better, an he had given me
+ time to pull a young tree up by the roots. But I hated to spoil the
+ Queen&rsquo;s blade upon his tough stick or no less tough hide. He had a warrant
+ for my arrest which I stole from him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Also, item, twelve silver pennies,&rdquo; interposed the tinker, unsubdued;
+ &ldquo;item, one crust of bread, &lsquo;gainst my supper. Item, one lump of solder.
+ Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six single keys. Item&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, I know,&rdquo; quoth the merry Robin; &ldquo;I stood outside the landlord&rsquo;s
+ window and heard you count over your losses. Here they are again; and the
+ silver pennies are turned by magic into gold. Here also, if you will, is
+ my hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I take it heartily, with the pence!&rdquo; cried Middle. &ldquo;By my leathern coat
+ and tools, which I shall presently have out of that sly host, I swear that
+ I never yet met a man I liked as well as you! An you and your men here
+ will take me, I swear I&rsquo;ll serve you honestly. Do you want a tinker? Nay,
+ but verily you must! Who else can mend and grind your swords and patch
+ your pannikins&mdash;and fight, too, when occasion serve? Mend your pots!
+ mend your pa-a-ans!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he ended his speech with the sonorous cry of his craft.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the whole band was laughing uproariously at the tinker&rsquo;s
+ talk.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What say you, fellows?&rdquo; asked Robin. &ldquo;Would not this tinker be a good
+ recruit?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That he would!&rdquo; answered Will Scarlet, clapping the new man on the back.
+ &ldquo;He will keep Friar Tuck and Much the miller&rsquo;s son from having the blues.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So amid great merriment and right good fellowship the outlaws shook Middle
+ by the hand, and he took oath of fealty, and thought no more of the
+ Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS TANNED OF THE TANNER
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ In Nottingham there lived a jolly tanner,
+ With a hey down, down, a down down!
+ His name was Arthur-a-Bland,
+ There was ne&rsquo;er a squire in Nottinghamshire
+
+ Dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+ And as he went forth, in a summer&rsquo;s morning,
+ With a hey down, down, a down down!
+ To the forest of merrie Sherwood,
+ To view the red deer, that range here and there,
+ There met he with bold Robin Hood.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter bided for several days in the faint hope that she
+ might hear tidings of the prattling tinker. But never a word heard she,
+ and she was forced to the conclusion that her messenger had not so much as
+ laid eyes upon the outlaw. Little recked she that he was, even then,
+ grinding sword-points and sharpening arrows out in the good greenwood,
+ while whistling blithely or chatting merrily with the good Friar Tuck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she bethought herself of another good man, one Arthur-a-Bland, a
+ tanner who dwelt in Nottingham town and was far-famed in the tourneys
+ round about. He had done some pretty tricks at archery, but was strongest
+ at wrestling and the quarter-staff. For three years he had cast all comers
+ to the earth in wrestling until the famous Eric o&rsquo; Lincoln broke a rib for
+ him in a mighty tussle. Howsoever, at quarter-staff he had never yet met
+ his match; so that there was never a squire in Nottinghamshire dare bid
+ bold Arthur stand.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ With a long pike-staff on his shoulder,
+ So well he could clear his way
+ That by two and three he made men flee
+ And none of them could stay.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus at least runs the old song which tells of his might.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is just the man for me!&rdquo; thought the Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter to herself;
+ and she forthwith summoned him to the Mansion House and commissioned him
+ to seek out Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The warrant was quite to Arthur&rsquo;s liking, for he was happiest when out in
+ the forest taking a sly peep at the King&rsquo;s deer; and now he reckoned that
+ he could look at them boldly, instead of by the rays of the moon. He could
+ say to any King&rsquo;s Forester who made bold to stop him: &ldquo;I am here on the
+ King&rsquo;s business!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy! No more oak-bark and ditch-water and the smell of half-tanned
+ hides to-day!&rdquo; quoth he, gaily. &ldquo;I shall e&rsquo;en see what the free air of
+ heaven tastes like, when it sweeps through the open wood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the tanner departed joyfully upon his errand, but much more interested
+ in the dun deer of the forest than in any two-legged rovers therein. This
+ interest had, in fact, caused the Foresters to keep a shrewd eye upon him
+ in the past, for his tannery was apt to have plenty of meat in it that was
+ more like venison than the law allowed. As for the outlaws, Arthur bore
+ them no ill-will; indeed he had felt a secret envy in his heart at their
+ free life; but he was not afraid to meet any two men who might come
+ against him. Nathless, the Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter did not choose a very good
+ messenger, as you shall presently see.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Away sped the tanner, a piece of bread and some wine in his wallet, a good
+ longbow and arrows slung across his shoulder, his stout quarter-staff in
+ his hand, and on his head a cap of trebled raw-hide so tough that it would
+ turn the edge of a broadsword. He lost no time in getting out of the hot
+ sun and into the welcome shade of the forest, where he stalked cautiously
+ about seeking some sign of the dun deer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it so chanced that upon that very morning Robin Hood had sent Little
+ John to a neighboring village to buy some cloth of Lincoln green for new
+ suits for all the band. Some of the money recently won of the King was
+ being spent in this fashion, &lsquo;gainst the approach of winter. Will Scarlet
+ had been sent on a similar errand to Barnesdale some time before, if you
+ remember, only to be chased up the hill without his purchase. So to-day
+ Little John was chosen, and for sweet company&rsquo;s sake Robin went with him a
+ part of the way until they came to the &ldquo;Seven Does,&rdquo; the inn where Robin
+ had recently played his prank upon Middle the tinker. Here they drank a
+ glass of ale to refresh themselves withal, and for good luck; and Robin
+ tarried a bit while Little John went on his errand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently Robin entered the edge of the wood, when whom should he see but
+ Arthur-a-Bland, busily creeping after a graceful deer that browsed alone
+ down the glade. &ldquo;Now by Saint George and the Dragon!&rdquo; quoth Robin to
+ himself. &ldquo;I much fear that yon same fellow is a rascally poacher come
+ after our own and the King&rsquo;s meat!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For you must know, by a curious process of reasoning, Robin and his men
+ had hunted in the royal preserves so long that they had come to consider
+ themselves joint owners to every animal which roamed therein.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay!&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;this must be looked into! That cow-skin cap in sooth
+ must hide a scurvy varlet!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And forthwith he crept behind a tree, and thence to another, stalking our
+ friend Arthur as busily as Arthur was stalking the deer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ This went on for quite a space, until the tanner began to come upon the
+ deer and to draw his bow in order to tickle the victim&rsquo;s ribs with a
+ cloth-yard shaft. But just at this moment Robin unluckily trod upon a twig
+ which snapped and caused the tanner to turn suddenly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin saw that he was discovered, so he determined to put a bold face on
+ the matter, and went forward with some smart show of authority.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; he cried: &ldquo;stay your hand! Why, who are you, bold fellow, to range
+ so boldly here? In sooth, to be brief, ye look like a thief that has come
+ to steal the King&rsquo;s deer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marry, it is scant concern of yours, what I look like!&rdquo; retorted
+ Arthur-a-Bland. &ldquo;Who are you, who speak so bravely?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You shall soon find out who I am!&rdquo; quoth Robin, determining to find some
+ sport in the matter. &ldquo;I am a keeper of this forest. The King knows that I
+ am looking after his deer for him; and therefore we must stay you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you any assistants, friend?&rdquo; asked the tanner calmly. &ldquo;For it is not
+ one man alone who can stop me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay truly, gossip,&rdquo; replied Robin. &ldquo;I have a good yew bow, also a right
+ sharp blade at my side. Nathless I need no better assistant than a good
+ oak-graff like unto yours. Give me a baker&rsquo;s dozen of minutes with it and
+ it shall pleasure me to crack that pate of yours for your sauciness!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Softly, my man! Fair and softly! Big words never killed so much as a
+ mouse&mdash;least of all yon deer which has got away while you were
+ filling all the woods with your noisy breath. So choose your own
+ playthings. For your sword and your bow I care not a straw; nor for all
+ your arrows to boot. If I get but a knock at you, &lsquo;twill be as much as
+ you&rsquo;ll need.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by our Lady! Will you listen to the braggart?&rdquo; cried Robin in a fine
+ rage. &ldquo;Marry, but I&rsquo;ll teach ye to be more mannerly!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he unbuckled his belt; and, flinging his bow upon the ground he
+ seized hold of a young sapling that was growing near by. His hunting knife
+ soon had it severed and lopped into shape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now come, fellow!&rdquo; said Arthur-a-Bland, seeing that he was ready. &ldquo;And if
+ I do not tan your hide for you in better shape than ever calf-skin was
+ turned into top-boots, may a murrain seize me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stay,&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;methinks my cudgel is half a foot longer than yours.
+ I would have them of even length before you begin your tanning.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pass not for length,&rdquo; bold Arthur replied; &ldquo;my staff is long enough, as
+ you will shortly find out. Eight foot and a half, and &lsquo;twill knock down a
+ calf&rdquo;&mdash;here he made it whistle in the air&mdash;&ldquo;and I hope it will
+ knock down you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Forthwith the two men spat on their hands, laid firm hold upon their
+ cudgels and began slowly circling round each other, looking for an
+ opening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now it so chanced that Little John had fared expeditiously with his
+ errand. He had met the merchant, from whom he was wont to buy Lincoln
+ green, coming along the road; and had made known his wants in few words.
+ The merchant readily undertook to deliver the suits by a certain day in
+ the following month. So Little John, glad to get back to the cool shelter
+ of the greenwood, hasted along the road lately taken by Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently he heard the sound of angry voices, one of which he recognized
+ as his captain&rsquo;s.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Heaven forfend,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;that Robin Hood has fallen into the
+ clutches of a King&rsquo;s man! I must take a peep at this fray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he cautiously made his way from tree to tree, as Robin had done, till
+ he came to the little open space where Robin and Arthur were circling
+ about each other with angry looks, like two dogs at bay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! this looks interesting!&rdquo; muttered Little John to himself, for he
+ loved a good quarter-staff bout above anything else in the world, and was
+ the best man at it in all the greenwood. And he crawled quietly underneath
+ a friendly bush&mdash;much as he had done when Robin undertook to teach
+ Will Scarlet a lesson&mdash;and chuckled softly to himself and slapped his
+ thigh and prepared to watch the fight at his ease.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed it was both exciting and laughable. You would have chuckled one
+ moment and caught your breath the next, to see those two stout fellows
+ swinging their sticks&mdash;each half as long again as the men were, and
+ thick as their arm&mdash;and edging along sidewise, neither wishing to
+ strike the first blow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last Robin could no longer forbear, and his good right arm swung round
+ like a flash. Ping! went the stick on the back of the other&rsquo;s head,
+ raising such a welt that the blood came. But the tanner did not seem to
+ mind it at all, for bing! went his own staff in return, giving Robin as
+ good as he had sent. Then the battle was on, and furiously it waged. Fast
+ fell the blows, but few save the first ones landed, being met in mid-air
+ by a counter-blow till the thwacking sticks sounded like the steady roll
+ of a kettle-drum and the oak&mdash;bark flew as fine as it had ever done
+ in Arthur-a-Bland&rsquo;s tannery.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Round and round they fought, digging their heels into the ground to keep
+ from slipping, so that you would have vowed there had been a yoke of oxen
+ ploughing a potato-patch. Round and round, up and down, in and out, their
+ arms working like threshing-machines, went the yeoman and the tanner, for
+ a full hour, each becoming more astonished every minute that the other was
+ such a good fellow. While Little John from underneath his bushy covert had
+ much ado to keep from roaring aloud in pure joy.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally Robin saw his chance and brought a full arm blow straight down
+ upon the other&rsquo;s head with a force that would have felled a bullock. But
+ Arthur&rsquo;s trebled cow-skin cap here stood him in good stead: the blow
+ glanced off without doing more than stunning him. Nathless, he reeled and
+ had much ado to keep from falling; seeing which Robin stayed his hand&mdash;to
+ his own sorrow, for the tanner recovered his wits in a marvelous quick
+ space and sent back a sidelong blow which fairly lifted Robin off his feet
+ and sent him tumbling on to the grass.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your hand! hold your hand!&rdquo; roared Robin with what little breath he
+ had left. &ldquo;Hold, I say, and I will give you the freedom of the greenwood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why, God-a-mercy,&rdquo; said Arthur; &ldquo;I may thank my staff for that&mdash;not
+ <i>you</i>.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Well, well, gossip&rsquo; let be as it may. But prithee tell me your name and
+ trade. I like to know fellows who can hit a blow like that same last.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a tanner,&rdquo; replied Arthur-a-Bland. &ldquo;In Nottingham long have I
+ wrought. And if you&rsquo;ll come to me I swear I&rsquo;ll tan your hides for naught.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Odds bodikins!&rdquo; quoth Robin ruefully. &ldquo;Mine own hide is tanned enough for
+ the present. Howsoever, there be others in this wood I would fain see you
+ tackle. Harkee, if you will leave your tan-pots and come with me, as sure
+ as my name is Robin Hood, you shan&rsquo;t want gold or fee.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the breath o&rsquo; my body!&rdquo; said Arthur, &ldquo;that will I do!&rdquo; and he gripped
+ him gladly by the hand. &ldquo;But I am minded that I clean forgot the errand
+ that brought me to Sherwood. I was commissioned by some, under the
+ Sheriff&rsquo;s roof, to capture you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So was a certain tinker, now in our service,&rdquo; said Robin smilingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily &lsquo;tis a new way to recruit forces!&rdquo; said the tanner laughing
+ loudly. &ldquo;But tell me, good Robin Hood, where is Little John? I fain would
+ see him, for he is a kinsman on my mother&rsquo;s side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here am I, good Arthur-a-Bland!&rdquo; said a voice; and Little John literally
+ rolled out from under the bush to the sward. His eyes were full of tears
+ from much laughter which had well-nigh left him powerless to get on his
+ feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As soon as the astonished tanner saw who it was, he gave Little John a
+ mighty hug around the neck, and lifted him up on his feet, and the two
+ pounded each other on the back soundly, so glad were they to meet again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O, man, man!&rdquo; said Little John as soon as he had got his breath. &ldquo;Never
+ saw I so fine a sight in all my born days. You did knock him over like as
+ he were a ninepin!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And you do joy to see me thwacked about on the ribs?&rdquo; asked Robin with
+ some choler.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not that, master!&rdquo; said Little John. &ldquo;But &lsquo;tis the second time I
+ have had special tickets to a show from beneath the bushes, and I cannot
+ forbear my delight. Howsoever, take no shame unto yourself, for this same
+ Arthur-a-Bland is the best man at the quarter-staff in all
+ Nottinghamshire. It commonly takes two or three men to hold him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Unless it be Eric o&rsquo; Lincoln,&rdquo; said Arthur modestly; &ldquo;and I well know how
+ you paid him out at the Fair.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Say no more!&rdquo; said Robin springing to his feet; &ldquo;for well I know that I
+ have done good business this day, and a few bruises are easy payment for
+ the stout cudgel I am getting into the band. Your hand again, good
+ Arthur-a-Bland! Come! let us after the deer of which I spoiled your
+ stalking.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Righty gladly!&rdquo; quoth Arthur. &ldquo;Come, Cousin Little John! Away with vats
+ and tan-bark and vile-smelling cowhides! I&rsquo;ll follow you two in the sweet
+ open air to the very ends of earth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD MET SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Then answered him the gentle knight
+ With words both fair and thee:
+ &ldquo;God save thee, my good Robin,
+ And all thy company!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now you must know that some months passed by. The winter dragged its weary
+ length through Sherwood Forest, and Robin Hood and his merry men found
+ what cheer they could in the big crackling fires before their woodland
+ cave. Friar Tuck had built him a little hermitage not far away, where he
+ lived comfortably with his numerous dogs.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The winter, I say, reached an end at last, and the blessed spring came and
+ went. Another summer passed on apace, and still neither King nor Sheriff
+ nor Bishop could catch the outlaws, who, meanwhile, thrived and prospered
+ mightily in their outlawry. The band had been increased from time to time
+ by picked men such as Arthur-a-Bland and David of Doncaster&mdash;he who
+ was the jolliest cobbler for miles around&mdash;until it now numbered a
+ full sevenscore of men; seven companies each with its stout lieutenant
+ serving under Robin Hood. And still they relieved the purses of the rich,
+ and aided the poor, and feasted upon King&rsquo;s deer until the lank Sheriff of
+ Nottingham was well-nigh distracted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Indeed, that official would probable have lost his office entirely, had it
+ not been for the fact of the King&rsquo;s death. Henry passed away, as all Kings
+ will, in common with ordinary men, and Richard of the Lion Heart was
+ proclaimed as his successor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Robin and his men, after earnest debate, resolved to throw themselves
+ upon the mercy of the new King, swear allegiance, and ask to be organized
+ into Royal Foresters. So Will Scarlet and Will Stutely and Little John
+ were sent to London with this message, which they were first to entrust
+ privately to Maid Marian. But they soon returned with bad tidings. The new
+ King had formerly set forth upon a crusade to the Holy Land, and Prince
+ John, his brother, was impossible to deal with&mdash;being crafty, cruel
+ and treacherous. He was laying his hands upon all the property which could
+ easily be seized; among other estates, that of the Earl of Huntingdon,
+ Robin&rsquo;s old enemy and Marian&rsquo;s father, who had lately died.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marian herself was in sore straits. Not only had her estates been taken
+ away, and the maid been deprived of the former protection of the Queen,
+ but the evil Prince John had persecuted her with his attentions. He
+ thought that since the maid was defenseless he could carry her away to one
+ of his castles and none could gainsay him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ No word of this peril reached Robin&rsquo;s ears, although his men brought him
+ word of the seizure of the Huntingdon lands. Nathless he was greatly
+ alarmed for the safety of Maid Marian, and his heart cried out for her
+ strongly. She had been continually in his thoughts ever since the
+ memorable shooting at London town.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One morning in early autumn when the leaves were beginning to turn gold at
+ the edges, the chestnut-pods to swell with promise of fatness, and the
+ whole wide woodland was redolent with the ripe fragrance of fruit and
+ flower, Robin was walking along the edge of a small open glade busy with
+ his thoughts. The peace of the woods was upon him, despite his broodings
+ of Marian and he paid little heed to a group of does quietly feeding among
+ the trees at the far edge of the glade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But presently this sylvan picture was rudely disturbed for him. A stag,
+ wild and furious, dashed suddenly forth from among the trees, scattering
+ the does in swift alarm. The vicious beast eyed the green-and-gold tunic
+ of Robin, and, lowering it head, charged at him impetuously. So sudden was
+ its attack that Robin had no time to bend his bow. He sprang behind a tree
+ while he seized his weapon.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A moment later the wild stag crashed blindly into the tree-trunk with a
+ shock which sent the beast reeling backward, while the dislodged leaves
+ from the shivering tree fell in a small shower over Robin&rsquo;s head.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my halidom, I am glad it was not me you struck, my gentle friend!&rdquo;
+ quoth Robin, fixing an arrow upon the string. &ldquo;Sorry indeed would be any
+ one&rsquo;s plight who should encounter you in this black humor.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Scarcely had he spoken when he saw the stag veer about and fix its glances
+ rigidly on the bushes to the left side of the glade. These were parted by
+ a delicate hand, and through the opening appeared the slight figure of a
+ page. It was Maid Marian, come back again to the greenwood!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She advanced, unconscious alike of Robin&rsquo;s horrified gaze and the evil
+ fury of the stag.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She was directly in line with the animal, so Robin dared not launch an
+ arrow. Her own bow was slung across her shoulder, and her small sword
+ would be useless against the beast&rsquo;s charge. But now as she caught sight
+ of the stag she pursed her lips as though she would whistle to it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the love of God, dear lady!&rdquo; cried Robin; and then the words died in
+ his throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With a savage snort of rage, the beast rushed at this new and inviting
+ target&mdash;rushed so swiftly and from so short a distance that she could
+ not defend herself. She sprang to one side as it charged down upon her,
+ but a side blow from its antlers stretched her upon the ground. The stag
+ stopped, turned, and lowered its head preparing to gore her to death.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Already its cruel horns were coming straight for her, while she, white of
+ face and bewildered by the sudden attack, was struggling to rise and draw
+ her sword. A moment more and the end would come. But the sharp voice of
+ Robin and already spoken.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Down, Marian!&rdquo; he cried, and the girl instinctively obeyed, just as the
+ shaft from Robin&rsquo;s bow went whizzing close above her head and struck with
+ terrific force full in the center of the stag&rsquo;s forehead.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The beast stumbled in its charge and fell dead, across the body of the
+ fainting maid.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin was quickly by her side, and dragged the beast from off the girl.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Picking her up in his strong arms, he bore her swiftly to the side of one
+ of the many brooks which watered the vale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He dashed cool water upon her face, roughly almost, in his agony of fear
+ that the she was already dead, and he could have shed tears of joy to see
+ those poor, closed eyelids tremble. He redoubled his efforts; and
+ presently she gave a little gasp.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Where am I? What is&rsquo;t?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You are in Sherwood, dear maid, tho&rsquo;, i&rsquo; faith, we gave you a rude
+ reception!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ She opened her eyes and sat up. &ldquo;Methinks you have rescued me from sudden
+ danger, sir,&rdquo; she said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then she recognized Robin for the first time, and a radiant smile came
+ over her face, together with the rare blush of returned vitality, and her
+ head sank upon his shoulder with a little tremble and sigh of relief.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Oh, Robin, it is you!&rdquo; she murmured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, &lsquo;tis I. Thank heaven, I was at hand to do you service!&rdquo; Robin&rsquo;s
+ tones were deep and full of feeling. &ldquo;I swear, dear Marian, that I will
+ not let you from my care henceforth.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Not another word was spoken for some moments, while her head still rested
+ confidingly upon his breast. Then recollecting, he suddenly cried:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy, I make but a poor nurse! I have not even asked if any of your
+ bones were broken.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, not any,&rdquo; she answered springing lightly to her feet to show him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That foolish dizziness o&rsquo;ercame me for the nonce, but we can now proceed
+ on our way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I meant not that,&rdquo; he protested; &ldquo;why should we haste? First tell me
+ of the news in London town, and of yourself.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she told him how that the Prince had seized upon her father&rsquo;s lands,
+ and had promised to restore them to her if she would listen to his suit;
+ and how that she knew he meant her no good, for he was even then suing for
+ a Princess&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That is all, Robin,&rdquo; she ended simply; &ldquo;and that is why I donned again my
+ page&rsquo;s costume and came to you in the greenwood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin&rsquo;s brow had grown fiercely black at the recital of her wrong; and he
+ had laid stern hand upon the hilt of his sword. &ldquo;By this sword which Queen
+ Eleanor gave me!&rdquo; he said impetuously; &ldquo;and which was devoted to the
+ service of all womankind, I take oath that Prince John and all his armies
+ shall not harm you!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So that is how Maid Marian came to take up her abode in the greenwood,
+ where the whole band of yeomen welcomed her gladly and swore fealty; and
+ where the sweet lady of Allan-a-Dale made her fully at home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this was a day of deeds in Sherwood Forest, and we &lsquo;gan to tell you
+ another happening which led to later events.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While Robin and Marian were having their encounter with the stag, Little
+ John, Much the miller&rsquo;s son, and Will Scarlet had sallied forth to watch
+ the highroad leading to Barnesdale, if perchance they might find some
+ haughty knight or fat priest whose wallet needed lightening.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had scarcely watched the great road known as Watling Street which
+ runs from Dover in Kent to Chester town&mdash;for many minutes, when they
+ espied a knight riding by in a very forlorn and careless manner.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ All dreary was his semblance,
+ And little was his pride,
+ His one
+ foot in the stirrup stood,
+ His other waved beside.
+
+ His visor hung down o&rsquo;er his eyes,
+ He rode in single array,
+ A sorrier man than he was one
+ Rode never in summer&rsquo;s day.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Little John came up to the knight and bade him stay; for who can judge of
+ a man&rsquo;s wealth by his looks? The outlaw bent his knee in all courtesy, and
+ prayed him to accept the hospitality of the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My master expects you to dine with him, to-day,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and indeed
+ has been fasting while awaiting your coming, these three hours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is your master?&rdquo; asked the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None other than Robin Hood,&rdquo; replied Little John, laying his hand upon
+ the knight&rsquo;s bridle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing the other two outlaws approaching, the knight shrugged his
+ shoulders, and replied indifferently.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis clear that your invitation is too urgent to admit of refusal,&rdquo; quoth
+ he, &ldquo;and I go with you right willingly, my friends. My purpose was to have
+ dined to-day at Blyth or Doncaster; but nothing matters greatly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So in the same lackadaisical fashion which had marked all his actions that
+ day, the knight suffered his horse to be led to the rendezvous of the band
+ in the greenwood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Marian had not yet had time to change her page&rsquo;s attire, when the three
+ escorts of the knight hove in sight. She recognized their captive as Sir
+ Richard of the Lea, whom she had often seen at court; and fearing lest he
+ might recognize her, she would have fled. But Robin asked her, with a
+ twinkle, if she would not like to play page that day, and she in roguish
+ mood consented to do so.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Welcome, Sir Knight,&rdquo; said Robin, courteously. &ldquo;You are come in good
+ time, for we were just preparing to sit down to meat.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save and thank you, good master Robin,&rdquo; returned the knight; &ldquo;and all
+ your company. It likes me well to break the fast with you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So while his horse was cared for, the knight laid aside his own heavy
+ gear, and laved his face and hands, and sat down with Robin and all his
+ men to a most plentiful repast of venison, swans, pheasants, various small
+ birds, cake and ale. And Marian stood behind Robin and filled his cup and
+ that of the guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After eating right heartily of the good cheer, the knight brightened up
+ greatly and vowed that he had not enjoyed so good a dinner for nigh three
+ weeks. He also said that if ever Robin and his fellows should come to his
+ domains, he would strive to set them down to as good a dinner on his own
+ behalf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this was not exactly the sort of payment which Robin had expected to
+ receive. He thanked the knight, therefore, in set phrase, but reminded him
+ that a yeoman like himself might hardly offer such a dinner to a knight as
+ a gift of charity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no money, Master Robin,&rdquo; answered the knight frankly. &ldquo;I have so
+ little of the world&rsquo;s goods, in sooth, that I should be ashamed to offer
+ you the whole of it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Money, however little, always jingles merrily in our pockets,&rdquo; said
+ Robin, smiling. &ldquo;Pray you tell me what you deem a little sum.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have of my own ten silver pennies,&rdquo; said the knight. &ldquo;Here they are,
+ and I wish they were ten times as many.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He handed Little John his pouch, and Robin nodded carelessly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What say you to the total, Little John?&rdquo; he asked as though in jest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis true enough, as the worthy knight hath said,&rdquo; responded the big
+ fellow gravely emptying the contents on his cloak.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin signed to Marian, who filled a bumper of wine for himself and his
+ guest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pledge me, Sir Knight!&rdquo; cried the merry outlaw; &ldquo;and pledge me heartily,
+ for these sorry times. I see that your armor is bent and that your clothes
+ are torn. Yet methinks I saw you at court, once upon a day, and in more
+ prosperous guise. Tell me now, were you a yeoman and made a knight by
+ force? Or, have you been a bad steward to yourself, and wasted your
+ property in lawsuits and the like? Be not bashful with us. We shall not
+ betray your secrets.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am a Saxon knight in my own right; and I have always lived a sober and
+ quiet life,&rdquo; the sorrowful guest replied. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis true you have seen me at
+ court, mayhap, for I was an excited witness of your shooting before King
+ Harry&mdash;God rest his bones! My name is Sir Richard of the Lea, and I
+ dwell in a castle, not a league from one of the gates of Nottingham, which
+ has belonged to my father, and his father, and his father&rsquo;s father before
+ him. Within two or three years ago my neighbors might have told you that a
+ matter of four hundred pounds one way or the other was as naught to me.
+ But now I have only these ten pennies of silver, and my wife and son.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In what manner have you lost your riches?&rdquo; asked Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Through folly and kindness,&rdquo; said the knight, sighing. &ldquo;I went with King
+ Richard upon a crusade, from which I am but lately returned, in time to
+ find my son&mdash;a goodly youth&mdash;grown up. He was but twenty, yet he
+ had achieved a squire&rsquo;s training and could play prettily in jousts and
+ tournaments and other knightly games. But about this time he had the ill
+ luck to push his sport too far, and did accidentally kill a knight in the
+ open lists. To save the boy, I had to sell my lands and mortgage my
+ ancestral castle; and this not being enough, in the end I have had to
+ borrow money, at a ruinous interest, from my lord of Hereford.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A most worthy Bishop,&rdquo; said Robin ironically. &ldquo;What is the sum of your
+ debt?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Four hundred pounds,&rdquo; said Sir Richard, &ldquo;and the Bishop swears he will
+ foreclose the mortgage if they are not paid promptly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you any friends who would become surety for you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not one. If good King Richard were here, the tale might be otherwise.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fill your goblet again, Sir Knight,&rdquo; said Robin; and he turned to whisper
+ a word in Marian&rsquo;s ear. She nodded and drew Little John and Will Scarlet
+ aside and talked earnestly with them, in a low tone.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here is health and prosperity to you, gallant Robin,&rdquo; said Sir Richard,
+ tilting his goblet. &ldquo;I hope I may pay your cheer more worthily, the next
+ time I ride by.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will Scarlet and Little John had meanwhile fallen in with Marian&rsquo;s idea,
+ for they consulted the other outlaws, who nodded their heads. Thereupon
+ Little John and Will Scarlet went into the cave near by and presently
+ returned bearing a bag of gold. This they counted out before the
+ astonished knight; and there were four times one hundred gold pieces in
+ it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take this loan from us, Sir Knight, and pay your debt to the Bishop,&rdquo;
+ then said Robin. &ldquo;Nay, no thanks; you are but exchanging creditors. Mayhap
+ we shall not be so hard upon you as the Christian Bishop; yet, again we
+ may be harder. Who can tell?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There were actual tears in Sir Richard&rsquo;s eyes, as he essayed to thank the
+ foresters. But at this juncture, Much, the miller&rsquo;s son, came from the
+ cave dragging a bale of cloth. &ldquo;The knight should have a suit worthy of
+ his rank, master&mdash;think you not so?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Measure him twenty ells of it,&rdquo; ordered Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give him a good horse, also,&rdquo; whispered Marian. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis a gift which will
+ come back four-fold, for this is a worthy man. I know him well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the horse was given, also, and Robin bade Arthur-a-Bland ride with the
+ knight as far as his castle, as esquire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight was sorrowful no longer; yet he could hardly voice his thanks
+ through his broken utterance. And having spent the night in rest, after
+ listening to Allan-a-Dale&rsquo;s singing, he mounted his new steed the
+ following morning an altogether different man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save you, comrades, and keep you all!&rdquo; said he, with deep feeling in
+ his tones; &ldquo;and give me a grateful heart!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We shall wait for you twelve months from to-day, here in this place,&rdquo;
+ said Robin, shaking him by the hand; &ldquo;and then you will repay us the loan,
+ if you have been prospered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall return it to you within the year, upon my honor as Sir Richard of
+ the Lea. And for all time, pray count on me as a steadfast friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying the knight and his esquire rode down the forest glade till they
+ were lost to view.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE BISHOP WAS DINED
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O what is the matter?&rdquo; then said the Bishop,
+ &ldquo;Or for whom do you make this a-do?
+ Or why do you kill the King&rsquo;s venison,
+ When your company is so few?&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;We are shepherds,&rdquo; quoth bold Robin Hood,
+ &ldquo;And we keep sheep all the year,
+ And we are disposed to be merrie this day,
+ And to kill of the King&rsquo;s fat deer.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Not many days after Sir Richard of the Lea came to Sherwood Forest, word
+ reached Robin Hood&rsquo;s ears that my lord Bishop of Hereford would be riding
+ that way betimes on that morning. &lsquo;Twas Arthur-a-Bland, the knight&rsquo;s
+ quondam esquire, who brought the tidings, and Robin&rsquo;s face brightened as
+ he heard it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, by our Lady!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;I have long desired to entertain my lord in
+ the greenwood, and this is too fair a chance to let slip. Come, my men,
+ kill me a venison; kill me a good fat deer. The Bishop of Hereford is to
+ dine with me today, and he shall pay well for his cheer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Shall we dress it here, as usual?&rdquo; asked Much, the miller&rsquo;s son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, we play a droll game on the churchman. We will dress it by the
+ highway side, and watch for the Bishop narrowly, lest he should ride some
+ other way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin gave his orders, and the main body of his men dispersed to
+ different parts of the forest, under Will Stutely and Little John, to
+ watch other roads; while Robin Hood himself took six of his men, including
+ Will Scarlet, and Much, and posted himself in full view of the main road.
+ This little company appeared funny enough, I assure you, for they had
+ disguised themselves as shepherds. Robin had an old wool cap, with a tail
+ to it, hanging over his ear, and a shock of hair stood straight up through
+ a hole in the top. Besides there was so much dirt on his face that you
+ would never have known him. An old tattered cloak over his hunter&rsquo;s garb
+ completed his make-up. The others were no less ragged and unkempt, even
+ the foppish Will Scarlet being so badly run down at the heel that the
+ court ladies would hardly have had speech with him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They quickly provided themselves with a deer and made great preparations
+ to cook it over a small fire, when a little dust was seen blowing along
+ the highway, and out of it came the portly Bishop cantering along with ten
+ men-at-arms at his heels. As soon as he saw the fancied shepherds he
+ spurred up his horse, and came straight toward them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are ye, fellows, who make so free with the King&rsquo;s deer?&rdquo; he asked
+ sharply.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We are shepherds,&rdquo; answered Robin Hood, pulling at his forelock
+ awkwardly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Heaven have mercy! Ye seem a sorry lot of shepherds. But who gave you
+ leave to cease eating mutton?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis one of our feast days, lording, and we were disposed to be merry
+ this day, and make free with a deer, out here where they are so many.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By me faith, the King shall hear of this. Who killed yon beast?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give me first your name, excellence, so that I may speak where &lsquo;tis
+ fitting,&rdquo; replied Robin stubbornly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis my lord Bishop of Hereford, fellow!&rdquo; interposed one of the guards
+ fiercely. &ldquo;See that you keep a civil tongue in your head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If &lsquo;tis a churchman,&rdquo; retorted Will Scarlet, &ldquo;he would do better to mind
+ his own flocks rather than concern himself with ours.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ye are saucy fellows, in sooth,&rdquo; cried the Bishop, &ldquo;and we will see if
+ your heads will pay for your manners. Come! quit your stolen roast and
+ march along with me, for you shall be brought before the Sheriff of
+ Nottingham forthwith.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pardon, excellence!&rdquo; said Robin, dropping on his knees. &ldquo;Pardon, I pray
+ you. It becomes not your lordship&rsquo;s coat to take so many lives away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, I&rsquo;ll pardon you!&rdquo; said the Bishop. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll pardon you, when I see
+ you hanged! Seize upon them, my men!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Robin had already sprung away with his back against a tree. And from
+ underneath his ragged cloak he drew his trusty horn and winded the
+ piercing notes which were wont to summon the band.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop no sooner saw this action than he knew his man, and that there
+ was a trap set; and being an arrant coward, he wheeled his horse sharply
+ and would have made off down the road; but his own men, spurred on the
+ charge, blocked his way. At almost the same instant the bushes round about
+ seemed literally to become alive with outlaws. Little John&rsquo;s men came from
+ one side and Will Stutely&rsquo;s from the other. In less time than it takes to
+ tell it, the worthy Bishop found himself a prisoner, and began to crave
+ mercy from the men he had so lately been ready to sentence.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O pardon, O pardon,&rdquo; said the Bishop,
+ &ldquo;O pardon, I you pray.
+ For if I had known it had been you,
+ I&rsquo;d have gone some other way.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I owe you no pardon,&rdquo; retorted Robin, &ldquo;but I will e&rsquo;en treat you better
+ than you would have treated me. Come, make haste, and go along with me. I
+ have already planned that you shall dine with me this day.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the unwilling prelate was dragged away, cheek by jowl, with the
+ half-cooked venison upon the back of his own horse; and Robin and his band
+ took charge of the whole company and led them through the forest glades
+ till they came to an open space near Barnesdale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Here they rested, and Robin gave the Bishop a seat full courteously. Much
+ the miller&rsquo;s son fell to roasting the deer afresh, while another and
+ fatter beast was set to frizzle on the other side of the fire. Presently
+ the appetizing odor of the cooking reached the Bishop&rsquo;s nostrils, and he
+ sniffed it eagerly. The morning&rsquo;s ride had made him hungry; and he was
+ nothing loath when they bade him come to the dinner. Robin gave him the
+ best place beside himself, and the Bishop prepared to fall to.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, my lord, craving your pardon, but we are accustomed to have grace
+ before meat,&rdquo; said Robin decorously. &ldquo;And as our own chaplain is not with
+ us to-day, will you be good enough to say it for us?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop reddened, but pronounced grace in the Latin tongue hastily, and
+ then settled himself to make the best of his lot. Red wines and ale were
+ brought forth and poured out, each man having a horn tankard from which to
+ drink.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Laughter bubbled among the diners, and the Bishop caught himself smiling
+ at more than one jest. But who, in sooth, could resist a freshly broiled
+ venison streak eaten out in the open air to the tune of jest and good
+ fellowship? Stutely filled the Bishop&rsquo;s beaker with wine each time he
+ emptied it, and the Bishop got mellower and mellower as the afternoon
+ shades lengthened on toward sunset. Then the approaching dusk warned him
+ of his position.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I wish, mine host,&rdquo; quoth he gravely to Robin, who had soberly drunk but
+ one cup of ale, &ldquo;that you would now call a reckoning. &lsquo;Tis late, and I
+ fear the cost of this entertainment may be more than my poor purse can
+ stand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For he bethought himself of his friend, the Sheriff&rsquo;s former experience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Verily, your lordship,&rdquo; said Robin, scratching his head, &ldquo;I have enjoyed
+ your company so much, that I scarce know how to charge for it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lend me your purse, my lord,&rdquo; said Little John, interposing, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll
+ give you the reckoning by and by.&rdquo; The Bishop shuddered. He had collected
+ Sir Richard&rsquo;s debt only that morning, and was even then carrying it home.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have but a few silver pennies of my own,&rdquo; he whined; &ldquo;and as for the
+ gold in my saddle-bags, &lsquo;tis for the church. Ye surely would not levy upon
+ the church, good friends.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But Little John was already gone to the saddle-bags, and returning he laid
+ the Bishop&rsquo;s cloak upon the ground, and poured out of the portmantua a
+ matter of four hundred glittering gold pieces. &lsquo;Twas the identical money
+ which Robin had lent Sir Richard a short while before!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said Robin, as though an idea had but just then come to him. &ldquo;The
+ church is always willing to aid in charity. And seeing this goodly sum
+ reminds me that I have a friend who is indebted to a churchman for this
+ exact amount. Now we shall charge you nothing on our own account; but
+ suffer us to make use of this in aiding my good friend.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, nay,&rdquo; began the Bishop with a wry face, &ldquo;this is requiting me ill
+ indeed. Was this not the King&rsquo;s meat, after all, that we feasted upon?
+ Furthermore, I am a poor man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Poor forsooth!&rdquo; answered Robin in scorn. &ldquo;You are the Bishop of Hereford,
+ and does not the whole countryside speak of your oppression? Who does not
+ know of your cruelty to the poor and ignorant&mdash;you who should use
+ your great office to aid them, instead of oppress? Have you not been
+ guilty of far greater robbery than this, even though less open? Of myself,
+ and how you have pursued me, I say nothing; nor of your unjust enmity
+ against my father. But on account of those you have despoiled and
+ oppressed, I take this money, and will use it far more worthily than you
+ would. God be my witness in this! There is an end of the matter, unless
+ you will lead us in a song or dance to show that your body had a better
+ spirit than your mind. Come, strike up the harp, Allan!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Neither the one nor the other will I do,&rdquo; snarled the Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, then we must help you,&rdquo; said Little John; and he and
+ Arthur-a-Bland seized the fat struggling churchman and commenced to hop up
+ and down. The Bishop being shorter must perforce accompany them in their
+ gyrations; while the whole company sat and rolled about over the ground,
+ and roared to see my lord of Hereford&rsquo;s queer capers. At last he sank in a
+ heap, fuddled with wine and quite exhausted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Little John picked him up as though he were a log of wood and carrying him
+ to his horse, set him astride facing the animal&rsquo;s tail; and thus fastened
+ him, leading the animal toward the highroad and, starting the Bishop, more
+ dead than alive, toward Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XVIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE BISHOP WENT OUTLAW-HUNTING
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The Bishop he came to the old woman&rsquo;s house,
+ And called with furious mood,
+ &ldquo;Come let me soon see, and bring unto me
+ That traitor, Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ The easy success with which they had got the better of the good Bishop led
+ Robin to be a little careless. He thought that his guest was too great a
+ coward to venture back into the greenwood for many a long day; and so
+ after lying quiet for one day, the outlaw ventured boldly upon the
+ highway, the morning of the second. But he had gone only half a mile when,
+ turning a sharp bend in the road, he plunged full upon the prelate
+ himself.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ My lord of Hereford had been so deeply smitten in his pride, that he had
+ lost no time in summoning a considerable body of the Sheriff&rsquo;s men,
+ offering to double the reward if Robin Hood could be come upon. This
+ company was now at his heels, and after the first shock of mutual
+ surprise, the Bishop gave an exultant shout and spurred upon the outlaw.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was too late for Robin to retreat by the way he had come, but quick as
+ a flash he sprang to one side of the road, dodged under some bushes, and
+ disappeared so suddenly that his pursuers thought he had truly been
+ swallowed up by magic.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;After him!&rdquo; yelled the Bishop; &ldquo;some of you beat up the woods around him,
+ while the rest of us will keep on the main road and head him off on the
+ other side!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For, truth to tell, the Bishop did not care to trust his bones away from
+ the highroad.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ About a mile away, on the other side of this neck of woods, wherein Robin
+ had been trapped, was a little tumbledown cottage. &lsquo;Twas where the widow
+ lived, whose three sons had been rescued. Robin remembered the cottage and
+ saw his one chance to escape.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Doubling in and out among the underbrush and heather with the agility of a
+ hare, he soon came out of the wood in the rear of the cottage, and thrust
+ his head through a tiny window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The widow, who had been at her spinning wheel, rose up with a cry of
+ alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Quiet, good mother! &lsquo;Tis I, Robin Hood. Where are your three sons?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They should be with you, Robin. Well do you know that. Do they not owe
+ their lives to you?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that be so, I come to seek payment of the debt,&rdquo; said Robin in a
+ breath. &ldquo;The Bishop is on my heels with many of his men.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll cheat the Bishop and all!&rdquo; cried the woman quickly. &ldquo;Here, Robin,
+ change your raiment with me, and we will see if my lord knows an old woman
+ when he sees her.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; said Robin. &ldquo;Pass your gray cloak out the window, and also your
+ spindle and twine; and I will give you my green mantle and everything else
+ down to my bow and arrows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ While they were talking, Robin had been nimbly changing clothes with the
+ old woman, through the window, and in a jiffy he stood forth complete,
+ even to the spindle and twine.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently up dashed the Bishop and his men, and, at sight of the cottage
+ and the old woman, gave pause. The crone was hobbling along with
+ difficulty, leaning heavily upon a gnarled stick and bearing the spindle
+ on her other arm. She would have gone by the Bishop&rsquo;s company, while
+ muttering to herself, but the Bishop ordered one of his men to question
+ her. The soldier laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mind your business!&rdquo; croaked the woman, &ldquo;or I&rsquo;ll curse ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, come, my good woman,&rdquo; said the soldier, who really was afraid of
+ her curses. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not molest you. But my lord Bishop of Hereford wants to
+ know if you have seen aught of the outlaw, Robin Hood?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And why shouldn&rsquo;t I see him?&rdquo; she whined. &ldquo;Where&rsquo;s the King or law to
+ prevent good Robin from coming to see me and bring me food and raiment?
+ That&rsquo;s more than my lord Bishop will do, I warrant ye!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Peace, woman!&rdquo; said the Bishop harshly. &ldquo;We want none of your opinions.
+ But we&rsquo;ll take you to Barnesdale and burn you for a witch if you do not
+ instantly tell us when you last saw Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Mercy, good my lord!&rdquo; chattered the crone, falling on her knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Robin is there in my cottage now, but you&rsquo;ll never take him alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see about that,&rdquo; cried the Bishop triumphantly. &ldquo;Enter the cottage,
+ my men. Fire it, if need be. But I&rsquo;ll give a purse of gold pieces, above
+ the reward, to the man who captures the outlaw alive.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old woman, being released, went on her way slowly. But it might have
+ been noticed that the farther she got away from the company and the nearer
+ to the edge of the woods, the swifter and straighter grew her pace. Once
+ inside the shelter of the forest she broke into a run of surprising
+ swiftness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gadzooks!&rdquo; exclaimed Little John who presently spied her. &ldquo;Who comes
+ here? Never saw I witch or woman run so fast. Methinks I&rsquo;ll send an arrow
+ close over her head to see which it is.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;O hold your hand! hold your hand!&rdquo; panted the supposed woman. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis I,
+ Robin Hood. Summon the yeomen and return with me speedily. We have still
+ another score to settle with my lord of Hereford.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ When Little John could catch his breath from laughing, he winded his horn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, mistress Robin,&rdquo; quoth he, grinning. &ldquo;Lead on! We&rsquo;ll be close to
+ your heels.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile, back at the widow&rsquo;s cottage the Bishop was growing more furious
+ every moment. For all his bold words, he dared not fire the house, and the
+ sturdy door had thus far resisted all his men&rsquo;s efforts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Break it down! Break it down!&rdquo; he shouted, &ldquo;and let me soon see who will
+ fetch out that traitor, Robin Hood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the door crashed in and the men stood guard on the threshold. But
+ not one dared enter for fear a sharp arrow should meet him halfway.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here he is!&rdquo; cried one keen-eyed fellow, peering in. &ldquo;I see him in the
+ corner by the cupboard. Shall we slay him with our pikes?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; said the Bishop, &ldquo;take him alive if you can. We&rsquo;ll make the biggest
+ public hanging of this that the shire ever beheld.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the joy of the Bishop over his capture was short lived. Down the road
+ came striding the shabby figure of the old woman who had helped him set
+ the trap; and very wrathy was she when she saw that the cottage door had
+ been battered in.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Stand by, you lazy rascals!&rdquo; she called to the soldiers. &ldquo;May all the
+ devils catch ye for hurting an old woman&rsquo;s hut. Stand by, I say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold your tongue!&rdquo; ordered the Bishop. &ldquo;These are my men and carrying out
+ my orders.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God-mercy!&rdquo; swore the beldame harshly. &ldquo;Things have come to a pretty pass
+ when our homes may be treated like common gaols. Couldn&rsquo;t all your men
+ catch one poor forester without this ado? Come! clear out, you and your
+ robber, on the instant, or I&rsquo;ll curse every mother&rsquo;s son of ye, eating and
+ drinking and sleeping!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seize on the hag!&rdquo; shouted the Bishop, as soon as he could get in a word.
+ &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll see about a witch&rsquo;s cursing. Back to town she shall go, alongside
+ of Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so fast, your worship!&rdquo; she retorted, clapping her hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And at the signal a goodly array of greenwood men sprang forth from all
+ sides of the cottage, with bows drawn back threateningly. The Bishop saw
+ that his men were trapped again, for they dared not stir. Nathless, he
+ determined to make a fight for it.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If one of you but budge an inch toward me, you rascals,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;it
+ shall sound the death of your master, Robin Hood! My men have him here
+ under their pikes, and I shall command them to kill him without mercy.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Faith, I should like to see the Robin you have caught,&rdquo; said a clear
+ voice from under the widow&rsquo;s cape; and the outlaw chief stood forth with
+ bared head, smilingly. &ldquo;Here am I, my lord, in no wise imperiled by your
+ men&rsquo;s fierce pikes. So let us see whom you have been guarding so well.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The old woman who, in the garb of Robin Hood, had been lying quiet in the
+ cottage through all the uproar, jumped up nimbly at this. In the bald
+ absurdity of her disguise she came to the doorway and bowed to the Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Give you good-den, my lord Bishop,&rdquo; she piped in a shrill voice; &ldquo;and
+ what does your Grace at my humble door? Do you come to bless me and give
+ me alms?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, that does he,&rdquo; answered Robin. &ldquo;We shall see if his saddle-bags
+ contain enough to pay you for that battered door.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by all the saints&mdash;&rdquo; began the Bishop.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Take care; they are all watching you,&rdquo; interrupted Robin; &ldquo;so name them
+ not upon your unchurchly lips. But I will trouble you to hand over that
+ purse of gold you had saved to pay for my head.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll see you hanged first!&rdquo; raged the Bishop, stating no more than what
+ would have been so, if he could do the ordering of things. &ldquo;Have at them,
+ my men, and hew them down in their tracks!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; retorted Robin. &ldquo;See how we have you at our mercy.&rdquo; And aiming a
+ sudden shaft he shot so close to the Bishop&rsquo;s head that it carried away
+ both his hat and the skull-cap which he always wore, leaving him quite
+ bald.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The prelate turned as white as his shiny head and clutched wildly at his
+ ears. He thought himself dead almost.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Help! Murder!&rdquo; he gasped. &ldquo;Do not shoot again! Here&rsquo;s your purse of
+ gold!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And without waiting for further parley he fairly bolted down the road.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His men being left leaderless had nothing for it but to retreat after him,
+ which they did in sullen order, covered by the bows of the yeomen. And
+ thus ended the Bishop of Hereford&rsquo;s great outlaw-hunt in the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XIX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW THE SHERIFF HELD ANOTHER SHOOTING MATCH
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;To tell the truth, I&rsquo;m well informed
+ Yon match it is a wile;
+ The Sheriff, I know, devises this
+ Us archers to beguile.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now the Sheriff was so greatly troubled in heart over the growing power of
+ Robin Hood, that he did a very foolish thing. He went to London town to
+ lay his troubles before the King and get another force of troops to cope
+ with the outlaws. King Richard was not yet returned from the Holy Land,
+ but Prince John heard him with scorn.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pooh!&rdquo; said he, shrugging his shoulders. &ldquo;What have I to do with all
+ this? Art thou not sheriff for me? The law is in force to take thy course
+ of them that injure thee. Go, get thee gone, and by thyself devise some
+ tricking game to trap these rebels; and never let me see thy face at court
+ again until thou hast a better tale to tell.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So away went the Sheriff in sorrier pass than ever, and cudgeled his
+ brain, on the way home, for some plan of action.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ His daughter met him on his return and saw at once that he had been on a
+ poor mission. She was minded to upbraid him when she learned what he had
+ told the Prince. But the words of the latter started her to thinking
+ afresh.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have it!&rdquo; she exclaimed at length. &ldquo;Why should we not hold another
+ shooting-match? &lsquo;Tis Fair year, as you know, and another tourney will be
+ expected. Now we will proclaim a general amnesty, as did King Harry
+ himself, and say that the field is open and unmolested to all comers.
+ Belike Robin Hood&rsquo;s men will be tempted to twang the bow, and then&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And then,&rdquo; said the Sheriff jumping up with alacrity, &ldquo;we shall see on
+ which side of the gate they stop over-night!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Sheriff lost no time in proclaiming a tourney, to be held that same
+ Fall at the Fair. It was open to all comers, said the proclamation, and
+ none should be molested in their going and coming. Furthermore, an arrow
+ with a golden head and shaft of silver-white should be given to the
+ winner, who would be heralded abroad as the finest archer in all the North
+ Countree. Also, many rich prizes were to be given to other clever archers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ These tidings came in due course to Robin Hood, under the greenwood tree,
+ and fired his impetuous spirit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, prepare ye, my merry men all,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and we&rsquo;ll go to the Fair
+ and take some part in this sport.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ With that stepped forth the merry cobbler, David of Doncaster.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;be ruled by me and stir not from the greenwood. To
+ tell the truth, I&rsquo;m well informed yon match is naught but a trap. I know
+ the Sheriff has devised it to beguile us archers into some treachery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;That word savors of the coward,&rdquo; replied Robin, &ldquo;and pleases me not. Let
+ come what will, I&rsquo;ll try my skill at that same archery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then up spoke Little John and said: &ldquo;Come, listen to me how it shall be
+ that we will not be discovered.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Our mantles all of Lincoln-green
+ Behind us we will leave;
+ We&rsquo;ll dress us all so several,
+ They shall not us perceive.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;One shall wear white, another red,
+ One yellow, another blue;
+ Thus in disguise to the exercise
+ We&rsquo;ll go, whate&rsquo;er ensue.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ This advice met with general favor from the adventurous fellows, and they
+ lost no time in putting it into practice. Maid Marian and Mistress Dale,
+ assisted by Friar Tuck, prepared some vari-colored costumes, and &lsquo;gainst
+ the Fair day had fitted out the sevenscore men till you would never have
+ taken them for other than villagers decked for the holiday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And forth went they from the greenwood, with hearts all firm and stout,
+ resolved to meet the Sheriff&rsquo;s men and have a merry bout. Along the
+ highway they fell in with many other bold fellows from the countryside,
+ going with their ruddy-cheeked lasses toward the wide-open gates of
+ Nottingham.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So in through the gates trooped the whole gay company, Robin&rsquo;s men
+ behaving as awkwardly and laughing and talking as noisily as the rest;
+ while the Sheriff&rsquo;s scowling men-at-arms stood round about and sought to
+ find one who looked like a forester, but without avail.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The herald now set forth the terms of the contest, as on former occasions,
+ and the shooting presently began. Robin had chosen five of his men to
+ shoot with him, and the rest were to mingle with the crowd and also watch
+ the gates. These five were Little John, Will Scarlet, Will Stutely, Much,
+ and Allan-a-Dale&rsquo;.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The other competitors made a brave showing on the first round, especially
+ Gilbert of the White Hand, who was present and never shot better. The
+ contest later narrowed down between Gilbert and Robin. But at the first
+ lead, when the butts were struck so truly by various well known archers,
+ the Sheriff was in doubt whether to feel glad or sorry. He was glad to see
+ such skill, but sorry that the outlaws were not in it.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Some said, &ldquo;If Robin Hood were here,
+ And all his men to boot,
+ Sure none of them could pass these men,
+ So bravely do they shoot.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+&ldquo;Aye,&rdquo; quoth the Sheriff, and scratched his head,
+
+ &ldquo;I thought he would be here;
+ I thought he would, but tho&rsquo; he&rsquo;s bold,
+ He durst not now appear.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ This word was privately brought to Robin by David of Doncaster, and the
+ saying vexed him sorely. But he bit his lip in silence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ere long,&rdquo; he thought to himself, &ldquo;we shall see whether Robin Hood be
+ here or not!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meantime the shooting had been going forward, and Robin&rsquo;s men had done so
+ well that the air was filled with shouts.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ One cried, &ldquo;Blue jacket!&rdquo; another cried, &ldquo;Brown!&rdquo;
+ And a third cried, &ldquo;Brave Yellow!&rdquo;
+ But the fourth man said, &ldquo;Yon man in red
+ In this place has no fellow.&rdquo;
+
+ For that was Robin Hood himself,
+ For he was clothed in red,
+ At every shot the prize he got,
+ For he was both sure and dead.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Thus went the second round of the shooting, and thus the third and last,
+ till even Gilbert of the White Hand was fairly beaten. During all this
+ shooting, Robin exchanged no word with his men, each treating the other as
+ a perfect stranger. Nathless, such great shooting could not pass without
+ revealing the archers.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff thought he discovered, in the winner of the golden arrow, the
+ person of Robin Hood without peradventure. So he sent word privately for
+ his men-at-arms to close round the group. But Robin&rsquo;s men also got wind of
+ the plan.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ To keep up appearances, the Sheriff summoned the crowd to form in a
+ circle; and after as much delay as possible the arrow was presented. The
+ delay gave time enough for the soldiers to close in. As Robin received his
+ prize, bowed awkwardly, and turned away, the Sheriff, letting his zeal get
+ the better of his discretion, grasped him about the neck and called upon
+ his men to arrest the traitor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the moment the Sheriff touched Robin, he received such a buffet on the
+ side of his head that he let go instantly and fell back several paces.
+ Turning to see who had struck him, he recognized Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ah, rascal Greenleaf, I have you now!&rdquo; he exclaimed springing at him.
+ Just then, however, he met a new check.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This is from another of your devoted servants!&rdquo; said a voice which he
+ knew to be that of Much the miller&rsquo;s son; and &ldquo;Thwack!&rdquo; went his open palm
+ upon the Sheriff&rsquo;s cheek sending that worthy rolling over and over upon
+ the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ By this time the conflict had become general, but the Sheriff&rsquo;s men
+ suffered the disadvantage of being hampered by the crowd of innocent
+ on-lookers, whom they could not tell from the outlaws and so dared not
+ attack; while the other outlaws in the rear fell upon them and put them in
+ confusion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ For a moment a fierce rain of blows ensued; then the clear bugle-note from
+ Robin ordered a retreat. The two warders at the nearest gate tried to
+ close it, but were shot dead in their tracks. David of Doncaster threw a
+ third soldier into the moat; and out through the gate went the foresters
+ in good order, keeping a respectful distance between themselves and the
+ advancing soldiery, by means of their well-directed shafts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the fight was not to go easily this day, for the soldiery, smarting
+ from their recent discomfiture at the widow&rsquo;s cottage, and knowing that
+ the eyes of the whole shire were upon them, fought well, and pressed
+ closely after the retreating outlaws. More than one ugly wound was given
+ and received. No less than five of the Sheriff&rsquo;s men were killed outright,
+ and a dozen others injured; while four of Robin&rsquo;s men were bleeding from
+ severe flesh cuts.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then Little John, who had fought by the side of his chief, suddenly fell
+ forward with a slight moan. An arrow had pierced his knee. Robin seized
+ the big fellow with almost superhuman strength.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Up he took him on his back,
+ And bare him well a mile;
+ Many a time he laid him down,
+ And shot another while.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile Little John grew weaker and closed his eyes; at last he sank to
+ the ground, and feebly motioned Robin to let him lie. &ldquo;Master Robin,&rdquo; said
+ he, &ldquo;have I not served you well, ever since we met upon the bridge?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Truer servant never man had,&rdquo; answered Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then if ever you loved me, and for the sake of that service, draw your
+ bright brown sword and strike off my head; never let me fall alive into
+ the hand of the Sheriff of Nottingham.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not for all the gold in England would I do either of the things you
+ suggest.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God forbid!&rdquo; cried Arthur-a-Bland, hurrying to the rescue. And packing
+ his wounded kinsman upon his own broad shoulders, he soon brought him
+ within the shelter of the forest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once there, the Sheriff&rsquo;s men did not follow; and Robin caused litters of
+ boughs to be made for Little John and the other four wounded men. Quickly
+ were they carried through the wood until the hermitage of Friar Tuck was
+ reached, where their wounds were dressed. Little John&rsquo;s hurt was
+ pronounced to be the most serious of any, but he was assured that in two
+ or three weeks&rsquo; time he could get about again; whereat the active giant
+ groaned mightily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening consternation came upon the hearts of the band. A careful
+ roll-call was taken to see it all the yeomen had escaped, when it was
+ found that Will Stutely was missing, and Maid Marian also was nowhere to
+ be found. Robin was seized with dread. He knew that Marian had gone to the
+ Fair, but felt that she would hardly come to grief. Her absence, however,
+ portended some danger, and he feared that it was connected with Will
+ Stutely. The Sheriff would hang him speedily and without mercy, if he were
+ captured.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The rest of the band shared their leader&rsquo;s uneasiness, though they said no
+ word. They knew that if Will were captured, the battle must be fought over
+ again the next day, and Will must be saved at any cost. But no man
+ flinched from the prospect.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That evening, while the Sheriff and his wife and daughter sat at meat in
+ the Mansion House, the Sheriff boasted of how he would make an example of
+ the captured outlaw; for Stutely had indeed fallen into his hands.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;He shall be strung high,&rdquo; he said, in a loud voice; &ldquo;and none shall dare
+ lift a finger. I now have Robin Hood&rsquo;s men on the run, and we shall soon
+ see who is master in this shire. I am only sorry that we let them have the
+ golden arrow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ As he spoke a missive sped through a window and fell clattering upon his
+ plate, causing him to spring back in alarm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was the golden arrow, and on its feathered shaft was sewed a little
+ note which read:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;This from one who will take no gifts from liars; and who henceforth will
+ show no mercy. Look well to yourself. R.H.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XX
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW WILL STUTELY WAS RESCUED
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Forth of the greenwood are they gone,
+ Yea, all courageously,
+ Resolving to bring Stutely home,
+ Or every man to die.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ The next day dawned bright and sunny. The whole face of nature seemed gay
+ as if in despite of the tragedy which was soon to take place in the walls
+ of Nottingham town. The gates were not opened upon this day, for the
+ Sheriff was determined to carry through the hanging of Will Stutely
+ undisturbed. No man, therefore, was to be allowed entrance from without,
+ all that morning and until after the fatal hour of noon, when Will&rsquo;s soul
+ was to be launched into eternity.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Early in the day Robin had drawn his men to a point, as near as he dared,
+ in the wood where he could watch the road leading to the East gate. He
+ himself was clad in a bright scarlet dress, while his men, a goodly array,
+ wore their suits of sober Lincoln green. They were armed with broadswords,
+ and &lsquo;each man carried his bow and a full quiver of new arrows,
+ straightened and sharpened cunningly by Middle, the tinker. Over their
+ greenwood dress, each man had thrown a rough mantle, making him look not
+ unlike a friar.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I hold it good, comrades,&rdquo; then said Robin Hood, &ldquo;to tarry here in hiding
+ for a season while we sent some one forth to obtain tidings. For, in
+ sooth, &lsquo;twill work no good to march upon the gates if they be closed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Look, master,&rdquo; quoth one of the widow&rsquo;s sons. &ldquo;There comes a palmer along
+ the road from the town. Belike he can tell us how the land ties, and if
+ Stutely be really in jeopardy. Shall I go out and engage him in speech?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go,&rdquo; answered Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Stout Will went out from the band while the others hid themselves and
+ waited. When he had come close to the palmer, who seemed a slight,
+ youngish man, he doffed his hat full courteously and said,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave your pardon, holy man, but can you tell me tidings of Nottingham
+ town? Do they intend to put an outlaw to death this day?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yea,&rdquo; answered the palmer sadly. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis true enough, sorry be the day. I
+ have passed the very spot where the gallows-tree is going up. &lsquo;Tis out
+ upon the roadway near the Sheriff&rsquo;s castle. One, Will Stutely, is to be
+ hung thereon at noon, and I could not bear the sight, so came away.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The palmer spoke in a muffled voice; and as his hood was pulled well over
+ his head, Stout Will could not discern what manner of man he was. Over his
+ shoulder he carried a long staff, with the fashion of a little cross at
+ one end; and he had sandaled feet like any monk. Stout Will notice idly
+ that the feet were very small and white, but gave no second thought to the
+ matter.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who will shrive the poor wretch, if you have come away from him?&rdquo; he
+ asked reproachfully.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The question seemed to put a new idea into the palmer&rsquo;s head. He turned so
+ quickly that he almost dropped his hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Do you think that I should undertake this holy office?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Saint Peter and the Blessed Virgin, I do indeed! Else, who will do it?
+ The Bishop and all his whining clerks may be there, but not one would say
+ a prayer for his soul.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I am only a poor palmer,&rdquo; the other began hesitatingly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nathless, your prayers are as good as any and better than some,&rdquo; replied
+ Will.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Right gladly would I go,&rdquo; then said the palmer; &ldquo;but I fear me I cannot
+ get into the city. You may know that the gates are fast locked, for this
+ morning, to all who would come in, although they let any pass out who
+ will.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come with me,&rdquo; said Stout Will, &ldquo;and my master will see that you pass
+ through the gates.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the palmer pulled his cloak still closer about him and was brought
+ before Robin Hood, to whom he told all he knew of the situation. He ended
+ with,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If I may make so bold, I would not try to enter the city from this gate,
+ as &lsquo;tis closely guarded since yesterday. But on the far side, no attack is
+ looked for.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My thanks, gentle palmer,&rdquo; quoth Robin, &ldquo;your suggestion is good, and we
+ will deploy to the gate upon the far side.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the men marched silently but quickly until they were near to the
+ western gate. Then Arthur-a-Bland asked leave to go ahead as a scout, and
+ quietly made his way to a point under the tower by the gate. The moat was
+ dry on this side, as these were times of peace, and Arthur was further
+ favored by a stout ivy vine which grew out from an upper window.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Swinging himself up boldly by means of this friendly vine, he crept
+ through the window and in a moment more had sprung upon the warder from
+ behind and gripped him hard about the throat. The warder had no chance to
+ utter the slightest sound, and soon lay bound and gagged upon the floor;
+ while Arthur-a-Bland slipped himself into his uniform and got hold of his
+ keys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &lsquo;Twas the work of but a few moments more to open the gates, let down the
+ bridge, and admit the rest of the band; and they lot inside the town so
+ quietly that none knew of their coming. Fortune also favored them in the
+ fact that just at this moment the prison doors had been opened for the
+ march of the condemned man, and every soldier and idle lout in the
+ market-lace had trooped thither to see him pass along.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Presently out came Will Stutely with firm step but dejected air. He looked
+ eagerly to the right hand and to the left, but saw none of the band. And
+ though more than one curious face betrayed friendship in it, he knew there
+ could be no aid from such source.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Will&rsquo;s hands were tied behind his back. He marched between rows of
+ soldiery, and the Sheriff and the Bishop brought up the rear on horses,
+ looking mightily puffed up and important over the whole proceeding. He
+ would show these sturdy rebels&mdash;would the Sheriff&mdash;whose word
+ was law! He knew that the gates were tightly fastened; and further he
+ believed that the outlaws would hardly venture again within the walls,
+ even if the gates were open. And as he looked around at the fivescore
+ archers and pikemen who lined the way to the gallows, he smiled with grim
+ satisfaction.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Seeing that no help was nigh, the prisoner paused at the foot of the
+ scaffold and spoke in a firm tone to the Sheriff.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My lord Sheriff,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;since I must needs die, grant me one boon;
+ for my noble master ne&rsquo;er yet had a man that was hanged on a tree:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ Give me a sword all in my hand,
+ And let me be unbound,
+ And with thee and thy men will I fight
+ Till I lie dead on the ground.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ But the Sheriff would by no means listen to his request; but swore that he
+ should be hanged a shameful death, and not die by the sword valiantly.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;O no, no, no,&rdquo; the Sheriff said,
+ &ldquo;Thou shalt on the gallows die,
+ Aye, and so shall they master too,
+ If ever it in me lie.&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;O dastard coward!&rdquo; Stutely cried,
+ &ldquo;Faint-hearted peasant slave!
+ If ever my master do thee meet,
+ Thou shalt thy payment have!&rdquo;
+
+ &ldquo;My noble master thee doth scorn,
+ And all thy cowardly crew,
+ Such silly imps unable are
+ Bold Robin to subdue.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ This brave speech was not calculated to soothe the Sheriff. &ldquo;To the
+ gallows with him!&rdquo; he roared, giving a sign to the hangman; and Stutely
+ was pushed into the rude cart which was to bear him under the gallows
+ until his neck was leashed. Then the cart would be drawn roughly away and
+ the unhappy man would swing out over the tail of it into another world.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But at this moment came a slight interruption. A boyish-looking palmer
+ stepped forth, and said:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your Excellency, let me at least shrive this poor wretch&rsquo;s soul ere it be
+ hurled into eternity.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No!&rdquo; shouted the Sheriff, &ldquo;let him die a dog&rsquo;s death!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then his damnation will rest upon you,&rdquo; said the monk firmly. &ldquo;You, my
+ lord Bishop, cannot stand by and see this wrong done.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop hesitated. Like the Sheriff, he wanted no delay; but the people
+ were beginning to mutter among themselves and move about uneasily. He said
+ a few words to the Sheriff, and the latter nodded to the monk
+ ungraciously.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Perform your duty, Sir Priest,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and be quick about it!&rdquo; Then
+ turning to his soldiers. &ldquo;Watch this palmer narrowly,&rdquo; he commanded.
+ &ldquo;Belike he is in league with those rascally outlaws.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But the palmer paid no heed to his last words. He began to tell his beads
+ quickly, and to speak in a low voice to the condemned man. But he did not
+ touch his bonds.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then came another stir in the crowd, and one came pushing through the
+ press of people and soldiery to come near to the scaffold.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I pray you, Will, before you die, take leave of all your friends!&rdquo; cried
+ out the well-known voice of Much, the miller&rsquo;s son.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the word the palmer stepped back suddenly and looked to one side. The
+ Sheriff also knew the speaker.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Seize him!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis another of the crew. He is the villain cook
+ who once did rob me of my silver plate. We&rsquo;ll make a double hanging of
+ this!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so fast, good master Sheriff,&rdquo; retorted Much. &ldquo;First catch your man
+ and then hang him. But meanwhile I would like to borrow my friend of you
+ awhile.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with one stroke of his keen hunting-knife he cut the bonds which
+ fastened the prisoner&rsquo;s arms, and Stutely leaped lightly from the cart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Treason!&rdquo; screamed the Sheriff, getting black with rage. &ldquo;Catch the
+ varlets!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he spurred his horse fiercely forward, and rising in his
+ stirrups brought down his sword with might and main at Much&rsquo;s head. But
+ his former cook dodged nimbly underneath the horse and came up on the
+ other side, while the weapon whistled harmlessly in the air.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Sir Sheriff!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I must e&rsquo;en borrow your sword for the
+ friend I have borrowed.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Thereupon he snatched the weapon deftly from the Sheriff&rsquo;s hand.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, Stutely!&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;the Sheriff has lent you his own sword. Back to
+ back with me, man, and we&rsquo;ll teach these knaves a trick or two!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the soldiers had recovered from their momentary surprise and had
+ flung themselves into the fray. A clear bugle-note had also sounded the
+ same which the soldiers had learned to dread. &lsquo;Twas the rallying note of
+ the green wood men.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Cloth yard shafts began to hurtle through the air, and Robin and his men
+ cast aside their cloaks and sprang forward crying:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lockesley! Lockesley! a rescue! a rescue!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On the instant, a terrible scene of hand to hand fighting followed. The
+ Sheriff&rsquo;s men, though once more taken by surprise, were determined to sell
+ this rescue dearly. They packed in closely and stubbornly about the
+ condemned man and Much and the palmer, and it was only by desperate rushes
+ that the foresters made an opening in the square. Ugly cuts and bruises
+ were exchanged freely; and lucky was the man who escaped with only these.
+ Many of the onlookers, who had long hated the Sheriff and felt sympathy
+ for Robin&rsquo;s men, also plunged into the conflict&mdash;although they could
+ not well keep out of it, in sooth!&mdash;and aided the rescuers no little.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last with a mighty onrush, Robin cleaved a way through the press to the
+ scaffold itself, and not a second too soon; for two men with pikes had
+ leaped upon the cart, and were in the act of thrusting down upon the
+ palmer and Will Stutely. A mighty upward blow from Robin&rsquo;s good blade sent
+ the pike flying from the hand of one, while a well-directed arrow from the
+ outskirt pierced the other fellow&rsquo;s throat.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save you, master!&rdquo; cried Will Stutely joyfully. &ldquo;I had begun to fear
+ that I would never see your face again.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A rescue!&rdquo; shouted the outlaws afresh, and the soldiery became
+ fainthearted and &lsquo;gan to give back. But the field was not yet won, for
+ they retreated in close order toward the East gate, resolved to hem the
+ attackers within the city walls. Here again, however, they were in error,
+ since the outlaws did not go out by their nearest gate. They made a sally
+ in that direction, in order to mislead the soldiery, then abruptly turned
+ and headed for the West gate, which was still guarded by Arthur-a-Bland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff&rsquo;s men raised an exultant shout at this, thinking they had the
+ enemy trapped. Down they charged after them, but the outlaws made good
+ their lead, and soon got through the gate and over the bridge which had
+ been let down by Arthur-a-Bland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Close upon their heels came the soldiers&mdash;so close, that Arthur had
+ no time to close the gate again or raise the bridge. So he threw away his
+ key and fell in with the yeomen, who now began their retreat up the long
+ hill to the woods.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ On this side the town, the road leading to the forest was long and almost
+ unprotected. The greenwood men were therefore in some distress, for the
+ archers shot at them from loop-holes in the walls, and the pikemen were
+ reinforced by a company of mounted men from the castle. But the outlaws
+ retreated stubbornly and now and again turned to hold their pursuers at
+ bay by a volley of arrows. Stutely was in their midst, fighting with the
+ energy of two; and the little palmer was there also, but took no part save
+ to keep close to Robin&rsquo;s side and mutter silent words as though in prayer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin put his horn to his lips to sound a rally, when a flying arrow from
+ the enemy pierced his hand. The palmer gave a little cry and sprang
+ forward. The Sheriff, who followed close with the men on horseback, also
+ saw the wound and gave a great huzza.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! you will shoot no more bows for a season, master outlaw!&rdquo; he shouted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You lie!&rdquo; retorted Robin fiercely, wrenching the shaft from his hand
+ despite the streaming blood; &ldquo;I have saved one shot for you all this day.
+ Here take it!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And he fitted the same arrow, which had wounded him, upon the string of
+ his bow and let it fly toward the Sheriff&rsquo;s head. The Sheriff fell forward
+ upon his horse in mortal terror, but not so quickly as to escape unhurt.
+ The sharp point laid bare a deep gash upon his scalp and must certainly
+ have killed him if it had come closer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The fall of the Sheriff discomfited his followers for the moment, and
+ Robin&rsquo;s men took this chance to speed on up the hill. The palmer had
+ whipped out a small white handkerchief and tried to staunch Robin&rsquo;s wound
+ as they went. At sight of the palmer&rsquo;s hand, Robin turned with a start,
+ and pushed back the other&rsquo;s hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Marian!&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;you here!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was indeed Maid Marian, who had helped save Will, and been in the
+ stress of battle from the first. Now she hung her head as though caught in
+ wrong.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I had to come, Robin,&rdquo; she said simply, &ldquo;and I knew you would not let me
+ come, else.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Their further talk was interrupted by an exclamation from Will Scarlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By the saints, we are trapped!&rdquo; he said, and pointed to the top of the
+ hill, toward which they were pressing.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ There from out a gray castle poured a troop of men, armed with pikes and
+ axes, who shouted and came running down upon them. At the same instant,
+ the Sheriff&rsquo;s men also renewed the pursuit.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Alas!&rdquo; cried poor Marian, &ldquo;we are undone! There is no way of escape!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Courage, dear heart!&rdquo; said Robin, drawing her close to him. But his own
+ spirit sank as he looked about for some outlet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then&mdash;oh, joyful sight!&mdash;he recognized among the foremost of
+ those coming from the castle the once doleful knight, Sir Richard of the
+ Lea. He was smiling now, and greatly excited.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A Hood! a Hood!&rdquo; he cried; &ldquo;a rescue! a rescue!&rdquo; Never were there more
+ welcome sights and sounds than these. With a great cheer the outlaws raced
+ up the hill to meet their new friends; and soon the whole force had gained
+ the shelter of the castle. Bang! went the bridge as it swung back, with
+ great clanking of chains. Clash! went one great door upon the other, as
+ they shut in the outlaw band, and shut out the Sheriff, who dashed up at
+ the head of his men, his bandaged face streaked with blood and inflamed
+ with rage.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXI
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA REPAID HIS DEBT
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ The proud Sheriff loud &lsquo;gan cry
+ And said, &ldquo;Thou traitor knight,
+ Thou keepest here the king&rsquo;s enemy
+ Against the laws and right.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open the gate!&rdquo; shouted the Sheriff hoarsely, to the sentinel upon the
+ walls. &ldquo;Open, I say, in the king&rsquo;s name!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Why who are you to come thus brawling upon my premises?&rdquo; asked a haughty
+ voice; and Sir Richard himself stepped forth upon the turret.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You know me well, traitor knight!&rdquo; said the Sheriff, &ldquo;now give up into my
+ hands the enemy of the King whom you have sheltered against the laws and
+ right.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Fair and softly, sir,&rdquo; quoth the knight smoothly. &ldquo;I well avow that I
+ have done certain deeds this day. But I have done them upon mine own land,
+ which you now trespass upon; and I shall answer only to the King&mdash;whom
+ God preserve!&mdash;for my actions.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Thou soft-spoken villain!&rdquo; said the Sheriff, still in a towering passion.
+ &ldquo;I, also, serve the King; and if these outlaws are not given up to me at
+ once, I shall lay siege to the castle and burn it with fire.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;First show me your warrants,&rdquo; said Sir Richard curtly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;My word is enough! Am I not Sheriff of Nottingham?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If you are, in sooth,&rdquo; retorted the knight, &ldquo;you should know that you
+ have no authority within my lands unless you bear the King&rsquo;s order. In the
+ meantime, go mend your manners, lording.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And Sir Richard snapped his fingers and disappeared from the walls. The
+ Sheriff, after lingering a few moments longer in hope of further parley,
+ was forced to withdraw, swearing fiercely.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The King&rsquo;s order!&rdquo; muttered he. &ldquo;That shall I have without delay, as well
+ as this upstart knight&rsquo;s estates; for King Richard is lately returned, I
+ hear, from the Holy Land.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Meanwhile the knight had gone back to Robin Hood, and the two men greeted
+ each other right gladly. &ldquo;Well met, bold Robin!&rdquo; cried he, taking him in
+ his arms. &ldquo;Well met, indeed! The Lord has lately prospered me, and I was
+ minded this day to ride forth and repay my debt to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;And so you have,&rdquo; answered Robin gaily.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, &lsquo;twas nothing&mdash;this small service!&rdquo; said the knight. &ldquo;I meant
+ the moneys coming to you.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They have all been repaid,&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;my lord of Hereford himself gave
+ them to me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The exact sum?&rdquo; asked the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The exact sum,&rdquo; answered Robin, winking solemnly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Richard smiled, but said no more at the time. Robin was made to rest
+ until dinner should be served. Meanwhile a leech bound up his hand with
+ ointment, promising him that he should soon have its use again. Some
+ halfscore others of the yeomen had been hurt in the fight, but luckily
+ none of grave moment. They were all bandaged and made happy by bumpers of
+ ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At dinner Sir Richard presented Robin to his wife and son. The lady was
+ stately and gracious, and made much of Marian, whom she had known as a
+ little girl and who was now clothed more seemly for a dinner than in
+ monkish garments. The young esquire was a goodly youth and bade fair to
+ make as stout a knight as his father.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The feast was a joyous event. There were two long tables, and two hundred
+ men sat down at them, and ate and drank and afterward sang songs. An
+ hundred and forty of these men wore Lincoln green and called Robin Hood
+ their chief. Never, I ween, had there been a more gallant company at table
+ in Lea Castle!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ That night the foresters tarried within the friendly walls, and the next
+ day took leave; though Sir Richard protested that they should have made a
+ longer stay. And he took Robin aside to his strong room and pressed him
+ again to take the four hundred golden pounds. But his guest was firm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Keep the money, for it is your own,&rdquo; said Robin; &ldquo;I have but made the
+ Bishop return that which he extorted unjustly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Sir Richard thanked him in a few earnest words, and asked him and all his
+ men to visit the armory, before they departed. And therein they saw,
+ placed apart, an hundred and forty stout yew bows of cunning make, with
+ fine waxen silk strings; and an hundred and forty sheaves of arrows. Every
+ shaft was a just ell long, set with peacock&rsquo;s feathers, and notched with
+ silver. And Sir Richard&rsquo;s fair lady came forward and with her own hands
+ gave each yeoman a bow and a sheaf.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth, these are poor presents we have made you, good Robin Hood,&rdquo;
+ said Sir Richard; &ldquo;but they carry with them a thousand times their weight
+ in gratitude.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff made good his threat to inform the King. Forth rode he to
+ London town upon the week following, his scalp wound having healed
+ sufficiently to permit him to travel. This time he did not seek out Prince
+ John, but asked audience with King Richard of the Lion Heart himself. His
+ Majesty had but lately returned from the crusades, and was just then
+ looking into the state of his kingdom. So the Sheriff found ready
+ audience.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then to him the Sheriff spoke at length concerning Robin Hood; how that
+ for many months the outlaws had defied the King, and slain the King&rsquo;s
+ deer; how Robin had gathered about him the best archers in all the
+ countryside; and, finally, how the traitorous knight Sir Richard of the
+ Lea had rescued the band when capture seemed certain, and refused to
+ deliver them up to justice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King heard him through with attention and quoth he:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Meseems I have heard of this same Robin Hood, and his men, and also seen
+ somewhat of their prowess. Did not these same outlaws shoot in a royal
+ Tourney at Finsbury field?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;They did, Your Majesty, under a royal amnesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In this speech the Sheriff erred, for the King asked quickly,
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;How came they last to the Fair at Nottingham&mdash;by stealth?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Yes, Your Majesty.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Did you forbid them to come?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;No, Your Majesty. That is&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Speak out!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;For the good of the shire,&rdquo; began the Sheriff again, falteringly, &ldquo;we did
+ proclaim an amnesty; but &lsquo;twas because these men had proved a menace&mdash;&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by my halidom!&rdquo; quoth the King, while his brow grew black. &ldquo;Such
+ treachery would be unknown in the camp of the Saracen; and yet we call
+ ourselves a Christian people!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff kept silence through very fear and shame; then the King began
+ speech again:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nathless, my lord Sheriff, we promise to look into this matter. Those
+ outlaws must be taught that there is but one King in England, and that he
+ stands for the law.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So the Sheriff was dismissed, with very mixed feelings, and went his way
+ home to Nottingham town. A fortnight later the King began to make good his
+ word, by riding with a small party of knights to Lea Castle. Sir Richard
+ was advised of the cavalcade&rsquo;s approach, and quickly recognized his royal
+ master in the tall knight who rode in advance. Hasting to open wide his
+ castle gates he went forth to meet the King and fell on one knee and
+ kissed his stirrup. For Sir Richard, also, had been with the King to the
+ Holy Land, and they had gone on many adventurous quests together.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King bade him rise, and dismounted from his own horse to greet him as
+ a brother in arms; and arm-in-arm they went into the castle, while bugles
+ and trumpets sounded forth joyous welcome in honor of the great occasion.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the King had rested and supped, he turned upon the knight and with
+ grave face inquired:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is this I hear about your castle&rsquo;s becoming a nest and harbor for
+ outlaws?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sir Richard of the Lea, divining that the Sheriff had been at the
+ King&rsquo;s ear with his story, made a clean breast of all he knew; how that
+ the outlaws had befriended him in sore need&mdash;as they had befriended
+ others&mdash;and how that he had given them only knightly protection in
+ return.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The King liked the story well, for his own soul was one of chivalry. And
+ he asked other questions about Robin Hood, and heard of the ancient wrong
+ done his father before him, and of Robin&rsquo;s own enemies, and of his manner
+ of living.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;In sooth,&rdquo; cried King Richard, springing up, &ldquo;I must see this bold fellow
+ for myself! An you will entertain my little company, and be ready to sally
+ forth, upon the second day, in quest of me if need were, I shall e&rsquo;en fare
+ alone into the greenwood to seek an adventure with him.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But of this adventure you shall be told in the next tale; for I have
+ already shown you how Sir Richard of the Lea repaid his debt, with
+ interest.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0022" id="link2HCH0022">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW KING RICHARD CAME TO SHERWOOD FOREST
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ King Richard hearing of the pranks
+ Of Robin Hood and his men,
+ He much admired and more desired
+ To see both him and them.
+
+ Then Robin takes a can of ale:
+ &ldquo;Come let us now begin;
+ And every man shall have his can;
+ Here&rsquo;s a health unto the King!&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Friar Tuck had nursed Little John&rsquo;s wounded knee so skilfully that it was
+ now healed. In sooth, the last part of the nursing depended more upon
+ strength than skill; for it consisted chiefly of holding down the patient,
+ by main force, to his cot. Little John had felt so well that he had
+ insisted upon getting up before the wound was healed; and he would have
+ done so, if the friar had not piled some holy books upon his legs and sat
+ upon his stomach.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Under this vigorous treatment Little John was constrained to lie quiet
+ until the friar gave him leave to get up. At last he had this leave, and
+ he and the friar went forth to join the rest of the band, who were right
+ glad to see them, you may be sure. They sat around a big fire, for &lsquo;twas a
+ chilly evening, and they feasted and made merry, in great content.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A cold rain set in, later, but the friar wended his way back, nathless, to
+ his little hermitage. There he made himself a cheerful blaze, and changed
+ his dripping robe, and had sat himself down, with a sigh of satisfaction,
+ before a tankard of hot mulled wine and a pasty, when suddenly a voice was
+ heard on the outside, demanding admission. His kennel of dogs set up
+ furious uproar, on the instant, by way of proving the fact of a stranger&rsquo;s
+ presence.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now by Saint Peter!&rdquo; growled the friar, &ldquo;who comes here at this unseemly
+ hour? Does he take this for a hostelry? Move on, friend, else my mulled
+ wine will get cold!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So saying he put the tankard to his lips, when a thundering rap sounded
+ upon the door-panel, making it to quiver, and causing Tuck almost to drop
+ his tankard; while an angry voice shouted, &ldquo;Ho! Within there! Open, I
+ say!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go your way in peace!&rdquo; roared back the friar; &ldquo;I can do nothing for you.
+ &lsquo;Tis but a few miles to Gamewell, if you know the road.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But I do not know the road, and if I did I would not budge another foot.
+ &lsquo;Tis wet without and dry within. So open, without further parley!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A murrain seize you for disturbing a holy man in his prayers!&rdquo; muttered
+ Tuck savagely. Nathless, he was fain to unbar the door in order to keep it
+ from being battered down. Then lighting a torch at his fire and whistling
+ for one of his dogs, he strode forth to see who his visitor might be.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The figure of a tall knight clad in a black coat of mail, with plumed
+ helmet, stood before him. By his side stood his horse, also caparisoned in
+ rich armor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have you no supper, brother?&rdquo; asked the Black Knight curtly. &ldquo;I must beg
+ of you a bed and a bit of roof, for this night, and fain would refresh my
+ body ere I sleep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no room that even your steed would deign to accept, Sir Knight;
+ and naught save a crust of bread and pitcher of water.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo; faith, I can smell better fare than that, brother, and must e&rsquo;en force
+ my company upon you, though I shall recompense it for gold in the name of
+ the church. As for my horse, let him but be blanketed and put on the
+ sheltered side of the house.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And without further parley the knight boldly strode past Tuck and his dog
+ and entered the hermitage. Something about his masterful air pleased Tuck,
+ in spite of his churlishness.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sit you down, Sir Knight,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and I will fasten up up your steed,
+ and find him somewhat in the shape of grain. Half, also, of my bed and
+ board is yours, this night; but we shall see later who is the better man,
+ and is to give the orders!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;With all my soul!&rdquo; said the knight, laughing. &ldquo;I can pay my keeping in
+ blows or gold as you prefer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The friar presently returned and drew up a small table near the fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now, Sir Knight,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;put off your sword and helm and such other
+ war-gear as it pleases you, and help me lay this table, for I am passing
+ hungry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight did as he was told, and put aside the visor which had hid his
+ face. He was a bronzed and bearded man with blue eyes, and hair shot with
+ gold, haughty but handsome withal.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then once again the priest sat him down to his pasty and mulled wine,
+ right hopefully. He spoke his grace with some haste, and was surprised to
+ hear his guest respond fittingly in the Latin tongue. Then they attacked
+ the wine and pasty valiantly, and the Black Knight made good his word of
+ being in need of refreshment. Tuck looked ruefully at the rapidly
+ disappearing food, but came to grudge it not, by reason of the stories
+ with which his guest enlivened the meal. The wine and warmth of the room
+ had cheered them both, and they were soon laughing uproariously as the
+ best of comrades in the world. The Black Knight, it seemed, had traveled
+ everywhere. He had been on crusades, had fought the courteous Saladin, had
+ been in prison, and often in peril. But now he spoke of it lightly, and
+ laughed it off, and made himself so friendly that Friar Tuck was like to
+ choke with merriment. So passed the time till late; and the two fell
+ asleep together, one on each side of the table which had been cleared to
+ the platters.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the morning Friar Tuck awoke disposed to be surly, but was speedily
+ mollified by the sight of the Black Knight, who had already risen gay as a
+ lark, washed his face and hands, and was now stirring a hot gruel over the
+ fire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my faith, I make a sorry host!&rdquo; cried Tuck springing to his feet. And
+ later as they sat at breakfast, he added, &ldquo;I want not your gold, of which
+ you spoke last night; but instead I will do what I can to speed you on
+ your way whenever you wish to depart.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then tell me,&rdquo; said the knight, &ldquo;how I may find Robin Hood the outlaw;
+ for I have a message to him from the King. All day yesterday I sought him,
+ but found him not.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Friar Tuck lifted up his hands in holy horror. &ldquo;I am a lover of peace, Sir
+ Knight, and do not consort with Robin&rsquo;s bold fellows.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I think no harm of Master Hood,&rdquo; said the knight; &ldquo;but much I yearn
+ to have speed with him in mine own person.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;If that be all, mayhap I can guide you to his haunts,&rdquo; said Tuck, who
+ foresaw in this knight a possible gold-bag for Robin. &ldquo;In sooth, I could
+ not well live in these woods without hearing somewhat of the outlaws; but
+ matters of religion are my chief joy and occupation.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I will go with you, brother,&rdquo; said the Black Knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So without more ado they went their way into the forest, the knight riding
+ upon his charger, and Tuck pacing along demurely by his side.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The day had dawned clear and bright, and now with the sun a good three
+ hours high a sweet autumn fragrance was in the air. The wind had just that
+ touch of coolness in it which sets the hunter&rsquo;s blood to tingling; and
+ every creature of nature seemed bounding with joyous life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight sniffed the fresh air in delight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By my halidom!&rdquo; quoth he; &ldquo;but the good greenwood is the best place to
+ live in, after all! What court or capital can equal this, for full-blooded
+ men?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;None of this earth,&rdquo; replied Tuck smilingly. And once more his heart
+ warmed toward the courteous stranger.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They had not proceeded more than three or four miles along the way from
+ Fountain Abbey to Barnesdale, when of a sudden the bushes just ahead of
+ them parted and a well-knit man with curling brown hair stepped into the
+ road and laid his hand upon the knight&rsquo;s bridle.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ It was Robin Hood. He had seen Friar Tuck, a little way back, and shrewdly
+ suspected his plan. Tuck, however, feigned not to know him at all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Hold!&rdquo; cried Robin; &ldquo;I am in charge of the highway this day, and must
+ exact an accounting from all passersby.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who is it bids me hold?&rdquo; asked the knight quietly. &ldquo;I am not i&rsquo; the habit
+ of yielding to one man.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then here are others to keep me company,&rdquo; said Robin clapping his hands.
+ And instantly a half-score other stalwart fellows came out of the bushes
+ and stood beside him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We be yeomen of the forest, Sir Knight,&rdquo; continued Robin, &ldquo;and live under
+ the greenwood tree. We have no means of support&mdash;thanks to the
+ tyranny of our over-lords&mdash;other than the aid which fat churchmen and
+ goodly knights like yourselves can give. And as ye have churches and
+ rents, both, and gold in great plenty, we beseech ye for Saint Charity to
+ give us some of your spending.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am but a poor monk, good sir!&rdquo; said Friar Tuck in a whining voice, &ldquo;and
+ am on my way to the shrine of Saint Dunstan, if your worshipfulness will
+ permit.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Tarry a space with us,&rdquo; answered Robin, biting back a smile, &ldquo;and we will
+ speed you on your way.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Black Knight now spoke again. &ldquo;But we are messengers of the King,&rdquo;
+ quoth he; &ldquo;His Majesty himself tarries near here and would have speech
+ with Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;God save the King!&rdquo; said Robin, doffing his cap loyally; &ldquo;and all that
+ wish him well! I am Robin Hood, but I say cursed be the man who denies our
+ liege King&rsquo;s sovereignty!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Have a care!&rdquo; said the knight, &ldquo;or you shall curse yourself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, not so,&rdquo; replied Robin curtly; &ldquo;the King has no more devoted subject
+ than I. Nor have I despoiled aught of his save, mayhap, a few deer for my
+ hunger. My chief war is against the clergy and barons of the land who bear
+ down upon the poor. But I am glad,&rdquo; he continued, &ldquo;that I have met you
+ here; and before we end you shall be my friend and taste of our greenwood
+ cheer.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;But what is the reckoning?&rdquo; asked the knight. &ldquo;For I am told that some of
+ your feasts are costly.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay,&rdquo; responded Robin waving his hands, &ldquo;you are from the King. Nathless&mdash;how
+ much money is in your purse?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have no more than forty gold pieces, seeing that I have lain a
+ fortnight at Nottingham with the King, and have spent some goodly amounts
+ upon other lordings,&rdquo; replied the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin took the forty pounds and gravely counted it. One half he gave to
+ his men and bade them drink the King&rsquo;s health with it. The other half he
+ handed back to the knight.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir,&rdquo; said he courteously, &ldquo;have this for your spending. If you lie with
+ kings and lordings overmuch, you are like to need it.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Gramercy!&rdquo; replied the other smiling. &ldquo;And now lead on to your greenwood
+ hostelry.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So Robin went on the one side of the knight&rsquo;s steed, and Friar Tuck on the
+ other, and the men went before and behind till they came to the open glade
+ before the caves of Barnesdale. Then Robin drew forth his bugle and winded
+ the three signal blasts of the band. Soon there came a company of yeomen
+ with its leader, and another, and a third, and a fourth, till there were
+ sevenscore yeomen in sight. All were dressed in new livery of Lincoln
+ green, and carried new bows in their hands and bright short swords at
+ their belts. And every man bent his knee to Robin Hood ere taking his
+ place before the board, which was already set.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ A handsome dark-haired page stood at Robin&rsquo;s right hand to pour his wine
+ and that of the knightly guest; while the knight marveled much at all he
+ saw, and said within himself:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;These men of Robin Hood&rsquo;s give him more obedience than my fellows give to
+ me.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the signal from Robin the dinner began. There was venison and fowl and
+ fish and wheaten cake and ale and red wine in great plenty, and &lsquo;twas a
+ goodly sight to see the smiles upon the hungry yeomen&rsquo;s faces.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ First they listened to an unctuous grace from Friar Tuck, and then Robin
+ lifted high a tankard of ale.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come, let us now begin,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and every man shall have his can. In
+ honor of our guest who comes with royal word, here&rsquo;s a health unto the
+ King!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The guest responded heartily to this toast, and round about the board it
+ went, the men cheering noisily for King Richard!
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After the feast was over, Robin turned to his guest and said, &ldquo;Now you
+ shall see what life we lead, so that you may report faithfully, for good
+ or bad, unto the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So at a signal from him, the men rose up and smartly bent their bows for
+ practice, while the knight was greatly astonished at the smallness of the
+ their targets. A wand was set up, far down the glade, and thereon was
+ balanced a garland of roses. Whosoever failed to speed his shaft through
+ the garland, without knocking it off the wand, was to submit to a buffet
+ from the hand of Friar Tuck.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ho, ho!&rdquo; cried the knight, as his late traveling companion rose up and
+ bared his brawny arm ready for service; &ldquo;so you, my friend, are Friar
+ Tuck!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I have not gainsaid it,&rdquo; replied Tuck growling at having betrayed
+ himself. &ldquo;But chastisement is a rule of the church, and I am seeking the
+ good of these stray sheep.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The knight said no more, though his eyes twinkled; and the shooting began.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ David of Doncaster shot first and landed safely through the rose garland.
+ Then came Allan-a-Dale and Little John and Stutely and Scarlet and many of
+ the rest, while the knight held his breath from very amazement. Each
+ fellow shot truly through the garland, until Middle the tinker&mdash;not
+ to be outdone&mdash;stepped up for a trial. But alas! while he made a fair
+ shot for a townsman, the arrow never came within a hand-breath of the
+ outer rim of the garland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Come hither, fellow,&rdquo; said Little John coaxingly. &ldquo;The priest would bless
+ thee with his open hand.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then because Middle made a wry face, as though he had already received the
+ buffet, and loitered in his steps, Arthur-a-Bland and Will Stutely seized
+ him by the arms and stood him before the friar. Tuck&rsquo;s big arm flashed
+ through the air&mdash;&ldquo;whoof!&rdquo; and stopped suddenly against the tinker&rsquo;s
+ ear; while Middle himself went rolling over and over on the grass. He was
+ stopped by a small bush, and up he sat, thrusting his head through it,
+ rubbing his ear and blinking up at the sky as though the stars had fallen
+ and struck him. The yeomen roared with merriment, and as for the knight,
+ he laughed till the tears came out of his blue eyes and rolled down his
+ face.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After Middle&rsquo;s mishap, others of the band seemed to lose their balance,
+ and fared in the same fashion. The garland would topple over in a most
+ impish way at every breath, although the arrows went through it. So Middle
+ &lsquo;gan to feel better when he saw this one and that one tumbling on the
+ sward.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last came Robin&rsquo;s turn. He shot carefully, but as ill luck would have
+ it the shaft was ill-feathered and swerved sidewise so that it missed the
+ garland by full three fingers. Then a great roar went up from the whole
+ company; for &lsquo;twas rare that they saw their leader miss his mark. Robin
+ flung his bow upon the ground from very vexation.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;A murrain take it!&rdquo; quoth he. &ldquo;The arrow was sadly winged. I felt the
+ poor feather upon it as it left my fingers!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then suddenly seizing his bow again, he sped three shafts as fast as he
+ could sent them, and every one went clean through the garland.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;By Saint George!&rdquo; muttered the knight. &ldquo;Never before saw I such shooting
+ in all Christendom!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The band cheered heartily at these last shots; but Will Scarlet came up
+ gravely to Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Pretty shooting, master!&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;but &lsquo;twill not save you from paying
+ for the bad arrow. So walk up and take your medicine!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, that may not be!&rdquo; protested Robin. &ldquo;The good friar belongs to my
+ company and has no authority to lift hands against me. But you, Sir
+ Knight, stand as it were for the King. I pray you, serve out my blow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so!&rdquo; said Friar Tuck. &ldquo;My son, you forget I stand for the church,
+ which is greater even than the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not in merry England,&rdquo; said the knight in a deep voice. Then rising to
+ his feet, he added, &ldquo;I stand ready to serve you, Master Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now out upon ye for an upstart knight!&rdquo; cried Friar Tuck. &ldquo;I told you
+ last night, sirrah, that we should yet see who was the better man! So we
+ will e&rsquo;en prove it now, and thus settle who is to pay Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; said Robin, &ldquo;for I want not to start a dispute between church and
+ state.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good!&rdquo; also said the knight. &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis an easy way to end prattling. Come,
+ friar, strike and ye dare. I will give you first blow.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;You have the advantage of an iron pot on your head and gloves on your
+ hands,&rdquo; said the friar; &ldquo;but have at ye! Down you shall go, if you were
+ Goliath of Gath.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Once more the priest&rsquo;s brawny arm flashed through the air, and struck with
+ a &ldquo;whoof!&rdquo; But to the amazement of all, the knight did not budge from his
+ tracks, though the upper half of his body swerved slightly to ease the
+ force of the blow. A loud shout burst from the yeomen at this, for the
+ friar&rsquo;s fist was proverbial, and few of those present had not felt the
+ force of it in times past.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Now &lsquo;tis my turn,&rdquo; said his antagonist coolly, casting aside his
+ gauntlet. And with one blow of his fist the knight sent the friar spinning
+ to the ground.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ If there had been uproar and shouting before, it was as naught to the
+ noise which now broke forth. Every fellow held his sides or rolled upon
+ the ground from laughter; every fellow, save one, and that was Robin Hood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Out of the frying-pan into the fire!&rdquo; thought he. &ldquo;I wish I had let the
+ friar box my ears, after all!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin&rsquo;s plight did, indeed, seem a sorry one, before the steel muscles of
+ his stranger. But he was saved from a tumble heels over head by an
+ unlooked-for diversion. A horn winded in the glade, and a party of knights
+ were seen approaching.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;To your arms!&rdquo; cried Robin, hurriedly seizing his sword and bow.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis Sir Richard of the Lea!&rdquo; cried another, as the troop came nearer.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And so it was. Sir Richard spurred forward his horse and dashed up to the
+ camp while the outlaws stood at stiff attention. When he had come near the
+ spot where the Black Knight stood, he dismounted and knelt before him.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I trust Your Majesty has not needed our arms before,&rdquo; he said humbly.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;It is the King!&rdquo; cried Will Scarlet, falling upon his knees.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The King!&rdquo; echoed Robin Hood after a moment of dumb wonderment; and he
+ and all his men bent reverently upon their knees, as one man.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0023" id="link2HCH0023">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIII
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD AND MAID MARIAN WERE WED
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Stand up again,&rdquo; then said the King,
+ &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll thee thy pardon give;
+ Stand up, my friend, who can contend,
+ When I give leave to live?&rdquo;
+
+ Then Robin Hood began a health
+ To Marian, his only dear,
+ And his yeomen all, both comely and tall,
+ Did quickly bring up the rear.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your pardon, sire!&rdquo; exclaimed Robin Hood. &ldquo;Pardon, from your royal
+ bounty, for these my men who stand ready to serve you all your days!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard of the Lion Heart looked grimly about over the kneeling band.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Is it as your leader says?&rdquo; he asked.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Aye, my lord King!&rdquo; burst from sevenscore throats at once.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We be not outlaws from choice alone,&rdquo; continued Robin; &ldquo;but have been
+ driven to outlawry through oppression. Grant us grace and royal
+ protection, and we will forsake the greenwood and follow the King.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard&rsquo;s eyes sparkled as he looked from one to another of this stalwart
+ band, and he thought within himself that here, indeed, was a royal
+ bodyguard worth the while.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Swear!&rdquo; he said in his full rich voice; &ldquo;swear that you, Robin Hood, and
+ all your men from this day henceforth will serve the King!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;We swear!&rdquo; came once more the answering shout from the yeomen.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Arise, then,&rdquo; said King Richard. &ldquo;I give you all free pardon, and will
+ speedily put your service to the test. For I love such archers as you have
+ shown yourselves to be, and it were a sad pity to decree such men to
+ death. England could not produce the like again, for many a day. But, in
+ sooth, I cannot allow you to roam in the forest and shoot my deer; nor to
+ take the law of the land into your own hands. Therefore, I now appoint you
+ to be Royal Archers and mine own especial body-guard. There be one or two
+ civil matters to settle with certain Norman noblemen, in which I crave
+ your aid. Thereafter, the half of your number, as may later be determined,
+ shall come back to these woodlands as Royal Foresters. Mayhap you will
+ show as much zeal in protecting my preserves as you have formerly shown in
+ hunting them. Where, now, is that outlaw known as Little John? Stand
+ forth!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Here, sire,&rdquo; quoth the giant, doffing his cap.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Good master Little John,&rdquo; said the King, looking him over approvingly.
+ &ldquo;Could your weak sinews stand the strain of an office in the shire? If so,
+ you are this day Sheriff of Nottingham; and I trust you will make a better
+ official than the man you relieve.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I shall do my best, sire,&rdquo; said Little John, great astonishment and
+ gladness in his heart.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Master Scarlet, stand forth,&rdquo; said the King; and then addressing him: &ldquo;I
+ have heard somewhat of your tale,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;and that your father was the
+ friend of my father. Now, therefore, accept the royal pardon and resume
+ the care of your family estates; for your father must be growing old. And
+ come you to London next Court day and we shall see if there be a
+ knighthood vacant.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Likewise the King called for Will Stutely and made him Chief of the Royal
+ Archers. Then he summoned Friar Tuck to draw near.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I crave my King&rsquo;s pardon,&rdquo; said the priest, humbly enough; &ldquo;for who am I
+ to lift my hand against the Lord&rsquo;s anointed?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, the Lord sent the smiter to thee without delay,&rdquo; returned Richard
+ smiling; &ldquo;and &lsquo;tis not for me to continue a quarrel between church and
+ state. So what can I do for you in payment of last night&rsquo;s hospitality?
+ Can I find some fat living where there are no wicked to chastise, and
+ where the work is easy and comfortable?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Not so, my lord,&rdquo; replied Tuck. &ldquo;I wish only for peace in this life. Mine
+ is a simple nature and I care not for the fripperies and follies of court
+ life. Give me a good meal and a cup of right brew, health, and enough for
+ the day, and I ask no more.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Richard sighed. &ldquo;You ask the greatest thing in the world, brother&mdash;contentment.
+ It is not mine to give or to deny. But ask your God for it, an if belike
+ he grant it, then ask it also in behalf of your King.&rdquo; He glanced around
+ once more at the foresters. &ldquo;Which one of you is Allan-a-Dale?&rdquo; he asked;
+ and Allan came forward. &ldquo;So,&rdquo; said the King with sober face, &ldquo;you are that
+ errant minstrel who stole a bride at Plympton, despite her would-be groom
+ and attending Bishop. I heard something of this in former days. Now what
+ excuse have you to make?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Only that I loved her, sire, and she loved me,&rdquo; said Allan, simply; &ldquo;and
+ the Norman lord would have married her perforce, because of her lands.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Which have since been forfeited by the Bishop of Hereford,&rdquo; added
+ Richard. &ldquo;But my lord Bishop must disgorge them; and from tomorrow you and
+ Mistress Dale are to return to them and live in peace and loyalty. And if
+ ever I need your harp at Court, stand ready to attend me, and bring also
+ the lady. Speaking of ladies,&rdquo; he continued, turning to Robin Hood, who
+ had stood silent, wondering if a special punishment was being reserved for
+ him, &ldquo;did you not have a sweetheart who was once at Court&mdash;one,
+ Mistress Marian? What has become of her, that you should have forgotten
+ her?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, Your Majesty,&rdquo; said the black-eyed page coming forward blushingly;
+ &ldquo;Robin has not forgotten me!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;So!&rdquo; said the King, bending to kiss her small hand in all gallantry.
+ &ldquo;Verily, as I have already thought within myself, this Master Hood is
+ better served than the King in his palace! But are you not the only child
+ of the late Earl of Huntingdon?&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;I am, sire, though there be some who say that Robin Hood&rsquo;s father was
+ formerly the rightful Earl of Huntingdon. Nathless, neither he is
+ advantaged nor I, for the estates are confiscate.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Then they shall be restored forthwith!&rdquo; cried the King; &ldquo;and lest you two
+ should revive the ancient quarrel over them, I bestow them upon you
+ jointly. Come forward, Robin Hood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin came and knelt before his king. Richard drew his sword and touched
+ him upon the shoulder.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Rise, Robin Fitzooth, Earl of Huntingdon!&rdquo; he exclaimed, while a mighty
+ cheer arose from the band and rent the air of the forest. &ldquo;The first
+ command I give you, my lord Earl,&rdquo; continued the King when quiet was
+ restored, &ldquo;is to marry Mistress Marian without delay.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;May I obey all Your Majesty&rsquo;s commands as willingly!&rdquo; cried the new Earl
+ of Huntingdon, drawing the old Earl&rsquo;s daughter close to him. &ldquo;The ceremony
+ shall take place to-morrow, an this maid is willing.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;She makes little protest,&rdquo; said the King; &ldquo;so I shall e&rsquo;en give away the
+ bride myself!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the King chatted with others of the foresters, and made himself as
+ one of them for the evening, rejoicing that he could have this careless
+ freedom of the woods. And Much, the miller&rsquo;s son, and Arthur-a-Bland, and
+ Middle, and Stutely and Scarlet and Little John and others played at the
+ quarter-staff, giving and getting many lusty blows. Then as the shades of
+ night drew on, the whole company&mdash;knights and foresters&mdash;supped
+ and drank around a blazing fire, while Allen sang sweetly to the thrumming
+ of the harp, and the others joined in the chorus.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &lsquo;Twas a happy, care-free night&mdash;this last one together under the
+ greenwood tree. Robin could not help feeling an undertone of sadness that
+ it was to be the last; for the charm of the woodland was still upon him.
+ But he knew &lsquo;twas better so, and that the new life with Marian and in the
+ service of his King would bring its own joys.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then the night deepened, the fire sank, but was replenished and the
+ company lay down to rest. The King, at his own request, spent the night in
+ the open. Thus they slept&mdash;King and subject alike&mdash;out under the
+ stars, cared for lovingly by Nature, kind mother of us all.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the morning the company was early astir and on their way to Nottingham.
+ It was a goodly cavalcade. First rode King Richard of the Lion Heart, with
+ his tall figure set forth by the black armor and waving plume in his helm.
+ Then came Sir Richard of the Lea with fourscore knights and men-at-arms.
+ And after them came Robin Hood and Maid Marian riding upon milk-white
+ steeds. Allan-a-Dale also escorted Mistress Dale on horseback, for she was
+ to be matron-of-honor at the wedding. These were followed by sevenscore
+ archers clad in their bravest Lincoln green, and with their new bows
+ unstrung in token of peace.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Outside the gates of Nottingham town they were halted.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who comes here?&rdquo; asked the warder&rsquo;s surly voice.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open to the King of England!&rdquo; came back the clear answer, and the gates
+ were opened and the bridge let down without delay.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Almost before the company had crossed the moat the news spread through the
+ town like wildfire.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;The King is here! The King is here, and hath taken Robin Hood!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ From every corner flocked the people to see the company pass; and wildly
+ did they cheer for the King, who rode smilingly with bared head down
+ through the market-place.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the far end of it, he was met by the Sheriff who came up puffing in his
+ haste to do the King honor. He fairly turned green with rage when he saw
+ Sir Richard of the Lea and Robin Hood in the royal company, but made low
+ obeisance to his master.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Sir Sheriff,&rdquo; quoth the King, &ldquo;I have come to rid the shire of outlaws,
+ according to my promise. There be none left, for all have now taken
+ service with their King. And lest there should be further outbreak, I have
+ determined to place in charge of this shire a man who fears no other man
+ in it. Master Little John is hereby created Sheriff of Nottingham, and you
+ will turn over the keys to him forthwith.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Sheriff bowed, but dared utter no word. Then the King turned to the
+ Bishop of Hereford, who had also come up to pay his respects.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Harkee, my lord Bishop,&rdquo; quoth he, &ldquo;the stench of your evil actions had
+ reached our nostrils. We shall demand strict accounting for certain
+ seizures of the lands and certain acts of oppression which ill become a
+ churchman. But of this later. This afternoon you must officiate at the
+ wedding of two of our company, in Nottingham Church. So make you ready.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Bishop also bowed and departed, glad to escape a severer censure for
+ the time.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The company then rode on to the Mansion House, where the King held high
+ levee through all the noon hours, and the whole town made a holiday.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ In the afternoon the way from the Mansion House to Nottingham Church was
+ lined with cheering people, as the wedding party passed by. The famous
+ bowmen were gazed at as curiously as though they had been wild animals,
+ but were cheered none the less. Robin who had long been held in secret
+ liking was now doubly popular since he had the King&rsquo;s favor.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Along the way ahead of the King and the smiling bride and groom to be ran
+ little maids strewing flowers; while streamers floated in greeting from
+ the windows. I ween, the only hearts that were not glad this day were
+ those of the old Sheriff, and of his proud daughter, who peered between
+ the shutters of her window and was like to eat out her heart from envy and
+ hatred.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At last the party reached the church, where the King dismounted lightly
+ from his horse and helped the bride to alight; while Will Scarlet, the
+ best man, assisted Mistress Dale. Within the church they found the Bishop
+ robed in state, and by his side Friar Tuck who had been especially deputed
+ to assist.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The service was said in Latin, while the organ pealed forth softly. The
+ King gave away the bride, as he had said, and afterwards claimed first
+ kiss for his pains. Then the happy party dispersed, and Robin and Marian
+ passed out again through the portal, man and wife.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Out through the cheering streets they fared, while the greenwood men ran
+ ahead and flung gold pennies right and left in their joy, and bade the
+ people drink the health of the young couple and the King. Then the whole
+ party took horse at Will Scarlet&rsquo;s earnest wish, and went down to Gamewell
+ Lodge, where the old Squire George wept for joy at seeing his son and the
+ King and the wedding&mdash;party. That night they spent there, and
+ feasted, and the next day, Sir Richard of the Lea claimed them.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And thus, amid feasting and rejoicing and kingly favor, Robin Hood, the
+ new Earl of Huntingdon, and his bride began their wedded life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ <a name="link2HCH0024" id="link2HCH0024">
+ <!-- H2 anchor --> </a>
+ </p>
+ <div style="height: 4em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+ <h2>
+ CHAPTER XXIV
+ </h2>
+ <h3>
+ HOW ROBIN HOOD MET HIS DEATH
+ </h3>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Give me my bent bow in my hand,
+ And a broad arrow I&rsquo;ll let flee;
+ And where this arrow is taken up,
+ There shall my grave digg&rsquo;d be.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <p>
+ Now by good rights this story should end with the wedding of Robin Hood
+ and Maid Marian; for do not many pleasant tales end with a wedding and the
+ saying, &ldquo;and they lived happy ever after.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But this is a true account&mdash;in so far as we can find the quaint old
+ ballads which tell of it&mdash;and so we must follow one more of these
+ songs and learn how Robin, after living many years longer, at last came to
+ seek his grave. And the story of it runs in this wise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Robin Hood and his men, now the Royal Archers, went with King Richard of
+ the Lion Heart through England settling certain private disputes which had
+ arisen among the Norman barons while the King was gone to the Holy Land.
+ Then the King proceeded amid great pomp and rejoicing to the palace at
+ London, and Robin, the new Earl of Huntingdon, brought his Countess
+ thither, where she became one of the finest ladies of the Court.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The Royal Archers were now divided into two bands, and one-half of them
+ were retained in London, while the other half returned to Sherwood and
+ Barnesdale, there to guard the King&rsquo;s preserves.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Several months passed by, and Robin began to chafe under the restraint of
+ city life. He longed for the fresh pure air of the greenwood, and the
+ rollicking society of his yeomen. One day, upon seeing some lads at
+ archery practice upon a green, he could not help but lament, saying, &ldquo;Woe
+ is me! I fear my hand is fast losing its old time cunning at the
+ bow-string!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Finally he became so distraught that he asked leave to travel in foreign
+ lands, and this was granted him. He took Maid Marian with him, and
+ together they went through many strange countries. Finally in an Eastern
+ land a great grief came upon Robin. Marian sickened of a plague and died.
+ They had been married but five years, and Robin felt as though all the
+ light had gone out of his life.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He wandered about the world for a few months longer, trying to forget his
+ grief, then came back to the court, at London, and sought some commission
+ in active service. But unluckily, Richard was gone again upon his
+ adventures, and Prince John, who acted as Regent, had never been fond of
+ Robin. He received him with a sarcastic smile.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Go forth into the greenwood,&rdquo; said he, coldly, &ldquo;and kill some more of the
+ King&rsquo;s deer. Belike, then, the King will make you Prime Minister, at the
+ very least, upon his return.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The taunt fired Robin&rsquo;s blood. He had been in a morose mood, ever since
+ his dear wife&rsquo;s death. He answered Prince John hotly, and the Prince bade
+ his guards seize him and cast him into the Tower.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ After lying there for a few weeks, he was released by the faithful Stutely
+ and the remnant of the Royal Archers, and all together they fled the city
+ and made their way to the greenwood. There Robin blew the old familiar
+ call, which all had known and loved so well. Up came running the remainder
+ of the band, who had been Royal Foresters, and when they saw their old
+ master they embraced his knees and kissed his hands, and fairly cried for
+ joy that he had come again to them. And one and all forswore fealty to
+ Prince John, and lived quietly with Robin in the greenwood, doing harm to
+ none and only awaiting the time when King Richard should come again.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But King Richard came not again, and would never need his Royal Guard
+ more. Tidings presently reached them, of how he had met his death in a
+ foreign land, and how John reigned as King in his stead. The proof of
+ these events followed soon after, when there came striding through the
+ glade the big, familiar form of Little John.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Art come to arrest us?&rdquo; called out Robin, as he ran forward and embraced
+ his old comrade.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, I am not come as the Sheriff of Nottingham, thanks be,&rdquo; answered
+ Little John. &ldquo;The new King has deposed me, and &lsquo;tis greatly to my liking,
+ for I have long desired to join you here again in the greenwood.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Then were the rest of the band right glad at this news, and toasted Little
+ John royally.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ The new King waged fierce war upon the outlaws, soon after this, and sent
+ so many scouting parties into Sherwood and Barnesdale that Robin and his
+ men left these woods for a time and went into Derbyshire, near Haddon
+ Hall. A curious pile of stone is shown to this day as the ruins of Robin&rsquo;s
+ Castle, where the bold outlaw is believed to have defied his enemies for a
+ year or more. At any rate King John found so many troubles of his own,
+ after a time, that he ceased troubling the outlaws.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ But in one of the last sorties Robin was wounded. The cut did not seem
+ serious, and healed over the top; but it left a lurking fever. Daily his
+ strength ebbed away from him, until he was in sore distress.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ One day as he rode along on horseback, near Kirklees Abbey, he was seized
+ with so violent a rush of blood to the head that he reeled and came near
+ falling from his saddle. He dismounted weakly and knocked at the Abbey
+ gate. A woman shrouded in black peered forth.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Who are you that knock here? For we allow no man within these walls,&rdquo; she
+ said.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Open, for the love of Heaven!&rdquo; he begged. &ldquo;I am Robin Hood, ill of a
+ fever and in sore straits.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ At the name of Robin Hood the woman started back, and then, as though
+ bethinking herself, unbarred the door and admitted him. Assisting his
+ fainting frame up a flight of stairs and into a front room, she loosed his
+ collar and bathed his face until he was revived. Then she spoke hurriedly
+ in a low voice:
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Your fever will sink, if you are bled. See, I have provided a lancet and
+ will open your veins, while you lie quiet.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So she bled him, and he fell into a stupor which lasted nearly all that
+ day, so that he awoke weak and exhausted from loss of blood.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Now there is a dispute as to this abbess who bled him. Some say that she
+ did it in all kindness of heart; while others aver that she was none other
+ than the former Sheriff&rsquo;s daughter, and found her revenge at last in this
+ cruel deed.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ Be that as it may, Robin&rsquo;s eyes swam from very weakness when he awoke.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He called wearily for help, but there was no response. He looked longingly
+ through the window at the green of the forest; but he was too weak to make
+ the leap that would be needed to reach the ground.
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ He then bethought him of his horn,
+ Which hung down at his knee;
+ He set his horn unto his mouth,
+ And blew out weak blasts three.
+</pre>
+ <p>
+ Little John was out in the forest near by, or the blasts would never have
+ been heard. At their sound he sprang to his feet.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Woe! woe!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;I fear my master is near dead, he blows so
+ wearily!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So he made haste and came running up to the door of the abbey, and knocked
+ loudly for admittance. Failing to get reply, he burst in the door with
+ frenzied blows of his mighty fist, and soon came running up to the room
+ where Robin lay, white and faint. &ldquo;Alas, dear master!&rdquo; cried Little John
+ in great distress; &ldquo;I fear you have met with treachery! If that be so,
+ grant me one last boon, I pray.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;What is it?&rdquo; asked Robin.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Let me burn Kirklees-Hall with fire, and all its nunnery.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Nay, good comrade,&rdquo; answered Robin Hood gently, &ldquo;I cannot grant such a
+ boon. The dear Christ bade us forgive all our enemies. Moreover, you know
+ I never hurt woman in all my life; nor man when in woman&rsquo;s company.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He closed his eyes and fell back, so that his friend thought him dying.
+ The great tears fell from the giant&rsquo;s eyes and wet his master&rsquo;s hand.
+ Robin slowly rallied and seized his comrade&rsquo;s outstretched arm.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Lift me up, good Little John,&rdquo; he said brokenly, &ldquo;I want to smell the air
+ from the good greenwood once again. Give me my good yew bow&mdash;here&mdash;here-and
+ fix a broad arrow upon the string. Out yonder&mdash;among the oaks&mdash;where
+ this arrow shall fall&mdash;let them dig my grave.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ And with one last mighty effort he sped his shaft out of the open window,
+ straight and true, as in the days of old, till it struck the largest oak
+ of them all and dropped in the shadow of the trees. Then he fell back upon
+ the sobbing breast of his devoted friend.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;&lsquo;Tis the last!&rdquo; he murmured, &ldquo;tell the brave hearts to lay me there with
+ the green sod under my head and feet. And&mdash;let them lay&mdash;my bent
+ bow at my side, for it has made sweet music in mine ears.&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ He rested a moment, and Little John scarce knew that he was alive. But on
+ a sudden Robin&rsquo;s eye brightened, and he seemed to think himself back once
+ more with the band in the open forest glade. He struggled to rise.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ &ldquo;Ha! &lsquo;tis a fine stag, Will! And Allan, thou never didst thrum the harp
+ more sweetly. How the light blazes! And Marian!&mdash;&lsquo;tis my Marian&mdash;come
+ at last!&rdquo;
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ So died the body of Robin Hood; but his spirit lives on through the
+ centuries in the deathless ballads which are sung of him, and in the
+ hearts of men who love freedom and chivalry.
+ </p>
+ <p>
+ They buried him where his last arrow had fallen, and they set a stone to
+ mark the spot. And on the stone were graven these words:
+ </p>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+ &ldquo;Here underneath his little stone
+ Lies Robert, Earl of Huntingdon;
+ Never archer as he so good,
+ And people called him Robin Hood.
+ Such outlaws as he and his men
+ Will England never see again.&rdquo;
+ </pre>
+ <div style="height: 6em;">
+ <br /><br /><br /><br /><br /><br />
+ </div>
+<pre xml:space="preserve">
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Robin Hood, by J. Walker McSpadden
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+</pre>
+ </body>
+</html>
diff --git a/832.txt b/832.txt
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--- /dev/null
+++ b/832.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,7751 @@
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Robin Hood, by J. Walker McSpadden
+
+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: Robin Hood
+
+Author: J. Walker McSpadden
+
+Release Date: January 21, 2006 [EBook #832]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROBIN HOOD ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Joseph S. Miller and David Widger
+
+
+
+
+
+ROBIN HOOD
+
+
+by J. Walker McSpadden
+
+
+
+ CHAPTER I How Robin Hood Became an Outlaw
+
+ CHAPTER II How Robin Hood Met Little John
+
+ CHAPTER III How Robin Hood Turned Butcher, and Entered the
+ Sheriff's Service
+
+ CHAPTER IV How Little John Entered the Sheriff's Service
+
+ CHAPTER V How the Sheriff Lost Three Good Servants, and
+ Found Them Again
+
+ CHAPTER VI How Robin Hood Met Will Scarlett
+
+ CHAPTER VII How Robin Hood Met Friar Tuck
+
+ CHAPTER VIII How Allan-a-Dale's Wooing Was Prospered
+
+ CHAPTER IX How the Widow's Three Sons Were Rescued
+
+ CHAPTER X How a Beggar Filled the Public Eye
+
+ CHAPTER XI How Robin Hood Fought Guy of Gisbourne
+
+ CHAPTER XII How Maid Marion Came Back to Sherwood Forest;
+ Also, How Robin Hood Came Before Queen Eleanor
+
+ CHAPTER XIII How the Outlaws Shot in King Harry's Tourney
+
+ CHAPTER XIV How Robin Hood Was Sought of the Tinker
+
+ CHAPTER XV How Robin Hood Was Tanned of the Tanner
+
+ CHAPTER XVI How Robin Hood Met Sir Richard of the Lea
+
+ CHAPTER XVII How the Bishop Was Dined
+
+ CHAPTER XVIII How the Bishop Went Outlaw-Hunting
+
+ CHAPTER XIX How the Sheriff Held Another Shooting Match
+
+ CHAPTER XX How Will Stutely Was Rescued
+
+ CHAPTER XXI How Sir Richard of the Lea Repaid His Debt
+
+ CHAPTER XXII How King Richard Came to Sherwood Forest
+
+ CHAPTER XXIII How Robin Hood and Maid Marion Were Wed
+
+ CHAPTER XXIV How Robin Hood Met His Death
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD BECAME AN OUTLAW
+
+ List and hearken, gentlemen,
+ That be of free-born blood,
+ I shall you tell of a good yeoman,
+ His name was Robin Hood.
+
+ Robin was a proud outlaw,
+ While as he walked on the ground.
+ So courteous an outlaw as he was one
+ Was never none else found.
+
+In the days of good King Harry the Second of England--he of the warring
+sons--there were certain forests in the north country set aside for the
+King's hunting, and no man might shoot deer therein under penalty of
+death. These forests were guarded by the King's Foresters, the chief
+of whom, in each wood, was no mean man but equal in authority to the
+Sheriff in his walled town, or even to my lord Bishop in his abbey.
+
+One of the greatest of royal preserves was Sherwood and Barnesdale
+forests near the two towns of Nottingham and Barnesdale. Here for some
+years dwelt one Hugh Fitzooth as Head Forester, with his good wife and
+son Robert. The boy had been born in Lockesley town--in the year 1160,
+stern records say--and was often called Lockesley, or Rob of Lockesley.
+He was a comely, well-knit stripling, and as soon as he was strong
+enough to walk his chief delight was to go with his father into the
+forest. As soon as his right arm received thew and sinew he learned to
+draw the long bow and speed a true arrow. While on winter evenings his
+greatest joy was to hear his father tell of bold Will o' the Green, the
+outlaw, who for many summers defied the King's Foresters and feasted
+with his men upon King's deer. And on other stormy days the boy learned
+to whittle out a straight shaft for the long bow, and tip it with gray
+goose feathers.
+
+The fond mother sighed when she saw the boy's face light up at these
+woodland tales. She was of gentle birth, and had hoped to see her son
+famous at court or abbey. She taught him to read and to write, to doff
+his cap without awkwardness and to answer directly and truthfully both
+lord and peasant. But the boy, although he took kindly to these lessons
+of breeding, was yet happiest when he had his beloved bow in hand and
+strolled at will, listening to the murmur of the trees.
+
+Two playmates had Rob in these gladsome early days. One was Will
+Gamewell, his father's brother's son, who lived at Gamewell Lodge, hard
+by Nottingham town. The other was Marian Fitzwalter, only child of the
+Earl of Huntingdon. The castle of Huntingdon could be seen from the top
+of one of the tall trees in Sherwood; and on more than one bright day
+Rob's white signal from this tree told Marian that he awaited her there:
+for you must know that Rob did not visit her at the castle. His father
+and her father were enemies. Some people whispered that Hugh Fitzooth
+was the rightful Earl of Huntingdon, but that he had been defrauded out
+of his lands by Fitzwalter, who had won the King's favor by a crusade to
+the Holy Land. But little cared Rob or Marian for this enmity, however
+it had arisen. They knew that the great green--wood was open to them,
+and that the wide, wide world was full of the scent of flowers and the
+song of birds.
+
+Days of youth speed all too swiftly, and troubled skies come all too
+soon. Rob's father had two other enemies besides Fitzwalter, in
+the persons of the lean Sheriff of Nottingham and the fat Bishop of
+Hereford. These three enemies one day got possession of the King's ear
+and whispered therein to such good--or evil--purpose that Hugh Fitzooth
+was removed from his post of King's Forester. He and his wife and Rob,
+then a youth of nineteen, were descended upon, during a cold winter's
+evening, and dispossessed without warning. The Sheriff arrested the
+Forester for treason--of which, poor man, he was as guiltless as you or
+I--and carried him to Nottingham jail. Rob and his mother were sheltered
+over night in the jail, also, but next morning were roughly bade to go
+about their business. Thereupon they turned for succor to their only
+kinsman, Squire George of Gamewell, who sheltered them in all kindness.
+
+But the shock, and the winter night's journey, proved too much for
+Dame Fitzooth. She had not been strong for some time before leaving the
+forest. In less than two months she was no more. Rob felt as though his
+heart was broken at this loss. But scarcely had the first spring flowers
+begun to blossom upon her grave, when he met another crushing blow in
+the loss of his father. That stern man had died in prison before his
+accusers could agree upon the charges by which he was to be brought to
+trial.
+
+Two years passed by. Rob's cousin Will was away at school; and Marian's
+father, who had learned of her friendship with Rob, had sent his
+daughter to the court of Queen Eleanor. So these years were lonely ones
+to the orphaned lad. The bluff old Squire was kind to him, but secretly
+could make nothing of one who went about brooding and as though seeking
+for something he had lost. The truth is that Rob missed his old life
+in the forest no less than his mother's gentleness, and his father's
+companionship. Every time he twanged the string of the long bow against
+his shoulder and heard the gray goose shaft sing, it told him of happy
+days that he could not recall.
+
+One morning as Rob came in to breakfast, his uncle greeted him with, "I
+have news for you, Rob, my lad!" and the hearty old Squire finished his
+draught of ale and set his pewter tankard down with a crash.
+
+"What may that be, Uncle Gamewell?" asked the young man.
+
+"Here is a chance to exercise your good long bow and win a pretty prize.
+The Fair is on at Nottingham, and the Sheriff proclaims an archer's
+tournament. The best fellows are to have places with the King's
+Foresters, and the one who shoots straightest of all will win for prize
+a golden arrow--a useless bauble enough, but just the thing for your lady
+love, eh, Rob my boy?" Here the Squire laughed and whacked the table
+again with his tankard.
+
+Rob's eyes sparkled. "'Twere indeed worth shooting for, uncle mine," he
+said. "I should dearly love to let arrow fly alongside another man. And
+a place among the Foresters is what I have long desired. Will you let me
+try?"
+
+"To be sure," rejoined his uncle. "Well I know that your good mother
+would have had me make a clerk of you; but well I see that the greenwood
+is where you will pass your days. So, here's luck to you in the bout!"
+And the huge tankard came a third time into play.
+
+The young man thanked his uncle for his good wishes, and set about
+making preparations for the journey. He traveled lightly; but his yew
+bow must needs have a new string, and his cloth-yard arrows must be of
+the straightest and soundest.
+
+One fine morning, a few days after, Rob might have been seen passing
+by way of Lockesley through Sherwood Forest to Nottingham town. Briskly
+walked he and gaily, for his hopes were high and never an enemy had he
+in the wide world. But 'twas the very last morning in all his life
+when he was to lack an enemy! For, as he went his way through Sherwood,
+whistling a blithe tune, he came suddenly upon a group of Foresters,
+making merry beneath the spreading branches of an oak-tree. They had a
+huge meat pie before them and were washing down prodigious slices of it
+with nut brown ale.
+
+One glance at the leader and Rob knew at once that he had found
+an enemy. 'Twas the man who had usurped his father's place as Head
+Forester, and who had roughly turned his mother out in the snow. But
+never a word said he for good or bad, and would have passed on his way,
+had not this man, clearing his throat with a huge gulp, bellowed out:
+"By my troth, here is a pretty little archer! Where go you, my lad, with
+that tupenny bow and toy arrows? Belike he would shoot at Nottingham
+Fair! Ho! Ho!"
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this sally. Rob flushed, for he was mightily
+proud of his shooting.
+
+"My bow is as good as yours," he retorted, "and my shafts will carry as
+straight and as far. So I'll not take lessons of any of ye."
+
+They laughed again loudly at this, and the leader said with frown:
+
+"Show us some of your skill, and if you can hit the mark here's twenty
+silver pennies for you. But if you hit it not you are in for a sound
+drubbing for your pertness."
+
+"Pick your own target," quoth Rob in a fine rage. "I'll lay my head
+against that purse that I can hit it."
+
+"It shall be as you say," retorted the Forester angrily, "your head for
+your sauciness that you hit not my target."
+
+Now at a little rise in the wood a herd of deer came grazing by, distant
+full fivescore yards. They were King's deer, but at that distance seemed
+safe from any harm. The Head Forester pointed to them.
+
+"If your young arm could speed a shaft for half that distance, I'd shoot
+with you."
+
+"Done!" cried Rob. "My head against twenty pennies I'll cause yon fine
+fellow in the lead of them to breathe his last."
+
+And without more ado he tried the string of his long bow, placed a shaft
+thereon, and drew it to his ear. A moment, and the quivering string sang
+death as the shaft whistled across the glade. Another moment and the
+leader of the herd leaped high in his tracks and fell prone, dyeing the
+sward with his heart's blood.
+
+A murmur of amazement swept through the Foresters, and then a growl of
+rage. He that had wagered was angriest of all.
+
+"Know you what you have done, rash youth?" he said. "You have killed a
+King's deer, and by the laws of King Harry your head remains forfeit.
+Talk not to me of pennies but get ye gone straight, and let me not look
+upon your face again."
+
+Rob's blood boiled within him, and he uttered a rash speech. "I have
+looked upon your face once too often already, my fine Forester. 'Tis you
+who wear my father's shoes."
+
+And with this he turned upon his heel and strode away.
+
+The Forester heard his parting thrust with an oath. Red with rage he
+seized his bow, strung an arrow, and without warning launched it full
+af' Rob. Well was it for the latter that the Forester's foot turned on a
+twig at the critical instant, for as it was the arrow whizzed by his ear
+so close as to take a stray strand of his hair with it. Rob turned upon
+his assailant, now twoscore yards away.
+
+"Ha!" said he. "You shoot not so straight as I, for all your bravado.
+Take this from the tupenny bow!"
+
+Straight flew his answering shaft. The Head Forester gave one cry, then
+fell face downward and lay still. His life had avenged Rob's father, but
+the son was outlawed. Forward he ran through the forest, before the
+band could gather their scattered wits--still forward into the great
+greenwood. The swaying trees seemed to open their arms to the wanderer,
+and to welcome him home.
+
+Toward the close of the same day, Rob paused hungry and weary at the
+cottage of a poor widow who dwelt upon the outskirts of the forest. Now
+this widow had often greeted him kindly in his boyhood days, giving him
+to eat and drink. So he boldly entered her door. The old dame was right
+glad to see him, and baked him cakes in the ashes, and had him rest and
+tell her his story. Then she shook her head.
+
+"'Tis an evil wind that blows through Sherwood," she said. "The poor are
+despoiled and the rich ride over their bodies. My three sons have been
+outlawed for shooting King's deer to keep us from starving, and now hide
+in the wood. And they tell me that twoscore of as good men as ever drew
+bow are in hiding with them."
+
+"Where are they, good mother?" cried Rob. "By my faith, I will join
+them."
+
+"Nay, nay," replied the old woman at first. But when she saw that there
+was no other way, she said: "My sons will visit me to-night. Stay you
+here and see them if you must."
+
+So Rob stayed willingly to see the widow's sons that night, for they
+were men after his own heart. And when they found that his mood was with
+them, they made him swear an oath of fealty, and told him the haunt of
+the band--a place he knew right well. Finally one of them said:
+
+"But the band lacks a leader--one who can use his head as well as
+his hand. So we have agreed that he who has skill enough to go to
+Nottingham, an outlaw, and win the prize at archery, shall be our
+chief."
+
+Rob sprang to his feet. "Said in good time!" cried he, "for I had
+started to that self-same Fair, and all the Foresters, and all the
+Sheriff's men in Christendom shall not stand between me and the center
+of their target!"
+
+And though he was but barely grown he stood so straight and his eye
+flashed with such fire that the three brothers seized his hand and
+shouted:
+
+"A Lockesley! a Lockesley! if you win the golden arrow you shall be
+chief of outlaws in Sherwood Forest!"
+
+So Rob fell to planning how he could disguise himself to go to
+Nottingham town; for he knew that the Foresters had even then set a
+price on his head in the market-place.
+
+It was even as Rob had surmised. The Sheriff of Nottingham posted a
+reward of two hundred pounds for the capture, dead or alive, of one
+Robert Fitzooth, outlaw. And the crowds thronging the streets upon that
+busy Fair day often paused to read the notice and talk together about
+the death of the Head Forester.
+
+But what with wrestling bouts and bouts with quarter-staves, and
+wandering minstrels, there came up so many other things to talk about,
+that the reward was forgotten for the nonce, and only the Foresters
+and Sheriff's men watched the gates with diligence, the Sheriff indeed
+spurring them to effort by offers of largess. His hatred of the father
+had descended to the son.
+
+The great event of the day came in the afternoon. It was the archer's
+contest for the golden arrow, and twenty men stepped forth to shoot.
+Among them was a beggar-man, a sorry looking fellow with leggings of
+different colors, and brown scratched face and hands. Over a tawny shock
+of hair he had a hood drawn, much like that of a monk. Slowly he limped
+to his place in the line, while the mob shouted in derision. But the
+contest was open to all comers, so no man said him nay.
+
+Side by side with Rob--for it was he--stood a muscular fellow of swarthy
+visage and with one eye hid by a green bandage. Him also the crowd
+jeered, but he passed them by with indifference while he tried his bow
+with practiced hand.
+
+A great crowd had assembled in the amphitheater enclosing the lists. All
+the gentry and populace of the surrounding country were gathered there
+in eager expectancy. The central box contained the lean but pompous
+Sheriff, his bejeweled wife, and their daughter, a supercilious young
+woman enough, who, it was openly hinted, was hoping to receive the
+golden arrow from the victor and thus be crowned queen of the day.
+
+Next to the Sheriff's box was one occupied by the fat Bishop of
+Hereford; while in the other side was a box wherein sat a girl whose
+dark hair, dark eyes, and fair features caused Rob's heart to leap.
+'Twas Maid Marian! She had come up for a visit from the Queen's court at
+London town, and now sat demurely by her father the Earl of Huntingdon.
+If Rob had been grimly resolved to win the arrow before, the sight of
+her sweet face multiplied his determination an hundredfold. He felt his
+muscles tightening into bands of steel, tense and true. Yet withal his
+heart would throb, making him quake in a most unaccountable way.
+
+Then the trumpet sounded, and the crowd became silent while the herald
+announced the terms of the contest. The lists were open to all comers.
+The first target was to be placed at thirty ells distance, and all those
+who hit its center were allowed to shoot at the second target, placed
+ten ells farther off. The third target was to be removed yet farther,
+until the winner was proved. The winner was to receive the golden arrow,
+and a place with the King's Foresters. He it was also who crowned the
+queen of the day.
+
+The trumpet sounded again, and the archers prepared to shoot. Rob looked
+to his string, while the crowd smiled and whispered at the odd figure
+he cut, with his vari-colored legs and little cape. But as the first man
+shot, they grew silent.
+
+The target was not so far but that twelve out of the twenty contestants
+reached its inner circle. Rob shot sixth in the line and landed fairly,
+being rewarded by an approving grunt from the man with the green
+blinder, who shot seventh, and with apparent carelessness, yet true to
+the bull's-eye.
+
+The mob cheered and yelled themselves hoarse at this even marksmanship.
+The trumpet sounded again, and a new target was set up at forty ells.
+
+The first three archers again struck true, amid the loud applause of the
+onlookers; for they were general favorites and expected to win. Indeed
+'twas whispered that each was backed by one of the three dignitaries
+of the day. The fourth and fifth archers barely grazed the center. Rob
+fitted his arrow quietly and with some confidence sped it unerringly
+toward the shining circle.
+
+"The beggar! the beggar!" yelled the crowd; "another bull for the
+beggar!" In truth his shaft was nearer the center than any of the
+others. But it was not so near that "Blinder," as the mob had promptly
+christened his neighbor, did not place his shaft just within the mark.
+Again the crowd cheered wildly. Such shooting as this was not seen every
+day in Nottingham town.
+
+The other archers in this round were disconcerted by the preceding
+shots, or unable to keep the pace. They missed one after another and
+dropped moodily back, while the trumpet sounded for the third round, and
+the target was set up fifty ells distant.
+
+"By my halidom you draw a good bow, young master," said Rob's queer
+comrade to him in the interval allowed for rest. "Do you wish me to
+shoot first on this trial?"
+
+"Nay," said Rob, "but you are a good fellow by this token, and if I win
+not, I hope you may keep the prize from yon strutters." And he nodded
+scornfully to the three other archers who were surrounded by their
+admirers, and were being made much of by retainers of the Sheriff, the
+Bishop, and the Earl. From them his eye wandered toward Maid Marian's
+booth. She had been watching him, it seemed, for their eyes met; then
+hers were hastily averted.
+
+"Blinder's" quick eye followed those of Rob. "A fair maid, that," he
+said smilingly, "and one more worthy the golden arrow than the Sheriff's
+haughty miss."
+
+Rob looked at him swiftly, and saw naught but kindliness in his glance.
+
+"You are a shrewd fellow and I like you well," was his only comment.
+
+Now the archers prepared to shoot again, each with some little care. The
+target seemed hardly larger than the inner ring had looked, at the first
+trial. The first three sped their shafts, and while they were fair shots
+they did not more than graze the inner circle.
+
+Rob took his stand with some misgiving. Some flecking clouds overhead
+made the light uncertain, and a handful of wind frolicked across the
+range in a way quite disturbing to a bowman's nerves. His eyes wandered
+for a brief moment to the box wherein sat the dark-eyed girl. His heart
+leaped! she met his glance and smiled at him reassuringly. And in that
+moment he felt that she knew him despite his disguise and looked to him
+to keep the honor of old Sherwood. He drew his bow firmly and, taking
+advantage of a momentary lull in the breeze, launched the arrow straight
+and true-singing across the range to the center of the target.
+
+"The beggar! the beggar! a bull! a bull!" yelled the fickle mob,
+who from jeering him were now his warm friends. "Can you beat that,
+Blinder?"
+
+The last archer smiled scornfully and made ready. He drew his bow with
+ease and grace and, without seeming to study the course, released the
+winged arrow. Forward it leaped toward the target, and all eyes followed
+its flight. A loud uproar broke forth when it alighted, just without the
+center and grazing the shaft sent by Rob. The stranger made a gesture
+of surprise when his own eyes announced the result to him, but saw his
+error. He had not allowed for the fickle gust of wind which seized the
+arrow and carried it to one side. But for all that he was the first to
+congratulate the victor.
+
+"I hope we may shoot again," quoth he. "In truth I care not for the
+golden bauble and wished to win it in despite of the Sheriff for whom I
+have no love. Now crown the lady of your choice." And turning suddenly
+he was lost in the crowd, before Rob could utter what it was upon his
+lips to say, that he would shoot again with him.
+
+And now the herald summoned Rob to the Sheriff's box to receive the
+prize.
+
+"You are a curious fellow enough," said the Sheriff, biting his lip
+coldly; "yet you shoot well. What name go you by?"
+
+Marian sat near and was listening intently.
+
+"I am called Rob the Stroller, my Lord Sheriff," said the archer.
+
+Marian leaned back and smiled.
+
+"Well, Rob the Stroller, with a little attention to your skin and
+clothes you would not be so bad a man," said the Sheriff. "How like you
+the idea of entering my service.
+
+"Rob the Stroller has ever been a free man, my Lord, and desires no
+service."
+
+The Sheriff's brow darkened, yet for the sake of his daughter and the
+golden arrow, he dissembled.
+
+"Rob the Stroller," said he, "here is the golden arrow which has been
+offered to the best of archers this day. You are awarded the prize. See
+that you bestow it worthily."
+
+At this point the herald nudged Rob and half inclined his head toward
+the Sheriff's daughter, who sat with a thin smile upon her lips. But Rob
+heeded him not. He took the arrow and strode to the next box where sat
+Maid Marian.
+
+"Lady," he said, "pray accept this little pledge from a poor stroller
+who would devote the best shafts in his quiver to serve you."
+
+"My thanks to you, Rob in the Hood," replied she with a roguish twinkle
+in her eye; and she placed the gleaming arrow in her hair, while the
+people shouted, "The Queen! the Queen!"
+
+The Sheriff glowered furiously upon this ragged archer who had refused
+his service, taken his prize without a word of thanks, and snubbed his
+daughter. He would have spoken, but his proud daughter restrained him.
+He called to his guard and bade them watch the beggar. But Rob had
+already turned swiftly, lost himself in the throng, and headed straight
+for the town gate.
+
+That same evening within a forest glade a group of men--some twoscore
+clad in Lincoln green--sat round a fire roasting venison and making
+merry. Suddenly a twig crackled and they sprang to their feet and seized
+their weapons.
+
+"I look for the widow's sons," a clear voice said, "and I come alone."
+
+Instantly the three men stepped forward.
+
+"Tis Rob!" they cried; "welcome to Sherwood Forest, Rob!" And all the
+men came and greeted him; for they had heard his story.
+
+Then one of the widow's sons, Stout Will, stepped forth and said:
+
+"Comrades all, ye know that our band has sadly lacked a leader--one of
+birth, breeding, and skill. Belike we have found that leader in this
+young man. And I and my brothers have told him that the band would
+choose that one who should bring the Sheriff to shame this day and
+capture his golden arrow. Is it not so?"
+
+The band gave assent.
+
+Will turned to Rob. "What news bring you from Nottingham town?" asked
+he.
+
+Rob laughed. "In truth I brought the Sheriff to shame for mine own
+pleasure, and won his golden arrow to boot. But as to the prize ye must
+e'en take my word, for I bestowed it upon a maid."
+
+And seeing the men stood in doubt at this, he continued: "But I'll
+gladly join your band, and you take me, as a common archer. For there
+are others older and mayhap more skilled than I."
+
+Then stepped one forward from the rest, a tall swarthy man. And Rob
+recognized him as the man with the green blinder; only this was now
+removed, and his freed eye gleamed as stoutly as the other one.
+
+"Rob in the Hood--for such the lady called you," said he, "I can vouch
+for your tale. You shamed the Sheriff e'en as I had hoped to do; and we
+can forego the golden arrow since it is in such fair hands. As to your
+shooting and mine, we must let future days decide. But here I, Will
+Stutely, declare that I will serve none other chief save only you."
+
+Then good Will Stutely told the outlaws of Rob's deeds, and gave him his
+hand of fealty. And the widow's sons did likewise, and the other members
+every one, right gladly; because Will Stutely had heretofore been the
+truest bow in all the company. And they toasted him in nut brown ale,
+and hailed him as their leader, by the name of Robin Hood. And he
+accepted that name because Maid Marian had said it.
+
+By the light of the camp-fire the band exchanged signs and passwords.
+They gave Robin Hood a horn upon which he was to blow to summon them.
+They swore, also, that while they might take money and goods from the
+unjust rich, they would aid and befriend the poor and the helpless; and
+that they would harm no woman, be she maid, wife, or widow. They swore
+all this with solemn oaths, while they feasted about the ruddy blaze,
+under the greenwood tree.
+
+And that is how Robin Hood became an outlaw.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET LITTLE JOHN
+
+ "O here is my hand," the stranger reply'd,
+ "I'll serve you with all my whole heart.
+ My name is John Little, a man of good mettle,
+ Ne'er doubt me for I'll play my part."
+
+ "His name shall be altered," quoth William Stutely,
+ "And I will his godfather be:
+ Prepare then a feast, and none of the least,
+ For we will be merry," quoth he.
+
+All that summer Robin Hood and his merry men roamed in Sherwood Forest,
+and the fame of their deeds ran abroad in the land. The Sheriff of
+Nottingham waxed wroth at the report, but all his traps and excursions
+failed to catch the outlaws. The poor people began by fearing them, but
+when they found that the men in Lincoln green who answered Robin Hood's
+horn meant them no harm, but despoiled the oppressor to relieve the
+oppressed, they 'gan to have great liking for them. And the band
+increased by other stout hearts till by the end of the summer fourscore
+good men and true had sworn fealty.
+
+But the days of quiet which came on grew irksome to Robin's adventurous
+spirit. Up rose he, one gay morn, and slung his quiver over his
+shoulders.
+
+"This fresh breeze stirs the blood, my lads," quoth he, "and I would
+be seeing what the gay world looks like in the direction of Nottingham
+town. But tarry ye behind in the borders of the forest, within earshot
+of my bugle call."
+
+Thus saying he strode merrily forward to the edge of the wood, and
+paused there a moment, his agile form erect, his brown locks flowing
+and his brown eyes watching the road; and a goodly sight he made, as the
+wind blew the ruddy color into his cheeks.
+
+The highway led clear in the direction of the town, and thither he
+boldly directed his steps. But at a bend in the road he knew of a
+by-path leading across a brook which made the way nearer and less open,
+into which he turned. As he approached the stream he saw that it had
+become swollen by recent rains into quite a pretty torrent. The log
+foot-bridge was still there, but at this end of it a puddle intervened
+which could be crossed only with a leap, if you would not get your feet
+wet.
+
+But Robin cared little for such a handicap. Taking a running start, his
+nimble legs carried him easily over and balanced neatly upon the end of
+the broad log. But he was no sooner started across than he saw a tall
+stranger coming from the other side. Thereupon Robin quickened his pace,
+and the stranger did likewise, each thinking to cross first. Midway they
+met, and neither would yield an inch.
+
+"Give way, fellow!" roared Robin, whose leadership of a band, I am
+afraid, had not tended to mend his manners.
+
+The stranger smiled. He was almost a head taller than the other.
+
+"Nay," he retorted, "fair and softly! I give way only to a better man
+than myself."
+
+"Give way, I say", repeated Robin, "or I shall have to show you a better
+man."
+
+His opponent budged not an inch, but laughed loudly. "Now by my
+halidom!" he said good-naturedly, "I would not move after hearing that
+speech, even if minded to it before; for this better man I have sought
+my life long. Therefore show him to me, an it please you."
+
+"That will I right soon," quoth Robin. "Stay you here a little while,
+till I cut me a cudgel like unto that you have been twiddling in your
+fingers." So saying he sought his own bank again with a leap, laid aside
+his long bow and arrows, and cut him a stout staff of oak, straight,
+knotless, and a good six feet in length. But still it was a full foot
+shorter than his opponent's. Then back came he boldly.
+
+"I mind not telling you, fellow," said he, "that a bout with archery
+would have been an easier way with me. But there are other tunes in
+England besides that the arrow sings." Here he whirred the staff about
+his head by way of practice. "So make you ready for the tune I am about
+to play upon your ribs. Have at you! One, two--"
+
+"Three!" roared the giant smiting at him instantly.
+
+Well was it for Robin that he was quick and nimble of foot; for the blow
+that grazed a hair's breadth from his shoulder would have felled an ox.
+Nevertheless while swerving to avoid this stroke, Robin was poising for
+his own, and back came he forthwith--whack!
+
+Whack! parried the other.
+
+Whack! whack! whack! whack!
+
+The fight waxed fast and furious. It was strength pitted against
+subtlety, and the match was a merry one. The mighty blows of the
+stranger went whistling around Robin's ducking head, while his own swift
+undercuts were fain to give the other an attack of indigestion. Yet each
+stood firmly in his place not moving backward or forward a foot for a
+good half hour, nor thinking of crying "Enough!" though some chance blow
+seemed likely to knock one or the other off the narrow foot-bridge. The
+giant's face was getting red, and his breath came snorting forth like
+a bull's. He stepped forward with a furious onslaught to finish this
+audacious fellow. Robin dodged his blows lightly, then sprang in swiftly
+and unexpectedly and dealt the stranger such a blow upon the short ribs
+that you would have sworn the tanner was trimming down his hides for
+market.
+
+The stranger reeled and came within an ace of falling, but regained his
+footing right quickly.
+
+"By my life, you can hit hard!" he gasped forth, giving back a blow
+almost while he was yet staggering.
+
+This blow was a lucky one. It caught Robin off his guard. His stick had
+rested a moment while he looked to see the giant topple into the water,
+when down came the other upon his head, whack! Robin saw more stars
+in that one moment than all the astronomers have since discovered, and
+forthwith he dropped neatly into the stream.
+
+The cool rushing current quickly brought him to his senses, howbeit he
+was still so dazed that he groped blindly for the swaying reeds to
+pull himself up on the bank. His assailant could not forbear laughing
+heartily at his plight, but was also quick to lend his aid. He thrust
+down his long staff to Robin crying, "Lay hold of that, an your fists
+whirl not so much as your head!"
+
+Robin laid hold and was hauled to dry land for all the world like
+a fish, except that the fish would never have come forth so wet and
+dripping. He lay upon the warm bank for a space to regain his senses.
+Then he sat up and gravely rubbed his pate.
+
+"By all the saints!" said he, "you hit full stoutly. My head hums like a
+hive of bees on a summer morning."
+
+Then he seized his horn, which lay near, and blew thereon three shrill
+notes that echoed against the trees. A moment of silence ensued, and
+then was heard the rustling of leaves and crackling of twigs like the
+coming of many men; and forth from the glade burst a score or two of
+stalwart yeomen, all clad in Lincoln green, like Robin, with good Will
+Stutely and the widow's three sons at their head.
+
+"Good master," cried Will Stutely, "how is this? In sooth there is not a
+dry thread on your body."
+
+"Why, marry," replied Robin, "this fellow would not let me pass the
+footbridge, and when I tickled him in the ribs, he must needs answer by
+a pat on the head which landed me overboard."
+
+"Then shall he taste some of his own porridge," quoth Will. "Seize him,
+lads!"
+
+"Nay, let him go free," said Robin. "The fight was a fair one and I
+abide by it. I surmise you also are quits?" he continued, turning to the
+stranger with a twinkling eye.
+
+"I am content," said the other, "for verily you now have the best end of
+the cudgel. Wherefore, I like you well, and would fain know your name."
+
+"Why," said Robin, "my men and even the Sheriff of Nottingham know me as
+Robin Hood, the outlaw."
+
+"Then am I right sorry that I beat you," exclaimed the man, "for I was
+on my way to seek you and to try to join your merry company. But after
+my unmannerly use of the cudgel, I fear we are still strangers."
+
+"Nay, never say it!" cried Robin, "I am glad I fell in with you; though,
+sooth to say, I did all the falling!"
+
+And amid a general laugh the two men clasped hands, and in that clasp
+the strong friendship of a lifetime was begun.
+
+"But you have not yet told us your name," said Robin, bethinking
+himself.
+
+"Whence I came, men call me John Little."
+
+"Enter our company then, John Little; enter and welcome. The rites are
+few, the fee is large. We ask your whole mind and body and heart even
+unto death."
+
+"I give the bond, upon my life," said the tall man.
+
+Thereupon Will Stutely, who loved a good jest, spoke up and said: "The
+infant in our household must be christened, and I'll stand godfather.
+This fair little stranger is so small of bone and sinew, that his old
+name is not to the purpose." Here he paused long enough to fill a horn
+in the stream. "Hark ye, my son,"--standing on tiptoe to splash the
+water on the giant--"take your new name on entering the forest. I
+christen you Little John."
+
+At this jest the men roared long and loud.
+
+"Give him a bow, and find a full sheath of arrows for Little John,"
+said Robin joyfully. "Can you shoot as well as fence with the staff, my
+friend?"
+
+"I have hit an ash twig at forty yards," said Little John.
+
+Thus chatting pleasantly the band turned back into the woodland and
+sought their secluded dell, where the trees were the thickest, the moss
+was the softest, and a secret path led to a cave, at once a retreat and
+a stronghold. Here under a mighty oak they found the rest of the band,
+some of whom had come in with a brace of fat does. And here they built
+a ruddy fire and sat down to the meat and ale, Robin Hood in the center
+with Will Stutely on the one hand and Little John on the other. And
+Robin was right well pleased with the day's adventure, even though he
+had got a drubbing; for sore ribs and heads will heal, and 'tis not
+every day that one can find a recruit as stout of bone and true of soul
+as Little John.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD TURNED BUTCHER, AND ENTERED THE SHERIFF'S SERVICE
+
+ The butcher he answered jolly Robin,
+ "No matter where I do dwell,
+ For a butcher am I, and to Nottingham
+ Am I going, my flesh to sell."
+
+The next morning the weather had turned ill, and Robin Hood's band
+stayed close to their dry and friendly cave. The third day brought a
+diversion in the shape of a trap by a roving party of the Sheriff's men.
+A fine stag had been struck down by one Of Will Stutely's fellows, and
+he and others had stepped forth from the covert to seize it, when twenty
+bowmen from Nottingham appeared at the end of the glade. Down dropped
+Will's men on all fours, barely in time to hear a shower of arrows
+whistle above their heads. Then from behind the friendly trees they
+sent back such a welcome that the Sheriff's men deemed it prudent not to
+tarry in their steps. Two of them, in sooth, bore back unpleasant wounds
+in their shoulders, from the encounter.
+
+When they returned to town the Sheriff waxed red with rage.
+
+"What," he gasped, "do my men fear to fight this Robin Hood, face to
+face? Would that I could get him within my reach, once. We should see
+then; we should see!"
+
+What it was the Sheriff would see, he did not state. But he was to have
+his wish granted in short space, and you and I will see how he profited
+by it.
+
+The fourth day and the one following this friendly bout, Little John was
+missing. One of his men said that he saw him talking with a beggar, but
+did not know whither they had gone. Two more days passed. Robin grew
+uneasy. He did not doubt the faith of Little John, but he was fearful
+lest a roving band of Foresters had captured him.
+
+At last Robin could not remain quiet. Up sprang he, with bow and arrows,
+and a short sword at his side.
+
+"I must away to Nottingham town, my men," he cried. "The goodly Sheriff
+has long desired to see me; and mayhap he can tell me tidings of the
+best quarter-staff in the shire"--meaning Little John.
+
+Others of the band besought him to let them go with him, but he would
+not.
+
+"Nay," he said smilingly, "the Sheriff and I are too good friends to put
+doubt upon our meeting. But tarry ye in the edge of the wood opposite
+the west gate of the town, and ye may be of service ere to-morrow
+night."
+
+So saying he strode forward to the road leading to Nottingham, and stood
+as before looking up and down to see if the way was clear. Back at a
+bend in the road he heard a rumbling and a lumbering, when up drove
+a stout butcher, whistling gaily, and driving a mare that sped slowly
+enough because of the weight of meat with which the cart was loaded.
+
+"A good morrow to you, friend," hailed Robin. "Whence come you and where
+go you with your load of meat?"
+
+"A good morrow to you," returned the butcher, civilly enough. "No matter
+where I dwell. I am but a simple butcher, and to Nottingham am I going,
+my flesh to sell. 'Tis Fair week, and my beef and mutton should fetch a
+fair penny," and he laughed loudly at his jest. "But whence come you?"
+
+"A yeoman am I, from Lockesley town. Men call me Robin Hood."
+
+"The saints forefend that you should treat me ill!" said the butcher in
+terror. "Oft have I heard of you, and how you lighten the purses of the
+fat priests and knights. But I am naught but a poor butcher, selling
+this load of meat, perchance, for enough to pay my quarter's rent."
+
+"Rest you, my friend, rest you," quoth Robin, "not so much as a silver
+penny would I take from you, for I love an honest Saxon face and a fair
+name with my neighbors. But I would strike a bargain with you."
+
+Here he took from his girdle a well-filled purse, and continued, "I
+would fain be a butcher, this day, and sell meat at Nottingham town.
+Could you sell me your meat, your cart, your mare, and your good-will,
+without loss, for five marks?"
+
+"Heaven bless ye, good Robin," cried the butcher right joyfully, "that
+can I!" And he leaped down forthwith from the cart, and handed Robin the
+reins in exchange for the purse.
+
+"One moment more," laughed Robin, "we must e'en change garments for the
+nonce. Take mine and scurry home quickly lest the King's Foresters try
+to put a hole through this Lincoln green."
+
+So saying he donned the butcher's blouse and apron, and, climbing into
+the cart, drove merrily down the road to the town.
+
+When he came to Nottingham he greeted the scowling gate-keeper blithely
+and proceeded to the market-place. Boldly he led his shuffling horse to
+the place where the butchers had their stalls.
+
+He had no notion of the price to ask for his meat, but put on a foolish
+and simple air as he called aloud his wares:
+
+ "Hark ye, lasses and dames, hark ye,
+ Good meat come buy, come buy,
+ Three pen'orths go for one penny,
+ And a kiss is good, say I!"
+
+Now when the folk found what a simple butcher he was, they crowded
+around his cart; for he really did sell three times as much for one
+penny as was sold by the other butchers. And one or two serving-lasses
+with twinkling eyes liked his comely face so well that they willingly
+gave boot of a kiss.
+
+But the other butchers were wroth when they found how he was taking
+their trade; and they accordingly put their heads together.
+
+One said, "He is a prodigal and has sold his father's land, and this is
+his first venture in trading."
+
+Another said, "He is a thief who has murdered a butcher, and stolen his
+horse and meat."
+
+Robin heard these sayings, but only laughed merrily and sang his song
+the louder. His good-humor made the people laugh also and crowd round
+his cart closely, shouting uproariously when some buxom lass submitted
+to be kissed.
+
+Then the butchers saw that they must meet craft with craft; and they
+said to him, "Come, brother butcher, if you would sell meat with us, you
+must e'en join our guild and stand by the rules of our trade."
+
+"We dine at the Sheriff's mansion to-day," said another, "and you must
+take one of our party."
+
+ "Accurst of his heart," said jolly Robin,
+ "That a butcher will deny.
+ I'll go with you, my brethren true,
+ And as fast as I can hie."
+
+Whereupon, having sold all his meat, he left his horse and cart in
+charge of a friendly hostler and prepared to follow his mates to the
+Mansion House.
+
+It was the Sheriff's custom to dine various guilds of the trade, from
+time to time, on Fair days, for he got a pretty profit out of the fees
+they paid him for the right to trade in the market-place. The Sheriff
+was already come with great pomp into the banqueting room, when Robin
+Hood and three or four butchers entered, and he greeted them all with
+great condescension; and presently the whole of a large company was
+seated at a table groaning beneath the good cheer of the feast.
+
+Now the Sheriff bade Robin sit by his right hand, at the head of the
+board; for one or two butchers had whispered to the official, "That
+fellow is a right mad blade, who yet made us much sport to-day. He sold
+more meat for one penny than we could sell for three; and he gave extra
+weight to whatsoever lass would buss him." And others said, "He is
+some prodigal who knows not the value of goods, and may be plucked by a
+shrewd man right closely."
+
+The Sheriff was will to pluck a prodigal with the next man, and he was
+moreover glad to have a guest who promised to enliven the feast. So, as
+I have told you, he placed Robin by his side, and he made much of him
+and laughed boisterously at his jests; though sooth to say, the laugh
+were come by easily, for Robin had never been in merrier mood, and his
+quips and jests soon put the whole table at a roar.
+
+Then my lord Bishop of Hereford came in, last of all, to say a ponderous
+grace and take his seat on the other side of the Sheriff--the prelate's
+fat body showing up in goodly contrast to the other's lean bones.
+
+After grace was said, and while the servants clattered in with the meat
+platters, Robin stood up and said:
+
+"An amen say I to my lord Bishop's thanks! How, now, my fine fellows, be
+merry and drink deep; for the shot I'll pay ere I go my way, though it
+cost me five pounds and more. So my lords and gentlemen all, spare not
+the wine, but fall to lustily."
+
+"Hear! hear!" shouted the butchers.
+
+"Now are you a right jolly soul," quoth the Sheriff, "but this feast is
+mine own. Howbeit you must have many a head of horned beasts, and many
+an acre of broad land, to spend from your purse so freely."
+
+"Aye, that have I," returned Robin, his eyes all a twinkle, "five
+hundred horned beasts have I and my brothers, and none of them have we
+been able to sell. That is why I have turned butcher. But I know not the
+trade, and would gladly sell the whole herd, an I could find a buyer."
+
+At this, the Sheriff's greed 'gan to rise. Since this fool _would_ be
+plucked, thought he, why should not he do the plucking?
+
+"Five hundred beasts, say you?" he queried sharply.
+
+"Five hundred and ten fat beasts by actual count, that I would sell for
+a just figure. Aye, to him who will pay me in right money, would I sell
+them for twenty pieces of gold. Is that too much to ask, lording?"
+
+Was there ever such an idiot butcher? thought the Sheriff; and he so far
+forgot his dignity as to nudge the Bishop in his fat ribs.
+
+"Nay, good fellow," quoth he chuckling, "I am always ready to help
+any in my shire. An you cannot find a buyer for your herd at this just
+figure, I will e'en buy them myself."
+
+At this generosity Robin was quite overcome, and fell to praising the
+Sheriff to the skies, and telling him that he should not have cause to
+forget the kindness.
+
+"Tut, tut," said the Sheriff, "'tis naught but a trade. Drive in your
+herd tomorrow to the market-place and you shall have money down."
+
+"Nay, excellence," said Robin, "that can I not easily do, for they are
+grazing in scattered fashion. But they are over near Gamewell, not more
+than a mile therefrom at most. Will you not come and choose your own
+beasts tomorrow?"
+
+"Aye, that I will," said the Sheriff, his cupidity casting his caution
+to the winds. "Tarry with me over night, and I will go with you in the
+morning."
+
+This was a poser for Robin, since he liked not the idea of staying over
+night at the Sheriff's house. He had hoped to appoint a meeting-place
+for the other, but now saw that this might excite doubt. He looked
+around at the company. By this time, you must know, the feast had
+progressed far, and the butchers were deep in their cups. The Sheriff
+and Robin had talked in a low voice, and my lord Bishop was almost
+asleep.
+
+"Agreed," said Robin presently, and the words were no sooner out of his
+mouth than the door opened and a serving-man entered bearing tray of
+mulled wine. At sight of the fellow's face, Robin gave an involuntary
+start of surprise which was instantly checked. The other also saw him,
+stood still a moment, and as if forgetting something turned about and
+left the hall.
+
+It was Little John.
+
+A dozen questions flashed across Robin's mind, and he could find answer
+for none of them. What was Little John doing in the Sheriff's house? Why
+had he not told the band? Was he true to them? Would he betray him?
+
+But these questions of distrust were dismissed from Robin's open mind
+as soon as they had entered. He knew that Little John was faithful and
+true.
+
+He recovered his spirits and began again upon a vein of foolish banter,
+for the amusement of the Sheriff and his guests, all being now merry
+with wine.
+
+"A song!" one of them shouted, and the cry was taken up round the table.
+Robin mounted his chair and trolled forth:
+
+ "A lass and a butcher of Nottingham
+ Agreed 'twixt them for to wed.
+ Says he, 'I'll give ye the meat, fair dame,
+ And ye will give me the bread."
+
+Then they joined in the chorus amid a pounding of cups upon the board:
+
+ "With a hey and a ho
+ And a hey nonny no,
+ A butcher of Nottingham!"
+
+While the song was at its height, Little John reappeared, with other
+servants, and refilled the cups. He came up to Robin and, as if asking
+him if he would have more wine, said softly, "Meet me in the pantry
+to-night."
+
+Robin nodded, and sang loudly. The day was already far spent, and
+presently the company broke up with many hiccupy bows of the Sheriff and
+little notice of the drowsy Bishop.
+
+When the company was dispersed, the Sheriff bade a servant show Robin to
+his room, and promised to see him at breakfast the next day.
+
+Robin kept his word and met Little John that night, and the sheriff next
+day; but Little John has been doing so much in the meantime that he must
+be allowed a chapter to himself.
+
+So let us turn to another story that was sung of, in the ballads of
+olden time, and find out how Little John entered the Sheriff's service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW LITTLE JOHN ENTERED THE SHERIFF'S SERVICE
+
+ List and hearken, gentlemen,
+ All ye that now be here,
+ Of Little John, that was Knight's-man,
+ Good mirth ye now shall hear.
+
+It had come around another Fair day at Nottingham town, and folk crowded
+there by all the gates. Goods of many kinds were displayed in gaily
+colored booths, and at every cross-street a free show was in progress.
+Here and there, stages had been erected for the play at quarter-staff, a
+highly popular sport.
+
+There was a fellow, one Eric of Lincoln, who was thought to be the
+finest man with the staff for miles around. His feats were sung about in
+ballads through all the shire. A great boaster was he withal, and to-day
+he strutted about on one of these corner stages, and vaunted of his
+prowess, and offered to crack any man's crown for a shilling. Several
+had tried their skill with Eric, but he had soon sent them spinning in
+no gentle manner, amid the jeers and laughter of the onlookers.
+
+A beggar-man sat over against Eric's stage and grinned every time a pate
+was cracked. He was an uncouth fellow, ragged and dirty and unshaven.
+Eric caught sight of his leering face at one of his boasts--for there
+was a lull in the game, because no man else wanted to come within reach
+of Eric's blows. Eric, I say, noticed the beggar-man grinning at him
+rather impudently, and turned toward him sharply.
+
+"How now, you dirty villain!" quoth he, "mend your manners to your
+betters, or, by our Lady, I'll dust your rags for you."
+
+The beggar-man still grinned. "I am always ready to mend my manners to
+my betters," said he, "but I am afraid you cannot teach me any better
+than you can dust my jacket."
+
+"Come up! Come up!" roared the other, flourishing his staff.
+
+"That will I," said the beggar, getting up slowly and with difficulty.
+"It will pleasure me hugely to take a braggart down a notch, an some
+good man will lend me a stout quarter-staff."
+
+At this a score of idlers reached him their staves--being ready enough
+to see another man have his head cracked, even if they wished to save
+their own--and he took the stoutest and heaviest of all. He made a sorry
+enough figure as he climbed awkwardly upon the stage, but when he had
+gained it, he towered full half a head above the other, for all his
+awkwardness. Nathless, he held his stick so clumsily that the crowd
+laughed in great glee.
+
+Now each man took his place and looked the other up and down, watching
+warily for an opening. Only a moment stood they thus, for Eric, intent
+on teaching this rash beggar a lesson and sweeping him speedily off the
+stage, launched forth boldly and gave the other a sounding crack on the
+shoulder. The beggar danced about, and made as though he would drop his
+staff from very pain, while the crowd roared and Eric raised himself for
+another crushing blow. But just then the awkward beggar came to life.
+Straightening himself like a flash, he dealt Eric a back-handed blow,
+the like of which he had never before seen. Down went the boaster to the
+floor with a sounding thump, and the fickle people yelled and laughed
+themselves purple; for it was a new sight to see Eric of Lincoln eating
+dust.
+
+But he was up again almost as soon as he had fallen, and right quickly
+retreated to his own ringside to gather his wits and watch for an
+opening. He saw instantly that he had no easy antagonist, and he came in
+cautiously this time.
+
+And now those who stood around saw the merriest game of quarter-staff
+that was ever played inside the walls of Nottingham town. Both men
+were on their guard and fenced with fine skill, being well matched in
+prowess. Again and again did Eric seek to force an opening under the
+other's guard, and just as often were his blows parried. The beggar
+stood sturdily in his tracks contenting himself with beating off the
+attack. For a long time their blows met like the steady crackling of
+some huge forest fire, and Eric strove to be wary, for he now knew that
+the other had no mean wits or mettle. But he grew right mad at last, and
+began to send down blows so fierce and fast that you would have sworn
+a great hail-storm was pounding on the shingles over your head. Yet he
+never so much as entered the tall beggar's guard.
+
+Then at last the stranger saw his chance and changed his tune of
+fighting. With one upward stroke he sent Eric's staff whirling through
+the air. With another he tapped Eric on the head; and, with a third
+broad swing, ere the other could recover himself, he swept him clear off
+the stage, much as you would brush a fly off the window pane.
+
+Now the people danced and shouted and made so much ado that the
+shop-keepers left their stalls and others came running from every
+direction. The victory of the queer beggar made him immensely popular.
+Eric had been a great bully, and many had suffered defeat and insult
+at his hands. So the ragged stranger found money and food and drink
+everywhere at his disposal, and he feasted right comfortably till the
+afternoon.
+
+Then a long bow contest came on, and to it the beggar went with some of
+his new friends. It was held in the same arena that Robin had formerly
+entered; and again the Sheriff and lords and ladies graced the scene
+with their presence, while the people crowded to their places.
+
+When the archers had stepped forward, the herald rose and proclaimed the
+rules of the game: how that each man should shoot three shots, and to
+him who shot best the prize of a yoke of fat steers should belong.
+A dozen keen-eyed bowmen were there, and among them some of the best
+fellows in the Forester's and Sheriff's companies. Down at the end of
+the line towered the tall beggar-man, who must needs twang a bow-string
+with the best of them.
+
+The Sheriff noted his queer figure and asked: "Who is that ragged
+fellow?"
+
+"'Tis he that hath but now so soundly cracked the crown of Eric of
+Lincoln," was the reply.
+
+The shooting presently began, and the targets soon showed a fine
+reckoning. Last of all came the beggar's turn.
+
+"By your leave," he said loudly, "I'd like it well to shoot with any
+other man here present at a mark of my own placing." And he strode down
+the lists with a slender peeled sapling which he stuck upright in the
+ground. "There," said he, "is a right good mark. Will any man try it?"
+
+But not an archer would risk his reputation on so small a target.
+
+Whereupon the beggar drew his bow with seeming carelessness and split
+the wand with his shaft.
+
+"Long live the beggar!" yelled the bystanders.
+
+The Sheriff swore a full great oath, and said: "This man is the best
+archer that ever yet I saw." And he beckoned to him, and asked him: "How
+now, good fellow, what is your name, and in what country were you born?"
+
+"In Holderness I was born," the man replied; "men call me Reynold
+Greenleaf."
+
+"You are a sturdy fellow, Reynold Greenleaf, and deserve better apparel
+than that you wear at present. Will you enter my service? I will give
+you twenty marks a year, above your living, and three good suits of
+clothes."
+
+"Three good suits, say you? Then right gladly will I enter your service,
+for my back has been bare this many a long day."
+
+Then Reynold turned him about to the crowd and shouted: "Hark ye, good
+people, I have entered the Sheriff's service, and need not the yoke of
+steers for prize. So take them for yourselves, to feast withal."
+
+At this the crowd shouted more merrily than ever, and threw their caps
+high into the air. And none so popular a man had come to Nottingham town
+in many a long day as this same Reynold Greenleaf.
+
+Now you may have guessed, by this time, who Reynold Greenleaf really
+was; so I shall tell you that he was none other than Little John. And
+forth went he to the Sheriff's house, and entered his service. But it
+was a sorry day for the Sheriff when he got his new man. For Little John
+winked his shrewd eye and said softly to himself: "By my faith, I shall
+be the worst servant to him that ever yet had he!"
+
+Two days passed by. Little John, it must be confessed, did not make
+a good servant. He insisted upon eating the Sheriff's best bread and
+drinking his best wine, so that the steward waxed wroth. Nathless the
+Sheriff held him in high esteem, and made great talk of taking him along
+on the next hunting trip.
+
+It was now the day of the banquet to the butchers, about which we have
+already heard. The banquet hall, you must know, was not in the main
+house, but connected with it by a corridor. All the servants were
+bustling about making preparations for the feast, save only Little John,
+who must needs lie abed the greater part of the day. But he presented
+himself at last, when the dinner was half over; and being desirous
+of seeing the guests for himself he went into the hall with the other
+servants to pass the wine. First, however, I am afraid that some of
+the wine passed his own lips while he went down the corridor. When he
+entered the banqueting hall, whom should he see but Robin Hood himself.
+We can imagine the start of surprise felt by each of these bold fellows
+upon seeing the other in such strange company. But they kept their
+secrets, as we have seen, and arranged to meet each other that same
+night. Meanwhile, the proud Sheriff little knew that he harbored the two
+chief outlaws of the whole countryside beneath his roof.
+
+After the feast was over and night was beginning to advance, Little John
+felt faint of stomach and remembered him that he had eaten nothing all
+that day. Back went he to the pantry to see what eatables were laid by.
+But there, locking up the stores for the night, stood the fat steward.
+
+"Good Sir Steward," said Little John, "give me to dine, for it is long
+for Greenleaf to be fasting."
+
+The steward looked grimly at him and rattled the keys at his girdle.
+
+"Sirrah lie-abed," quoth he, "'tis late in the day to be talking of
+eating. Since you have waited thus long to be hungry, you can e'en take
+your appetite back to bed again."
+
+"Now by mine appetite, that will I not do," cried Little John. "Your
+own paunch of fat would be enough for any bear to sleep on through the
+winter. But my stomach craves food, and food it shall have!"
+
+Saying this he brushed past the steward and tried the door, but it
+was locked fast; whereat the fat steward chuckled and jangled his keys
+again.
+
+Then was Little John right mad, and he brought down his huge fist on the
+door-panel with a sledge-hammer blow that shivered an opening you could
+thrust your hand into. Little John stooped and peered through the hole
+to see what food lay within reach, when crack! went the steward's keys
+upon his crown, and the worthy danced around him playing a tattoo that
+made Little John's ears ring. At this he turned upon the steward and
+gave him such a rap that his back went nigh in two, and over went the
+fat fellow rolling on the floor.
+
+"Lie there," quoth Little John, "till ye find strength to go to bed.
+Meanwhile, I must be about my dinner." And he kicked open the buttery
+door without ceremony and brought to light a venison pasty and cold
+roast pheasant--goodly sights to a hungry man. Placing these down on a
+convenient shelf he fell to with right good will. So Little John ate and
+drank as much as he would.
+
+Now the Sheriff had in his kitchen a cook, a stout man and bold, who
+heard the rumpus and came in to see how the land lay. There sat Little
+John eating away for dear life, while the fat steward was rolled under
+the table like a bundle of rags.
+
+"I make my vow!" said the cook, "you are a shrewd hind to dwell thus in
+a household, and ask thus to dine." So saying he laid aside his spit and
+drew a good sword that hung at his side.
+
+"I make my vow!" said Little John, "you are a bold man and hardy to come
+thus between me and my meat. So defend yourself and see that you prove
+the better man." And he drew his own sword and crossed weapons with the
+cook.
+
+Then back and forth they clashed with sullen sound. The old ballad which
+tells of their fight says that they thought nothing for to flee, but
+stiffly for to stand. There they fought sore together, two miles away
+and more, but neither might the other harm for the space of a full hour.
+
+"I make my vow!" cried Little John, "you are the best swordsman that
+ever yet I saw. What say you to resting a space and eating and drinking
+good health with me. Then we may fall to again with the swords."
+
+"Agreed!" said the cook, who loved good fare as well as a good fight;
+and they both laid by their swords and fell to the food with hearty
+will. The venison pasty soon disappeared, and the roast pheasant flew
+at as lively a rate as ever the bird itself had sped. Then the warriors
+rested a space and patted their stomachs, and smiled across at
+each other like bosom friends; for a man when he as dined looks out
+pleasantly upon the world.
+
+"And now good Reynold Greenleaf," said the cook, "we may as well settle
+this brave fight we have in hand."
+
+"A true saying," rejoined the other, "but first tell me, friend--for
+I protest you are my friend henceforth--what is the score we have to
+settle?"
+
+"Naught save who can handle the sword best," said the cook. "By my troth
+I had thought to carve you like a capon ere now."
+
+"And I had long since thought to shave your ears," replied Little John.
+"This bout we can settle in right good time. But just now I and my
+master have need of you, and you can turn your stout blade to better
+service than that of the Sheriff."
+
+"Whose service would that be?" asked the cook.
+
+"Mine," answered a would-be butcher entering the room, "and I am Robin
+Hood."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HOW THE SHERIFF LOST THREE GOOD SERVANTS AND FOUND THEM AGAIN
+
+ "Make good cheer," said Robin Hood.
+ "Sheriff! for charity!
+ And for the love of Little John
+ Thy life is granted thee!"
+
+The cook gasped in amazement. This Robin Hood! and under the Sheriff's
+very roof!
+
+"Now by my troth you are a brave fellow," he said. "I have heard great
+tales of your prowess, and the half has not been told. But who might
+this tall slasher be?"
+
+"Men do call me Little John, good fellow."
+
+"Then Little John, or Reynold Greenleaf, I like you well, on my honor as
+Much the miller's son; and you too, bold Robin Hood. An you take me, I
+will enter your service right gladly."
+
+"Spoken like a stout man!" said Robin, seizing him by the hand. "But I
+must back to my own bed, lest some sleepy warden stumble upon me, and
+I be forced to run him through. Lucky for you twain that wine flowed
+so freely in the house to-day; else the noise of your combat would have
+brought other onlookers besides Robin Hood. Now if ye would flee the
+house to-night, I will join you in the good greenwood to-morrow."
+
+"But, good master," said the cook, "you would not stay here over night!
+Verily, it is running your head into a noose. Come with us. The Sheriff
+has set strict watch on all the gates, since 'tis Fair week, but I know
+the warden at the west gate and could bring us through safely. To-morrow
+you will be stayed." "Nay, that will I not," laughed Robin, "for I shall
+go through with no less escort than the Sheriff himself. Now do you,
+Little John, and do you, Much the miller's son, go right speedily. In
+the borders of the wood you will find my merry men. Tell them to kill
+two fine harts against to-morrow eve, for we shall have great company
+and lordly sport."
+
+And Robin left them as suddenly as he had come.
+
+"Comrade," then said Little John, "we may as well bid the Sheriff's roof
+farewell. But ere we go, it would seem a true pity to fail to take such
+of the Sheriff's silver plate as will cause us to remember him, and also
+grace our special feasts."
+
+"'Tis well said indeed," quoth the cook.
+
+Thereupon they got a great sack and filled it with silver plate from the
+shelves where it would not at once be missed, and they swung the sack
+between them, and away they went, out of the house, out of the town, and
+into the friendly shelter of Sherwood Forest.
+
+The next morning the servants were late astir in the Sheriff's house.
+The steward awoke from a heavy sleep, but his cracked head was still in
+such a whirl that he could not have sworn whether the Sheriff had ever
+owned so much as one silver dish. So the theft went undiscovered for the
+nonce.
+
+Robin Hood met the Sheriff at breakfast, when his host soon spoke of
+what was uppermost in his heart--the purchase of the fine herd of cattle
+near Gamewell. 'Twas clear that a vision of them, purchased for twenty
+paltry gold pieces, had been with him all through the night, in his
+dreams. And Robin again appeared such a silly fellow that the Sheriff
+saw no need of dissembling, but said that he was ready to start at once
+to look at the herd.
+
+Accordingly they set forth, Robin in his little butcher's cart, behind
+the lean mare, and the Sheriff mounted on a horse. Out of Nottingham
+town, through gates open wide, they proceeded, and took the hill road
+leading through Sherwood Forest. And as they went on and plunged deeper
+among the trees, Robin whistled blithely and sang snatches of tunes.
+
+"Why are you so gay, fellow?" said the Sheriff, for, sooth to say, the
+silence of the woods was making him uneasy.
+
+"I am whistling to keep my courage up," replied Robin.
+
+"What is there to fear, when you have the Sheriff of Nottingham beside
+you?" quoth the other pompously.
+
+Robin scratched his head.
+
+"They do say that Robin Hood and his men care little for the Sheriff,"
+he said.
+
+"Pooh!" said the Sheriff. "I would not give _that_ for their lives, if
+I could once lay hands upon them." And he snapped his fingers angrily.
+"But Robin Hood himself was on this very road the last time I came to
+town," said the other.
+
+The Sheriff started at the crackling of a twig under his horse's feet,
+and looked around.
+
+"Did you see him?" he asked.
+
+"Aye, that did I! He wanted the use of this mare and cart to drive to
+Nottingham. He said he would fain turn butcher. But see!"
+
+As he spoke he came to a turn in the road, and there before them stood a
+herd of the King's deer, feeding. Robin pointed to them and continued:
+
+"There is my herd of cattle, good Master Sheriff! How do you like them?
+Are they not fat and fair to see?"
+
+The Sheriff drew rein quickly. "Now fellow," quoth he, "I would I were
+well out of this forest, for I care not to see such herds as these, or
+such faces as yours. Choose your own way, therefore, whoever you be, and
+let me go mine."
+
+"Nay," laughed Robin, seizing the Sheriff's bridle, "I have been at too
+much pains to cultivate your company to forego it now so easily. Besides
+I wish you to meet some of my friends and dine with me, since you have
+so lately entertained me at your board."
+
+So saying he clapped a horn on his lips and winded three merry notes.
+The deer bounded away; and before the last of them was seen, there came
+a running and a rustling, and out from behind covert and tree came full
+twoscore of men, clad in Lincoln green, and bearing good yew bows in
+their hands and short swords at their sides. Up they ran to Robin Hood
+and doffed their caps to him respectfully, while the Sheriff sat still
+from very amazement.
+
+"Welcome to the greenwood!" said one of the leaders, bending the knee
+with mock reverence before the Sheriff.
+
+The Sheriff glared. It was Little John.
+
+"Woe the worth, Reynold Greenleaf," he said, "you have betrayed me!"
+
+"I make my vow," said Little John, "that you are to blame, master. I was
+misserved of my dinner, when I was at your house. But we shall set you
+down to a feast we hope you will enjoy."
+
+"Well spoken, Little John," said Robin Hood. "Take you his bridle and
+let us do honor to the guest who has come to feast with us."
+
+Then turning abruptly the whole company plunged into the heart of the
+forest.
+
+After twisting and turning till the Sheriff's bewildered head sat
+dizzily upon his shoulders, the greenwood men passed through a narrow
+alley amid the trees which led to a goodly open space flanked by
+wide-spreading oaks. Under the largest of these a pleasant fire was
+crackling, and near it two fine harts lay ready for cooking. Around the
+blaze were gathered another company of yeomen quite as large as that
+which came with Robin Hood. Up sprang they as the latter advanced and
+saluted their leader with deference, but with hearty gladness to see him
+back again.
+
+That merry wag Will Stutely was in command; and when he saw the
+palefaced Sheriff being led in like any culprit, he took his cloak and
+laid it humbly upon the ground and besought the Sheriff to alight upon
+it, as the ground of Sherwood was unused to such dignitaries.
+
+"Bestir yourselves, good fellows!" cried Robin Hood; "and while our new
+cook, whom I see with us, is preparing a feast worthy of our high guest,
+let us have a few games to do him honor!"
+
+Then while the whole glade was filled with the savory smell of roasting
+venison and fat capons, and brown pasties warmed beside the blaze,
+and mulled wine sent forth a cordial fragrance, Robin Hood placed the
+Sheriff upon a knoll beneath the largest oak and sat himself down by
+him.
+
+First stepped forward several pairs of men armed with the quarter-staff,
+the widow's sons among them, and so skilfully did they thrust and parry
+and beat down guards, that the Sheriff, who loved a good game as well as
+any man, clapped his hands, forgetting where he was, and shouted, "Well
+struck! well struck! Never have I seen such blows at all the Fairs of
+Nottingham!"
+
+Then the best archers of the band set up a small wand at eightscore
+paces distant, and thereon they affixed a wreath of green. And the
+archers began to shoot; and he who shot not through the garland without
+disturbing its leaves and tendrils was fain to submit to a good sound
+buffet from Little John. But right cunning was the shooting, for the
+men had spent a certain time in daily practice, and many were the shafts
+which sped daintily through the circle. Nathless now and again some
+luckless fellow would shoot awry and would be sent winding from a long
+arm blow from the tall lieutenant while the glade roared with laughter.
+And none more hearty a guffaw was given than came from the Sheriff's own
+throat, for the spirit of the greenwood was upon him.
+
+But presently his high mood was dashed. The company sat down to meat,
+and the guest was treated to two more disturbing surprise. The cook came
+forward to serve the food, when the Sheriff beheld in him his own former
+servant, and one whom he supposed was at the moment in the scullery at
+Nottingham.
+
+Much the miller's son grinned by way of answer to the Sheriff's
+amazement, and served the plates, and placed them before the party. Then
+did the Sheriff gasp and fairly choke with rage. The service was his own
+silverware from the Mansion House!
+
+"You rascals! you rogues!" he spluttered. "Was it not enough to defraud
+me out of three of my servants, that you must also rob me of my best
+silver service? Nay, by my life, but I will not touch your food!"
+
+But Robin Hood bade him pause.
+
+"Gramercy!" quoth he, "servants come and go, in merry England, and so
+does service. The platters are but used to do your worship honor. And as
+for your life, it is forfeit to your eagerness to buy my herd of cattle
+so cheaply. Now sit you down again and make good cheer, Sheriff, for
+charity! And for the love of Little John your life is granted you!"
+
+So the Sheriff sat him down again, with the best face he could assume,
+and soon the cook's viands were disappearing down his gullet as rapidly
+as the next man's. And they feasted royally and clinked each other's
+cups until the sun had ceased to print the pattern of the leaves upon
+the forest carpet.
+
+Then the Sheriff arose and said: "I thank you, Robin Hood, one-time
+butcher, and you, Little John, one-time beggar, and you, Much, one-time
+cook, and all you good men who have entertained me in Sherwood so well.
+Promises I make not as to how I shall requite you when next you come to
+Nottingham, for I am in the King's service. So for the present the score
+rests with you. But the shadows grow long and I must away, if you will
+be pleased to pilot me to the road."
+
+Then Robin Hood and all his men arose and drank the Sheriff's health,
+and Robin said: "If you must needs go at once we will not detain
+you--except that you have forgotten two things."
+
+"What may they be?" asked the Sheriff, while his heart sank within him.
+
+"You forget that you came with me to-day to buy a herd of horned beasts;
+likewise that he who dines at the Greenwood Inn must pay the landlord."
+
+The Sheriff fidgeted like a small boy who has forgotten his lesson.
+
+"Nay, I have but a small sum with me," he began apologetically.
+
+"What is that sum, gossip?" questioned Little John, "for my own wage
+should also come out of it!"
+
+"And mine!" said Much.
+
+"And mine!" smiled Robin.
+
+The Sheriff caught his breath. "By my troth, are all these silver dishes
+worth anything?"
+
+The outlaws roared heartily at this.
+
+"I'll tell you what it is, worship," said Robin, "we three rascally
+servants will compound our back wages for those plates. And we will keep
+the herd of cattle free for our own use--and the King's. But this little
+tavern bill should be settled! Now, what sum have you about you?"
+
+"I have only those twenty pieces of gold, and twenty others," said the
+Sheriff: and well it was that he told the truth for once, for Robin
+said:
+
+"Count it, Little John."
+
+Little John turned the Sheriff's wallet inside out. "'Tis true enough,"
+he said.
+
+"Then you shall pay no more than twenty pieces for your entertainment,
+excellence," decreed Robin. "Speak I soothly, men of greenwood?"
+
+"Good!" echoed the others.
+
+"The Sheriff should swear by his patron saint that he will not molest
+us," said Will Stutely; and his addition was carried unanimously.
+
+"So be it, then," cried Little John, approaching the sheriff. "Now swear
+by your life and your patron saint--"
+
+"I will swear it by St. George, who is patron of us all," said the
+Sheriff vigorously, "that I will never disturb or distress the outlaws
+in Sherwood."
+
+"But let me catch any of you _out_ of Sherwood!" thought he to himself.
+
+Then the twenty pieces of gold were paid over, and the Sheriff once more
+prepared to depart.
+
+"Never had we so worshipful a guest before," said Robin; "and as the new
+moon is beginning to silver the leaves, I shall bear you company myself
+for part of the way. 'Twas I who brought you into the wood."
+
+"Nay, I protest against your going needlessly far," said Sheriff.
+
+"But I protest that I am loath to lose your company," replied Robin.
+"The next time I may not be so pleased."
+
+And he took the Sheriff's horse by the bridle rein, and led him through
+the lane and by many a thicket till the main road was reached.
+
+"Now fare you well, good Sheriff," he said, "and when next you think to
+despoil a poor prodigal, remember the herd you would have bought over
+against Gamewell. And when next you employ a servant, make certain that
+he is not employing you."
+
+So saying he smote the nag's haunch, and off went the Sheriff upon the
+road to Nottingham.
+
+And that is how--you will find from many ballads that came to be sung
+at the Sheriff's expense, and which are known even to the present
+day--that, I say, is how the Sheriff lost three good servants and found
+them again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET WILL SCARLET
+
+ The youngster was clothed in scarlet red
+ In scarlet fine and gay;
+ And he did frisk it o'er the plain,
+ And chanted a roundelay.
+
+One fine morning, soon after the proud Sheriff had been brought to
+grief, Robin Hood and Little John went strolling down a path through the
+wood. It was not far from the foot--bridge where they had fought their
+memorable battle; and by common impulse they directed their steps to
+the brook to quench their thirst and rest them in the cool bushes. The
+morning gave promise of a hot day. The road even by the brook was dusty.
+So the cooling stream was very pleasing and grateful to their senses.
+
+On each side of them, beyond the dusty highway, stretched out broad
+fields of tender young corn. On the yon side of the fields uprose the
+sturdy oaks and beeches and ashes of the forest; while at their feet
+modest violets peeped out shyly and greeted the loiterers with an odor
+which made the heart glad. Over on the far side of the brook in a tiny
+bay floated three lily-pads; and from amid some clover blossoms on the
+bank an industrious bee rose with the hum of busy contentment. It was a
+day so brimful of quiet joy that the two friends lay flat on their
+backs gazing up at the scurrying clouds, and neither caring to break the
+silence.
+
+Presently they heard some one coming up the road whistling gaily, as
+though he owned the whole world and 'twas but made to whistle in. Anon
+he chanted a roundelay with a merry note.
+
+"By my troth, a gay bird!" quoth Robin, raising up on his elbow. "Let us
+lie still, and trust that his purse is not as light as his heart."
+
+So they lay still, and in a minute more up came a smart stranger dressed
+in scarlet and silk and wearing a jaunty hat with a curling cock feather
+in it. His whole costume was of scarlet, from the feather to the silk
+hosen on his legs. A goodly sword hung at his side, its scabbard all
+embossed with tilting knights and weeping ladies. His hair was long and
+yellow and hung clustering about his shoulders, for all the world like a
+schoolgirl's; and he bore himself with as mincing a gait as the pertest
+of them.
+
+Little John clucked his teeth drolly at this sight. "By my troth, a gay
+bird!" he said echoing the other's words--then added, "But not so bad a
+build for all his prettiness. Look you, those calves and thighs are well
+rounded and straight. The arms, for all that gold-wrought cloak, hang
+stoutly from full shoulders. I warrant you the fop can use his dainty
+sword right well on occasion."
+
+"Nay," retorted Robin, "he is naught but a ladies' man from court. My
+long-bow 'gainst a plugged shilling that he would run and bellow lustily
+at sight of a quarter-staff. Stay you behind this bush and I will soon
+get some rare sport out of him. Belike his silk purse may contain more
+pennies than the law allows to one man in Sherwood or Barnesdale."
+
+So saying Robin Hood stepped forth briskly from the covert and planted
+himself in the way of the scarlet stranger. The latter had walked
+so slowly that he was scarce come to their resting-place; and now
+on beholding Robin he neither slackened nor quickened his pace but
+sauntered idly straight ahead, looking to the right and to the left,
+with the finest air in the world, but never once at Robin.
+
+"Hold!" quoth the outlaw. "What mean ye by running thus over a wayfarer,
+rough shod?"
+
+"Wherefore should I hold, good fellow?" said the stranger in a smooth
+voice, and looking at Robin for the first time.
+
+"Because I bid you to," replied Robin.
+
+"And who may you be?" asked the other as coolly as you please.
+
+"What my name is matters not," said Robin; "but know that I am a public
+tax-gatherer and equalizer of shillings. If your purse have more than a
+just number of shillings or pence, I must e'en lighten it somewhat; for
+there are many worthy people round about these borders who have less
+than the just amount. Wherefore, sweet gentleman, I pray you hand over
+your purse without more ado, that I may judge of its weight in proper
+fashion."
+
+The other smiled as sweetly as though a lady were paying him a
+compliment.
+
+"You are a droll fellow," he said calmly. "Your speech amuses me
+mightily. Pray continue, if you have not done, for I am in no hurry this
+morning."
+
+"I have said all with my tongue that is needful," retorted Robin,
+beginning to grow red under the collar. "Nathless, I have other
+arguments which may not be so pleasing to your dainty skin. Prithee,
+stand and deliver. I promise to deal fairly with the purse."
+
+"Alack-a-day!" said the stranger with a little shrug of his shoulders;
+"I am deeply sorrowful that I cannot show my purse to every rough lout
+that asks to see it. But I really could not, as I have further need of
+it myself and every farthing it contains. Wherefore, pray stand aside."
+
+"Nay that will I not! and 'twill go the harder with you if you do not
+yield at once."
+
+"Good fellow," said the other gently, "have I not heard all your speech
+with patience? Now that is all I promised to do. My conscience is salved
+and I must go on my way. To-rol-o-rol-e-loo!" he caroled, making as
+though to depart.
+
+"Hold, I say!" quoth Robin hotly; for he knew how Little John must be
+chuckling at this from behind the bushes. "Hold I say, else I shall have
+to bloody those fair locks of yours!" And he swung his quarter-staff
+threateningly.
+
+"Alas!" moaned the stranger shaking his head. "The pity of it all! Now I
+shall have to run this fellow through with my sword! And I hoped to be a
+peaceable man henceforth!" And sighing deeply he drew his shining blade
+and stood on guard.
+
+"Put by your weapon," said Robin. "It is too pretty a piece of steel to
+get cracked with common oak cudgel; and that is what would happen on
+the first pass I made at you. Get you a stick like mine out of yon
+undergrowth, and we will fight fairly, man to man."
+
+The stranger thought a moment with his usual slowness, and eyed Robin
+from head to foot. Then he unbuckled his scabbard, laid it and the sword
+aside, and walked deliberately over to the oak thicket. Choosing from
+among the shoots and saplings he found a stout little tree to his
+liking, when he laid hold of it, without stopping to cut it, and gave a
+tug. Up it came root and all, as though it were a stalk of corn, and the
+stranger walked back trimming it as quietly as though pulling up trees
+were the easiest thing in the world.
+
+Little John from his hiding-place saw the feat, and could hardly
+restrain a long whistle. "By our Lady!" he muttered to himself, "I would
+not be in Master Robin's boots!"
+
+Whatever Robin thought upon seeing the stranger's strength, he uttered
+not a word and budged not an inch. He only put his oak staff at parry as
+the other took his stand.
+
+There was a threefold surprise that day, by the brookside. The stranger
+and Robin and Little John in the bushes all found a combat that upset
+all reckoning. The stranger for all his easy strength and cool nerve
+found an antagonist who met his blows with the skill of a woodman. Robin
+found the stranger as hard to hit as though fenced in by an oak hedge.
+While Little John rolled over and over in silent joy.
+
+Back and forth swayed the fighters, their cudgels pounding this way and
+that, knocking off splinters and bark, and threatening direst damage to
+bone and muscle and skin. Back and forth they pranced kicking up a cloud
+of dust and gasping for fresh air. From a little way off you would have
+vowed that these two men were trying to put out a fire, so thickly
+hung the cloud of battle over them. Thrice did Robin smite the scarlet
+man--with such blows that a less stout fellow must have bowled over.
+Only twice did the scarlet man smite Robin, but the second blow was
+like to finish him. The first had been delivered over the knuckles, and
+though 'twas a glancing stroke it well nigh broke Robin's fingers, so
+that he could not easily raise his staff again. And while he was dancing
+about in pain and muttering a dust-covered oath, the other's staff came
+swinging through the cloud at one side--zip!--and struck him under the
+arm. Down went Robin as though he were a nine-pin--flat down into the
+dust of the road. But despite the pain he was bounding up again like an
+India rubber man to renew the attack, when Little John interfered.
+
+"Hold!" said he, bursting out of the bushes and seizing the stranger's
+weapon. "Hold, I say!"
+
+"Nay," retorted the stranger quietly, "I was not offering to smite him
+while he was down. But if there be a whole nest of you hatching here by
+the waterside, cluck out the other chicks and I'll make shift to fight
+them all."
+
+"Not for all the deer in Sherwood!" cried Robin. "You are a good fellow
+and a gentleman. I'll fight no more with you, for verily I feel sore in
+wrist and body. Nor shall any of mine molest you henceforth."
+
+Sooth to say, Robin did not look in good fighting trim. His clothes were
+coated with dirt, one of his hosen had slipped halfway down from his
+knee, the sleeve of his jerkin was split, and his face was streaked with
+sweat and dirt. Little John eyed him drolly.
+
+"How now, good master," quoth he, "the sport you were to kick up has
+left you in sorry plight. Let me dust your coat for you."
+
+"Marry, it has been dusted enough already," replied Robin; "and I now
+believe the Scripture saying that all men are but dust, for it has
+sifted me through and through and lined my gullet an inch deep. By your
+leave"--and he went to the brookside and drank deep and laved his face
+and hands.
+
+All this while the stranger had been eyeing Robin attentively and
+listening to his voice as though striving to recall it.
+
+"If I mistake not," he said slowly at last, "you are that famous outlaw,
+Robin Hood of Barnesdale."
+
+"You say right," replied Robin; "but my fame has been tumbling sadly
+about in the dust to-day."
+
+"Now why did I not know you at once?" continued the stranger. "This
+battle need not have happened, for I came abroad to find you to-day, and
+thought to have remembered your face and speech. Know you not me, Rob,
+my lad? Hast ever been to Gamewell Lodge?"
+
+"Ha! Will Gamewell! my dear old chum, Will Gamewell!" shouted Robin,
+throwing his arms about the other in sheer affection. "What an ass I was
+not to recognize you! But it has been years since we parted, and your
+gentle schooling has polished you off mightily."
+
+Will embraced his cousin no less heartily.
+
+"We are quits on not knowing kinsmen," he said, "for you have changed
+and strengthened much from the stripling with whom I used to run foot
+races in old Sherwood."
+
+"But why seek you me?" asked Robin. "You know I am an outlaw and
+dangerous company. And how left you mine uncle? and have you heard aught
+of late of--of Maid Marian?"
+
+"Your last question first," answered Will, laughing, "for I perceive
+that it lies nearest your heart. I saw Maid Marian not many weeks after
+the great shooting at Nottingham, when you won her the golden arrow. She
+prizes the bauble among her dearest possessions, though it has made her
+an enemy in the Sheriff's proud daughter. Maid Marian bade me tell you,
+if I ever saw you, that she must return to Queen Eleanor's court, but
+she could never forget the happy days in the greenwood. As for the old
+Squire, he is still hale and hearty, though rheumatic withal. He speaks
+of you as a sad young dog, but for all that is secretly proud of your
+skill at the bow and of the way you are pestering the Sheriff, whom
+he likes not. 'Twas for my father's sake that I am now in the open, an
+outlaw like yourself. He has had a steward, a surly fellow enough, who,
+while I was away at school, boot-licked his way to favor until he lorded
+it over the whole house. Then he grew right saucy and impudent, but my
+father minded it not, deeming the fellow indispensable in managing the
+estate. But when I came back it irked me sorely to see the fellow strut
+about as though he owned the place. He was sly enough with me at first,
+and would brow-beat the Squire only while I was out of earshot. It
+chanced one day, however, that I heard loud voices through an open
+window and paused to hearken. That vile servant called my father 'a
+meddling old fool,' 'Fool and meddler art thou thyself, varlet,' I
+shouted, springing through the window, '_that_ for thy impudence!' and
+in my heat I smote him a blow mightier than I intended, for I have
+some strength in mine arm. The fellow rolled over and never breathed
+afterwards, I think I broke his neck or something the like. Then I knew
+that the Sheriff would use this as a pretext to hound my father, if I
+tarried. So I bade the Squire farewell and told him I would seek you in
+Sherwood."
+
+"Now by my halidom!" said Robin Hood; "for a man escaping the law, you
+took it about as coolly as one could wish. To see you come tripping
+along decked out in all your gay plumage and trolling forth a roundelay,
+one would think you had not a care in all the world. Indeed I remarked
+to Little John here that I hoped your purse was not as light as your
+heart."
+
+"Belike you meant _head_," laughed Will; "and is this Little John the
+Great? Shake hands with me, an you will, and promise me to cross a staff
+with me in friendly bout some day in the forest!"
+
+"That will I!" quoth Little John heartily. "Here's my hand on it. What
+is your last name again, say you?"
+
+"'Tis to be changed," interposed Robin; "then shall the men armed with
+warrants go hang for all of us. Let me bethink myself. Ah!--I have it!
+In scarlet he came to us, and that shall be his name henceforth. Welcome
+to the greenwood, Will Scarlet!"
+
+"Aye, welcome, Will Scarlet!" said Little John; and they all clasped
+hands again and swore to be true each to the other and to Robin Hood's
+men in Sherwood Forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET FRIAR TUCK
+
+ The friar took Robin Hood on his back,
+ Deep water he did bestride,
+ And spake neither good word nor bad,
+ Till he came at the other side.
+
+In summer time when leaves grow green, and flowers are fresh and gay,
+Robin Hood and his merry men were all disposed to play. Thus runs a
+quaint old ballad which begins the next adventure. Then some would leap
+and some would run and some try archery and some ply the quarter-staff
+and some fall to with the good broad sword. Some again would try a round
+at buffet and fisticuff; and thus by every variety of sport and exercise
+they perfected themselves in skill and made the band and its prowess
+well known throughout all England.
+
+It had been a custom of Robin Hood's to pick out the best men in all the
+countryside. Whenever he heard of one more than usually skilled in
+any feat of arms he would seek the man and test him in personal
+encounter--which did not always end happily for Robin. And when he had
+found a man to his liking he offered him service with the bold fellows
+of Sherwood Forest.
+
+Thus it came about that one day after a practice at shooting, in which
+Little John struck down a hart at five hundred feet distance, Robin Hood
+was fain to boast.
+
+"God's blessing on your heart!" he cried, clapping the burly fellow on
+the shoulder; "I would travel an hundred miles to find one who could
+match you!"
+
+At this Will Scarlet laughed full roundly.
+
+"There lives a curtall friar in Fountain's Abbey--Tuck, by name--who can
+beat both him and you," he said.
+
+Robin pricked up his ears at this free speech.
+
+"By our Lady," he said, "I'll neither eat nor drink till I see this same
+friar."
+
+And with his usual impetuosity he at once set about arming himself for
+the adventure. On his head he placed a cap of steel. Underneath his
+Lincoln green he wore a coat of chain metal. Then with sword and buckler
+girded at his side he made a goodly show. But he also took with him his
+stout yew bow and a sheaf of chosen arrows.
+
+So he set forth upon his way with blithe heart; for it was a day when
+the whole face of the earth seemed glad and rejoicing in pulsing life.
+Steadily he pressed forward by winding ways till he came to a green
+broad pasture land at whose edge flowed a stream dipping in and out
+among the willows and rushes on the banks. A pleasant stream it was, but
+it flowed calmly as though of some depth in the middle. Robin did not
+fancy getting his feet wet, or his fine suit of mail rusted, so he
+paused on the hither bank to rest and take his bearings.
+
+As he sat down quietly under the shade of a drooping willow he heard
+snatches of a jovial song floating to him from the farther side; then
+came a sound of two men's voices arguing. One was upholding the
+merits of hasty pudding and the other stood out stoutly for meat pie,
+"especially"--quoth this one--"when flavored with young onions!"
+
+"Gramercy!" muttered Robin to himself, "that is a tantalizing speech to
+a hungry man! But, odds bodikins! did ever two men talk more alike than
+those two fellows yonder!"
+
+In truth Robin could well marvel at the speech, for the voices were
+curiously alike.
+
+Presently the willows parted on the other bank, and Robin could hardly
+forebear laughing out right. His mystery was explained. It was not two
+men who had done all this singing and talking, but one--and that one a
+stout curtall friar who wore a long cloak over his portly frame, tied
+with a cord in the middle. On his head was a knight's helmet, and in his
+hand was a no more warlike weapon than a huge pasty pie, with which he
+sat down by the water's edge. His twofold argument was finished. The
+meat pie had triumphed; and no wonder! for it was the present witness,
+soon to give its own testimony.
+
+But first the friar took off his helmet to cool his head, and a droll
+picture he made. His head was as round as an apple, and eke as smooth in
+spots. A fringe of close curling black hair grew round the base of his
+skull, but his crown was bare and shiny as an egg. His cheeks also were
+smooth and red and shiny; and his little gray eyes danced about with
+the funniest air imaginable. You would not have blamed Robin Hood for
+wanting to laugh, had you heard this serious two-faced talk and then
+seen this jovial one-faced man. Good humor and fat living stood out all
+over him; yet for all that he looked stout enough and able to take
+care of himself with any man. His short neck was thick like that of a
+Berkshire bull; his shoulders were set far back, and his arms sprouted
+therefrom like two oak limbs. As he sat him down, the cloak fell apart
+disclosing a sword and buckler as stout as Robin's own.
+
+Nathless, Robin was not dismayed at sight of the weapons. Instead, his
+heart fell within him when he saw the meat pie which was now in fair
+way to be devoured before his very eyes; for the friar lost no time in
+thrusting one hand deep into the pie, while he crossed himself with the
+other.
+
+Thereupon Robin seized his bow and fitted a shaft.
+
+"Hey, friar!" he sang out, "carry me over the water, or else I cannot
+answer for your safety."
+
+The other started at the unexpected greeting, and laid his hand upon
+his sword. Then he looked up and beheld Robin's arrow pointing full upon
+him.
+
+"Put down your bow, fellow," he shouted back, "and I will bring you over
+the brook. 'Tis our duty in life to help each other, and your keen shaft
+shows me that you are a man worthy of some attention." So the friar
+knight got him up gravely, though his eyes twinkled with a cunning
+light, and laid aside his beloved pie and his cloak and his sword and
+his buckler, and waded across the stream with waddling dignity. Then he
+took Robin Hood upon his back and spoke neither good word nor bad till
+he came to the other side.
+
+Lightly leaped Robin off his back, and said, "I am much beholden to you,
+good father."
+
+"Beholden, say you!" rejoined the other drawing his sword; "then by my
+faith you shall e'en repay your score. Now mine own affairs, which are
+of a spiritual kind and much more important than yours which are carnal,
+lie on the other side of this stream. I see that you are a likely man
+and one, moreover, who would not refuse to serve the church. I must
+therefore pray of you that whatsoever I have done unto you, you will do
+also unto me. In short, my son, you must e'en carry me back again."
+
+Courteously enough was this said; but so suddenly had the friar drawn
+his sword that Robin had no time to unsling his bow from his back,
+whither he had placed it to avoid getting it wet, or to unfasten his
+scabbard. So he was fain to temporize.
+
+"Nay, good father, but I shall get my feet wet," he commenced.
+
+"Are your feet any better than mine?" retorted the other. "I fear me
+now that I have already wetted myself so sadly as to lay in a store of
+rheumatic pains by way of penance."
+
+"I am not so strong as you," continued Robin; "that helmet and sword and
+buckler would be my undoing on the uncertain footing amidstream, to say
+nothing of your holy flesh and bones."
+
+"Then I will lighten up, somewhat," replied the other calmly. "Promise
+to carry me across and I will lay aside my war gear."
+
+"Agreed," said Robin; and the friar thereupon stripped himself; and
+Robin bent his stout back and took him up even as he had promised.
+
+Now the stones at the bottom of the stream were round and slippery, and
+the current swept along strongly, waist-deep, in the middle. More-over
+Robin had a heavier load than the other had borne, nor did he know the
+ford. So he went stumbling along now stepping into a deep hole, now
+stumbling over a boulder in a manner that threatened to unseat his rider
+or plunge them both clear under current. But the fat friar hung on and
+dug his heels into his steed's ribs in as gallant manner as if he were
+riding in a tournament; while as for poor Robin the sweat ran down him
+in torrents and he gasped like the winded horse he was. But at last he
+managed to stagger out on the bank and deposit his unwieldy load.
+
+No sooner had he set the friar down than he seized his own sword.
+
+"Now, holy friar," quoth he, panting and wiping the sweat from his brow,
+"what say the Scriptures that you quote so glibly?--Be not weary of
+well doing. You must carry me back again or I swear that I will make a
+cheese-cloth out of your jacket!"
+
+The friar's gray eyes once more twinkled with a cunning gleam that boded
+no good to Robin; but his voice was as calm and courteous as ever.
+
+"Your wits are keen, my son," he said; "and I see that the waters of the
+stream have not quenched your spirit. Once more will I bend my back to
+the oppressor and carry the weight of the haughty."
+
+So Robin mounted again in high glee, and carried his sword in his
+hand, and went prepared to tarry upon the other side. But while he
+was bethinking himself what great words to use, when he should arrive
+thither, he felt himself slipping from the friar's broad back. He
+clutched frantically to save himself but had too round a surface to
+grasp, besides being hampered by his weapon. So down went he with a
+loud splash into the middle of the stream, where the crafty friar had
+conveyed him.
+
+"There!" quoth the holy man; "choose you, choose you, my fine fellow,
+whether you will sink or swim!" And he gained his own bank without more
+ado, while Robin thrashed and spluttered about until he made shift to
+grasp a willow wand and thus haul himself ashore on the other side.
+
+Then Robin's rage waxed furious, despite his wetting, and he took his
+bow and his arrows and let fly one shaft after another at the worthy
+friar. But they rattled harmlessly off his steel buckler, while he
+laughed and minded them no more than if they had been hail-stones.
+
+"Shoot on, shoot on, good fellow," he sang out; "shoot as you have
+begun; if you shoot here a summer's day, your mark I will not shun!"
+
+So Robin shot, and passing well, till all his arrows were gone, when
+from very rage he began to revile him.
+
+"You bloody villain!" shouted he, "You psalm-singing hypocrite! You
+reviler of good hasty pudding! Come but within reach of my sword
+arm, and, friar or no friar, I'll shave your tonsure closer than ever
+bald-pated monk was shaven before!"
+
+"Soft you and fair!" said the friar unconcernedly; "hard words are
+cheap, and you may need your wind presently. An you would like a bout
+with swords, meet me halfway i' the stream."
+
+And with this speech the friar waded into the brook, sword in hand,
+where he was met halfway by the impetuous outlaw.
+
+Thereupon began a fierce and mighty battle. Up and down, in and out,
+back and forth they fought. The swords flashed in the rays of the
+declining sun and then met with a clash that would have shivered less
+sturdy weapons or disarmed less sturdy wielders. Many a smart blow was
+landed, but each perceived that the other wore an undercoat of linked
+mail which might not be pierced. Nathless, their ribs ached at the force
+of the blows. Once and again they paused by mutual consent and caught
+breath and looked hard each at the other; for never had either met so
+stout a fellow.
+
+Finally in a furious onset of lunge and parry Robin's foot stepped on a
+rolling stone, and he went down upon his knees. But his antagonist would
+not take this advantage: he paused until Robin should get upon his feet.
+
+"Now by our Lady!" cried the outlaw, using his favorite oath, "you are
+the fairest swordsman that I have met in many a long day. I would beg a
+boon of you."
+
+"What is it?" said the other.
+
+"Give me leave to set my horn to my mouth and blow three blasts
+thereon."
+
+"That will I do," said the curtall friar, "blow till your breath fails,
+an it please you."
+
+Then, says the old ballad, Robin Hood set his horn to mouth and blew
+mighty blasts; and half a hundred yeomen, bows bent, came raking over
+the lee.
+
+"Whose men are these," said the friar, "that come so hastily?"
+
+"These men are mine," said Robin Hood, feeling that his time to laugh
+was come at last.
+
+Then said the friar in his turn, "A boon, a boon, the like I gave to
+you. Give me leave to set my fist to my mouth and whistle three blasts
+thereon."
+
+"That will I do," said Robin, "or else I were lacking in courtesy."
+
+The friar set his fist to his mouth and put the horn to shame by the
+piercing whistles he blew; whereupon half a hundred great dogs came
+running and jumping so swiftly that they had reached their bank as soon
+as Robin Hood's men had reached his side.
+
+Then followed a rare foolish conflict. Stutely, Much, Little John
+and the other outlaws began sending their arrows whizzing toward the
+opposite bank; but the dogs, which were taught of the friar, dodged the
+missiles cleverly and ran and fetched them back again, just as the dogs
+of to-day catch sticks.
+
+"I have never seen the like of this in my days!" cried Little John,
+amazed.
+
+"'Tis rank sorcery and witchcraft."
+
+"Take off your dogs, Friar Tuck!" shouted Will Scarlet, who had but then
+run up, and who now stood laughing heartily at the scene.
+
+"Friar Tuck!" exclaimed Robin, astounded. "Are you Friar Tuck? Then am I
+your friend, for you are he I came to seek."
+
+"I am but a poor anchorite, a curtall friar," said the other, whistling
+to his pack, "by name Friar Tuck of Fountain's Dale. For seven years
+have I tended the Abbey here, preached o' Sundays, and married and
+christened and buried folk--and fought too, if need were; and if it
+smacks not too much of boasting, I have not yet met the knight or
+trooper or yeoman that I would yield before. But yours is a stout blade.
+I would fain know you."
+
+"'Tis Robin Hood, the outlaw, who has been assisting you at this
+christening," said Will Scarlet glancing roguishly at the two opponents'
+dripping garments. And at this sally the whole bad burst into a shout of
+laughter, in which Robin and Friar Tuck joined.
+
+"Robin Hood!" cried the good friar presently, holding his sides; "are
+you indeed that famous yeoman? Then I like you well; and had I known you
+earlier, would have both carried you across and shared my pasty pie with
+you."
+
+"To speak soothly," replied Robin gaily, "'twas that same pie that led
+me to be rude. Now, therefore, bring it and your dogs and repair with us
+to the greenwood. We have need of you--with this message came I to-day
+to seek you. We will build you a hermitage in Sherwood Forest, and you
+shall keep us from evil ways. Will you not join our band?"
+
+"Marry, that will I!" cried Friar Tuck jovially. "Once more will I cross
+this much beforded stream, and go with you to the good greenwood!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+HOW ALLAN-A-DALE'S WOOING WAS PROSPERED
+
+ "What is thy name?" then said Robin Hood,
+ "Come tell me, without any fail!"
+ "By the faith o' my body," then said the young man,
+ "My name it is Allan-a-Dale."
+
+Friar Tuck and Much the miller's son soon became right good friends over
+the steaming stew they jointly prepared for the merry men that evening.
+Tuck was mightily pleased when he found a man in the forest who could
+make pasties and who had cooked for no less person than the High Sheriff
+himself. While Much marveled at the friar's knowledge of herbs and
+simples and woodland things which savored a stew greatly. So they
+gabbled together like two old gossips and, between them, made such a
+tasty mess that Robin Hood and his stout followers were like never to
+leave off eating. And the friar said grace too, with great unction, over
+the food; and Robin said Amen! and that henceforth they were always to
+have mass of Sundays.
+
+So Robin walked forth into the wood that evening with his stomach full
+and his heart, therefore, in great contentment and love for other men.
+He did not stop the first passer-by, as his manner often was, and desire
+a fight. Instead, he stepped behind a tree, when he heard a man's voice
+in song, and waited to behold the singer. Perhaps he remembered, also,
+the merry chanting of Will Scarlet, and how he had tried to give it
+pause a few days before.
+
+Like Will, this fellow was clad in scarlet, though he did not look quite
+as fine a gentleman. Nathless, he was a sturdy yeoman of honest face and
+a voice far sweeter than Will's. He seemed to be a strolling minstrel,
+for he bore a harp in his hand, which he thrummed, while his lusty tenor
+voice rang out with--
+
+ "Hey down, and a down, and a down!
+ I've a lassie back i' the town;
+ Come day, come night, Come dark or light,
+ She will wed me, back i' the town!"
+
+Robin let the singer pass, caroling on his way.
+
+"'Tis not in me to disturb a light-hearted lover, this night," he
+muttered, a memory of Marian coming back to him. "Pray heaven she may be
+true to him and the wedding be a gay one 'back i' the town!"'
+
+So Robin went back to his camp, where he told of the minstrel.
+
+"If any of ye set on him after this," quoth he in ending, "bring him to
+me, for I would have speech with him."
+
+The very next day his wish was gratified. Little John and Much the
+miller's son were out together on a foraging expedition when they espied
+the same young man; at least, they thought it must be he, for he was
+clad in scarlet and carried a harp in his hand. But now he came drooping
+along the way; his scarlet was all in tatters; and at every step he
+fetched a sigh, "Alack and a well-a-day!"
+
+Then stepped forth Little John and Much the miller's son.
+
+"Ho! do not wet the earth with your weeping," said Little John, "else we
+shall all have lumbago."
+
+No sooner did the young man catch sight of them than he bent his bow,
+and held an arrow back to his ear.
+
+"Stand off! stand off!" he said; "what is your will with me?"
+
+"Put by your weapon," said Much, "we will not harm you. But you must
+come before our master straight, under yon greenwood tree."
+
+So the minstrel put by his bow and suffered himself to be led before
+Robin Hood.
+
+"How now!" quoth Robin, when he beheld his sorry countenance, "are you
+not he whom I heard no longer ago than yesternight caroling so blithely
+about 'a lassie back i' the town'?"
+
+"The same in body, good sir," replied the other sadly; "but my spirit is
+grievously changed."
+
+"Tell me your tale," said Robin courteously. "Belike I can help you."
+
+"That can no man on earth, I fear," said the stranger; "nathless, I'll
+tell you the tale. Yesterday I stood pledged to a maid, and thought
+soon to wed her. But she has been taken from me and is to become an
+old knight's bride this very day; and as for me, I care not what ending
+comes to my days, or how soon, without her."
+
+"Marry, come up!" said Robin; "how got the old knight so sudden
+vantage?"
+
+"Look you, worship, 'tis this way. The Normans overrun us, and are in
+such great favor that none may say them nay. This old returned Crusader
+coveted the land whereon my lady dwells. The estate is not large, but
+all in her own right; whereupon her brother says she shall wed a title,
+and he and the old knight have fixed it up for to-day."
+
+"Nay, but surely--" began Robin.
+
+"Hear me out, worship," said the other. "Belike you think me a sorry
+dog not to make fight of this. But the old knight, look you, is not
+come-at-able. I threw one of his varlets into a thorn hedge, and another
+into a water-butt, and a third landed head-first into a ditch. But I
+couldn't do any fighting at all."
+
+"'Tis a pity!" quoth Little John gravely. He had been sitting
+cross-legged listening to this tale of woe. "What think you, Friar Tuck,
+doth not a bit of fighting ease a man's mind?"
+
+"Blood-letting is ofttimes recommended of the leeches," replied Tuck.
+
+"Does the maid love you?" asked Robin Hood.
+
+"By our troth, she loved me right well," said the minstrel. "I have a
+little ring of hers by me which I have kept for seven long years."
+
+"What is your name?" then said Robin Hood.
+
+"By the faith of my body," replied the young man, "my name is
+Allan-a-Dale."
+
+"What will you give me, Allan-a-Dale," said Robin Hood, "in ready gold
+or fee, to help you to your true love again, and deliver her back unto
+you?"
+
+"I have no money, save only five shillings," quoth Allan; "but--are you
+not Robin Hood?"
+
+Robin nodded.
+
+"Then you, if any one, can aid me!" said Allan-a-Dale eagerly. "And if
+you give me back my love, I swear upon the Book that I will be your true
+servant forever after."
+
+"Where is this wedding to take place, and when?" asked Robin.
+
+"At Plympton Church, scarce five miles from here; and at three o' the
+afternoon."
+
+"Then to Plympton we will go!" cried Robin suddenly springing into
+action; and he gave out orders like a general: "Will Stutely, do you
+have four-and-twenty good men over against Plympton Church 'gainst three
+o' the afternoon. Much, good fellow, do you cook up some porridge for
+this youth, for he must have a good round stomach--aye, and a better
+gear! Will Scarlet, you will see to decking him out bravely for the
+nonce. And Friar Tuck, hold yourself in readiness, good book in hand, at
+the church. Mayhap you had best go ahead of us all."
+
+The fat Bishop of Hereford was full of pomp and importance that day at
+Plympton Church. He was to celebrate the marriage of an old knight--a
+returned Crusader--and a landed young woman; and all the gentry
+thereabout were to grace the occasion with their presence. The church
+itself was gaily festooned with flowers for the ceremony, while out
+in the church-yard at one side brown ale flowed freely for all the
+servitors.
+
+Already were the guests beginning to assemble, when the Bishop, back in
+the vestry, saw a minstrel clad in green walk up boldly to the door and
+peer within. It was Robin Hood, who had borrowed Allan's be-ribboned
+harp for the time.
+
+"Now who are you, fellow?" quoth the Bishop, "and what do you here at
+the church-door with you harp and saucy air?"
+
+"May it please your Reverence," returned Robin bowing very humbly, "I
+am but a strolling harper, yet likened the best in the whole North
+Countree. And I had hope that my thrumming might add zest to the wedding
+to-day."
+
+"What tune can you harp?" demanded the Bishop.
+
+"I can harp a tune so merry that a forlorn lover will forget he is
+jilted," said Robin. "I can harp another tune that will make a bride
+forsake her lord at the altar. I can harp another tune that will bring
+loving souls together though they were up hill and down dale five good
+miles away from each other."
+
+"Then welcome, good minstrel," said the Bishop, "music pleases me right
+well, and if you can play up to your prattle, 'twill indeed grace your
+ceremony. Let us have a sample of your wares."
+
+"Nay, I must not put finger to string until the bride and groom have
+come. Such a thing would ill fortune both us and them."
+
+"Have it as you will," said the Bishop, "but here comes the party now."
+
+Then up the lane to the church came the old knight, preceded by ten
+archers liveried in scarlet and gold. A brave sight the archers made,
+but their master walked slowly leaning upon a cane and shaking as though
+in a palsy.
+
+And after them came a sweet lass leaning upon her brother's arm. Her
+hair did shine like glistering gold, and her eyes were like blue violets
+that peep out shyly at the sun. The color came and went in her cheeks
+like that tinting of a sea-shell, and her face was flushed as though
+she had been weeping. But now she walked with a proud air, as though she
+defied the world to crush her spirit. She had but two maids with her,
+finikin lasses, with black eyes and broad bosoms, who set off their
+lady's more delicate beauty well. One held up the bride's gown from the
+ground; the other carried flowers in plenty.
+
+"Now by all the wedding bells that ever were rung!" quoth Robin boldly,
+"this is the worst matched pair that ever mine eyes beheld!"
+
+"Silence, miscreant!" said a man who stood near.
+
+The Bishop had hurriedly donned his gown and now stood ready to meet the
+couple at the chancel.
+
+But Robin paid no heed to him. He let the knight and his ten archers
+pass by, then he strode up to the bride, and placed himself on the other
+side from her brother.
+
+"Courage, lady!" he whispered, "there is another minstrel near, who
+mayhap may play more to your liking."
+
+The lady glanced at him with a frightened air, but read such honesty and
+kindness in his glance that she brightened and gave him a grateful look.
+
+"Stand aside, fool!" cried the brother wrathfully.
+
+"Nay, but I am to bring good fortune to the bride by accompanying her
+through the church-doors," said Robin laughing.
+
+Thereupon he was allowed to walk by her side unmolested, up to the
+chancel with the party.
+
+"Now strike up your music, fellow!" ordered the Bishop.
+
+"Right gladly will I," quoth Robin, "an you will let me choose my
+instrument. For sometimes I like the harp, and other times I think the
+horn makes the merriest music in all the world."
+
+And he drew forth his bugle from underneath his green cloak and blew
+three winding notes that made the church--rafters ring again.
+
+"Seize him!" yelled the Bishop; "there's mischief afoot! These are the
+tricks of Robin Hood!"
+
+The ten liveried archers rushed forward from the rear of the church,
+where they had been stationed. But their rush was blocked by the
+onlookers who now rose from their pews in alarm and crowded the aisles.
+Meanwhile Robin had leaped lightly over the chancel rail and stationed
+himself in a nook by the altar.
+
+"Stand where you are!" he shouted, drawing his bow, "the first man to
+pass the rail dies the death. And all ye who have come to witness a
+wedding stay in your seats. We shall e'en have one, since we are come
+into the church. But the bride shall choose her own swain!"
+
+Then up rose another great commotion at the door, and four-and-twenty
+good bowmen came marching in with Will Stutely at their head. And they
+seized the ten liveried archers and the bride's scowling brother and the
+other men on guard and bound them prisoners.
+
+Then in came Allan-a-Dale, decked out gaily, with Will Scarlet for best
+man. And they walked gravely down the aisle and stood over against the
+chancel.
+
+"Before a maiden weds she chooses--an the laws of good King Harry be
+just ones," said Robin. "Now, maiden, before this wedding continues,
+whom will you have to husband?"
+
+The maiden answered not in words, but smiled with a glad light in her
+eyes, and walked over to Allan and clasped her arms about his neck.
+
+"That is her true love," said Robin. "Young Allan instead of the gouty
+knight. And the true lovers shall be married at this time before we
+depart away. Now my lord Bishop, proceed with the ceremony!"
+
+"Nay, that shall not be," protested the Bishop; "the banns must be cried
+three times in the church. Such is the law of our land."
+
+"Come here, Little John," called Robin impatiently; and plucked off the
+Bishop's frock from his back and put it on the yeoman.
+
+Now the Bishop was short and fat, and Little John was long and lean.
+The gown hung loosely over Little John's shoulders and came only to
+his waist. He was a fine comical sight, and the people began to laugh
+consumedly at him.
+
+"By the faith o' my body," said Robin, "this cloth makes you a man.
+You're the finest Bishop that ever I saw in my life. Now cry the banns."
+
+So Little John clambered awkwardly into the quire, his short gown
+fluttering gaily; and he called the banns for the marriage of the maid
+and Allan-a-Dale once, twice, and thrice.
+
+"That's not enough," said Robin; "your gown is so short that you must
+talk longer."
+
+Then Little John asked them in the church four, five, six, and seven
+times.
+
+"Good enough!" said Robin. "Now belike I see a worthy friar in the back
+of this church who can say a better service than ever my lord Bishop of
+Hereford. My lord Bishop shall be witness and seal the papers, but do
+you, good friar, bless this pair with book and candle."
+
+So Friar Tuck, who all along had been back in one corner of the church,
+came forward; and Allan and his maid kneeled before him, while the old
+knight, held an unwilling witness, gnashed his teeth in impotent rage;
+and the friar began with the ceremony.
+
+When he asked, "Who giveth this woman?" Robin stepped up and answered in
+a clear voice:
+
+"I do! I, Robin Hood of Barnesdale and Sherwood! And he who takes her
+from Allan-a-Dale shall buy her full dearly."
+
+So the twain were declared man and wife and duly blessed; and the bride
+was kissed by each sturdy yeoman beginning with Robin Hood.
+
+Now I cannot end this jolly tale better than in the words of the ballad
+which came out of the happening and which has been sung in the villages
+and countryside ever since:
+
+ "And thus having end of this merry wedding,
+ The bride lookt like a queen;
+ And so they returned to the merry greenwood
+ Amongst the leaves so green."
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW THE WIDOW'S THREE SONS WERE RESCUED
+
+ Now Robin Hood is to Nottingham gone,
+ With a link a down and a down,
+ And there he met with the proud Sheriff,
+ Was walking along the town.
+
+The wedding-party was a merry one that left Plympton Church, I ween; but
+not so merry were the ones left behind. My lord Bishop of Hereford
+was stuck up in the organ-loft and left, gownless and fuming. The ten
+liveried archers were variously disposed about the church to keep him
+company; two of them being locked in a tiny crypt, three in the belfry,
+"to ring us a wedding peal," as Robin said; and the others under
+quire seats or in the vestry. The bride's brother at her entreaty was
+released, but bidden not to return to the church that day or interfere
+with his sister again on pain of death. While the rusty old knight was
+forced to climb a high tree, where he sat insecurely perched among the
+branches, feebly cursing the party as it departed.
+
+It was then approaching sundown, but none of the retainers or villagers
+dared rescue the imprisoned ones that night, for fear of Robin Hood's
+men. So it was not until sunup the next day, that they were released.
+The Bishop and the old knight, stiff as they were, did not delay longer
+than for breakfast, but so great was their rage and shame--made straight
+to Nottingham and levied the Sheriff's forces. The Sheriff himself was
+not anxious to try conclusions again with Robin in the open. Perhaps he
+had some slight scruples regarding his oath. But the others swore that
+they would go straight to the King, if he did not help them, so he was
+fain to consent.
+
+A force of an hundred picked men from the Royal Foresters and swordsmen
+of the shire was gathered together and marched straightway into the
+greenwood. There, as fortune would have it, they surprised some score of
+outlaws hunting, and instantly gave chase. But they could not surround
+the outlaws, who kept well in the lead, ever and anon dropping behind
+a log or boulder to speed back a shaft which meant mischief to the
+pursuers. One shaft indeed carried off the Sheriff's hat and caused
+that worthy man to fall forward upon his horse's neck from sheer terror;
+while five other arrows landed in the fleshy parts of Foresters' arms.
+
+But the attacking party was not wholly unsuccessful. One outlaw in his
+flight stumbled and fell; when two others instantly stopped and helped
+to put him on his feet again. They were the widow's three sons, Stout
+Will, and Lester, and John. The pause was an unlucky one for them, as
+a party of Sheriff's men got above them and cut them off from their
+fellows. Swordsmen came up in the rear, and they were soon hemmed in on
+every side. But they gave good account of themselves, and before they
+had been overborne by force of numbers they had killed two and disabled
+three more.
+
+The infuriated attackers were almost on the point of hewing the stout
+outlaws to pieces, when the Sheriff cried:
+
+"Hold! Bind the villains! We will follow the law in this and take them
+to the town jail. But I promise ye the biggest public hanging that has
+been seen in this shire for many changes of the moon!"
+
+So they bound the widow's three sons and carried them back speedily to
+Nottingham.
+
+Now Robin Hood had not chanced to be near the scene of the fight, or
+with his men; so for a time he heard nothing of the happening.
+
+But that evening while returning to the camp he was met by the widow
+herself, who came weeping along the way.
+
+"What news, what news, good woman?" said Robin hastily but courteously;
+for he liked her well.
+
+"God save ye, Master Robin!" said the dame wildly. "God keep ye from the
+fate that has met my three sons! The Sheriff has laid hands on them and
+they are condemned to die."
+
+"Now, by our Lady! That cuts me to the heart! Stout Will, and Lester,
+and merry John! The earliest friends I had in the band, and still among
+the bravest! It must not be! When is this hanging set?"
+
+"Middle the tinker tells me that it is for tomorrow noon," replied the
+dame.
+
+"By the truth o' my body," quoth Robin, "you could not tell me in better
+time. The memory of the old days when you freely bade me sup and dine
+would spur me on, even if three of the bravest lads in all the shire
+were not imperiled. Trust to me, good woman!"
+
+The old widow threw herself on the ground and embraced his knees.
+
+"'Tis dire danger I am asking ye to face," she said weeping; "and yet I
+knew your brave true heart would answer me. Heaven help ye, good Master
+Robin, to answer a poor widow's prayers!"
+
+Then Robin Hood sped straightway to the forest-camp, where he heard the
+details of the skirmish--how that his men had been out-numbered five to
+one, but got off safely, as they thought, until a count of their members
+had shown the loss of the widow's three sons.
+
+"We must rescue them, my men!" quoth Robin, "even from out the shadow of
+the rope itself!"
+
+Whereupon the band set to work to devise ways and means.
+
+Robin walked apart a little way with his head leaned thoughtfully upon
+his breast--for he was sore troubled--when whom should he meet but an
+old begging palmer, one of a devout order which made pilgrimages and
+wandered from place to place, supported by charity.
+
+This old fellow walked boldly up to Robin and asked alms of him; since
+Robin had been wont to aid members of his order.
+
+"What news, what news, thou foolish old man?" said Robin, "what news, I
+do thee pray?"
+
+"Three squires in Nottingham town," quoth the palmer, "are condemned
+to die. Belike that is greater news than the shire has had in some
+Sundays."
+
+Then Robin's long-sought idea came to him like a flash.
+
+"Come, change thine apparel with me, old man," he said, "and I'll give
+thee forty shillings in good silver to spend in beer or wine."
+
+"O, thine apparel is good," the palmer protested, "and mine is ragged
+and torn. The holy church teaches that thou should'st ne'er laugh an old
+man to scorn."
+
+"I am in simple earnest, I say. Come, change thine apparel with mine.
+Here are twenty pieces of good broad gold to feast they brethren right
+royally."
+
+So the palmer was persuaded; and Robin put on the old man's hat, which
+stood full high in the crown; and his cloak, patched with black and
+blue and red, like Joseph's coat of many colors in its old age; and
+his breeches, which had been sewed over with so many patterns that the
+original was scarce discernible; and his tattered hose; and his shoes,
+cobbled above and below. And while as he made the change in dress he
+made so many whimsical comments also about a man's pride and the dress
+that makes a man, that the palmer was like to choke with cackling
+laughter.
+
+I warrant you, the two were comical sights when they parted company that
+day. Nathless, Robin's own mother would not have known him, had she been
+living.
+
+The next morning the whole town of Nottingham was early astir, and as
+soon as the gates were open country-folk began to pour in; for a triple
+hanging was not held there every day in the week, and the bustle almost
+equated a Fair day.
+
+Robin Hood in his palmer's disguise was one of the first ones to enter
+the gates, and he strolled up and down and around the town as though he
+had never been there before in all his life. Presently he came to the
+market-place, and beheld thereon three gallows erected.
+
+"Who are these builded for, my son?" asked he of a rough soldier
+standing by.
+
+"For three of Robin Hood's men," answered the other. "And it were Robin
+himself, 'twould be thrice as high I warrant ye. But Robin is too smart
+to get within the Sheriff's clutches again."
+
+The palmer crossed himself.
+
+"They say that he is a bold fellow," he whined.
+
+"Ha!" said the soldier, "he may be bold enough out behind stumps i' the
+forest, but the open market-place is another matter."
+
+"Who is to hang these three poor wretches?" asked the palmer.
+
+"That hath the Sheriff not decided. But here he comes now to answer his
+own questions." And the soldier came to stiff attention as the Sheriff
+and his body-guard stalked pompously up to inspect the gallows.
+
+"O, Heaven save you, worshipful Sheriff!" said the palmer. "Heaven
+protect you! What will you give a silly old man to-day to be your
+hangman?"
+
+"Who are you, fellow?" asked the Sheriff sharply.
+
+"Naught save a poor old palmer. But I can shrive their souls and hang
+their bodies most devoutly."
+
+"Very good," replied the other. "The fee to-day is thirteen pence; and
+I will add thereunto some suits of clothing for that ragged back of
+yours."
+
+"God bless ye!" said the palmer. And he went with the soldier to the
+jail to prepare his three men for execution.
+
+Just before the stroke of noon the doors of the prison opened and the
+procession of the condemned came forth. Down through the long lines of
+packed people they walked to the market-place, the palmer in the lead,
+and the widow's three sons marching firmly erect between soldiers.
+
+At the gallows foot they halted. The palmer whispered to them, as though
+offering last words of consolation; and the three men, with arms bound
+tightly behind their backs, ascended the scaffold, followed by their
+confessor.
+
+Then Robin stepped to the edge of the scaffold, while the people grew
+still as death; for they desired to hear the last words uttered to the
+victims. But Robin's voice did not quaver forth weakly, as formerly,
+and his figure had stiffened bolt upright beneath the black robe that
+covered his rags.
+
+"Hark ye, proud Sheriff!" he cried. "I was ne'er a hangman in all my
+life, nor do I now intend to begin that trade. Accurst be he who first
+set the fashion of hanging! I have but three more words to say. Listen
+to them!"
+
+And forth from the robe he drew his horn and blew three loud blasts
+thereon. Then his keen hunting-knife flew forth and in a trice, Stout
+Will, Lester, and merry John were free men and had sprung forward and
+seized the halberds from the nearest soldiers guarding the gallows.
+
+"Seize them! 'Tis Robin Hood!" screamed the Sheriff, "an hundred pounds
+if ye hold them, dead or alive!"
+
+"I make it two hundred!" roared the fat Bishop.
+
+But their voices were drowned in the uproar that ensued immediately
+after Robin blew his horn. He himself had drawn his sword and leaped
+down the stairs from the scaffold, followed by his three men. The guard
+had closed around them in vain effort to disarm them, when "A rescuer"
+shouted Will Stutely's clear voice on one side of them, and "A
+rescue!" bellowed Little John's on the other; and down through the
+terror-stricken crowd rushed fourscore men in Lincoln green, their force
+seeming twice that number in the confusion. With swords drawn they fell
+upon the guard from every side at once. There was a brief clash of hot
+weapons, then the guard scattered wildly, and Robin Hood's men formed in
+a compact mass around their leader and forced their way slowly down the
+market-place.
+
+"Seize them! In the King's name!" shrieked the Sheriff. "Close the
+gates!"
+
+In truth, the peril would have been even greater, had this last order
+been carried out. But Will Scarlet and Allan-a-Dale had foreseen that
+event, and had already overpowered the two warders.
+
+So the gates stood wide open, and toward them the band of outlaws
+headed.
+
+The soldiers rallied a force of twice their number and tried resolutely
+to pierce their center. But the retreating force turned thrice and sent
+such volleys of keen arrows from their good yew bows, that they kept a
+distance between the two forces.
+
+And thus the gate was reached, and the long road leading up the hill,
+and at last the protecting greenwood itself. The soldiers dared come no
+farther. And the widow's three sons, I warrant you, supped more heartily
+that night than ever before in their whole lives.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+HOW A BEGGAR FILLED THE PUBLIC EYE
+
+ Good Robin accost him in his way,
+ To see what he might be;
+ If any beggar had money,
+ He thought some part had he.
+
+One bright morning, soon after the stirring events told in the last
+chapter, Robin wandered forth alone down the road to Barnesdale, to see
+if aught had come of the Sheriff's pursuit. But all was still and
+serene and peaceful. No one was in sight save a solitary beggar who came
+sturdily along his way in Robin's direction. The beggar caught sight
+of Robin, at the same moment, as he emerged from the trees, but gave no
+sign of having seen him. He neither slackened nor quickened his pace,
+but jogged forward merrily, whistling as he came, and beating time by
+punching holes in the dusty road with the stout pike-staff in his hand.
+
+The curious look of the fellow arrested Robin's attention, and he
+decided to stop and talk with him. The fellow was bare-legged and
+bare-armed, and wore a long shift of a shirt, fastened with a belt.
+About his neck hung a stout, bulging bag, which was buckled by a good
+piece of leather thong.
+
+ He had three hats upon his head,
+ Together sticked fast,
+ He cared neither for the wind nor wet,
+ In lands where'er he past.
+
+The fellow looked so fat and hearty, and the wallet on his shoulder
+seemed so well filled, that Robin thought within himself,
+
+"Ha! this is a lucky beggar for me! If any of them have money, this is
+the chap, and, marry, he should share it with us poorer bodies."
+
+So he flourished his own stick and planted himself in the traveler's
+path.
+
+"Sirrah, fellow!" quoth he; "whither away so fast? Tarry, for I would
+have speech with ye!"
+
+The beggar made as though he heard him not, and kept straight on with
+his faring.
+
+"Tarry, I say, fellow!" said Robin again; "for there's a way to make
+folks obey!"
+
+"Nay, 'tis not so," answered the beggar, speaking for the first time; "I
+obey no man in all England, not even the King himself. So let me pass on
+my way, for 'tis growing late, and I have still far to go before I can
+care for my stomach's good."
+
+"Now, by my troth," said Robin, once more getting in front of the other,
+"I see well by your fat countenance, that you lack not for good food,
+while I go hungry. Therefore you must lend me of your means till we meet
+again, so that I may hie to the nearest tavern."
+
+"I have no money to lend," said the beggar crossly. "Methinks you are as
+young a man as I, and as well able to earn a supper. So go your way, and
+I'll go mine. If you fast till you get aught out of me, you'll go hungry
+for the next twelvemonth."
+
+"Not while I have a stout stick to thwack your saucy bones!" cried
+Robin. "Stand and deliver, I say, or I'll dust your shirt for you; and
+if that will not teach you manners, then we'll see what a broad arrow
+can do with a beggar's skin!"
+
+The beggar smiled, and answered boast with boast. "Come on with your
+staff, fellow! I care no more for it than for a pudding stick. And as
+for your pretty bow--_that_ for it!"
+
+And with amazing quickness, he swung his pike-staff around and knocked
+Robin's bow clean out of his hand, so that his fingers smarted with
+pain. Robin danced and tried to bring his own staff into action; but
+the beggar never gave him a chance. Biff! whack! came the pike-staff,
+smiting him soundly and beating down his guard.
+
+There were but two things to do; either stand there and take a sound
+drubbing, or beat a hasty retreat. Robin chose the latter--as you or I
+would probably have done--and scurried back into the wood, blowing his
+horn as he went.
+
+"Fie, for shame, man!" jeered the bold beggar after him. "What is your
+haste? We had but just begun. Stay and take your money, else you will
+never be able to pay your reckoning at the tavern!"
+
+But Robin answered him never a word. He fled up hill and down dale till
+he met three of his men who were running up in answer to his summons.
+
+"What is wrong?" they asked.
+
+"'Tis a saucy beggar," said Robin, catching his breath. "He is back
+there on the highroad with the hardest stick I've met in a good many
+days. He gave me no chance to reason with him, the dirty scamp!"
+
+The men--Much and two of the widow's sons--could scarce conceal their
+mirth at the thought of Robin Hood running from a beggar. Nathless, they
+kept grave faces, and asked their leader if he was hurt.
+
+"Nay," he replied, "but I shall speedily feel better if you will fetch
+me that same beggar and let me have a fair chance at him."
+
+So the three yeomen made haste and came out upon the highroad and
+followed after the beggar, who was going smoothly along his way again,
+as though he were at peace with all the world.
+
+"The easiest way to settle this beggar," said Much, "is to surprise
+him. Let us cut through yon neck of woods and come upon him before he is
+aware."
+
+The others agreed to this, and the three were soon close upon their
+prey.
+
+"Now!" quoth Much; and the other two sprang quickly upon the beggar's
+back and wrested his pike-staff from his hand. At the same moment Much
+drew his dagger and flashed it before the fellow's breast.
+
+"Yield you, my man!" cried he; "for a friend of ours awaits you in the
+wood, to teach you how to fight properly."
+
+"Give me a fair chance," said the beggar valiantly, "and I'll fight you
+all at once."
+
+But they would not listen to him. Instead, they turned him about and
+began to march him toward the forest. Seeing that it was useless to
+struggle, the beggar began to parley.
+
+"Good my masters," quoth he, "why use this violence? I will go with ye
+safe and quietly, if ye insist, but if ye will set me free I'll make
+it worth your while. I've a hundred pounds in my bag here. Let me go my
+way, and ye shall have all that's in the bag."
+
+The three outlaws took council together at this.
+
+"What say you?" asked Much of the others. "Our master will be more glad
+to see this beggar's wallet than his sorry face."
+
+The other two agreed, and the little party came to a halt and loosed
+hold of the beggar.
+
+"Count out your gold speedily, friend," said Much. There was a brisk
+wind blowing, and the beggar turned about to face it, directly they had
+unhanded him.
+
+"It shall be done, gossips," said he. "One of you lend me your cloak and
+we will spread it upon the ground and put the wealth upon it."
+
+The cloak was handed him, and he placed his wallet upon it as though
+it were very heavy indeed. Then he crouched down and fumbled with
+the leather fastenings. The outlaws also bent over and watched the
+proceeding closely, lest he should hide some of the money on his person.
+Presently he got the bag unfastened and plunged his hands into it. Forth
+from it he drew--not shining gold--but handfuls of fine meal which he
+dashed into the eager faces of the men around him. The wind aided him
+in this, and soon there arose a blinding cloud which filled the eyes,
+noses, and mouths of the three outlaws till they could scarcely see or
+breathe.
+
+While they gasped and choked and sputtered and felt around wildly for
+that rogue of a beggar, he finished the job by picking up the cloak
+by its corners and shaking it vigorously in the faces of his suffering
+victims. Then he seized a stick which lay conveniently near, and began
+to rain blows down upon their heads, shoulders, and sides, all the time
+dancing first on one leg, then on the other, and crying,
+
+"Villains! rascals! here are the hundred pounds I promised. How do you
+like them? I' faith, you'll get all that's in the bag."
+
+Whack! whack! whack! whack! went the stick, emphasizing each word. Howls
+of pain might have gone up from the sufferers, but they had too much
+meal in their throats for that. Their one thought was to flee, and they
+stumbled off blindly down the road, the beggar following them a little
+way to give them a few parting love-taps.
+
+"Fare ye well, my masters," he said finally turning the other way; "and
+when next I come along the Barnesdale road, I hope you will be able to
+tell gold from meal dust!"
+
+With this he departed, an easy victor, and again went whistling on his
+way, while the three outlaws rubbed the meal out of their eyes and began
+to catch their breath again.
+
+As soon as they could look around them clearly, they beheld Robin
+Hood leaning against a tree trunk and surveying them smilingly. He had
+recovered his own spirits in full measure, on seeing their plight.
+
+"God save ye, gossips!" he said, "ye must, in sooth, have gone the wrong
+way and been to the mill, from the looks of your clothes."
+
+Then when they looked shamefaced and answered never a word, he went on,
+in a soft voice,
+
+"Did ye see aught of that bold beggar I sent you for, lately?"
+
+"In sooth, master," responded Much the miller's son, "we heard more of
+him than we saw him. He filled us so full of meal that I shall sweat
+meal for a week. I was born in a mill, and had the smell of meal in my
+nostrils from my very birth, you might say, and yet never before did I
+see such a quantity of the stuff in so small space."
+
+And he sneezed violently.
+
+"How was that?" asked Robin demurely.
+
+"Why we laid hold of the beggar, as you did order, when he offered to
+pay for his release out of the bag he carried upon his back."
+
+"The same I coveted," quoth Robin as if to himself.
+
+"So we agreed to this," went on Much, "and spread a cloak down, and he
+opened his bag and shook it thereon. Instantly a great cloud of meal
+filled the air, whereby we could neither see nor breathe; and in the
+midst of this cloud he vanished like a wizard."
+
+"But not before he left certain black and blue spots, to be remembered
+by, I see," commented Robin.
+
+"He was in league with the evil one," said one of the widow's sons,
+rubbing himself ruefully.
+
+Then Robin laughed outright, and sat him down upon the gnarled root of a
+tree, to finish his merriment.
+
+"Four bold outlaws, put to rout by a sorry beggar!" cried he. "I can
+laugh at ye, my men, for I am in the same boat with ye. But 'twould
+never do to have this tale get abroad--even in the greenwood--how that
+we could not hold our own with the odds in our favor. So let us have
+this little laugh all to ourselves, and no one else need be the wiser!"
+
+The others saw the point of this, and felt better directly, despite
+their itching desire to get hold of the beggar again. And none of the
+four ever told of the adventure.
+
+But the beggar must have boasted of it at the next tavern; or a little
+bird perched among the branches of a neighboring oak must have sung
+of it. For it got abroad, as such tales will, and was put into a right
+droll ballad which, I warrant you, the four outlaws did not like to
+hear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD FOUGHT GUY OF GISBORNE
+
+ "I dwell by dale and down," quoth he,
+ "And Robin to take I'm sworn;
+ And when I am called by my right name,
+ I am Guy of good Gisborne."
+
+Some weeks passed after the rescue of the widow's three sons; weeks
+spent by the Sheriff in the vain effort to entrap Robin Hood and his
+men. For Robin's name and deeds had come to the King's ears, in London
+town, and he sent word to the Sheriff to capture the outlaw, under
+penalty of losing his office. So the Sheriff tried every manner of means
+to surprise Robin Hood in the forest, but always without success. And he
+increased the price put upon Robin's head, in the hope that the best men
+of the kingdom could be induced to try their skill at a capture.
+
+Now there was a certain Guy of Gisborne, a hireling knight of the King's
+army, who heard of Robin and of the price upon his head. Sir Guy was one
+of the best men at the bow and the sword in all the King's service.
+But his heart was black and treacherous. He obtained the King's leave
+forthwith to seek out the forester; and armed with the King's scroll he
+came before the Sheriff at Nottingham.
+
+"I have come to capture Robin Hood," quoth he, "and mean to have him,
+dead or alive."
+
+"Right gladly would I aid you," answered the Sheriff, "even if the
+King's seal were not sufficient warrant. How many men need you?"
+
+"None," replied Sir Guy, "for I am convinced that forces of men can
+never come at the bold robber. I must needs go alone. But do you hold
+your men in readiness at Barnesdale, and when you hear a blast from this
+silver bugle, come quickly, for I shall have the sly Robin within my
+clutches."
+
+"Very good," said the Sheriff. "Marry, it shall be done." And he set
+about giving orders, while Guy of Gisborne sallied forth disguised.
+
+Now as luck would have it, Will Scarlet and Little John had gone to
+Barnesdale that very day to buy suits of Lincoln green for certain of
+the yeomen who had come out at the knees and elbows. But not deeming it
+best for both of them to run their necks into a noose, together, they
+parted just outside the town, and Will went within the gates, while John
+tarried and watched at the brow of the hill on the outside.
+
+Presently whom should he see but this same Will flying madly forth from
+the gates again, closely pursued by the Sheriff and threescore men. Over
+the moat Will sprang, through the bushes and briars, across the swamp,
+over stocks and stones, up the woodland roads in long leaps like a
+scared jack rabbit. And after him puffed the Sheriff and his men, their
+force scattering out in the flight as one man would tumble head-first
+into a ditch, another mire up in the swamp, another trip over a rolling
+stone, and still others sit down on the roadside and gasp for wind like
+fish out of water.
+
+Little John could not forbear laughing heartily at the scene, though
+he knew that 'twould be anything but a laughing matter if Will should
+stumble. And in truth one man was like to come upon him. It was
+William-a-Trent, the best runner among the Sheriff's men. He had come
+within twenty feet of Scarlet and was leaping upon him with long bounds
+like a greyhound, when John rose up quickly, drew his bow and let fly
+one of his fatal shafts. It would have been better for William-a-Trent
+to have been abed with sorrow--says the ballad--than to be that day in
+the greenwood slade to meet with Little John's arrow. He had run his
+last race.
+
+The others halted a moment in consternation, when the shaft came
+hurtling down from the hill; but looking up they beheld none save Little
+John, and with a cry of fierce joy they turned upon him. Meanwhile Will
+Scarlet had reached the brow of the hill and sped down the other side.
+
+"I'll just send one more little message of regret to the Sheriff," said
+Little John, "before I join Will."
+
+But this foolhardy deed was his undoing, for just as the arrow left the
+string, the good yew bow that had never before failed him snapped in
+twain.
+
+"Woe worth, woe worth thee, wicked wood, that ere thou grew on a
+tree!" cursed Little John, and planted his feet resolutely in the earth
+resolved to sell the path dearly; for the soldiers were now so close
+upon him that he dared not turn.
+
+And a right good account of himself he gave that day, dealing with
+each man as he came up according to his merit. And so winded were the
+pursuers when they reached the top of the hill that he laid out the
+first ten of them right and left with huge blows of his brawny fist.
+
+But if five men can do more than three, a score can overcome one.
+
+A body of archers stood off at a prudent distance and covered Little
+John with their arrows.
+
+"Now yield you!" panted the Sheriff. "Yield you, Little John, or Reynold
+Greenleaf, or whatever else name you carry this day! Yield you, or some
+few of these shafts will reach your heart!"
+
+"Marry, my heart has been touched by your words ere now," said Little
+John; "and I yield me."
+
+So the Sheriff's men laid hold of Little John and bound him fast with
+many cords, so fearful were they lest he should escape. And the Sheriff
+laughed aloud in glee, and thought of how he should avenge his stolen
+plate, and determined to make a good day's work of it.
+
+"By the Saints!" he said, "you shall be drawn by dale and down, and
+hanged high on a hill in Barnesdale this very day."
+
+"Hang and be hanged!" retorted the prisoner. "You may fail of your
+purpose if it be Heaven's will."
+
+Back down the hill and across the moor went the company speedily, for
+they feared a rescue. And as they went the stragglers joined them. Here
+a man got up feebly out of the ditch and rubbed his pate and fell in
+like a chicken with the pip going for its dinner. Yonder came hobbling
+a man with a lame ankle, or another with his shins torn by the briars or
+another with his jacket all muddy from the marsh. So in truth it was
+a tatterdemalion crew that limped and straggled and wandered back into
+Barnesdale that day. Yet all were merry, for the Sheriff had promised
+them flagons of wine, and moreover they were to hang speedily the
+boldest outlaw in England, next to Robin Hood himself.
+
+The gallows was quickly put up and a new rope provided.
+
+"Now up with you!" commanded the Sheriff, "and let us see if your
+greenwood tricks will avail you to-morrow."
+
+"I would that I had bold Robin's horn," muttered poor John; "methinks
+'tis all up with me even as the Sheriff hath spoken."
+
+In good sooth the time was dire and pressing. The rope was placed around
+the prisoner's neck and the men prepared to haul away.
+
+"Are you ready?" called the Sheriff. "One--two--"
+
+But before the "three" left his lips the faint sound of a silver bugle
+came floating over the hill.
+
+"By my troth, that is Sir Guy of Gisborne's horn," quoth the Sheriff;
+"and he bade me not to delay answering its summons. He has caught Robin
+Hood."
+
+"Pardon, Excellency," said one of his men; "but if he has caught Robin
+Hood, this is a merry day indeed. And let us save this fellow and build
+another gallows and hang them both together."
+
+"That's a brave thought!" said the Sheriff slapping his knee. "Take the
+rascal down and bind him fast to the gallows-tree against our return."
+
+So Little John was made fast to the gallows-tree, while the Sheriff and
+all his men who could march or hobble went out to get Robin Hood and
+bring him in for the double hanging.
+
+Let us leave talking of Little John and the Sheriff, and see what has
+become of Robin Hood.
+
+In the first place, he and Little John had come near having a quarrel
+that self-same morning because both had seen a curious looking yeoman,
+and each wanted to challenge him singly. But Robin would not give way to
+his lieutenant, and that is why John, in a huff, had gone with Will to
+Barnesdale.
+
+Meanwhile Robin approached the curious looking stranger. He seemed to be
+a three-legged creature at first sight, but on coming nearer you would
+have seen that 'twas really naught but a poorly clad man, who for a
+freak had covered up his rags with a capul-hide, nothing more nor less
+than the sun-dried skin of a horse, complete with head, tail, and mane.
+The skin of the head made a helmet; while the tail gave the curious
+three-legged appearance.
+
+"Good-morrow, good fellow," said Robin cheerily, "methinks by the bow
+you bear in your hand that you should be a good archer."
+
+"Indifferent good," said the other returning his greeting; "but 'tis not
+of archery that I am thinking this morning, for I have lost my way and
+would fain find it again."
+
+"By my faith, I could have believed 'twas your wits you'd lost!" thought
+Robin smiling. Then aloud: "I'll lead you through the wood," quoth
+he, "an you will tell me your business. For belike your speech is much
+gentler than your attire."
+
+"Who are you to ask me my business?" asked the other roughly.
+
+"I am one of the King's Rangers," replied Robin, "set here to guard his
+deer against curious looking strollers."
+
+"Curious looking I may be," returned the other, "but no stroller. Hark
+ye, since you are a Ranger, I must e'en demand your service. I am on the
+King's business and seek an outlaw. Men call him Robin Hood. Are you one
+of his men?"--eyeing him keenly.
+
+"Nay, God forbid!" said Robin; "but what want you with him?"
+
+"That is another tale. But I'd rather meet with that proud outlaw than
+forty good pounds of the King's money."
+
+Robin now saw how the land lay.
+
+"Come with me, good yeoman," said he, "and belike, a little later in the
+day, I can show you Robin's haunts when he is at home. Meanwhile let us
+have some pastime under the greenwood tree. Let us first try the mastery
+at shooting arrows."
+
+The other agreed, and they cut down two willow wands of a summer's
+growth that grew beneath a brier, and set them up at a distance of
+threescore yards.
+
+"Lead on, good fellow," quoth Robin. "The first shot to you."
+
+"Nay, by my faith," said the other, "I will follow your lead."
+
+So Robin stepped forth and bent his bow carelessly and sent his
+shaft whizzing toward the wand, missing it by a scant inch. He of the
+horse-hide followed with more care yet was a good three-fingers' breadth
+away. On the second round, the stranger led off and landed cleverly
+within the small garland at the top of the wand; but Robin shot far
+better and clave the wand itself, clean at the middle.
+
+"A blessing on your heart!" shouted Capul-Hide; "never saw I such
+shooting as that! Belike you are better than Robin Hood himself. But you
+have not yet told me your name."
+
+"Nay, by my faith," quoth Robin, "I must keep it secret till you have
+told me your own."
+
+"I do not disdain to tell it," said the other. "I dwell by dale and
+down, and to take bold Robin am I sworn. This would I tell him to his
+face, were he not so great a craven. When I am called by my right name,
+I am Guy of Gisborne."
+
+This he said with a great show of pride, and he strutted back and forth,
+forgetful that he had just been beaten at archery.
+
+Robin eyed him quietly. "Methinks I have heard of you elsewhere. Do you
+not bring men to the gallows for a living?"
+
+"Aye, but only outlaws such as Robin Hood."
+
+"But pray what harm has Robin Hood done you?"
+
+"He is a highway robber," said Sir Guy, evading the question.
+
+"Has he ever taken from the rich that he did not give again to the
+poor? Does he not protect the women and children and side with weak and
+helpless? Is not his greatest crime the shooting of a few King's deer?"
+
+"Have done with your sophistry," said Sir Guy impatiently. "I am more
+than ever of opinion that you are one of Robin's men yourself."
+
+"I have told you I am not," quoth Robin briefly. "But if I am to help
+you catch him, what is your plan?"
+
+"Do you see this silver bugle?" said the other. "A long blast upon it
+will summon the Sheriff and all his men, when once I have Robin within
+my grasp. And if you show him to me, I'll give you the half of my forty
+pounds reward."
+
+"I would not help hang a man for ten times forty pounds," said the
+outlaw. "Yet will I point out Robin to you for the reward I find at my
+sword's point. I myself am Robin Hood of Sherwood and Barnesdale."
+
+"Then have at you!" cried the other springing swiftly into action. His
+sword leaped forth from beneath the horse's hide with the speed born of
+long practice, and before Robin had come to guard, the other had smitten
+at him full and foul. Robin eluded the lunge and drew his own weapon.
+
+"A scurvy trick!" quoth he grimly, "to strike at a man unprepared."
+
+Then neither spoke more, but fell sternly to work--lunge and thrust and
+ward and parry--for two full hours the weapons smote together sullenly,
+and neither Robin Hood nor Sir Guy would yield an inch. I promise you
+that if you could have looked forth on the fight from behind the trunk
+of some friendly tree, you would have seen deadly sport such as few
+men beheld in Sherwood Forest. For the fighters glared sullenly at each
+other, the fires of hatred burning in their eyes. One was fighting for
+his life; the other for a reward and the King's favor.
+
+Still circled the bright blades swiftly in the air--now gleaming in the
+peaceful sunlight--again hissing like maddened serpents. Neither had yet
+touched the other, until Robin, in an unlucky moment, stumbled over
+the projecting root of a tree; when Sir Guy, instead of giving him the
+chance to recover himself, as any courteous knight would have done,
+struck quickly at the falling man and wounded him in the left side.
+
+"Ah, dear Lady in Heaven," gasped Robin uttering his favorite prayer,
+"shield me now! 'Twas never a man's destiny to die before his day."
+
+And adroitly he sprang up again, and came straight at the other with an
+awkward but unexpected stroke. The knight had raised his weapon high to
+give a final blow, when Robin reached beneath and across his guard.
+One swift lunge, and Sir Guy of Gisborne staggered backward with a deep
+groan, Robin's sword through his throat.
+
+Robin looked at the slain man regretfully.
+
+"You did bring it upon yourself," said he; "and traitor and hireling
+though you were, I would not willingly have killed you."
+
+He looked to his own wound. It was not serious, and he soon staunched
+the blood and bound up the cut. Then he dragged the dead body into the
+bushes, and took off the horse's hide and put it upon himself. He placed
+his own cloak upon Sir Guy, and marked his face so none might tell who
+had been slain. Robin's own figure and face were not unlike the other's.
+
+Pulling the capul-hide well over himself, so that the helmet hid most
+of his face, Robin seized the silver bugle and blew a long blast. It was
+the blast that saved the life of Little John, over in Barnesdale, for
+you and I have already seen how it caused the fond Sheriff to prick up
+his ears and stay the hanging, and go scurrying up over the hill and
+into the wood with his men in search of another victim.
+
+In five-and-twenty minutes up came running a score of the Sheriff's best
+archers.
+
+"Did you signal us, lording?" they asked, approaching Robin.
+
+"Aye," said he, going to meet the puffing Sheriff.
+
+"What news, what news, Sir Guy?" said that officer.
+
+"Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne had a fight; and he that wears Robin's
+cloak lies under the covert yonder."
+
+"The best news I have heard in all my life!" exclaimed the Sheriff
+rubbing his hands. "I would that we could have saved him for the
+hanging--though I cannot now complain."
+
+"The hanging?" repeated Robin.
+
+"Yes. This is our lucky day on the calendar. After you left me we
+narrowly missed running one of the fellows--I believe 'twas Will
+Scarlet--to earth; and another who came to his relief we were just about
+to hang, when your horn blew."
+
+"Who was the other?" asked the disguised outlaw.
+
+"Whom do you suppose?" laughed the Sheriff. "The best man in the
+greenwood, next to Robin Hood himself--Little John, Reynold Greenleaf!"
+For the Sheriff could not forget the name Little John had borne under
+his own roof at Nottingham.
+
+"Little John!" thought Robin with a start. Verily that was a lucky
+blast of the bugle! "But I see you have not escaped without a scratch,"
+continued the Sheriff, becoming talkative through pure glee. "Here, one
+of you men! Give Sir Guy of Gisborne your horse; while others of you
+bury that dog of an outlaw where he lies. And let us hasten back to
+Barnesdale and finish hanging the other."
+
+So they put spurs to their horses, and as they rode Robin forced himself
+to talk merrily, while all the time he was planning the best way to
+succor Little John.
+
+"A boon, Sheriff," he said as they reached the gates of the town.
+
+"What is it, worthy sir? You have but to speak."
+
+"I do not want any of your gold, for I have had a brave fight. But now
+that I have slain the master, let me put an end to the man; so it shall
+be said that Guy of Gisborne despatched the two greatest outlaws of
+England in one day."
+
+"Have it as you will," said the Sheriff, "but you should have asked a
+knight's fee and double your reward, and it would have been yours. It
+isn't every man that can take Robin Hood." "No, Excellency," answered
+Robin. "I say it without boasting, that no man took Robin Hood yesterday
+and none shall take him to-morrow."
+
+Then he approached Little John, who was still tied to the gallows-tree;
+and he said to the Sheriff's men, "Now stand you back here till I see if
+the prisoner has been shrived." And he stooped swiftly, and cut Little
+John's bonds, and thrust into his hands Sir Guy's bow and arrows, which
+he had been careful to take.
+
+"'Tis I, Robin!" he whispered. But in truth, Little John knew it
+already, and had decided there was to be no hanging that day.
+
+Then Robin blew three loud blasts upon his own horn, and drew forth his
+own bow; and before the astonished Sheriff and his men could come to
+arms the arrows were whistling in their midst in no uncertain fashion.
+
+And look! Through the gates and over the walls came pouring another
+flight of arrows! Will Scarlet and Will Stutely had watched and planned
+a rescue ever since the Sheriff and Robin rode back down the hill. Now
+in good time they came; and the Sheriff's demoralized force turned tail
+and ran, while Robin and Little John stood under the harmless gallows,
+and sped swift arrows after them, and laughed to see them go.
+
+Then they joined their comrades and hasted back to the good greenwood,
+and there rested. They had got enough sport for one day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+HOW MAID MARIAN CAME BACK TO SHERWOOD FOREST; ALSO, HOW ROBIN HOOD CAME
+BEFORE QUEEN ELEANOR.
+
+ But Robin Hood, he himself had disguis'd,
+ And Marian was strangely attir'd,
+ That they proved foes, and so fell to blows,
+ Whose valor bold Robin admir'd.
+
+ And when he came at London's court,
+ He fell down on his knee.
+ "Thou art welcome, Lockesley," said the Queen,
+ "And all thy good yeomandree."
+
+Now it fell out that one day not long thereafter, Robin was minded to
+try his skill at hunting. And not knowing whom he might meet in his
+rambles, he stained his face and put on a sorry-looking jacket and a
+long cloak before he sallied forth. As he walked, the peacefulness of
+the morning came upon him, and brought back to his memory the early days
+so long ago when he had roamed these same glades with Marian. How sweet
+they seemed to him now, and how far away! Marian, too, the dainty friend
+of his youth--would he ever see her again? He had thought of her very
+often of late, and each time with increasing desire to hear her clear
+voice and musical laugh, and see her eyes light up at his coming.
+
+Perhaps the happiness of Allen-a-Dale and his lady had caused Robin's
+heart-strings to vibrate more strongly; perhaps, too, the coming of
+Will Scarlet. But, certes, Robin was anything but a hunter this bright
+morning as he walked along with head drooping in a most love-lorn way.
+
+Presently a hart entered the glade in full view of him, grazing
+peacefully, and instantly the man of action awoke. His bow was drawn
+and a shaft all but loosed, when the beast fell suddenly, pierced by a
+clever arrow from the far side of the glade.
+
+Then a handsome little page sprang gleefully from the covert and ran
+toward the dying animal. This was plainly the archer, for he flourished
+his bow aloft, and likewise bore a sword at his side, though for all
+that he looked a mere lad.
+
+Robin approached the hart from the other side.
+
+"How dare you shoot the King's beasts, stripling?" he asked severely.
+
+"I have as much right to shoot them as the King himself," answered the
+page haughtily. "How dare you question me?"
+
+The voice stirred Robin strongly. It seemed to chime into his memories
+of the old days. He looked at the page sharply, and the other returned
+the glance, straight and unafraid.
+
+"Who are you, my lad?" Robin said more civilly.
+
+"No lad of yours, and my name's my own," retorted the other with spirit.
+
+"Softly! Fair and softly, sweet page, or we of the forest will have to
+teach you manners!" said Robin.
+
+"Not if _you_ stand for the forest!" cried the page, whipping out his
+sword. "Come, draw, and defend yourself!"
+
+He swung his blade valiantly; and Robin saw nothing for it but to draw
+likewise. The page thereupon engaged him quite fiercely, and Robin found
+that he had many pretty little tricks at fencing.
+
+Nathless, Robin contented himself with parrying, and was loth to exert
+all his superior strength upon the lad. So the fight lasted for above a
+quarter of an hour, at the end of which time the page was almost spent
+and the hot blood flushed his cheeks in a most charming manner.
+
+The outlaw saw his distress, and to end the fight allowed himself to be
+pricked slightly on the wrist.
+
+"Are you satisfied, fellow?" asked the page, wincing a little at sight
+of the blood.
+
+"Aye, honestly," replied Robin; "and now perhaps you will grant me the
+honor of knowing to whom I owe this scratch?"
+
+"I am Richard Partington, page to Her Majesty, Queen Eleanor," answered
+the lad with dignity; and again the sound of his voice troubled Robin
+sorely.
+
+"Why come you to the greenwood alone, Master Partington?"
+
+The lad considered his answer while wiping his sword with a small lace
+kerchief. The action brought a dim confused memory to Robin. The lad
+finally looked him again in the eye.
+
+"Forester, whether or no you be a King's man, know that I seek one Robin
+Hood, an outlaw, to whom I bring amnesty from the Queen. Can you tell me
+aught of him?" And while awaiting his answer, he replaced the kerchief
+in his shirt. As he did so, the gleam of a golden trophy caught the
+outlaw's eye.
+
+Robin started forward with a joyful cry.
+
+"Ah! I know you now! By the sight of yon golden arrow won at the
+Sheriff's tourney, you are she on whom I bestowed it, and none other
+than Maid Marian!"
+
+"You--are--?" gasped Marian, for it was she; "not Robin!"
+
+"Robin's self!" said he gaily; and forthwith, clad as he was in rags,
+and stained of face, he clasped the dainty page close to his breast, and
+she forsooth yielded right willingly.
+
+"But Robin!" she exclaimed presently, "I knew you not, and was rude, and
+wounded you!"
+
+"'Twas nothing," he replied laughingly, "so long as it brought me you."
+
+But she made more ado over the sore wrist than Robin had received for
+all his former hurts put together. And she bound it with the little
+kerchief, and said, "Now 'twill get well!" and Robin was convinced she
+spoke the truth, for he never felt better in all his life. The whole
+woods seemed tinged with a roseate hue, since Marian had come again.
+
+But she, while happy also, was ill at ease; and Robin with a man's slow
+discernment at last saw that it was because of her boy's attire. He
+thought bluntly that there was naught to be ashamed of, yet smilingly
+handed her his tattered long cloak, which she blushingly put on, and
+forthwith recovered her spirits directly.
+
+Then they began to talk of each other's varied fortunes, and of the many
+things which had parted them; and so much did they find to tell that the
+sun had begun to decline well into the afternoon before they realized
+how the hours sped.
+
+"I am but a sorry host!" exclaimed Robin, springing to his feet. "I have
+not once invited you to my wild roof."
+
+"And I am but a sorry page," replied Marian; "for I had clean forgot
+that I was Richard Partington, and really did bring you a message from
+Queen Eleanor!"
+
+"Tell me on our way home, and there you shall be entrusted to Mistress
+Dale. While the first of my men we meet will I send back for your deer."
+
+So she told him, as they walked back through the glade, how that the
+fame of his prowess had reached Queen Eleanor's ears, in London town.
+And the Queen had said, "Fain would I see this bold yeoman, and behold
+his skill at the long-bow." And the Queen had promised him amnesty if
+he and four of his archers would repair to London against the next
+tournament the week following, there to shoot against King Henry's
+picked men, of whom the King was right vain. All this Marian told in
+detail, and added:
+
+"When I heard Her Majesty say she desired to see you, I asked leave
+to go in search of you, saying I had known you once. And the Queen was
+right glad, and bade me go, and sent this gold ring to you from off her
+finger, in token of her faith."
+
+Then Robin took the ring and bowed his head and kissed it loyally. "By
+this token will I go to London town," quoth he, "and ere I part with
+the Queen's pledge, may the hand that bears it be stricken off at the
+wrist!" By this time they were come to the grove before the cave,
+and Robin presented Maid Marian to the band, who treated her with the
+greatest respect. Will Scarlet was especially delighted to greet again
+his old time friend, while Allan-a-Dale and his good wife bustled about
+to make her welcome in their tiny thatched cottage.
+
+That evening after they had supped royally upon the very hart that
+Marian had slain, Allan sang sweet songs of Northern minstrelsy to the
+fair guest as she sat by Robin's side, the golden arrow gleaming in
+her dark hair. The others all joined in the chorus, from Will Scarlet's
+baritone to Friar Tuck's heavy bass. Even Little John essayed to sing,
+although looked at threateningly by Much the miller's son.
+
+Then Robin bade Marian repeat her message from the Queen, which Marian
+did in a way befitting the dignity of her royal mistress. After which
+the yeomen gave three cheers for the Queen and three more for her page,
+and drank toasts to them both, rising to their feet.
+
+"Ye have heard," quoth Robin standing forth, "how that Her Majesty--whom
+God preserve!--wishes but four men to go with me. Wherefore, I choose
+Little John and Will Stutely, my two lieutenants, Will Scarlet, my
+cousin, and Allan-a-Dale, my minstrel. Mistress Dale, also, can go with
+her husband and be company for the Queen's page. We will depart with
+early morning, decked in our finest. So stir ye, my lads! and see that
+not only your tunics are fresh, but your swords bright and your bows
+and arrows fit. For we must be a credit to the Queen as well as the good
+greenwood. You, Much, with Stout Will, Lester, and John, the widow's
+three sons, shall have command of the band while we are away; and Friar
+Tuck shall preside over the needs of your souls and stomachs."
+
+The orders were received with shouts of approval, and toasts all around
+were drunk again in nut-brown ale, ere the company dispersed to rest
+after making ready for the journey.
+
+The next morning was as fine a summer's day as ever you want to see, and
+the green leaves of the forest made a pleasing background for the gay
+picture of the yeomen setting forth. Says the old ballad--it was a
+seemly sight to see how Robin Hood himself had dressed, and all his
+yeomanry. He clothed his men in Lincoln green, and himself in scarlet
+red, with hats of black and feathers white to bravely deck each head.
+Nor were the two ladies behind-hand, I ween, at the bedecking.
+
+Thus the chosen party of seven sallied forth being accompanied to the
+edge of the wood by the whole band, who gave them a merry parting and
+Godspeed!
+
+The journey to London town was made without incident. The party
+proceeded boldly along the King's highroad, and no man met them who was
+disposed to say them nay. Besides, the good Queen's warrant and ring
+would have answered for them, as indeed it did at the gates of London.
+So on they sped and in due course came to the palace itself and awaited
+audience with the Queen.
+
+Now the King had gone that day to Finsbury Field, where the tourney was
+soon to be held, in order to look over the lists and see some of his
+picked men whom he expected to win against all comers. So much had he
+boasted of these men, that the Queen had secretly resolved to win a
+wager of him. She had heard of the fame of Robin Hood and his yeomen, as
+Marian had said; and Marian on her part had been overjoyed to be able to
+add a word in their favor and to set out in search of them.
+
+To-day the Queen sat in her private audience-room chatting pleasantly
+with her ladies, when in came Mistress Marian Fitzwalter attired again
+as befitted her rank of lady-in-waiting. She courtesied low to the Queen
+and awaited permission to speak.
+
+"How now!" said the Queen smiling; "is this my lady Marian, or the page,
+Richard Partington?"
+
+"Both, an it please Your Majesty. Richard found the man you sought,
+while Marian brought him to you."
+
+"Where is he?" asked Queen Eleanor eagerly.
+
+"Awaiting your audience--he and four of his men, likewise a lady of
+whose wooing and wedding I can tell you a pretty story at another time."
+
+"Have them admitted."
+
+So Marian gave orders to a herald, and presently Robin Hood and his
+little party entered the room.
+
+Now the Queen had half-expected the men to be rude and uncouth in
+appearance, because of their wild life in the forest; but she was
+delightfully disappointed. Indeed she started back in surprise and
+almost clapped her hands. For, sooth to say, the yeomen made a brave
+sight, and in all the court no more gallant men could be found. Marian
+felt her cheeks glow with pride, at sight of the half-hidden looks of
+admiration sent forth by the other ladies-in-waiting.
+
+Robin had not forgot the gentle arts taught by his mother, and he wore
+his fine red velvet tunic and breeches with the grace of a courtier.
+We have seen, before, what a dandified gentleman Will Scarlet was; and
+Allan-a-Dale, the minstrel, was scarcely less goodly to look upon.
+While the giant Little John and broad-shouldered Will Stutely made up in
+stature what little they lacked in outward polish. Mistress Dale, on her
+part, looked even more charming, if possible, than on the momentous day
+when she went to Plympton Church to marry one man and found another.
+
+Thus came the people of the greenwood before Queen Eleanor, in her own
+private audience room. And Robin advanced and knelt down before her, and
+said:
+
+"Here I am, Robin Hood--I and my chosen men! At Your Majesty's bidding
+am I come, bearing the ring of amnesty which I will protect--as I would
+protect Your Majesty's honor--with my life!"
+
+"Thou art welcome, Lockesley," said the Queen smiling graciously.
+
+"Thou art come in good time, thou and all thy brave yeomanry."
+
+Then Robin presented each of his men in turn, and each fell on his
+knee and was greeted with most kindly words. And the Queen kissed fair
+Mistress Dale upon the cheek, and bade her remain in the palace with her
+ladies while she was in the city. And she made all the party be seated
+to rest themselves after their long journey. Fine wines were brought,
+and cake, and rich food, for their refreshment. And as they ate and
+drank, the Queen told them further of the tourney to be held at Finsbury
+Field, and of how she desired them to wear her colors and shoot for her.
+Meantime, she concluded, they were to lie by quietly and be known of no
+man.
+
+To do all this, Robin and his men pledged themselves full heartily. Then
+at the Queen's request, they related to her and her ladies some of their
+merry adventures; whereat the listeners were vastly entertained, and
+laughed heartily. Then Marian, who had heard of the wedding at Plympton
+Church, told it so drolly that tears stood in the Queen's eyes from
+merriment.
+
+"My lord Bishop of Hereford!" she said, "'Twas indeed a comical business
+for him! I shall keep that to twit his bones, I promise you! So this is
+our minstrel?" she added presently, turning to Allan-a-Dale. "Methinks I
+have already heard of him. Will he not harp awhile for us to-day?"
+
+Allan bowed low, and took a harp which was brought to him, and he
+thrummed the strings and sang full sweetly the border songs of the North
+Countree. And the Queen and all her ladies listened in rapt silence till
+all the songs were ended.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HOW THE OUTLAWS SHOT IN KING HARRY'S TOURNEY
+
+ The King is into Finsbury Field
+ Marching in battle 'ray,
+ And after follows bold Robin Hood,
+ And all his yeomen gay.
+
+The morning of the great archery contest dawned fair and bright,
+bringing with it a fever of impatience to every citizen of London town,
+from the proudest courtier to the lowest kitchen wench. Aye, and all the
+surrounding country was early awake, too, and began to wend their way to
+Finsbury Field, a fine broad stretch of practice ground near Moorfields.
+Around three sides of the Field were erected tier upon tier of seats,
+for the spectators, with the royal boxes and booths for the nobility
+and gentry in the center. Down along one end were pitched gaily colored
+tents for the different bands of King's archers. There were ten of
+these bands, each containing a score of men headed by a captain of great
+renown; so to-day there were ten of the pavilions, each bearing aloft
+the Royal Arms and vari-colored pennants which fluttered lightly in the
+fresh morning breeze.
+
+Each captain's flag was of peculiar color and device. First came the
+royal purple streamer of Tepus, own bow-bearer to the King, and esteemed
+the finest archer in all the land. Then came the yellow of Clifton of
+Buckinghamshire; and the blue of Gilbert of the White Hand--he who was
+renowned in Nottinghamshire; and the green of Elwyn the Welshman; and
+the White of Robert of Cloudesdale; and, after them, five other captains
+of bands, each a man of proved prowess. As the Queen had said aforetime,
+the King was mightily proud of his archers, and now held this tourney to
+show their skill and, mayhap, to recruit their forces.
+
+The uprising tiers of seats filled early, upon this summer morning, and
+the merry chatter of the people went abroad like the hum of bees in a
+hive. The royal party had not yet put in an appearance, nor were any
+of the King's archers visible. So the crowd was content to hide its
+impatience by laughing jibes passed from one section to another, and
+crying the colors of their favorite archers. In and out among the seats
+went hawkers, their arms laden with small pennants to correspond with
+the rival tents. Other vendors of pie and small cakes and cider also did
+a thrifty business, for so eager had some of the people been to get good
+seats, that they had rushed away from home without their breakfast.
+
+Suddenly the gates at the far end, next the tents, opened wide, and a
+courier in scarlet and gold, mounted upon a white horse, rode in
+blowing lustily upon the trumpet at his lips; and behind him came six
+standard-bearers riding abreast. The populace arose with a mighty cheer.
+King Harry had entered the arena. He bestrode a fine white charger
+and was clad in a rich dark suit of slashed velvet with satin and gold
+facings. His hat bore a long curling ostrich plume of pure white and he
+doffed it graciously in answer to the shouts of the people. By his
+side rode Queen Eleanor, looking regal and charming in her long brocade
+riding-habit; while immediately behind them came Prince Richard and
+Prince John, each attired in knightly coats of mail and helmets. Lords
+and ladies of the realm followed; and finally, the ten companies of
+archers, whose progress round the field was greeted with hardly less
+applause than that given the King himself.
+
+The King and Queen dismounted from their steeds, ascended the steps
+of the royal box, and seated themselves upon two thrones, decked with
+purple and gold trapping, upon a dais sheltered by striped canvas. In
+the booths at each side the members of the Court took their places;
+while comely pages ran hither and thither bearing the royal commands.
+'Twas a lordly sight, I ween, this shifting of proud courtiers, flashing
+of jeweled fans, and commingling of bright colors with costly gems!
+
+Now the herald arose to command peace, and soon the clear note of his
+bugle rose above the roar of the crowd and hushed it to silence. The
+tenscore archers ranged themselves in two long rows on each side of
+the lists--a gallant array--while their captains, as a special mark of
+favor, stood near the royal box.
+
+"Come hither, Tepus," said the King to his bow-bearer. "Come, measure me
+out this line, how long our mark must be."
+
+"What is the reward?" then asked the Queen.
+
+"That will the herald presently proclaim," answered the King. "For first
+prize we have offered a purse containing twoscore golden pounds; for
+second, a purse containing twoscore silver pennies; and for third a
+silver bugle, inlaid with gold. Moreover, if the King's companies keep
+these prizes, the winning companies shall have, first, two tuns of
+Rhenish wine; second, two tuns of English beer; and, third, five of
+the fattest harts that run on Dallom Lea. Methinks that is a princely
+wager," added King Harry laughingly.
+
+Up spake bold Clifton, secure in the King's favor. "Measure no marks for
+us, most sovereign liege," quoth he; "for such largess as that, we'll
+shoot at the sun and the moon."
+
+"'Twill not be so far as that," said the King. "But get a line of good
+length, Tepus, and set up the targets at tenscore paces."
+
+Forthwith, Tepus bowed low, and set up ten targets, each bearing the
+pennant of a different company, while the herald stood forth again and
+proclaimed the rules and prizes. The entries were open to all comers.
+Each man, also, of the King's archers should shoot three arrows at the
+target bearing the colors of his band, until the best bowman in each
+band should be chosen. These ten chosen archers should then enter a
+contest for an open target--three shots apiece--and here any other
+bowman whatsoever was asked to try his skill. The result at the open
+targets should decide the tourney.
+
+Then all the people shouted again, in token that the terms of the
+contest pleased them; and the archers waved their bows aloft, and
+wheeled into position facing their respective targets.
+
+The shooting now began, upon all the targets at once, and the multitude
+had so much ado to watch them, that they forgot to shout. Besides,
+silence was commanded during the shooting. Of all the fine shooting that
+morning, I have not now space to tell you. The full score of men shot
+three times at each target, and then three times again to decide a tie.
+For, more than once, the arrow shot by one man would be split wide
+open by his successor. Every man's shaft bore his number to ease the
+counting; and so close would they stick at the end of a round, that the
+target looked like a big bristle hairbrush. Then must the spectators
+relieve their tense spirits by great cheering; while the King looked
+mighty proud of his skilled bowmen.
+
+At last the company targets were decided, and Tepus, as was expected,
+led the score, having made six exact centers in succession. Gilbert
+of the White Hand followed with five, and Clifton with four. Two other
+captains had touched their center four times, but not roundly. While in
+the other companies it so chanced that the captains had been out-shot by
+some of the men under them.
+
+The winners then saluted the King and Queen, and withdrew for a space to
+rest and renew their bow-strings for the keenest contest of all; while
+the lists were cleared and a new target--the open one--was set up at
+twelvescore paces. At the bidding of the King, the herald announced
+that the open target was to be shot at, to decide the title of the best
+archer in all England; and any man there present was privileged to try
+for it. But so keen had been the previous shooting, that many yeomen who
+had come to enter the lists now would not do so; and only a dozen men
+stepped forth to give in their names.
+
+"By my halidom!" said the King, "these must be hardy men to pit
+themselves against my archers!"
+
+"Think you that your ten chosen fellows are the best bowmen in all
+England?" asked the Queen.
+
+"Aye, and in all the world beside," answered the King; "and thereunto I
+would stake five hundred pounds."
+
+"I am minded to take your wager," said the Queen musingly, "and will
+e'en do so if you grant me a boon."
+
+"What is it?" asked the King.
+
+"If I produce five archers who can out-shoot your ten, will you grant my
+men full grace and amnesty?"
+
+"Assuredly!" quoth the King in right good humor. "Nathless, I tell you
+now, your wager is in jeopardy, for there never were such bowmen as
+Tepus and Clifton and Gilbert!"
+
+"Hum!" said the Queen puckering her brow, still as though lost in
+thought. "I must see if there be none present to aid me in my wager.
+Boy, call hither Sir Richard of the Lea and my lord Bishop of Hereford!"
+
+The two summoned ones, who had been witnessing the sport, came forward.
+
+"Sir Richard," said she, "thou art a full knight and good. Would'st
+advise me to meet a wager of the King's, that I can produce other
+archers as good as Tepus and Gilbert and Clifton?"
+
+"Nay, Your Majesty," he said, bending his knee. "There be none present
+that can match them. Howbeit,"--he added dropping his voice--"I have
+heard of some who lie hid in Sherwood Forest who could show them strange
+targets."
+
+The Queen smiled and dismissed him.
+
+"Come hither, my lord Bishop of Hereford," quoth she, "would'st thou
+advance a sum to support my wager 'gainst the King?"
+
+"Nay, Your Majesty," said the fat Bishop, "an you pardon me, I'd not lay
+down a penny on such a bet. For by my silver mitre, the King's archers
+are men who have no peers."
+
+"But suppose I found men whom _thou knewest_ to be masters at the bow,"
+she insisted roguishly, "would'st thou not back them? Belike, I have
+heard that there be men round about Nottingham and Plympton who carry
+such matters with a high hand!"
+
+The Bishop glanced nervously around, as if half expecting to see Robin
+Hood's men standing near; then turned to find the Queen looking at him
+with much amusement lurking in her eyes.
+
+"Odds bodikins! The story of my misadventure must have preceded me!" he
+thought, ruefully. Aloud he said, resolved to face it out,
+
+"Your Majesty, such tales are idle and exaggerated. An you pardon me, I
+would add to the King's wager that his men are invincible."
+
+"As it pleases thee," replied the Queen imperturbably. "How much?"
+
+"Here is my purse," said the Bishop uneasily. "It contains fifteen score
+nobles, or near a hundred pounds."
+
+"I'll take it at even money," she said, dismissing him; "and Your
+Majesty"--turning to the King who had been conversing with the two
+princes and certain of the nobles--"I accept your wager of five hundred
+pounds."
+
+"Very good," said the King, laughing as though it were a great jest.
+"But what had minded you to take such interest in the sport, of a
+sudden?"
+
+"It is as I have said. I have found five men whom I will pit against any
+you may produce."
+
+"Then we will try their skill speedily," quoth the King. "How say you,
+if first we decide this open target and then match the five best thereat
+against your unknown champions?"
+
+"Agreed," said the Queen. Thereupon she signed to Maid Marian to
+step forward, from a near-by booth where she sat with other
+ladies-in-waiting, and whispered something in her ear. Marian courtesied
+and withdrew.
+
+Now the ten chosen archers from the King's bands came forth again and
+took their stand; and with them stood forth the twelve untried men from
+the open lists. Again the crowd was stilled, and every eye hung upon the
+speeding of the shafts. Slowly but skilfully each man shot, and as
+his shaft struck within the inner ring a deep breath broke from the
+multitude like the sound of the wind upon the seashore. And now Gilbert
+of the White Hand led the shooting, and 'twas only by the space of a
+hairsbreadth upon the line that Tepus tied his score. Stout Elwyn, the
+Welshman, took third place; one of the private archers, named Geoffrey,
+come fourth; while Clifton must needs content himself with fifth.
+
+The men from the open lists shot fairly true, but nervousness and fear
+of ridicule wrought their undoing.
+
+The herald then came forward again, and, instead of announcing the
+prize-winners, proclaimed that there was to be a final contest. Two
+men had tied for first place, declared His Majesty the King, and three
+others were entitled to honors. Now all these five were to shoot
+again, and they were to be pitted against five other of the Queen's
+choosing--men who had not yet shot upon that day.
+
+A thrill of astonishment and excitement swept around the arena. "Who
+were these men of the Queen's choosing?" was upon every lip. The hubbub
+of eager voices grew intense; and in the midst of it all, the gate at
+the far end of the field opened and five men entered and escorted a lady
+upon horseback across the arena to the royal box. The lady was instantly
+recognized as Mistress Marian of the Queen's household, but no one
+seemed to know the faces of her escort. Four were clad in Lincoln green,
+while the fifth, who seemed to be the leader, was dressed in a brave
+suit of scarlet red. Each man wore a close fitting cap of black, decked
+with a curling white feather. For arms, they carried simply a stout bow,
+a sheaf of new arrows, and a short hunting-knife.
+
+When the little party came before the dais on which the King and Queen
+sat, the yeomen doffed their caps humbly, while Maid Marian was assisted
+to dismount.
+
+"Your Gracious Majesty," she said, addressing the Queen, "these be the
+men for whom you sent me, and who are now come to wear your colors and
+service you in the tourney."
+
+The Queen leaned forward and handed them each a scarf of green and gold.
+
+"Lockesley," she said in a clear voice, "I thank thee and thy men for
+this service. Know that I have laid a wager with the King that ye can
+outshoot the best five whom he has found in all his bowmen." The five
+men pressed the scarfs to their lips in token of fealty.
+
+The King turned to the Queen inquiringly.
+
+"Who are these men you have brought before us?" asked he.
+
+Up came the worthy Bishop of Hereford, growing red and pale by turns.
+
+"Your pardon, my liege lord!" cried he; "But I must denounce these
+fellows as outlaws. Yon man in scarlet is none other than Robin Hood
+himself. The others are Little John and Will Stutely and Will Scarlet
+and Allan-a-Dale--all famous in the North Countree for their deeds of
+violence."
+
+"As my lord Bishop personally knows!" added the Queen significantly.
+
+The King's brows grew dark. The name of Robin Hood was well known to
+him, as to every man there present.
+
+"Is this true?" he demanded sternly.
+
+"Aye, my lord," responded the Queen demurely. "But, bethink you--I have
+your royal promise of grace and amnesty."
+
+"That will I keep," said the King, holding in check his ire by a mighty
+effort. "But, look you! Only forty days do I grant of respite. When this
+time has elapsed, let these bold outlaws look to their safety!"
+
+Then turning to his five victorious archers, who had drawn near, he
+added, "Ye have heard, my men, how that I have a wager with the Queen
+upon your prowess. Now here be men of her choosing--certain free shafts
+of Sherwood and Barnesdale. Wherefore look well to it, Gilbert and Tepus
+and Geoffrey and Elwyn and Clifton! If ye outshoot these knaves, I will
+fill your caps with silver pennies--aye, and knight the man who stands
+first. But if ye lose, I give the prizes, for which ye have just
+striven, to Robin Hood and his men, according to my royal word."
+
+"Robin Hood and his men!" the saying flew round the arena with the speed
+of wild-fire, and every neck craned forward to see the famous fellows
+who had dared to brave the King's anger, because of the Queen.
+
+Another target was now set up, at the same distance as the last, and
+it was decided that the ten archers should shoot three arrows in turn.
+Gilbert and Robin tossed up a penny for the lead, and it fell to the
+King's men. So Clifton was bidden to shoot first.
+
+Forth he stood, planting his feet firmly, and wetting his fingers before
+plucking the string. For he was resolved to better his losing score of
+that day. And in truth he did so, for the shaft he loosed sped true, and
+landed on the black bull's-eye, though not in the exact center. Again he
+shot, and again he hit the black, on the opposite rim. The third shaft
+swerved downward and came within the second ring, some two fingers'
+breadths away. Nathless, a general cry went up, as this was the best
+shooting Clifton had done that day.
+
+Will Scarlet was chosen to follow him, and now took his place and
+carefully chose three round and full-feathered arrows.
+
+"Careful, my sweet coz!" quoth Robin in a low tone. "The knave has left
+wide space at the center for all of your darts."
+
+But Robin gave Will the wrong caution, for over-much care spoiled
+his aim. His first shaft flew wide and lodged in the second ring even
+further away than the worst shot of Clifton.
+
+"Your pardon, coz!" quoth Robin hastily. "Bid care go to the bottom of
+the sea, and do you loose your string before it sticks to your fingers!"
+
+And Will profited by this hint, and loosed his next two shafts as
+freely as though they flew along a Sherwood glade. Each struck upon the
+bull's-eye, and one even nearer the center than his rival's mark. Yet
+the total score was adjudged in favor of Clifton. At this Will Scarlet
+bit his lip, but said no word, while the crowd shouted and waved yellow
+flags for very joy that the King's man had overcome the outlaw. They
+knew, also, that this demonstration would please the King.
+
+The target was now cleared for the next two contestants--Geoffrey and
+Allan-a-Dale. Whereat, it was noticed that many ladies in the Queen's
+booths boldly flaunted Allan's colors, much to the honest pride which
+glowed in the cheeks of one who sat in their midst.
+
+"In good truth," said more than one lady to Mistress Dale, "if thy
+husband can handle the longbow as skilfully as the harp, his rival has
+little show of winning!"
+
+The saying augured well. Geoffrey had shot many good shafts that day;
+and indeed had risen from the ranks by virtue of them. But now each of
+his three shots, though well placed in triangular fashion around the rim
+of the bull's-eye, yet allowed an easy space for Allan to graze within.
+His shooting, moreover, was so prettily done, that he was right heartily
+applauded--the ladies and their gallants leading in the hand-clapping.
+
+Now you must know that there had long been a friendly rivalry in Robin
+Hood's band as to who was the best shot, next after Robin himself. He
+and Will Stutely had lately decided their marksmanship, and Will had
+found that Robin's skill was now so great as to place the leader at the
+head of all good bowmen in the forest. But the second place lay between
+Little John and Stutely, and neither wished to yield to the other. So
+to-day they looked narrowly at their leader to see who should shoot
+third. Robin read their faces at a glance, and laughing merrily, broke
+off two straws and held them out.
+
+"The long straw goes next!" he decided; and it fell to Stutely.
+
+Elwyn the Welshman was to precede him; and his score was no whit better
+than Geoffrey's. But Stutely failed to profit by it. His besetting sin
+at archery had ever been an undue haste and carelessness. To-day these
+were increased by a certain moodiness, that Little John had outranked
+him. So his first two shafts flew swiftly, one after the other, to
+lodging places outside the Welshman's mark.
+
+"Man! man!" cried Robin entreatingly, "you do forget the honor of the
+Queen, and the credit of Sherwood!"
+
+"I ask your pardon, master!" quoth Will humbly enough, and loosing as he
+spoke his last shaft. It whistled down the course unerringly and struck
+in the exact center--the best shot yet made.
+
+Now some shouted for Stutely and some shouted for Elwyn; but Elwyn's
+total mark was declared the better. Whereupon the King turned to the
+Queen. "What say you now?" quoth he in some triumph. "Two out of the
+three first rounds have gone to my men. Your outlaws will have to shoot
+better than that in order to save your wager!"
+
+The Queen smiled gently.
+
+"Yea, my lord," she said. "But the twain who are left are able to do the
+shooting. You forget that I still have Little John and Robin Hood."
+
+"And you forget, my lady, that I still have Tepus and Gilbert."
+
+So each turned again to the lists and awaited the next rounds in silent
+eagerness. I ween that King Harry had never watched the invasion of an
+enemy with more anxiety than he now felt.
+
+Tepus was chosen to go next and he fell into the same error with Will
+Scarlet. He held the string a moment too long, and both his first and
+second arrows came to grief. One of them, however, came within the black
+rim, and he followed it up by placing his third in the full center,
+just as Stutely had done in his last. These two centers were the fairest
+shots that had been made that day; and loud was the applause which
+greeted this second one. But the shouting was as nothing to the uproar
+which followed Little John's shooting. That good-natured giant seemed
+determined to outdo Tepus by a tiny margin in each separate shot; for
+the first and the second shafts grazed his rival's on the inner side,
+while for the third Little John did the old trick of the forest: he
+shot his own arrow in a graceful curve which descended from above upon
+Tepus's final center shaft with a glancing blow that drove the other out
+and left the outlaw's in its place.
+
+The King could scarce believe his eyes. "By my halidom!" quoth he, "that
+fellow deserves either a dukedom or a hanging! He must be in league with
+Satan himself! Never saw I such shooting."
+
+"The score is tied, my lord," said the Queen; "we have still to see
+Gilbert and Robin Hood."
+
+Gilbert now took his stand and slowly shot his arrows, one after
+another, into the bull's-eye. 'Twas the best shooting he had yet
+done, but there was still the smallest of spaces left--if you looked
+closely--at the very center.
+
+"Well done, Gilbert!" spoke up Robin Hood. "You are a foeman worthy of
+being shot against." He took his own place as he spoke. "Now if you had
+placed one of your shafts _there_"--loosing one of his own--"and another
+_there_"--out sped the second--"and another _there_"--the third was
+launched--"mayhap the King would have declared you the best bowman in
+all England!"
+
+But the last part of his merry speech was drowned in the wild tumult
+of applause which followed his exploit. His first two shafts had packed
+themselves into the small space left at the bull's-eye; while his third
+had split down between them, taking half of each, and making all three
+appear from a distance, as one immense arrow.
+
+Up rose the King in amazement and anger.
+
+"Gilbert is not yet beaten!" he cried. "Did he not shoot within the mark
+thrice? And that is allowed a best in all the rules of archery."
+
+Robin bowed low.
+
+"As it please Your Majesty!" quoth he. "But may I be allowed to place
+the mark for the second shooting?"
+
+The King waved his hand sullenly.. Thereupon Robin prepared another old
+trick of the greenwood, and got him a light, peeled willow wand which he
+set in the ground in place of the target.
+
+"There, friend Gilbert," called he gaily; "belike you can hit that!"
+
+"I can scarce see it from here," said Gilbert, "much less hit it.
+Nathless, for the King's honor, I will try."
+
+But this final shot proved his undoing, and his shaft flew harmlessly
+by the thin white streak. Then came Robin to his stand again, and picked
+his arrow with exceeding care, and tried his string. Amid a breathless
+pause he drew the good yew bow back to his ear, glanced along the shaft,
+and let the feathered missile fly. Straight it sped, singing a keen note
+of triumph as it went. The willow wand was split in twain, as though it
+had met a hunter's knife.
+
+"Verily, I think your bow is armed with witchcraft!" cried Gilbert. "For
+I did not believe such shooting possible."
+
+"You should come to see our merry lads in the greenwood," retorted Robin
+lightly. "For willow wands do not grow upon the cobblestones of London
+town."
+
+Meanwhile the King in great wrath had risen to depart, first signing the
+judges to distribute the prizes. Never a word said he, of good or
+ill, to the Queen, but mounted his horse and, followed by his sons and
+knights, rode off the field. The archers dropped upon one knee as he
+passed, but he gave them a single baleful look and was gone.
+
+Then the Queen beckoned the outlaws to approach, and they did so and
+knelt at her feet.
+
+"Right well have ye served me," she said, "and sorry am I that the
+King's anger is aroused thereby. But fear ye not. His word and grace
+hold true. As to these prizes ye have gained, I add others of mine
+own--the wagers I have won from His Majesty the King and from the lord
+Bishop of Hereford. Buy with some of these moneys the best swords ye
+can find in London, for all your band, and call them the swords of the
+Queen. And swear with them to protect all the poor and the helpless and
+the women--kind who come your way."
+
+"We swear," said the five yeomen solemnly.
+
+Then the Queen gave each of them her hand to kiss, and arose and
+departed with all her ladies. And after they were gone, the King's
+archers came crowding around Robin and his men, eager to get a glimpse
+of the fellows about whom they had heard so much. And back of them came
+a great crowd of the spectators pushing and jostling in their efforts to
+come nearer.
+
+"Verily!" laughed Little John, "they must take us for a Merry Andrew
+show!"
+
+Now the judges came up, and announced each man his prize, according
+to the King's command. To Robin was give the purse containing twoscore
+golden pounds; to Little John the twoscore silver pennies; and to
+Allan-a-Dale the fine inlaid bugle, much to his delight, for he was
+skilled at blowing sweet tunes upon the horn hardly less than handling
+the harp strings. But when the Rhenish wine and English beer and harts
+of Dallom Lea were spoken of, Robin said:
+
+"Nay, what need we of wine or beer, so far from the greenwood? And
+'twould be like carrying coals to Newcastle, to drive those harts to
+Sherwood! Now Gilbert and Tepus and their men have shot passing well.
+Wherefore, the meat and drink must go to them, an they will accept it of
+us."
+
+"Right gladly," replied Gilbert grasping his hand. "Ye are good men
+all, and we will toast you every one, in memory of the greatest day at
+archery that England has ever seen, or ever will see!"
+
+Thus said all the King's archers, and the hand of good-fellowship was
+given amid much shouting and clapping on the shoulder-blades.
+
+And so ended King Harry's tourney, whose story has been handed down from
+sire to son, even unto the present day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS SOUGHT OF THE TINKER
+
+ And while the tinker fell asleep,
+ Robin made haste away,
+ And left the tinker in the lurch,
+ For the great shot to pay.
+
+King Henry was as good as his word. Robin Hood and his party were
+suffered to depart from London--the parting bringing keen sorrow to
+Marian--and for forty days no hand was raised against them. But at
+the end of that time, the royal word was sent to the worthy Sheriff at
+Nottingham that he must lay hold upon the outlaws without further delay,
+as he valued his office.
+
+Indeed, the exploits of Robin and his band, ending with the great
+tourney in Finsbury Field, had made a mighty stir through all England,
+and many there were to laugh boldly at the Nottingham official for his
+failures to capture the outlaws.
+
+The Sheriff thereupon planned three new expeditions into the greenwood,
+and was even brave enough to lead them, since he had fifteen-score men
+at his beck and call each time. But never the shadow of an outlaw did
+he see, for Robin's men lay close, and the Sheriff's men knew not how to
+come at their chief hiding-place in the cove before the cavern.
+
+Now the Sheriff's daughter had hated Robin Hood bitterly in her heart
+ever since the day he refused to bestow upon her the golden arrow, and
+shamed her before all the company. His tricks, also, upon her father
+were not calculated to lessen her hatred, and so she sought about for
+means to aid the Sheriff in catching the enemy.
+
+"There is no need to go against this man with force of arms," she said.
+"We must meet his tricks with other tricks of our own."
+
+"Would that we could!" groaned the Sheriff. "The fellow is becoming a
+nightmare unto me."
+
+"Let me plan a while," she replied. "Belike I can cook up some scheme
+for his undoing."
+
+"Agreed," said the Sheriff, "and if anything comes of your planning,
+I will e'en give you an hundred silver pennies for a new gown, and a
+double reward to the man who catches the outlaws."
+
+Now upon that same day, while the Sheriff's daughter was racking her
+brains for a scheme, there came to the Mansion House a strolling tinker
+named Middle, a great gossip and braggart. And as he pounded away upon
+some pots and pans in the scullery, he talked loudly about what _he_
+would do, if he once came within reach of that rascal Robin Hood.
+
+"It might be that this simple fellow could do something through his
+very simplicity," mused the Sheriff's daughter, overhearing his prattle.
+"Odds bodikins! 'twill do no harm to try his service, while I bethink
+myself of some better plan."
+
+And she called him to her, and looked him over--a big brawny fellow
+enough, with an honest look about the eye, and a countenance so open
+that when he smiled his mouth seemed the only country on the map.
+
+"I am minded to try your skill at outlaw catching," she said, "and will
+add goodly measure to the stated reward if you succeed. Do you wish to
+make good your boasted prowess?"
+
+The tinker grinned broadly.
+
+"Yes, your ladyship," he said.
+
+"Then here is a warrant made out this morning by the Sheriff himself.
+See that you keep it safely and use it to good advantage."
+
+And she dismissed him.
+
+Middle departed from the house mightily pleased with himself, and
+proud of his commission. He swung his crab-tree-staff recklessly in his
+glee--so recklessly that he imperiled the shins of more than one angry
+passer-by--and vowed he'd crack the ribs of Robin Hood with it, though
+he was surrounded by every outlaw in the whole greenwood.
+
+Spurred on by the thoughts of his own coming bravery, he left the town
+and proceeded toward Barnesdale. The day was hot and dusty, and at
+noontime he paused at a wayside inn to refresh himself. He began by
+eating and drinking and dozing, in turn, then sought to do all at once.
+
+Mine host of the "Seven Does" stood by, discussing the eternal Robin
+with a drover.
+
+"Folk do say that my lord Sheriff has sent into Lincoln for more
+men-at-arms and horses, and that when he has these behind him, he'll
+soon rid the forest of these fellows."
+
+"Of whom speak you?" asked the tinker sitting up.
+
+"Of Robin Hood and his men," said the host; "but go to sleep again. You
+will never get the reward!"
+
+"And why not?" asked the tinker, rising with great show of dignity.
+
+"Where our Sheriff has failed, and the stout Guy of Gisborne, and many
+more beside, it behoves not a mere tinker to succeed."
+
+The tinker laid a heavy hand upon the innkeeper's fat shoulder, and
+tried to look impressive.
+
+"There is your reckoning, host, upon the table. I must e'en go upon my
+way, because I have more important business than to stand here gossiping
+with you. But be not surprised, if, the next time you see me, I shall
+have with me no less person than Robin Hood himself!"
+
+And he strode loftily out the door and walked up the hot white road
+toward Barnesdale.
+
+He had not gone above a quarter of a mile when he met a young man with
+curling brown hair and merry eyes. The young man carried his light cloak
+over his arm, because of the heat, and was unarmed save for a light
+sword at his side. The newcomer eyed the perspiring tinker in a friendly
+way, and seeing he was a stout fellow accosted him.
+
+"Good-day to you!" said he.
+
+"Good-day to you!" said the tinker; "and a morrow less heating."
+
+"Aye," laughed the other. "Whence come you? And know you the news?"
+
+"What is the news?" said the gossipy tinker, pricking up his ear; "I am
+a tinker by trade, Middle by name, and come from over against Banbury."
+
+"Why as for the news," laughed the stranger, "I hear that two tinkers
+were set i' the stocks for drinking too much ale and beer."
+
+"If that be all your news," retorted Middle, "I can beat you clear to
+the end of the lane."
+
+"What news have you? Seeing that you go from town to town, I ween you
+can outdo a poor country yokel at tidings."
+
+"All I have to tell," said the other, "is that I am especially
+commissioned"--he felt mightily proud of these big words--"especially
+commissioned to seek a bold outlaw which they call Robin Hood."
+
+"So?" said the other arching his brows. "How 'especially commissioned'?"
+
+"I have a warrant from the Sheriff, sealed with the King's own seal, to
+take him where I can; and if you can tell me where he is, I will e'en
+make a man of you."
+
+"Let me see the warrant," said the other, "to satisfy myself if it be
+right; and I will do the best I can to bring him to you."
+
+"That will I not," replied the tinker; "I will trust none with it.
+And if you'll not help me to come at him I must forsooth catch him by
+myself."
+
+And he made his crab-tree-staff whistle shrill circles in the air.
+
+The other smiled at the tinker's simplicity, and said:
+
+"The middle of the road on a hot July day is not a good place to talk
+things over. Now if you're the man for me and I'm the man for you, let's
+go back to the inn, just beyond the bend of road, and quench our thirst
+and cool our heads for thinking."
+
+"Marry come up!" quoth the tinker. "That will I! For though I've just
+come from there, my thirst rises mightily at the sound of your voice."
+
+So back he turned with the stranger and proceeded to the "Seven Does."
+
+The landlord arched his eyebrows silently when he saw the two come in,
+but served them willingly.
+
+The tinker asked for wine, and Robin for ale. The wine was not the most
+cooling drink in the cellar, nor the clearest headed. Nathless, the
+tinker asked for it, since it was expensive and the other man had
+invited him to drink. They lingered long over their cups, Master Middle
+emptying one after another while the stranger expounded at great length
+on the best plans for coming at and capturing Robin Hood.
+
+In the end the tinker fell sound asleep while in the act of trying to
+get a tankard to his lips. Then the stranger deftly opened the snoring
+man's pouch, took out the warrant, read it, and put it in his own
+wallet. Calling mine host to him, he winked at him with a half smile and
+told him that the tinker would pay the whole score when he awoke. Thus
+was Master Middle left in the lurch "for the great shot to pay."
+
+Nathless, the stranger seemed in no great hurry. He had the whim to stay
+awhile and see what the droll tinker might do when he awoke. So he hid
+behind a window shutter, on the outside, and awaited events.
+
+Presently the tinker came to himself with a prodigious yawn, and reached
+at once for another drink.
+
+"What were you saying, friend, about the best plan (ya-a-a-ah!) for
+catching this fellow?--Hello!--where's the man gone?"
+
+He had looked around and saw no one with him at the table.
+
+"Host! host!" he shouted, "where is that fellow who was to pay my
+reckoning?"
+
+"I know not," answered the landlord sharply. "Mayhap he left the money
+in your purse."
+
+"No he didn't!" roared Middle, looking therein. "Help! Help! I've been
+robbed! Look you, host, you are liable to arrest for high treason! I am
+here upon the King's business, as I told you earlier in the day. And yet
+while I did rest under your roof, thinking you were an honest man (hic!)
+and one loving of the King, my pouch has been opened and many matters of
+state taken from it."
+
+"Cease your bellowing!" said the landlord. "What did you lose?"
+
+"Oh, many weighty matters, I do assure you. I had with me, item, a
+warrant, granted under the hand of my lord High Sheriff of Nottingham,
+and sealed with the Kings's own seal, for the capture (hic!)--and
+arrest--and overcoming of a notorious rascal, one Robin Hood of
+Barnesdale. Item, one crust of bread. Item, one lump (hic!) of solder.
+Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six single keys (hic!), useful
+withal. Item, twelve silver pennies, the which I earned this week (hic!)
+in fair labor. Item--"
+
+"Have done with your items!" said the host. "And I marvel greatly to
+hear you speak in such fashion of your friend, Robin Hood of Barnesdale.
+For was he not with you in all good-fellowship?"
+
+"Wh-a-at? _That_ Robin Hood?" gasped Middle with staring eyes. "Why did
+you not tell me?"
+
+"Faith, _I_ saw no need o' telling you! Did you not tell me the first
+time you were here to-day, that I need not be surprised if you came back
+with no less person than Robin Hood himself?"
+
+"Jesu give me pardon!" moaned the tinker. "I see it all now. He got me
+to drinking, and then took my warrant, and my pennies, and my crust--"
+
+"Yes, yes," interrupted the host. "I know all about that. But pay me the
+score for both of you."
+
+"But I have no money, gossip. Let me go after that vile bag-o'-bones,
+and I'll soon get it out of him."
+
+"Not so," replied the other. "If I waited for you to collect from Robin
+Hood, I would soon close up shop."
+
+"What is the account?" asked Middle.
+
+"Ten shillings, just."
+
+"Then take here my working-bag and my good hammer too; and if I light
+upon that knave I will soon come back after them."
+
+"Give me your leathern coat as well," said mine host; "the hammer and
+bag of tools are as naught to me."
+
+"Gramercy!" cried Master Middle, losing what was left of his temper.
+"It seems that I have escaped one thief only to fall into the hands of
+another. If you will but walk with me out into the middle of the road,
+I'll give you such a crack as shall drive some honesty into your thick
+skull."
+
+"You are wasting your breath and my time," retorted the landlord.
+
+"Give me your things, and get you gone after your man, speedily."
+
+Middle thought this to be good advice; so he strode forth from the
+"Seven Does" in a black mood.
+
+Ere he had gone half a mile, he saw Robin Hood walking demurely among
+the trees a little in front of him.
+
+"Ho there, you villain!" roared the tinker. "Stay your steps! I am
+desperately in need of you this day!"
+
+Robin turned about with a surprised face.
+
+"What knave is this?" he asked gently, "who comes shouting after me?"
+
+"No knave! no knave at all!" panted the other, rushing up. "But an
+honest--man--who would have--that warrant--and the money for drink!"
+
+"Why, as I live, it is our honest tinker who was seeking Robin Hood! Did
+you find him, gossip?"
+
+"Marry, that did I! and I'm now going to pay him my respects!"
+
+And he plunged at him, making a sweeping stroke with his
+crab-tree-cudgel.
+
+Robin tried to draw his sword, but could not do it for a moment through
+dodging the other's furious blows. When he did get it in hand, the
+tinker had reached him thrice with resounding thwacks. Then the tables
+were turned, for he dashed in right manfully with his shining blade and
+made the tinker give back again.
+
+The greenwood rang with the noise of the fray. 'Twas steel against
+wood, and they made a terrible clattering when they came together. Robin
+thought at first that he could hack the cudgel to pieces, for his blade
+was one of Toledo--finely tempered steel which the Queen had given him.
+But the crab-tree-staff had been fired and hardened and seasoned by the
+tinker's arts until it was like a bar of iron--no pleasant neighbor for
+one's ribs.
+
+Robin presently found this out to his sorrow. The long reach and long
+stick got to him when 'twas impossible for him to touch his antagonist.
+So his sides began to ache sorely.
+
+"Hold your hand, tinker," he said at length. "I cry a boon of you."
+
+"Before I do it," said the tinker, "I'd hang you on this tree."
+
+But even as he spoke, Robin found the moment's grace for which he
+longed; and immediately grasped his horn and blew the three well-known
+blasts of the greenwood.
+
+"A murrain seize you!" roared the tinker commencing afresh. "Up to your
+old tricks again, are you? Well, I'll have time to finish my job, if I
+hurry."
+
+But Robin was quite able to hold his own at a pinch, and they had not
+exchanged many lunges and passes when up came Little John and Will
+Scarlet and a score of yeomen at their heels. Middle was seized without
+ceremony, while Robin sat himself down to breathe. "What is the matter?"
+quoth Little John, "that you should sit so weariedly upon the highway
+side?"
+
+"Faith, that rascally tinker yonder has paid his score well upon my
+hide," answered Robin ruefully.
+
+"That tinker, then," said Little John, "must be itching for more work.
+Fain would I try if he can do as much for me."
+
+"Or me," said Will Scarlet, who like Little John was always willing to
+swing a cudgel.
+
+"Nay," laughed Robin. "Belike I could have done better, an he had given
+me time to pull a young tree up by the roots. But I hated to spoil
+the Queen's blade upon his tough stick or no less tough hide. He had a
+warrant for my arrest which I stole from him."
+
+"Also, item, twelve silver pennies," interposed the tinker, unsubdued;
+"item, one crust of bread, 'gainst my supper. Item, one lump of solder.
+Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six single keys. Item--"
+
+"Yes, I know," quoth the merry Robin; "I stood outside the landlord's
+window and heard you count over your losses. Here they are again; and
+the silver pennies are turned by magic into gold. Here also, if you
+will, is my hand."
+
+"I take it heartily, with the pence!" cried Middle. "By my leathern coat
+and tools, which I shall presently have out of that sly host, I swear
+that I never yet met a man I liked as well as you! An you and your
+men here will take me, I swear I'll serve you honestly. Do you want
+a tinker? Nay, but verily you must! Who else can mend and grind your
+swords and patch your pannikins--and fight, too, when occasion serve?
+Mend your pots! mend your pa-a-ans!"
+
+And he ended his speech with the sonorous cry of his craft.
+
+By this time the whole band was laughing uproariously at the tinker's
+talk.
+
+"What say you, fellows?" asked Robin. "Would not this tinker be a good
+recruit?"
+
+"That he would!" answered Will Scarlet, clapping the new man on the
+back. "He will keep Friar Tuck and Much the miller's son from having the
+blues."
+
+So amid great merriment and right good fellowship the outlaws shook
+Middle by the hand, and he took oath of fealty, and thought no more of
+the Sheriff's daughter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS TANNED OF THE TANNER
+
+ In Nottingham there lived a jolly tanner,
+ With a hey down, down, a down down!
+ His name was Arthur-a-Bland,
+ There was ne'er a squire in Nottinghamshire
+
+ Dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+ And as he went forth, in a summer's morning,
+ With a hey down, down, a down down!
+ To the forest of merrie Sherwood,
+ To view the red deer, that range here and there,
+ There met he with bold Robin Hood.
+
+The Sheriff's daughter bided for several days in the faint hope that she
+might hear tidings of the prattling tinker. But never a word heard she,
+and she was forced to the conclusion that her messenger had not so much
+as laid eyes upon the outlaw. Little recked she that he was, even then,
+grinding sword-points and sharpening arrows out in the good greenwood,
+while whistling blithely or chatting merrily with the good Friar Tuck.
+
+Then she bethought herself of another good man, one Arthur-a-Bland, a
+tanner who dwelt in Nottingham town and was far-famed in the tourneys
+round about. He had done some pretty tricks at archery, but was
+strongest at wrestling and the quarter-staff. For three years he had
+cast all comers to the earth in wrestling until the famous Eric
+o' Lincoln broke a rib for him in a mighty tussle. Howsoever, at
+quarter-staff he had never yet met his match; so that there was never a
+squire in Nottinghamshire dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+
+ With a long pike-staff on his shoulder,
+ So well he could clear his way
+ That by two and three he made men flee
+ And none of them could stay.
+
+Thus at least runs the old song which tells of his might.
+
+"This is just the man for me!" thought the Sheriff's daughter to
+herself; and she forthwith summoned him to the Mansion House and
+commissioned him to seek out Robin Hood.
+
+The warrant was quite to Arthur's liking, for he was happiest when out
+in the forest taking a sly peep at the King's deer; and now he reckoned
+that he could look at them boldly, instead of by the rays of the moon.
+He could say to any King's Forester who made bold to stop him: "I am
+here on the King's business!"
+
+"Gramercy! No more oak-bark and ditch-water and the smell of half-tanned
+hides to-day!" quoth he, gaily. "I shall e'en see what the free air of
+heaven tastes like, when it sweeps through the open wood."
+
+So the tanner departed joyfully upon his errand, but much more
+interested in the dun deer of the forest than in any two-legged rovers
+therein. This interest had, in fact, caused the Foresters to keep a
+shrewd eye upon him in the past, for his tannery was apt to have plenty
+of meat in it that was more like venison than the law allowed. As for
+the outlaws, Arthur bore them no ill-will; indeed he had felt a secret
+envy in his heart at their free life; but he was not afraid to meet any
+two men who might come against him. Nathless, the Sheriff's daughter did
+not choose a very good messenger, as you shall presently see.
+
+Away sped the tanner, a piece of bread and some wine in his wallet,
+a good longbow and arrows slung across his shoulder, his stout
+quarter-staff in his hand, and on his head a cap of trebled raw-hide so
+tough that it would turn the edge of a broadsword. He lost no time in
+getting out of the hot sun and into the welcome shade of the forest,
+where he stalked cautiously about seeking some sign of the dun deer.
+
+Now it so chanced that upon that very morning Robin Hood had sent Little
+John to a neighboring village to buy some cloth of Lincoln green for new
+suits for all the band. Some of the money recently won of the King
+was being spent in this fashion, 'gainst the approach of winter. Will
+Scarlet had been sent on a similar errand to Barnesdale some time
+before, if you remember, only to be chased up the hill without his
+purchase. So to-day Little John was chosen, and for sweet company's
+sake Robin went with him a part of the way until they came to the "Seven
+Does," the inn where Robin had recently played his prank upon Middle the
+tinker. Here they drank a glass of ale to refresh themselves withal,
+and for good luck; and Robin tarried a bit while Little John went on his
+errand.
+
+Presently Robin entered the edge of the wood, when whom should he see
+but Arthur-a-Bland, busily creeping after a graceful deer that browsed
+alone down the glade. "Now by Saint George and the Dragon!" quoth Robin
+to himself. "I much fear that yon same fellow is a rascally poacher come
+after our own and the King's meat!"
+
+For you must know, by a curious process of reasoning, Robin and his men
+had hunted in the royal preserves so long that they had come to consider
+themselves joint owners to every animal which roamed therein.
+
+"Nay!" he added, "this must be looked into! That cow-skin cap in sooth
+must hide a scurvy varlet!"
+
+And forthwith he crept behind a tree, and thence to another, stalking
+our friend Arthur as busily as Arthur was stalking the deer.
+
+This went on for quite a space, until the tanner began to come upon the
+deer and to draw his bow in order to tickle the victim's ribs with a
+cloth-yard shaft. But just at this moment Robin unluckily trod upon a
+twig which snapped and caused the tanner to turn suddenly.
+
+Robin saw that he was discovered, so he determined to put a bold face on
+the matter, and went forward with some smart show of authority.
+
+"Hold!" he cried: "stay your hand! Why, who are you, bold fellow, to
+range so boldly here? In sooth, to be brief, ye look like a thief that
+has come to steal the King's deer."
+
+"Marry, it is scant concern of yours, what I look like!" retorted
+Arthur-a-Bland. "Who are you, who speak so bravely?"
+
+"You shall soon find out who I am!" quoth Robin, determining to find
+some sport in the matter. "I am a keeper of this forest. The King knows
+that I am looking after his deer for him; and therefore we must stay
+you."
+
+"Have you any assistants, friend?" asked the tanner calmly. "For it is
+not one man alone who can stop me."
+
+"Nay truly, gossip," replied Robin. "I have a good yew bow, also a right
+sharp blade at my side. Nathless I need no better assistant than a good
+oak-graff like unto yours. Give me a baker's dozen of minutes with
+it and it shall pleasure me to crack that pate of yours for your
+sauciness!"
+
+"Softly, my man! Fair and softly! Big words never killed so much as a
+mouse--least of all yon deer which has got away while you were filling
+all the woods with your noisy breath. So choose your own playthings. For
+your sword and your bow I care not a straw; nor for all your arrows to
+boot. If I get but a knock at you, 'twill be as much as you'll need."
+
+"Now by our Lady! Will you listen to the braggart?" cried Robin in a
+fine rage. "Marry, but I'll teach ye to be more mannerly!"
+
+So saying he unbuckled his belt; and, flinging his bow upon the ground
+he seized hold of a young sapling that was growing near by. His hunting
+knife soon had it severed and lopped into shape.
+
+"Now come, fellow!" said Arthur-a-Bland, seeing that he was ready. "And
+if I do not tan your hide for you in better shape than ever calf-skin
+was turned into top-boots, may a murrain seize me!"
+
+"Stay," said Robin, "methinks my cudgel is half a foot longer than
+yours. I would have them of even length before you begin your tanning."
+
+"I pass not for length," bold Arthur replied; "my staff is long enough,
+as you will shortly find out. Eight foot and a half, and 'twill knock
+down a calf"--here he made it whistle in the air--"and I hope it will
+knock down you."
+
+Forthwith the two men spat on their hands, laid firm hold upon their
+cudgels and began slowly circling round each other, looking for an
+opening.
+
+Now it so chanced that Little John had fared expeditiously with his
+errand. He had met the merchant, from whom he was wont to buy Lincoln
+green, coming along the road; and had made known his wants in few words.
+The merchant readily undertook to deliver the suits by a certain day
+in the following month. So Little John, glad to get back to the cool
+shelter of the greenwood, hasted along the road lately taken by Robin.
+
+Presently he heard the sound of angry voices, one of which he recognized
+as his captain's.
+
+"Now, Heaven forfend," quoth he, "that Robin Hood has fallen into the
+clutches of a King's man! I must take a peep at this fray."
+
+So he cautiously made his way from tree to tree, as Robin had done, till
+he came to the little open space where Robin and Arthur were circling
+about each other with angry looks, like two dogs at bay.
+
+"Ha! this looks interesting!" muttered Little John to himself, for he
+loved a good quarter-staff bout above anything else in the world, and
+was the best man at it in all the greenwood. And he crawled quietly
+underneath a friendly bush--much as he had done when Robin undertook to
+teach Will Scarlet a lesson--and chuckled softly to himself and slapped
+his thigh and prepared to watch the fight at his ease.
+
+Indeed it was both exciting and laughable. You would have chuckled one
+moment and caught your breath the next, to see those two stout fellows
+swinging their sticks--each half as long again as the men were, and
+thick as their arm--and edging along sidewise, neither wishing to strike
+the first blow.
+
+At last Robin could no longer forbear, and his good right arm swung
+round like a flash. Ping! went the stick on the back of the other's
+head, raising such a welt that the blood came. But the tanner did not
+seem to mind it at all, for bing! went his own staff in return, giving
+Robin as good as he had sent. Then the battle was on, and furiously it
+waged. Fast fell the blows, but few save the first ones landed, being
+met in mid-air by a counter-blow till the thwacking sticks sounded like
+the steady roll of a kettle-drum and the oak--bark flew as fine as it
+had ever done in Arthur-a-Bland's tannery.
+
+Round and round they fought, digging their heels into the ground to keep
+from slipping, so that you would have vowed there had been a yoke of
+oxen ploughing a potato-patch. Round and round, up and down, in and
+out, their arms working like threshing-machines, went the yeoman and the
+tanner, for a full hour, each becoming more astonished every minute that
+the other was such a good fellow. While Little John from underneath his
+bushy covert had much ado to keep from roaring aloud in pure joy.
+
+Finally Robin saw his chance and brought a full arm blow straight down
+upon the other's head with a force that would have felled a bullock.
+But Arthur's trebled cow-skin cap here stood him in good stead: the blow
+glanced off without doing more than stunning him. Nathless, he reeled
+and had much ado to keep from falling; seeing which Robin stayed
+his hand--to his own sorrow, for the tanner recovered his wits in a
+marvelous quick space and sent back a sidelong blow which fairly lifted
+Robin off his feet and sent him tumbling on to the grass.
+
+"Hold your hand! hold your hand!" roared Robin with what little breath
+he had left. "Hold, I say, and I will give you the freedom of the
+greenwood."
+
+"Why, God-a-mercy," said Arthur; "I may thank my staff for that--not
+_you_."
+
+"Well, well, gossip' let be as it may. But prithee tell me your name and
+trade. I like to know fellows who can hit a blow like that same last."
+
+"I am a tanner," replied Arthur-a-Bland. "In Nottingham long have
+I wrought. And if you'll come to me I swear I'll tan your hides for
+naught."
+
+"Odds bodikins!" quoth Robin ruefully. "Mine own hide is tanned enough
+for the present. Howsoever, there be others in this wood I would fain
+see you tackle. Harkee, if you will leave your tan-pots and come with
+me, as sure as my name is Robin Hood, you shan't want gold or fee."
+
+"By the breath o' my body!" said Arthur, "that will I do!" and he
+gripped him gladly by the hand. "But I am minded that I clean forgot the
+errand that brought me to Sherwood. I was commissioned by some, under
+the Sheriff's roof, to capture you."
+
+"So was a certain tinker, now in our service," said Robin smilingly.
+
+"Verily 'tis a new way to recruit forces!" said the tanner laughing
+loudly. "But tell me, good Robin Hood, where is Little John? I fain
+would see him, for he is a kinsman on my mother's side."
+
+"Here am I, good Arthur-a-Bland!" said a voice; and Little John
+literally rolled out from under the bush to the sward. His eyes were
+full of tears from much laughter which had well-nigh left him powerless
+to get on his feet.
+
+As soon as the astonished tanner saw who it was, he gave Little John a
+mighty hug around the neck, and lifted him up on his feet, and the two
+pounded each other on the back soundly, so glad were they to meet again.
+
+"O, man, man!" said Little John as soon as he had got his breath. "Never
+saw I so fine a sight in all my born days. You did knock him over like
+as he were a ninepin!"
+
+"And you do joy to see me thwacked about on the ribs?" asked Robin with
+some choler.
+
+"Nay, not that, master!" said Little John. "But 'tis the second time I
+have had special tickets to a show from beneath the bushes, and I cannot
+forbear my delight. Howsoever, take no shame unto yourself, for
+this same Arthur-a-Bland is the best man at the quarter-staff in all
+Nottinghamshire. It commonly takes two or three men to hold him."
+
+"Unless it be Eric o' Lincoln," said Arthur modestly; "and I well know
+how you paid him out at the Fair."
+
+"Say no more!" said Robin springing to his feet; "for well I know that I
+have done good business this day, and a few bruises are easy payment
+for the stout cudgel I am getting into the band. Your hand again, good
+Arthur-a-Bland! Come! let us after the deer of which I spoiled your
+stalking."
+
+"Righty gladly!" quoth Arthur. "Come, Cousin Little John! Away with
+vats and tan-bark and vile-smelling cowhides! I'll follow you two in the
+sweet open air to the very ends of earth!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA
+
+ Then answered him the gentle knight
+ With words both fair and thee:
+ "God save thee, my good Robin,
+ And all thy company!"
+
+Now you must know that some months passed by. The winter dragged its
+weary length through Sherwood Forest, and Robin Hood and his merry men
+found what cheer they could in the big crackling fires before their
+woodland cave. Friar Tuck had built him a little hermitage not far away,
+where he lived comfortably with his numerous dogs.
+
+The winter, I say, reached an end at last, and the blessed spring came
+and went. Another summer passed on apace, and still neither King nor
+Sheriff nor Bishop could catch the outlaws, who, meanwhile, thrived and
+prospered mightily in their outlawry. The band had been increased
+from time to time by picked men such as Arthur-a-Bland and David of
+Doncaster--he who was the jolliest cobbler for miles around--until it
+now numbered a full sevenscore of men; seven companies each with its
+stout lieutenant serving under Robin Hood. And still they relieved the
+purses of the rich, and aided the poor, and feasted upon King's deer
+until the lank Sheriff of Nottingham was well-nigh distracted.
+
+Indeed, that official would probable have lost his office entirely, had
+it not been for the fact of the King's death. Henry passed away, as all
+Kings will, in common with ordinary men, and Richard of the Lion Heart
+was proclaimed as his successor.
+
+Then Robin and his men, after earnest debate, resolved to throw
+themselves upon the mercy of the new King, swear allegiance, and ask to
+be organized into Royal Foresters. So Will Scarlet and Will Stutely and
+Little John were sent to London with this message, which they were first
+to entrust privately to Maid Marian. But they soon returned with bad
+tidings. The new King had formerly set forth upon a crusade to the Holy
+Land, and Prince John, his brother, was impossible to deal with--being
+crafty, cruel and treacherous. He was laying his hands upon all the
+property which could easily be seized; among other estates, that of
+the Earl of Huntingdon, Robin's old enemy and Marian's father, who had
+lately died.
+
+Marian herself was in sore straits. Not only had her estates been taken
+away, and the maid been deprived of the former protection of the Queen,
+but the evil Prince John had persecuted her with his attentions. He
+thought that since the maid was defenseless he could carry her away to
+one of his castles and none could gainsay him.
+
+No word of this peril reached Robin's ears, although his men brought
+him word of the seizure of the Huntingdon lands. Nathless he was greatly
+alarmed for the safety of Maid Marian, and his heart cried out for
+her strongly. She had been continually in his thoughts ever since the
+memorable shooting at London town.
+
+One morning in early autumn when the leaves were beginning to turn gold
+at the edges, the chestnut-pods to swell with promise of fatness, and
+the whole wide woodland was redolent with the ripe fragrance of fruit
+and flower, Robin was walking along the edge of a small open glade busy
+with his thoughts. The peace of the woods was upon him, despite his
+broodings of Marian and he paid little heed to a group of does quietly
+feeding among the trees at the far edge of the glade.
+
+But presently this sylvan picture was rudely disturbed for him. A stag,
+wild and furious, dashed suddenly forth from among the trees, scattering
+the does in swift alarm. The vicious beast eyed the green-and-gold tunic
+of Robin, and, lowering it head, charged at him impetuously. So sudden
+was its attack that Robin had no time to bend his bow. He sprang behind
+a tree while he seized his weapon.
+
+A moment later the wild stag crashed blindly into the tree-trunk with a
+shock which sent the beast reeling backward, while the dislodged leaves
+from the shivering tree fell in a small shower over Robin's head.
+
+"By my halidom, I am glad it was not me you struck, my gentle friend!"
+quoth Robin, fixing an arrow upon the string. "Sorry indeed would be any
+one's plight who should encounter you in this black humor."
+
+Scarcely had he spoken when he saw the stag veer about and fix its
+glances rigidly on the bushes to the left side of the glade. These were
+parted by a delicate hand, and through the opening appeared the slight
+figure of a page. It was Maid Marian, come back again to the greenwood!
+
+She advanced, unconscious alike of Robin's horrified gaze and the evil
+fury of the stag.
+
+She was directly in line with the animal, so Robin dared not launch an
+arrow. Her own bow was slung across her shoulder, and her small sword
+would be useless against the beast's charge. But now as she caught sight
+of the stag she pursed her lips as though she would whistle to it.
+
+"For the love of God, dear lady!" cried Robin; and then the words died
+in his throat.
+
+With a savage snort of rage, the beast rushed at this new and inviting
+target--rushed so swiftly and from so short a distance that she could
+not defend herself. She sprang to one side as it charged down upon her,
+but a side blow from its antlers stretched her upon the ground. The stag
+stopped, turned, and lowered its head preparing to gore her to death.
+
+Already its cruel horns were coming straight for her, while she, white
+of face and bewildered by the sudden attack, was struggling to rise
+and draw her sword. A moment more and the end would come. But the sharp
+voice of Robin and already spoken.
+
+"Down, Marian!" he cried, and the girl instinctively obeyed, just as
+the shaft from Robin's bow went whizzing close above her head and struck
+with terrific force full in the center of the stag's forehead.
+
+The beast stumbled in its charge and fell dead, across the body of the
+fainting maid.
+
+Robin was quickly by her side, and dragged the beast from off the girl.
+
+Picking her up in his strong arms, he bore her swiftly to the side of
+one of the many brooks which watered the vale.
+
+He dashed cool water upon her face, roughly almost, in his agony of fear
+that the she was already dead, and he could have shed tears of joy to
+see those poor, closed eyelids tremble. He redoubled his efforts; and
+presently she gave a little gasp.
+
+"Where am I? What is't?"
+
+"You are in Sherwood, dear maid, tho', i' faith, we gave you a rude
+reception!"
+
+She opened her eyes and sat up. "Methinks you have rescued me from
+sudden danger, sir," she said.
+
+Then she recognized Robin for the first time, and a radiant smile came
+over her face, together with the rare blush of returned vitality,
+and her head sank upon his shoulder with a little tremble and sigh of
+relief.
+
+"Oh, Robin, it is you!" she murmured.
+
+"Aye, 'tis I. Thank heaven, I was at hand to do you service!" Robin's
+tones were deep and full of feeling. "I swear, dear Marian, that I will
+not let you from my care henceforth."
+
+Not another word was spoken for some moments, while her head still
+rested confidingly upon his breast. Then recollecting, he suddenly
+cried:
+
+"Gramercy, I make but a poor nurse! I have not even asked if any of your
+bones were broken."
+
+"No, not any," she answered springing lightly to her feet to show him.
+
+"That foolish dizziness o'ercame me for the nonce, but we can now
+proceed on our way."
+
+"Nay, I meant not that," he protested; "why should we haste? First tell
+me of the news in London town, and of yourself."
+
+So she told him how that the Prince had seized upon her father's lands,
+and had promised to restore them to her if she would listen to his suit;
+and how that she knew he meant her no good, for he was even then suing
+for a Princess's hand.
+
+"That is all, Robin," she ended simply; "and that is why I donned again
+my page's costume and came to you in the greenwood."
+
+Robin's brow had grown fiercely black at the recital of her wrong; and
+he had laid stern hand upon the hilt of his sword. "By this sword which
+Queen Eleanor gave me!" he said impetuously; "and which was devoted to
+the service of all womankind, I take oath that Prince John and all his
+armies shall not harm you!"
+
+So that is how Maid Marian came to take up her abode in the greenwood,
+where the whole band of yeomen welcomed her gladly and swore fealty; and
+where the sweet lady of Allan-a-Dale made her fully at home.
+
+But this was a day of deeds in Sherwood Forest, and we 'gan to tell you
+another happening which led to later events.
+
+While Robin and Marian were having their encounter with the stag, Little
+John, Much the miller's son, and Will Scarlet had sallied forth to watch
+the highroad leading to Barnesdale, if perchance they might find some
+haughty knight or fat priest whose wallet needed lightening.
+
+They had scarcely watched the great road known as Watling Street which
+runs from Dover in Kent to Chester town--for many minutes, when they
+espied a knight riding by in a very forlorn and careless manner.
+
+ All dreary was his semblance,
+ And little was his pride,
+ His one
+ foot in the stirrup stood,
+ His other waved beside.
+
+ His visor hung down o'er his eyes,
+ He rode in single array,
+ A sorrier man than he was one
+ Rode never in summer's day.
+
+Little John came up to the knight and bade him stay; for who can
+judge of a man's wealth by his looks? The outlaw bent his knee in all
+courtesy, and prayed him to accept the hospitality of the forest.
+
+"My master expects you to dine with him, to-day," quoth he, "and indeed
+has been fasting while awaiting your coming, these three hours."
+
+"Who is your master?" asked the knight.
+
+"None other than Robin Hood," replied Little John, laying his hand upon
+the knight's bridle.
+
+Seeing the other two outlaws approaching, the knight shrugged his
+shoulders, and replied indifferently.
+
+"'Tis clear that your invitation is too urgent to admit of refusal,"
+quoth he, "and I go with you right willingly, my friends. My purpose
+was to have dined to-day at Blyth or Doncaster; but nothing matters
+greatly."
+
+So in the same lackadaisical fashion which had marked all his actions
+that day, the knight suffered his horse to be led to the rendezvous of
+the band in the greenwood.
+
+Marian had not yet had time to change her page's attire, when the three
+escorts of the knight hove in sight. She recognized their captive as Sir
+Richard of the Lea, whom she had often seen at court; and fearing lest
+he might recognize her, she would have fled. But Robin asked her, with a
+twinkle, if she would not like to play page that day, and she in roguish
+mood consented to do so.
+
+"Welcome, Sir Knight," said Robin, courteously. "You are come in good
+time, for we were just preparing to sit down to meat."
+
+"God save and thank you, good master Robin," returned the knight; "and
+all your company. It likes me well to break the fast with you."
+
+So while his horse was cared for, the knight laid aside his own heavy
+gear, and laved his face and hands, and sat down with Robin and all his
+men to a most plentiful repast of venison, swans, pheasants, various
+small birds, cake and ale. And Marian stood behind Robin and filled his
+cup and that of the guest.
+
+After eating right heartily of the good cheer, the knight brightened
+up greatly and vowed that he had not enjoyed so good a dinner for nigh
+three weeks. He also said that if ever Robin and his fellows should come
+to his domains, he would strive to set them down to as good a dinner on
+his own behalf.
+
+But this was not exactly the sort of payment which Robin had expected to
+receive. He thanked the knight, therefore, in set phrase, but reminded
+him that a yeoman like himself might hardly offer such a dinner to a
+knight as a gift of charity.
+
+"I have no money, Master Robin," answered the knight frankly. "I have so
+little of the world's goods, in sooth, that I should be ashamed to offer
+you the whole of it."
+
+"Money, however little, always jingles merrily in our pockets," said
+Robin, smiling. "Pray you tell me what you deem a little sum."
+
+"I have of my own ten silver pennies," said the knight. "Here they are,
+and I wish they were ten times as many."
+
+He handed Little John his pouch, and Robin nodded carelessly.
+
+"What say you to the total, Little John?" he asked as though in jest.
+
+"'Tis true enough, as the worthy knight hath said," responded the big
+fellow gravely emptying the contents on his cloak.
+
+Robin signed to Marian, who filled a bumper of wine for himself and his
+guest.
+
+"Pledge me, Sir Knight!" cried the merry outlaw; "and pledge me
+heartily, for these sorry times. I see that your armor is bent and that
+your clothes are torn. Yet methinks I saw you at court, once upon a day,
+and in more prosperous guise. Tell me now, were you a yeoman and made a
+knight by force? Or, have you been a bad steward to yourself, and wasted
+your property in lawsuits and the like? Be not bashful with us. We shall
+not betray your secrets."
+
+"I am a Saxon knight in my own right; and I have always lived a sober
+and quiet life," the sorrowful guest replied. "'Tis true you have seen
+me at court, mayhap, for I was an excited witness of your shooting
+before King Harry--God rest his bones! My name is Sir Richard of the
+Lea, and I dwell in a castle, not a league from one of the gates of
+Nottingham, which has belonged to my father, and his father, and his
+father's father before him. Within two or three years ago my neighbors
+might have told you that a matter of four hundred pounds one way or
+the other was as naught to me. But now I have only these ten pennies of
+silver, and my wife and son."
+
+"In what manner have you lost your riches?" asked Robin.
+
+"Through folly and kindness," said the knight, sighing. "I went with
+King Richard upon a crusade, from which I am but lately returned, in
+time to find my son--a goodly youth--grown up. He was but twenty, yet he
+had achieved a squire's training and could play prettily in jousts and
+tournaments and other knightly games. But about this time he had the ill
+luck to push his sport too far, and did accidentally kill a knight in
+the open lists. To save the boy, I had to sell my lands and mortgage my
+ancestral castle; and this not being enough, in the end I have had to
+borrow money, at a ruinous interest, from my lord of Hereford."
+
+"A most worthy Bishop," said Robin ironically. "What is the sum of your
+debt?"
+
+"Four hundred pounds," said Sir Richard, "and the Bishop swears he will
+foreclose the mortgage if they are not paid promptly."
+
+"Have you any friends who would become surety for you?"
+
+"Not one. If good King Richard were here, the tale might be otherwise."
+
+"Fill your goblet again, Sir Knight," said Robin; and he turned to
+whisper a word in Marian's ear. She nodded and drew Little John and Will
+Scarlet aside and talked earnestly with them, in a low tone.
+
+"Here is health and prosperity to you, gallant Robin," said Sir Richard,
+tilting his goblet. "I hope I may pay your cheer more worthily, the next
+time I ride by."
+
+Will Scarlet and Little John had meanwhile fallen in with Marian's idea,
+for they consulted the other outlaws, who nodded their heads. Thereupon
+Little John and Will Scarlet went into the cave near by and presently
+returned bearing a bag of gold. This they counted out before the
+astonished knight; and there were four times one hundred gold pieces in
+it.
+
+"Take this loan from us, Sir Knight, and pay your debt to the Bishop,"
+then said Robin. "Nay, no thanks; you are but exchanging creditors.
+Mayhap we shall not be so hard upon you as the Christian Bishop; yet,
+again we may be harder. Who can tell?"
+
+There were actual tears in Sir Richard's eyes, as he essayed to thank
+the foresters. But at this juncture, Much, the miller's son, came from
+the cave dragging a bale of cloth. "The knight should have a suit worthy
+of his rank, master--think you not so?"
+
+"Measure him twenty ells of it," ordered Robin.
+
+"Give him a good horse, also," whispered Marian. "'Tis a gift which will
+come back four-fold, for this is a worthy man. I know him well."
+
+So the horse was given, also, and Robin bade Arthur-a-Bland ride with
+the knight as far as his castle, as esquire.
+
+The knight was sorrowful no longer; yet he could hardly voice his thanks
+through his broken utterance. And having spent the night in rest,
+after listening to Allan-a-Dale's singing, he mounted his new steed the
+following morning an altogether different man.
+
+"God save you, comrades, and keep you all!" said he, with deep feeling
+in his tones; "and give me a grateful heart!"
+
+"We shall wait for you twelve months from to-day, here in this place,"
+said Robin, shaking him by the hand; "and then you will repay us the
+loan, if you have been prospered."
+
+"I shall return it to you within the year, upon my honor as Sir Richard
+of the Lea. And for all time, pray count on me as a steadfast friend."
+
+So saying the knight and his esquire rode down the forest glade till
+they were lost to view.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HOW THE BISHOP WAS DINED
+
+ "O what is the matter?" then said the Bishop,
+ "Or for whom do you make this a-do?
+ Or why do you kill the King's venison,
+ When your company is so few?"
+
+ "We are shepherds," quoth bold Robin Hood,
+ "And we keep sheep all the year,
+ And we are disposed to be merrie this day,
+ And to kill of the King's fat deer."
+
+Not many days after Sir Richard of the Lea came to Sherwood Forest,
+word reached Robin Hood's ears that my lord Bishop of Hereford would
+be riding that way betimes on that morning. 'Twas Arthur-a-Bland, the
+knight's quondam esquire, who brought the tidings, and Robin's face
+brightened as he heard it.
+
+"Now, by our Lady!" quoth he, "I have long desired to entertain my lord
+in the greenwood, and this is too fair a chance to let slip. Come, my
+men, kill me a venison; kill me a good fat deer. The Bishop of Hereford
+is to dine with me today, and he shall pay well for his cheer."
+
+"Shall we dress it here, as usual?" asked Much, the miller's son.
+
+"Nay, we play a droll game on the churchman. We will dress it by the
+highway side, and watch for the Bishop narrowly, lest he should ride
+some other way."
+
+So Robin gave his orders, and the main body of his men dispersed to
+different parts of the forest, under Will Stutely and Little John,
+to watch other roads; while Robin Hood himself took six of his men,
+including Will Scarlet, and Much, and posted himself in full view of the
+main road. This little company appeared funny enough, I assure you, for
+they had disguised themselves as shepherds. Robin had an old wool cap,
+with a tail to it, hanging over his ear, and a shock of hair stood
+straight up through a hole in the top. Besides there was so much dirt on
+his face that you would never have known him. An old tattered cloak over
+his hunter's garb completed his make-up. The others were no less ragged
+and unkempt, even the foppish Will Scarlet being so badly run down at
+the heel that the court ladies would hardly have had speech with him.
+
+They quickly provided themselves with a deer and made great preparations
+to cook it over a small fire, when a little dust was seen blowing along
+the highway, and out of it came the portly Bishop cantering along with
+ten men-at-arms at his heels. As soon as he saw the fancied shepherds he
+spurred up his horse, and came straight toward them.
+
+"Who are ye, fellows, who make so free with the King's deer?" he asked
+sharply.
+
+"We are shepherds," answered Robin Hood, pulling at his forelock
+awkwardly.
+
+"Heaven have mercy! Ye seem a sorry lot of shepherds. But who gave you
+leave to cease eating mutton?"
+
+"'Tis one of our feast days, lording, and we were disposed to be merry
+this day, and make free with a deer, out here where they are so many."
+
+"By me faith, the King shall hear of this. Who killed yon beast?"
+
+"Give me first your name, excellence, so that I may speak where 'tis
+fitting," replied Robin stubbornly.
+
+"'Tis my lord Bishop of Hereford, fellow!" interposed one of the guards
+fiercely. "See that you keep a civil tongue in your head."
+
+"If 'tis a churchman," retorted Will Scarlet, "he would do better to
+mind his own flocks rather than concern himself with ours."
+
+"Ye are saucy fellows, in sooth," cried the Bishop, "and we will see if
+your heads will pay for your manners. Come! quit your stolen roast and
+march along with me, for you shall be brought before the Sheriff of
+Nottingham forthwith."
+
+"Pardon, excellence!" said Robin, dropping on his knees. "Pardon, I pray
+you. It becomes not your lordship's coat to take so many lives away."
+
+"Faith, I'll pardon you!" said the Bishop. "I'll pardon you, when I see
+you hanged! Seize upon them, my men!"
+
+But Robin had already sprung away with his back against a tree. And
+from underneath his ragged cloak he drew his trusty horn and winded the
+piercing notes which were wont to summon the band.
+
+The Bishop no sooner saw this action than he knew his man, and that
+there was a trap set; and being an arrant coward, he wheeled his horse
+sharply and would have made off down the road; but his own men, spurred
+on the charge, blocked his way. At almost the same instant the bushes
+round about seemed literally to become alive with outlaws. Little John's
+men came from one side and Will Stutely's from the other. In less time
+than it takes to tell it, the worthy Bishop found himself a prisoner,
+and began to crave mercy from the men he had so lately been ready to
+sentence.
+
+ "O pardon, O pardon," said the Bishop,
+ "O pardon, I you pray.
+ For if I had known it had been you,
+ I'd have gone some other way."
+
+"I owe you no pardon," retorted Robin, "but I will e'en treat you better
+than you would have treated me. Come, make haste, and go along with me.
+I have already planned that you shall dine with me this day."
+
+So the unwilling prelate was dragged away, cheek by jowl, with the
+half-cooked venison upon the back of his own horse; and Robin and his
+band took charge of the whole company and led them through the forest
+glades till they came to an open space near Barnesdale.
+
+Here they rested, and Robin gave the Bishop a seat full courteously.
+Much the miller's son fell to roasting the deer afresh, while another
+and fatter beast was set to frizzle on the other side of the fire.
+Presently the appetizing odor of the cooking reached the Bishop's
+nostrils, and he sniffed it eagerly. The morning's ride had made him
+hungry; and he was nothing loath when they bade him come to the dinner.
+Robin gave him the best place beside himself, and the Bishop prepared to
+fall to.
+
+"Nay, my lord, craving your pardon, but we are accustomed to have grace
+before meat," said Robin decorously. "And as our own chaplain is not
+with us to-day, will you be good enough to say it for us?"
+
+The Bishop reddened, but pronounced grace in the Latin tongue hastily,
+and then settled himself to make the best of his lot. Red wines and ale
+were brought forth and poured out, each man having a horn tankard from
+which to drink.
+
+Laughter bubbled among the diners, and the Bishop caught himself smiling
+at more than one jest. But who, in sooth, could resist a freshly broiled
+venison streak eaten out in the open air to the tune of jest and good
+fellowship? Stutely filled the Bishop's beaker with wine each time he
+emptied it, and the Bishop got mellower and mellower as the afternoon
+shades lengthened on toward sunset. Then the approaching dusk warned him
+of his position.
+
+"I wish, mine host," quoth he gravely to Robin, who had soberly drunk
+but one cup of ale, "that you would now call a reckoning. 'Tis late, and
+I fear the cost of this entertainment may be more than my poor purse can
+stand."
+
+For he bethought himself of his friend, the Sheriff's former experience.
+
+"Verily, your lordship," said Robin, scratching his head, "I have
+enjoyed your company so much, that I scarce know how to charge for it."
+
+"Lend me your purse, my lord," said Little John, interposing, "and
+I'll give you the reckoning by and by." The Bishop shuddered. He had
+collected Sir Richard's debt only that morning, and was even then
+carrying it home.
+
+"I have but a few silver pennies of my own," he whined; "and as for the
+gold in my saddle-bags, 'tis for the church. Ye surely would not levy
+upon the church, good friends."
+
+But Little John was already gone to the saddle-bags, and returning
+he laid the Bishop's cloak upon the ground, and poured out of the
+portmantua a matter of four hundred glittering gold pieces. 'Twas the
+identical money which Robin had lent Sir Richard a short while before!
+
+"Ah!" said Robin, as though an idea had but just then come to him. "The
+church is always willing to aid in charity. And seeing this goodly sum
+reminds me that I have a friend who is indebted to a churchman for this
+exact amount. Now we shall charge you nothing on our own account; but
+suffer us to make use of this in aiding my good friend."
+
+"Nay, nay," began the Bishop with a wry face, "this is requiting me ill
+indeed. Was this not the King's meat, after all, that we feasted upon?
+Furthermore, I am a poor man."
+
+"Poor forsooth!" answered Robin in scorn. "You are the Bishop of
+Hereford, and does not the whole countryside speak of your oppression?
+Who does not know of your cruelty to the poor and ignorant--you who
+should use your great office to aid them, instead of oppress? Have you
+not been guilty of far greater robbery than this, even though less
+open? Of myself, and how you have pursued me, I say nothing; nor of
+your unjust enmity against my father. But on account of those you have
+despoiled and oppressed, I take this money, and will use it far more
+worthily than you would. God be my witness in this! There is an end of
+the matter, unless you will lead us in a song or dance to show that
+your body had a better spirit than your mind. Come, strike up the harp,
+Allan!"
+
+"Neither the one nor the other will I do," snarled the Bishop.
+
+"Faith, then we must help you," said Little John; and he and
+Arthur-a-Bland seized the fat struggling churchman and commenced to hop
+up and down. The Bishop being shorter must perforce accompany them in
+their gyrations; while the whole company sat and rolled about over the
+ground, and roared to see my lord of Hereford's queer capers. At last he
+sank in a heap, fuddled with wine and quite exhausted.
+
+Little John picked him up as though he were a log of wood and carrying
+him to his horse, set him astride facing the animal's tail; and thus
+fastened him, leading the animal toward the highroad and, starting the
+Bishop, more dead than alive, toward Nottingham.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HOW THE BISHOP WENT OUTLAW-HUNTING
+
+ The Bishop he came to the old woman's house,
+ And called with furious mood,
+ "Come let me soon see, and bring unto me
+ That traitor, Robin Hood."
+
+The easy success with which they had got the better of the good Bishop
+led Robin to be a little careless. He thought that his guest was too
+great a coward to venture back into the greenwood for many a long day;
+and so after lying quiet for one day, the outlaw ventured boldly upon
+the highway, the morning of the second. But he had gone only half a mile
+when, turning a sharp bend in the road, he plunged full upon the prelate
+himself.
+
+My lord of Hereford had been so deeply smitten in his pride, that he
+had lost no time in summoning a considerable body of the Sheriff's men,
+offering to double the reward if Robin Hood could be come upon. This
+company was now at his heels, and after the first shock of mutual
+surprise, the Bishop gave an exultant shout and spurred upon the outlaw.
+
+It was too late for Robin to retreat by the way he had come, but quick
+as a flash he sprang to one side of the road, dodged under some bushes,
+and disappeared so suddenly that his pursuers thought he had truly been
+swallowed up by magic.
+
+"After him!" yelled the Bishop; "some of you beat up the woods around
+him, while the rest of us will keep on the main road and head him off on
+the other side!"
+
+For, truth to tell, the Bishop did not care to trust his bones away from
+the highroad.
+
+About a mile away, on the other side of this neck of woods, wherein
+Robin had been trapped, was a little tumbledown cottage. 'Twas where
+the widow lived, whose three sons had been rescued. Robin remembered the
+cottage and saw his one chance to escape.
+
+Doubling in and out among the underbrush and heather with the agility
+of a hare, he soon came out of the wood in the rear of the cottage, and
+thrust his head through a tiny window.
+
+The widow, who had been at her spinning wheel, rose up with a cry of
+alarm.
+
+"Quiet, good mother! 'Tis I, Robin Hood. Where are your three sons?"
+
+"They should be with you, Robin. Well do you know that. Do they not owe
+their lives to you?"
+
+"If that be so, I come to seek payment of the debt," said Robin in a
+breath. "The Bishop is on my heels with many of his men."
+
+"I'll cheat the Bishop and all!" cried the woman quickly. "Here, Robin,
+change your raiment with me, and we will see if my lord knows an old
+woman when he sees her."
+
+"Good!" said Robin. "Pass your gray cloak out the window, and also your
+spindle and twine; and I will give you my green mantle and everything
+else down to my bow and arrows."
+
+While they were talking, Robin had been nimbly changing clothes with the
+old woman, through the window, and in a jiffy he stood forth complete,
+even to the spindle and twine.
+
+Presently up dashed the Bishop and his men, and, at sight of the
+cottage and the old woman, gave pause. The crone was hobbling along with
+difficulty, leaning heavily upon a gnarled stick and bearing the spindle
+on her other arm. She would have gone by the Bishop's company, while
+muttering to herself, but the Bishop ordered one of his men to question
+her. The soldier laid his hand upon her shoulder.
+
+"Mind your business!" croaked the woman, "or I'll curse ye!"
+
+"Come, come, my good woman," said the soldier, who really was afraid of
+her curses. "I'll not molest you. But my lord Bishop of Hereford wants
+to know if you have seen aught of the outlaw, Robin Hood?"
+
+"And why shouldn't I see him?" she whined. "Where's the King or law to
+prevent good Robin from coming to see me and bring me food and raiment?
+That's more than my lord Bishop will do, I warrant ye!"
+
+"Peace, woman!" said the Bishop harshly. "We want none of your opinions.
+But we'll take you to Barnesdale and burn you for a witch if you do not
+instantly tell us when you last saw Robin Hood."
+
+"Mercy, good my lord!" chattered the crone, falling on her knees.
+
+"Robin is there in my cottage now, but you'll never take him alive."
+
+"We'll see about that," cried the Bishop triumphantly. "Enter the
+cottage, my men. Fire it, if need be. But I'll give a purse of gold
+pieces, above the reward, to the man who captures the outlaw alive."
+
+The old woman, being released, went on her way slowly. But it might
+have been noticed that the farther she got away from the company and
+the nearer to the edge of the woods, the swifter and straighter grew
+her pace. Once inside the shelter of the forest she broke into a run of
+surprising swiftness.
+
+"Gadzooks!" exclaimed Little John who presently spied her. "Who comes
+here? Never saw I witch or woman run so fast. Methinks I'll send an
+arrow close over her head to see which it is."
+
+"O hold your hand! hold your hand!" panted the supposed woman. "'Tis I,
+Robin Hood. Summon the yeomen and return with me speedily. We have still
+another score to settle with my lord of Hereford."
+
+When Little John could catch his breath from laughing, he winded his
+horn.
+
+"Now, mistress Robin," quoth he, grinning. "Lead on! We'll be close to
+your heels."
+
+Meanwhile, back at the widow's cottage the Bishop was growing more
+furious every moment. For all his bold words, he dared not fire the
+house, and the sturdy door had thus far resisted all his men's efforts.
+
+"Break it down! Break it down!" he shouted, "and let me soon see who
+will fetch out that traitor, Robin Hood!"
+
+At last the door crashed in and the men stood guard on the threshold.
+But not one dared enter for fear a sharp arrow should meet him halfway.
+
+"Here he is!" cried one keen-eyed fellow, peering in. "I see him in the
+corner by the cupboard. Shall we slay him with our pikes?"
+
+"Nay," said the Bishop, "take him alive if you can. We'll make the
+biggest public hanging of this that the shire ever beheld."
+
+But the joy of the Bishop over his capture was short lived. Down the
+road came striding the shabby figure of the old woman who had helped him
+set the trap; and very wrathy was she when she saw that the cottage door
+had been battered in.
+
+"Stand by, you lazy rascals!" she called to the soldiers. "May all the
+devils catch ye for hurting an old woman's hut. Stand by, I say!"
+
+"Hold your tongue!" ordered the Bishop. "These are my men and carrying
+out my orders."
+
+"God-mercy!" swore the beldame harshly. "Things have come to a pretty
+pass when our homes may be treated like common gaols. Couldn't all your
+men catch one poor forester without this ado? Come! clear out, you and
+your robber, on the instant, or I'll curse every mother's son of ye,
+eating and drinking and sleeping!"
+
+"Seize on the hag!" shouted the Bishop, as soon as he could get in a
+word. "We'll see about a witch's cursing. Back to town she shall go,
+alongside of Robin Hood."
+
+"Not so fast, your worship!" she retorted, clapping her hands.
+
+And at the signal a goodly array of greenwood men sprang forth from all
+sides of the cottage, with bows drawn back threateningly. The Bishop saw
+that his men were trapped again, for they dared not stir. Nathless, he
+determined to make a fight for it.
+
+"If one of you but budge an inch toward me, you rascals," he cried, "it
+shall sound the death of your master, Robin Hood! My men have him here
+under their pikes, and I shall command them to kill him without mercy."
+
+"Faith, I should like to see the Robin you have caught," said a clear
+voice from under the widow's cape; and the outlaw chief stood forth with
+bared head, smilingly. "Here am I, my lord, in no wise imperiled by your
+men's fierce pikes. So let us see whom you have been guarding so well."
+
+The old woman who, in the garb of Robin Hood, had been lying quiet in
+the cottage through all the uproar, jumped up nimbly at this. In the
+bald absurdity of her disguise she came to the doorway and bowed to the
+Bishop.
+
+"Give you good-den, my lord Bishop," she piped in a shrill voice; "and
+what does your Grace at my humble door? Do you come to bless me and give
+me alms?"
+
+"Aye, that does he," answered Robin. "We shall see if his saddle-bags
+contain enough to pay you for that battered door."
+
+"Now by all the saints--" began the Bishop.
+
+"Take care; they are all watching you," interrupted Robin; "so name them
+not upon your unchurchly lips. But I will trouble you to hand over that
+purse of gold you had saved to pay for my head."
+
+"I'll see you hanged first!" raged the Bishop, stating no more than
+what would have been so, if he could do the ordering of things. "Have at
+them, my men, and hew them down in their tracks!"
+
+"Hold!" retorted Robin. "See how we have you at our mercy." And aiming a
+sudden shaft he shot so close to the Bishop's head that it carried away
+both his hat and the skull-cap which he always wore, leaving him quite
+bald.
+
+The prelate turned as white as his shiny head and clutched wildly at his
+ears. He thought himself dead almost.
+
+"Help! Murder!" he gasped. "Do not shoot again! Here's your purse of
+gold!"
+
+And without waiting for further parley he fairly bolted down the road.
+
+His men being left leaderless had nothing for it but to retreat after
+him, which they did in sullen order, covered by the bows of the yeomen.
+And thus ended the Bishop of Hereford's great outlaw-hunt in the forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW THE SHERIFF HELD ANOTHER SHOOTING MATCH
+
+ "To tell the truth, I'm well informed
+ Yon match it is a wile;
+ The Sheriff, I know, devises this
+ Us archers to beguile."
+
+Now the Sheriff was so greatly troubled in heart over the growing power
+of Robin Hood, that he did a very foolish thing. He went to London town
+to lay his troubles before the King and get another force of troops to
+cope with the outlaws. King Richard was not yet returned from the Holy
+Land, but Prince John heard him with scorn.
+
+"Pooh!" said he, shrugging his shoulders. "What have I to do with all
+this? Art thou not sheriff for me? The law is in force to take thy
+course of them that injure thee. Go, get thee gone, and by thyself
+devise some tricking game to trap these rebels; and never let me see thy
+face at court again until thou hast a better tale to tell."
+
+So away went the Sheriff in sorrier pass than ever, and cudgeled his
+brain, on the way home, for some plan of action.
+
+His daughter met him on his return and saw at once that he had been on a
+poor mission. She was minded to upbraid him when she learned what he
+had told the Prince. But the words of the latter started her to thinking
+afresh.
+
+"I have it!" she exclaimed at length. "Why should we not hold another
+shooting-match? 'Tis Fair year, as you know, and another tourney will
+be expected. Now we will proclaim a general amnesty, as did King Harry
+himself, and say that the field is open and unmolested to all comers.
+Belike Robin Hood's men will be tempted to twang the bow, and then--"
+
+"And then," said the Sheriff jumping up with alacrity, "we shall see on
+which side of the gate they stop over-night!"
+
+So the Sheriff lost no time in proclaiming a tourney, to be held that
+same Fall at the Fair. It was open to all comers, said the proclamation,
+and none should be molested in their going and coming. Furthermore, an
+arrow with a golden head and shaft of silver-white should be given to
+the winner, who would be heralded abroad as the finest archer in all the
+North Countree. Also, many rich prizes were to be given to other clever
+archers.
+
+These tidings came in due course to Robin Hood, under the greenwood
+tree, and fired his impetuous spirit.
+
+"Come, prepare ye, my merry men all," quoth he, "and we'll go to the
+Fair and take some part in this sport."
+
+With that stepped forth the merry cobbler, David of Doncaster.
+
+"Master," quoth he, "be ruled by me and stir not from the greenwood. To
+tell the truth, I'm well informed yon match is naught but a trap. I know
+the Sheriff has devised it to beguile us archers into some treachery."
+
+"That word savors of the coward," replied Robin, "and pleases me not.
+Let come what will, I'll try my skill at that same archery."
+
+Then up spoke Little John and said: "Come, listen to me how it shall be
+that we will not be discovered."
+
+ "Our mantles all of Lincoln-green
+ Behind us we will leave;
+ We'll dress us all so several,
+ They shall not us perceive."
+
+ "One shall wear white, another red,
+ One yellow, another blue;
+ Thus in disguise to the exercise
+ We'll go, whate'er ensue."
+
+This advice met with general favor from the adventurous fellows, and
+they lost no time in putting it into practice. Maid Marian and Mistress
+Dale, assisted by Friar Tuck, prepared some vari-colored costumes, and
+'gainst the Fair day had fitted out the sevenscore men till you would
+never have taken them for other than villagers decked for the holiday.
+
+And forth went they from the greenwood, with hearts all firm and stout,
+resolved to meet the Sheriff's men and have a merry bout. Along the
+highway they fell in with many other bold fellows from the countryside,
+going with their ruddy-cheeked lasses toward the wide-open gates of
+Nottingham.
+
+So in through the gates trooped the whole gay company, Robin's men
+behaving as awkwardly and laughing and talking as noisily as the rest;
+while the Sheriff's scowling men-at-arms stood round about and sought to
+find one who looked like a forester, but without avail.
+
+The herald now set forth the terms of the contest, as on former
+occasions, and the shooting presently began. Robin had chosen five of
+his men to shoot with him, and the rest were to mingle with the crowd
+and also watch the gates. These five were Little John, Will Scarlet,
+Will Stutely, Much, and Allan-a-Dale'.
+
+The other competitors made a brave showing on the first round,
+especially Gilbert of the White Hand, who was present and never shot
+better. The contest later narrowed down between Gilbert and Robin. But
+at the first lead, when the butts were struck so truly by various well
+known archers, the Sheriff was in doubt whether to feel glad or sorry.
+He was glad to see such skill, but sorry that the outlaws were not in
+it.
+
+ Some said, "If Robin Hood were here,
+ And all his men to boot,
+ Sure none of them could pass these men,
+ So bravely do they shoot."
+
+"Aye," quoth the Sheriff, and scratched his head,
+
+ "I thought he would be here;
+ I thought he would, but tho' he's bold,
+ He durst not now appear."
+
+This word was privately brought to Robin by David of Doncaster, and the
+saying vexed him sorely. But he bit his lip in silence.
+
+"Ere long," he thought to himself, "we shall see whether Robin Hood be
+here or not!"
+
+Meantime the shooting had been going forward, and Robin's men had done
+so well that the air was filled with shouts.
+
+ One cried, "Blue jacket!" another cried, "Brown!"
+ And a third cried, "Brave Yellow!"
+ But the fourth man said, "Yon man in red
+ In this place has no fellow."
+
+ For that was Robin Hood himself,
+ For he was clothed in red,
+ At every shot the prize he got,
+ For he was both sure and dead.
+
+Thus went the second round of the shooting, and thus the third and last,
+till even Gilbert of the White Hand was fairly beaten. During all this
+shooting, Robin exchanged no word with his men, each treating the other
+as a perfect stranger. Nathless, such great shooting could not pass
+without revealing the archers.
+
+The Sheriff thought he discovered, in the winner of the golden arrow,
+the person of Robin Hood without peradventure. So he sent word privately
+for his men-at-arms to close round the group. But Robin's men also got
+wind of the plan.
+
+To keep up appearances, the Sheriff summoned the crowd to form in a
+circle; and after as much delay as possible the arrow was presented. The
+delay gave time enough for the soldiers to close in. As Robin received
+his prize, bowed awkwardly, and turned away, the Sheriff, letting his
+zeal get the better of his discretion, grasped him about the neck and
+called upon his men to arrest the traitor.
+
+But the moment the Sheriff touched Robin, he received such a buffet
+on the side of his head that he let go instantly and fell back several
+paces. Turning to see who had struck him, he recognized Little John.
+
+"Ah, rascal Greenleaf, I have you now!" he exclaimed springing at him.
+Just then, however, he met a new check.
+
+"This is from another of your devoted servants!" said a voice which he
+knew to be that of Much the miller's son; and "Thwack!" went his open
+palm upon the Sheriff's cheek sending that worthy rolling over and over
+upon the ground.
+
+By this time the conflict had become general, but the Sheriff's men
+suffered the disadvantage of being hampered by the crowd of innocent
+on-lookers, whom they could not tell from the outlaws and so dared not
+attack; while the other outlaws in the rear fell upon them and put them
+in confusion.
+
+For a moment a fierce rain of blows ensued; then the clear bugle-note
+from Robin ordered a retreat. The two warders at the nearest gate tried
+to close it, but were shot dead in their tracks. David of Doncaster
+threw a third soldier into the moat; and out through the gate went
+the foresters in good order, keeping a respectful distance between
+themselves and the advancing soldiery, by means of their well-directed
+shafts.
+
+But the fight was not to go easily this day, for the soldiery, smarting
+from their recent discomfiture at the widow's cottage, and knowing that
+the eyes of the whole shire were upon them, fought well, and pressed
+closely after the retreating outlaws. More than one ugly wound was
+given and received. No less than five of the Sheriff's men were killed
+outright, and a dozen others injured; while four of Robin's men were
+bleeding from severe flesh cuts.
+
+Then Little John, who had fought by the side of his chief, suddenly fell
+forward with a slight moan. An arrow had pierced his knee. Robin seized
+the big fellow with almost superhuman strength.
+
+ Up he took him on his back,
+ And bare him well a mile;
+ Many a time he laid him down,
+ And shot another while.
+
+Meanwhile Little John grew weaker and closed his eyes; at last he sank
+to the ground, and feebly motioned Robin to let him lie. "Master
+Robin," said he, "have I not served you well, ever since we met upon the
+bridge?"
+
+"Truer servant never man had," answered Robin.
+
+"Then if ever you loved me, and for the sake of that service, draw your
+bright brown sword and strike off my head; never let me fall alive into
+the hand of the Sheriff of Nottingham."
+
+"Not for all the gold in England would I do either of the things you
+suggest."
+
+"God forbid!" cried Arthur-a-Bland, hurrying to the rescue. And packing
+his wounded kinsman upon his own broad shoulders, he soon brought him
+within the shelter of the forest.
+
+Once there, the Sheriff's men did not follow; and Robin caused litters
+of boughs to be made for Little John and the other four wounded men.
+Quickly were they carried through the wood until the hermitage of Friar
+Tuck was reached, where their wounds were dressed. Little John's hurt
+was pronounced to be the most serious of any, but he was assured that
+in two or three weeks' time he could get about again; whereat the active
+giant groaned mightily.
+
+That evening consternation came upon the hearts of the band. A careful
+roll-call was taken to see it all the yeomen had escaped, when it was
+found that Will Stutely was missing, and Maid Marian also was nowhere to
+be found. Robin was seized with dread. He knew that Marian had gone to
+the Fair, but felt that she would hardly come to grief. Her absence,
+however, portended some danger, and he feared that it was connected with
+Will Stutely. The Sheriff would hang him speedily and without mercy, if
+he were captured.
+
+The rest of the band shared their leader's uneasiness, though they said
+no word. They knew that if Will were captured, the battle must be fought
+over again the next day, and Will must be saved at any cost. But no man
+flinched from the prospect.
+
+That evening, while the Sheriff and his wife and daughter sat at meat in
+the Mansion House, the Sheriff boasted of how he would make an example
+of the captured outlaw; for Stutely had indeed fallen into his hands.
+
+"He shall be strung high," he said, in a loud voice; "and none shall
+dare lift a finger. I now have Robin Hood's men on the run, and we shall
+soon see who is master in this shire. I am only sorry that we let them
+have the golden arrow."
+
+As he spoke a missive sped through a window and fell clattering upon his
+plate, causing him to spring back in alarm.
+
+It was the golden arrow, and on its feathered shaft was sewed a little
+note which read:
+
+"This from one who will take no gifts from liars; and who henceforth
+will show no mercy. Look well to yourself. R.H."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HOW WILL STUTELY WAS RESCUED
+
+ Forth of the greenwood are they gone,
+ Yea, all courageously,
+ Resolving to bring Stutely home,
+ Or every man to die.
+
+The next day dawned bright and sunny. The whole face of nature seemed
+gay as if in despite of the tragedy which was soon to take place in the
+walls of Nottingham town. The gates were not opened upon this day, for
+the Sheriff was determined to carry through the hanging of Will Stutely
+undisturbed. No man, therefore, was to be allowed entrance from without,
+all that morning and until after the fatal hour of noon, when Will's
+soul was to be launched into eternity.
+
+Early in the day Robin had drawn his men to a point, as near as he
+dared, in the wood where he could watch the road leading to the East
+gate. He himself was clad in a bright scarlet dress, while his men, a
+goodly array, wore their suits of sober Lincoln green. They were armed
+with broadswords, and 'each man carried his bow and a full quiver of new
+arrows, straightened and sharpened cunningly by Middle, the tinker. Over
+their greenwood dress, each man had thrown a rough mantle, making him
+look not unlike a friar.
+
+"I hold it good, comrades," then said Robin Hood, "to tarry here in
+hiding for a season while we sent some one forth to obtain tidings.
+For, in sooth, 'twill work no good to march upon the gates if they be
+closed."
+
+"Look, master," quoth one of the widow's sons. "There comes a palmer
+along the road from the town. Belike he can tell us how the land ties,
+and if Stutely be really in jeopardy. Shall I go out and engage him in
+speech?"
+
+"Go," answered Robin.
+
+So Stout Will went out from the band while the others hid themselves
+and waited. When he had come close to the palmer, who seemed a slight,
+youngish man, he doffed his hat full courteously and said,
+
+"I crave your pardon, holy man, but can you tell me tidings of
+Nottingham town? Do they intend to put an outlaw to death this day?"
+
+"Yea," answered the palmer sadly. "'Tis true enough, sorry be the day.
+I have passed the very spot where the gallows-tree is going up. 'Tis out
+upon the roadway near the Sheriff's castle. One, Will Stutely, is to be
+hung thereon at noon, and I could not bear the sight, so came away."
+
+The palmer spoke in a muffled voice; and as his hood was pulled well
+over his head, Stout Will could not discern what manner of man he was.
+Over his shoulder he carried a long staff, with the fashion of a little
+cross at one end; and he had sandaled feet like any monk. Stout Will
+notice idly that the feet were very small and white, but gave no second
+thought to the matter.
+
+"Who will shrive the poor wretch, if you have come away from him?" he
+asked reproachfully.
+
+The question seemed to put a new idea into the palmer's head. He turned
+so quickly that he almost dropped his hood.
+
+"Do you think that I should undertake this holy office?"
+
+"By Saint Peter and the Blessed Virgin, I do indeed! Else, who will
+do it? The Bishop and all his whining clerks may be there, but not one
+would say a prayer for his soul."
+
+"But I am only a poor palmer," the other began hesitatingly.
+
+"Nathless, your prayers are as good as any and better than some,"
+replied Will.
+
+"Right gladly would I go," then said the palmer; "but I fear me I cannot
+get into the city. You may know that the gates are fast locked, for this
+morning, to all who would come in, although they let any pass out who
+will."
+
+"Come with me," said Stout Will, "and my master will see that you pass
+through the gates."
+
+So the palmer pulled his cloak still closer about him and was brought
+before Robin Hood, to whom he told all he knew of the situation. He
+ended with,
+
+"If I may make so bold, I would not try to enter the city from this
+gate, as 'tis closely guarded since yesterday. But on the far side, no
+attack is looked for."
+
+"My thanks, gentle palmer," quoth Robin, "your suggestion is good, and
+we will deploy to the gate upon the far side."
+
+So the men marched silently but quickly until they were near to the
+western gate. Then Arthur-a-Bland asked leave to go ahead as a scout,
+and quietly made his way to a point under the tower by the gate. The
+moat was dry on this side, as these were times of peace, and Arthur was
+further favored by a stout ivy vine which grew out from an upper window.
+
+Swinging himself up boldly by means of this friendly vine, he crept
+through the window and in a moment more had sprung upon the warder from
+behind and gripped him hard about the throat. The warder had no chance
+to utter the slightest sound, and soon lay bound and gagged upon the
+floor; while Arthur-a-Bland slipped himself into his uniform and got
+hold of his keys.
+
+'Twas the work of but a few moments more to open the gates, let down the
+bridge, and admit the rest of the band; and they lot inside the town so
+quietly that none knew of their coming. Fortune also favored them in the
+fact that just at this moment the prison doors had been opened for
+the march of the condemned man, and every soldier and idle lout in the
+market-lace had trooped thither to see him pass along.
+
+Presently out came Will Stutely with firm step but dejected air. He
+looked eagerly to the right hand and to the left, but saw none of the
+band. And though more than one curious face betrayed friendship in it,
+he knew there could be no aid from such source.
+
+Will's hands were tied behind his back. He marched between rows of
+soldiery, and the Sheriff and the Bishop brought up the rear on horses,
+looking mightily puffed up and important over the whole proceeding. He
+would show these sturdy rebels--would the Sheriff--whose word was law!
+He knew that the gates were tightly fastened; and further he believed
+that the outlaws would hardly venture again within the walls, even if
+the gates were open. And as he looked around at the fivescore archers
+and pikemen who lined the way to the gallows, he smiled with grim
+satisfaction.
+
+Seeing that no help was nigh, the prisoner paused at the foot of the
+scaffold and spoke in a firm tone to the Sheriff.
+
+"My lord Sheriff," quoth he, "since I must needs die, grant me one boon;
+for my noble master ne'er yet had a man that was hanged on a tree:
+
+ Give me a sword all in my hand,
+ And let me be unbound,
+ And with thee and thy men will I fight
+ Till I lie dead on the ground."
+
+But the Sheriff would by no means listen to his request; but swore
+that he should be hanged a shameful death, and not die by the sword
+valiantly.
+
+ "O no, no, no," the Sheriff said,
+ "Thou shalt on the gallows die,
+ Aye, and so shall they master too,
+ If ever it in me lie."
+
+ "O dastard coward!" Stutely cried,
+ "Faint-hearted peasant slave!
+ If ever my master do thee meet,
+ Thou shalt thy payment have!"
+
+ "My noble master thee doth scorn,
+ And all thy cowardly crew,
+ Such silly imps unable are
+ Bold Robin to subdue."
+
+This brave speech was not calculated to soothe the Sheriff. "To the
+gallows with him!" he roared, giving a sign to the hangman; and Stutely
+was pushed into the rude cart which was to bear him under the gallows
+until his neck was leashed. Then the cart would be drawn roughly away
+and the unhappy man would swing out over the tail of it into another
+world.
+
+But at this moment came a slight interruption. A boyish-looking palmer
+stepped forth, and said:
+
+"Your Excellency, let me at least shrive this poor wretch's soul ere it
+be hurled into eternity."
+
+"No!" shouted the Sheriff, "let him die a dog's death!"
+
+"Then his damnation will rest upon you," said the monk firmly. "You, my
+lord Bishop, cannot stand by and see this wrong done."
+
+The Bishop hesitated. Like the Sheriff, he wanted no delay; but
+the people were beginning to mutter among themselves and move about
+uneasily. He said a few words to the Sheriff, and the latter nodded to
+the monk ungraciously.
+
+"Perform your duty, Sir Priest," quoth he, "and be quick about it!" Then
+turning to his soldiers. "Watch this palmer narrowly," he commanded.
+"Belike he is in league with those rascally outlaws."
+
+But the palmer paid no heed to his last words. He began to tell his
+beads quickly, and to speak in a low voice to the condemned man. But he
+did not touch his bonds.
+
+Then came another stir in the crowd, and one came pushing through the
+press of people and soldiery to come near to the scaffold.
+
+"I pray you, Will, before you die, take leave of all your friends!"
+cried out the well-known voice of Much, the miller's son.
+
+At the word the palmer stepped back suddenly and looked to one side. The
+Sheriff also knew the speaker.
+
+"Seize him!" he shouted. "'Tis another of the crew. He is the villain
+cook who once did rob me of my silver plate. We'll make a double hanging
+of this!"
+
+"Not so fast, good master Sheriff," retorted Much. "First catch your man
+and then hang him. But meanwhile I would like to borrow my friend of you
+awhile."
+
+And with one stroke of his keen hunting-knife he cut the bonds which
+fastened the prisoner's arms, and Stutely leaped lightly from the cart.
+
+"Treason!" screamed the Sheriff, getting black with rage. "Catch the
+varlets!"
+
+So saying he spurred his horse fiercely forward, and rising in his
+stirrups brought down his sword with might and main at Much's head. But
+his former cook dodged nimbly underneath the horse and came up on the
+other side, while the weapon whistled harmlessly in the air.
+
+"Nay, Sir Sheriff!" he cried, "I must e'en borrow your sword for the
+friend I have borrowed."
+
+Thereupon he snatched the weapon deftly from the Sheriff's hand.
+
+"Here, Stutely!" said he, "the Sheriff has lent you his own sword. Back
+to back with me, man, and we'll teach these knaves a trick or two!"
+
+Meanwhile the soldiers had recovered from their momentary surprise and
+had flung themselves into the fray. A clear bugle-note had also sounded
+the same which the soldiers had learned to dread. 'Twas the rallying
+note of the green wood men.
+
+Cloth yard shafts began to hurtle through the air, and Robin and his men
+cast aside their cloaks and sprang forward crying:
+
+"Lockesley! Lockesley! a rescue! a rescue!"
+
+On the instant, a terrible scene of hand to hand fighting followed. The
+Sheriff's men, though once more taken by surprise, were determined to
+sell this rescue dearly. They packed in closely and stubbornly about
+the condemned man and Much and the palmer, and it was only by desperate
+rushes that the foresters made an opening in the square. Ugly cuts and
+bruises were exchanged freely; and lucky was the man who escaped with
+only these. Many of the onlookers, who had long hated the Sheriff and
+felt sympathy for Robin's men, also plunged into the conflict--although
+they could not well keep out of it, in sooth!--and aided the rescuers no
+little.
+
+At last with a mighty onrush, Robin cleaved a way through the press to
+the scaffold itself, and not a second too soon; for two men with pikes
+had leaped upon the cart, and were in the act of thrusting down upon the
+palmer and Will Stutely. A mighty upward blow from Robin's good blade
+sent the pike flying from the hand of one, while a well-directed arrow
+from the outskirt pierced the other fellow's throat.
+
+"God save you, master!" cried Will Stutely joyfully. "I had begun to
+fear that I would never see your face again."
+
+"A rescue!" shouted the outlaws afresh, and the soldiery became
+fainthearted and 'gan to give back. But the field was not yet won, for
+they retreated in close order toward the East gate, resolved to hem
+the attackers within the city walls. Here again, however, they were in
+error, since the outlaws did not go out by their nearest gate. They
+made a sally in that direction, in order to mislead the soldiery, then
+abruptly turned and headed for the West gate, which was still guarded by
+Arthur-a-Bland.
+
+The Sheriff's men raised an exultant shout at this, thinking they had
+the enemy trapped. Down they charged after them, but the outlaws made
+good their lead, and soon got through the gate and over the bridge which
+had been let down by Arthur-a-Bland.
+
+Close upon their heels came the soldiers--so close, that Arthur had no
+time to close the gate again or raise the bridge. So he threw away his
+key and fell in with the yeomen, who now began their retreat up the long
+hill to the woods.
+
+On this side the town, the road leading to the forest was long and
+almost unprotected. The greenwood men were therefore in some distress,
+for the archers shot at them from loop-holes in the walls, and the
+pikemen were reinforced by a company of mounted men from the castle. But
+the outlaws retreated stubbornly and now and again turned to hold their
+pursuers at bay by a volley of arrows. Stutely was in their midst,
+fighting with the energy of two; and the little palmer was there also,
+but took no part save to keep close to Robin's side and mutter silent
+words as though in prayer.
+
+Robin put his horn to his lips to sound a rally, when a flying arrow
+from the enemy pierced his hand. The palmer gave a little cry and sprang
+forward. The Sheriff, who followed close with the men on horseback, also
+saw the wound and gave a great huzza.
+
+"Ha! you will shoot no more bows for a season, master outlaw!" he
+shouted.
+
+"You lie!" retorted Robin fiercely, wrenching the shaft from his hand
+despite the streaming blood; "I have saved one shot for you all this
+day. Here take it!"
+
+And he fitted the same arrow, which had wounded him, upon the string
+of his bow and let it fly toward the Sheriff's head. The Sheriff fell
+forward upon his horse in mortal terror, but not so quickly as to escape
+unhurt. The sharp point laid bare a deep gash upon his scalp and must
+certainly have killed him if it had come closer.
+
+The fall of the Sheriff discomfited his followers for the moment, and
+Robin's men took this chance to speed on up the hill. The palmer had
+whipped out a small white handkerchief and tried to staunch Robin's
+wound as they went. At sight of the palmer's hand, Robin turned with a
+start, and pushed back the other's hood.
+
+"Marian!" he exclaimed, "you here!"
+
+It was indeed Maid Marian, who had helped save Will, and been in the
+stress of battle from the first. Now she hung her head as though caught
+in wrong.
+
+"I had to come, Robin," she said simply, "and I knew you would not let
+me come, else."
+
+Their further talk was interrupted by an exclamation from Will Scarlet.
+
+"By the saints, we are trapped!" he said, and pointed to the top of the
+hill, toward which they were pressing.
+
+There from out a gray castle poured a troop of men, armed with pikes and
+axes, who shouted and came running down upon them. At the same instant,
+the Sheriff's men also renewed the pursuit.
+
+"Alas!" cried poor Marian, "we are undone! There is no way of escape!"
+
+"Courage, dear heart!" said Robin, drawing her close to him. But his own
+spirit sank as he looked about for some outlet.
+
+Then--oh, joyful sight!--he recognized among the foremost of those
+coming from the castle the once doleful knight, Sir Richard of the Lea.
+He was smiling now, and greatly excited.
+
+"A Hood! a Hood!" he cried; "a rescue! a rescue!" Never were there more
+welcome sights and sounds than these. With a great cheer the outlaws
+raced up the hill to meet their new friends; and soon the whole force
+had gained the shelter of the castle. Bang! went the bridge as it swung
+back, with great clanking of chains. Clash! went one great door upon the
+other, as they shut in the outlaw band, and shut out the Sheriff, who
+dashed up at the head of his men, his bandaged face streaked with blood
+and inflamed with rage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+HOW SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA REPAID HIS DEBT
+
+ The proud Sheriff loud 'gan cry
+ And said, "Thou traitor knight,
+ Thou keepest here the king's enemy
+ Against the laws and right."
+
+"Open the gate!" shouted the Sheriff hoarsely, to the sentinel upon the
+walls. "Open, I say, in the king's name!"
+
+"Why who are you to come thus brawling upon my premises?" asked a
+haughty voice; and Sir Richard himself stepped forth upon the turret.
+
+"You know me well, traitor knight!" said the Sheriff, "now give up into
+my hands the enemy of the King whom you have sheltered against the laws
+and right."
+
+"Fair and softly, sir," quoth the knight smoothly. "I well avow that
+I have done certain deeds this day. But I have done them upon mine
+own land, which you now trespass upon; and I shall answer only to the
+King--whom God preserve!--for my actions."
+
+"Thou soft-spoken villain!" said the Sheriff, still in a towering
+passion. "I, also, serve the King; and if these outlaws are not given up
+to me at once, I shall lay siege to the castle and burn it with fire."
+
+"First show me your warrants," said Sir Richard curtly.
+
+"My word is enough! Am I not Sheriff of Nottingham?"
+
+"If you are, in sooth," retorted the knight, "you should know that you
+have no authority within my lands unless you bear the King's order. In
+the meantime, go mend your manners, lording."
+
+And Sir Richard snapped his fingers and disappeared from the walls. The
+Sheriff, after lingering a few moments longer in hope of further parley,
+was forced to withdraw, swearing fiercely.
+
+"The King's order!" muttered he. "That shall I have without delay,
+as well as this upstart knight's estates; for King Richard is lately
+returned, I hear, from the Holy Land."
+
+Meanwhile the knight had gone back to Robin Hood, and the two men
+greeted each other right gladly. "Well met, bold Robin!" cried he,
+taking him in his arms. "Well met, indeed! The Lord has lately prospered
+me, and I was minded this day to ride forth and repay my debt to you."
+
+"And so you have," answered Robin gaily.
+
+"Nay, 'twas nothing--this small service!" said the knight. "I meant the
+moneys coming to you."
+
+"They have all been repaid," said Robin; "my lord of Hereford himself
+gave them to me."
+
+"The exact sum?" asked the knight.
+
+"The exact sum," answered Robin, winking solemnly.
+
+Sir Richard smiled, but said no more at the time. Robin was made to rest
+until dinner should be served. Meanwhile a leech bound up his hand with
+ointment, promising him that he should soon have its use again. Some
+halfscore others of the yeomen had been hurt in the fight, but luckily
+none of grave moment. They were all bandaged and made happy by bumpers
+of ale.
+
+At dinner Sir Richard presented Robin to his wife and son. The lady was
+stately and gracious, and made much of Marian, whom she had known as
+a little girl and who was now clothed more seemly for a dinner than in
+monkish garments. The young esquire was a goodly youth and bade fair to
+make as stout a knight as his father.
+
+The feast was a joyous event. There were two long tables, and two
+hundred men sat down at them, and ate and drank and afterward sang
+songs. An hundred and forty of these men wore Lincoln green and called
+Robin Hood their chief. Never, I ween, had there been a more gallant
+company at table in Lea Castle!
+
+That night the foresters tarried within the friendly walls, and the next
+day took leave; though Sir Richard protested that they should have made
+a longer stay. And he took Robin aside to his strong room and pressed
+him again to take the four hundred golden pounds. But his guest was
+firm.
+
+"Keep the money, for it is your own," said Robin; "I have but made the
+Bishop return that which he extorted unjustly."
+
+Sir Richard thanked him in a few earnest words, and asked him and all
+his men to visit the armory, before they departed. And therein they saw,
+placed apart, an hundred and forty stout yew bows of cunning make, with
+fine waxen silk strings; and an hundred and forty sheaves of arrows.
+Every shaft was a just ell long, set with peacock's feathers, and
+notched with silver. And Sir Richard's fair lady came forward and with
+her own hands gave each yeoman a bow and a sheaf.
+
+"In sooth, these are poor presents we have made you, good Robin Hood,"
+said Sir Richard; "but they carry with them a thousand times their
+weight in gratitude."
+
+The Sheriff made good his threat to inform the King. Forth rode he
+to London town upon the week following, his scalp wound having healed
+sufficiently to permit him to travel. This time he did not seek out
+Prince John, but asked audience with King Richard of the Lion Heart
+himself. His Majesty had but lately returned from the crusades, and was
+just then looking into the state of his kingdom. So the Sheriff found
+ready audience.
+
+Then to him the Sheriff spoke at length concerning Robin Hood; how that
+for many months the outlaws had defied the King, and slain the King's
+deer; how Robin had gathered about him the best archers in all the
+countryside; and, finally, how the traitorous knight Sir Richard of the
+Lea had rescued the band when capture seemed certain, and refused to
+deliver them up to justice.
+
+The King heard him through with attention and quoth he:
+
+"Meseems I have heard of this same Robin Hood, and his men, and also
+seen somewhat of their prowess. Did not these same outlaws shoot in a
+royal Tourney at Finsbury field?"
+
+"They did, Your Majesty, under a royal amnesty."
+
+In this speech the Sheriff erred, for the King asked quickly,
+
+"How came they last to the Fair at Nottingham--by stealth?"
+
+"Yes, Your Majesty."
+
+"Did you forbid them to come?"
+
+"No, Your Majesty. That is--"
+
+"Speak out!"
+
+"For the good of the shire," began the Sheriff again, falteringly,
+"we did proclaim an amnesty; but 'twas because these men had proved a
+menace--"
+
+"Now by my halidom!" quoth the King, while his brow grew black. "Such
+treachery would be unknown in the camp of the Saracen; and yet we call
+ourselves a Christian people!"
+
+The Sheriff kept silence through very fear and shame; then the King
+began speech again:
+
+"Nathless, my lord Sheriff, we promise to look into this matter. Those
+outlaws must be taught that there is but one King in England, and that
+he stands for the law."
+
+So the Sheriff was dismissed, with very mixed feelings, and went his way
+home to Nottingham town. A fortnight later the King began to make good
+his word, by riding with a small party of knights to Lea Castle. Sir
+Richard was advised of the cavalcade's approach, and quickly recognized
+his royal master in the tall knight who rode in advance. Hasting to open
+wide his castle gates he went forth to meet the King and fell on one
+knee and kissed his stirrup. For Sir Richard, also, had been with the
+King to the Holy Land, and they had gone on many adventurous quests
+together.
+
+The King bade him rise, and dismounted from his own horse to greet him
+as a brother in arms; and arm-in-arm they went into the castle, while
+bugles and trumpets sounded forth joyous welcome in honor of the great
+occasion.
+
+After the King had rested and supped, he turned upon the knight and with
+grave face inquired:
+
+"What is this I hear about your castle's becoming a nest and harbor for
+outlaws?"
+
+The Sir Richard of the Lea, divining that the Sheriff had been at the
+King's ear with his story, made a clean breast of all he knew; how that
+the outlaws had befriended him in sore need--as they had befriended
+others--and how that he had given them only knightly protection in
+return.
+
+The King liked the story well, for his own soul was one of chivalry.
+And he asked other questions about Robin Hood, and heard of the ancient
+wrong done his father before him, and of Robin's own enemies, and of his
+manner of living.
+
+"In sooth," cried King Richard, springing up, "I must see this bold
+fellow for myself! An you will entertain my little company, and be ready
+to sally forth, upon the second day, in quest of me if need were, I
+shall e'en fare alone into the greenwood to seek an adventure with him."
+
+But of this adventure you shall be told in the next tale; for I have
+already shown you how Sir Richard of the Lea repaid his debt, with
+interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HOW KING RICHARD CAME TO SHERWOOD FOREST
+
+ King Richard hearing of the pranks
+ Of Robin Hood and his men,
+ He much admired and more desired
+ To see both him and them.
+
+ Then Robin takes a can of ale:
+ "Come let us now begin;
+ And every man shall have his can;
+ Here's a health unto the King!"
+
+Friar Tuck had nursed Little John's wounded knee so skilfully that it
+was now healed. In sooth, the last part of the nursing depended more
+upon strength than skill; for it consisted chiefly of holding down the
+patient, by main force, to his cot. Little John had felt so well that he
+had insisted upon getting up before the wound was healed; and he would
+have done so, if the friar had not piled some holy books upon his legs
+and sat upon his stomach.
+
+Under this vigorous treatment Little John was constrained to lie quiet
+until the friar gave him leave to get up. At last he had this leave, and
+he and the friar went forth to join the rest of the band, who were right
+glad to see them, you may be sure. They sat around a big fire, for 'twas
+a chilly evening, and they feasted and made merry, in great content.
+
+A cold rain set in, later, but the friar wended his way back, nathless,
+to his little hermitage. There he made himself a cheerful blaze, and
+changed his dripping robe, and had sat himself down, with a sigh of
+satisfaction, before a tankard of hot mulled wine and a pasty, when
+suddenly a voice was heard on the outside, demanding admission. His
+kennel of dogs set up furious uproar, on the instant, by way of proving
+the fact of a stranger's presence.
+
+"Now by Saint Peter!" growled the friar, "who comes here at this
+unseemly hour? Does he take this for a hostelry? Move on, friend, else
+my mulled wine will get cold!"
+
+So saying he put the tankard to his lips, when a thundering rap sounded
+upon the door-panel, making it to quiver, and causing Tuck almost to
+drop his tankard; while an angry voice shouted, "Ho! Within there! Open,
+I say!"
+
+"Go your way in peace!" roared back the friar; "I can do nothing for
+you. 'Tis but a few miles to Gamewell, if you know the road."
+
+"But I do not know the road, and if I did I would not budge another
+foot. 'Tis wet without and dry within. So open, without further parley!"
+
+"A murrain seize you for disturbing a holy man in his prayers!" muttered
+Tuck savagely. Nathless, he was fain to unbar the door in order to
+keep it from being battered down. Then lighting a torch at his fire and
+whistling for one of his dogs, he strode forth to see who his visitor
+might be.
+
+The figure of a tall knight clad in a black coat of mail, with plumed
+helmet, stood before him. By his side stood his horse, also caparisoned
+in rich armor.
+
+"Have you no supper, brother?" asked the Black Knight curtly. "I must
+beg of you a bed and a bit of roof, for this night, and fain would
+refresh my body ere I sleep."
+
+"I have no room that even your steed would deign to accept, Sir Knight;
+and naught save a crust of bread and pitcher of water."
+
+"I' faith, I can smell better fare than that, brother, and must e'en
+force my company upon you, though I shall recompense it for gold in the
+name of the church. As for my horse, let him but be blanketed and put on
+the sheltered side of the house."
+
+And without further parley the knight boldly strode past Tuck and his
+dog and entered the hermitage. Something about his masterful air pleased
+Tuck, in spite of his churlishness.
+
+"Sit you down, Sir Knight," quoth he, "and I will fasten up up your
+steed, and find him somewhat in the shape of grain. Half, also, of my
+bed and board is yours, this night; but we shall see later who is the
+better man, and is to give the orders!"
+
+"With all my soul!" said the knight, laughing. "I can pay my keeping in
+blows or gold as you prefer."
+
+The friar presently returned and drew up a small table near the fire.
+
+"Now, Sir Knight," quoth he, "put off your sword and helm and such other
+war-gear as it pleases you, and help me lay this table, for I am passing
+hungry."
+
+The knight did as he was told, and put aside the visor which had hid
+his face. He was a bronzed and bearded man with blue eyes, and hair shot
+with gold, haughty but handsome withal.
+
+Then once again the priest sat him down to his pasty and mulled wine,
+right hopefully. He spoke his grace with some haste, and was surprised
+to hear his guest respond fittingly in the Latin tongue. Then they
+attacked the wine and pasty valiantly, and the Black Knight made good
+his word of being in need of refreshment. Tuck looked ruefully at the
+rapidly disappearing food, but came to grudge it not, by reason of the
+stories with which his guest enlivened the meal. The wine and warmth of
+the room had cheered them both, and they were soon laughing uproariously
+as the best of comrades in the world. The Black Knight, it seemed, had
+traveled everywhere. He had been on crusades, had fought the courteous
+Saladin, had been in prison, and often in peril. But now he spoke of
+it lightly, and laughed it off, and made himself so friendly that Friar
+Tuck was like to choke with merriment. So passed the time till late; and
+the two fell asleep together, one on each side of the table which had
+been cleared to the platters.
+
+In the morning Friar Tuck awoke disposed to be surly, but was speedily
+mollified by the sight of the Black Knight, who had already risen gay as
+a lark, washed his face and hands, and was now stirring a hot gruel over
+the fire.
+
+"By my faith, I make a sorry host!" cried Tuck springing to his feet.
+And later as they sat at breakfast, he added, "I want not your gold, of
+which you spoke last night; but instead I will do what I can to speed
+you on your way whenever you wish to depart."
+
+"Then tell me," said the knight, "how I may find Robin Hood the outlaw;
+for I have a message to him from the King. All day yesterday I sought
+him, but found him not."
+
+Friar Tuck lifted up his hands in holy horror. "I am a lover of peace,
+Sir Knight, and do not consort with Robin's bold fellows."
+
+"Nay, I think no harm of Master Hood," said the knight; "but much I
+yearn to have speed with him in mine own person."
+
+"If that be all, mayhap I can guide you to his haunts," said Tuck, who
+foresaw in this knight a possible gold-bag for Robin. "In sooth, I could
+not well live in these woods without hearing somewhat of the outlaws;
+but matters of religion are my chief joy and occupation."
+
+"I will go with you, brother," said the Black Knight.
+
+So without more ado they went their way into the forest, the knight
+riding upon his charger, and Tuck pacing along demurely by his side.
+
+The day had dawned clear and bright, and now with the sun a good three
+hours high a sweet autumn fragrance was in the air. The wind had just
+that touch of coolness in it which sets the hunter's blood to tingling;
+and every creature of nature seemed bounding with joyous life.
+
+The knight sniffed the fresh air in delight.
+
+"By my halidom!" quoth he; "but the good greenwood is the best place
+to live in, after all! What court or capital can equal this, for
+full-blooded men?"
+
+"None of this earth," replied Tuck smilingly. And once more his heart
+warmed toward the courteous stranger.
+
+They had not proceeded more than three or four miles along the way from
+Fountain Abbey to Barnesdale, when of a sudden the bushes just ahead of
+them parted and a well-knit man with curling brown hair stepped into the
+road and laid his hand upon the knight's bridle.
+
+It was Robin Hood. He had seen Friar Tuck, a little way back, and
+shrewdly suspected his plan. Tuck, however, feigned not to know him at
+all.
+
+"Hold!" cried Robin; "I am in charge of the highway this day, and must
+exact an accounting from all passersby."
+
+"Who is it bids me hold?" asked the knight quietly. "I am not i' the
+habit of yielding to one man."
+
+"Then here are others to keep me company," said Robin clapping his
+hands. And instantly a half-score other stalwart fellows came out of the
+bushes and stood beside him.
+
+"We be yeomen of the forest, Sir Knight," continued Robin, "and live
+under the greenwood tree. We have no means of support--thanks to the
+tyranny of our over-lords--other than the aid which fat churchmen and
+goodly knights like yourselves can give. And as ye have churches and
+rents, both, and gold in great plenty, we beseech ye for Saint Charity
+to give us some of your spending."
+
+"I am but a poor monk, good sir!" said Friar Tuck in a whining voice,
+"and am on my way to the shrine of Saint Dunstan, if your worshipfulness
+will permit."
+
+"Tarry a space with us," answered Robin, biting back a smile, "and we
+will speed you on your way."
+
+The Black Knight now spoke again. "But we are messengers of the King,"
+quoth he; "His Majesty himself tarries near here and would have speech
+with Robin Hood."
+
+"God save the King!" said Robin, doffing his cap loyally; "and all that
+wish him well! I am Robin Hood, but I say cursed be the man who denies
+our liege King's sovereignty!"
+
+"Have a care!" said the knight, "or you shall curse yourself!"
+
+"Nay, not so," replied Robin curtly; "the King has no more devoted
+subject than I. Nor have I despoiled aught of his save, mayhap, a few
+deer for my hunger. My chief war is against the clergy and barons of the
+land who bear down upon the poor. But I am glad," he continued, "that I
+have met you here; and before we end you shall be my friend and taste of
+our greenwood cheer."
+
+"But what is the reckoning?" asked the knight. "For I am told that some
+of your feasts are costly."
+
+"Nay," responded Robin waving his hands, "you are from the King.
+Nathless--how much money is in your purse?"
+
+"I have no more than forty gold pieces, seeing that I have lain a
+fortnight at Nottingham with the King, and have spent some goodly
+amounts upon other lordings," replied the knight.
+
+Robin took the forty pounds and gravely counted it. One half he gave to
+his men and bade them drink the King's health with it. The other half he
+handed back to the knight.
+
+"Sir," said he courteously, "have this for your spending. If you lie
+with kings and lordings overmuch, you are like to need it."
+
+"Gramercy!" replied the other smiling. "And now lead on to your
+greenwood hostelry."
+
+So Robin went on the one side of the knight's steed, and Friar Tuck on
+the other, and the men went before and behind till they came to the open
+glade before the caves of Barnesdale. Then Robin drew forth his bugle
+and winded the three signal blasts of the band. Soon there came a
+company of yeomen with its leader, and another, and a third, and a
+fourth, till there were sevenscore yeomen in sight. All were dressed
+in new livery of Lincoln green, and carried new bows in their hands and
+bright short swords at their belts. And every man bent his knee to Robin
+Hood ere taking his place before the board, which was already set.
+
+A handsome dark-haired page stood at Robin's right hand to pour his wine
+and that of the knightly guest; while the knight marveled much at all he
+saw, and said within himself:
+
+"These men of Robin Hood's give him more obedience than my fellows give
+to me."
+
+At the signal from Robin the dinner began. There was venison and fowl
+and fish and wheaten cake and ale and red wine in great plenty, and
+'twas a goodly sight to see the smiles upon the hungry yeomen's faces.
+
+First they listened to an unctuous grace from Friar Tuck, and then Robin
+lifted high a tankard of ale.
+
+"Come, let us now begin," quoth he, "and every man shall have his can.
+In honor of our guest who comes with royal word, here's a health unto
+the King!"
+
+The guest responded heartily to this toast, and round about the board it
+went, the men cheering noisily for King Richard!
+
+After the feast was over, Robin turned to his guest and said, "Now you
+shall see what life we lead, so that you may report faithfully, for good
+or bad, unto the King."
+
+So at a signal from him, the men rose up and smartly bent their bows for
+practice, while the knight was greatly astonished at the smallness of
+the their targets. A wand was set up, far down the glade, and thereon
+was balanced a garland of roses. Whosoever failed to speed his shaft
+through the garland, without knocking it off the wand, was to submit to
+a buffet from the hand of Friar Tuck.
+
+"Ho, ho!" cried the knight, as his late traveling companion rose up and
+bared his brawny arm ready for service; "so you, my friend, are Friar
+Tuck!"
+
+"I have not gainsaid it," replied Tuck growling at having betrayed
+himself. "But chastisement is a rule of the church, and I am seeking the
+good of these stray sheep."
+
+The knight said no more, though his eyes twinkled; and the shooting
+began.
+
+David of Doncaster shot first and landed safely through the rose
+garland. Then came Allan-a-Dale and Little John and Stutely and Scarlet
+and many of the rest, while the knight held his breath from very
+amazement. Each fellow shot truly through the garland, until Middle the
+tinker--not to be outdone--stepped up for a trial. But alas! while
+he made a fair shot for a townsman, the arrow never came within a
+hand-breath of the outer rim of the garland.
+
+"Come hither, fellow," said Little John coaxingly. "The priest would
+bless thee with his open hand."
+
+Then because Middle made a wry face, as though he had already received
+the buffet, and loitered in his steps, Arthur-a-Bland and Will Stutely
+seized him by the arms and stood him before the friar. Tuck's big arm
+flashed through the air--"whoof!" and stopped suddenly against the
+tinker's ear; while Middle himself went rolling over and over on the
+grass. He was stopped by a small bush, and up he sat, thrusting his head
+through it, rubbing his ear and blinking up at the sky as though the
+stars had fallen and struck him. The yeomen roared with merriment, and
+as for the knight, he laughed till the tears came out of his blue eyes
+and rolled down his face.
+
+After Middle's mishap, others of the band seemed to lose their balance,
+and fared in the same fashion. The garland would topple over in a most
+impish way at every breath, although the arrows went through it. So
+Middle 'gan to feel better when he saw this one and that one tumbling on
+the sward.
+
+At last came Robin's turn. He shot carefully, but as ill luck would have
+it the shaft was ill-feathered and swerved sidewise so that it missed
+the garland by full three fingers. Then a great roar went up from the
+whole company; for 'twas rare that they saw their leader miss his mark.
+Robin flung his bow upon the ground from very vexation.
+
+"A murrain take it!" quoth he. "The arrow was sadly winged. I felt the
+poor feather upon it as it left my fingers!"
+
+Then suddenly seizing his bow again, he sped three shafts as fast as he
+could sent them, and every one went clean through the garland.
+
+"By Saint George!" muttered the knight. "Never before saw I such
+shooting in all Christendom!"
+
+The band cheered heartily at these last shots; but Will Scarlet came up
+gravely to Robin.
+
+"Pretty shooting, master!" quoth he, "but 'twill not save you from
+paying for the bad arrow. So walk up and take your medicine!"
+
+"Nay, that may not be!" protested Robin. "The good friar belongs to
+my company and has no authority to lift hands against me. But you, Sir
+Knight, stand as it were for the King. I pray you, serve out my blow."
+
+"Not so!" said Friar Tuck. "My son, you forget I stand for the church,
+which is greater even than the King."
+
+"Not in merry England," said the knight in a deep voice. Then rising to
+his feet, he added, "I stand ready to serve you, Master Hood."
+
+"Now out upon ye for an upstart knight!" cried Friar Tuck. "I told you
+last night, sirrah, that we should yet see who was the better man! So we
+will e'en prove it now, and thus settle who is to pay Robin Hood."
+
+"Good!" said Robin, "for I want not to start a dispute between church
+and state."
+
+"Good!" also said the knight. "'Tis an easy way to end prattling. Come,
+friar, strike and ye dare. I will give you first blow."
+
+"You have the advantage of an iron pot on your head and gloves on your
+hands," said the friar; "but have at ye! Down you shall go, if you were
+Goliath of Gath."
+
+Once more the priest's brawny arm flashed through the air, and struck
+with a "whoof!" But to the amazement of all, the knight did not budge
+from his tracks, though the upper half of his body swerved slightly to
+ease the force of the blow. A loud shout burst from the yeomen at this,
+for the friar's fist was proverbial, and few of those present had not
+felt the force of it in times past.
+
+"Now 'tis my turn," said his antagonist coolly, casting aside his
+gauntlet. And with one blow of his fist the knight sent the friar
+spinning to the ground.
+
+If there had been uproar and shouting before, it was as naught to the
+noise which now broke forth. Every fellow held his sides or rolled upon
+the ground from laughter; every fellow, save one, and that was Robin
+Hood.
+
+"Out of the frying-pan into the fire!" thought he. "I wish I had let the
+friar box my ears, after all!"
+
+Robin's plight did, indeed, seem a sorry one, before the steel muscles
+of his stranger. But he was saved from a tumble heels over head by
+an unlooked-for diversion. A horn winded in the glade, and a party of
+knights were seen approaching.
+
+"To your arms!" cried Robin, hurriedly seizing his sword and bow.
+
+"'Tis Sir Richard of the Lea!" cried another, as the troop came nearer.
+
+And so it was. Sir Richard spurred forward his horse and dashed up to
+the camp while the outlaws stood at stiff attention. When he had come
+near the spot where the Black Knight stood, he dismounted and knelt
+before him.
+
+"I trust Your Majesty has not needed our arms before," he said humbly.
+
+"It is the King!" cried Will Scarlet, falling upon his knees.
+
+"The King!" echoed Robin Hood after a moment of dumb wonderment; and he
+and all his men bent reverently upon their knees, as one man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD AND MAID MARIAN WERE WED
+
+ "Stand up again," then said the King,
+ "I'll thee thy pardon give;
+ Stand up, my friend, who can contend,
+ When I give leave to live?"
+
+ Then Robin Hood began a health
+ To Marian, his only dear,
+ And his yeomen all, both comely and tall,
+ Did quickly bring up the rear.
+
+"Your pardon, sire!" exclaimed Robin Hood. "Pardon, from your royal
+bounty, for these my men who stand ready to serve you all your days!"
+
+Richard of the Lion Heart looked grimly about over the kneeling band.
+
+"Is it as your leader says?" he asked.
+
+"Aye, my lord King!" burst from sevenscore throats at once.
+
+"We be not outlaws from choice alone," continued Robin; "but have
+been driven to outlawry through oppression. Grant us grace and royal
+protection, and we will forsake the greenwood and follow the King."
+
+Richard's eyes sparkled as he looked from one to another of this
+stalwart band, and he thought within himself that here, indeed, was a
+royal bodyguard worth the while.
+
+"Swear!" he said in his full rich voice; "swear that you, Robin Hood,
+and all your men from this day henceforth will serve the King!"
+
+"We swear!" came once more the answering shout from the yeomen.
+
+"Arise, then," said King Richard. "I give you all free pardon, and will
+speedily put your service to the test. For I love such archers as you
+have shown yourselves to be, and it were a sad pity to decree such men
+to death. England could not produce the like again, for many a day. But,
+in sooth, I cannot allow you to roam in the forest and shoot my deer;
+nor to take the law of the land into your own hands. Therefore, I now
+appoint you to be Royal Archers and mine own especial body-guard. There
+be one or two civil matters to settle with certain Norman noblemen,
+in which I crave your aid. Thereafter, the half of your number, as
+may later be determined, shall come back to these woodlands as Royal
+Foresters. Mayhap you will show as much zeal in protecting my preserves
+as you have formerly shown in hunting them. Where, now, is that outlaw
+known as Little John? Stand forth!"
+
+"Here, sire," quoth the giant, doffing his cap.
+
+"Good master Little John," said the King, looking him over approvingly.
+"Could your weak sinews stand the strain of an office in the shire? If
+so, you are this day Sheriff of Nottingham; and I trust you will make a
+better official than the man you relieve."
+
+"I shall do my best, sire," said Little John, great astonishment and
+gladness in his heart.
+
+"Master Scarlet, stand forth," said the King; and then addressing him:
+"I have heard somewhat of your tale," quoth he, "and that your father
+was the friend of my father. Now, therefore, accept the royal pardon and
+resume the care of your family estates; for your father must be growing
+old. And come you to London next Court day and we shall see if there be
+a knighthood vacant."
+
+Likewise the King called for Will Stutely and made him Chief of the
+Royal Archers. Then he summoned Friar Tuck to draw near.
+
+"I crave my King's pardon," said the priest, humbly enough; "for who am
+I to lift my hand against the Lord's anointed?"
+
+"Nay, the Lord sent the smiter to thee without delay," returned Richard
+smiling; "and 'tis not for me to continue a quarrel between church and
+state. So what can I do for you in payment of last night's hospitality?
+Can I find some fat living where there are no wicked to chastise, and
+where the work is easy and comfortable?"
+
+"Not so, my lord," replied Tuck. "I wish only for peace in this life.
+Mine is a simple nature and I care not for the fripperies and follies
+of court life. Give me a good meal and a cup of right brew, health, and
+enough for the day, and I ask no more."
+
+Richard sighed. "You ask the greatest thing in the world,
+brother--contentment. It is not mine to give or to deny. But ask your
+God for it, an if belike he grant it, then ask it also in behalf of your
+King." He glanced around once more at the foresters. "Which one of you
+is Allan-a-Dale?" he asked; and Allan came forward. "So," said the King
+with sober face, "you are that errant minstrel who stole a bride at
+Plympton, despite her would-be groom and attending Bishop. I heard
+something of this in former days. Now what excuse have you to make?"
+
+"Only that I loved her, sire, and she loved me," said Allan, simply;
+"and the Norman lord would have married her perforce, because of her
+lands."
+
+"Which have since been forfeited by the Bishop of Hereford," added
+Richard. "But my lord Bishop must disgorge them; and from tomorrow you
+and Mistress Dale are to return to them and live in peace and loyalty.
+And if ever I need your harp at Court, stand ready to attend me, and
+bring also the lady. Speaking of ladies," he continued, turning to Robin
+Hood, who had stood silent, wondering if a special punishment was
+being reserved for him, "did you not have a sweetheart who was once at
+Court--one, Mistress Marian? What has become of her, that you should
+have forgotten her?"
+
+"Nay, Your Majesty," said the black-eyed page coming forward blushingly;
+"Robin has not forgotten me!"
+
+"So!" said the King, bending to kiss her small hand in all gallantry.
+"Verily, as I have already thought within myself, this Master Hood is
+better served than the King in his palace! But are you not the only
+child of the late Earl of Huntingdon?"
+
+"I am, sire, though there be some who say that Robin Hood's father
+was formerly the rightful Earl of Huntingdon. Nathless, neither he is
+advantaged nor I, for the estates are confiscate."
+
+"Then they shall be restored forthwith!" cried the King; "and lest you
+two should revive the ancient quarrel over them, I bestow them upon you
+jointly. Come forward, Robin Hood."
+
+Robin came and knelt before his king. Richard drew his sword and touched
+him upon the shoulder.
+
+"Rise, Robin Fitzooth, Earl of Huntingdon!" he exclaimed, while a mighty
+cheer arose from the band and rent the air of the forest. "The first
+command I give you, my lord Earl," continued the King when quiet was
+restored, "is to marry Mistress Marian without delay."
+
+"May I obey all Your Majesty's commands as willingly!" cried the new
+Earl of Huntingdon, drawing the old Earl's daughter close to him. "The
+ceremony shall take place to-morrow, an this maid is willing."
+
+"She makes little protest," said the King; "so I shall e'en give away
+the bride myself!"
+
+Then the King chatted with others of the foresters, and made himself as
+one of them for the evening, rejoicing that he could have this careless
+freedom of the woods. And Much, the miller's son, and Arthur-a-Bland,
+and Middle, and Stutely and Scarlet and Little John and others played
+at the quarter-staff, giving and getting many lusty blows. Then as
+the shades of night drew on, the whole company--knights and
+foresters--supped and drank around a blazing fire, while Allen sang
+sweetly to the thrumming of the harp, and the others joined in the
+chorus.
+
+'Twas a happy, care-free night--this last one together under the
+greenwood tree. Robin could not help feeling an undertone of sadness
+that it was to be the last; for the charm of the woodland was still upon
+him. But he knew 'twas better so, and that the new life with Marian and
+in the service of his King would bring its own joys.
+
+Then the night deepened, the fire sank, but was replenished and the
+company lay down to rest. The King, at his own request, spent the night
+in the open. Thus they slept--King and subject alike--out under the
+stars, cared for lovingly by Nature, kind mother of us all.
+
+In the morning the company was early astir and on their way to
+Nottingham. It was a goodly cavalcade. First rode King Richard of the
+Lion Heart, with his tall figure set forth by the black armor and waving
+plume in his helm. Then came Sir Richard of the Lea with fourscore
+knights and men-at-arms. And after them came Robin Hood and Maid Marian
+riding upon milk-white steeds. Allan-a-Dale also escorted Mistress Dale
+on horseback, for she was to be matron-of-honor at the wedding. These
+were followed by sevenscore archers clad in their bravest Lincoln green,
+and with their new bows unstrung in token of peace.
+
+Outside the gates of Nottingham town they were halted.
+
+"Who comes here?" asked the warder's surly voice.
+
+"Open to the King of England!" came back the clear answer, and the gates
+were opened and the bridge let down without delay.
+
+Almost before the company had crossed the moat the news spread through
+the town like wildfire.
+
+"The King is here! The King is here, and hath taken Robin Hood!"
+
+From every corner flocked the people to see the company pass; and wildly
+did they cheer for the King, who rode smilingly with bared head down
+through the market-place.
+
+At the far end of it, he was met by the Sheriff who came up puffing in
+his haste to do the King honor. He fairly turned green with rage when he
+saw Sir Richard of the Lea and Robin Hood in the royal company, but made
+low obeisance to his master.
+
+"Sir Sheriff," quoth the King, "I have come to rid the shire of outlaws,
+according to my promise. There be none left, for all have now taken
+service with their King. And lest there should be further outbreak,
+I have determined to place in charge of this shire a man who fears
+no other man in it. Master Little John is hereby created Sheriff of
+Nottingham, and you will turn over the keys to him forthwith."
+
+The Sheriff bowed, but dared utter no word. Then the King turned to the
+Bishop of Hereford, who had also come up to pay his respects.
+
+"Harkee, my lord Bishop," quoth he, "the stench of your evil actions
+had reached our nostrils. We shall demand strict accounting for certain
+seizures of the lands and certain acts of oppression which ill become a
+churchman. But of this later. This afternoon you must officiate at the
+wedding of two of our company, in Nottingham Church. So make you ready."
+
+The Bishop also bowed and departed, glad to escape a severer censure for
+the time.
+
+The company then rode on to the Mansion House, where the King held high
+levee through all the noon hours, and the whole town made a holiday.
+
+In the afternoon the way from the Mansion House to Nottingham Church was
+lined with cheering people, as the wedding party passed by. The famous
+bowmen were gazed at as curiously as though they had been wild animals,
+but were cheered none the less. Robin who had long been held in secret
+liking was now doubly popular since he had the King's favor.
+
+Along the way ahead of the King and the smiling bride and groom to be
+ran little maids strewing flowers; while streamers floated in greeting
+from the windows. I ween, the only hearts that were not glad this day
+were those of the old Sheriff, and of his proud daughter, who peered
+between the shutters of her window and was like to eat out her heart
+from envy and hatred.
+
+At last the party reached the church, where the King dismounted lightly
+from his horse and helped the bride to alight; while Will Scarlet,
+the best man, assisted Mistress Dale. Within the church they found
+the Bishop robed in state, and by his side Friar Tuck who had been
+especially deputed to assist.
+
+The service was said in Latin, while the organ pealed forth softly. The
+King gave away the bride, as he had said, and afterwards claimed first
+kiss for his pains. Then the happy party dispersed, and Robin and Marian
+passed out again through the portal, man and wife.
+
+Out through the cheering streets they fared, while the greenwood men ran
+ahead and flung gold pennies right and left in their joy, and bade the
+people drink the health of the young couple and the King. Then the
+whole party took horse at Will Scarlet's earnest wish, and went down to
+Gamewell Lodge, where the old Squire George wept for joy at seeing his
+son and the King and the wedding--party. That night they spent there,
+and feasted, and the next day, Sir Richard of the Lea claimed them.
+
+And thus, amid feasting and rejoicing and kingly favor, Robin Hood, the
+new Earl of Huntingdon, and his bride began their wedded life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET HIS DEATH
+
+ "Give me my bent bow in my hand,
+ And a broad arrow I'll let flee;
+ And where this arrow is taken up,
+ There shall my grave digg'd be."
+
+Now by good rights this story should end with the wedding of Robin Hood
+and Maid Marian; for do not many pleasant tales end with a wedding and
+the saying, "and they lived happy ever after."
+
+But this is a true account--in so far as we can find the quaint old
+ballads which tell of it--and so we must follow one more of these songs
+and learn how Robin, after living many years longer, at last came to
+seek his grave. And the story of it runs in this wise.
+
+Robin Hood and his men, now the Royal Archers, went with King Richard of
+the Lion Heart through England settling certain private disputes which
+had arisen among the Norman barons while the King was gone to the Holy
+Land. Then the King proceeded amid great pomp and rejoicing to the
+palace at London, and Robin, the new Earl of Huntingdon, brought his
+Countess thither, where she became one of the finest ladies of the
+Court.
+
+The Royal Archers were now divided into two bands, and one-half of them
+were retained in London, while the other half returned to Sherwood and
+Barnesdale, there to guard the King's preserves.
+
+Several months passed by, and Robin began to chafe under the restraint
+of city life. He longed for the fresh pure air of the greenwood, and
+the rollicking society of his yeomen. One day, upon seeing some lads
+at archery practice upon a green, he could not help but lament, saying,
+"Woe is me! I fear my hand is fast losing its old time cunning at the
+bow-string!"
+
+Finally he became so distraught that he asked leave to travel in foreign
+lands, and this was granted him. He took Maid Marian with him, and
+together they went through many strange countries. Finally in an Eastern
+land a great grief came upon Robin. Marian sickened of a plague and
+died. They had been married but five years, and Robin felt as though all
+the light had gone out of his life.
+
+He wandered about the world for a few months longer, trying to forget
+his grief, then came back to the court, at London, and sought some
+commission in active service. But unluckily, Richard was gone again upon
+his adventures, and Prince John, who acted as Regent, had never been
+fond of Robin. He received him with a sarcastic smile.
+
+"Go forth into the greenwood," said he, coldly, "and kill some more of
+the King's deer. Belike, then, the King will make you Prime Minister, at
+the very least, upon his return."
+
+The taunt fired Robin's blood. He had been in a morose mood, ever since
+his dear wife's death. He answered Prince John hotly, and the Prince
+bade his guards seize him and cast him into the Tower.
+
+After lying there for a few weeks, he was released by the faithful
+Stutely and the remnant of the Royal Archers, and all together they fled
+the city and made their way to the greenwood. There Robin blew the old
+familiar call, which all had known and loved so well. Up came running
+the remainder of the band, who had been Royal Foresters, and when they
+saw their old master they embraced his knees and kissed his hands, and
+fairly cried for joy that he had come again to them. And one and all
+forswore fealty to Prince John, and lived quietly with Robin in the
+greenwood, doing harm to none and only awaiting the time when King
+Richard should come again.
+
+But King Richard came not again, and would never need his Royal Guard
+more. Tidings presently reached them, of how he had met his death in a
+foreign land, and how John reigned as King in his stead. The proof of
+these events followed soon after, when there came striding through the
+glade the big, familiar form of Little John.
+
+"Art come to arrest us?" called out Robin, as he ran forward and
+embraced his old comrade.
+
+"Nay, I am not come as the Sheriff of Nottingham, thanks be," answered
+Little John. "The new King has deposed me, and 'tis greatly to
+my liking, for I have long desired to join you here again in the
+greenwood."
+
+Then were the rest of the band right glad at this news, and toasted
+Little John royally.
+
+The new King waged fierce war upon the outlaws, soon after this, and
+sent so many scouting parties into Sherwood and Barnesdale that Robin
+and his men left these woods for a time and went into Derbyshire, near
+Haddon Hall. A curious pile of stone is shown to this day as the ruins
+of Robin's Castle, where the bold outlaw is believed to have defied his
+enemies for a year or more. At any rate King John found so many troubles
+of his own, after a time, that he ceased troubling the outlaws.
+
+But in one of the last sorties Robin was wounded. The cut did not seem
+serious, and healed over the top; but it left a lurking fever. Daily his
+strength ebbed away from him, until he was in sore distress.
+
+One day as he rode along on horseback, near Kirklees Abbey, he was
+seized with so violent a rush of blood to the head that he reeled and
+came near falling from his saddle. He dismounted weakly and knocked at
+the Abbey gate. A woman shrouded in black peered forth.
+
+"Who are you that knock here? For we allow no man within these walls,"
+she said.
+
+"Open, for the love of Heaven!" he begged. "I am Robin Hood, ill of a
+fever and in sore straits."
+
+At the name of Robin Hood the woman started back, and then, as though
+bethinking herself, unbarred the door and admitted him. Assisting his
+fainting frame up a flight of stairs and into a front room, she loosed
+his collar and bathed his face until he was revived. Then she spoke
+hurriedly in a low voice:
+
+"Your fever will sink, if you are bled. See, I have provided a lancet
+and will open your veins, while you lie quiet."
+
+So she bled him, and he fell into a stupor which lasted nearly all that
+day, so that he awoke weak and exhausted from loss of blood.
+
+Now there is a dispute as to this abbess who bled him. Some say that
+she did it in all kindness of heart; while others aver that she was none
+other than the former Sheriff's daughter, and found her revenge at last
+in this cruel deed.
+
+Be that as it may, Robin's eyes swam from very weakness when he awoke.
+
+He called wearily for help, but there was no response. He looked
+longingly through the window at the green of the forest; but he was too
+weak to make the leap that would be needed to reach the ground.
+
+ He then bethought him of his horn,
+ Which hung down at his knee;
+ He set his horn unto his mouth,
+ And blew out weak blasts three.
+
+Little John was out in the forest near by, or the blasts would never
+have been heard. At their sound he sprang to his feet.
+
+"Woe! woe!" he cried, "I fear my master is near dead, he blows so
+wearily!"
+
+So he made haste and came running up to the door of the abbey, and
+knocked loudly for admittance. Failing to get reply, he burst in the
+door with frenzied blows of his mighty fist, and soon came running up
+to the room where Robin lay, white and faint. "Alas, dear master!" cried
+Little John in great distress; "I fear you have met with treachery! If
+that be so, grant me one last boon, I pray."
+
+"What is it?" asked Robin.
+
+"Let me burn Kirklees-Hall with fire, and all its nunnery."
+
+"Nay, good comrade," answered Robin Hood gently, "I cannot grant such
+a boon. The dear Christ bade us forgive all our enemies. Moreover,
+you know I never hurt woman in all my life; nor man when in woman's
+company."
+
+He closed his eyes and fell back, so that his friend thought him dying.
+The great tears fell from the giant's eyes and wet his master's hand.
+Robin slowly rallied and seized his comrade's outstretched arm.
+
+"Lift me up, good Little John," he said brokenly, "I want to smell
+the air from the good greenwood once again. Give me my good yew
+bow--here--here-and fix a broad arrow upon the string. Out yonder--among
+the oaks--where this arrow shall fall--let them dig my grave."
+
+And with one last mighty effort he sped his shaft out of the open
+window, straight and true, as in the days of old, till it struck the
+largest oak of them all and dropped in the shadow of the trees. Then he
+fell back upon the sobbing breast of his devoted friend.
+
+"'Tis the last!" he murmured, "tell the brave hearts to lay me there
+with the green sod under my head and feet. And--let them lay--my bent
+bow at my side, for it has made sweet music in mine ears."
+
+He rested a moment, and Little John scarce knew that he was alive. But
+on a sudden Robin's eye brightened, and he seemed to think himself back
+once more with the band in the open forest glade. He struggled to rise.
+
+"Ha! 'tis a fine stag, Will! And Allan, thou never didst thrum the harp
+more sweetly. How the light blazes! And Marian!--'tis my Marian--come at
+last!"
+
+So died the body of Robin Hood; but his spirit lives on through the
+centuries in the deathless ballads which are sung of him, and in the
+hearts of men who love freedom and chivalry.
+
+They buried him where his last arrow had fallen, and they set a stone to
+mark the spot. And on the stone were graven these words:
+
+ "Here underneath his little stone
+ Lies Robert, Earl of Huntingdon;
+ Never archer as he so good,
+ And people called him Robin Hood.
+ Such outlaws as he and his men
+ Will England never see again."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Robin Hood, by J. Walker McSpadden
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+The Project Gutenberg Etext of Robin Hood by J. Walker McSpadden
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+This etext was prepared by Joseph S. Miller, Pensacola, FL and
+Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Library, Prescott, AZ.
+
+
+Robin Hood by J. Walker McSpadden
+
+CHAPTER I How Robin Hood Became an Outlaw
+
+CHAPTER II How Robin Hood Met Little John
+
+CHAPTER III How Robin Hood Turned Butcher, and Entered the
+
+ Sheriff's Service
+
+CHAPTER IV How Little John Entered the Sheriff's Service
+
+CHAPTER V How the Sheriff Lost Three Good Servants, and
+
+ Found Them Again
+
+CHAPTER VI How Robin Hood Met Will Scarlett
+
+CHAPTER VII How Robin Hood Met Friar Tuck
+
+CHAPTER VIII How Allan-a-Dale's Wooing Was Prospered
+
+CHAPTER IX How the Widow's Three Sons Were Rescued
+
+CHAPTER X How a Beggar Filled the Public Eye
+
+CHAPTER XI How Robin Hood Fought Guy of Gisbourne
+
+CHAPTER XII How Maid Marion Came Back to Sherwood Forest;
+
+ Also, How Robin Hood Came Before Queen Eleanor
+
+CHAPTER XIII How the Outlaws Shot in King Harry's Tourney
+
+CHAPTER XIV How Robin Hood Was Sought of the Tinker
+
+CHAPTER XV How Robin Hood Was Tanned of the Tanner
+
+CHAPTER XVI How Robin Hood Met Sir Richard of the Lea
+
+CHAPTER XVII How the Bishop Was Dined
+
+CHAPTER XVIII How the Bishop Went Outlaw-Hunting
+
+CHAPTER XIX How the Sheriff Held Another Shooting Match
+
+CHAPTER XX How Will Stutely Was Rescued
+
+CHAPTER XXI How Sir Richard of the Lea Repaid His Debt
+
+CHAPTER XXII How King Richard Came to Sherwood Forest
+
+CHAPTER XXIII How Robin Hood and Maid Marion Were Wed
+
+CHAPTER XXIV How Robin Hood Met His Death
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD BECAME AN OUTLAW
+
+List and hearken, gentlemen,
+That be of free-born blood,
+I shall you tell of a good yeoman,
+His name was Robin Hood.
+
+Robin was a proud outlaw,
+While as he walked on the ground.
+So courteous an outlaw as he was one
+Was never none else found.
+
+
+In the days of good King Harry the Second of England--he of the
+warring sons--there were certain forests in the north country set
+aside for the King's hunting, and no man might shoot deer therein
+under penalty of death. These forests were guarded by the King's
+Foresters, the chief of whom, in each wood, was no mean man but
+equal in authority to the Sheriff in his walled town, or even to
+my lord Bishop in his abbey.
+
+One of the greatest of royal preserves was Sherwood and
+Barnesdale forests near the two towns of Nottingham and
+Barnesdale. Here for some years dwelt one Hugh Fitzooth as Head
+Forester, with his good wife and son Robert. The boy had been
+born in Lockesley town--in the year 1160, stern records say--and
+was often called Lockesley, or Rob of Lockesley. He was a
+comely, well-knit stripling, and as soon as he was strong enough
+to walk his chief delight was to go with his father into the
+forest. As soon as his right arm received thew and sinew he
+learned to draw the long bow and speed a true arrow. While on
+winter evenings his greatest joy was to hear his father tell of
+bold Will o' the Green, the outlaw, who for many summers defied
+the King's Foresters and feasted with his men upon King's deer.
+And on other stormy days the boy learned to whittle out a
+straight shaft for the long bow, and tip it with gray goose
+feathers.
+
+The fond mother sighed when she saw the boy's face light up at
+these woodland tales. She was of gentle birth, and had hoped to
+see her son famous at court or abbey. She taught him to read and
+to write, to doff his cap without awkwardness and to answer
+directly and truthfully both lord and peasant. But the boy,
+although he took kindly to these lessons of breeding, was yet
+happiest when he had his beloved bow in hand and strolled at
+will, listening to the murmur of the trees.
+
+Two playmates had Rob in these gladsome early days. One was Will
+Gamewell, his father's brother's son, who lived at Gamewell
+Lodge, hard by Nottingham town. The other was Marian Fitzwalter,
+only child of the Earl of Huntingdon. The castle of Huntingdon
+could be seen from the top of one of the tall trees in Sherwood;
+and on more than one bright day Rob's white signal from this tree
+told Marian that he awaited her there: for you must know that Rob
+did not visit her at the castle. His father and her father were
+enemies. Some people whispered that Hugh Fitzooth was the
+rightful Earl of Huntingdon, but that he had been defrauded out
+of his lands by Fitzwalter, who had won the King's favor by a
+crusade to the Holy Land. But little cared Rob or Marian for
+this enmity, however it had arisen. They knew that the great
+green--wood was open to them, and that the wide, wide world was
+full of the scent of flowers and the song of birds.
+
+Days of youth speed all too swiftly, and troubled skies come all
+too soon. Rob's father had two other enemies besides Fitzwalter,
+in the persons of the lean Sheriff of Nottingham and the fat
+Bishop of Hereford. These three enemies one day got possession
+of the King's ear and whispered therein to such good--or
+evil--purpose that Hugh Fitzooth was removed from his post of
+King's Forester. He and his wife and Rob, then a youth of
+nineteen, were descended upon, during a cold winter's evening,
+and dispossessed without warning. The Sheriff arrested the
+Forester for treason--of which, poor man, he was as guiltless as
+you or I--and carried him to Nottingham jail. Rob and his mother
+were sheltered over night in the jail, also, but next morning
+were roughly bade to go about their business. Thereupon they
+turned for succor to their only kinsman, Squire George of
+Gamewell, who sheltered them in all kindness.
+
+But the shock, and the winter night's journey, proved too much
+for Dame Fitzooth. She had not been strong for some time before
+leaving the forest. In less than two months she was no more.
+Rob felt as though his heart was broken at this loss. But
+scarcely had the first spring flowers begun to blossom upon her
+grave, when he met another crushing blow in the loss of his
+father. That stern man had died in prison before his accusers
+could agree upon the charges by which he was to be brought to
+trial.
+
+Two years passed by. Rob's cousin Will was away at school; and
+Marian's father, who had learned of her friendship with Rob, had
+sent his daughter to the court of Queen Eleanor. So these years
+were lonely ones to the orphaned lad. The bluff old Squire was
+kind to him, but secretly could make nothing of one who went
+about brooding and as though seeking for something he had lost.
+The truth is that Rob missed his old life in the forest no less
+than his mother's gentleness, and his father's companionship.
+Every time he twanged the string of the long bow against his
+shoulder and heard the gray goose shaft sing, it told him of
+happy days that he could not recall.
+
+One morning as Rob came in to breakfast, his uncle greeted him
+with, "I have news for you, Rob, my lad!" and the hearty old
+Squire finished his draught of ale and set his pewter tankard
+down with a crash.
+
+"What may that be, Uncle Gamewell?" asked the young man.
+
+"Here is a chance to exercise your good long bow and win a pretty
+prize. The Fair is on at Nottingham, and the Sheriff proclaims
+an archer's tournament. The best fellows are to have places with
+the King's Foresters, and the one who shoots straightest of all
+will win for prize a olden arrow--a useless bauble enough, but
+just the thing for your lady love, eh, Rob my boy?" Here the
+Squire laughed and whacked the table again with his tankard.
+
+Rob's eyes sparkled. "'Twere indeed worth shooting for, uncle
+mine," he said. "I should dearly love to let arrow fly alongside
+another man. And a place among the Foresters is what I have long
+desired. Will you let me try?"
+
+"To be sure," rejoined his uncle. "Well I know that your good
+mother would have had me make a clerk of you; but well I see that
+the greenwood is where you will pass your days. So, here's luck
+to you in the bout!" And the huge tankard came a third time into
+play.
+
+The young man thanked his uncle for his good wishes, and set
+about making preparations for the journey. He traveled lightly;
+but his yew bow must needs have a new string, and his cloth-yard
+arrows must be of the straightest and soundest.
+
+One fine morning, a few days after, Rob might have been seen
+passing by way of Lockesley through Sherwood Forest to Nottingham
+town. Briskly walked he and gaily, for his hopes were high and
+never an enemy had he in the wide world. But 'twas the very last
+morning in all his life when he was to lack an enemy! For, as he
+went his way through Sherwood, whistling a blithe tune, he came
+suddenly upon a group of Foresters, making merry beneath the
+spreading branches of an oak-tree. They had a huge meat pie
+before them and were washing down prodigious slices of it with
+nut brown ale.
+
+One glance at the leader and Rob knew at once that he had found
+an enemy. 'Twas the man who had usurped his father's place as
+Head Forester, and who had roughly turned his mother out in the
+snow. But never a word said he for good or bad, and would have
+passed on his way, had not this man, clearing his throat with a
+huge gulp, bellowed out: "By my troth, here is a pretty little
+archer! Where go you, my lad, with that tupenny bow and toy
+arrows? Belike he would shoot at Nottingham Fair! Ho! Ho!"
+
+A roar of laughter greeted this sally. Rob flushed, for he was
+mightily proud of his shooting.
+
+"My bow is as good as yours," he retorted, "and my shafts will
+carry as straight and as far. So I'll not take lessons of any of
+ye"'
+
+They laughed again loudly at this, and the leader said with
+frown:
+
+"Show us some of your skill, and if you can hit the mark here's
+twenty silver pennies for you. But if you hit it not you are in
+for a sound drubbing for your pertness."
+
+"Pick your own target," quoth Rob in a fine rage. "I'll lay my
+head against that purse that I can hit it."
+
+"It shall be as you say," retorted the Forester angrily, "your
+head for your sauciness that you hit not my target."
+
+Now at a little rise in the wood a herd of deer came grazing by,
+distant full fivescore yards. They were King's deer, but at that
+distance seemed safe from any harm. The Head Forester pointed to
+them.
+
+"If your young arm could speed a shaft for half that distance,
+I'd shoot with you."
+
+"Done!" cried Rob. "My head against twenty pennies I'll cause
+yon fine fellow in the lead of them to breathe his last."
+
+And without more ado he tried the string of his long bow, placed
+a shaft thereon, and drew it to his ear. A moment, and the
+quivering string sang death as the shaft whistled across the
+glade. Another moment and the leader of the herd leaped high in
+his tracks and fell prone, dyeing the sward with his heart's
+blood.
+
+A murmur of amazement swept through the Foresters, and then a
+growl of rage. He that had wagered was angriest of all.
+
+"Know you what you have done, rash youth?" he said. "You have
+killed a King's deer, and by the laws of King Harry your head
+remains forfeit. Talk not to me of pennies but get ye gone
+straight, and let me not look upon your face again."
+
+Rob's blood boiled within him, and he uttered a rash speech. "I
+have looked upon your face once too often already, my fine
+Forester. 'Tis you who wear my father's shoes."
+
+And with this he turned upon his heel and strode away.
+
+The Forester heard his parting thrust with an oath. Red with
+rage he seized his bow, strung an arrow, and without warning
+launched it full af' Rob. Well was it for the latter that the
+Forester's foot turned on a twig at the critical instant, for as
+it was the arrow whizzed by his ear so close as to take a stray
+strand of his hair with it. Rob turned upon his assailant, now
+twoscore yards away.
+
+"Ha!" said he. "You shoot not so straight as I, for all your
+bravado. Take this from the tupenny bow!"
+
+Straight flew his answering shaft. The Head Forester gave one
+cry, then fell face downward and lay still. His life had avenged
+Rob's father, but the son was outlawed. Forward he ran through
+the forest, before the band could gather their scattered
+wits--still forward into the great greenwood. The swaying trees
+seemed to open their arms to the wanderer, and to welcome him
+home.
+
+Toward the close of the same day, Rob paused hungry and weary at
+the cottage of a poor widow who dwelt upon the outskirts of the
+forest. Now this widow had often greeted him kindly in his
+boyhood days, giving him to eat and drink. So he boldly entered
+her door. The old dame was right glad to see him, and baked him
+cakes in the ashes, and had him rest and tell her his story. Then
+she shook her head.
+
+"'Tis an evil wind that blows through Sherwood," she said. "The
+poor are despoiled and the rich ride over their bodies. My three
+sons have been outlawed for shooting King's deer to keep us from
+starving, and now hide in the wood. And they tell me that
+twoscore of as good men as ever drew bow are in hiding with
+them."
+
+"Where are they, good mother?" cried Rob. "By my faith, I will
+join them."
+
+"Nay, nay," replied the old woman at first. But when she saw
+that there was no other way, she said: "My sons will visit me
+to-night. Stay you here and see them if you must."
+
+So Rob stayed willingly to see the widow's sons that night, for
+they were men after his own heart. And when they found that his
+mood was with them, they made him swear an oath of fealty, and
+told him the haunt of the band--a place he knew right well.
+Finally one of them said:
+
+"But the band lacks a leader--one who can use his head as well as
+his hand. So we have agreed that he who has skill enough to go
+to Nottingham, an outlaw, and win the prize at archery, shall be
+our chief."
+
+Rob sprang to his feet. "Said in good time!" cried he, "for I
+had started to that self-same Fair, and all the Foresters, and
+all the Sheriff's men in Christendom shall not stand between me
+and the center of their target!"
+
+And though he was but barely grown he stood so straight and his
+eye flashed with such fire that the three brothers seized his
+hand and shouted:
+
+"A Lockesley! a Lockesley! if you win the golden arrow you shall
+be chief of outlaws in Sherwood Forest!"
+
+So Rob fell to planning how he could disguise himself to go to
+Nottingham town; for he knew that the Foresters had even then set
+a price on his head in the market-place.
+
+It was even as Rob had surmised. The Sheriff of Nottingham
+posted a reward of two hundred pounds for the capture, dead or
+alive, of one Robert Fitzooth, outlaw. And the crowds thronging
+the streets upon that busy Fair day often paused to read the
+notice and talk together about the death of the Head Forester.
+
+But what with wrestling bouts and bouts with quarter-staves, and
+wandering minstrels, there came up so many other things to talk
+about, that the reward was forgotten for the nonce, and only the
+Foresters and Sheriff's men watched the gates with diligence, the
+Sheriff indeed spurring them to effort by offers of largess. His
+hatred of the father had descended to the son.
+
+The great event of the day came in the afternoon. It was the
+archer's contest for the golden arrow, and twenty men stepped
+forth to shoot. Among them was a beggar-man, a sorry looking
+fellow with leggings of different colors, and brown scratched
+face and hands. Over a tawny shock of hair he had a hood drawn,
+much like that of a monk. Slowly he limped to his place in the
+line, while the mob shouted in derision. But the contest was
+open to all comers, so no man said him nay.
+
+Side by side with Rob--for it was he--stood a muscular fellow of
+swarthy visage and with one eye hid by a green bandage. Him also
+the crowd jeered, but he passed them by with indifference while
+he tried his bow with practiced hand.
+
+A great crowd had assembled in the amphitheater enclosing the
+lists. All the gentry and populace of the surrounding country
+were gathered there in eager expectancy. The central box
+contained the lean but pompous Sheriff, his bejeweled wife, and
+their daughter, a supercilious young woman enough, who, it was
+openly hinted, was hoping to receive the golden arrow from the
+victor and thus be crowned queen of the day.
+
+Next to the Sheriff's box was one occupied by the fat Bishop of
+Hereford; while in the other side was a box wherein sat a girl
+whose dark hair, dark eyes, and fair features caused Rob's heart
+to leap. 'Twas Maid Marian! She had come up for a visit from
+the Queen's court at London town, and now sat demurely by her
+father the Earl of Huntingdon. If Rob had been grimly resolved
+to win the arrow before, the sight of her sweet face multiplied
+his determination an hundredfold. He felt his muscles tightening
+into bands of steel, tense and true. Yet withal his heart would
+throb, making him quake in a most unaccountable way.
+
+Then the trumpet sounded, and the crowd became silent while the
+herald announced the terms of the contest. The lists were open
+to all comers. The first target was to be placed at thirty ells
+distance, and all those who hit its center were allowed to shoot
+at the second target, placed ten ells farther off. The third
+target was to be removed yet farther, until the winner was
+proved. The winner was to receive the golden arrow, and a place
+with the King's Foresters. He it was also who crowned the queen
+of the day.
+
+The trumpet sounded again, and the archers prepared to shoot.
+Rob looked to his string, while the crowd smiled and whispered at
+the odd figure he cut, with his vari-colored legs and little
+cape. But as the first man shot, they grew silent.
+
+The target was not so far but that twelve out of the twenty
+contestants reached its inner circle. Rob shot sixth in the line
+and landed fairly, being rewarded by an approving grunt from the
+man with the green blinder, who shot seventh, and with apparent
+carelessness, yet true to the bull's-eye.
+
+The mob cheered and yelled themselves hoarse at this even
+marksmanship. The trumpet sounded again, and a new target was
+set up at forty ells.
+
+The first three archers again struck true, amid the loud applause
+of the onlookers; for they were general favorites and expected to
+win. Indeed 'twas whispered that each was backed by one of the
+three dignitaries of the day. The fourth and fifth archers
+barely grazed the center. Rob fitted his arrow quietly and with
+some confidence sped it unerringly toward the shining circle.
+
+"The beggar! the beggar!" yelled the crowd; "another bull for the
+beggar!" In truth his shaft was nearer the center than any of the
+others. But it was not so near that "Blinder," as the mob had
+promptly christened his neighbor, did not place his shaft just
+within the mark. Again the crowd cheered wildly. Such shooting
+as this was not seen every day in Nottingham town.
+
+The other archers in this round were disconcerted by the
+preceding shots, or unable to keep the pace. They missed one
+after another and dropped moodily back, while the trumpet sounded
+for the third round, and the target was set up fifty ells
+distant.
+
+"By my halidom you draw a good bow, young master," said Rob's
+queer comrade to him in the interval allowed for rest. "Do you
+wish me to shoot first on this trial?"
+
+"Nay," said Rob, "but you are a good fellow by this token, and if
+I win not, I hope you may keep the prize from yon strutters." And
+he nodded scornfully to the three other archers who were
+surrounded by their admirers, and were being made much of by
+retainers of the Sheriff, the Bishop, and the Earl. From them his
+eye wandered toward Maid Marian's booth. She had been watching
+him, it seemed, for their eyes met; then hers were hastily
+averted.
+
+"Blinder's" quick eye followed those of Rob. "A fair maid,
+that," he said smilingly, "and one more worthy the golden arrow
+than the Sheriff's haughty miss."
+
+Rob looked at him swiftly, and saw naught but kindliness in his
+glance.
+
+"You are a shrewd fellow and I like you well," was his only
+comment.
+
+Now the archers prepared to shoot again, each with some little
+care. The target seemed hardly larger than the inner ring had
+looked, at the first trial. The first three sped their shafts,
+and while they were fair shots they did not more than graze the
+inner circle.
+
+Rob took his stand with some misgiving. Some flecking clouds
+overhead made the light uncertain, and a handful of wind
+frolicked across the range in a way quite disturbing to a
+bowman's nerves. His eyes wandered for a brief moment to the box
+wherein sat the dark-eyed girl. His heart leaped! she met his
+glance and smiled at him reassuringly. And in that moment he
+felt that she knew him despite his disguise and looked to him to
+keep the honor of old Sherwood. He drew his bow firmly and,
+taking advantage of a momentary lull in the breeze, launched the
+arrow straight and true-singing across the range to the center of
+the target.
+
+"The beggar! the beggar! a bull! a bull!" yelled the fickle mob,
+who from jeering him were now his warm friends. "Can you beat
+that, Blinder?"
+
+The last archer smiled scornfully and made ready. He drew his
+bow with ease and grace and, without seeming to study the course,
+released the winged arrow. Forward it leaped toward the target,
+and all eyes followed its flight. A loud uproar broke forth when
+it alighted, just without the center and grazing the shaft sent
+by Rob. The stranger made a gesture of surprise when his own
+eyes announced the result to him, but saw his error. He had not
+allowed for the fickle gust of wind which seized the arrow and
+carried it to one side. But for all that he was the first to
+congratulate the victor.
+
+"I hope we may shoot again," quoth he. "In truth I care not for
+the golden bauble and wished to win it in despite of the Sheriff
+for whom I have no love. Now crown the lady of your choice." And
+turning suddenly he was lost in the crowd, before Rob could utter
+what it was upon his lips to say, that he would shoot again with
+him.
+
+And now the herald summoned Rob to the Sheriff's box to receive
+the prize.
+
+"You are a curious fellow enough," said the Sheriff, biting his
+lip coldly; "yet you shoot well. What name go you by?"
+
+Marian sat near and was listening intently.
+
+"I am called Rob the Stroller, my Lord Sheriff," said the archer.
+
+Marian leaned back and smiled.
+
+"Well, Rob the Stroller, with a little attention to your skin and
+clothes you would not be so bad a man," said the Sheriff. "How
+like you the idea of entering my service.
+
+"Rob the Stroller has ever been a free man, my Lord, and desires
+no service."
+
+The Sheriff's brow darkened, yet for the sake of his daughter and
+the golden arrow, he dissembled.
+
+"Rob the Stroller," said he, "here is the golden arrow which has
+been offered to the best of archers this day. You are awarded
+the prize. See that you bestow it worthily."
+
+At this point the herald nudged Rob and half inclined his head
+toward the Sheriff's daughter, who sat with a thin smile upon her
+lips. But Rob heeded him not. He took the arrow and strode to
+the next box where sat Maid Marian.
+
+"Lady," he said, "pray accept this little pledge from a poor
+stroller who would devote the best shafts in his quiver to serve
+you."
+
+"My thanks to you, Rob in the Hood," replied she with a roguish
+twinkle in her eye; and she placed the gleaming arrow in her
+hair, while the people shouted, "The Queen! the Queen!"
+
+The Sheriff glowered furiously upon this ragged archer who had
+refused his service, taken his prize without a word of thanks,
+and snubbed his daughter. He would have spoken, but his proud
+daughter restrained him. He called to his guard and bade them
+watch the beggar. But Rob had already turned swiftly, lost
+himself in the throng, and headed straight for the town gate.
+
+That same evening within a forest glade a group of men--some
+twoscore clad in Lincoln green--sat round a fire roasting venison
+and making merry. Suddenly a twig crackled and they sprang to
+their feet and seized their weapons.
+
+"I look for the widow's sons," a clear voice said, "and I come
+alone."
+
+Instantly the three men stepped forward.
+
+"Tis Rob!" they cried; "welcome to Sherwood Forest, Rob!" And all
+the men came and greeted him; for they had heard his story.
+
+Then one of the widow's sons, Stout Will, stepped forth and said:
+
+"Comrades all, ye know that our band has sadly lacked a
+leader--one of birth, breeding, and skill. Belike we have found
+that leader in this young man. And I and my brothers have told
+him that the band would choose that one who should bring the
+Sheriff to shame this day and capture his golden arrow. Is it
+not so?"
+
+The band gave assent.
+
+Will turned to Rob. "What news bring you from Nottingham town?"
+asked he.
+
+Rob laughed. "In truth I brought the Sheriff to shame for mine
+own pleasure, and won his golden arrow to boot. But as to the
+prize ye must e'en take my word, for I bestowed it upon a maid."
+
+And seeing the men stood in doubt at this, he continued: "But
+I'll gladly join your band, and you take me, as a common archer.
+For there are others older and mayhap more skilled than I."
+
+Then stepped one forward from the rest, a tall swarthy man. And
+Rob recognized him as the man with the green blinder; only this
+was now removed, and his freed eye gleamed as stoutly as the
+other one.
+
+"Rob in the Hood--for such the lady called you," said he, "I can
+vouch for your tale. You shamed the Sheriff e'en as I had hoped
+to do; and we can forego the golden arrow since it is in such
+fair hands. As to your shooting and mine, we must let future
+days decide. But here I, Will Stutely, declare that I will serve
+none other chief save only you."
+
+Then good Will Stutely told the outlaws of Rob's deeds, and gave
+him his hand of fealty. And the widow's sons did likewise, and
+the other members every one, right gladly; because Will Stutely
+had heretofore been the truest bow in all the company. And they
+toasted him in nut brown ale, and hailed him as their leader, by
+the name of Robin Hood. And he accepted that name because Maid
+Marian had said it.
+
+By the light of the camp-fire the band exchanged signs and
+passwords. They gave Robin Hood a horn upon which he was to blow
+to summon them. They swore, also, that while they might take
+money and goods from the unjust rich, they would aid and befriend
+the poor and the helpless; and that they would harm no woman, be
+she maid, wife, or widow. They swore all this with solemn oaths,
+while they feasted about the ruddy blaze, under the greenwood
+tree.
+
+And that is how Robin Hood became an outlaw.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET LITTLE JOHN
+
+"O here is my hand," the stranger reply'd,
+"I'll serve you with all my whole heart.
+My name is John Little, a man of good mettle,
+Ne'er doubt me for I'll play my part."
+
+"His name shall be altered," quoth William Stutely,
+"And I will his godfather be:
+Prepare then a feast, and none of the least,
+For we will be merry," quoth he.
+
+
+All that summer Robin Hood and his merry men roamed in Sherwood
+Forest, and the fame of their deeds ran abroad in the land. The
+Sheriff of Nottingham waxed wroth at the report, but all his
+traps and excursions failed to catch the outlaws. The poor
+people began by fearing them, but when they found that the men in
+Lincoln green who answered Robin Hood's horn meant them no harm,
+but despoiled the oppressor to relieve the oppressed, they 'gan
+to have great liking for them. And the band increased by other
+stout hearts till by the end of the summer fourscore good men and
+true had sworn fealty.
+
+But the days of quiet which came on grew irksome to Robin's
+adventurous spirit. Up rose he, one gay morn, and slung his
+quiver over his shoulders.
+
+"This fresh breeze stirs the blood, my lads," quoth he, "and I
+would be seeing what the gay world looks like in the direction of
+Nottingham town. But tarry ye behind in the borders of the
+forest, within earshot of my bugle call."
+
+Thus saying he strode merrily forward to the edge of the wood,
+and paused there a moment, his agile form erect, his brown locks
+flowing and his brown eyes watching the road; and a goodly sight
+he made, as the wind blew the ruddy color into his cheeks.
+
+The highway led clear in the direction of the town, and thither
+he boldly directed his steps. But at a bend in the road he knew
+of a by-path leading across a brook which made the way nearer
+and less open, into which he turned. As he approached the stream
+he saw that it had become swollen by recent rains into quite a
+pretty torrent. The log foot-bridge was still there, but at this
+end of it a puddle intervened which could be crossed only with a
+leap, if you would not get your feet wet.
+
+But Robin cared little for such a handicap. Taking a running
+start, his nimble legs carried him easily over and balanced
+neatly upon the end of the broad log. But he was no sooner
+started across than he saw a tall stranger coming from the other
+side. Thereupon Robin quickened his pace, and the stranger did
+likewise, each thinking to cross first. Midway they met, and
+neither would yield an inch.
+
+"Give way, fellow!" roared Robin, whose leadership of a band, I
+am afraid, had not tended to mend his manners.
+
+The stranger smiled. He was almost a head taller than the other.
+
+"Nay," he retorted, "fair and softly! I give way only to a
+better man than myself."
+
+"Give way, I say", repeated Robin, "or I shall have to show you a
+better man."
+
+His opponent budged not an inch, but laughed loudly. "Now by my
+halidom!" he said good-naturedly, "I would not move after hearing
+that speech, even if minded to it before; for this better man I
+have sought my life long. Therefore show him to me, an it please
+you."
+
+"That will I right soon," quoth Robin. "Stay you here a little
+while, till I cut me a cudgel like unto that you have been
+twiddling in your fingers." So saying he sought his own bank
+again with a leap, laid aside his long bow and arrows, and cut
+him a stout staff of oak, straight, knotless, and a good six feet
+in length. But still it was a full foot shorter than his
+opponent's. Then back came he boldly.
+
+"I mind not telling you, fellow," said he, "that a bout with
+archery would have been an easier way with me. But there are
+other tunes in England besides that the arrow sings." Here he
+whirred the staff about his head by way of practice. "So make
+you ready for the tune I am about to play upon your ribs. Have
+at you! One, two--"
+
+"Three!" roared the giant smiting at him instantly.
+
+Well was it for Robin that he was quick and nimble of foot; for
+the blow that grazed a hair's breadth from his shoulder would
+have felled an ox. Nevertheless while swerving to avoid this
+stroke, Robin was poising for his own, and back came he
+forthwith--whack!
+
+Whack! parried the other.
+
+Whack! whack! whack! whack!
+
+The fight waxed fast and furious. It was strength pitted against
+subtlety, and the match was a merry one. The mighty blows of the
+stranger went whistling around Robin's ducking head, while his
+own swift undercuts were fain to give the other an attack of
+indigestion. Yet each stood firmly in his place not moving
+backward or forward a foot for a good half hour, nor thinking of
+crying "Enough!" though some chance blow seemed likely to knock
+one or the other off the narrow foot-bridge. The giant's face
+was getting red, and his breath came snorting forth like a
+bull's. He stepped forward with a furious onslaught to finish
+this audacious fellow. Robin dodged his blows lightly, then
+sprang in swiftly and unexpectedly and dealt the stranger such a
+blow upon the short ribs that you would have sworn the tanner was
+trimming down his hides for market.
+
+The stranger reeled and came within an ace of falling, but
+regained his footing right quickly.
+
+"By my life, you can hit hard!" he gasped forth, giving back a
+blow almost while he was yet staggering.
+
+This blow was a lucky one. It caught Robin off his guard. His
+stick had rested a moment while he looked to see the giant topple
+into the water, when down came the other upon his head, whack!
+Robin saw more stars in that one moment than all the astronomers
+have since discovered, and forthwith he dropped neatly into the
+stream.
+
+The cool rushing current quickly brought him to his senses,
+howbeit he was still so dazed that he groped blindly for the
+swaying reeds to pull himself up on the bank. His assailant
+could not forbear laughing heartily at his plight, but was also
+quick to lend his aid. He thrust down his long staff to Robin
+crying, "Lay hold of that, an your fists whirl not so much as
+your head!"
+
+Robin laid hold and was hauled to dry land for all the world like
+a fish, except that the fish would never have come forth so wet
+and dripping. He lay upon the warm bank for a space to regain
+his senses. Then he sat up and gravely rubbed his pate.
+
+"By all the saints!" said he, "you hit full stoutly. My head
+hums like a hive of bees on a summer morning."
+
+Then he seized his horn, which lay near, and blew thereon three
+shrill notes that echoed against the trees. A moment of silence
+ensued, and then was heard the rustling of leaves and crackling
+of twigs like the coming of many men; and forth from the glade
+burst a score or two of stalwart yeomen, all clad in Lincoln
+green, like Robin, with good Will Stutely and the widow's three
+sons at their head.
+
+"Good master," cried Will Stutely, "how is this? In sooth there
+is not a dry thread on your body."
+
+"Why, marry," replied Robin, "this fellow would not let me pass
+the footbridge, and when I tickled him in the ribs, he must needs
+answer by a pat on the head which landed me overboard."
+
+"Then shall he taste some of his own porridge," quoth Will.
+"Seize him, lads!"
+
+"Nay, let him go free," said Robin. "The fight was a fair one
+and I abide by it. I surmise you also are quits?" he continued,
+turning to the stranger with a twinkling eye.
+
+"I am content," said the other, "for verily you now have the best
+end of the cudgel. Wherefore, I like you well, and would fain
+know your name."
+
+"Why," said Robin, "my men and even the Sheriff of Nottingham
+know me as Robin Hood, the outlaw."
+
+"Then am I right sorry that I beat you," exclaimed the man, "for
+I was on my way to seek you and to try to join your merry
+company. But after my unmannerly use of the cudgel, I fear we
+are still strangers."
+
+"Nay, never say it!" cried Robin, "I am glad I fell in with you;
+though, "sooth to say, I did all the falling!"
+
+And amid a general laugh the two men clasped hands, and in that
+clasp the strong friendship of a lifetime was begun.
+
+"But you have not yet told us your name," said Robin, bethinking
+himself.
+
+"Whence I came, men call me John Little."
+
+"Enter our company then, John Little; enter and welcome. The
+rites are few, the fee is large. We ask your whole mind and body
+and heart even unto death."
+
+"I give the bond, upon my life," said the tall man.
+
+Thereupon Will Stutely, who loved a good jest, spoke up and said:
+"The infant in our household must be christened, and I'll stand
+godfather. This fair little stranger is so small of bone and
+sinew, that his old name is not to the purpose." Here he paused
+long enough to fill a horn in the stream. "Hark ye, my
+son,"--standing on tiptoe to splash the water on the giant--"take
+your new name on entering the forest. I christen you Little
+John."
+
+At this jest the men roared long and loud.
+
+"Give him a bow, and find a full sheath of arrows for Little
+John," said Robin joyfully. "Can you shoot as well as fence with
+the staff, my friend?"
+
+"I have hit an ash twig at forty yards," said Little John.
+
+Thus chatting pleasantly the band turned back into the woodland
+and sought their secluded dell, where the trees were the
+thickest, the moss was the softest, and a secret path led to a
+cave, at once a retreat and a stronghold. Here under a mighty oak
+they found the rest of the band, some of whom had come in with a
+brace of fat does. And here they built a ruddy fire and sat down
+to the meat and ale, Robin Hood in the center with Will Stutely
+on the one hand and Little John on the other. And Robin was
+right well pleased with the day's adventure, even though he had
+got a drubbing; for sore ribs and heads will heal, and 'tis not
+every day that one can find a recruit as stout of bone and true
+of soul as Little John.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD TURNED BUTCHER, AND ENTERED THE SHERIFF'S SERVICE
+
+The butcher he answered jolly Robin,
+"No matter where I do dwell,
+For a butcher am I, and to Nottingham
+Am I going, my flesh to sell."
+
+
+The next morning the weather had turned ill, and Robin Hood's
+band stayed close to their dry and friendly cave. The third day
+brought a diversion in the shape of a trap by a roving party of
+the Sheriff's men. A fine stag had been struck down by one Of
+Will Stutely's fellows, and he and others had stepped forth from
+the covert to seize it, when twenty bowmen from Nottingham
+appeared at the end of the glade. Down dropped Will's men on all
+fours, barely in time to hear a shower of arrows whistle above
+their heads. Then from behind the friendly trees they sent back
+such a welcome that the Sheriff's men deemed it prudent not to
+tarry in their steps. Two of them, in sooth, bore back
+unpleasant wounds in their shoulders, from the encounter.
+
+When they returned to town the Sheriff waxed red with rage.
+
+"What," he gasped, "do my men fear to fight this Robin Hood, face
+to face? Would that I could get him within my reach, once. We
+should see then; we should see!"
+
+What it was the Sheriff would see, he did not state. But he was
+to have his wish granted in short space, and you and I will see
+how he profited by it.
+
+The fourth day and the one following this friendly bout, Little
+John was missing. One of his men said that he saw him talking
+with a beggar, but did not know whither they had gone. Two more
+days passed. Robin grew uneasy. He did not doubt the faith of
+Little John, but he was fearful lest a roving band of Foresters
+had captured him.
+
+At last Robin could not remain quiet. Up sprang he, with bow and
+arrows, and a short sword at his side.
+
+"I must away to Nottingham town, my men," he cried. "The goodly
+Sheriff has long desired to see me; and mayhap he can tell me
+tidings of the best quarter-staff in the shire"--meaning Little
+John.
+
+Others of the band besought him to let them go with him, but he
+would not.
+
+"Nay," he said smilingly, "the Sheriff and I are too good friends
+to put doubt upon our meeting. But tarry ye in the edge of the
+wood opposite the west gate of the town, and ye may be of service
+ere to-morrow night."
+
+So saying he strode forward to the road leading to Nottingham,
+and stood as before looking up and down to see if the way was
+clear. Back at a bend in the road he heard a rumbling and a
+lumbering, when up drove a stout butcher, whistling gaily, and
+driving a mare that sped slowly enough because of the weight of
+meat with which the cart was loaded.
+
+"A good morrow to you, friend," hailed Robin. "Whence come you
+and where go you with your load of meat?"
+
+"A good morrow to you," returned the butcher, civilly enough.
+"No matter where I dwell. I am but a simple butcher, and to
+Nottingham am I going, my flesh to sell. 'Tis Fair week, and my
+beef and mutton should fetch a fair penny," and he laughed loudly
+at his jest. "But whence come you?"
+
+"A yeoman am I, from Lockesley town. Men call me Robin Hood."
+
+"The saints forefend that you should treat me ill!" said the
+butcher in terror. "Oft have I heard of you, and how you lighten
+the purses of the fat priests and knights. But I am naught but a
+poor butcher, selling this load of meat, perchance, for enough to
+pay my quarter's rent."
+
+"Rest you, my friend, rest you," quoth Robin, "not so much as a
+silver penny would I take from you, for I love an honest Saxon
+face and a fair name with my neighbors. But I would strike a
+bargain with you."
+
+Here he took from his girdle a well-filled purse, and continued,
+"I would fain be a butcher, this day, and sell meat at Nottingham
+town. Could you sell me your meat, your cart, your mare, and
+your good-will, without loss, for five marks?"
+
+"Heaven bless ye, good Robin," cried the butcher right joyfully,
+"that can I!" And he leaped down forthwith from the cart, and
+handed Robin the reins in exchange for the purse.
+
+"One moment more," laughed Robin, "we must e'en change garments
+for the nonce. Take mine and scurry home quickly lest the King's
+Foresters try to put a hole through this Lincoln green."
+
+So saying he donned the butcher's blouse and apron, and, climbing
+into the cart, drove merrily down the road to the town.
+
+When he came to Nottingham he greeted the scowling gate-keeper
+blithely and proceeded to the market-place. Boldly he led his
+shuffling horse to the place where the butchers had their stalls.
+
+He had no notion of the price to ask for his meat, but put on a
+foolish and simple air as he called aloud his wares:
+
+"Hark ye, lasses and dames, hark ye,
+Good meat come buy, come buy,
+Three pen'orths go for one penny,
+And a kiss is good, say I!"
+
+Now when the folk found what a simple butcher he was, they
+crowded around his cart; for he really did sell three times as
+much for one penny as was sold by the other butchers. And one or
+two serving-lasses with twinkling eyes liked his comely face so
+well that they willingly gave boot of a kiss.
+
+But the other butchers were wroth when they found how he was
+taking their trade; and they accordingly put their heads
+together.
+
+One said, "He is a prodigal and has sold his father's land, and
+this is his first venture in trading."
+
+Another said, "He is a thief who has murdered a butcher, and
+stolen his horse and meat."
+
+Robin heard these sayings, but only laughed merrily and sang his
+song the louder. His good-humor made the people laugh also and
+crowd round his cart closely, shouting uproariously when some
+buxom lass submitted to be kissed.
+
+Then the butchers saw that they must meet craft with craft; and
+they said to him, "Come, brother butcher, if you would sell meat
+with us, you must e'en join our guild and stand by the rules of
+our trade."
+
+"We dine at the Sheriff's mansion to-day," said another, "and you
+must take one of our party."
+
+'Accurst of his heart," said jolly Robin,
+"That a butcher will deny.
+I'll go with you, my brethren true,
+And as fast as I can hie."
+
+Whereupon, having sold all his meat, he left his horse and cart
+in charge of a friendly hostler and prepared to follow his mates
+to the Mansion House.
+
+It was the Sheriff's custom to dine various guilds of the trade,
+from time to time, on Fair days, for he got a pretty profit out
+of the fees they paid him for the right to trade in the
+market-place. The Sheriff was already come with great pomp into
+the banqueting room, when Robin Hood and three or four butchers
+entered, and he greeted them all with great condescension; and
+presently the whole of a large company was seated at a table
+groaning beneath the good cheer of the feast.
+
+Now the Sheriff bade Robin sit by his right hand, at the head of
+the board; for one or two butchers had whispered to the official,
+"That fellow is a right mad blade, who yet made us much sport
+to-day. He sold more meat for one penny than we could sell for
+three; and he gave extra weight to whatsoever lass would buss
+him." And others said, "He is some prodigal who knows not the
+value of goods, and may be plucked by a shrewd man right
+closely."
+
+The Sheriff was will to pluck a prodigal with the next man, and
+he was moreover glad to have a guest who promised to enliven the
+feast. So, as I have told you, he placed Robin by his side, and
+he made much of him and laughed boisterously at his jests; though
+sooth to say, the laugh were come by easily, for Robin had never
+been in merrier mood, and his quips and jests soon put the whole
+table at a roar.
+
+Then my lord Bishop of Hereford came in, last of all, to say a
+ponderous grace and take his seat on the other side of the
+Sheriff--the prelate's fat body showing up in goodly contrast to
+the other's lean bones.
+
+After grace was said, and while the servants clattered in with
+the meat platters, Robin stood up and said:
+
+"An amen say I to my lord Bishop's thanks! How, now, my fine
+fellows, be merry and drink deep; for the shot I'll pay ere I go
+my way, though it cost me five pounds and more. So my lords and
+gentlemen all, spare not the wine, but fall to lustily."
+
+"Hear! hear!" shouted the butchers.
+
+"Now are you a right jolly soul," quoth the Sheriff, "but this
+feast is mine own. Howbeit you must have many a head of horned
+beasts, and many an acre of broad land, to spend from your purse
+so freely."
+
+"Aye, that have I," returned Robin, his eyes all a twinkle, "five
+hundred horned beasts have I and my brothers, and none of them
+have we been able to sell. That is why I have turned butcher.
+But I know not the trade, and would gladly sell the whole herd,
+an I could find a buyer."
+
+At this, the Sheriff's greed 'gan to rise. Since this fool WOULD
+be plucked, thought he, why should not he do the plucking?
+
+"Five hundred beasts, say you?" he queried sharply.
+
+"Five hundred and ten fat beasts by actual count, that I would
+sell for a just figure. Aye, to him who will pay me in right
+money, would I sell them for twenty pieces of gold. Is that too
+much to ask, lording?"
+
+Was there ever such an idiot butcher? thought the Sheriff; and he
+so far forgot his dignity as to nudge the Bishop in his fat ribs.
+
+"Nay, good fellow," quoth he chuckling, "I am always ready to
+help any in my shire. An you cannot find a buyer for your herd
+at this just figure, I will e'en buy them myself."
+
+At this generosity Robin was quite overcome, and fell to praising
+the Sheriff to the skies, and telling him that he should not have
+cause to forget the kindness.
+
+"Tut, tut," said the Sheriff, "'tis naught but a trade. Drive in
+your herd tomorrow to the market-place and you shall have money
+down."
+
+"Nay, excellence," said Robin, "that can I not easily do, for
+they are grazing in scattered fashion. But they are over near
+Gamewell, not more than a mile therefrom at most. Will you not
+come and choose your own beasts tomorrow?"
+
+"Aye, that I will," said the Sheriff, his cupidity casting his
+caution to the winds. "Tarry with me over night, and I will go
+with you in the morning."
+
+This was a poser for Robin, since he liked not the idea of
+staying over night at the Sheriff's house. He had hoped to
+appoint a meeting-place for the other, but now saw that this
+might excite doubt. He looked around at the company. By this
+time, you must know, the feast had progressed far, and the
+butchers were deep in their cups. The Sheriff and Robin had
+talked in a low voice, and my lord Bishop was almost asleep.
+
+"Agreed," said Robin presently, and the words were no sooner out
+of his mouth than the door opened and a serving-man entered
+bearing tray of mulled wine. At sight of the fellow's face,
+Robin gave an involuntary start of surprise which was instantly
+checked. The other also saw him, stood still a moment, and as if
+forgetting something turned about and left the hall.
+
+It was Little John.
+
+A dozen questions flashed across Robin's mind, and he could find
+answer for none of them. What was Little John doing in the
+Sheriff's house? Why had he not told the band? Was he true to
+them? Would he betray him?
+
+But these questions of distrust were dismissed from Robin's open
+mind as soon as they had entered. He knew that Little John was
+faithful and true.
+
+He recovered his spirits and began again upon a vein of foolish
+banter, for the amusement of the Sheriff and his guests, all
+being now merry with wine.
+
+"A song!" one of them shouted, and the cry was taken up round the
+table. Robin mounted his chair and trolled forth:
+
+"A lass and a butcher of Nottingham
+Agreed 'twixt them for to wed.
+Says he, 'I'll give ye the meat, fair dame,
+And ye will give me the bread."
+
+Then they joined in the chorus amid a pounding of cups upon the
+board:
+
+"With a hey and a ho
+And a hey nonny no,
+A butcher of Nottingham!"
+
+While the song was at its height, Little John reappeared, with
+other servants, and refilled the cups. He came up to Robin and,
+as if asking him if he would have more wine, said softly, "Meet
+me in the pantry to-night."
+
+Robin nodded, and sang loudly. The day was already far spent,
+and presently the company broke up with many hiccupy bows of the
+Sheriff and little notice of the drowsy Bishop.
+
+When the company was dispersed, the Sheriff bade a servant show
+Robin to his room, and promised to see him at breakfast the next
+day.
+
+Robin kept his word and met Little John that night, and the
+sheriff next day; but Little John has been doing so much in the
+meantime that he must be allowed a chapter to himself.
+
+So let us turn to another story that was sung of, in the ballads
+of olden time, and find out how Little John entered the Sheriff's
+service.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+HOW LITTLE JOHN ENTERED THE SHERIFF'S SERVICE
+
+List and hearken, gentlemen,
+All ye that now be here,
+Of Little John, that was Knight's-man,
+Good mirth ye now shall hear.
+
+
+It had come around another Fair day at Nottingham town, and folk
+crowded there by all the gates. Goods of many kinds were
+displayed in gaily colored booths, and at every cross-street a
+free show was in progress. Here and there, stages had been
+erected for the play at quarter-staff, a highly popular sport.
+
+There was a fellow, one Eric of Lincoln, who was thought to be
+the finest man with the staff for miles around. His feats were
+sung about in ballads through all the shire. A great boaster was
+he withal, and to-day he strutted about on one of these corner
+stages, and vaunted of his prowess, and offered to crack any
+man's crown for a shilling. Several had tried their skill with
+Eric, but he had soon sent them spinning in no gentle manner,
+amid the jeers and laughter of the onlookers.
+
+A beggar-man sat over against Eric's stage and grinned every time
+a pate was cracked. He was an uncouth fellow, ragged and dirty
+and unshaven. Eric caught sight of his leering face at one of
+his boasts--for there was a lull in the game, because no man else
+wanted to come within reach of Eric's blows. Eric, I say,
+noticed the beggar-man grinning at him rather impudently, and
+turned toward him sharply.
+
+"How now, you dirty villain!" quoth he, "mend your manners to
+your betters, or, by our Lady, I'll dust your rags for you."
+
+The beggar-man still grinned. "I am always ready to mend my
+manners to my betters," said he, "but I am afraid you cannot
+teach me any better than you can dust my jacket."
+
+"Come up! Come up!" roared the other, flourishing his staff.
+
+"That will I," said the beggar, getting up slowly and with
+difficulty. "It will pleasure me hugely to take a braggart down
+a notch, an some good man will lend me a stout quarter-staff."
+
+At this a score of idlers reached him their staves--being ready
+enough to see another man have his head cracked, even if they
+wished to save their own--and he took the stoutest and heaviest
+of all. He made a sorry enough figure as he climbed awkwardly
+upon the stage, but when he had gained it, he towered full half a
+head above the other, for all his awkwardness. Nathless, he held
+his stick so clumsily that the crowd laughed in great glee.
+
+Now each man took his place and looked the other up and down,
+watching warily for an opening. Only a moment stood they thus,
+for Eric, intent on teaching this rash beggar a lesson and
+sweeping him speedily off the stage, launched forth boldly and
+gave the other a sounding crack on the shoulder. The beggar
+danced about, and made as though he would drop his staff from
+very pain, while the crowd roared and Eric raised himself for
+another crushing blow. But just then the awkward beggar came to
+life. Straightening himself like a flash, he dealt Eric a
+back-handed blow, the like of which he had never before seen.
+Down went the boaster to the floor with a sounding thump, and the
+fickle people yelled and laughed themselves purple; for it was a
+new sight to see Eric of Lincoln eating dust.
+
+But he was up again almost as soon as he had fallen, and right
+quickly retreated to his own ringside to gather his wits and
+watch for an opening. He saw instantly that he had no easy
+antagonist, and he came in cautiously this time.
+
+And now those who stood around saw the merriest game of
+quarter-staff that was ever played inside the walls of Nottingham
+town. Both men were on their guard and fenced with fine skill,
+being well matched in prowess. Again and again did Eric seek to
+force an opening under the other's guard, and just as often were
+his blows parried. The beggar stood sturdily in his tracks
+contenting himself with beating off the attack. For a long time
+their blows met like the steady crackling of some huge forest
+fire, and Eric strove to be wary, for he now knew that the other
+had no mean wits or mettle. But he grew right mad at last, and
+began to send down blows so fierce and fast that you would have
+sworn a great hail-storm was pounding on the shingles over your
+head. Yet he never so much as entered the tall beggar's guard.
+
+Then at last the stranger saw his chance and changed his tune of
+fighting. With one upward stroke he sent Eric's staff whirling
+through the air. With another he tapped Eric on the head; and,
+with a third broad swing, ere the other could recover himself, he
+swept him clear off the stage, much as you would brush a fly off
+the window pane.
+
+Now the people danced and shouted and made so much ado that the
+shop-keepers left their stalls and others came running from every
+direction. The victory of the queer beggar made him immensely
+popular. Eric had been a great bully, and many had suffered
+defeat and insult at his hands. So the ragged stranger found
+money and food and drink everywhere at his disposal, and he
+feasted right comfortably till the afternoon.
+
+Then a long bow contest came on, and to it the beggar went with
+some of his new friends. It was held in the same arena that
+Robin had formerly entered; and again the Sheriff and lords and
+ladies graced the scene with their presence, while the people
+crowded to their places.
+
+When the archers had stepped forward, the herald rose and
+proclaimed the rules of the game: how that each man should shoot
+three shots, and to him who shot best the prize of a yoke of fat
+steers should belong. A dozen keen-eyed bowmen were there, and
+among them some of the best fellows in the Forester's and
+Sheriff's companies. Down at the end of the line towered the
+tall beggar-man, who must needs twang a bow-string with the best
+of them.
+
+The Sheriff noted his queer figure and asked: "Who is that ragged
+fellow?"
+
+"'Tis he that hath but now so soundly cracked the crown of Eric
+of Lincoln," was the reply.
+
+The shooting presently began, and the targets soon showed a fine
+reckoning. Last of all came the beggar's turn.
+
+"By your leave," he said loudly, "I'd like it well to shoot with
+any other man here present at a mark of my own placing." And he
+strode down the lists with a slender peeled sapling which he
+stuck upright in the ground. "There," said he, "is a right good
+mark. Will any man try it?"
+
+But not an archer would risk his reputation on so small a target.
+
+Whereupon the beggar drew his bow with seeming carelessness and
+split the wand with his shaft.
+
+"Long live the beggar!" yelled the bystanders.
+
+The Sheriff swore a full great oath, and said: "This man is the
+best archer that ever yet I saw." And he beckoned to him, and
+asked him: "How now, good fellow, what is your name, and in what
+country were you born?"
+
+"In Holderness I was born," the man replied; "men call me Reynold
+Greenleaf."
+
+"You are a sturdy fellow, Reynold Greenleaf, and deserve better
+apparel than that you wear at present. Will you enter my
+service? I will give you twenty marks a year, above your living,
+and three good suits of clothes."
+
+"Three good suits, say you? Then right gladly will I enter your
+service, for my back has been bare this many a long day."
+
+Then Reynold turned him about to the crowd and shouted: "Hark ye,
+good people, I have entered the Sheriff's service, and need not
+the yoke of steers for prize. So take them for yourselves, to
+feast withal."
+
+At this the crowd shouted more merrily than ever, and threw their
+caps high into the air. And none so popular a man had come to
+Nottingham town in many a long day as this same Reynold
+Greenleaf.
+
+Now you may have guessed, by this time, who Reynold Greenleaf
+really was; so I shall tell you that he was none other than
+Little John. And forth went he to the Sheriff's house, and
+entered his service. But it was a sorry day for the Sheriff when
+he got his new man. For Little John winked his shrewd eye and
+said softly to himself: "By my faith, I shall be the worst
+servant to him that ever yet had he!"
+
+Two days passed by. Little John, it must be confessed, did not
+make a good servant. He insisted upon eating the Sheriff's best
+bread and drinking his best wine, so that the steward waxed
+wroth. Nathless the Sheriff held him in high esteem, and made
+great talk of taking him along on the next hunting trip.
+
+It was now the day of the banquet to the butchers, about which we
+have already heard. The banquet hall, you must know, was not in
+the main house, but connected with it by a corridor. All the
+servants were bustling about making preparations for the feast,
+save only Little John, who must needs lie abed the greater part
+of the day. But he presented himself at last, when the dinner
+was half over; and being desirous of seeing the guests for
+himself he went into the hall with the other servants to pass the
+wine. First, however, I am afraid that some of the wine passed
+his own lips while he went down the corridor. When he entered
+the banqueting hall, whom should he see but Robin Hood himself.
+We can imagine the start of surprise felt by each of these bold
+fellows upon seeing the other in such strange company. But they
+kept their secrets, as we have seen, and arranged to meet each
+other that same night. Meanwhile, the proud Sheriff little knew
+that he harbored the two chief outlaws of the whole countryside
+beneath his roof.
+
+After the feast was over and night was beginning to advance,
+Little John felt faint of stomach and remembered him that he had
+eaten nothing all that day. Back went he to the pantry to see
+what eatables were laid by. But there, locking up the stores for
+the night, stood the fat steward.
+
+"Good Sir Steward," said Little John, "give me to dine, for it is
+long for Greenleaf to be fasting."
+
+The steward looked grimly at him and rattled the keys at his
+girdle.
+
+"Sirrah lie-abed," quoth he, "'tis late in the day to be talking
+of eating. Since you have waited thus long to be hungry, you can
+e'en take your appetite back to bed again."
+
+"Now by mine appetite, that will I not do," cried Little John.
+"Your own paunch of fat would be enough for any bear to sleep on
+through the winter. But my stomach craves food, and food it shall
+have!"
+
+Saying this he brushed past the steward and tried the door, but
+it was locked fast; whereat the fat steward chuckled and jangled
+his keys again.
+
+Then was Little John right mad, and he brought down his huge fist
+on the door-panel with a sledge-hammer blow that shivered an
+opening you could thrust your hand into. Little John stooped and
+peered through the hole to see what food lay within reach, when
+crack! went the steward's keys upon his crown, and the worthy
+danced around him playing a tattoo that made Little John's ears
+ring. At this he turned upon the steward and gave him such a rap
+that his back went nigh in two, and over went the fat fellow
+rolling on the floor.
+
+"Lie there," quoth Little John, "till ye find strength to go to
+bed. Meanwhile, I must be about my dinner." And he kicked open
+the buttery door without ceremony and brought to light a venison
+pasty and cold roast pheasant--goodly sights to a hungry man.
+Placing these down on a convenient shelf he fell to with right
+good will. So Little John ate and drank as much as he would.
+
+Now the Sheriff had in his kitchen a cook, a stout man and bold,
+who heard the rumpus and came in to see how the land lay. There
+sat Little John eating away for dear life, while the fat steward
+was rolled under the table like a bundle of rags.
+
+"I make my vow!" said the cook, "you are a shrewd hind to dwell
+thus in a household, and ask thus to dine." So saying he laid
+aside his spit and drew a good sword that hung at his side.
+
+"I make my vow!" said Little John, "you are a bold man and hardy
+to come thus between me and my meat. So defend yourself and see
+that you prove the better man." And he drew his own sword and
+crossed weapons with the cook.
+
+Then back and forth they clashed with sullen sound. The old
+ballad which tells of their fight says that they thought nothing
+for to flee, but stiffly for to stand. There they fought sore
+together, two miles away and more, but neither might the other
+harm for the space of a full hour.
+
+"I make my vow!" cried Little John, "you are the best swordsman
+that ever yet I saw. What say you to resting a space and eating
+and drinking good health with me. Then we may fall to again with
+the swords."
+
+"Agreed!" said the cook, who loved good fare as well as a good
+fight; and they both laid by their swords and fell to the food
+with hearty will. The venison pasty soon disappeared, and the
+roast pheasant flew at as lively a rate as ever the bird itself
+had sped. Then the warriors rested a space and patted their
+stomachs, and smiled across at each other like bosom friends; for
+a man when he as dined looks out pleasantly upon the world.
+
+"And now good Reynold Greenleaf," said the cook, "we may as well
+settle this brave fight we have in hand."
+
+"A true saying," rejoined the other, "but first tell me,
+friend--for I protest you are my friend henceforth--what is the
+score we have to settle?"
+
+"Naught save who can handle the sword best," said the cook. "By
+my troth I had thought to carve you like a capon ere now."
+
+"And I had long since thought to shave your ears," replied Little
+John. "This bout we can settle in right good time. But just now
+I and my master have need of you, and you can turn your stout
+blade to better service than that of the Sheriff."
+
+"Whose service would that be?" asked the cook.
+
+"Mine," answered a would-be butcher entering the room, "and I am
+Robin Hood."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+HOW THE SHERIFF LOST THREE GOOD SERVANTS AND FOUND THEM AGAIN
+
+"Make good cheer," said Robin Hood.
+"Sheriff! for charity!
+And for the love of Little John
+Thy life is granted thee!"
+
+
+The cook gasped in amazement. This Robin Hood! and under the
+Sheriff's very roof!
+
+"Now by my troth you are a brave fellow," he said. "I have heard
+great tales of your prowess, and the half has not been told. But
+who might this tall slasher be?"
+
+"Men do call me Little John, good fellow."
+
+"Then Little John, or Reynold Greenleaf, I like you well, on my
+honor as Much the miller's son; and you too, bold Robin Hood. An
+you take me, I will enter your service right gladly."
+
+"Spoken like a stout man!" said Robin, seizing him by the hand.
+"But I must back to my own bed, lest some sleepy warden stumble
+upon me, and I be forced to run him through. Lucky for you twain
+that wine flowed so freely in the house to-day; else the noise of
+your combat would have brought other onlookers besides Robin
+Hood. Now if ye would flee the house to-night, I will join you
+in the good greenwood to-morrow."
+
+"But, good master," said the cook, "you would not stay here over
+night! Verily, it is running your head into a noose. Come with
+us. The Sheriff has set strict watch on all the gates, since
+'tis Fair week, but I know the warden at the west gate and could
+bring us through safely. To-morrow you will be stayed." "Nay,
+that will I not," laughed Robin, "for I shall go through with no
+less escort than the Sheriff himself. Now do you, Little John,
+and do you, Much the miller's son, go right speedily. In the
+borders of the wood you will find my merry men. Tell them to
+kill two fine harts against to-morrow eve, for we shall have
+great company and lordly sport."
+
+And Robin left them as suddenly as he had come.
+
+"Comrade," then said Little John, "we may as well bid the
+Sheriff's roof farewell. But ere we go, it would seem a true
+pity to fail to take such of the Sheriff's silver plate as will
+cause us to remember him, and also grace our special feasts."
+
+"'Tis well said indeed," quoth the cook.
+
+Thereupon they got a great sack and filled it with silver plate
+from the shelves where it would not at once be missed, and they
+swung the sack between them, and away they went, out of the
+house, out of the town, and into the friendly shelter of Sherwood
+Forest.
+
+The next morning the servants were late astir in the Sheriff's
+house. The steward awoke from a heavy sleep, but his cracked
+head was still in such a whirl that he could not have sworn
+whether the Sheriff had ever owned so much as one silver
+dish. So the theft went undiscovered for the nonce.
+
+Robin Hood met the Sheriff at breakfast, when his host soon spoke
+of what was uppermost in his heart--the purchase of the fine herd
+of cattle near Gamewell. 'Twas clear that a vision of them,
+purchased for twenty paltry gold pieces, had been with him all
+through the night, in his dreams. And Robin again appeared such
+a silly fellow that the Sheriff saw no need of dissembling, but
+said that he was ready to start at once to look at the herd.
+
+Accordingly they set forth, Robin in his little butcher's cart,
+behind the lean mare, and the Sheriff mounted on a horse. Out of
+Nottingham town, through gates open wide, they proceeded, and
+took the hill road leading through Sherwood Forest. And as they
+went on and plunged deeper among the trees, Robin whistled
+blithely and sang snatches of tunes.
+
+"Why are you so gay, fellow?" said the Sheriff, for, sooth to
+say, the silence of the woods was making him uneasy.
+
+"I am whistling to keep my courage up," replied Robin.
+
+"What is there to fear, when you have the Sheriff of Nottingham
+beside you?" quoth the other pompously.
+
+Robin scratched his head.
+
+"They do say that Robin Hood and his men care little for the
+Sheriff," he said.
+
+"Pooh!" said the Sheriff. "I would not give THAT for their
+lives, if I could once lay hands upon them." And he snapped his
+fingers angrily. "But Robin Hood himself was on this very road
+the last time I came to town," said the other.
+
+The Sheriff started at the crackling of a twig under his horse's
+feet, and looked around.
+
+"Did you see him?" he asked.
+
+"Aye, that did I! He wanted the use of this mare and cart to
+drive to Nottingham. He said he would fain turn butcher. But
+see!"
+
+As he spoke he came to a turn in the road, and there before them
+stood a herd of the King's deer, feeding. Robin pointed to them
+and continued:
+
+"There is my herd of cattle, good Master Sheriff! How do you
+like them? Are they not fat and fair to see?"
+
+The Sheriff drew rein quickly. "Now fellow," quoth he, "I would
+I were well out of this forest, for I care not to see such herds
+as these, or such faces as yours. Choose your own way,
+therefore, whoever you be, and let me go mine."
+
+"Nay," laughed Robin, seizing the Sheriff's bridle, "I have been
+at too much pains to cultivate your company to forego it now so
+easily. Besides I wish you to meet some of my friends and dine
+with me, since you have so lately entertained me at your board."
+
+So saying he clapped a horn on his lips and winded three merry
+notes. The deer bounded away; and before the last of them was
+seen, there came a running and a rustling, and out from behind
+covert and tree came full twoscore of men, clad in Lincoln green,
+and bearing good yew bows in their hands and short swords at
+their sides. Up they ran to Robin Hood and doffed their caps to
+him respectfully, while the Sheriff sat still from very
+amazement.
+
+"Welcome to the greenwood!" said one of the leaders, bending the
+knee with mock reverence before the Sheriff.
+
+The Sheriff glared. It was Little John.
+
+"Woe the worth, Reynold Greenleaf," he said, "you have betrayed
+me!"
+
+"I make my vow," said Little John, "that you are to blame,
+master. I was misserved of my dinner, when I was at your house.
+But we shall set you down to a feast we hope you will enjoy."
+
+"Well spoken, Little John," said Robin Hood. "Take you his
+bridle and let us do honor to the guest who has come to feast
+with us."
+
+Then turning abruptly the whole company plunged into the heart of
+the forest.
+
+After twisting and turning till the Sheriff's bewildered head sat
+dizzily upon his shoulders, the greenwood men passed through a
+narrow alley amid the trees which led to a goodly open space
+flanked by wide-spreading oaks. Under the largest of these a
+pleasant fire was crackling, and near it two fine harts lay ready
+for cooking. Around the blaze were gathered another company of
+yeomen quite as large as that which came with Robin Hood. Up
+sprang they as the latter advanced and saluted their leader with
+deference, but with hearty gladness to see him back again.
+
+That merry wag Will Stutely was in command; and when he saw the
+palefaced Sheriff being led in like any culprit, he took his
+cloak and laid it humbly upon the ground and besought the Sheriff
+to alight upon it, as the ground of Sherwood was unused to such
+dignitaries.
+
+"Bestir yourselves, good fellows!" cried Robin Hood; "and while
+our new cook, whom I see with us, is preparing a feast worthy of
+our high guest, let us have a few games to do him honor!"
+
+Then while the whole glade was filled with the savory smell of
+roasting venison and fat capons, and brown pasties warmed beside
+the blaze, and mulled wine sent forth a cordial fragrance, Robin
+Hood placed the Sheriff upon a knoll beneath the largest oak and
+sat himself down by him.
+
+First stepped forward several pairs of men armed with the
+quarter-staff, the widow's sons among them, and so skilfully did
+they thrust and parry and beat down guards, that the Sheriff, who
+loved a good game as well as any man, clapped his hands,
+forgetting where he was, and shouted, "Well struck! well struck!
+Never have I seen such blows at all the Fairs of Nottingham!"
+
+Then the best archers of the band set up a small wand at
+eightscore paces distant, and thereon they affixed a wreath of
+green. And the archers began to shoot; and he who shot not
+through the garland without disturbing its leaves and tendrils
+was fain to submit to a good sound buffet from Little John. But
+right cunning was the shooting, for the men had spent a certain
+time in daily practice, and many were the shafts which sped
+daintily through the circle. Nathless now and again some
+luckless fellow would shoot awry and would be sent winding from a
+long arm blow from the tall lieutenant while the glade roared
+with laughter. And none more hearty a guffaw was given than came
+from the Sheriff's own throat, for the spirit of the greenwood
+was upon him.
+
+But presently his high mood was dashed. The company sat down to
+meat, and the guest was treated to two more disturbing surprise.
+The cook came forward to serve the food, when the Sheriff beheld
+in him his own former servant, and one whom he supposed was at
+the moment in the scullery at Nottingham.
+
+Much the miller's son grinned by way of answer to the Sheriff's
+amazement, and served the plates, and placed them before the
+party. Then did the Sheriff gasp and fairly choke with rage.
+The service was his own silverware from the Mansion House!
+
+"You rascals! you rogues!" he spluttered. "Was it not enough to
+defraud me out of three of my servants, that you must also rob me
+of my best silver service? Nay, by my life, but I will not touch
+your food!"
+
+But Robin Hood bade him pause.
+
+"Gramercy!" quoth he, "servants come and go, in merry England,
+and so does service. The platters are but used to do your
+worship honor. And as for your life, it is forfeit to your
+eagerness to buy my herd of cattle so cheaply. Now sit you down
+again and make good cheer, Sheriff, for charity! And for the
+love of Little John your life is granted you!"
+
+So the Sheriff sat him down again, with the best face he could
+assume, and soon the cook's viands were disappearing down his
+gullet as rapidly as the next man's. And they feasted royally
+and clinked each other's cups until the sun had ceased to print
+the pattern of the leaves upon the forest carpet.
+
+Then the Sheriff arose and said: "I thank you, Robin Hood,
+one-time butcher, and you, Little John, one-time beggar, and you,
+Much, one-time cook, and all you good men who have entertained me
+in Sherwood so well. Promises I make not as to how I shall
+requite you when next you come to Nottingham, for I am in the
+King's service. So for the present the score rests with you.
+But the shadows grow long and I must away, if you will be pleased
+to pilot me to the road."
+
+Then Robin Hood and all his men arose and drank the Sheriff's
+health, and Robin said: "If you must needs go at once we will not
+detain you--except that you have forgotten two things."
+
+"What may they be?" asked the Sheriff, while his heart sank
+within him.
+
+"You forget that you came with me to-day to buy a herd of horned
+beasts; likewise that he who dines at the Greenwood Inn must pay
+the landlord."
+
+The Sheriff fidgeted like a small boy who has forgotten his
+lesson.
+
+"Nay, I have but a small sum with me," he began apologetically.
+
+"What is that sum, gossip?" questioned Little John, "for my own
+wage should also come out of it!"
+
+"And mine!" said Much.
+
+"And mine!" smiled Robin.
+
+The Sheriff caught his breath. "By my troth, are all these
+silver dishes worth anything?"
+
+The outlaws roared heartily at this.
+
+"I'll tell you what it is, worship," said Robin, "we three
+rascally servants will compound our back wages for those plates.
+And we will keep the herd of cattle free for our own use--and the
+King's. But this little tavern bill should be settled! Now,
+what sum have you about you?"
+
+"I have only those twenty pieces of gold, and twenty others,"
+said the Sheriff: and well it was that he told the truth for
+once, for Robin said:
+
+"Count it, Little John."
+
+Little John turned the Sheriff's wallet inside out. "'Tis true
+enough," he said.
+
+"Then you shall pay no more than twenty pieces for your
+entertainment, excellence," decreed Robin. "Speak I soothly, men
+of greenwood?"
+
+"Good!" echoed the others.
+
+"The Sheriff should swear by his patron saint that he will not
+molest us," said Will Stutely; and his addition was carried
+unanimously.
+
+"So be it, then," cried Little John, approaching the sheriff.
+"Now swear by your life and your patron saint--"
+
+"I will swear it by St. George, who is patron of us all," said
+the Sheriff vigorously, "that I will never disturb or distress
+the outlaws in Sherwood."
+
+"But let me catch any of you OUT of Sherwood!" thought he to
+himself.
+
+Then the twenty pieces of gold were paid over, and the Sheriff
+once more prepared to depart.
+
+"Never had we so worshipful a guest before," said Robin; "and as
+the new moon is beginning to silver the leaves, I shall bear you
+company myself for part of the way. 'Twas I who brought you into
+the wood."
+
+"Nay, I protest against your going needlessly far," said Sheriff.
+
+"But I protest that I am loath to lose your company," replied
+Robin. "The next time I may not be so pleased."
+
+And he took the Sheriff's horse by the bridle rein, and led him
+through the lane and by many a thicket till the main road was
+reached.
+
+"Now fare you well, good Sheriff," he said, "and when next you
+think to despoil a poor prodigal, remember the herd you would
+have bought over against Gamewell. And when next you employ a
+servant, make certain that he is not employing you."
+
+So saying he smote the nag's haunch, and off went the Sheriff
+upon the road to Nottingham.
+
+And that is how--you will find from many ballads that came to be
+sung at the Sheriff's expense, and which are known even to the
+present day--that, I say, is how the Sheriff lost three good
+servants and found them again.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET WILL SCARLET
+
+The youngster was clothed in scarlet red
+In scarlet fine and gay;
+And he did frisk it o'er the plain,
+And chanted a roundelay.
+
+
+One fine morning, soon after the proud Sheriff had been brought
+to grief, Robin Hood and Little John went strolling down a path
+through the wood. It was not far from the foot--bridge where
+they had fought their memorable battle; and by common impulse
+they directed their steps to the brook to quench their thirst and
+rest them in the cool bushes. The morning gave promise of a hot
+day. The road even by the brook was dusty. So the cooling
+stream was very pleasing and grateful to their senses.
+
+On each side of them, beyond the dusty highway, stretched out
+broad fields of tender young corn. On the yon side of the fields
+uprose the sturdy oaks and beeches and ashes of the forest; while
+at their feet modest violets peeped out shyly and greeted the
+loiterers with an odor which made the heart glad. Over on the
+far side of the brook in a tiny bay floated three lily-pads; and
+from amid some clover blossoms on the bank an industrious bee
+rose with the hum of busy contentment. It was a day so brimful
+of quiet joy that the two friends lay flat on their backs gazing
+up at the scurrying clouds, and neither caring to break the
+silence.
+
+Presently they heard some one coming up the road whistling gaily,
+as though he owned the whole world and 'twas but made to whistle
+in. Anon he chanted a roundelay with a merry note.
+
+"By my troth, a gay bird!" quoth Robin, raising up on his elbow.
+"Let us lie still, and trust that his purse is not as light as
+his heart."
+
+So they lay still, and in a minute more up came a smart stranger
+dressed in scarlet and silk and wearing a jaunty hat with a
+curling cock feather in it. His whole costume was of scarlet,
+from the feather to the silk hosen on his legs. A goodly sword
+hung at his side, its scabbard all embossed with tilting knights
+and weeping ladies. His hair was long and yellow and hung
+clustering about his shoulders, for all the world like a
+schoolgirl's; and he bore himself with as mincing a gait as the
+pertest of them.
+
+Little John clucked his teeth drolly at this sight. "By my
+troth, a gay bird!" he said echoing the other's words--then
+added, "But not so bad a build for all his prettiness. Look you,
+those calves and thighs are well rounded and straight. The arms,
+for all that gold-wrought cloak, hang stoutly from full
+shoulders. I warrant you the fop can use his dainty sword right
+well on occasion."
+
+"Nay," retorted Robin, "he is naught but a ladies' man from
+court. My long-bow 'gainst a plugged shilling that he would run
+and bellow lustily at sight of a quarter-staff. Stay you behind
+this bush and I will soon get some rare sport out of him. Belike
+his silk purse may contain more pennies than the law allows to
+one man in Sherwood or Barnesdale."
+
+So saying Robin Hood stepped forth briskly from the covert and
+planted himself in the way of the scarlet stranger. The latter
+had walked so slowly that he was scarce come to their
+resting-place; and now on beholding Robin he neither slackened
+nor quickened his pace but sauntered idly straight ahead, looking
+to the right and to the left, with the finest air in the world,
+but never once at Robin.
+
+"Hold!" quoth the outlaw. "What mean ye by running thus over a
+wayfarer, rough shod?"
+
+"Wherefore should I hold, good fellow?" said the stranger in a
+smooth voice, and looking at Robin for the first time.
+
+"Because I bid you to," replied Robin.
+
+"And who may you be?" asked the other as coolly as you please.
+
+"What my name is matters not," said Robin; "but know that I am a
+public tax-gatherer and equalizer of shillings. If your purse
+have more than a just number of shillings or pence, I must e'en
+lighten it somewhat; for there are many worthy people round about
+these borders who have less than the just amount. Wherefore,
+sweet gentleman, I pray you hand over your purse without more
+ado, that I may judge of its weight in proper fashion."
+
+The other smiled as sweetly as though a lady were paying him a
+compliment.
+
+"You are a droll fellow," he said calmly. "Your speech amuses me
+mightily. Pray continue, if you have not done, for I am in no
+hurry this morning."
+
+"I have said all with my tongue that is needful," retorted Robin,
+beginning to grow red under the collar. "Nathless, I have other
+arguments which may not be so pleasing to your dainty skin.
+Prithee, stand and deliver. I promise to deal fairly with the
+purse."
+
+"Alack-a-day!" said the stranger with a little shrug of his
+shoulders; "I am deeply sorrowful that I cannot show my purse to
+every rough lout that asks to see it. But I really could not, as
+I have further need of it myself and every farthing it contains.
+Wherefore, pray stand aside."
+
+"Nay that will I not! and 'twill go the harder with you if you do
+not yield at once."
+
+"Good fellow," said the other gently, "have I not heard all your
+speech with patience? Now that is all I promised to do. My
+conscience is salved and I must go on my way.
+To-rol-o-rol-e-loo!" he caroled, making as though to depart.
+
+"Hold, I say!" quoth Robin hotly; for he knew how Little John
+must be chuckling at this from behind the bushes. "Hold I say,
+else I shall have to bloody those fair locks of yours!" And he
+swung his quarter-staff threateningly.
+
+"Alas!" moaned the stranger shaking his head. "The pity of it
+all! Now I shall have to run this fellow through with my sword!
+And I hoped to be a peaceable man henceforth!" And sighing deeply
+he drew his shining blade and stood on guard.
+
+"Put by your weapon," said Robin. "It is too pretty a piece of
+steel to get cracked with common oak cudgel; and that is what
+would happen on the first pass I made at you. Get you a stick
+like mine out of yon undergrowth, and we will fight fairly, man
+to man."
+
+The stranger thought a moment with his usual slowness, and eyed
+Robin from head to foot. Then he unbuckled his scabbard, laid it
+and the sword aside, and walked deliberately over to the oak
+thicket. Choosing from among the shoots and saplings he found a
+stout little tree to his liking, when he laid hold of it, without
+stopping to cut it, and gave a tug. Up it came root and all, as
+though it were a stalk of corn, and the stranger walked back
+trimming it as quietly as though pulling up trees were the
+easiest thing in the world.
+
+Little John from his hiding-place saw the feat, and could hardly
+restrain a long whistle. "By our Lady!" he muttered to himself,
+"I would not be in Master Robin's boots!"
+
+Whatever Robin thought upon seeing the stranger's strength, he
+uttered not a word and budged not an inch. He only put his oak
+staff at parry as the other took his stand.
+
+There was a threefold surprise that day, by the brookside. The
+stranger and Robin and Little John in the bushes all found a
+combat that upset all reckoning. The stranger for all his easy
+strength and cool nerve found an antagonist who met his blows
+with the skill of a woodman. Robin found the stranger as hard to
+hit as though fenced in by an oak hedge. While Little John
+rolled over and over in silent joy.
+
+Back and forth swayed the fighters, their cudgels pounding this
+way and that, knocking off splinters and bark, and threatening
+direst damage to bone and muscle and skin. Back and forth they
+pranced kicking up a cloud of dust and gasping for fresh air.
+From a little way off you would have vowed that these two men
+were trying to put out a fire, so thickly hung the cloud of
+battle over them. Thrice did Robin smite the scarlet man--with
+such blows that a less stout fellow must have bowled over. Only
+twice did the scarlet man smite Robin, but the second blow was
+like to finish him. The first had been delivered over the
+knuckles, and though 'twas a glancing stroke it well nigh broke
+Robin's fingers, so that he could not easily raise his staff
+again. And while he was dancing about in pain and muttering a
+dust-covered oath, the other's staff came swinging through the
+cloud at one side--zip!--and struck him under the arm. Down went
+Robin as though he were a nine-pin--flat down into the dust of
+the road. But despite the pain he was bounding up again like an
+India rubber man to renew the attack, when Little John
+interfered.
+
+"Hold!" said he, bursting out of the bushes and seizing the
+stranger's weapon. "Hold, I say!"
+
+"Nay," retorted the stranger quietly, "I was not offering to
+smite him while he was down. But if there be a whole nest of you
+hatching here by the waterside, cluck out the other chicks and
+I'll make shift to fight them all."
+
+"Not for all the deer in Sherwood!" cried Robin. "You are a good
+fellow and a gentleman. I'll fight no more with you, for verily
+I feel sore in wrist and body. Nor shall any of mine molest you
+henceforth."
+
+Sooth to say, Robin did not look in good fighting trim. His
+clothes were coated with dirt, one of his hosen had slipped
+halfway down from his knee, the sleeve of his jerkin was split,
+and his face was streaked with sweat and dirt. Little John eyed
+him drolly.
+
+"How now, good master," quoth he, "the sport you were to kick up
+has left you in sorry plight. Let me dust your coat for you."
+
+"Marry, it has been dusted enough already," replied Robin; "and I
+now believe the Scripture saying that all men are but dust, for
+it has sifted me through and through and lined my gullet an inch
+deep. By your leave"--and he went to the brookside and drank
+deep and laved his face and hands.
+
+All this while the stranger had been eyeing Robin attentively and
+listening to his voice as though striving to recall it.
+
+"If I mistake not," he said slowly at last, "you are that famous
+outlaw, Robin Hood of Barnesdale."
+
+"You say right," replied Robin; "but my fame has been tumbling
+sadly about in the dust to-day."
+
+"Now why did I not know you at once?" continued the stranger.
+"This battle need not have happened, for I came abroad to find
+you to-day, and thought to have remembered your face and speech.
+Know you not me, Rob, my lad? Hast ever been to Gamewell Lodge?"
+
+"Ha! Will Gamewell! my dear old chum, Will Gamewell!" shouted
+Robin, throwing his arms about the other in sheer affection.
+"What an ass I was not to recognize you! But it has been years
+since we parted, and your gentle schooling has polished you off
+mightily."
+
+Will embraced his cousin no less heartily.
+
+"We are quits on not knowing kinsmen," he said, "for you have
+changed and strengthened much from the stripling with whom I used
+to run foot races in old Sherwood."
+
+"But why seek you me?" asked Robin. "You know I am an outlaw and
+dangerous company. And how left you mine uncle? and have you
+heard aught of late of--of Maid Marian?"
+
+"Your last question first," answered Will, laughing, "for I
+perceive that it lies nearest your heart. I saw Maid Marian not
+many weeks after the great shooting at Nottingham, when you won
+her the golden arrow. She prizes the bauble among her dearest
+possessions, though it has made her an enemy in the Sheriff's
+proud daughter. Maid Marian bade me tell you, if I ever saw you,
+that she must return to Queen Eleanor's court, but she could
+never forget the happy days in the greenwood. As for the old
+Squire, he is still hale and hearty, though rheumatic withal. He
+speaks of you as a sad young dog, but for all that is secretly
+proud of your skill at the bow and of the way you are pestering
+the Sheriff, whom he likes not. 'Twas for my father's sake that
+I am now in the open, an outlaw like yourself. He has had a
+steward, a surly fellow enough, who, while I was away at school,
+boot-licked his way to favor until he lorded it over the whole
+house. Then he grew right saucy and impudent, but my father
+minded it not, deeming the fellow indispensable in managing the
+estate. But when I came back it irked me sorely to see the
+fellow strut about as though he owned the place. He was sly
+enough with me at first, and would brow-beat the Squire only
+while I was out of earshot. It chanced one day, however, that I
+heard loud voices through an open window and paused to hearken.
+That vile servant called my father 'a meddling old fool,' 'Fool
+and meddler art thou thyself, varlet,' I shouted, springing
+through the window, 'THAT for thy impudence!' and in my heat I
+smote him a blow mightier than I intended, for I have some
+strength in mine arm. The fellow rolled over and never breathed
+afterwards, I think I broke his neck or something the like. Then
+I knew that the Sheriff would use this as a pretext to hound my
+father, if I tarried. So I bade the Squire farewell and told him
+I would seek you in Sherwood."
+
+"Now by my halidom!" said Robin Hood; "for a man escaping the
+law, you took it about as coolly as one could wish. To see you
+come tripping along decked out in all your gay plumage and
+trolling forth a roundelay, one would think you had not a care in
+all the world. Indeed I remarked to Little John here that I
+hoped your purse was not as light as your heart."
+
+"Belike you meant HEAD," laughed Will; "and is this Little John
+the Great? Shake hands with me, an you will, and promise me to
+cross a staff with me in friendly bout some day in the forest!"
+
+"That will I!" quoth Little John heartily. "Here's my hand on
+it. What is your last name again, say you?"
+
+"'Tis to be changed," interposed Robin; "then shall the men armed
+with warrants go hang for all of us. Let me bethink myself.
+Ah!--I have it! In scarlet he came to us, and that shall be his
+name henceforth. Welcome to the greenwood, Will Scarlet!"
+
+"Aye, welcome, Will Scarlet!" said Little John; and they all
+clasped hands again and swore to be true each to the other and to
+Robin Hood's men in Sherwood Forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET FRIAR TUCK
+
+The friar took Robin Hood on his back,
+Deep water he did bestride,
+And spake neither good word nor bad,
+Till he came at the other side.
+
+
+In summer time when leaves grow green, and flowers are fresh and
+gay, Robin Hood and his merry men were all disposed to play.
+Thus runs a quaint old ballad which begins the next adventure.
+Then some would leap and some would run and some try archery and
+some ply the quarter-staff and some fall to with the good broad
+sword. Some again would try a round at buffet and fisticuff; and
+thus by every variety of sport and exercise they perfected
+themselves in skill and made the band and its prowess well known
+throughout all England.
+
+It had been a custom of Robin Hood's to pick out the best men in
+all the countryside. Whenever he heard of one more than usually
+skilled in any feat of arms he would seek the man and test him in
+personal encounter--which did not always end happily for Robin.
+And when he had found a man to his liking he offered him service
+with the bold fellows of Sherwood Forest.
+
+Thus it came about that one day after a practice at shooting, in
+which Little John struck down a hart at five hundred feet
+distance, Robin Hood was fain to boast.
+
+"God's blessing on your heart!" he cried, clapping the burly
+fellow on the shoulder; "I would travel an hundred miles to find
+one who could match you!"
+
+At this Will Scarlet laughed full roundly.
+
+"There lives a curtall friar in Fountain's Abbey--Tuck, by
+name--who can beat both him and you," he said.
+
+Robin pricked up his ears at this free speech.
+
+"By our Lady," he said, "I'll neither eat nor drink till I see
+this same friar."
+
+And with his usual impetuosity he at once set about arming
+himself for the adventure. On his head he placed a cap of steel.
+Underneath his Lincoln green he wore a coat of chain metal. Then
+with sword and buckler girded at his side he made a goodly show.
+But he also took with him his stout yew bow and a sheaf of chosen
+arrows.
+
+So he set forth upon his way with blithe heart; for it was a day
+when the whole face of the earth seemed glad and rejoicing in
+pulsing life. Steadily he pressed forward by winding ways till
+he came to a green broad pasture land at whose edge flowed a
+stream dipping in and out among the willows and rushes on the
+banks. A pleasant stream it was, but it flowed calmly as though
+of some depth in the middle. Robin did not fancy getting his
+feet wet, or his fine suit of mail rusted, so he paused on the
+hither bank to rest and take his bearings.
+
+As he sat down quietly under the shade of a drooping willow he
+heard snatches of a jovial song floating to him from the farther
+side; then came a sound of two men's voices arguing. One was
+upholding the merits of hasty pudding and the other stood out
+stoutly for meat pie, "especially--quoth this one--"when flavored
+with young onions!"
+
+"Gramercy!" muttered Robin to himself, "that is a tantalizing
+speech to a hungry man! But, odds bodikins! did ever two men
+talk more alike than those two fellows yonder!"
+
+In truth Robin could well marvel at the speech, for the voices
+were curiously alike.
+
+Presently the willows parted on the other bank, and Robin could
+hardly forebear laughing out right. His mystery was explained.
+It was not two men who had done all this singing and talking, but
+one--and that one a stout curtall friar who wore a long cloak
+over his portly frame, tied with a cord in the middle. On his
+head was a knight's helmet, and in his hand was a no more warlike
+weapon than a huge pasty pie, with which he sat down by the
+water's edge. His twofold argument was finished. The meat pie
+had triumphed; and no wonder! for it was the present witness,
+soon to give its own testimony.
+
+But first the friar took off his helmet to cool his head, and a
+droll picture he made. His head was as round as an apple, and
+eke as smooth in spots. A fringe of close curling black hair
+grew round the base of his skull, but his crown was bare and
+shiny as an egg. His cheeks also were smooth and red and shiny;
+and his little gray eyes danced about with the funniest air
+imaginable. You would not have blamed Robin Hood for wanting to
+laugh, had you heard this serious two-faced talk and then seen
+this jovial one-faced man. Good humor and fat living stood out
+all over him; yet for all that he looked stout enough and able to
+take care of himself with any man. His short neck was thick like
+that of a Berkshire bull; his shoulders were set far back, and
+his arms sprouted therefrom like two oak limbs. As he sat him
+down, the cloak fell apart disclosing a sword and buckler as
+stout as Robin's own.
+
+Nathless, Robin was not dismayed at sight of the weapons.
+Instead, his heart fell within him when he saw the meat pie which
+was now in fair way to be devoured before his very eyes; for the
+friar lost no time in thrusting one hand deep into the pie, while
+he crossed himself with the other.
+
+Thereupon Robin seized his bow and fitted a shaft.
+
+"Hey, friar!" he sang out, "carry me over the water, or else I
+cannot answer for your safety."
+
+The other started at the unexpected greeting, and laid his hand
+upon his sword. Then he looked up and beheld Robin's arrow
+pointing full upon him.
+
+"Put down your bow, fellow," he shouted back, "and I will bring
+you over the brook. 'Tis our duty in life to help each other,
+and your keen shaft shows me that you are a man worthy of some
+attention." So the friar knight got him up gravely, though his
+eyes twinkled with a cunning light, and laid aside his beloved
+pie and his cloak and his sword and his buckler, and waded across
+the stream with waddling dignity. Then he took Robin Hood upon
+his back and spoke neither good word nor bad till he came to the
+other side.
+
+Lightly leaped Robin off his back, and said, "I am much beholden
+to you, good father."
+
+"Beholden, say you!" rejoined the other drawing his sword; "then
+by my faith you shall e'en repay your score. Now mine own
+affairs, which are of a spiritual kind and much more important
+than yours which are carnal, lie on the other side of this
+stream. I see that you are a likely man and one, moreover, who
+would not refuse to serve the church. I must therefore pray of
+you that whatsoever I have done unto you, you will do also unto
+me. In short, my son, you must e'en carry me back again."
+
+Courteously enough was this said; but so suddenly had the friar
+drawn his sword that Robin had no time to unsling his bow from
+his back, whither he had placed it to avoid getting it wet, or to
+unfasten his scabbard. So he was fain to temporize.
+
+"Nay, good father, but I shall get my feet wet," he commenced.
+
+"Are your feet any better than mine?" retorted the other. "I
+fear me now that I have already wetted myself so sadly as to lay
+in a store of rheumatic pains by way of penance."
+
+"I am not so strong as you," continued Robin; "that helmet and
+sword and buckler would be my undoing on the uncertain footing
+amidstream, to say nothing of your holy flesh and bones."
+
+"Then I will lighten up, somewhat," replied the other calmly.
+"Promise to carry me across and I will lay aside my war gear."
+
+"Agreed," said Robin; and the friar thereupon stripped himself;
+and Robin bent his stout back and took him up even as he had
+promised.
+
+Now the stones at the bottom of the stream were round and
+slippery, and the current swept along strongly, waist-deep, in
+the middle. More-over Robin had a heavier load than the other
+had borne, nor did he know the ford. So he went stumbling along
+now stepping into a deep hole, now stumbling over a boulder in a
+manner that threatened to unseat his rider or plunge them both
+clear under current. But the fat friar hung on and dug his heels
+into his steed's ribs in as gallant manner as if he were riding
+in a tournament; while as for poor Robin the sweat ran down him
+in torrents and he gasped like the winded horse he was. But at
+last he managed to stagger out on the bank and deposit his
+unwieldy load.
+
+No sooner had he set the friar down than he seized his own sword.
+
+"Now, holy friar," quoth he, panting and wiping the sweat from
+his brow, "what say the Scriptures that you quote so glibly?--Be
+not weary of well doing. You must carry me back again or I swear
+that I will make a cheese-cloth out of your jacket!"
+
+The friar's gray eyes once more twinkled with a cunning gleam
+that boded no good to Robin; but his voice was as calm and
+courteous as ever.
+
+"Your wits are keen, my son," he said; "and I see that the waters
+of the stream have not quenched your spirit. Once more will I
+bend my back to the oppressor and carry the weight of the
+haughty."
+
+So Robin mounted again in high glee, and carried his sword in his
+hand, and went prepared to tarry upon the other side. But while
+he was bethinking himself what great words to use, when he should
+arrive thither, he felt himself slipping from the friar's broad
+back. He clutched frantically to save himself but had too round
+a surface to grasp, besides being hampered by his weapon. So
+down went he with a loud splash into the middle of the stream,
+where the crafty friar had conveyed him.
+
+"There!" quoth the holy man; "choose you, choose you, my fine
+fellow, whether you will sink or swim!" And he gained his own
+bank without more ado, while Robin thrashed and spluttered about
+until he made shift to grasp a willow wand and thus haul himself
+ashore on the other side.
+
+Then Robin's rage waxed furious, despite his wetting, and he took
+his bow and his arrows and let fly one shaft after another at the
+worthy friar. But they rattled harmlessly off his steel buckler,
+while he laughed and minded them no more than if they had been
+hail-stones.
+
+"Shoot on, shoot on, good fellow," he sang out; "shoot as you
+have begun; if you shoot here a summer's day, your mark I will
+not shun!"
+
+So Robin shot, and passing well, till all his arrows were gone,
+when from very rage he began to revile him.
+
+"You bloody villain!" shouted he, "You psalm-singing hypocrite!
+You reviler of good hasty pudding! Come but within reach of my
+sword arm, and, friar or no friar, I'll shave your tonsure closer
+than ever bald-pated monk was shaven before!"
+
+"Soft you and fair!" said the friar unconcernedly; "hard words
+are cheap, and you may need your wind presently. An you would
+like a bout with swords, meet me halfway i' the stream."
+
+And with this speech the friar waded into the brook, sword in
+hand, where he was met halfway by the impetuous outlaw.
+
+Thereupon began a fierce and mighty battle. Up and down, in and
+out, back and forth they fought. The swords flashed in the rays
+of the declining sun and then met with a clash that would have
+shivered less sturdy weapons or disarmed less sturdy wielders.
+Many a smart blow was landed, but each perceived that the other
+wore an undercoat of linked mail which might not be pierced.
+Nathless, their ribs ached at the force of the blows. Once and
+again they paused by mutual consent and caught breath and looked
+hard each at the other; for never had either met so stout a
+fellow.
+
+Finally in a furious onset of lunge and parry Robin's foot
+stepped on a rolling stone, and he went down upon his knees. But
+his antagonist would not take this advantage: he paused until
+Robin should get upon his feet.
+
+"Now by our Lady!" cried the outlaw, using his favorite oath,
+"you are the fairest swordsman that I have met in many a long
+day. I would beg a boon of you."
+
+"What is it?" said the other.
+
+"Give me leave to set my horn to my mouth and blow three blasts
+thereon."
+
+"That will I do," said the curtall friar, "blow till your breath
+fails, an it please you."
+
+Then, says the old ballad, Robin Hood set his horn to mouth and
+blew mighty blasts; and half a hundred yeomen, bows bent, came
+raking over the lee.
+
+"Whose men are these," said the friar, "that come so hastily?"
+
+"These men are mine," said Robin Hood, feeling that his time to
+laugh was come at last.
+
+Then said the friar in his turn, "A boon, a boon, the like I gave
+to you. Give me leave to set my fist to my mouth and whistle
+three blasts thereon."
+
+"That will I do," said Robin, "or else I were lacking in
+courtesy."
+
+The friar set his fist to his mouth and put the horn to shame by
+the piercing whistles he blew; whereupon half a hundred great
+dogs came running and jumping so swiftly that they had reached
+their bank as soon as Robin Hood's men had reached his side.
+
+Then followed a rare foolish conflict. Stutely, Much, Little
+John and the other outlaws began sending their arrows whizzing
+toward the opposite bank; but the dogs, which were taught of the
+friar, dodged the missiles cleverly and ran and fetched them back
+again, just as the dogs of to-day catch sticks.
+
+"I have never seen the like of this in my days!" cried Little
+John, amazed.
+
+"'Tis rank sorcery and witchcraft."
+
+"Take off your dogs, Friar Tuck!" shouted Will Scarlet, who had
+but then run up, and who now stood laughing heartily at the
+scene.
+
+"Friar Tuck!" exclaimed Robin, astounded. "Are you Friar Tuck?
+Then am I your friend, for you are he I came to seek."
+
+"I am but a poor anchorite, a curtall friar," said the other,
+whistling to his pack, "by name Friar Tuck of Fountain's Dale.
+For seven years have I tended the Abbey here, preached o'
+Sundays, and married and christened and buried folk--and fought
+too, if need were; and if it smacks not too much of boasting, I
+have not yet met the knight or trooper or yeoman that I would
+yield before. But yours is a stout blade. I would fain know
+you."
+
+"'Tis Robin Hood, the outlaw, who has been assisting you at this
+christening," said Will Scarlet glancing roguishly at the two
+opponents' dripping garments. And at this sally the whole bad
+burst into a shout of laughter, in which Robin and Friar Tuck
+joined.
+
+"Robin Hood!" cried the good friar presently, holding his sides;
+"are you indeed that famous yeoman? Then I like you well; and
+had I known you earlier, would have both carried you across and
+shared my pasty pie with you."
+
+"To speak soothly," replied Robin gaily, "'twas that same pie
+that led me to be rude. Now, therefore, bring it and your dogs
+and repair with us to the greenwood. We have need of you--with
+this message came I to-day to seek you. We will build you a
+hermitage in Sherwood Forest, and you shall keep us from evil
+ways. Will you not join our band?"
+
+"Marry, that will I!" cried Friar Tuck jovially. "Once more will
+I cross this much beforded stream, and go with you to the good
+greenwood!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+HOW ALLAN-A-DALE'S WOOING WAS PROSPERED
+
+"What is thy name?" then said Robin Hood,
+"Come tell me, without any fail"
+"By the faith o' my body," then said the young man,
+"My name it is Allan-a-Dale."
+
+
+Friar Tuck and Much the miller's son soon became right good
+friends over the steaming stew they jointly prepared for the
+merry men that evening. Tuck was mightily pleased when he found
+a man in the forest who could make pasties and who had cooked for
+no less person than the High Sheriff himself. While Much
+marveled at the friar's knowledge of herbs and simples and
+woodland things which savored a stew greatly. So they gabbled
+together like two old gossips and, between them, made such a
+tasty mess that Robin Hood and his stout followers were like
+never to leave off eating. And the friar said grace too, with
+great unction, over the food; and Robin said Amen! and that
+henceforth they were always to have mass of Sundays.
+
+So Robin walked forth into the wood that evening with his stomach
+full and his heart, therefore, in great contentment and love for
+other men. He did not stop the first passer-by, as his manner
+often was, and desire a fight. Instead, he stepped behind a
+tree, when he heard a man's voice in song, and waited to behold
+the singer. Perhaps he remembered, also, the merry chanting of
+Will Scarlet, and how he had tried to give it pause a few days
+before.
+
+Like Will, this fellow was clad in scarlet, though he did not
+look quite as fine a gentleman. Nathless, he was a sturdy yeoman
+of honest face and a voice far sweeter than Will's. He seemed to
+be a strolling minstrel, for he bore a harp in his hand, which he
+thrummed, while his lusty tenor voice rang out with--
+
+"Hey down, and a down, and a down!
+I've a lassie back i' the town;
+Come day, come night, Come dark or light,
+She will wed me, back i' the town!"
+
+Robin let the singer pass, caroling on his way.
+
+"'Tis not in me to disturb a light-hearted lover, this night," he
+muttered, a memory of Marian coming back to him. "Pray heaven
+she may be true to him and the wedding be a gay one 'back i' the
+town!"'
+
+So Robin went back to his camp, where he told of the minstrel.
+
+"If any of ye set on him after this," quoth he in ending, "bring
+him to me, for I would have speech with him."
+
+The very next day his wish was gratified. Little John and Much
+the miller's son were out together on a foraging expedition when
+they espied the same young man; at least, they thought it must be
+he, for he was clad in scarlet and carried a harp in his hand.
+But now he came drooping along the way; his scarlet was all in
+tatters; and at every step he fetched a sigh, "Alack and a
+well-a-day!"
+
+Then stepped forth Little John and Much the miller's son.
+
+"Ho! do not wet the earth with your weeping," said Little John,
+"else we shall all have lumbago."
+
+No sooner did the young man catch sight of them than he bent his
+bow, and held an arrow back to his ear.
+
+"Stand off! stand off!" he said; "what is your will with me?"
+
+"Put by your weapon," said Much, "we will not harm you. But you
+must come before our master straight, under yon greenwood tree."
+
+So the minstrel put by his bow and suffered himself to be led
+before Robin Hood.
+
+"How now!" quoth Robin, when he beheld his sorry countenance,
+"are you not he whom I heard no longer ago than yesternight
+caroling so blithely about 'a lassie back i' the town'?"
+
+"The same in body, good sir," replied the other sadly; "but my
+spirit is grievously changed."
+
+"Tell me your tale," said Robin courteously. "Belike I can help
+you."
+
+"That can no man on earth, I fear," said the stranger; "nathless,
+I'll tell you the tale. Yesterday I stood pledged to a maid, and
+thought soon to wed her. But she has been taken from me and is
+to become an old knight's bride this very day; and as for me, I
+care not what ending comes to my days, or how soon, without her."
+
+"Marry, come up!" said Robin; "how got the old knight so sudden
+vantage?"
+
+"Look you, worship, 'tis this way. The Normans overrun us, and
+are in such great favor that none may say them nay. This old
+returned Crusader coveted the land whereon my lady dwells. The
+estate is not large, but all in her own right; whereupon her
+brother says she shall wed a title, and he and the old knight
+have fixed it up for to-day."
+
+"Nay, but surely--" began Robin.
+
+"Hear me out, worship," said the other. "Belike you think me a
+sorry dog not to make fight of this. But the old knight, look
+you, is not come-at-able. I threw one of his varlets into a
+thorn hedge, and another into a water-butt, and a third landed
+head-first into a ditch. But I couldn't do any fighting at all."
+
+"'Tis a pity!" quoth Little John gravely. He had been sitting
+cross-legged listening to this tale of woe. "What think you,
+Friar Tuck, doth not a bit of fighting ease a man's mind?"
+
+"Blood-letting is ofttimes recommended of the leeches," replied
+Tuck.
+
+"Does the maid love you?" asked Robin Hood.
+
+"By our troth, she loved me right well," said the minstrel. "I
+have a little ring of hers by me which I have kept for seven long
+years."
+
+"What is your name?" then said Robin Hood.
+
+"By the faith of my body," replied the young man, "my name is
+Allan-a-Dale."
+
+"What will you give me, Allan-a-Dale," said Robin Hood, "in ready
+gold or fee, to help you to your true love again, and deliver her
+back unto you?"
+
+"I have no money, save only five shillings," quoth Allan;
+"but--are you not Robin Hood?"
+
+Robin nodded.
+
+"Then you, if any one, can aid me!" said Allan-a-Dale eagerly.
+"And if you give me back my love, I swear upon the Book that I
+will be your true servant forever after."
+
+"Where is this wedding to take place, and when?" asked Robin.
+
+"At Plympton Church, scarce five miles from here; and at three o'
+the afternoon."
+
+"Then to Plympton we will go!" cried Robin suddenly springing
+into action; and he gave out orders like a general: "Will
+Stutely, do you have four-and-twenty good men over against
+Plympton Church 'gainst three o' the afternoon. Much, good
+fellow, do you cook up some porridge for this youth, for he must
+have a good round stomach--aye, and a better gear! Will Scarlet,
+you will see to decking him out bravely for the nonce. And Friar
+Tuck, hold yourself in readiness, good book in hand, at the
+church. Mayhap you had best go ahead of us all."
+
+The fat Bishop of Hereford was full of pomp and importance that
+day at Plympton Church. He was to celebrate the marriage of an
+old knight--a returned Crusader--and a landed young woman; and
+all the gentry thereabout were to grace the occasion with their
+presence. The church itself was gaily festooned with flowers for
+the ceremony, while out in the church-yard at one side brown ale
+flowed freely for all the servitors.
+
+Already were the guests beginning to assemble, when the Bishop,
+back in the vestry, saw a minstrel clad in green walk up boldly
+to the door and peer within. It was Robin Hood, who had borrowed
+Allan's be-ribboned harp for the time.
+
+"Now who are you, fellow?" quoth the Bishop, "and what do you
+here at the church-door with you harp and saucy air?"
+
+"May it please your Reverence," returned Robin bowing very
+humbly, "I am but a strolling harper, yet likened the best in the
+whole North Countree. And I had hope that my thrumming might add
+zest to the wedding to-day."
+
+"What tune can you harp?" demanded the Bishop.
+
+"I can harp a tune so merry that a forlorn lover will forget he
+is jilted," said Robin. "I can harp another tune that will make
+a bride forsake her lord at the altar. I can harp another tune
+that will bring loving souls together though they were up hill
+and down dale five good miles away from each other."
+
+"Then welcome, good minstrel," said the Bishop, "music pleases me
+right well, and if you can play up to your prattle, 'twill indeed
+grace your ceremony. Let us have a sample of your wares."
+
+"Nay, I must not put finger to string until the bride and groom
+have come. Such a thing would ill fortune both us and them."
+
+"Have it as you will," said the Bishop, "but here comes the party
+now."
+
+Then up the lane to the church came the old knight, preceded by
+ten archers liveried in scarlet and gold. A brave sight the
+archers made, but their master walked slowly leaning upon a cane
+and shaking as though in a palsy.
+
+And after them came a sweet lass leaning upon her brother's arm.
+Her hair did shine like glistering gold, and her eyes were like
+blue violets that peep out shyly at the sun. The color came and
+went in her cheeks like that tinting of a sea-shell, and her face
+was flushed as though she had been weeping. But now she walked
+with a proud air, as though she defied the world to crush her
+spirit. She had but two maids with her, finikin lasses, with
+black eyes and broad bosoms, who set off their lady's more
+delicate beauty well. One held up the bride's gown from the
+ground; the other carried flowers in plenty.
+
+"Now by all the wedding bells that ever were rung!" quoth Robin
+boldly, "this is the worst matched pair that ever mine eyes
+beheld!"
+
+"Silence, miscreant!" said a man who stood near.
+
+The Bishop had hurriedly donned his gown and now stood ready to
+meet the couple at the chancel.
+
+But Robin paid no heed to him. He let the knight and his ten
+archers pass by, then he strode up to the bride, and placed
+himself on the other side from her brother.
+
+"Courage, lady!" he whispered, "there is another minstrel near,
+who mayhap may play more to your liking."
+
+The lady glanced at him with a frightened air, but read such
+honesty and kindness in his glance that she brightened and gave
+him a grateful look.
+
+"Stand aside, fool!" cried the brother wrathfully.
+
+"Nay, but I am to bring good fortune to the bride by accompanying
+her through the church-doors," said Robin laughing.
+
+Thereupon he was allowed to walk by her side unmolested, up to
+the chancel with the party.
+
+"Now strike up your music, fellow!" ordered the Bishop.
+
+"Right gladly will I," quoth Robin, "an you will let me choose my
+instrument. For sometimes I like the harp, and other times I
+think the horn makes the merriest music in all the world."
+
+And he drew forth his bugle from underneath his green cloak and
+blew three winding notes that made the church--rafters ring
+again.
+
+"Seize him!" yelled the Bishop; "there's mischief afoot! These
+are the tricks of Robin Hood!"
+
+The ten liveried archers rushed forward from the rear of the
+church, where they had been stationed. But their rush was
+blocked by the onlookers who now rose from their pews in alarm
+and crowded the aisles. Meanwhile Robin had leaped lightly over
+the chancel rail and stationed himself in a nook by the altar.
+
+"Stand where you are!" he shouted, drawing his bow, "the first
+man to pass the rail dies the death. And all ye who have come to
+witness a wedding stay in your seats. We shall e'en have one,
+since we are come into the church. But the bride shall choose her
+own swain!"
+
+Then up rose another great commotion at the door, and
+four-and-twenty good bowmen came marching in with Will Stutely at
+their head. And they seized the ten liveried archers and the
+bride's scowling brother and the other men on guard and bound
+them prisoners.
+
+Then in came Allan-a-Dale, decked out gaily, with Will Scarlet
+for best man. And they walked gravely down the aisle and stood
+over against the chancel.
+
+"Before a maiden weds she chooses--an the laws of good King Harry
+be just ones," said Robin. "Now, maiden, before this wedding
+continues, whom will you have to husband?"
+
+The maiden answered not in words, but smiled with a glad light in
+her eyes, and walked over to Allan and clasped her arms about his
+neck.
+
+"That is her true love," said Robin. "Young Allan instead of the
+gouty knight. And the true lovers shall be married at this time
+before we depart away. Now my lord Bishop, proceed with the
+ceremony!"
+
+"Nay, that shall not be," protested the Bishop; "the banns must
+be cried three times in the church. Such is the law of our
+land."
+
+"Come here, Little John," called Robin impatiently; and plucked
+off the Bishop's frock from his back and put it on the yeoman.
+
+Now the Bishop was short and fat, and Little John was long and
+lean. The gown hung loosely over Little John's shoulders and
+came only to his waist. He was a fine comical sight, and the
+people began to laugh consumedly at him.
+
+"By the faith o' my body," said Robin, "this cloth makes you a
+man. You're the finest Bishop that ever I saw in my life. Now
+cry the banns."
+
+So Little John clambered awkwardly into the quire, his short gown
+fluttering gaily; and he called the banns for the marriage of the
+maid and Allan-a-Dale once, twice, and thrice.
+
+"That's not enough," said Robin; "your gown is so short that you
+must talk longer."
+
+Then Little John asked them in the church four, five, six, and
+seven times.
+
+"Good enough!" said Robin. "Now belike I see a worthy friar in
+the back of this church who can say a better service than ever my
+lord Bishop of Hereford. My lord Bishop shall be witness and
+seal the papers, but do you, good friar, bless this pair with
+book and candle."
+
+So Friar Tuck, who all along had been back in one corner of the
+church, came forward; and Allan and his maid kneeled before him,
+while the old knight, held an unwilling witness, gnashed his
+teeth in impotent rage; and the friar began with the ceremony.
+
+When he asked, "Who giveth this woman?" Robin stepped up and
+answered in a clear voice:
+
+"I do! I, Robin Hood of Barnesdale and Sherwood! And he who
+takes her from Allan-a-Dale shall buy her full dearly."
+
+So the twain were declared man and wife and duly blessed; and the
+bride was kissed by each sturdy yeoman beginning with Robin Hood.
+
+Now I cannot end this jolly tale better than in the words of the
+ballad which came out of the happening and which has been sung in
+the villages and countryside ever since:
+
+"And thus having end of this merry wedding,
+The bride lookt like a queen;
+And so they returned to the merry greenwood
+Amongst the leaves so green."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+HOW THE WIDOW'S THREE SONS WERE RESCUED
+
+Now Robin Hood is to Nottingham gone,
+With a link a down and a down,
+And there he met with the proud Sheriff,
+Was walking along the town.
+
+
+The wedding-party was a merry one that left Plympton Church, I
+ween; but not so merry were the ones left behind. My lord Bishop
+of Hereford was stuck up in the organ-loft and left, gownless and
+fuming. The ten liveried archers were variously disposed about
+the church to keep him company; two of them being locked in a
+tiny crypt, three in the belfry, "to ring us a wedding peal," as
+Robin said; and the others under quire seats or in the vestry.
+The bride's brother at her entreaty was released, but bidden not
+to return to the church that day or interfere with his sister
+again on pain of death. While the rusty old knight was forced to
+climb a high tree, where he sat insecurely perched among the
+branches, feebly cursing the party as it departed.
+
+It was then approaching sundown, but none of the retainers or
+villagers dared rescue the imprisoned ones that night, for fear
+of Robin Hood's men. So it was not until sunup the next day,
+that they were released. The Bishop and the old knight, stiff as
+they were, did not delay longer than for breakfast, but so great
+was their rage and shame--made straight to Nottingham and levied
+the Sheriff's forces. The Sheriff himself was not anxious to try
+conclusions again with Robin in the open. Perhaps he had some
+slight scruples regarding his oath. But the others swore that
+they would go straight to the King, if he did not help them, so
+he was fain to consent.
+
+A force of an hundred picked men from the Royal Foresters and
+swordsmen of the shire was gathered together and marched
+straightway into the greenwood. There, as fortune would have it,
+they surprised some score of outlaws hunting, and instantly gave
+chase. But they could not surround the outlaws, who kept well in
+the lead, ever and anon dropping behind a log or boulder to speed
+back a shaft which meant mischief to the pursuers. One shaft
+indeed carried off the Sheriff's hat and caused that worthy man
+to fall forward upon his horse's neck from sheer terror; while
+five other arrows landed in the fleshy parts of Foresters' arms.
+
+But the attacking party was not wholly unsuccessful. One outlaw
+in his flight stumbled and fell; when two others instantly
+stopped and helped to put him on his feet again. They were the
+widow's three sons, Stout Will, and Lester, and John. The pause
+was an unlucky one for them, as a party of Sheriff's men got
+above them and cut them off from their fellows. Swordsmen came
+up in the rear, and they were soon hemmed in on every side. But
+they gave good account of themselves, and before they had been
+overborne by force of numbers they had killed two and disabled
+three more.
+
+The infuriated attackers were almost on the point of hewing the
+stout outlaws to pieces, when the Sheriff cried:
+
+"Hold! Bind the villains! We will follow the law in this and
+take them to the town jail. But I promise ye the biggest public
+hanging that has been seen in this shire for many changes of the
+moon!"
+
+So they bound the widow's three sons and carried them back
+speedily to Nottingham.
+
+Now Robin Hood had not chanced to be near the scene of the fight,
+or with his men; so for a time he heard nothing of the happening.
+
+But that evening while returning to the camp he was met by the
+widow herself, who came weeping along the way.
+
+"What news, what news, good woman?" said Robin hastily but
+courteously; for he liked her well.
+
+"God save ye, Master Robin!" said the dame wildly. "God keep ye
+from the fate that has met my three sons! The Sheriff has laid
+hands on them and they are condemned to die."
+
+"Now, by our Lady! That cuts me to the heart! Stout Will, and
+Lester, and merry John! The earliest friends I had in the band,
+and still among the bravest! It must not be! When is this
+hanging set?"
+
+"Middle the. tinker tells me that it is for tomorrow noon,"
+replied the dame.
+
+"By the truth o' my body," quoth Robin, "you could not tell me in
+better time. The memory of the old days when you freely bade me
+sup and dine would spur me on, even if three of the bravest lads
+in all the shire were not imperiled. Trust to me, good woman!"
+
+The old widow threw herself on the ground and embraced his knees.
+
+"'Tis dire danger I am asking ye to face," she said weeping; "and
+yet I knew your brave true heart would answer me. Heaven help
+ye, good Master Robin, to answer a poor widow's prayers!"
+
+Then Robin Hood sped straightway to the forest-camp, where he
+heard the details of the skirmish--how that his men had been
+out-numbered five to one, but got off safely, as they thought,
+until a count of their members had shown the loss of the widow's
+three sons.
+
+"We must rescue them, my men!" quoth Robin, "even from out the
+shadow of the rope itself!"
+
+Whereupon the band set to work to devise ways and means.
+
+Robin walked apart a little way with his head leaned thoughtfully
+upon his breast--for he was sore troubled--when whom should he
+meet but an old begging palmer, one of a devout order which made
+pilgrimages and wandered from place to place, supported by
+charity.
+
+This old fellow walked boldly up to Robin and asked alms of him;
+since Robin had been wont to aid members of his order.
+
+"What news, what news, thou foolish old man?" said Robin, "what
+news, I do thee pray?"
+
+"Three squires in Nottingham town," quoth the palmer, "are
+condemned to die. Belike that is greater news than the shire has
+had in some Sundays."
+
+Then Robin's long-sought idea came to him like a flash.
+
+"Come, change thine apparel with me, old man," he said, "and I'll
+give thee forty shillings in good silver to spend in beer or
+wine."
+
+"O, thine apparel is good," the palmer protested, "and mine is
+ragged and torn. The holy church teaches that thou should'st
+ne'er laugh an old man to scorn."
+
+"I am in simple earnest, I say. Come, change thine apparel with
+mine. Here are twenty pieces of good broad gold to feast they
+brethren right royally."
+
+So the palmer was persuaded; and Robin put on the old man's hat,
+which stood full high in the crown; and his cloak, patched with
+black and blue and red, like Joseph's coat of many colors in its
+old age; and his breeches, which had been sewed over with so many
+patterns that the original was scarce discernible; and his
+tattered hose; and his shoes, cobbled above and below. And while
+as he made the change in dress he made so many whimsical comments
+also about a man's pride and the dress that makes a man, that the
+palmer was like to choke with cackling laughter.
+
+I warrant you, the two were comical sights when they parted
+company that day. Nathless, Robin's own mother would not have
+known him, had she been living.
+
+The next morning the whole town of Nottingham was early astir,
+and as soon as the gates were open country-folk began to pour in;
+for a triple hanging was not held there every day in the week,
+and the bustle almost equated a Fair day.
+
+Robin Hood in his palmer's disguise was one of the first ones to
+enter the gates, and he strolled up and down and around the town
+as though he had never been there before in all his life.
+Presently he came to the market-place, and beheld thereon three
+gallows erected.
+
+"Who are these builded for, my son?" asked he of a rough soldier
+standing by.
+
+"For three of Robin Hood's men," answered the other. "And it
+were Robin himself, 'twould be thrice as high I warrant ye. But
+Robin is too smart to get within the Sheriff's clutches again."
+
+The palmer crossed himself.
+
+"They say that he is a bold fellow," he whined.
+
+"Ha!" said the soldier, "he may be bold enough out behind stumps
+i' the forest, but the open market-place is another matter."
+
+"Who is to hang these three poor wretches?" asked the palmer.
+
+"That hath the Sheriff not decided. But here he comes now to
+answer his own questions." And the soldier came to stiff
+attention as the Sheriff and his body-guard stalked pompously up
+to inspect the gallows.
+
+"O, Heaven save you, worshipful Sheriff!" said the palmer.
+"Heaven protect you! What will you give a silly old man to-day
+to be your hangman?"
+
+"Who are you, fellow?" asked the Sheriff sharply.
+
+"Naught save a poor old palmer. But I can shrive their souls and
+hang their bodies most devoutly."
+
+"Very good," replied the other. "The fee to-day is thirteen
+pence; and I will add thereunto some suits of clothing for that
+ragged back of yours."
+
+"God bless ye!" said the palmer. And he went with the soldier to
+the jail to prepare his three men for execution.
+
+Just before the stroke of noon the doors of the prison opened and
+the procession of the condemned came forth. Down through the
+long lines of packed people they walked to the market-place, the
+palmer in the lead, and the widow's three sons marching firmly
+erect between soldiers.
+
+At the gallows foot they halted. The palmer whispered to them,
+as though offering last words of consolation; and the three men,
+with arms bound tightly behind their backs, ascended the
+scaffold, followed by their confessor.
+
+Then Robin stepped to the edge of the scaffold, while the people
+grew still as death; for they desired to hear the last words
+uttered to the victims. But Robin's voice did not quaver forth
+weakly, as formerly, and his figure had stiffened bolt upright
+beneath the black robe that covered his rags.
+
+"Hark ye, proud Sheriff!" he cried. "I was ne'er a hangman in
+all my life, nor do I now intend to begin that trade. Accurst be
+he who first set the fashion of hanging! I have but three more
+words to say. Listen to them!"
+
+And forth from the robe he drew his horn and blew three loud
+blasts thereon. Then his keen hunting-knife flew forth and in a
+trice, Stout Will, Lester, and merry John were free men and had
+sprung forward and seized the halberds from the nearest soldiers
+guarding the gallows.
+
+"Seize them! 'Tis Robin Hood!" screamed the Sheriff, "an hundred
+pounds if ye hold them, dead or alive!"
+
+"I make it two hundred!" roared the fat Bishop.
+
+But their voices were drowned in the uproar that ensued
+immediately after Robin blew his horn. He himself had drawn his
+sword and leaped down the stairs from the scaffold, followed by
+his three men. The guard had closed around them in vain effort
+to disarm them, when "A rescuer" shouted Will Stutely's clear
+voice on one side of them, and "A rescue!" bellowed Little John's
+on the other; and down through the terror-stricken crowd rushed
+fourscore men in Lincoln green, their force seeming twice that
+number in the confusion. With swords drawn they fell upon the
+guard from every side at once. There was a brief clash of hot
+weapons, then the guard scattered wildly, and Robin Hood's men
+formed in a compact mass around their leader and forced their way
+slowly down the market-place.
+
+"Seize them! In the King's name!" shrieked the Sheriff. "Close
+the gates!"
+
+In truth, the peril would have been even greater, had this last
+order been carried out. But Will Scarlet and Allan-a-Dale had
+foreseen that event, and had already overpowered the two warders.
+
+So the gates stood wide open, and toward them the band of outlaws
+headed.
+
+The soldiers rallied a force of twice their number and tried
+resolutely to pierce their center. But the retreating force
+turned thrice and sent such volleys of keen arrows from their
+good yew bows, that they kept a distance between the two forces.
+
+And thus the gate was reached, and the long road leading up the
+hill, and at last the protecting greenwood itself. The soldiers
+dared come no farther. And the widow's three sons, I warrant
+you, supped more heartily that night than ever before in their
+whole lives.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+HOW A BEGGAR FILLED THE PUBLIC EYE
+
+Good Robin accost him in his way,
+To see what he might be;
+If any beggar had money,
+He thought some part had he.
+
+
+One bright morning, soon after the stirring events told in the
+last chapter, Robin wandered forth alone down the road to
+Barnesdale, to see if aught had come of the Sheriff's pursuit.
+But all was still and serene and peaceful. No one was in sight
+save a solitary beggar who came sturdily along his way in Robin's
+direction. The beggar caught sight of Robin, at the same moment,
+as he emerged from the trees, but gave no sign of having seen
+him. He neither slackened nor quickened his pace, but jogged
+forward merrily, whistling as he came, and beating time by
+punching holes in the dusty road with the stout pike-staff in his
+hand.
+
+The curious look of the fellow arrested Robin's attention, and he
+decided to stop and talk with him. The fellow was bare-legged
+and bare-armed, and wore a long shift of a shirt, fastened with a
+belt. About his neck hung a stout, bulging bag, which was
+buckled by a good piece of leather thong.
+
+He had three hats upon his head,
+Together sticked fast,
+He cared neither for the wind nor wet,
+In lands where'er he past.
+
+The fellow looked so fat and hearty, and the wallet on his
+shoulder seemed so well filled, that Robin thought within
+himself,
+
+"Ha! this is a lucky beggar for me! If any of them have money,
+this is the chap, and, marry, he should share it with us poorer
+bodies."
+
+So he flourished his own stick and planted himself in the
+traveler's path.
+
+"Sirrah, fellow!" quoth he; "whither away so fast? Tarry, for I
+would have speech with ye!"
+
+The beggar made as though he heard him not, and kept straight on
+with his faring.
+
+"Tarry, I say, fellow!" said Robin again; "for there's a way to
+make folks obey!"
+
+"Nay, 'tis not so," answered the beggar, speaking for the first
+time; "I obey no man in all England, not even the King himself.
+So let me pass on my way, for 'tis growing late, and I have still
+far to go before I can care for my stomach's good."
+
+"Now, by my troth," said Robin, once more getting in front of the
+other, "I see well by your fat countenance, that you lack not for
+good food, while I go hungry. Therefore you must lend me of your
+means till we meet again, so that I may hie to the nearest
+tavern."
+
+"I have no money to lend," said the beggar crossly. "Methinks
+you are as young a man as 1, and as well able to earn a supper.
+So go your way, and I'll go mine. If you fast till you get aught
+out of me, you'll go hungry for the next twelvemonth."
+
+"Not while I have a stout stick to thwack your saucy bones!"
+cried Robin. "Stand and deliver, I say, or I'll dust your shirt
+for you; and if that will not teach you manners, then we'll see
+what a broad arrow can do with a beggar's skin!"
+
+The beggar smiled, and answered boast with boast. "Come on with
+your staff, fellow! I care no more for it than for a pudding
+stick. And as for your pretty bow--THAT for it!"
+
+And with amazing quickness, he swung his pike-staff around and
+knocked Robin's bow clean out of his hand, so that his fingers
+smarted with pain. Robin danced and tried to bring his own staff
+into action; but the beggar never gave him a chance. Biff!
+whack! came the pike-staff, smiting him soundly and beating down
+his guard.
+
+There were but two things to do; either stand there and take a
+sound drubbing, or beat a hasty retreat. Robin chose the
+latter--as you or I would probably have done--and scurried back
+into the wood, blowing his horn as he went.
+
+"Fie, for shame, man!" jeered the bold beggar after him. "What
+is your haste? We had but just begun. Stay and take your money,
+else you will never be able to pay your reckoning at the tavern!"
+
+But Robin answered him never a word. He fled up hill and down
+dale till he met three of his men who were running up in answer
+to his summons.
+
+"What is wrong?" they asked.
+
+"'Tis a saucy beggar," said Robin, catching his breath. "He is
+back there on the highroad with the hardest stick I've met in a
+good many days. He gave me no chance to reason with him, the
+dirty scamp!"
+
+The men--Much and two of the widow's sons--could scarce conceal
+their mirth at the thought of Robin Hood running from a beggar.
+Nathless, they kept grave faces, and asked their leader if he was
+hurt.
+
+"Nay," he replied, "but I shall speedily feel better if you will
+fetch me that same beggar and let me have a fair chance at him."
+
+So the three yeomen made haste and came out upon the highroad and
+followed after the beggar, who was going smoothly along his way
+again, as though he were at peace with all the world.
+
+"The easiest way to settle this beggar," said Much, "is to
+surprise him. Let us cut through yon neck of woods and come upon
+him before he is aware."
+
+The others agreed to this, and the three were soon close upon
+their prey.
+
+"Now!" quoth Much; and the other two sprang quickly upon the
+beggar's back and wrested his pike-staff from his hand. At the
+same moment Much drew his dagger and flashed it before the
+fellow's breast.
+
+"Yield you, my man!" cried he; "for a friend of ours awaits you
+in the wood, to teach you how to fight properly."
+
+"Give me a fair chance," said the beggar valiantly, "and I'll
+fight you all at once."
+
+But they would not listen to him. Instead, they turned him about
+and began to march him toward the forest. Seeing that it was
+useless to struggle, the beggar began to parley.
+
+"Good my masters," quoth he, "why use this violence? I will go
+with ye safe and quietly, if ye insist, but if ye will set me
+free I'll make it worth your while. I've a hundred pounds in my
+bag here. Let me go my way, and ye shall have all that's in the
+bag."
+
+The three outlaws took council together at this.
+
+"What say you?" asked Much of the others. "Our master will be
+more glad to see this beggar's wallet than his sorry face."
+
+The other two agreed, and the little party came to a halt and
+loosed hold of the beggar.
+
+"Count out your gold speedily, friend," said Much. There was a
+brisk wind blowing, and the beggar turned about to face it,
+directly they had unhanded him.
+
+"It shall be done, gossips," said he. "One of you lend me your
+cloak and we will spread it upon the ground and put the wealth
+upon it."
+
+The cloak was handed him, and he placed his wallet upon it as
+though it were very heavy indeed. Then he crouched down and
+fumbled with the leather fastenings. The outlaws also bent over
+and watched the proceeding closely, lest he should hide some of
+the money on his person. Presently he got the bag unfastened and
+plunged his hands into it. Forth from it he drew--not shining
+gold--but handfuls of fine meal which he dashed into the eager
+faces of the men around him. The wind aided him in this, and
+soon there arose a blinding cloud which filled the eyes, noses,
+and mouths of the three outlaws till they could scarcely see or
+breathe.
+
+While they gasped and choked and sputtered and felt around wildly
+for that rogue of a beggar, he finished the job by picking up the
+cloak by its corners and shaking it vigorously in the faces of
+his suffering victims. Then he seized a stick which lay
+conveniently near, and began to rain blows down upon their heads,
+shoulders, and sides, all the time dancing first on one leg, then
+on the other, and crying,
+
+"Villains! rascals! here are the hundred pounds I promised. How
+do you like them? I' faith, you'll get all that's in the bag."
+
+Whack! whack! whack! whack! went the stick, emphasizing each
+word. Howls of pain might have gone up from the sufferers, but
+they had too much meal in their throats for that. Their one
+thought was to flee, and they stumbled off blindly down the road,
+the beggar following them a little way to give them a few parting
+love-taps.
+
+"Fare ye well, my masters," he said finally turning the other
+way; "and when next I come along the Barnesdale road, I hope you
+will be able to tell gold from meal dust!"
+
+With this he departed, an easy victor, and again went whistling
+on his way, while the three outlaws rubbed the meal out of their
+eyes and began to catch their breath again.
+
+As soon as they could look around them clearly, they beheld Robin
+Hood leaning against a tree trunk and surveying them smilingly.
+He had recovered his own spirits in full measure, on seeing their
+plight.
+
+"God save ye, gossips!" he said, "ye must, in sooth, have gone
+the wrong way and been to the mill, from the looks of your
+clothes."
+
+Then when they looked shamefaced and answered never a word, he
+went on, in a soft voice,
+
+"Did ye see aught of that bold beggar I sent you for, lately?"
+
+"In sooth, master," responded Much the miller's son, "we heard
+more of him than we saw him. He filled us so full of meal that I
+shall sweat meal for a week. I was born in a mill, and had the
+smell of meal in my nostrils from my very birth, you might say,
+and yet never before did I see such a quantity of the stuff in so
+small space."
+
+And he sneezed violently.
+
+"How was that?" asked Robin demurely.
+
+"Why we laid hold of the beggar, as you did order, when he
+offered to pay for his release out of the bag he carried upon his
+back."
+
+"The same I coveted," quoth Robin as if to himself.
+
+"So we agreed to this," went on Much, "and spread a cloak down,
+and he opened his bag and shook it thereon. Instantly a great
+cloud of meal filled the air, whereby we could neither see nor
+breathe; and in the midst of this cloud he vanished like a
+wizard."
+
+"But not before he left certain black and blue spots, to be
+remembered by, I see," commented Robin.
+
+"He was in league with the evil one," said one of the widow's
+sons, rubbing himself ruefully.
+
+Then Robin laughed outright, and sat him down upon the gnarled
+root of a tree, to finish his merriment.
+
+"Four bold outlaws, put to rout by a sorry beggar!" cried he. "I
+can laugh at ye, my men, for I am in the same boat with ye. But
+'twould never do to have this tale get abroad--even in the
+greenwood--how that we could not hold our own with the odds in
+our favor. So let us have this little laugh all to ourselves,
+and no one else need be the wiser!"
+
+The others saw the point of this, and felt better directly,
+despite their itching desire to get hold of the beggar again.
+And none of the four ever told of the adventure.
+
+But the beggar must have boasted of it at the next tavern; or a
+little bird perched among the branches of a neighboring oak must
+have sung of it. For it got abroad, as such tales will, and was
+put into a right droll ballad which, I warrant you, the four
+outlaws did not like to hear.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD FOUGHT GUY OF GISBORNE
+
+"I dwell by dale and down," quoth he,
+"And Robin to take I'm sworn;
+And when I am called by my right name,
+I am Guy of good Gisborne."
+
+
+Some weeks passed after the rescue of the widow's three sons;
+weeks spent by the Sheriff in the vain effort to entrap Robin
+Hood and his men. For Robin's name and deeds had come to the
+King's ears, in London town, and he sent word to the Sheriff to
+capture the outlaw, under penalty of losing his office. So the
+Sheriff tried every manner of means to surprise Robin Hood in the
+forest, but always without success. And he increased the price
+put upon Robin's head, in the hope that the best men of the
+kingdom could be induced to try their skill at a capture.
+
+Now there was a certain Guy of Gisborne, a hireling knight of the
+King's army, who heard of Robin and of the price upon his head.
+Sir Guy was one of the best men at the bow and the sword in all
+the King's service. But his heart was black and treacherous. He
+obtained the King's leave forthwith to seek out the forester; and
+armed with the King's scroll he came before the Sheriff at
+Nottingham.
+
+"I have come to capture Robin Hood," quoth he, "and mean to have
+him, dead or alive."
+
+"Right gladly would I aid you," answered the Sheriff, "even if
+the King's seal were not sufficient warrant. How many men need
+you?"
+
+"None," replied Sir Guy, "for I am convinced that forces of men
+can never come at the bold robber. I must needs go alone. But
+do you hold your men in readiness at Barnesdale, and when you
+hear a blast from this silver bugle, come quickly, for I shall
+have the sly Robin within my clutches."
+
+"Very good," said the Sheriff. "Marry, it shall be done." And he
+set about giving orders, while Guy of Gisborne sallied forth
+disguised.
+
+Now as luck would have it, Will Scarlet and Little John had gone
+to Barnesdale that very day to buy suits of Lincoln green for
+certain of the yeomen who had come out at the knees and elbows.
+But not deeming it best for both of them to run their necks into
+a noose, together, they parted just outside the town, and Will
+went within the gates, while John tarried and watched at the brow
+of the hill on the outside.
+
+Presently whom should he see but this same Will flying madly
+forth from the gates again, closely pursued by the Sheriff and
+threescore men. Over the moat Will sprang, through the bushes
+and briars, across the swamp, over stocks and stones, up the
+woodland roads in long leaps like a scared jack rabbit. And
+after him puffed the Sheriff and his men, their force scattering
+out in the flight as one man would tumble head-first into a
+ditch, another mire up in the swamp, another trip over a rolling
+stone, and still others sit down on the roadside and gasp for
+wind like fish out of water.
+
+Little John could not forbear laughing heartily at the scene,
+though he knew that 'twould be anything but a laughing matter if
+Will should stumble. And in truth one man was like to come upon
+him. It was William-a-Trent, the best runner among the Sheriff's
+men. He had come within twenty feet of Scarlet and was leaping
+upon him with long bounds like a greyhound, when John rose up
+quickly, drew his bow and let fly one of his fatal shafts. It
+would have been better for William-a-Trent to have been abed with
+sorrow--says the ballad--than to be that day in the greenwood
+slade to meet with Little John's arrow. He had run his last
+race.
+
+The others halted a moment in consternation, when the shaft came
+hurtling down from the hill; but looking up they beheld none save
+Little John, and with a cry of fierce joy they turned upon him.
+Meanwhile Will Scarlet had reached the brow of the hill and sped
+down the other side.
+
+"I'll just send one more little message of regret to the
+Sheriff," said Little John, "before I join Will."
+
+But this foolhardy deed was his undoing, for just as the arrow
+left the string, the good yew bow that had never before failed
+him snapped in twain.
+
+"Woe worth, woe worth thee, wicked wood, that ere thou grew on a
+tree!" cursed Little John, and planted his feet resolutely in the
+earth resolved to sell the path dearly; for the soldiers were now
+so close upon him that he dared not turn.
+
+And a right good account of himself he gave that day, dealing
+with each man as he came up according to his merit. And so
+winded were the pursuers when they reached the top of the hill
+that he laid out the first ten of them right and left with huge
+blows of his brawny fist.
+
+But if five men can do more than three, a score can overcome one.
+
+A body of archers stood off at a prudent distance and covered
+Little John with their arrows.
+
+"Now yield you!" panted the Sheriff. "Yield you, Little John, or
+Reynold Greenleaf, or whatever else name you carry this day!
+Yield you, or some few of these shafts will reach your heart!"
+
+"Marry, my heart has been touched by your words ere now," said
+Little John; "and I yield me."
+
+So the Sheriff's men laid hold of Little John and bound him fast
+with many cords, so fearful were they lest he should escape. And
+the Sheriff laughed aloud in glee, and thought of how he should
+avenge his stolen plate, and determined to make a good day's work
+of it.
+
+"By the Saints!" he said, "you shall be drawn by dale and down,
+and hanged high on a hill in Barnesdale this very day."
+
+"Hang and be hanged!" retorted the prisoner. "You may fail of
+your purpose if it be Heaven's will."
+
+Back down the hill and across the moor went the company speedily,
+for they feared a rescue. And as they went the stragglers joined
+them. Here a man got up feebly out of the ditch and rubbed his
+pate and fell in like a chicken with the pip going for its
+dinner. Yonder came hobbling a man with a lame ankle, or another
+with his shins torn by the briars or another with his jacket all
+muddy from the marsh. So in truth it was a tatterdemalion crew
+that limped and straggled and wandered back into Barnesdale that
+day. Yet all were merry, for the Sheriff had promised them
+flagons of wine, and moreover they were to hang speedily the
+boldest outlaw in England, next to Robin Hood himself.
+
+The gallows was quickly put up and a new rope provided.
+
+"Now up with you!" commanded the Sheriff, "and let us see if your
+greenwood tricks will avail you to-morrow."
+
+"I would that I had bold Robin's horn," muttered poor John;
+"methinks 'tis all up with me even as the Sheriff hath spoken."
+
+In good sooth the time was dire and pressing. The rope was
+placed around the prisoner's neck and the men prepared to haul
+away.
+
+"Are you ready?" called the Sheriff. "One--two--"
+
+But before the "three" left his lips the faint sound of a silver
+bugle came floating over the hill.
+
+"By my troth, that is Sir Guy of Gisborne's horn," quoth the
+Sheriff; "and he bade me not to delay answering its summons. He
+has caught Robin Hood."
+
+"Pardon, Excellency," said one of his men; "but if he has caught
+Robin Hood, this is a merry day indeed. And let us save this
+fellow and build another gallows and hang them both together."
+
+"That's a brave thought!" said the Sheriff slapping his knee.
+"Take the rascal down and bind him fast to the gallows-tree
+against our return."
+
+So Little John was made fast to the gallows-tree, while the
+Sheriff and all his men who could march or hobble went out to get
+Robin Hood and bring him in for the double hanging.
+
+Let us leave talking of Little John and the Sheriff, and see what
+has become of Robin Hood.
+
+In the first place, he and Little John had come near having a
+quarrel that self-same morning because both had seen a curious
+looking yeoman, and each wanted to challenge him singly. But
+Robin would not give way to his lieutenant, and that is why John,
+in a huff, had gone with Will to Barnesdale.
+
+Meanwhile Robin approached the curious looking stranger. He
+seemed to be a three-legged creature at first sight, but on
+coming nearer you would have seen that 'twas really naught but a
+poorly clad man, who for a freak had covered up his rags with a
+capul-hide, nothing more nor less than the sun-dried skin of a
+horse, complete with head, tail, and mane. The skin of the head
+made a helmet; while the tail gave the curious three-legged
+appearance.
+
+"Good-morrow, good fellow," said Robin cheerily, "methinks by the
+bow you bear in your hand that you should be a good archer."
+
+"Indifferent good," said the other returning his greeting; "but
+'tis not of archery that I am thinking this morning, for I have
+lost my way and would fain find it again."
+
+"By my faith, I could have believed 'twas your wits you'd lost!"
+thought Robin smiling. Then aloud: "I'll lead you through the
+wood," quoth he, "an you will tell me your business. For belike
+your speech is much gentler than your attire."
+
+"Who are you to ask me my business?" asked the other roughly.
+
+"I am one of the King's Rangers," replied Robin, "set here to
+guard his deer against curious looking strollers."
+
+"Curious looking I may be," returned the other, "but no stroller.
+Hark ye, since you are a Ranger, I must e'en demand your service.
+I am on the King's business and seek an outlaw. Men call him
+Robin Hood. Are you one of his men?"--eyeing him keenly.
+
+"Nay, God forbid!" said Robin; "but what want you with him?"
+
+"That is another tale. But I'd rather meet with that proud
+outlaw than forty good pounds of the King's money."
+
+Robin now saw how the land lay.
+
+"Come with me, good yeoman," said he, "and belike, a little later
+in the day, I can show you Robin's haunts when he is at home.
+Meanwhile let us have some pastime under the greenwood tree. Let
+us first try the mastery at shooting arrows."
+
+The other agreed, and they cut down two willow wands of a
+summer's growth that grew beneath a brier, and set them up at a
+distance of threescore yards.
+
+"Lead on, good fellow," quoth Robin. "The first shot to you."
+
+"Nay, by my faith," said the other, "I will follow your lead."
+
+So Robin stepped forth and bent his bow carelessly and sent his
+shaft whizzing toward the wand, missing it by a scant inch. He
+of the horse-hide followed with more care yet was a good
+three-fingers' breadth away. On the second round, the stranger
+led off and landed cleverly within the small garland at the top
+of the wand; but Robin shot far better and clave the wand itself,
+clean at the middle.
+
+"A blessing on your heart!" shouted Capul-Hide; "never saw I such
+shooting as that! Belike you are better than Robin Hood himself.
+But you have not yet told me your name."
+
+"Nay, by my faith,"quoth Robin, "I must keep it secret till you
+have told me your own."
+
+"I do not disdain to tell it," said the other. "I dwell by dale
+and down, and to take bold Robin am I sworn. This would I tell
+him to his face, were he not so great a craven. When I am called
+by my right name, I am Guy of Gisborne."
+
+This he said with a great show of pride, and he strutted back and
+forth, forgetful that he had just been beaten at archery.
+
+Robin eyed him quietly. "Methinks I have heard of you elsewhere.
+Do you not bring men to the gallows for a living?"
+
+"Aye, but only outlaws such as Robin Hood."
+
+"But pray what harm has Robin Hood done you?"
+
+"He is a highway robber," said Sir Guy, evading the question.
+
+"Has he ever taken from the rich that he did not give again to
+the poor? Does he not protect the women and children and side
+with weak and helpless? Is not his greatest crime the shooting
+of a few King's deer?"
+
+"Have done with your sophistry," said Sir Guy impatiently. "I am
+more than ever of opinion that you are one of Robin's men
+yourself."
+
+"I have told you I am not," quoth Robin briefly. "But if I am to
+help you catch him, what is your plan?"
+
+"Do you see this silver bugle?" said the other. "A long blast
+upon it will summon the Sheriff and all his men, when once I have
+Robin within my grasp. And if you show him to me, I'll give you
+the half of my forty pounds reward."
+
+"I would not help hang a man for ten times forty pounds," said
+the outlaw. "Yet will I point out Robin to you for the reward I
+find at my sword's point. I myself am Robin Hood of Sherwood and
+Barnesdale."
+
+"Then have at you!" cried the other springing swiftly into
+action. His sword leaped forth from beneath the horse's hide
+with the speed born of long practice, and before Robin had come
+to guard, the other had smitten at him full and foul. Robin
+eluded the lunge and drew his own weapon.
+
+"A scurvy trick!" quoth he grimly, "to strike at a man
+unprepared."
+
+Then neither spoke more, but fell sternly to work--lunge and
+thrust and ward and parry--for two full hours the weapons smote
+together sullenly, and neither Robin Hood nor Sir Guy would yield
+an inch. I promise you that if you could have looked forth on
+the fight from behind the trunk of some friendly tree, you would
+have seen deadly sport such as few men beheld in Sherwood Forest.
+For the fighters glared sullenly at each other, the fires of
+hatred burning in their eyes. One was fighting for his life; the
+other for a reward and the King's favor.
+
+Still circled the bright blades swiftly in the air--now gleaming
+in the peaceful sunlight--again hissing like maddened serpents.
+Neither had yet touched the other, until Robin, in an unlucky
+moment, stumbled over the projecting root of a tree; when Sir
+Guy, instead of giving him the chance to recover himself, as any
+courteous knight would have done, struck quickly at the falling
+man and wounded him in the left side.
+
+"Ah, dear Lady in Heaven," gasped Robin uttering his favorite
+prayer, "shield me now! 'Twas never a man's destiny to die
+before his day."
+
+And adroitly he sprang up again, and came straight at the other
+with an awkward but unexpected stroke. The knight had raised his
+weapon high to give a final blow, when Robin reached beneath and
+across his guard. One swift lunge, and Sir Guy of Gisborne
+staggered backward with a deep groan, Robin's sword through his
+throat.
+
+Robin looked at the slain man regretfully.
+
+"You did bring it upon yourself," said he; "and traitor and
+hireling though you were, I would not willingly have killed you."
+
+He looked to his own wound. It was not serious, and he soon
+staunched the blood and bound up the cut. Then he dragged the
+dead body into the bushes, and took off the horse's hide and put
+it upon himself. He placed his own cloak upon Sir Guy, and
+marked his face so none might tell who had been slain. Robin's
+own figure and face were not unlike the other's.
+
+Pulling the capul-hide well over himself, so that the helmet hid
+most of his face, Robin seized the silver bugle and blew a long
+blast. It was the blast that saved the life of Little John, over
+in Barnesdale, for you and I have already seen how it caused the
+fond Sheriff to prick up his ears and stay the hanging, and go
+scurrying up over the hill and into the wood with his men in
+search of another victim.
+
+In five-and-twenty minutes up came running a score of the
+Sheriff's best archers.
+
+"Did you signal us, lording?" they asked, approaching Robin.
+
+"Aye," said he, going to meet the puffing Sheriff.
+
+"What news, what news, Sir Guy?" said that officer.
+
+"Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne had a fight; and he that wears
+Robin's cloak lies under the covert yonder."
+
+"The best news I have heard in all my life!" exclaimed the
+Sheriff rubbing his hands. "I would that we could have saved him
+for the hanging--though I cannot now complain."
+
+"The hanging?" repeated Robin.
+
+"Yes. This is our lucky day on the calendar. After you left me
+we narrowly missed running one of the fellows--I believe 'twas
+Will Scarlet--to earth; and another who came to his relief we
+were just about to hang, when your horn blew."
+
+"Who was the other?" asked the disguised outlaw.
+
+"Whom do you suppose?" laughed the Sheriff. "The best man in the
+greenwood, next to Robin Hood himself--Little John, Reynold
+Greenleaf!" For the Sheriff could not forget the name Little
+John had borne under his own roof at Nottingham.
+
+"Little John!" thought Robin with a start. Verily that was a
+lucky blast of the bugle! "But I see you have not escaped
+without a scratch," continued the Sheriff, becoming talkative
+through pure glee. "Here, one of you men! Give Sir Guy of
+Gisborne your horse; while others of you bury that dog of an
+outlaw where he lies. And let us hasten back to Barnesdale and
+finish hanging the other."
+
+So they put spurs to their horses, and as they rode Robin forced
+himself to talk merrily, while all the time he as planning the
+best way to succor Little John.
+
+"A boon, Sheriff," he said as they reached the gates of the town.
+
+"What is it, worthy sir? You have but to speak."
+
+"I do not want any of your gold, for I have had a brave fight.
+But now that I have slain the master, let me put an end to the
+man; so it shall be said that Guy of Gisborne despatched the two
+greatest outlaws of England in one day."
+
+"Have it as you will," said the Sheriff, "but you should have
+asked a knight's fee and double your reward, and it would have
+been yours. It isn't every man that can take Robin Hood."
+"No, Excellency," answered Robin. "I say it without boasting,
+that no man took Robin Hood yesterday and none shall take him
+to-morrow."
+
+Then he approached Little John, who was still tied to the
+gallows-tree; and he said to the Sheriff's men, "Now stand you
+back here till I see if the prisoner has been shrived." And he
+stooped swiftly, and cut Little John's bonds, and thrust into his
+hands Sir Guy's bow and arrows, which he had been careful to
+take.
+
+"'Tis I, Robin!" he whispered. But in truth, Little John knew it
+already, and had decided there was to be no hanging that day.
+
+Then Robin blew three loud blasts upon his own horn, and drew
+forth his own bow; and before the astonished Sheriff and his men
+could come to arms the arrows were whistling in their midst in no
+uncertain fashion.
+
+And look! Through the gates and over the walls came pouring
+another flight of arrows! Will Scarlet and Will Stutely had
+watched and planned a rescue ever since the Sheriff and Robin
+rode back down the hill. Now in good time they came; and the
+Sheriff's demoralized force turned tail and ran, while Robin and
+Little John stood under the harmless gallows, and sped swift
+arrows after them, and laughed to see them go.
+
+Then they joined their comrades and hasted back to the good
+greenwood, and there rested. They had got enough sport for one
+day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+HOW MAID MARIAN CAME BACK TO SHERWOOD FOREST; ALSO, HOW ROBIN
+HOOD CAME BEFORE QUEEN ELEANOR
+
+But Robin Hood, he himself had disguis'd,
+And Marian was strangely attir'd,
+That they proved foes, and so fell to blows,
+Whose valor bold Robin admir'd.
+
+And when he came at London's court,
+He fell down on his knee.
+"Thou art welcome, Lockesley," said the Queen,
+"And all thy good yeomandree."
+
+
+Now it fell out that one day not long thereafter, Robin was
+minded to try his skill at hunting. And not knowing whom he
+might meet in his rambles, he stained his face and put on a
+sorry-looking jacket and a long cloak before he sallied forth.
+As he walked, the peacefulness of the morning came upon him, and
+brought back to his memory the early days so long ago when he had
+roamed these same glades with Marian. How sweet they seemed to
+him now, and how far away! Marian, too, the dainty friend of his
+youth--would he ever see her again? He had thought of her very
+often of late, and each time with increasing desire to hear her
+clear voice and musical laugh, and see her eyes light up at his
+coming.
+
+Perhaps the happiness of Allen-a-Dale and his lady had caused
+Robin's heart-strings to vibrate more strongly; perhaps, too, the
+coming of Will Scarlet. But, certes, Robin was anything but a
+hunter this bright morning as he walked along with head drooping
+in a most love-lorn way.
+
+Presently a hart entered the glade in full view of him, grazing
+peacefully, and instantly the man of action awoke. His bow was
+drawn and a shaft all but loosed, when the beast fell suddenly,
+pierced by a clever arrow from the far side of the glade.
+
+Then a handsome little page sprang gleefully from the covert and
+ran toward the dying animal. This was plainly the archer, for he
+flourished his bow aloft, and likewise bore a sword at his side,
+though for all that he looked a mere lad.
+
+Robin approached the hart from the other side.
+
+"How dare you shoot the King's beasts, stripling?" he asked
+severely.
+
+"I have as much right to shoot them as the King himself,"
+answered the page haughtily. "How dare you question me?"
+
+The voice stirred Robin strongly. It seemed to chime into his
+memories of the old days. He looked at the page sharply, and the
+other returned the glance, straight and unafraid.
+
+"Who are you, my lad?" Robin said more civilly.
+
+"No lad of yours, and my name's my own," retorted the other with
+spirit.
+
+"Softly! Fair and softly, sweet page, or we of the forest will
+have to teach you manners!" said Robin.
+
+"Not if YOU stand for the forest!" cried the page, whipping out
+his sword. "Come, draw, and defend yourself!"
+
+He swung his blade valiantly; and Robin saw nothing for it but to
+draw likewise. The page thereupon engaged him quite fiercely,
+and Robin found that he had many pretty little tricks at fencing.
+
+Nathless, Robin contented himself with parrying, and was loth to
+exert all his superior strength upon the lad. So the fight
+lasted for above a quarter of an hour, at the end of which time
+the page was almost spent and the hot blood flushed his cheeks in
+a most charming manner.
+
+The outlaw saw his distress, and to end the fight allowed himself
+to be pricked slightly on the wrist.
+
+"Are you satisfied, fellow?" asked the page, wincing a little at
+sight of the blood.
+
+"Aye, honestly," replied Robin; "and now perhaps you will grant
+me the honor of knowing to whom I owe this scratch?"
+
+"I am Richard Partington, page to Her Majesty, Queen Eleanor,"
+answered the lad with dignity; and again the sound of his voice
+troubled Robin sorely.
+
+"Why come you to the greenwood alone, Master Partington?"
+
+The lad considered his answer while wiping his sword with a small
+lace kerchief. The action brought a dim confused memory to
+Robin. The lad finally looked him again in the eye.
+
+"Forester, whether or no you be a King's man, know that I seek
+one Robin Hood, an outlaw, to whom I bring amnesty from the
+Queen. Can you tell me aught of him?" And while awaiting his
+answer, he replaced the kerchief in his shirt. As he did so, the
+gleam of a golden trophy caught the outlaw's eye.
+
+Robin started forward with a joyful cry.
+
+"Ah! I know you now! By the sight of yon golden arrow won at
+the Sheriff's tourney, you are she on whom I bestowed it, and
+none other than Maid Marian!"
+
+"You--are--?" gasped Marian, for it was she; "not Robin!"
+
+"Robin's self!" said he gaily; and forthwith, clad as he was in
+rags, and stained of face, he clasped the dainty page close to
+his breast, and she forsooth yielded right willingly.
+
+"But Robin!" she exclaimed presently, "I knew you not, and was
+rude, and wounded you!"
+
+"'Twas nothing," he replied laughingly, "so long as it brought me
+you."
+
+But she made more ado over the sore wrist than Robin had received
+for all his former hurts put together. And she bound it with the
+little kerchief, and said, "Now 'twill get well!" and Robin was
+convinced she spoke the truth, for he never felt better in all
+his life. The whole woods seemed tinged with a roseate hue,
+since Marian had come again.
+
+But she, while happy also, was ill at ease; and Robin with a
+man's slow discernment at last saw that it was because of her
+boy's attire. He thought bluntly that there was naught to be
+ashamed of, yet smilingly handed her his tattered long cloak,
+which she blushingly put on, and forthwith recovered her spirits
+directly.
+
+Then they began to talk of each other's varied fortunes, and of
+the many things which had parted them; and so much did they find
+to tell that the sun had begun to decline well into the afternoon
+before they realized how the hours sped.
+
+"I am but a sorry host!" exclaimed Robin, springing to his feet.
+"I have not once invited you to my wild roof."
+
+"And I am but a sorry page," replied Marian; "for I had clean
+forgot that I was Richard Partington, and really did bring you a
+message from Queen Eleanor!"
+
+"Tell me on our way home, and there you shall be entrusted to
+Mistress Dale. While the first of my men we meet will I send
+back for your deer."
+
+So she told him, as they walked back through the glade, how that
+the fame of his prowess had reached Queen Eleanor's ears, in
+London town. And the Queen had said, "Fain would I see this bold
+yeoman, and behold his skill at the long-bow." And the Queen had
+promised him amnesty if he and four of his archers would repair
+to London against the next tournament the week following, there
+to shoot against King Henry's picked men, of whom the King was
+right vain. All this Marian told in detail, and added:
+
+"When I heard Her Majesty say she desired to see you, I asked
+leave to go in search of you, saying I had known you once. And
+the Queen was right glad, and bade me go, and sent this gold ring
+to you from off her finger, in token of her faith."
+
+Then Robin took the ring and bowed his head and kissed it
+loyally. "By this token will I go to London town," quoth he,
+"and ere I part with the Queen's pledge, may the hand that bears
+it be stricken off at the wrist!" By this time they were come to
+the grove before the cave, and Robin presented Maid Marian to the
+band, who treated her with the greatest respect. Will Scarlet was
+especially delighted to greet again his old time friend, while
+Allan-a-Dale and his good wife bustled about to make her welcome
+in their tiny thatched cottage.
+
+That evening after they had supped royally upon the very hart
+that Marian had slain, Allan sang sweet songs of Northern
+minstrelsy to the fair guest as she sat by Robin's side, the
+golden arrow gleaming in her dark hair. The others all joined in
+the chorus, from Will Scarlet's baritone to Friar Tuck's heavy
+bass. Even Little John essayed to sing, although looked at
+threateningly by Much the miller's son.
+
+Then Robin bade Marian repeat her message from the Queen, which
+Marian did in a way befitting the dignity of her royal mistress.
+After which the yeomen gave three cheers for the Queen and three
+more for her page, and drank toasts to them both, rising to their
+feet.
+
+"Ye have heard," quoth Robin standing forth, "how that Her
+Majesty--whom God preserve!--wishes but four men to go with me.
+Wherefore, I choose Little John and Will Stutely, my two
+lieutenants, Will Scarlet, my cousin, and Allan-a-Dale, my
+minstrel. Mistress Dale, also, can go with her husband and be
+company for the Queen's page. We will depart with early morning,
+decked in our finest. So stir ye, my lads! and see that not only
+your tunics are fresh, but your swords bright and your bows and
+arrows fit. For we must be a credit to the Queen as well as the
+good greenwood. You, Much, with Stout Will, Lester, and John,
+the widow's three sons, shall have command of the band while we
+are away; and Friar Tuck shall preside over the needs of your
+souls and stomachs."
+
+The orders were received with shouts of approval, and toasts all
+around were drunk again in nut-brown ale, ere the company
+dispersed to rest after making ready for the journey.
+
+The next morning was as fine a summer's day as ever you want to
+see, and the green leaves of the forest made a pleasing
+background for the gay picture of the yeomen setting forth. Says
+the old ballad--it was a seemly sight to see how Robin Hood
+himself had dressed, and all his yeomanry. He clothed his men in
+Lincoln green, and himself in scarlet red, with hats of black and
+feathers white to bravely deck each head. Nor were the two
+ladies behind-hand, I ween, at the bedecking.
+
+Thus the chosen party of seven sallied forth being accompanied to
+the edge of the wood by the whole band, who gave them a merry
+parting and Godspeed!
+
+The journey to London town was made without incident. The party
+proceeded boldly along the King's highroad, and no man met them
+who was disposed to say them nay. Besides, the good Queen's
+warrant and ring would have answered for them, as indeed it did
+at the gates of London. So on they sped and in due course came
+to the palace itself and awaited audience with the Queen.
+
+Now the King had gone that day to Finsbury Field, where the
+tourney was soon to be held, in order to look over the lists and
+see some of his picked men whom he expected to win against all
+comers. So much had he boasted of these men, that the Queen had
+secretly resolved to win a wager of him. She had heard of the
+fame of Robin Hood and his yeomen, as Marian had said; and Marian
+on her part had been overjoyed to be able to add a word in their
+favor and to set out in search of them.
+
+To-day the Queen sat in her private audience-room chatting
+pleasantly with her ladies, when in came Mistress Marian
+Fitzwalter attired again as befitted her rank of lady-in-waiting.
+She courtesied low to the Queen and awaited permission to speak.
+
+"How now!" said the Queen smiling; "is this my lady Marian, or
+the page, Richard Partington?"
+
+"Both, an it please Your Majesty. Richard found the man you
+sought, while Marian brought him to you."
+
+"Where is he?" asked Queen Eleanor eagerly.
+
+"Awaiting your audience--he and four of his men, likewise a lady
+of whose wooing and wedding I can tell you a pretty story at
+another time."
+
+"Have them admitted."
+
+So Marian gave orders to a herald, and presently Robin Hood and
+his little party entered the room.
+
+Now the Queen had half-expected the men to be rude and uncouth in
+appearance, because of their wild life in the forest; but she was
+delightfully disappointed. Indeed she started back in surprise
+and almost clapped her hands. For, sooth to say, the yeomen made
+a brave sight, and in all the court no more gallant men could be
+found. Marian felt her cheeks glow with pride, at sight of the
+half-hidden looks of admiration sent forth by the other
+ladies-in-waiting.
+
+Robin had not forgot the gentle arts taught by his mother, and he
+wore his fine red velvet tunic and breeches with the grace of a
+courtier. We have seen, before, what a dandified gentleman Will
+Scarlet was; and Allan-a-Dale, the minstrel, was scarcely less
+goodly to look upon. While the giant Little John and
+broad-shouldered Will Stutely made up in stature what little they
+lacked in outward polish. Mistress Dale, on her part, looked
+even more charming, if possible, than on the momentous day when
+she went to Plympton Church to marry one man and found another.
+
+Thus came the people of the greenwood before Queen Eleanor, in
+her own private audience room. And Robin advanced and knelt down
+before her, and said:
+
+"Here I am, Robin Hood--I and my chosen men! At Your Majesty's
+bidding am I come, bearing the ring of amnesty which I will
+protect--as I would protect Your Majesty's honor--with my life!"
+
+"Thou art welcome, Lockesley," said the Queen smiling graciously.
+
+"Thou art come in good time, thou and all thy brave yeomanry."
+
+Then Robin presented each of his men in turn, and each fell on
+his knee and was greeted with most kindly words. And the Queen
+kissed fair Mistress Dale upon the cheek, and bade her remain in
+the palace with her ladies while she was in the city. And she
+made all the party be seated to rest themselves after their long
+journey. Fine wines were brought, and cake, and rich food, for
+their refreshment. And as they ate and drank, the Queen told
+them further of the tourney to be held at Finsbury Field, and of
+how she desired them to wear her colors and shoot for her.
+Meantime, she concluded, they were to lie by quietly and be known
+of no man.
+
+To do all this, Robin and his men pledged themselves full
+heartily. Then at the Queen's request, they related to her and
+her ladies some of their merry adventures; whereat the listeners
+were vastly entertained, and laughed heartily. Then Marian, who
+had heard of the wedding at Plympton Church, told it so drolly
+that tears stood in the Queen's eyes from merriment.
+
+"My lord Bishop of Hereford!" she said, "'Twas indeed a comical
+business for him! I shall keep that to twit his bones, I promise
+you! So this is our minstrel?" she added presently, turning to
+Allan-a-Dale. "Methinks I have already heard of him. Will he
+not harp awhile for us to-day?"
+
+Allan bowed low, and took a harp which was brought to him, and he
+thrummed the strings and sang full sweetly the border songs of
+the North Countree. And the Queen and all her ladies listened in
+rapt silence till all the songs were ended.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+HOW THE OUTLAWS SHOT IN KING HARRY'S TOURNEY
+
+The King is into Finsbury Field
+Marching in battle 'ray,
+And after follows bold Robin Hood,
+And all his yeomen gay.
+
+
+The morning of the great archery contest dawned fair and bright,
+bringing with it a fever of impatience to every citizen of London
+town, from the proudest courtier to the lowest kitchen wench.
+Aye, and all the surrounding country was early awake, too, and
+began to wend their way to Finsbury Field, a fine broad stretch
+of practice ground near Moorfields. Around three sides of the
+Field were erected tier upon tier of seats, for the spectators,
+with the royal boxes and booths for the nobility and gentry in
+the center. Down along one end were pitched gaily colored tents
+for the different bands of King's archers. There were ten of
+these bands, each containing a score of men headed by a captain
+of great renown; so to-day there were ten of the pavilions, each
+bearing aloft the Royal Arms and vari-colored pennants which
+fluttered lightly in the fresh morning breeze.
+
+Each captain's flag was of peculiar color and device. First came
+the royal purple streamer of Tepus, own bow-bearer to the King,
+and esteemed the finest archer in all the land. Then came the
+yellow of Clifton of Buckinghamshire; and the blue of Gilbert of
+the White Hand--he who was renowned in Nottinghamshire; and the
+green of Elwyn the Welshman; and the White of Robert of
+Cloudesdale; and, after them, five other captains of bands, each
+a man of proved prowess. As the Queen had said aforetime, the
+King was mightily proud of his archers, and now held this tourney
+to show their skill and, mayhap, to recruit their forces.
+
+The uprising tiers of seats filled early, upon this summer
+morning, and the merry chatter of the people went abroad like the
+hum of bees in a hive. The royal party had not yet put in an
+appearance, nor were any of the King's archers visible. So the
+crowd was content to hide its impatience by laughing jibes passed
+from one section to another, and crying the colors of their
+favorite archers. In and out among the seats went hawkers, their
+arms laden with small pennants to correspond with the rival
+tents. Other vendors of pie and small cakes and cider also did a
+thrifty business, for so eager had some of the people been to get
+good seats, that they had rushed away from home without their
+breakfast.
+
+Suddenly the gates at the far end, next the tents, opened wide,
+and a courier in scarlet and gold, mounted upon a white horse,
+rode in blowing lustily upon the trumpet at his lips; and behind
+him came six standard-bearers riding abreast. The populace arose
+with a mighty cheer. King Harry had entered the arena. He
+bestrode a fine white charger and was clad in a rich dark suit of
+slashed velvet with satin and gold facings. His hat bore a long
+curling ostrich plume of pure white and he doffed it graciously
+in answer to the shouts of the people. By his side rode Queen
+Eleanor, looking regal and charming in her long brocade
+riding-habit; while immediately behind them came Prince Richard
+and Prince John, each attired in knightly coats of mail and
+helmets. Lords and ladies of the realm followed; and finally, the
+ten companies of archers, whose progress round the field was
+greeted with hardly less applause than that given the King
+himself.
+
+The King and Queen dismounted from their steeds, ascended the
+steps of the royal box, and seated themselves upon two thrones,
+decked with purple and gold trapping, upon a dais sheltered by
+striped canvas. In the booths at each side the members of the
+Court took their places; while comely pages ran hither and
+thither bearing the royal commands. 'Twas a lordly sight, I
+ween, this shifting of proud courtiers, flashing of jeweled fans,
+and commingling of bright colors with costly gems!
+
+Now the herald arose to command peace, and soon the clear note of
+his bugle rose above the roar of the crowd and hushed it to
+silence. The tenscore archers ranged themselves in two long rows
+on each side of the lists--a gallant array--while their captains,
+as a special mark of favor, stood near the royal box.
+
+"Come hither, Tepus," said the King to his bow-bearer. "Come,
+measure me out this line, how long our mark must be."
+
+"What is the reward?" then asked the Queen.
+
+"That will the herald presently proclaim," answered the King.
+"For first prize we have offered a purse containing twoscore
+golden pounds; for second, a purse containing twoscore silver
+pennies; and for third a silver bugle, inlaid with gold.
+Moreover, if the King's companies keep these prizes, the winning
+companies shall have, first, two tuns of Rhenish wine; second,
+two tuns of English beer; and, third, five of the fattest harts
+that run on Dallom Lea. Methinks that is a princely wager,"
+added King Harry laughingly.
+
+Up spake bold Clifton, secure in the King's favor. "Measure no
+marks for us, most sovereign liege," quoth he; "for such largess
+as that, we'll shoot at the sun and the moon."
+
+"'Twill not be so far as that," said the King. "But get a line
+of good length, Tepus, and set up the targets at tenscore paces."
+
+Forthwith, Tepus bowed low, and set up ten targets, each bearing
+the pennant of a different company, while the herald stood forth
+again and proclaimed the rules and prizes. The entries were open
+to all comers. Each man, also, of the King's archers should
+shoot three arrows at the target bearing the colors of his band,
+until the best bowman in each band should be chosen. These ten
+chosen archers should then enter a contest for an open
+target--three shots apiece--and here any other bowman whatsoever
+was asked to try his skill. The result at the open targets
+should decide the tourney.
+
+Then all the people shouted again, in token that the terms of the
+contest pleased them; and the archers waved their bows aloft, and
+wheeled into position facing their respective targets.
+
+The shooting now began, upon all the targets at once, and the
+multitude had so much ado to watch them, that they forgot to
+shout. Besides, silence was commanded during the shooting. Of
+all the fine shooting that morning, I have not now space to tell
+you. The full score of men shot three times at each target, and
+then three times again to decide a tie. For, more than once, the
+arrow shot by one man would be split wide open by his successor.
+Every man's shaft bore his number to ease the counting; and so
+close would they stick at the end of a round, that the target
+looked like a big bristle hairbrush. Then must the spectators
+relieve their tense spirits by great cheering; while the King
+looked mighty proud of his skilled bowmen.
+
+At last the company targets were decided, and Tepus, as was
+expected, led the score, having made six exact centers in
+succession. Gilbert of the White Hand followed with five, and
+Clifton with four. Two other captains had touched their center
+four times, but not roundly. While in the other companies it so
+chanced that the captains had been out-shot by some of the men
+under them.
+
+The winners then saluted the King and Queen, and withdrew for a
+space to rest and renew their bow-strings for the keenest contest
+of all; while the lists were cleared and a new target--the open
+one--was set up at twelvescore paces. At the bidding of the
+King, the herald announced that the open target was to be shot
+at, to decide the title of the best archer in all England; and
+any man there present was privileged to try for it. But so keen
+had been the previous shooting, that many yeomen who had come to
+enter the lists now would not do so; and only a dozen men stepped
+forth to give in their names.
+
+"By my halidom!" said the King, "these must be hardy men to pit
+themselves against my archers!"
+
+"Think you that your ten chosen fellows are the best bowmen in
+all England?" asked the Queen.
+
+"Aye, and in all the world beside," answered the King; "and
+thereunto I would stake five hundred pounds."
+
+"I am minded to take your wager," said the Queen musingly, "and
+will e'en do so if you grant me a boon."
+
+"What is it?" asked the King.
+
+"If I produce five archers who can out-shoot your ten, will you
+grant my men full grace and amnesty?"
+
+"Assuredly!" quoth the King in right good humor. "Nathless, I
+tell you now, your wager is in jeopardy, for there never were
+such bowmen as Tepus and Clifton and Gilbert!"
+
+"Hum!" said the Queen puckering her brow, still as though lost in
+thought. "I must see if there be none present to aid me in my
+wager. Boy, call hither Sir Richard of the Lea and my lord
+Bishop of Hereford!"
+
+The two summoned ones, who had been witnessing the sport, came
+forward.
+
+"Sir Richard," said she, "thou art a full knight and good.
+Would'st advise me to meet a wager of the King's, that I can
+produce other archers as good as Tepus and Gilbert and Clifton?"
+
+"Nay, Your Majesty," he said, bending his knee. "There be none
+present that can match them. Howbeit,"--he added dropping his
+voice--'I have heard of some who lie hid in Sherwood Forest who
+could show them strange targets."
+
+The Queen smiled and dismissed him.
+
+"Come hither, my lord Bishop of Hereford," quoth she, "would'st
+thou advance a sum to support my wager 'gainst the King?"
+
+"Nay, Your Majesty," said the fat Bishop, "an you pardon me, I'd
+not lay down a penny on such a bet. For by my silver mitre, the
+King's archers are men who have no peers."
+
+"But suppose I found men whom THOU KNEWEST to be masters at the
+bow," she insisted roguishly, "would'st thou not back them?
+Belike, I have heard that there be men round about Nottingham and
+Plympton who carry such matters with a high hand!"
+
+The Bishop glanced nervously around, as if half expecting to see
+Robin Hood's men standing near; then turned to find the Queen
+looking at him with much amusement lurking in her eyes.
+
+"Odds bodikins! The story of my misadventure must have preceded
+me!" he thought, ruefully. Aloud he said, resolved to face it
+out,
+
+"Your Majesty, such tales are idle and exaggerated. An you
+pardon me, I would add to the King's wager that his men are
+invincible."
+
+"As it pleases thee," replied the Queen imperturbably. "How
+much?"
+
+"Here is my purse," said the Bishop uneasily. "It contains
+fifteen score nobles, or near a hundred pounds."
+
+"I'll take it at even money," she said, dismissing him; "and Your
+Majesty"--turning to the King who had been conversing with the
+two princes and certain of the nobles--"I accept your wager of
+five hundred pounds."
+
+"Very good," said the King, laughing as though it were a great
+jest. "But what had minded you to take such interest in the
+sport, of a sudden?"
+
+"It is as I have said. I have found five men whom I will pit
+against any you may produce."
+
+"Then we will try their skill speedily," quoth the King. "How
+say you, if first we decide this open target and then match the
+five best thereat against your unknown champions?"
+
+"Agreed," said the Queen. Thereupon she signed to Maid Marian to
+step forward, from a near-by booth where she sat with other
+ladies-in-waiting, and whispered something in her ear. Marian
+courtesied and withdrew.
+
+Now the ten chosen archers from the King's bands came forth again
+and took their stand; and with them stood forth the twelve
+untried men from the open lists. Again the crowd was stilled,
+and every eye hung upon the speeding of the shafts. Slowly but
+skilfully each man shot, and as his shaft struck within the inner
+ring a deep breath broke from the multitude like the sound of the
+wind upon the seashore. And now Gilbert of the White Hand led
+the shooting, and 'twas only by the space of a hairsbreadth upon
+the line that Tepus tied his score. Stout Elwyn, the Welshman,
+took third place; one of the private archers, named Geoffrey,
+come fourth; while Clifton must needs content himself with fifth.
+
+The men from the open lists shot fairly true, but nervousness and
+fear of ridicule wrought their undoing.
+
+The herald then came forward again, and, instead of announcing
+the prize-winners, proclaimed that there was to be a final
+contest. Two men had tied for first place, declared His Majesty
+the King, and three others were entitled to honors. Now all
+these five were to shoot again, and they were to be pitted
+against five other of the Queen's choosing--men who had not yet
+shot upon that day.
+
+A thrill of astonishment and excitement swept around the arena.
+"Who were these men of the Queen's choosing?" was upon every lip.
+The hubbub of eager voices grew intense; and in the midst of it
+all, the gate at the far end of the field opened and five men
+entered and escorted a lady upon horseback across the arena to
+the royal box. The lady was instantly recognized as Mistress
+Marian of the Queen's household, but no one seemed to know the
+faces of her escort. Four were clad in Lincoln green, while the
+fifth, who seemed to be the leader, was dressed in a brave suit
+of scarlet red. Each man wore a close fitting cap of black,
+decked with a curling white feather. For arms, they carried
+simply a stout bow, a sheaf of new arrows, and a short
+hunting-knife.
+
+When the little party came before the dais on which the King and
+Queen sat, the yeomen doffed their caps humbly, while Maid Marian
+was assisted to dismount.
+
+"Your Gracious Majesty," she said, addressing the Queen, "these
+be the men for whom you sent me, and who are now come to wear
+your colors and service you in the tourney."
+
+The Queen leaned forward and handed them each a scarf of green
+and gold.
+
+"Lockesley," she said in a clear voice, "I thank thee and thy men
+for this service. Know that I have laid a wager with the King
+that ye can outshoot the best five whom he has found in all his
+bowmen." The five men pressed the scarfs to their lips in token
+of fealty.
+
+The King turned to the Queen inquiringly.
+
+"Who are these men you have brought before us?" asked he.
+
+Up came the worthy Bishop of Hereford, growing red and pale by
+turns.
+
+"Your pardon, my liege lord!" cried he; "But I must denounce
+these fellows as outlaws. Yon man in scarlet is none other than
+Robin Hood himself. The others are Little John and Will Stutely
+and Will Scarlet and Allan-a-Dale--all famous in the North
+Countree for their deeds of violence."
+
+"As my lord Bishop personally knows!" added the Queen
+significantly.
+
+The King's brows grew dark. The name of Robin Hood was well
+known to him, as to every man there present.
+
+"Is this true?" he demanded sternly.
+
+"Aye, my lord," responded the Queen demurely. "But, bethink
+you--I have your royal promise of grace and amnesty."
+
+"That will I keep," said the King, holding in check his ire by a
+mighty effort. "But, look you! Only forty days do I grant of
+respite. When this time has elapsed, let these bold outlaws look
+to their safety!"
+
+Then turning to his five victorious archers, who had drawn near,
+he added, "Ye have heard, my men, how that I have a wager with
+the Queen upon your prowess. Now here be men of her
+choosing--certain free shafts of Sherwood and Barnesdale.
+Wherefore look well to it, Gilbert and Tepus and Geoffrey and
+Elwyn and Clifton! If ye outshoot these knaves, I will fill your
+caps with silver pennies--aye, and knight the man who stands
+first. But if ye lose, I give the prizes, for which ye have just
+striven, to Robin Hood and his men, according to my royal word."
+
+"Robin Hood and his men!" the saying flew round the arena with
+the speed of wild-fire, and every neck craned forward to see the
+famous fellows who had dared to brave the King's anger, because
+of the Queen.
+
+Another target was now set up, at the same distance as the last,
+and it was decided that the ten archers should shoot three arrows
+in turn. Gilbert and Robin tossed up a penny for the lead, and
+it fell to the King's men. So Clifton was bidden to shoot first.
+
+Forth he stood, planting his feet firmly, and wetting his fingers
+before plucking the string. For he was resolved to better his
+losing score of that day. And in truth he did so, for the shaft
+he loosed sped true, and landed on the black bull's-eye, though
+not in the exact center. Again he shot, and again he hit the
+black, on the opposite rim. The third shaft swerved downward and
+came within the second ring, some two fingers' breadths away.
+Nathless, a general cry went up, as this was the best shooting
+Clifton had done that day.
+
+Will Scarlet was chosen to follow him, and now took his place and
+carefully chose three round and full-feathered arrows.
+
+"Careful, my sweet coz!" quoth Robin in a low tone. "The knave
+has left wide space at the center for all of your darts."
+
+But Robin gave Will the wrong caution, for over-much care spoiled
+his aim. His first shaft flew wide and lodged in the second ring
+even further away than the worst shot of Clifton.
+
+"Your pardon, coz!" quoth Robin hastily. "Bid care go to the
+bottom of the sea, and do you loose your string before it sticks
+to your fingers!"
+
+And Will profited by this hint, and loosed his next two shafts as
+freely as though they flew along a Sherwood glade. Each struck
+upon the bull's-eye, and one even nearer the center than his
+rival's mark. Yet the total score was adjudged in favor of
+Clifton. At this Will Scarlet bit his lip, but said no word,
+while the crowd shouted and waved yellow flags for very joy that
+the King's man had overcome the outlaw. They knew, also, that
+this demonstration would please the King.
+
+The target was now cleared for the next two contestants--Geoffrey
+and Allan-a-Dale. Whereat, it was noticed that many ladies in
+the Queen's booths boldly flaunted Allan's colors, much to the
+honest pride which glowed in the cheeks of one who sat in their
+midst.
+
+"In good truth," said more than one lady to Mistress Dale, "if
+thy husband can handle the longbow as skilfully as the harp, his
+rival has little show of winning!"
+
+The saying augured well. Geoffrey had shot many good shafts that
+day; and indeed had risen from the ranks by virtue of them. But
+now each of his three shots, though well placed in triangular
+fashion around the rim of the bull's-eye, yet allowed an easy
+space for Allan to graze within. His shooting, moreover, was so
+prettily done, that he was right heartily applauded--the ladies
+and their gallants leading in the hand-clapping.
+
+Now you must know that there had long been a friendly rivalry in
+Robin Hood's band as to who was the best shot, next after Robin
+himself. He and Will Stutely had lately decided their
+marksmanship, and Will had found that Robin's skill was now so
+great as to place the leader at the head of all good bowmen in
+the forest. But the second place lay between Little John and
+Stutely, and neither wished to yield to the other. So to-day
+they looked narrowly at their leader to see who should shoot
+third. Robin read their faces at a glance, and laughing merrily,
+broke off two straws and held them out.
+
+"The long straw goes next!" he decided; and it fell to Stutely.
+
+Elwyn the Welshman was to precede him; and his score was no whit
+better than Geoffrey's. But Stutely failed to profit by it. His
+besetting sin at archery had ever been an undue haste and
+carelessness. To-day these were increased by a certain
+moodiness, that Little John had outranked him. So his first two
+shafts flew swiftly, one after the other, to lodging places
+outside the Welshman's mark.
+
+"Man! man!" cried Robin entreatingly, "you do forget the honor of
+the Queen, and the credit of Sherwood!"
+
+"I ask your pardon, master!" quoth Will humbly enough, and
+loosing as he spoke his last shaft. It whistled down the course
+unerringly and struck in the exact center--the best shot yet
+made.
+
+Now some shouted for Stutely and some shouted for Elwyn; but
+Elwyn's total mark was declared the better. Whereupon the King
+turned to the Queen. "What say you now?" quoth he in some
+triumph. "Two out of the three first rounds have gone to my men.
+Your outlaws will have to shoot better than that in order to save
+your wager!"
+
+The Queen smiled gently.
+
+"Yea, my lord," she said. "But the twain who are left are able
+to do the shooting. You forget that I still have Little John and
+Robin Hood."
+
+"And you forget, my lady, that I still have Tepus and Gilbert."
+
+So each turned again to the lists and awaited the next rounds in
+silent eagerness. I ween that King Harry had never watched the
+invasion of an enemy with more anxiety than he now felt.
+
+Tepus was chosen to go next and he fell into the same error with
+Will Scarlet. He held the string a moment too long, and both his
+first and second arrows came to grief. One of them, however,
+came within the black rim, and he followed it up by placing his
+third in the full center, just as Stutely had done in his last.
+These two centers were the fairest shots that had been made that
+day; and loud was the applause which greeted this second one.
+But the shouting was as nothing to the uproar which followed
+Little John's shooting. That good-natured giant seemed
+determined to outdo Tepus by a tiny margin in each separate shot;
+for the first and the second shafts grazed his rival's on the
+inner side, while for the third Little John did the old trick of
+the forest: he shot his own arrow in a graceful curve which
+descended from above upon Tepus's final center shaft with a
+glancing blow that drove the other out and left the outlaw's in
+its place.
+
+The King could scarce believe his eyes. "By my halidom!" quoth
+he, "that fellow deserves either a dukedom or a hanging! He must
+be in league with Satan himself! Never saw I such shooting."
+
+The score is tied, my lord," said the Queen; "we have still to
+see Gilbert and Robin Hood."
+
+Gilbert now took his stand and slowly shot his arrows, one after
+another, into the bull's-eye. 'Twas the best shooting he had yet
+done, but there was still the smallest of spaces left--if you
+looked closely--at the very center.
+
+"Well done, Gilbert!" spoke up Robin Hood. "You are a foeman
+worthy of being shot against." He took his own place as he spoke.
+"Now if you had placed one of your shafts THERE"--loosing one of
+his own--"and another THERE"--out sped the second--"and another
+THERE"--the third was launched--"mayhap the King would have
+declared you the best bowman in all England!"
+
+But the last part of his merry speech was drowned in the wild
+tumult of applause which followed his exploit. His first two
+shafts had packed themselves into the small space left at the
+bull's-eye; while his third had split down between them, taking
+half of each, and making all three appear from a distance, as one
+immense arrow.
+
+Up rose the King in amazement and anger.
+
+"Gilbert is not yet beaten!" he cried. "Did he not shoot within
+the mark thrice? And that is allowed a best in all the rules of
+archery."
+
+Robin bowed low.
+
+"As it please Your Majesty!" quoth he. "But may I be allowed to
+place the mark for the second shooting?"
+
+The King waved his hand sullenly.. Thereupon Robin prepared
+another old trick of the greenwood, and got him a light, peeled
+willow wand which he set in the ground in place of the target.
+
+"There, friend Gilbert," called he gaily; "belike you can hit
+that!"
+
+"I can scarce see it from here," said Gilbert, "much less hit it.
+Nathless, for the King's honor, I will try."
+
+But this final shot proved his undoing, and his shaft flew
+harmlessly by the thin white streak. Then came Robin to his
+stand again, and picked his arrow with exceeding care, and tried
+his string. Amid a breathless pause he drew the good yew bow
+back to his ear, glanced along the shaft, and let the feathered
+missile fly. Straight it sped, singing a keen note of triumph as
+it went. The willow wand was split in twain, as though it had met
+a hunter's knife.
+
+"Verily, I think your bow is armed with witchcraft!" cried
+Gilbert. "For I did not believe such shooting possible."
+
+"You should come to see our merry lads in the greenwood,"
+retorted Robin lightly. "For willow wands do not grow upon the
+cobblestones of London town."
+
+Meanwhile the King in great wrath had risen to depart, first
+signing the judges to distribute the prizes. Never a word said
+he, of good or ill, to the Queen, but mounted his horse and,
+followed by his sons and knights, rode off the field. The
+archers dropped upon one knee as he passed, but he gave them a
+single baleful look and was gone.
+
+Then the Queen beckoned the outlaws to approach, and they did so
+and knelt at her feet.
+
+"Right well have ye served me," she said, "and sorry am I that
+the King's anger is aroused thereby. But fear ye not. His word
+and grace hold true. As to these prizes ye have gained, I add
+others of mine own--the wagers I have won from His Majesty the
+King and from the lord Bishop of Hereford. Buy with some of
+these moneys the best swords ye can find in London, for all your
+band, and call them the swords of the Queen. And swear with them
+to protect all the poor and the helpless and the women--kind who
+come your way."
+
+"We swear," said the five yeomen solemnly.
+
+Then the Queen gave each of them her hand to kiss, and arose and
+departed with all her ladies. And after they were gone, the
+King's archers came crowding around Robin and his men, eager to
+get a glimpse of the fellows about whom they had heard so much.
+And back of them came a great crowd of the spectators pushing and
+jostling in their efforts to come nearer.
+
+"Verily!" laughed Little John, "they must take us for a Merry
+Andrew show!"
+
+Now the judges came up, and announced each man his prize,
+according to the King's command. To Robin was give the purse
+containing twoscore golden pounds; to Little John the twoscore
+silver pennies; and to Allan-a-Dale the fine inlaid bugle, much
+to his delight, for he was skilled at blowing sweet tunes upon
+the horn hardly less than handling the harp strings. But when
+the Rhenish wine and English beer and harts of Dallom Lea were
+spoken of, Robin said:
+
+"Nay, what need we of wine or beer, so far from the greenwood?
+And 'twould be like carrying coals to Newcastle, to drive those
+harts to Sherwood! Now Gilbert and Tepus and their men have shot
+passing well. Wherefore, the meat and drink must go to them, an
+they will accept it of us."
+
+"Right gladly," replied Gilbert grasping his hand. "Ye are good
+men all, and we will toast you every one, in memory of the
+greatest day at archery that England has ever seen, or ever will
+see!"
+
+Thus said all the King's archers, and the hand of good-fellowship
+was given amid much shouting and clapping on the shoulder-blades.
+
+And so ended King Harry's tourney, whose story has been handed
+down from sire to son, even unto the present day.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS SOUGHT OF THE TINKER
+
+And while the tinker fell asleep,
+Robin made haste away,
+And left the tinker in the lurch,
+For the great shot to pay.
+
+
+King Henry was as good as his word. Robin Hood and his party were
+suffered to depart from London--the parting bringing keen sorrow
+to Marian--and for forty days no hand was raised against them.
+But at the end of that time, the royal word was sent to the
+worthy Sheriff at Nottingham that he must lay hold upon the
+outlaws without further delay, as he valued his office.
+
+Indeed, the exploits of Robin and his band, ending with the great
+tourney in Finsbury Field, had made a mighty stir through all
+England, and many there were to laugh boldly at the Nottingham
+official for his failures to capture the outlaws.
+
+The Sheriff thereupon planned three new expeditions into the
+greenwood, and was even brave enough to lead them, since he had
+fifteen-score men at his beck and call each time. But never the
+shadow of an outlaw did he see, for Robin's men lay close, and
+the Sheriff's men knew not how to come at their chief
+hiding-place in the cove before the cavern.
+
+Now the Sheriff's daughter had hated Robin Hood bitterly in her
+heart ever since the day he refused to bestow upon her the golden
+arrow, and shamed her before all the company. His tricks, also,
+upon her father were not calculated to lessen her hatred, and so
+she sought about for means to aid the Sheriff in catching the
+enemy.
+
+"There is no need to go against this man with force of arms," she
+said. "We must meet his tricks with other tricks of our own."
+
+"Would that we could!" groaned the Sheriff. "The fellow is
+becoming a nightmare unto me."
+
+"Let me plan a while," she replied. "Belike I can cook up some
+scheme for his undoing."
+
+"Agreed," said the Sheriff, "and if anything comes of your
+planning, I will e'en give you an hundred silver pennies for a
+new gown, and a double reward to the man who catches the
+outlaws."
+
+Now upon that same day, while the Sheriff's daughter was racking
+her brains for a scheme, there came to the Mansion House a
+strolling tinker named Middle, a great gossip and braggart. And
+as he pounded away upon some pots and pans in the scullery, he
+talked loudly about what HE would do, if he once came within
+reach of that rascal Robin Hood.
+
+"It might be that this simple fellow could do something through
+his very simplicity," mused the Sheriff's daughter, overhearing
+his prattle. "Odds bodikins! 'twill do no harm to try his
+service, while I bethink myself of some better plan."
+
+And she called him to her, and looked him over--a big brawny
+fellow enough, with an honest look about the eye, and a
+countenance so open that when he smiled his mouth seemed the only
+country on the map.
+
+"I am minded to try your skill at outlaw catching," she said,
+"and will add goodly measure to the stated reward if you succeed.
+Do you wish to make good your boasted prowess?"
+
+The tinker grinned broadly.
+
+"Yes, your ladyship," he said.
+
+"Then here is a warrant made out this morning by the Sheriff
+himself. See that you keep it safely and use it to good
+advantage."
+
+And she dismissed him.
+
+Middle departed from the house mightily pleased with himself, and
+proud of his commission. He swung his crab-tree-staff recklessly
+in his glee--so recklessly that he imperiled the shins of more
+than one angry passer-by--and vowed he'd crack the ribs of Robin
+Hood with it, though he was surrounded by every outlaw in the
+whole greenwood.
+
+Spurred on by the thoughts of his own coming bravery, he left the
+town and proceeded toward Barnesdale. The day was hot and dusty,
+and at noontime he paused at a wayside inn to refresh himself.
+He began by eating and drinking and dozing, in turn, then sought
+to do all at once.
+
+Mine host of the "Seven Does" stood by, discussing the eternal
+Robin with a drover.
+
+"Folk do say that my lord Sheriff has sent into Lincoln for more
+men-at-arms and horses, and that when he has these behind him,
+he'll soon rid the forest of these fellows."
+
+"Of whom speak you?" asked the tinker sitting up.
+
+"Of Robin Hood and his men," said the host; "but go to sleep
+again. You will never get the reward!"
+
+"And why not?" asked the tinker, rising with great show of
+dignity.
+
+"Where our Sheriff has failed, and the stout Guy of Gisborne, and
+many more beside, it behoves not a mere tinker to succeed."
+
+The tinker laid a heavy hand upon the innkeeper's fat shoulder,
+and tried to look impressive.
+
+"There is your reckoning, host, upon the table. I must e'en go
+upon my way, because I have more important business than to stand
+here gossiping with you. But be not surprised, if, the next time
+you see me, I shall have with me no less person than Robin Hood
+himself!"
+
+And he strode loftily out the door and walked up the hot white
+road toward Barnesdale.
+
+He had not gone above a quarter of a mile when he met a young man
+with curling brown hair and merry eyes. The young man carried
+his light cloak over his arm, because of the heat, and was
+unarmed save for a light sword at his side. The newcomer eyed
+the perspiring tinker in a friendly way, and seeing he was a
+stout fellow accosted him.
+
+"Good-day to you!" said he.
+
+"Good-day to you!" said the tinker; "and a morrow less heating."
+
+"Aye," laughed the other. "Whence come you? And know you the
+news?"
+
+"What is the news?" said the gossipy tinker, pricking up his ear;
+"I am a tinker by trade, Middle by name, and come from over
+against Banbury."
+
+"Why as for the news," laughed the stranger, "I hear that two
+tinkers were set i' the stocks for drinking too much ale and
+beer."
+
+"If that be all your news," retorted Middle, "I can beat you
+clear to the end of the lane."
+
+"What news have you? Seeing that you go from town to town, I
+ween you can outdo a poor country yokel at tidings."
+
+"All I have to tell," said the other, "is that I am especially
+commissioned"--he felt mightily proud of these big
+words--"especially commissioned to seek a bold outlaw which they
+call Robin Hood."
+
+"So?" said the other arching his brows. "How 'especially
+commissioned'?"
+
+"I have a warrant from the Sheriff, sealed with the King's own
+seal, to take him where I can; and if you can tell me where he
+is, I will e'en make a man of you."
+
+"Let me see the warrant," said the other, "to satisfy myself if
+it be right; and I will do the best I can to bring him to you."
+
+"That will I not," replied the tinker; "I will trust none with
+it. And if you'll not help me to come at him I must forsooth
+catch him by myself."
+
+And he made his crab-tree-staff whistle shrill circles in the
+air.
+
+The other smiled at the tinker's simplicity, and said:
+
+"The middle of the road on a hot July day is not a good place to
+talk things over. Now if you're the man for me and I'm the man
+for you, let's go back to the inn, just beyond the bend of road,
+and quench our thirst and cool our heads for thinking."
+
+"Marry come up!" quoth the tinker. "That will I! For though
+I've just come from there, my thirst rises mightily at the sound
+of your voice."
+
+So back he turned with the stranger and proceeded to the "Seven
+Does."
+
+The landlord arched his eyebrows silently when he saw the two
+come in, but served them willingly.
+
+The tinker asked for wine, and Robin for ale. The wine was not
+the most cooling drink in the cellar, nor the clearest headed.
+Nathless, the tinker asked for it, since it was expensive and the
+other man had invited him to drink. They lingered long over
+their cups, Master Middle emptying one after another while the
+stranger expounded at great length on the best plans for coming
+at and capturing Robin Hood.
+
+In the end the tinker fell sound asleep while in the act of
+trying to get a tankard to his lips. Then the stranger deftly
+opened the snoring man's pouch, took out the warrant, read it,
+and put it in his own wallet. Calling mine host to him, he
+winked at him with a half smile and told him that the tinker
+would pay the whole score when he awoke. Thus was Master Middle
+left in the lurch "for the great shot to pay."
+
+Nathless, the stranger seemed in no great hurry. He had the whim
+to stay awhile and see what the droll tinker might do when he
+awoke. So he hid behind a window shutter, on the outside, and
+awaited events.
+
+Presently the tinker came to himself with a prodigious yawn, and
+reached at once for another drink.
+
+"What were you saying, friend, about the best plan
+(ya-a-a-ah!) for catching this fellow?--Hello!--where's the
+man gone?"
+
+He had looked around and saw no one with him at the table.
+
+"Host! host!" he shouted, "where is that fellow who was to pay my
+reckoning?"
+
+"I know not," answered the landlord sharply. "Mayhap he left the
+money in your purse."
+
+"No he didn't!" roared Middle, looking therein. "Help! Help!
+I've been robbed! Look you, host, you are liable to arrest for
+high treason! I am here upon the King's business, as I told you
+earlier in the day. And yet while I did rest under your roof,
+thinking you were an honest man (hic!) and one loving of the
+King, my pouch has been opened and many matters of state taken
+from it."
+
+"Cease your bellowing!" said the landlord. "What did you lose?"
+
+"Oh, many weighty matters, I do assure you. I had with me, item,
+a warrant, granted under the hand of my lord High Sheriff of
+Nottingham, and sealed with the Kings's own seal, for the capture
+(hic!)--and arrest--and overcoming of a notorious rascal, one
+Robin Hood of Barnesdale. Item, one crust of bread. Item, one
+lump (hic!) of solder. Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six
+single keys (hic!), useful withal. Item, twelve silver pennies,
+the which I earned this week (hic!) in fair labor. Item--"
+
+"Have done with your items!" said the host. "And I marvel
+greatly to hear you speak in such fashion of your friend, Robin
+Hood of Barnesdale. For was he not with you in all
+good-fellowship?"
+
+"Wh-a-at? THAT Robin Hood?" gasped Middle with staring eyes.
+"Why did you not tell me?"
+
+"Faith, _I_ saw no need o' telling you! Did you not tell me the
+first time you were here to-day, that I need not be surprised if
+you came back with no less person than Robin Hood himself?"
+
+"Jesu give me pardon!" moaned the tinker. "I see it all now. He
+got me to drinking, and then took my warrant, and my pennies, and
+my crust--"
+
+"Yes, yes," interrupted the host. "I know all about that. But
+pay me the score for both of you."
+
+"But I have no money, gossip. Let me go after that vile
+bag-o'-bones, and I'll soon get it out of him."
+
+"Not so," replied the other. "If I waited for you to collect
+from Robin Hood, I would soon close up shop."
+
+"What is the account?" asked Middle.
+
+"Ten shillings, just."
+
+"Then take here my working-bag and my good hammer too; and if I
+light upon that knave I will soon come back after them."
+
+"Give me your leathern coat as well," said mine host; "the hammer
+and bag of tools are as naught to me."
+
+"Gramercy!" cried Master Middle, losing what was left of his
+temper. "It seems that I have escaped one thief only to fall
+into the hands of another. If you will but walk with me out into
+the middle of the road, I'll give you such a crack as shall drive
+some honesty into your thick skull."
+
+"You are wasting your breath and my time," retorted the landlord.
+
+"Give me your things, and get you gone after your man, speedily,"
+
+Middle thought this to be good advice; so he strode forth from
+the "Seven Does" in a black mood.
+
+Ere he had gone half a mile, he saw Robin Hood walking demurely
+among the trees a little in front of him.
+
+"Ho there, you villain!" roared the tinker. "Stay your steps! I
+am desperately in need of you this day!"
+
+Robin turned about with a surprised face.
+
+"What knave is this?" he asked gently, "who comes shouting after
+me?"
+
+"No knave! no knave at all!" panted the other, rushing up. "But
+an honest--man--who would have--that warrant--and the money for
+drink!"
+
+"Why, as I live, it is our honest tinker who was seeking Robin
+Hood! Did you find him, gossip?"
+
+"Marry, that did I! and I'm now going to pay him my respects!"
+
+And he plunged at him, making a sweeping stroke with his
+crab-tree-cudgel.
+
+Robin tried to draw his sword, but could not do it for a moment
+through dodging the other's furious blows. When he did get it in
+hand, the tinker had reached him thrice with resounding thwacks.
+Then the tables were turned, for he dashed in right manfully with
+his shining blade and made the tinker give back again.
+
+The greenwood rang with the noise of the fray. 'Twas steel
+against wood, and they made a terrible clattering when they came
+together. Robin thought at first that he could hack the cudgel
+to pieces, for his blade was one of Toledo--finely tempered steel
+which the Queen had given him. But the crab-tree-staff had been
+fired and hardened and seasoned by the tinker's arts until it was
+like a bar of iron--no pleasant neighbor for one's ribs.
+
+Robin presently found this out to his sorrow. The long reach and
+long stick got to him when 'twas impossible for him to touch his
+antagonist. So his sides began to ache sorely.
+
+"Hold your hand, tinker," he said at length. "I cry a boon of
+you."
+
+"Before I do it," said the tinker, "I'd hang you on this tree."
+
+But even as he spoke, Robin found the moment's grace for which he
+longed; and immediately grasped his horn and blew the three
+well-known blasts of the greenwood.
+
+"A murrain seize you!" roared the tinker commencing afresh. "Up
+to your old tricks again, are you? Well, I'll have time to
+finish my job, if I hurry."
+
+But Robin was quite able to hold his own at a pinch, and they had
+not exchanged many lunges and passes when up came Little John and
+Will Scarlet and a score of yeomen at their heels. Middle was
+seized without ceremony, while Robin sat himself down to breathe.
+"What is the matter?" quoth Little John, "that you should sit so
+weariedly upon the highway side?"
+
+"Faith, that rascally tinker yonder has paid his score well upon
+my hide," answered Robin ruefully.
+
+"That tinker, then," said Little John, "must be itching for more
+work. Fain would I try if he can do as much for me."
+
+"Or me," said Will Scarlet, who like Little John was always
+willing to swing a cudgel.
+
+"Nay," laughed Robin. "Belike I could have done better, an he
+had given me time to pull a young tree up by the roots. But I
+hated to spoil the Queen's blade upon his tough stick or no less
+tough hide. He had a warrant for my arrest which I stole from
+him."
+
+"Also, item, twelve silver pennies," interposed the tinker,
+unsubdued; "item, one crust of bread, 'gainst my supper. Item,
+one lump of solder. Item, three pieces of twine. Item, six
+single keys. Item--"
+
+"Yes, I know," quoth the merry Robin; "I stood outside the
+landlord's window and heard you count over your losses. Here
+they are again; and the silver pennies are turned by magic into
+gold. Here also, if you will, is my hand."
+
+"I take it heartily, with the pence!" cried Middle. "By my
+leathern coat and tools, which I shall presently have out of that
+sly host, I swear that I never yet met a man I liked as well as
+you! An you and your men here will take me, I swear I'll serve
+you honestly. Do you want a tinker? Nay, but verily you must!
+Who else can mend and grind your swords and patch your
+pannikins--and fight, too, when occasion serve? Mend your pots!
+mend your pa-a-ans!"
+
+And he ended his speech with the sonorous cry of his craft.
+
+By this time the whole band was laughing uproariously at the
+tinker's talk.
+
+"What say you, fellows?" asked Robin. "Would not this tinker be
+a good recruit?"
+
+"That he would!" answered Will Scarlet, clapping the new man on
+the back. "He will keep Friar Tuck and Much the miller's son
+from having the blues."
+
+So amid great merriment and right good fellowship the outlaws
+shook Middle by the hand, and he took oath of fealty, and thought
+no more of the Sheriff's daughter.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS TANNED OF THE TANNER
+
+In Nottingham there lived a jolly tanner,
+With a hey down, down, a down down!
+His name was Arthur-a-Bland,
+There was ne'er a squire in Nottinghamshire
+
+Dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+And as he went forth, in a summer's morning,
+With a hey down, down, a down down!
+To the forest of merrie Sherwood,
+To view the red deer, that range here and there,
+There met he with bold Robin Hood.
+
+
+The Sheriff's daughter bided for several days in the faint hope
+that she might hear tidings of the prattling tinker. But never a
+word heard she, and she was forced to the conclusion that her
+messenger had not so much as laid eyes upon the outlaw. Little
+recked she that he was, even then, grinding sword-points and
+sharpening arrows out in the good greenwood, while whistling
+blithely or chatting merrily with the good Friar Tuck.
+
+Then she bethought herself of another good man, one
+Arthur-a-Bland, a tanner who dwelt in Nottingham town and was
+far-famed in the tourneys round about. He had done some pretty
+tricks at archery, but was strongest at wrestling and the
+quarter-staff. For three years he had cast all comers to the
+earth in wrestling until the famous Eric o' Lincoln broke a rib
+for him in a mighty tussle. Howsoever, at quarter-staff he had
+never yet met his match; so that there was never a squire in
+Nottinghamshire dare bid bold Arthur stand.
+
+With a long pike-staff on his shoulder,
+So well he could clear his way
+That by two and three he made men flee
+And none of them could stay.
+
+Thus at least runs the old song which tells of his might.
+
+"This is just the man for me!" thought the Sheriff's daughter to
+herself; and she forthwith summoned him to the Mansion House and
+commissioned him to seek out Robin Hood.
+
+The warrant was quite to Arthur's liking, for he was happiest
+when out in the forest taking a sly peep at the King's deer; and
+now he reckoned that he could look at them boldly, instead of by
+the rays of the moon. He could say to any King's Forester who
+made bold to stop him: "I am here on the King's business!"
+
+"Gramercy! No more oak-bark and ditch-water and the smell of
+half-tanned hides to-day!" quoth he, gaily. "I shall e'en see
+what the free air of heaven tastes like, when it sweeps through
+the open wood."
+
+So the tanner departed joyfully upon his errand, but much more
+interested in the dun deer of the forest than in any two-legged
+rovers therein. This interest had, in fact, caused the Foresters
+to keep a shrewd eye upon him in the past, for his tannery was
+apt to have plenty of meat in it that was more like venison than
+the law allowed. As for the outlaws, Arthur bore them no
+ill-will; indeed he had felt a secret envy in his heart at their
+free life; but he was not afraid to meet any two men who might
+come against him. Nathless, the Sheriff's daughter did not
+choose a very good messenger, as you shall presently see.
+
+Away sped the tanner, a piece of bread and some wine in his
+wallet, a good longbow and arrows slung across his shoulder, his
+stout quarter-staff in his hand, and on his head a cap of trebled
+raw-hide so tough that it would turn the edge of a broadsword.
+He lost no time in getting out of the hot sun and into the
+welcome shade of the forest, where he stalked cautiously about
+seeking some sign of the dun deer.
+
+Now it so chanced that upon that very morning Robin Hood had sent
+Little John to a neighboring village to buy some cloth of Lincoln
+green for new suits for all the band. Some of the money recently
+won of the King was being spent in this fashion, 'gainst the
+approach of winter. Will Scarlet had been sent on a similar
+errand to Barnesdale some time before, if you remember, only to
+be chased up the hill without his purchase. So to-day Little
+John was chosen, and for sweet company's sake Robin went with him
+a part of the way until they came to the "Seven Does," the inn
+where Robin had recently played his prank upon Middle the tinker.
+Here they drank a glass of ale to refresh themselves withal, and
+for good luck; and Robin tarried a bit while Little John went on
+his errand.
+
+Presently Robin entered the edge of the wood, when whom should he
+see but Arthur-a-Bland, busily creeping after a graceful deer
+that browsed alone down the glade. "Now by Saint George and the
+Dragon!" quoth Robin to himself. "I much fear that yon same
+fellow is a rascally poacher come after our own and the King's
+meat!"
+
+For you must know, by a curious process of reasoning, Robin and
+his men had hunted in the royal preserves so long that they had
+come to consider themselves joint owners to every animal which
+roamed therein.
+
+"Nay!" he added, "this must be looked into! That cow-skin cap in
+sooth must hide a scurvy varlet!"
+
+And forthwith he crept behind a tree, and thence to another,
+stalking our friend Arthur as busily as Arthur was stalking the
+deer.
+
+This went on for quite a space, until the tanner began to come
+upon the deer and to draw his bow in order to tickle the victim's
+ribs with a cloth-yard shaft. But just at this moment Robin
+unluckily trod upon a twig which snapped and caused the tanner to
+turn suddenly.
+
+Robin saw that he was discovered, so he determined to put a bold
+face on the matter, and went forward with some smart show of
+authority.
+
+"Hold!" he cried: "stay your hand! Why, who are you, bold
+fellow, to range so boldly here? In sooth, to be brief, ye look
+like a thief that has come to steal the King's deer."
+
+"Marry, it is scant concern of yours, what I look like!" retorted
+Arthur-a-Bland. "Who are you, who speak so bravely?"
+
+"You shall soon find out who I am!" quoth Robin, determining to
+find some sport in the matter. "I am a keeper of this forest.
+The King knows that I am looking after his deer for him; and
+therefore we must stay you."
+
+"Have you any assistants, friend?" asked the tanner calmly. "For
+it is not one man alone who can stop me."
+
+"Nay truly, gossip," replied Robin. "I have a good yew bow, also
+a right sharp blade at my side. Nathless I need no better
+assistant than a good oak-graff like unto yours. Give me a
+baker's dozen of minutes with it and it shall pleasure me to
+crack that pate of yours for your sauciness!"
+
+"Softly, my man! Fair and softly! Big words never killed so
+much as a mouse--least of all yon deer which has got away while
+you were filling all the woods with your noisy breath. So choose
+your own playthings. For your sword and your bow I care not a
+straw; nor for all your arrows to boot. If I get but a knock at
+you, 'twill be as much as you'll need."
+
+"Now by our Lady! Will you listen to the braggart?" cried Robin
+in a fine rage. "Marry, but I'll teach ye to be more mannerly!"
+
+So saying he unbuckled his belt; and, flinging his bow upon the
+ground he seized hold of a young sapling that was growing near
+by. His hunting knife soon had it severed and lopped into shape.
+
+"Now come, fellow!" said Arthur-a-Bland, seeing that he was
+ready. "And if I do not tan your hide for you in better shape
+than ever calf-skin was turned into top-boots, may a murrain
+seize me!"
+
+"Stay," said Robin, "methinks my cudgel is half a foot longer
+than yours. I would have them of even length before you begin
+your tanning."
+
+"I pass not for length," bold Arthur replied; "my staff is long
+enough, as you will shortly find out. Eight foot and a half,
+and 'twill knock down a calf"--here he made it whistle in the
+air--"and I hope it will knock down you."
+
+Forthwith the two men spat on their hands, laid firm hold upon
+their cudgels and began slowly circling round each other, looking
+for an opening.
+
+Now it so chanced that Little John had fared expeditiously with
+his errand. He had met the merchant, from whom he was wont to
+buy Lincoln green, coming along the road; and had made known his
+wants in few words. The merchant readily undertook to deliver the
+suits by a certain day in the following month. So Little John,
+glad to get back to the cool shelter of the greenwood, hasted
+along the road lately taken by Robin.
+
+Presently he heard the sound of angry voices, one of which he
+recognized as his captain's.
+
+"Now, Heaven forfend," quoth he, "that Robin Hood has fallen into
+the clutches of a King's man! I must take a peep at this fray."
+
+So he cautiously made his way from tree to tree, as Robin had
+done, till he came to the little open space where Robin and
+Arthur were circling about each other with angry looks, like two
+dogs at bay.
+
+"Ha! this looks interesting!" muttered Little John to himself,
+for he loved a good quarter-staff bout above anything else in
+the world, and was the best man at it in all the greenwood. And
+he crawled quietly underneath a friendly bush--much as he had
+done when Robin undertook to teach Will Scarlet a lesson--and
+chuckled softly to himself and slapped his thigh and prepared to
+watch the fight at his ease.
+
+Indeed it was both exciting and laughable. You would have
+chuckled one moment and caught your breath the next, to see those
+two stout fellows swinging their sticks--each half as long again
+as the men were, and thick as their arm--and edging along
+sidewise, neither wishing to strike the first blow.
+
+At last Robin could no longer forbear, and his good right arm
+swung round like a flash. Ping! went the stick on the back of
+the other's head, raising such a welt that the blood came. But
+the tanner did not seem to mind it at all, for bing! went his own
+staff in return, giving Robin as good as he had sent. Then the
+battle was on, and furiously it waged. Fast fell the blows, but
+few save the first ones landed, being met in mid-air by a
+counter-blow till the thwacking sticks sounded like the steady
+roll of a kettle-drum and the oak--bark flew as fine as it had
+ever done in Arthur-a-Bland's tannery.
+
+Round and round they fought, digging their heels into the ground
+to keep from slipping, so that you would have vowed there had
+been a yoke of oxen ploughing a potato-patch. Round and round,
+up and down, in and out, their arms working like
+threshing-machines, went the yeoman and the tanner, for a full
+hour, each becoming more astonished every minute that the other
+was such a good fellow. While Little John from underneath his
+bushy covert had much ado to keep from roaring aloud in pure joy.
+
+Finally Robin saw his chance and brought a full arm blow straight
+down upon the other's head with a force that would have felled a
+bullock. But Arthur's trebled cow-skin cap here stood him in
+good stead: the blow glanced off without doing more than stunning
+him. Nathless, he reeled and had much ado to keep from falling;
+seeing which Robin stayed his hand--to his own sorrow, for the
+tanner recovered his wits in a marvelous quick space and sent
+back a sidelong blow which fairly lifted Robin off his feet and
+sent him tumbling on to the grass.
+
+"Hold your hand! hold your hand!" roared Robin with what little
+breath he had left. "Hold, I say, and I will give you the
+freedom of the greenwood."
+
+"Why, God-a-mercy," said Arthur; "I may thank my staff for
+that--not YOU."
+
+"Well, well, gossip' let be as it may. But prithee tell me your
+name and trade. I like to know fellows who can hit a blow like
+that same last."
+
+"I am a tanner," replied Arthur-a-Bland. "In Nottingham long
+have I wrought. And if you'll come to me I swear I'll tan your
+hides for naught."
+
+"Odds bodikins!" quoth Robin ruefully. "Mine own hide is tanned
+enough for the present. Howsoever, there be others in this wood
+I would fain see you tackle. Harkee, if you will leave your
+tan-pots and come with me, as sure as my name is Robin Hood, you
+shan't want gold or fee."
+
+"By the breath o' my body!" said Arthur, "that will I do!" and
+he gripped him gladly by the hand. "But I am minded that I clean
+forgot the errand that brought me to Sherwood. I was
+commissioned by some, under the Sheriff's roof, to capture you."
+
+"So was a certain tinker, now in our service," said Robin
+smilingly.
+
+"Verily 'tis a new way to recruit forces!" said the tanner
+laughing loudly. "But tell me, good Robin Hood, where is Little
+John? I fain would see him, for he is a kinsman on my mother's
+side."
+
+"Here am I, good Arthur-a-Bland!" said a voice; and Little
+John literally rolled out from under the bush to the sward. His
+eyes were full of tears from much laughter which had well-nigh
+left him powerless to get on his feet.
+
+As soon as the astonished tanner saw who it was, he gave Little
+John a mighty hug around the neck, and lifted him up on his feet,
+and the two pounded each other on the back soundly, so glad were
+they to meet again.
+
+"O, man, man!" said Little John as soon as he had got his
+breath. "Never saw I so fine a sight in all my born days. You
+did knock him over like as he were a ninepin!"
+
+"And you do joy to see me thwacked about on the ribs?" asked
+Robin with some choler.
+
+"Nay, not that, master!" said Little John. "But 'tis the second
+time I have had special tickets to a show from beneath the
+bushes, and I cannot forbear my delight. Howsoever, take no
+shame unto yourself, for this same Arthur-a-Bland is the best man
+at the quarter-staff in all Nottinghamshire. It commonly takes
+two or three men to hold him."
+
+"Unless it be Eric o' Lincoln," said Arthur modestly; "and I well
+know how you paid him out at the Fair."
+
+"Say no more!" said Robin springing to his feet; "for well I know
+that I have done good business this day, and a few bruises are
+easy payment for the stout cudgel I am getting into the band.
+Your hand again, good Arthur-a-Bland! Come! let us after the deer
+of which I spoiled your stalking."
+
+"Righty gladly!" quoth Arthur. "Come, Cousin Little John! Away
+with vats and tan-bark and vile-smelling cowhides! I'll follow
+you two in the sweet open air to the very ends of earth!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA
+
+Then answered him the gentle knight
+With words both fair and thee:
+"God save thee, my good Robin,
+And all thy company!"
+
+
+Now you must know that some months passed by. The winter dragged
+its weary length through Sherwood Forest, and Robin Hood and his
+merry men found what cheer they could in the big crackling fires
+before their woodland cave. Friar Tuck had built him a little
+hermitage not far away, where he lived comfortably with his
+numerous dogs.
+
+The winter, I say, reached an end at last, and the blessed spring
+came and went. Another summer passed on apace, and still neither
+King nor Sheriff nor Bishop could catch the outlaws, who,
+meanwhile, thrived and prospered mightily in their outlawry. The
+band had been increased from time to time by picked men such as
+Arthur-a-Bland and David of Doncaster--he who was the jolliest
+cobbler for miles around--until it now numbered a full sevenscore
+of men; seven companies each with its stout lieutenant serving
+under Robin Hood. And still they relieved the purses of the rich,
+and aided the poor, and feasted upon King's deer until the lank
+Sheriff of Nottingham was well-nigh distracted.
+
+Indeed, that official would probable have lost his office
+entirely, had it not been for the fact of the King's death.
+Henry passed away, as all Kings will, in common with ordinary
+men, and Richard of the Lion Heart was proclaimed as his
+successor.
+
+Then Robin and his men, after earnest debate, resolved to throw
+themselves upon the mercy of the new King, swear allegiance, and
+ask to be organized into Royal Foresters. So Will Scarlet and
+Will Stutely and Little John were sent to London with this
+message, which they were first to entrust privately to Maid
+Marian. But they soon returned with bad tidings. The new King
+had formerly set forth upon a crusade to the Holy Land, and
+Prince John, his brother, was impossible to deal with--being
+crafty, cruel and treacherous. He was laying his hands upon all
+the property which could easily be seized; among other estates,
+that of the Earl of Huntingdon, Robin's old enemy and Marian's
+father, who had lately died.
+
+Marian herself was in sore straits. Not only had her estates
+been taken away, and the maid been deprived of the former
+protection of the Queen, but the evil Prince John had persecuted
+her with his attentions. He thought that since the maid was
+defenseless he could carry her away to one of his castles and
+none could gainsay him.
+
+No word of this peril reached Robin's ears, although his men
+brought him word of the seizure of the Huntingdon lands.
+Nathless he was greatly alarmed for the safety of Maid Marian,
+and his heart cried out for her strongly. She had been
+continually in his thoughts ever since the memorable shooting at
+London town.
+
+One morning in early autumn when the leaves were beginning to
+turn gold at the edges, the chestnut-pods to swell with promise
+of fatness, and the whole wide woodland was redolent with the
+ripe fragrance of fruit and flower, Robin was walking along the
+edge of a small open glade busy with his thoughts. The peace of
+the woods was upon him, despite his broodings of Marian and he
+paid little heed to a group of does quietly feeding among the
+trees at the far edge of the glade.
+
+But presently this sylvan picture was rudely disturbed for him.
+A stag, wild and furious, dashed suddenly forth from among the
+trees, scattering the does in swift alarm. The vicious beast
+eyed the green-and-gold tunic of Robin, and, lowering it head,
+charged at him impetuously. So sudden was its attack that Robin
+had no time to bend his bow. He sprang behind a tree while he
+seized his weapon.
+
+A moment later the wild stag crashed blindly into the tree-trunk
+with a shock which sent the beast reeling backward, while the
+dislodged leaves from the shivering tree fell in a small shower
+over Robin's head.
+
+"By my halidom, I am glad it was not me you struck, my gentle
+friend!" quoth Robin, fixing an arrow upon the string. "Sorry
+indeed would be any one's plight who should encounter you in this
+black humor."
+
+Scarcely had he spoken when he saw the stag veer about and fix
+its glances rigidly on the bushes to the left side of the glade.
+These were parted by a delicate hand, and through the opening
+appeared the slight figure of a page. It was Maid Marian, come
+back again to the greenwood!
+
+She advanced, unconscious alike of Robin's horrified gaze and the
+evil fury of the stag.
+
+She was directly in line with the animal, so Robin dared not
+launch an arrow. Her own bow was slung across her shoulder, and
+her small sword would be useless against the beast's charge. But
+now as she caught sight of the stag she pursed her lips as though
+she would whistle to it.
+
+"For the love of God, dear lady!" cried Robin; and then the words
+died in his throat.
+
+With a savage snort of rage, the beast rushed at this new and
+inviting target--rushed so swiftly and from so short a distance
+that she could not defend herself. She sprang to one side as it
+charged down upon her, but a side blow from its antlers stretched
+her upon the ground. The stag stopped, turned, and lowered its
+head preparing to gore her to death.
+
+Already its cruel horns were coming straight for her, while she,
+white of face and bewildered by the sudden attack, was struggling
+to rise and draw her sword. A moment more and the end would
+come. But the sharp voice of Robin and already spoken.
+
+"Down, Marian!" he cried, and the girl instinctively obeyed, just
+as the shaft from Robin's bow went whizzing close above her head
+and struck with terrific force full in the center of the stag's
+forehead.
+
+The beast stumbled in its charge and fell dead, across the body
+of the fainting maid.
+
+Robin was quickly by her side, and dragged the beast from off the
+girl.
+
+Picking her up in his strong arms, he bore her swiftly to the
+side of one of the many brooks which watered the vale.
+
+He dashed cool water upon her face, roughly almost, in his agony
+of fear that the she was already dead, and he could have shed
+tears of joy to see those poor, closed eyelids tremble. He
+redoubled his efforts; and presently she gave a little gasp.
+
+"Where am I? What is't?"
+
+"You are in Sherwood, dear maid, tho', i' faith, we gave you a
+rude reception!"
+
+She opened her eyes and sat up. "Methinks you have rescued me
+from sudden danger, sir," she said.
+
+Then she recognized Robin for the first time, and a radiant smile
+came over her face, together with the rare blush of returned
+vitality, and her head sank upon his shoulder with a little
+tremble and sigh of relief.
+
+"Oh, Robin, it is you!" she murmured.
+
+"Aye, 'tis I. Thank heaven, I was at hand to do you service!"
+Robin's tones were deep and full of feeling. "I swear, dear
+Marian, that I will not let you from my care henceforth."
+
+Not another word was spoken for some moments, while her head
+still rested confidingly upon his breast. Then recollecting, he
+suddenly cried:
+
+"Gramercy, I make but a poor nurse! I have not even asked if any
+of your bones were broken."
+
+"No, not any," she answered springing lightly to her feet to show
+him.
+
+"That foolish dizziness o'ercame me for the nonce, but we can now
+proceed on our way."
+
+"Nay, I meant not that," he protested; "why should we haste?
+First tell me of the news in London town, and of yourself."
+
+So she told him how that the Prince had seized upon her father's
+lands, and had promised to restore them to her if she would
+listen to his suit; and how that she knew he meant her no good,
+for he was even then suing for a Princess's hand.
+
+"That is all, Robin," she ended simply; "and that is why I donned
+again my page's costume and came to you in the greenwood."
+
+Robin's brow had grown fiercely black at the recital of her
+wrong; and he had laid stern hand upon the hilt of his sword.
+"By this sword which Queen Eleanor gave me!" he said impetuously;
+"and which was devoted to the service of all womankind, I take
+oath that Prince John and all his armies shall not harm you!"
+
+So that is how Maid Marian came to take up her abode in the
+greenwood, where the whole band of yeomen welcomed her gladly and
+swore fealty; and where the sweet lady of Allan-a-Dale made her
+fully at home.
+
+But this was a day of deeds in Sherwood Forest, and we 'gan to
+tell you another happening which led to later events.
+
+While Robin and Marian were having their encounter with the stag,
+Little John, Much the miller's son, and Will Scarlet had sallied
+forth to watch the highroad leading to Barnesdale, if perchance
+they might find some haughty knight or fat priest whose wallet
+needed lightening.
+
+They had scarcely watched the great road known as Watling Street
+which runs from Dover in Kent to Chester town--for many minutes,
+when they espied a knight riding by in a very forlorn and
+careless manner.
+
+All dreary was his semblance,
+And little was his pride,
+His one
+foot in the stirrup stood,
+His other waved beside.
+
+His visor hung down o'er his eyes,
+He rode in single array,
+A sorrier man than he was one
+Rode never in summer's day.
+
+Little John came up to the knight and bade him stay; for who can
+judge of a man's wealth by his looks? The outlaw bent his knee
+in all courtesy, and prayed him to accept the hospitality of the
+forest.
+
+"My master expects you to dine with him, to-day," quoth he, "and
+indeed has been fasting while awaiting your coming, these three
+hours."
+
+"Who is your master?" asked the knight.
+
+"None other than Robin Hood," replied Little John, laying his
+hand upon the knight's bridle.
+
+Seeing the other two outlaws approaching, the knight shrugged his
+shoulders, and replied indifferently.
+
+"'Tis clear that your invitation is too urgent to admit of
+refusal," quoth he, "and I go with you right willingly, my
+friends. My purpose was to have dined to-day at Blyth or
+Doncaster; but nothing matters greatly."
+
+So in the same lackadaisical fashion which had marked all his
+actions that day, the knight suffered his horse to be led to the
+rendezvous of the band in the greenwood.
+
+Marian had not yet had time to change her page's attire, when the
+three escorts of the knight hove in sight. She recognized their
+captive as Sir Richard of the Lea, whom she had often seen at
+court; and fearing lest he might recognize her, she would have
+fled. But Robin asked her, with a twinkle, if she would not like
+to play page that day, and she in roguish mood consented to do
+so.
+
+"Welcome, Sir Knight," said Robin, courteously. "You are come in
+good time, for we were just preparing to sit down to meat."
+
+"God save and thank you, good master Robin," returned the knight;
+"and all your company. It likes me well to break the fast with
+you."
+
+So while his horse was cared for, the knight laid aside his own
+heavy gear, and laved his face and hands, and sat down with Robin
+and all his men to a most plentiful repast of venison, swans,
+pheasants, various small birds, cake and ale. And Marian stood
+behind Robin and filled his cup and that of the guest.
+
+After eating right heartily of the good cheer, the knight
+brightened up greatly and vowed that he had not enjoyed so good a
+dinner for nigh three weeks. He also said that if ever Robin and
+his fellows should come to his domains, he would strive to set
+them down to as good a dinner on his own behalf.
+
+But this was not exactly the sort of payment which Robin had
+expected to receive. He thanked the knight, therefore, in set
+phrase, but reminded him that a yeoman like himself might hardly
+offer such a dinner to a knight as a gift of charity.
+
+"I have no money, Master Robin," answered the knight frankly. "I
+have so little of the world's goods, in sooth, that I should be
+ashamed to offer you the whole of it."
+
+"Money, however little, always jingles merrily in our pockets,"
+said Robin, smiling. "Pray you tell me what you deem a little
+sum."
+
+"I have of my own ten silver pennies," said the knight. "Here
+they are, and I wish they were ten times as many."
+
+He handed Little John his pouch, and Robin nodded carelessly.
+
+"What say you to the total, Little John?" he asked as though in
+jest.
+
+"'Tis true enough, as the worthy knight hath said," responded the
+big fellow gravely emptying the contents on his cloak.
+
+Robin signed to Marian, who filled a bumper of wine for himself
+and his guest.
+
+"Pledge me, Sir Knight!" cried the merry outlaw; "and pledge me
+heartily, for these sorry times. I see that your armor is bent
+and that your clothes are torn. Yet methinks I saw you at court,
+once upon a day, and in more prosperous guise. Tell me now, were
+you a yeoman and made a knight by force? Or, have you been a bad
+steward to yourself, and wasted your property in lawsuits and the
+like? Be not bashful with us. We shall not betray your
+secrets."
+
+"I am a Saxon knight in my own right; and I have always lived a
+sober and quiet life," the sorrowful guest replied. "'Tis true
+you have seen me at court, mayhap, for I was an excited witness
+of your shooting before King Harry--God rest his bones! My name
+is Sir Richard of the Lea, and I dwell in a castle, not a league
+from one of the gates of Nottingham, which has belonged to my
+father, and his father, and his father's father before him.
+Within two or three years ago my neighbors might have told you
+that a matter of four hundred pounds one way or the other was as
+naught to me. But now I have only these ten pennies of silver,
+and my wife and son."
+
+"In what manner have you lost your riches?" asked Robin.
+
+"Through folly and kindness," said the knight, sighing. "I went
+with King Richard upon a crusade, from which I am but lately
+returned, in time to find my son--a goodly youth--grown up. He
+was but twenty, yet he had achieved a squire's training and could
+play prettily in jousts and tournaments and other knightly games.
+But about this time he had the ill luck to push his sport too
+far, and did accidentally kill a knight in the open lists. To
+save the boy, I had to sell my lands and mortgage my ancestral
+castle; and this not being enough, in the end I have had to
+borrow money, at a ruinous interest, from my lord of Hereford."
+
+"A most worthy Bishop," said Robin ironically. "What is the sum
+of your debt?"
+
+"Four hundred pounds," said Sir Richard, "and the Bishop swears
+he will foreclose the mortgage if they are not paid promptly."
+
+"Have you any friends who would become surety for you?"
+
+"Not one. If good King Richard were here, the tale might be
+otherwise."
+
+"Fill your goblet again, Sir Knight," said Robin; and he turned
+to whisper a word in Marian's ear. She nodded and drew Little
+John and Will Scarlet aside and talked earnestly with them, in a
+low tone.
+
+"Here is health and prosperity to you, gallant Robin," said Sir
+Richard, tilting his goblet. "I hope I may pay your cheer more
+worthily, the next time I ride by."
+
+Will Scarlet and Little John had meanwhile fallen in with
+Marian's idea, for they consulted the other outlaws, who nodded
+their heads. Thereupon Little John and Will Scarlet went into
+the cave near by and presently returned bearing a bag of gold.
+This they counted out before the astonished knight; and there
+were four times one hundred gold pieces in it.
+
+"Take this loan from us, Sir Knight, and pay your debt to the
+Bishop," then said Robin. "Nay, no thanks; you are but
+exchanging creditors. Mayhap we shall not be so hard upon you as
+the Christian Bishop; yet, again we may be harder. Who can
+tell?"
+
+There were actual tears in Sir Richard's eyes, as he essayed to
+thank the foresters. But at this juncture, Much, the miller's
+son, came from the cave dragging a bale of cloth. "The knight
+should have a suit worthy of his rank, master--think you not so?"
+
+"Measure him twenty ells of it," ordered Robin.
+
+"Give him a good horse, also," whispered Marian. "'Tis a gift
+which will come back four-fold, for this is a worthy man. I know
+him well."
+
+So the horse was given, also, and Robin bade Arthur-a-Bland ride
+with the knight as far as his castle, as esquire.
+
+The knight was sorrowful no longer; yet he could hardly voice his
+thanks through his broken utterance. And having spent the night
+in rest, after listening to Allan-a-Dale's singing, he mounted
+his new steed the following morning an altogether different man.
+
+"God save you, comrades, and keep you all!" said he, with deep
+feeling in his tones; "and give me a grateful heart!"
+
+"We shall wait for you twelve months from to-day, here in this
+place," said Robin, shaking him by the hand; "and then you will
+repay us the loan, if you have been prospered."
+
+"I shall return it to you within the year, upon my honor as Sir
+Richard of the Lea. And for all time, pray count on me as a
+steadfast friend."
+
+So saying the knight and his esquire rode down the forest glade
+till they were lost to view.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+HOW THE BISHOP WAS DINED
+
+"O what is the matter?" then said the Bishop,
+"Or for whom do you make this a-do?
+Or why do you kill the King's venison,
+When your company is so few?"
+
+"We are shepherds," quoth bold Robin Hood,
+"And we keep sheep all the year,
+And we are disposed to be merrie this day,
+And to kill of the King's fat deer."
+
+
+Not many days after Sir Richard of the Lea came to Sherwood
+Forest, word reached Robin Hood's ears that my lord Bishop of
+Hereford would be riding that way betimes on that morning. 'Twas
+Arthur-a-Bland, the knight's quondam esquire, who brought the
+tidings, and Robin's face brightened as he heard it.
+
+"Now, by our Lady!" quoth he, "I have long desired to entertain
+my lord in the greenwood, and this is too fair a chance to let
+slip. Come, my men, kill me a venison; kill me a good fat deer.
+The Bishop of Hereford is to dine with me today, and he shall pay
+well for his cheer."
+
+"Shall we dress it here, as usual?" asked Much, the miller's son.
+
+"Nay, we play a droll game on the churchman. We will dress it by
+the highway side, and watch for the Bishop narrowly, lest he
+should ride some other way."
+
+So Robin gave his orders, and the main body of his men dispersed
+to different parts of the forest, under Will Stutely and Little
+John, to watch other roads; while Robin Hood himself took six of
+his men, including Will Scarlet, and Much, and posted himself in
+full view of the main road. This little company appeared funny
+enough, I assure you, for they had disguised themselves as
+shepherds. Robin had an old wool cap, with a tail to it, hanging
+over his ear, and a shock of hair stood straight up through a
+hole in the top. Besides there was so much dirt on his face that
+you would never have known him. An old tattered cloak over his
+hunter's garb completed his make-up. The others were no less
+ragged and unkempt, even the foppish Will Scarlet being so badly
+run down at the heel that the court ladies would hardly have had
+speech with him.
+
+They quickly provided themselves with a deer and made great
+preparations to cook it over a small fire, when a little dust was
+seen blowing along the highway, and out of it came the portly
+Bishop cantering along with ten men-at-arms at his heels. As
+soon as he saw the fancied shepherds he spurred up his horse, and
+came straight toward them.
+
+"Who are ye, fellows, who make so free with the King's deer?" he
+asked sharply.
+
+"We are shepherds," answered Robin Hood, pulling at his forelock
+awkwardly.
+
+"Heaven have mercy! Ye seem a sorry lot of shepherds. But who
+gave you leave to cease eating mutton?"
+
+"'Tis one of our feast days, lording, and we were disposed to be
+merry this day, and make free with a deer, out here where they
+are so many."
+
+"By me faith, the King shall hear of this. Who killed yon
+beast?"
+
+"Give me first your name, excellence, so that I may speak where
+'tis fitting," replied Robin stubbornly.
+
+"'Tis my lord Bishop of Hereford, fellow!" interposed one of the
+guards fiercely. "See that you keep a civil tongue in your
+head."
+
+"If 'tis a churchman," retorted Will Scarlet, "he would do better
+to mind his own flocks rather than concern himself with ours."
+
+"Ye are saucy fellows, in sooth," cried the Bishop, "and we will
+see if your heads will pay for your manners. Come! quit your
+stolen roast and march along with me, for you shall be brought
+before the Sheriff of Nottingham forthwith."
+
+"Pardon, excellence!" said Robin, dropping on his knees.
+"Pardon, I pray you. It becomes not your lordship's coat to take
+so many lives away."
+
+"Faith, I'll pardon you!" said the Bishop. "I'll pardon you,
+when I see you hanged! Seize upon them, my men!"
+
+But Robin had already sprung away with his back against a tree.
+And from underneath his ragged cloak he drew his trusty horn and
+winded the piercing notes which were wont to summon the band.
+
+The Bishop no sooner saw this action than he knew his man, and
+that there was a trap set; and being an arrant coward, he wheeled
+his horse sharply and would have made off down the road; but his
+own men, spurred on the charge, blocked his way. At almost the
+same instant the bushes round about seemed literally to become
+alive with outlaws. Little John's men came from one side and
+Will Stutely's from the other. In less time than it takes to
+tell it, the worthy Bishop found himself a prisoner, and began to
+crave mercy from the men he had so lately been ready to sentence.
+
+"O pardon, O pardon," said the Bishop,
+"O pardon, I you pray.
+For if I had known it had been you,
+I'd have gone some other way."
+
+"I owe you no pardon," retorted Robin, "but I will e'en treat you
+better than you would have treated me. Come, make haste, and go
+along with me. I have already planned that you shall dine with
+me this day."
+
+So the unwilling prelate was dragged away, cheek by jowl, with
+the half-cooked venison upon the back of his own horse; and Robin
+and his band took charge of the whole company and led them
+through the forest glades till they came to an open space near
+Barnesdale.
+
+Here they rested, and Robin gave the Bishop a seat full
+courteously. Much the miller's son fell to roasting the deer
+afresh, while another and fatter beast was set to frizzle on the
+other side of the fire. Presently the appetizing odor of the
+cooking reached the Bishop's nostrils, and he sniffed it eagerly.
+The morning's ride had made him hungry; and he was nothing loath
+when they bade him come to the dinner. Robin gave him the best
+place beside himself, and the Bishop prepared to fall to.
+
+"Nay, my lord, craving your pardon, but we are accustomed to have
+grace before meat," said Robin decorously. "And as our own
+chaplain is not with us to-day, will you be good enough to say it
+for us?"
+
+The Bishop reddened, but pronounced grace in the Latin tongue
+hastily, and then settled himself to make the best of his lot.
+Red wines and ale were brought forth and poured out, each man
+having a horn tankard from which to drink.
+
+Laughter bubbled among the diners, and the Bishop caught himself
+smiling at more than one jest. But who, in sooth, could resist a
+freshly broiled venison streak eaten out in the open air to the
+tune of jest and good fellowship? Stutely filled the Bishop's
+beaker with wine each time he emptied it, and the Bishop got
+mellower and mellower as the afternoon shades lengthened on
+toward sunset. Then the approaching dusk warned him of his
+position.
+
+"I wish, mine host," quoth he gravely to Robin, who had soberly
+drunk but one cup of ale, "that you would now call a reckoning.
+'Tis late, and I fear the cost of this entertainment may be more
+than my poor purse can stand."
+
+For he bethought himself of his friend, the Sheriff's former
+experience.
+
+"Verily, your lordship," said Robin, scratching his head, "I have
+enjoyed your company so much, that I scarce know how to charge
+for it."
+
+"Lend me your purse, my lord," said Little John, interposing,
+"and I'll give you the reckoning by and by." The Bishop
+shuddered. He had collected Sir Richard's debt only that
+morning, and was even then carrying it home.
+
+"I have but a few silver pennies of my own," he whined; "and as
+for the gold in my saddle-bags, 'tis for the church. Ye surely
+would not levy upon the church, good friends."
+
+But Little John was already gone to the saddle-bags, and
+returning he laid the Bishop's cloak upon the ground, and poured
+out of the portmantua a matter of four hundred glittering gold
+pieces. 'Twas the identical money which Robin had lent Sir
+Richard a short while before!
+
+"Ah!" said Robin, as though an idea had but just then come to
+him. "The church is always willing to aid in charity. And
+seeing this goodly sum reminds me that I have a friend who is
+indebted to a churchman for this exact amount. Now we shall
+charge you nothing on our own account; but suffer us to make use
+of this in aiding my good friend."
+
+"Nay, nay," began the Bishop with a wry face, "this is requiting
+me ill indeed. Was this not the King's meat, after all, that we
+feasted upon? Furthermore, I am a poor man."
+
+"Poor forsooth!" answered Robin in scorn. "You are the Bishop of
+Hereford, and does not the whole countryside speak of your
+oppression? Who does not know of your cruelty to the poor and
+ignorant--you who should use your great office to aid them,
+instead of oppress? Have you not been guilty of far greater
+robbery than this, even though less open? Of myself, and how you
+have pursued me, I say nothing; nor of your unjust enmity against
+my father. But on account of those you have despoiled and
+oppressed, I take this money, and will use it far more worthily
+than you would. God be my witness in this! There is an end of
+the matter, unless you will lead us in a song or dance to show
+that your body had a better spirit than your mind. Come, strike
+up the harp, Allan!"
+
+"Neither the one nor the other will I do," snarled the Bishop.
+
+"Faith, then we must help you," said Little John; and he and
+Arthur-a-Bland seized the fat struggling churchman and commenced
+to hop up and down. The Bishop being shorter must perforce
+accompany them in their gyrations; while the whole company sat
+and rolled about over the ground, and roared to see my lord of
+Hereford's queer capers. At last he sank in a heap, fuddled with
+wine and quite exhausted.
+
+Little John picked him up as though he were a log of wood and
+carrying him to his horse, set him astride facing the animal's
+tail; and thus fastened him, leading the animal toward the
+highroad and, starting the Bishop, more dead than alive, toward
+Nottingham.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HOW THE BISHOP WENT OUTLAW-HUNTING
+
+The Bishop he came to the old woman's house,
+And called with furious mood,
+"Come let me soon see, and bring unto me
+That traitor, Robin Hood."
+
+
+The easy success with which they had got the better of the good
+Bishop led Robin to be a little careless. He thought that his
+guest was too great a coward to venture back into the greenwood
+for many a long day; and so after lying quiet for one day, the
+outlaw ventured boldly upon the highway, the morning of the
+second. But he had gone only half a mile when, turning a sharp
+bend in the road, he plunged full upon the prelate himself.
+
+My lord of Hereford had been so deeply smitten in his pride, that
+he had lost no time in summoning a considerable body of the
+Sheriff's men, offering to double the reward if Robin Hood could
+be come upon. This company was now at his heels, and after the
+first shock of mutual surprise, the Bishop gave an exultant shout
+and spurred upon the outlaw.
+
+It was too late for Robin to retreat by the way he had come, but
+quick as a flash he sprang to one side of the road, dodged under
+some bushes, and disappeared so suddenly that his pursuers
+thought he had truly been swallowed up by magic.
+
+"After him!" yelled the Bishop; "some of you beat up the woods
+around him, while the rest of us will keep on the main road and
+head him off on the other side!"
+
+For, truth to tell, the Bishop did not care to trust his bones
+away from the highroad.
+
+About a mile away, on the other side of this neck of woods,
+wherein Robin had been trapped, was a little tumbledown cottage.
+'Twas where the widow lived, whose three sons had been rescued.
+Robin remembered the cottage and saw his one chance to escape.
+
+Doubling in and out among the underbrush and heather with the
+agility of a hare, he soon came out of the wood in the rear of
+the cottage, and thrust his head through a tiny window.
+
+The widow, who had been at her spinning wheel, rose up with a cry
+of alarm.
+
+"Quiet, good mother! 'Tis I, Robin Hood. Where are your three
+sons?"
+
+"They should be with you, Robin. Well do you know that. Do they
+not owe their lives to you?"
+
+"If that be so, I come to seek payment of the debt," said Robin
+in a breath. "The Bishop is on my heels with many of his men."
+
+"I'll cheat the Bishop and all!" cried the woman quickly. "Here,
+Robin, change your raiment with me, and we will see if my lord
+knows an old woman when he sees her."
+
+"Good!" said Robin. "Pass your gray cloak out the window, and
+also your spindle and twine; and I will give you my green mantle
+and everything else down to my bow and arrows."
+
+While they were talking, Robin had been nimbly changing clothes
+with the old woman, through the window, and in a jiffy he stood
+forth complete, even to the spindle and twine.
+
+Presently up dashed the Bishop and his men, and, at sight of the
+cottage and the old woman, gave pause. The crone was hobbling
+along with difficulty, leaning heavily upon a gnarled stick and
+bearing the spindle on her other arm. She would have gone by the
+Bishop's company, while muttering to herself, but the Bishop
+ordered one of his men to question her. The soldier laid his
+hand upon her shoulder.
+
+"Mind your business!" croaked the woman, "or I'll curse ye!"
+
+"Come, come, my good woman," said the soldier, who really was
+afraid of her curses. "I'll not molest you. But my lord Bishop
+of Hereford wants to know if you have seen aught of the outlaw,
+Robin Hood?"
+
+"And why shouldn't I see him?" she whined. "Where's the King or
+law to prevent good Robin from coming to see me and bring me food
+and raiment? That's more than my lord Bishop will do, I warrant
+ye!"
+
+"Peace, woman!" said the Bishop harshly. "We want none of your
+opinions. But we'll take you to Barnesdale and burn you for a
+witch if you do not instantly tell us when you last saw Robin
+Hood."
+
+"Mercy, good my lord!" chattered the crone, falling on her knees.
+
+"Robin is there in my cottage now, but you'll never take him
+alive."
+
+"We'll see about that," cried the Bishop triumphantly. "Enter
+the cottage, my men. Fire it, if need be. But I'll give a purse
+of gold pieces, above the reward, to the man who captures the
+outlaw alive."
+
+The old woman, being released, went on her way slowly. But it
+might have been noticed that the farther she got away from the
+company and the nearer to the edge of the woods, the swifter and
+straighter grew her pace. Once inside the shelter of the forest
+she broke into a run of surprising swiftness.
+
+"Gadzooks!" exclaimed Little John who presently spied her. "Who
+comes here? Never saw I witch or woman run so fast. Methinks
+I'll send an arrow close over her head to see which it is."
+
+"O hold your hand! hold your hand!" panted the supposed woman.
+"'Tis I, Robin Hood. Summon the yeomen and return with me
+speedily. We have still another score to settle with my lord of
+Hereford."
+
+When Little John could catch his breath from laughing, he winded
+his horn.
+
+"Now, mistress Robin," quoth he, grinning. "Lead on! We'll be
+close to your heels."
+
+Meanwhile, back at the widow's cottage the Bishop was growing
+more furious every moment. For all his bold words, he dared not
+fire the house, and the sturdy door had thus far resisted all his
+men's efforts.
+
+"Break it down! Break it down!" he shouted, "and let me soon see
+who will fetch out that traitor, Robin Hood!"
+
+At last the door crashed in and the men stood guard on the
+threshold. But not one dared enter for fear a sharp arrow should
+meet him halfway.
+
+"Here he is!" cried one keen-eyed fellow, peering in. "I see him
+in the corner by the cupboard. Shall we slay him with our
+pikes?"
+
+"Nay," said the Bishop, "take him alive if you can. We'll make
+the biggest public hanging of this that the shire ever beheld."
+
+But the joy of the Bishop over his capture was short lived. Down
+the road came striding the shabby figure of the old woman who had
+helped him set the trap; and very wrathy was she when she saw
+that the cottage door had been battered in.
+
+"Stand by, you lazy rascals!" she called to the soldiers. "May
+all the devils catch ye for hurting an old woman's hut. Stand
+by, I say!"
+
+"Hold your tongue!" ordered the Bishop. "These are my men and
+carrying out my orders."
+
+"God-mercy!" swore the beldame harshly. "Things have come to a
+pretty pass when our homes may be treated like common gaols.
+Couldn't all your men catch one poor forester without this ado?
+Come! clear out, you and your robber, on the instant, or I'll
+curse every mother's son of ye, eating and drinking and
+sleeping!"
+
+"Seize on the hag!" shouted the Bishop, as soon as he could get
+in a word. "We'll see about a witch's cursing. Back to town she
+shall go, alongside of Robin Hood."
+
+"Not so fast, your worship!" she retorted, clapping her hands.
+
+And at the signal a goodly array of greenwood men sprang forth
+from all sides of the cottage, with bows drawn back
+threateningly. The Bishop saw that his men were trapped again,
+for they dared not stir. Nathless, he determined to make a fight
+for it.
+
+"If one of you but budge an inch toward me, you rascals," he
+cried, "it shall sound the death of your master, Robin Hood! My
+men have him here under their pikes, and I shall command them to
+kill him without mercy."
+
+"Faith, I should like to see the Robin you have caught," said a
+clear voice from under the widow's cape; and the outlaw chief
+stood forth with bared head, smilingly. "Here am I, my lord, in
+no wise imperiled by your men's fierce pikes. So let us see whom
+you have been guarding so well."
+
+The old woman who, in the garb of Robin Hood, had been lying
+quiet in the cottage through all the uproar, jumped up nimbly at
+this. In the bald absurdity of her disguise she came to the
+doorway and bowed to the Bishop.
+
+"Give you good-den, my lord Bishop," she piped in a shrill voice;
+"and what does your Grace at my humble door? Do you come to bless
+me and give me alms?"
+
+"Aye, that does he," answered Robin. "We shall see if his
+saddle-bags contain enough to pay you for that battered door."
+
+"Now by all the saints--" began the Bishop.
+
+"Take care; they are all watching you," interrupted Robin; "so
+name them not upon your unchurchly lips. But I will trouble you
+to hand over that purse of gold you had saved to pay for my
+head."
+
+"I'll see you hanged first!" raged the Bishop, stating no more
+than what would have been so, if he could do the ordering of
+things. "Have at them, my men, and hew them down in their
+tracks!"
+
+"Hold!" retorted Robin. "See how we have you at our mercy." And
+aiming a sudden shaft he shot so close to the Bishop's head that
+it carried away both his hat and the skull-cap which he always
+wore, leaving him quite bald.
+
+The prelate turned as white as his shiny head and clutched wildly
+at his ears. He thought himself dead almost.
+
+"Help! Murder!" he gasped. "Do not shoot again! Here's your
+purse of gold!"
+
+And without waiting for further parley he fairly bolted down the
+road.
+
+His men being left leaderless had nothing for it but to retreat
+after him, which they did in sullen order, covered by the bows of
+the yeomen. And thus ended the Bishop of Hereford's great
+outlaw-hunt in the forest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+HOW THE SHERIFF HELD ANOTHER SHOOTING MATCH
+
+"To tell the truth, I'm well informed
+Yon match it is a wile;
+The Sheriff, I know, devises this
+Us archers to beguile."
+
+
+Now the Sheriff was so greatly troubled in heart over the growing
+power of Robin Hood, that he did a very foolish thing. He went
+to London town to lay his troubles before the King and get
+another force of troops to cope with the outlaws. King Richard
+was not yet returned from the Holy Land, but Prince John heard
+him with scorn.
+
+"Pooh!" said he, shrugging his shoulders. "What have I to do
+with all this? Art thou not sheriff for me? The law is in force
+to take thy course of them that injure thee. Go, get thee gone,
+and by thyself devise some tricking game to trap these rebels;
+and never let me see thy face at court again until thou hast a
+better tale to tell."
+
+So away went the Sheriff in sorrier pass than ever, and cudgeled
+his brain, on the way home, for some plan of action.
+
+His daughter met him on his return and saw at once that he had
+been on a poor mission. She was minded to upbraid him when she
+learned what he had told the Prince. But the words of the latter
+started her to thinking afresh.
+
+"I have it!" she exclaimed at length. "Why should we not hold
+another shooting-match? 'Tis Fair year, as you know, and another
+tourney will be expected. Now we will proclaim a general
+amnesty, as did King Harry himself, and say that the field is
+open and unmolested to all comers. Belike Robin Hood's men will
+be tempted to twang the bow, and then--"
+
+"And then," said the Sheriff jumping up with alacrity, "we shall
+see on which side of the gate they stop over-night!"
+
+So the Sheriff lost no time in proclaiming a tourney, to be held
+that same Fall at the Fair. It was open to all comers, said the
+proclamation, and none should be molested in their going and
+coming. Furthermore, an arrow with a golden head and shaft of
+silver-white should be given to the winner, who would be heralded
+abroad as the finest archer in all the North Countree. Also,
+many rich prizes were to be given to other clever archers.
+
+Thesemtidings came in due course to Robin Hood, under the
+greenwood tree, and fired his impetuous spirit.
+
+"Come, prepare ye, my merry men all," quoth he, "and we'll go to
+the Fair and take some part in this sport."
+
+With that stepped forth the merry cobbler, David of Doncaster.
+
+"Master," quoth he, "be ruled by me and stir not from the
+greenwood. To tell the truth, I'm well informed yon match is
+naught but a trap. I know the Sheriff has devised it to beguile
+us archers into some treachery."
+
+"That word savors of the coward," replied Robin, "and pleases me
+not. Let come what will, I'll try my skill at that same
+archery."
+
+Then up spoke Little John and said: "Come, listen to me how it
+shall be that we will not be discovered."
+
+"Our mantles all of Lincoln-green
+Behind us we will leave;
+We'll dress us all so several,
+They shall not us perceive."
+
+"One shall wear white, another red,
+One yellow, another blue;
+Thus in disguise to the exercise
+We'll go, whate'er ensue."
+
+This advice met with general favor from the adventurous fellows,
+and they lost no time in putting it into practice. Maid Marian
+and Mistress Dale, assisted by Friar Tuck, prepared some
+vari-colored costumes, and 'gainst the Fair day had fitted out
+the sevenscore men till you would never have taken them for other
+than villagers decked for the holiday.
+
+And forth went they from the greenwood, with hearts all firm and
+stout, resolved to meet the Sheriff's men and have a merry bout.
+Along the highway they fell in with many other bold fellows from
+the countryside, going with their ruddy-cheeked lasses toward the
+wide-open gates of Nottingham.
+
+So in through the gates trooped the whole gay company, Robin's
+men behaving as awkwardly and laughing and talking as noisily as
+the rest; while the Sheriff's scowling men-at-arms stood round
+about and sought to find one who looked like a forester, but
+without avail.
+
+The herald now set forth the terms of the contest, as on former
+occasions, and the shooting presently began. Robin had chosen
+five of his men to shoot with him, and the rest were to mingle
+with the crowd and also watch the gates. These five were Little
+John, Will Scarlet, Will Stutely, Much, and Allan-a-Dale'.
+
+The other competitors made a brave showing on the first round,
+especially Gilbert of the White Hand, who was present and never
+shot better. The contest later narrowed down between Gilbert and
+Robin. But at the first lead, when the butts were struck so
+truly by various well known archers, the Sheriff was in doubt
+whether to feel glad or sorry. He was glad to see such skill,
+but sorry that the outlaws were not in it.
+
+Some said, "If Robin Hood were here,
+And all his men to boot,
+Sure none of them could pass these men,
+So bravely do they shoot"
+
+"Aye," quoth the Sheriff, and scratched his head,
+"I thought he would be here;
+I thought he would, but tho' he's bold,
+He durst not now appear "
+
+This word was privately brought to Robin by David of Doncaster,
+and the saying vexed him sorely. But he bit his lip in silence.
+
+"Ere long," he thought to himself, "we shall see whether Robin
+Hood be here or not!"
+
+Meantime the shooting had been going forward, and Robin's men had
+done so well that the air was filled with shouts.
+
+One cried, "Blue jacket!" another cried, "Brown!"
+And a third cried, "Brave Yellow!"
+But the fourth man said, "Yon man in red
+In this place has no fellow."
+
+For that was Robin Hood himself,
+For he was clothed in red,
+At every shot the prize he got,
+For he was both sure and dead.
+
+Thus went the second round of the shooting, and thus the third
+and last, till even Gilbert of the White Hand was fairly beaten.
+During all this shooting, Robin exchanged no word with his men,
+each treating the other as a perfect stranger. Nathless, such
+great shooting could not pass without revealing the archers.
+
+The Sheriff thought he discovered, in the winner of the golden
+arrow, the person of Robin Hood without peradventure. So he sent
+word privately for his men-at-arms to close round the group. But
+Robin's men also got wind of the plan.
+
+To keep up appearances, the Sheriff summoned the crowd to form in
+a circle; and after as much delay as possible the arrow was
+presented. The delay gave time enough for the soldiers to close
+in. As Robin received his prize, bowed awkwardly, and turned
+away, the Sheriff, letting his zeal get the better of his
+discretion, grasped him about the neck and called upon his men to
+arrest the traitor.
+
+But the moment the Sheriff touched Robin, he received such a
+buffet on the side of his head that he let go instantly and fell
+back several paces. Turning to see who had struck him, he
+recognized Little John.
+
+"Ah, rascal Greenleaf, I have you now!" he exclaimed springing at
+him. Just then, however, he met a new check.
+
+"This is from another of your devoted servants!" said a voice
+which he knew to be that of Much the miller's son; and "Thwack!"
+went his open palm upon the Sheriff's cheek sending that worthy
+rolling over and over upon the ground.
+
+By this time the conflict had become general, but the Sheriff's
+men suffered the disadvantage of being hampered by the crowd of
+innocent on-lookers, whom they could not tell from the outlaws
+and so dared not attack; while the other outlaws in the rear fell
+upon them and put them in confusion.
+
+For a moment a fierce rain of blows ensued; then the clear
+bugle-note from Robin ordered a retreat. The two warders at the
+nearest gate tried to close it, but were shot dead in their
+tracks. David of Doncaster threw a third soldier into the moat;
+and out through the gate went the foresters in good order,
+keeping a respectful distance between themselves and the
+advancing soldiery, by means of their well-directed shafts.
+
+But the fight was not to go easily this day, for the soldiery,
+smarting from their recent discomfiture at the widow's cottage,
+and knowing that the eyes of the whole shire were upon them,
+fought well, and pressed closely after the retreating outlaws.
+More than one ugly wound was given and received. No less than
+five of the Sheriff's men were killed outright, and a dozen
+others injured; while four of Robin's men were bleeding from
+severe flesh cuts.
+
+Then Little John, who had fought by the side of his chief,
+suddenly fell forward with a slight moan. An arrow had pierced
+his knee. Robin seized the big fellow with almost superhuman
+strength.
+
+Up he took him on his back,
+And bare him well a mile;
+Many a time he laid him down,
+And shot another while.
+
+Meanwhile Little John grew weaker and closed his eyes; at last he
+sank to the ground, and feebly motioned Robin to let him lie.
+"Master Robin," said he, "have I not served you well, ever since
+we met upon the bridge?"
+
+"Truer servant never man had," answered Robin.
+
+"Then if ever you loved me, and for the sake of that service,
+draw your bright brown sword and strike off my head; never let me
+fall alive into the hand of the Sheriff of Nottingham."
+
+"Not for all the gold in England would I do either of the things
+you suggest."
+
+"God forbid!" cried Arthur-a-Bland, hurrying to the rescue. And
+packing his wounded kinsman upon his own broad shoulders, he soon
+brought him within the shelter of the forest.
+
+Once there, the Sheriff's men did not follow; and Robin caused
+litters of boughs to be made for Little John and the other four
+wounded men. Quickly were they carried through the wood until
+the hermitage of Friar Tuck was reached, where their wounds were
+dressed. Little John's hurt was pronounced to be the most
+serious of any, but he was assured that in two or three weeks'
+time he could get about again; whereat the active giant groaned
+mightily.
+
+That evening consternation came upon the hearts of the band. A
+careful roll-call was taken to see it all the yeomen had escaped,
+when it was found that Will Stutely was missing, and Maid Marian
+also was nowhere to be found. Robin was seized with dread. He
+knew that Marian had gone to the Fair, but felt that she would
+hardly come to grief. Her absence, however, portended some
+danger, and he feared that it was connected with Will Stutely.
+The Sheriff would hang him speedily and without mercy, if he were
+captured.
+
+The rest of the band shared their leader's uneasiness, though
+they said no word. They knew that if Will were captured, the
+battle must be fought over again the next day, and Will must be
+saved at any cost. But no man flinched from the prospect.
+
+That evening, while the Sheriff and his wife and daughter sat at
+meat in the Mansion House, the Sheriff boasted of how he would
+make an example of the captured outlaw; for Stutely had indeed
+fallen into his hands.
+
+"He shall be strung high," he said, in a loud voice; "and none
+shall dare lift a finger. I now have Robin Hood's men on the
+run, and we shall soon see who is master in this shire. I am
+only sorry that we let them have the golden arrow."
+
+As he spoke a missive sped through a window and fell clattering
+upon his plate, causing him to spring back in alarm.
+
+It was the golden arrow, and on its feathered shaft was sewed a
+little note which read:
+
+"This from one who will take no gifts from liars; and who
+henceforth will show no mercy. Look well to yourself. R.H."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+HOW WILL STUTELY WAS RESCUED
+
+Forth of the greenwood are they gone,
+Yea, all courageously,
+Resolving to bring Stutely home,
+Or every man to die.
+
+
+The next day dawned bright and sunny. The whole face of nature
+seemed gay as if in despite of the tragedy which was soon to take
+place in the walls of Nottingham town. The gates were not opened
+upon this day, for the Sheriff was determined to carry through
+the hanging of Will Stutely undisturbed. No man, therefore, was
+to be allowed entrance from without, all that morning and until
+after the fatal hour of noon, when Will's soul was to be launched
+into eternity.
+
+Early in the day Robin had drawn his men to a point, as near as
+he dared, in the wood where he could watch the road leading to
+the East gate. He himself was clad in a bright scarlet dress,
+while his men, a goodly array, wore their suits of sober Lincoln
+green. They were armed with broadswords, and 'each man carried
+his bow and a full quiver of new arrows, straightened and
+sharpened cunningly by Middle, the tinker. Over their greenwood
+dress, each man had thrown a rough mantle, making him look not
+unlike a friar.
+
+"I hold it good, comrades," then said Robin Hood, "to tarry here
+in hiding for a season while we sent some one forth to obtain
+tidings. For, in sooth, 'twill work no good to march upon the
+gates if they be closed."
+
+"Look, master," quoth one of the widow's sons. "There comes a
+palmer along the road from the town. Belike he can tell us how
+the land ties, and if Stutely be really in jeopardy. Shall I go
+out and engage him in speech?"
+
+"Go," answered Robin.
+
+So Stout Will went out from the band while the others hid
+themselves and waited. When he had come close to the palmer, who
+seemed a slight, youngish man, he doffed his hat full courteously
+and said,
+
+"I crave your pardon, holy man, but can you tell me tidings of
+Nottingham town? Do they intend to put an outlaw to death this
+day?"
+
+"Yea," answered the palmer sadly. "'Tis true enough, sorry be the
+day. I have passed the very spot where the gallows-tree is
+going up. 'Tis out upon the roadway near the Sheriff's castle.
+One, Will Stutely, is to be hung thereon at noon, and I could not
+bear the sight, so came away."
+
+The palmer spoke in a muffled voice; and as his hood was pulled
+well over his head, Stout Will could not discern what manner of
+man he was. Over his shoulder he carried a long staff, with the
+fashion of a little cross at one end; and he had sandaled feet
+like any monk. Stout Will notice idly that the feet were very
+small and white, but gave no second thought to the matter.
+
+"Who will shrive the poor wretch, if you have come away from
+him?" he asked reproachfully.
+
+The question seemed to put a new idea into the palmer's head. He
+turned so quickly that he almost dropped his hood.
+
+"Do you think that I should undertake this holy office?"
+
+"By Saint Peter and the Blessed Virgin, I do indeed! Else, who
+will do it? The Bishop and all his whining clerks may be there,
+but not one would say a prayer for his soul."
+
+"But I am only a poor palmer," the other began hesitatingly.
+
+"Nathless, your prayers are as good as any and better than some,"
+replied Will.
+
+"Right gladly would I go," then said the palmer; "but I fear me I
+cannot get into the city. You may know that the gates are fast
+locked, for this morning, to all who would come in, although they
+let any pass out who will."
+
+"Come with me," said Stout Will, "and my master will see that you
+pass through the gates."
+
+So the palmer pulled his cloak still closer about him and was
+brought before Robin Hood, to whom he told all he knew of the
+situation. He ended with,
+
+"If I may make so bold, I would not try to enter the city from
+this gate, as 'tis closely guarded since yesterday. But on the
+far side, no attack is looked for."
+
+"My thanks, gentle palmer," quoth Robin, "your suggestion is
+good, and we will deploy to the gate upon the far side."
+
+So the men marched silently but quickly until they were near to
+the western gate. Then Arthur-a-Bland asked leave to go ahead as
+a scout, and quietly made his way to a point under the tower by
+the gate. The moat was dry on this side, as these were times of
+peace, and Arthur was further favored by a stout ivy vine which
+grew out from an upper window.
+
+Swinging himself up boldly by means of this friendly vine, he
+crept through the window and in a moment more had sprung upon the
+warder from behind and gripped him hard about the throat. The
+warder had no chance to utter the slightest sound, and soon lay
+bound and gagged upon the floor; while Arthur-a-Bland slipped
+himself into his uniform and got hold of his keys.
+
+'Twas the work of but a few moments more to open the gates, let
+down the bridge, and admit the rest of the band; and they lot
+inside the town so quietly that none knew of their coming.
+Fortune also favored them in the fact that just at this moment
+the prison doors had been opened for the march of the condemned
+man, and every soldier and idle lout in the market-lace had
+trooped thither to see him pass along.
+
+Presently out came Will Stutely with firm step but dejected air.
+He looked eagerly to the right hand and to the left, but saw none
+of the band. And though more than one curious face betrayed
+friendship in it, he knew there could be no aid from such source.
+
+Will's hands were tied behind his back. He marched between rows
+of soldiery, and the Sheriff and the Bishop brought up the rear
+on horses, looking mightily puffed up and important over the
+whole proceeding. He would show these sturdy rebels--would the
+Sheriff--whose word was law! He knew that the gates were tightly
+fastened; and further he believed that the outlaws would hardly
+venture again within the walls, even if the gates were open. And
+as he looked around at the fivescore archers and pikemen who
+lined the way to the gallows, he smiled with grim satisfaction.
+
+Seeing that no help was nigh, the prisoner paused at the foot of
+the scaffold and spoke in a firm tone to the Sheriff.
+
+"My lord Sheriff," quoth he, "since I must needs die, grant me
+one boon; for my noble master ne'er yet had a man that was hanged
+on a tree:
+
+'Give me a sword all in my hand,
+And let me be unbound,
+And with thee and thy men will I fight
+Till I lie dead on the ground.'"
+
+But the Sheriff would by no means listen to his request; but
+swore that he should be hanged a shameful death, and not die by
+the sword valiantly.
+
+"O no, no, no," the Sheriff said,
+"Thou shalt on the gallows die,
+Aye, and so shall they master too,
+If ever it in me lie."
+
+"O dastard coward!" Stutely cried,
+"Faint-hearted peasant slave!
+If ever my master do thee meet,
+Thou shalt thy payment have!"
+
+"My noble master thee doth scorn,
+And all thy cowardly crew,
+Such silly imps unable are
+Bold Robin to subdue."
+
+This brave speech was not calculated to soothe the Sheriff. "To
+the gallows with him!" he roared, giving a sign to the hangman;
+and Stutely was pushed into the rude cart which was to bear him
+under the gallows until his neck was leashed. Then the cart
+would be drawn roughly away and the unhappy man would swing out
+over the tail of it into another world.
+
+But at this moment came a slight interruption. A boyish-looking
+palmer stepped forth, and said:
+
+"Your Excellency, let me at least shrive this poor wretch's soul
+ere it be hurled into eternity."
+
+"No!" shouted the Sheriff, "let him die a dog's death!"
+
+"Then his damnation will rest upon you," said the monk firmly.
+"You, my lord Bishop, cannot stand by and see this wrong done."
+
+The Bishop hesitated. Like the Sheriff, he wanted no delay; but
+the people were beginning to mutter among themselves and move
+about uneasily. He said a few words to the Sheriff, and the
+latter nodded to the monk ungraciously.
+
+"Perform your duty, Sir Priest," quoth he, "and be quick about
+it!" Then turning to his soldiers. "Watch this palmer narrowly,"
+he commanded. "Belike he is in league with those rascally
+outlaws."
+
+But the palmer paid no heed to his last words. He began to tell
+his beads quickly, and to speak in a low voice to the condemned
+man. But he did not touch his bonds.
+
+Then came another stir in the crowd, and one came pushing through
+the press of people and soldiery to come near to the scaffold.
+
+"I pray you, Will, before you die, take leave of all your
+friends!" cried out the well-known voice of Much, the miller's
+son.
+
+At the word the palmer stepped back suddenly and looked to one
+side. The Sheriff also knew the speaker.
+
+"Seize him!" he shouted. "'Tis another of the crew. He is the
+villain cook who once did rob me of my silver plate. We'll make
+a double hanging of this!"
+
+"Not so fast, good master Sheriff," retorted Much. "First catch
+your man and then hang him. But meanwhile I would like to borrow
+my friend of you awhile."
+
+And with one stroke of his keen hunting-knife he cut the bonds
+which fastened the prisoner's arms, and Stutely leaped lightly
+from the cart.
+
+"Treason!" screamed the Sheriff, getting black with rage. "Catch
+the varlets!"
+
+So saying he spurred his horse fiercely forward, and rising in
+his stirrups brought down his sword with might and main at Much's
+head. But his former cook dodged nimbly underneath the horse and
+came up on the other side, while the weapon whistled harmlessly
+in the air.
+
+"Nay, Sir Sheriff!" he cried, "I must e'en borrow your sword for
+the friend I have borrowed."
+
+Thereupon he snatched the weapon deftly from the Sheriff's hand.
+
+"Here, Stutely!" said he, "the Sheriff has lent you his own
+sword. Back to back with me, man, and we'll teach these knaves a
+trick or two!"
+
+Meanwhile the soldiers had recovered from their momentary
+surprise and had flung themselves into the fray. A clear
+bugle-note had also sounded the same which the soldiers had
+learned to dread. 'Twas the rallying note of the green wood men.
+
+Cloth yard shafts began to hurtle through the air, and Robin and
+his men cast aside their cloaks and sprang forward crying:
+
+"Lockesley! Lockesley! a rescue! a rescue!"
+
+On the instant, a terrible scene of hand to hand fighting
+followed. The Sheriff's men, though once more taken by surprise,
+were determined to sell this rescue dearly. They packed in
+closely and stubbornly about the condemned man and Much and the
+palmer, and it was only by desperate rushes that the foresters
+made an opening in the square. Ugly cuts and bruises were
+exchanged freely; and lucky was the man who escaped with only
+these. Many of the onlookers, who had long hated the Sheriff and
+felt sympathy for Robin's men, also plunged into the
+conflict--although they could not well keep out of it, in
+sooth!--and aided the rescuers no little.
+
+At last with a mighty onrush, Robin cleaved a way through the
+press to the scaffold itself, and not a second too soon; for two
+men with pikes had leaped upon the cart, and were in the act of
+thrusting down upon the palmer and Will Stutely. A mighty upward
+blow from Robin's good blade sent the pike flying from the hand
+of one, while a well-directed arrow from the outskirt pierced the
+other fellow's throat.
+
+"God save you, master!" cried Will Stutely joyfully. "I had
+begun to fear that I would never see your face again."
+
+"A rescue!" shouted the outlaws afresh, and the soldiery became
+fainthearted and 'gan to give back. But the field was not yet
+won, for they retreated in close order toward the East gate,
+resolved to hem the attackers within the city walls. Here again,
+however, they were in error, since the outlaws did not go out by
+their nearest gate. They made a sally in that direction, in
+order to mislead the soldiery, then abruptly turned and headed
+for the West gate, which was still guarded by Arthur-a-Bland.
+
+The Sheriff's men raised an exultant shout at this, thinking they
+had the enemy trapped. Down they charged after them, but the
+outlaws made good their lead, and soon got through the gate and
+over the bridge which had been let down by Arthur-a-Bland.
+
+Close upon their heels came the soldiers--so close, that Arthur
+had no time to close the gate again or raise the bridge. So he
+threw away his key and fell in with the yeomen, who now began
+their retreat up the long hill to the woods.
+
+On this side the town, the road leading to the forest was long
+and almost unprotected. The greenwood men were therefore in some
+distress, for the archers shot at them from loop-holes in the
+walls, and the pikemen were reinforced by a company of mounted
+men from the castle. But the outlaws retreated stubbornly and
+now and again turned to hold their pursuers at bay by a volley of
+arrows. Stutely was in their midst, fighting with the energy of
+two; and the little palmer was there also, but took no part save
+to keep close to Robin's side and mutter silent words as though
+in prayer.
+
+Robin put his horn to his lips to sound a rally, when a flying
+arrow from the enemy pierced his hand. The palmer gave a little
+cry and sprang forward. The Sheriff, who followed close with the
+men on horseback, also saw the wound and gave a great huzza.
+
+"Ha! you will shoot no more bows for a season, master outlaw!" he
+shouted.
+
+"You lie!" retorted Robin fiercely, wrenching the shaft from his
+hand despite the streaming blood; "I have saved one shot for you
+all this day. Here take it!"
+
+And he fitted the same arrow, which had wounded him, upon the
+string of his bow and let it fly toward the Sheriff's head. The
+Sheriff fell forward upon his horse in mortal terror, but not so
+quickly as to escape unhurt. The sharp point laid bare a deep
+gash upon his scalp and must certainly have killed him if it had
+come closer.
+
+The fall of the Sheriff discomfited his followers for the moment,
+and Robin's men took this chance to speed on up the hill. The
+palmer had whipped out a small white handkerchief and tried to
+staunch Robin's wound as they went. At sight of the palmer's
+hand, Robin turned with a start, and pushed back the other's
+hood.
+
+"Marian!" he exclaimed, "you here!"
+
+It was indeed Maid Marian, who had helped save Will, and been in
+the stress of battle from the first. Now she hung her head as
+though caught in wrong.
+
+"I had to come, Robin," she said simply, "and I knew you would
+not let me come, else."
+
+Their further talk was interrupted by an exclamation from Will
+Scarlet.
+
+"By the saints, we are trapped!" he said, and pointed to the top
+of the hill, toward which they were pressing.
+
+There from out a gray castle poured a troop of men, armed with
+pikes and axes, who shouted and came running down upon them. At
+the same instant, the Sheriff's men also renewed the pursuit.
+
+"Alas!" cried poor Marian, "we are undone! There is no way of
+escape!"
+
+"Courage, dear heart!" said Robin, drawing her close to him. But
+his own spirit sank as he looked about for some outlet.
+
+Then--oh, joyful sight!--he recognized among the foremost of
+those coming from the castle the once doleful knight, Sir Richard
+of the Lea. He was smiling now, and greatly excited.
+
+"A Hood! a Hood!" he cried; "a rescue! a rescue!" Never were
+there more welcome sights and sounds than these. With a great
+cheer the outlaws raced up the hill to meet their new friends;
+and soon the whole force had gained the shelter of the castle.
+Bang! went the bridge as it swung back, with great clanking of
+chains. Clash! went one great door upon the other, as they shut
+in the outlaw band, and shut out the Sheriff, who dashed up at
+the head of his men, his bandaged face streaked with blood and
+inflamed with rage.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+HOW SIR RICHARD OF THE LEA REPAID HIS DEBT
+
+The proud Sheriff loud 'gan cry
+And said, "Thou traitor knight,
+Thou keepest here the king's enemy
+Against the laws and right."
+
+
+"Open the gate!" shouted the Sheriff hoarsely, to the sentinel
+upon the walls. "Open, I say, in the king's name!"
+
+"Why who are you to come thus brawling upon my premises?" asked a
+haughty voice; and Sir Richard himself stepped forth upon the
+turret.
+
+"You know me well, traitor knight!" said the Sheriff, "now give
+up into my hands the enemy of the King whom you have sheltered
+against the laws and right."
+
+"Fair and softly, sir," quoth the knight smoothly. "I well avow
+that I have done certain deeds this day. But I have done them
+upon mine own land, which you now trespass upon; and I shall
+answer only to the King--whom God preserve!--for my actions."
+
+"Thou soft-spoken villain!" said the Sheriff, still in a towering
+passion. "I, also, serve the King; and if these outlaws are not
+given up to me at once, I shall lay siege to the castle and burn
+it with fire."
+
+"First show me your warrants," said Sir Richard curtly.
+
+"My word is enough! Am I not Sheriff of Nottingham?"
+
+"If you are, in sooth," retorted the knight, "you should know
+that you have no authority within my lands unless you bear the
+King's order. In the meantime, go mend your manners, lording."
+
+And Sir Richard snapped his fingers and disappeared from the
+walls. The Sheriff, after lingering a few moments longer in hope
+of further parley, was forced to withdraw, swearing fiercely.
+
+"The King's order!" muttered he. "That shall I have without
+delay, as well as this upstart knight's estates; for King Richard
+is lately returned, I hear, from the Holy Land."
+
+Meanwhile the knight had gone back to Robin Hood, and the two men
+greeted each other right gladly. "Well met, bold Robin!" cried
+he, taking him in his arms. "Well met, indeed! The Lord has
+lately prospered me, and I was minded this day to ride forth and
+repay my debt to you."
+
+"And so you have," answered Robin gaily.
+
+"Nay, 'twas nothing--this small service!" said the knight. "I
+meant the moneys coming to you."
+
+"They have all been repaid," said Robin; "my lord of Hereford
+himself gave them to me."
+
+"The exact sum?" asked the knight.
+
+"The exact sum," answered Robin, winking solemnly.
+
+Sir Richard smiled, but said no more at the time. Robin was made
+to rest until dinner should be served. Meanwhile a leech bound
+up his hand with ointment, promising him that he should soon have
+its use again. Some halfscore others of the yeomen had been hurt
+in the fight, but luckily none of grave moment. They were all
+bandaged and made happy by bumpers of ale.
+
+At dinner Sir Richard presented Robin to his wife and son. The
+lady was stately and gracious, and made much of Marian, whom she
+had known as a little girl and who was now clothed more seemly
+for a dinner than in monkish garments. The young esquire was a
+goodly youth and bade fair to make as stout a knight as his
+father.
+
+The feast was a joyous event. There were two long tables, and
+two hundred men sat down at them, and ate and drank and afterward
+sang songs. An hundred and forty of these men wore Lincoln green
+and called Robin Hood their chief. Never, I ween, had there been
+a more gallant company at table in Lea Castle!
+
+That night the foresters tarried within the friendly walls, and
+the next day took leave; though Sir Richard protested that they
+should have made a longer stay. And he took Robin aside to his
+strong room and pressed him again to take the four hundred golden
+pounds. But his guest was firm.
+
+"Keep the money, for it is your own," said Robin; "I have but
+made the Bishop return that which he extorted unjustly."
+
+Sir Richard thanked him in a few earnest words, and asked him and
+all his men to visit the armory, before they departed. And
+therein they saw, placed apart, an hundred and forty stout yew
+bows of cunning make, with fine waxen silk strings; and an
+hundred and forty sheaves of arrows. Every shaft was a just ell
+long, set with peacock's feathers, and notched with silver. And
+Sir Richard's fair lady came forward and with her own hands gave
+each yeoman a bow and a sheaf.
+
+"In sooth, these are poor presents we have made you, good Robin
+Hood," said Sir Richard; "but they carry with them a thousand
+times their weight in gratitude."
+
+The Sheriff made good his threat to inform the King. Forth rode
+he to London town upon the week following, his scalp wound having
+healed sufficiently to permit him to travel. This time he did
+not seek out Prince John, but asked audience with King Richard of
+the Lion Heart himself. His Majesty had but lately returned from
+the crusades, and was just then looking into the state of his
+kingdom. So the Sheriff found ready audience.
+
+Then to him the Sheriff spoke at length concerning Robin Hood;
+how that for many months the outlaws had defied the King, and
+slain the King's deer; how Robin had gathered about him the best
+archers in all the countryside; and, finally, how the traitorous
+knight Sir Richard of the Lea had rescued the band when capture
+seemed certain, and refused to deliver them up to justice.
+
+The King heard him through with attention and quoth he:
+
+"Meseems I have heard of this same Robin Hood, and his men, and
+also seen somewhat of their prowess. Did not these same outlaws
+shoot in a royal Tourney at Finsbury field?"
+
+"They did, Your Majesty, under a royal amnesty."
+
+In this speech the Sheriff erred, for the King asked quickly,
+
+"How came they last to the Fair at Nottingham--by stealth?"
+
+"Yes, Your Majesty."
+
+"Did you forbid them to come?"
+
+"No, Your Majesty. That is--"
+
+"Speak out!"
+
+For the good of the shire," began the Sheriff again, falteringly,
+"we did proclaim an amnesty; but 'twas because these men had
+proved a menace--"
+
+"Now by my halidom!" quoth the King, while his brow grew black.
+"Such treachery would be unknown in the camp of the Saracen; and
+yet we call ourselves a Christian people!"
+
+The Sheriff kept silence through very fear and shame; then the
+King began speech again:
+
+"Nathless, my lord Sheriff, we promise to look into this matter.
+Those outlaws must be taught that there is but one King in
+England, and that he stands for the law."
+
+So the Sheriff was dismissed, with very mixed feelings, and went
+his way home to Nottingham town. A fortnight later the King began
+to make good his word, by riding with a small party of knights to
+Lea Castle. Sir Richard was advised of the cavalcade's approach,
+and quickly recognized his royal master in the tall knight who
+rode in advance. Hasting to open wide his castle gates he went
+forth to meet the King and fell on one knee and kissed his
+stirrup. For Sir Richard, also, had been with the King to the
+Holy Land, and they had gone on many adventurous quests together.
+
+The King bade him rise, and dismounted from his own horse to
+greet him as a brother in arms; and arm-in-arm they went into the
+castle, while bugles and trumpets sounded forth joyous welcome in
+honor of the great occasion.
+
+After the King had rested and supped, he turned upon the knight
+and with grave face inquired:
+
+"What is this I hear about your castle's becoming a nest and
+harbor for outlaws?"
+
+The Sir Richard of the Lea, divining that the Sheriff had been at
+the King's ear with his story, made a clean breast of all he
+knew; how that the outlaws had befriended him in sore need--as
+they had befriended others--and how that he had given them only
+knightly protection in return.
+
+The King liked the story well, for his own soul was one of
+chivalry. And he asked other questions about Robin Hood, and
+heard of the ancient wrong done his father before him, and of
+Robin's own enemies, and of his manner of living.
+
+"In sooth," cried King Richard, springing up, "I must see this
+bold fellow for myself! An you will entertain my little company,
+and be ready to sally forth, upon the second day, in quest of me
+if need were, I shall e'en fare alone into the greenwood to seek
+an adventure with him."
+
+But of this adventure you shall be told in the next tale; for I
+have already shown you how Sir Richard of the Lea repaid his
+debt, with interest.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+HOW KING RICHARD CAME TO SHERWOOD FOREST
+
+King Richard hearing of the pranks
+Of Robin Hood and his men,
+He much admired and more desired
+To see both him and them.
+
+Then Robin takes a can of ale:
+"Come let us now begin;
+And every man shall have his can;
+Here's a health unto the King!"
+
+
+Friar Tuck had nursed Little John's wounded knee so skilfully
+that it was now healed. In sooth, the last part of the nursing
+depended more upon strength than skill; for it consisted chiefly
+of holding down the patient, by main force, to his cot. Little
+John had felt so well that he had insisted upon getting up before
+the wound was healed; and he would have done so, if the friar had
+not piled some holy books upon his legs and sat upon his stomach.
+
+Under this vigorous treatment Little John was constrained to lie
+quiet until the friar gave him leave to get up. At last he had
+this leave, and he and the friar went forth to join the rest of
+the band, who were right glad to see them, you may be sure. They
+sat around a big fire, for 'twas a chilly evening, and they
+feasted and made merry, in great content.
+
+A cold rain set in, later, but the friar wended his way back,
+nathless, to his little hermitage. There he made himself a
+cheerful blaze, and changed his dripping robe, and had sat
+himself down, with a sigh of satisfaction, before a tankard of
+hot mulled wine and a pasty, when suddenly a voice was heard on
+the outside, demanding admission. His kennel of dogs set up
+furious uproar, on the instant, by way of proving the fact of a
+stranger's presence.
+
+"Now by Saint Peter!" growled the friar, "who comes here at this
+unseemly hour? Does he take this for a hostelry? Move on,
+friend, else my mulled wine will get cold!"
+
+So saying he put the tankard to his lips, when a thundering rap
+sounded upon the door-panel, making it to quiver, and causing
+Tuck almost to drop his tankard; while an angry voice shouted,
+"Ho! Within there! Open, I say!"
+
+"Go your way in peace!" roared back the friar; "I can do nothing
+for you. 'Tis but a few miles to Gamewell, if you know the road."
+
+"But I do not know the road, and if I did I would not budge
+another foot. 'Tis wet without and dry within. So open, without
+further parley!"
+
+"A murrain seize you for disturbing a holy man in his prayers!"
+muttered Tuck savagely. Nathless, he was fain to unbar the door
+in order to keep it from being battered down. Then lighting a
+torch at his fire and whistling for one of his dogs, he strode
+forth to see who his visitor might be.
+
+The figure of a tall knight clad in a black coat of mail, with
+plumed helmet, stood before him. By his side stood his horse,
+also caparisoned in rich armor.
+
+"Have you no supper, brother?" asked the Black Knight curtly. "I
+must beg of you a bed and a bit of roof, for this night, and fain
+would refresh my body ere I sleep."
+
+"I have no room that even your steed would deign to accept, Sir
+Knight; and naught save a crust of bread and pitcher of water."
+
+"I' faith, I can smell better fare than that, brother, and must
+e'en force my company upon you, though I shall recompense it for
+gold in the name of the church. As for my horse, let him but be
+blanketed and put on the sheltered side of the house."
+
+And without further parley the knight boldly strode past Tuck and
+his dog and entered the hermitage. Something about his masterful
+air pleased Tuck, in spite of his churlishness.
+
+"Sit you down, Sir Knight," quoth he, "and I will fasten up up
+your steed, and find him somewhat in the shape of grain. Half,
+also, of my bed and board is yours, this night; but we shall see
+later who is the better man, and is to give the orders!"
+
+"With all my soul!" said the knight, laughing. "I can pay my
+keeping in blows or gold as you prefer."
+
+The friar presently returned and drew up a small table near the
+fire.
+
+"Now, Sir Knight," quoth he, "put off your sword and helm and
+such other war-gear as it pleases you, and help me lay this
+table, for I am passing hungry."
+
+The knight did as he was told, and put aside the visor which had
+hid his face. He was a bronzed and bearded man with blue eyes,
+and hair shot with gold, haughty but handsome withal.
+
+Then once again the priest sat him down to his pasty and mulled
+wine, right hopefully. He spoke his grace with some haste, and
+was surprised to hear his guest respond fittingly in the Latin
+tongue. Then they attacked the wine and pasty valiantly, and the
+Black Knight made good his word of being in need of refreshment.
+Tuck looked ruefully at the rapidly disappearing food, but came
+to grudge it not, by reason of the stories with which his guest
+enlivened the meal. The wine and warmth of the room had cheered
+them both, and they were soon laughing uproariously as the best
+of comrades in the world. The Black Knight, it seemed, had
+traveled everywhere. He had been on crusades, had fought the
+courteous Saladin, had been in prison, and often in peril. But
+now he spoke of it lightly, and laughed it off, and made himself
+so friendly that Friar Tuck was like to choke with merriment. So
+passed the time till late; and the two fell asleep together, one
+on each side of the table which had been cleared to the platters.
+
+In the morning Friar Tuck awoke disposed to be surly, but was
+speedily mollified by the sight of the Black Knight, who had
+already risen gay as a lark, washed his face and hands, and was
+now stirring a hot gruel over the fire.
+
+"By my faith, I make a sorry host!" cried Tuck springing to his
+feet. And later as they sat at breakfast, he added, "I want not
+your gold, of which you spoke last night; but instead I will do
+what I can to speed you on your way whenever you wish to depart."
+
+"Then tell me," said the knight, "how I may find Robin Hood the
+outlaw; for I have a message to him from the King. All day
+yesterday I sought him, but found him not."
+
+Friar Tuck lifted up his hands in holy horror. "I am a lover of
+peace, Sir Knight, and do not consort with Robin's bold fellows."
+
+"Nay, I think no harm of Master Hood," said the knight; "but much
+I yearn to have speed with him in mine own person."
+
+"If that be all, mayhap I can guide you to his haunts," said
+Tuck, who foresaw in this knight a possible gold-bag for Robin.
+"In sooth, I could not well live in these woods without hearing
+somewhat of the outlaws; but matters of religion are my chief joy
+and occupation."
+
+"I will go with you, brother," said the Black Knight.
+
+So without more ado they went their way into the forest, the
+knight riding upon his charger, and Tuck pacing along demurely by
+his side.
+
+The day had dawned clear and bright, and now with the sun a good
+three hours high a sweet autumn fragrance was in the air. The
+wind had just that touch of coolness in it which sets the
+hunter's blood to tingling; and every creature of nature seemed
+bounding with joyous life.
+
+The knight sniffed the fresh air in delight.
+
+"By my halidom!" quoth he; "but the good greenwood is the best
+place to live in, after all! What court or capital can equal
+this, for full-blooded men?"
+
+"None of this earth," replied Tuck smilingly. And once more his
+heart warmed toward the courteous stranger.
+
+They had not proceeded more than three or four miles along the
+way from Fountain Abbey to Barnesdale, when of a sudden the
+bushes just ahead of them parted and a well-knit man with curling
+brown hair stepped into the road and laid his hand upon the
+knight's bridle.
+
+It was Robin Hood. He had seen Friar Tuck, a little way back,
+and shrewdly suspected his plan. Tuck, however, feigned not to
+know him at all.
+
+"Hold!" cried Robin; "I am in charge of the highway this day, and
+must exact an accounting from all passersby."
+
+"Who is it bids me hold?" asked the knight quietly. "I am not i'
+the habit of yielding to one man."
+
+"Then here are others to keep me company," said Robin clapping
+his hands. And instantly a half-score other stalwart fellows
+came out of the bushes and stood beside him.
+
+"We be yeomen of the forest, Sir Knight," continued Robin, "and
+live under the greenwood tree. We have no means of
+support--thanks to the tyranny of our over-lords--other than the
+aid which fat churchmen and goodly knights like yourselves can
+give. And as ye have churches and rents, both, and gold in great
+plenty, we beseech ye for Saint Charity to give us some of your
+spending."
+
+"I am but a poor monk, good sir!" said Friar Tuck in a whining
+voice, "and am on my way to the shrine of Saint Dunstan, if your
+worshipfulness will permit."
+
+"Tarry a space with us," answered Robin, biting back a smile,
+"and we will speed you on your way."
+
+The Black Knight now spoke again. "But we are messengers of the
+King," quoth he; "His Majesty himself tarries near here and would
+have speech with Robin Hood."
+
+"God save the King!" said Robin, doffing his cap loyally; "and
+all that wish him well! I am Robin Hood, but I say cursed be the
+man who denies our liege King's sovereignty!"
+
+"Have a care!" said the knight, "or you shall curse yourself!"
+
+"Nay, not so," replied Robin curtly; "the King has no more
+devoted subject than I. Nor have I despoiled aught of his save,
+mayhap, a few deer for my hunger. My chief war is against the
+clergy and barons of the land who bear down upon the poor. But I
+am glad," he continued, "that I have met you here; and before we
+end you shall be my friend and taste of our greenwood cheer."
+
+"But what is the reckoning?" asked the knight. "For I am told
+that some of your feasts are costly."
+
+"Nay," responded Robin waving his hands, "you are from the King.
+Nathless--how much money is in your purse?"
+
+"I have no more than forty gold pieces, seeing that I have lain a
+fortnight at Nottingham with the King, and have spent some goodly
+amounts upon other lordings," replied the knight.
+
+Robin took the forty pounds and gravely counted it. One half he
+gave to his men and bade them drink the King's health with it.
+The other half he handed back to the knight.
+
+"Sir," said he courteously, "have this for your spending. If you
+lie with kings and lordings overmuch, you are like to need it."
+
+"Gramercy!" replied the other smiling. "And now lead on to your
+greenwood hostelry."
+
+So Robin went on the one side of the knight's steed, and Friar
+Tuck on the other, and the men went before and behind till they
+came to the open glade before the caves of Barnesdale. Then
+Robin drew forth his bugle and winded the three signal blasts of
+the band. Soon there came a company of yeomen with its leader,
+and another, and a third, and a fourth, till there were
+sevenscore yeomen in sight. All were dressed in new livery of
+Lincoln green, and carried new bows in their hands and bright
+short swords at their belts. And every man bent his knee to
+Robin Hood ere taking his place before the board, which was
+already set.
+
+A handsome dark-haired page stood at Robin's right hand to pour
+his wine and that of the knightly guest; while the knight
+marveled much at all he saw, and said within himself:
+
+"These men of Robin Hood's give him more obedience than my
+fellows give to me."
+
+At the signal from Robin the dinner began. There was venison and
+fowl and fish and wheaten cake and ale and red wine in great
+plenty, and 'twas a goodly sight to see the smiles upon the
+hungry yeomen's faces.
+
+First they listened to an unctuous grace from Friar Tuck, and
+then Robin lifted high a tankard of ale.
+
+"Come, let us now begin," quoth he, "and every man shall have his
+can. In honor of our guest who comes with royal word, here's a
+health unto the King!"
+
+The guest responded heartily to this toast, and round about the
+board it went, the men cheering noisily for King Richard!
+
+After the feast was over, Robin turned to his guest and said,
+"Now you shall see what life we lead, so that you may report
+faithfully, for good or bad, unto the King."
+
+So at a signal from him, the men rose up and smartly bent their
+bows for practice, while the knight was greatly astonished at the
+smallness of the their targets. A wand was set up, far down the
+glade, and thereon was balanced a garland of roses. Whosoever
+failed to speed his shaft through the garland, without knocking
+it off the wand, was to submit to a buffet from the hand of Friar
+Tuck.
+
+"Ho, ho!" cried the knight, as his late traveling companion rose
+up and bared his brawny arm ready for service; "so you, my
+friend, are Friar Tuck!"
+
+"I have not gainsaid it," replied Tuck growling at having
+betrayed himself. "But chastisement is a rule of the church, and
+I am seeking the good of these stray sheep."
+
+The knight said no more, though his eyes twinkled; and the
+shooting began.
+
+David of Doncaster shot first and landed safely through the rose
+garland. Then came Allan-a-Dale and Little John and Stutely and
+Scarlet and many of the rest, while the knight held his breath
+from very amazement. Each fellow shot truly through the garland,
+until Middle the tinker--not to be outdone--stepped up for a
+trial. But alas! while he made a fair shot for a townsman, the
+arrow never came within a hand-breath of the outer rim of the
+garland.
+
+"Come hither, fellow," said Little John coaxingly. "The priest
+would bless thee with his open hand."
+
+Then because Middle made a wry face, as though he had already
+received the buffet, and loitered in his steps, Arthur-a-Bland
+and Will Stutely seized him by the arms and stood him before the
+friar. Tuck's big arm flashed through the air--"whoof!" and
+stopped suddenly against the tinker's ear; while Middle himself
+went rolling over and over on the grass. He was stopped by a
+small bush, and up he sat, thrusting his head through it, rubbing
+his ear and blinking up at the sky as though the stars had fallen
+and struck him. The yeomen roared with merriment, and as for the
+knight, he laughed till the tears came out of his blue eyes and
+rolled down his face.
+
+After Middle's mishap, others of the band seemed to lose their
+balance, and fared in the same fashion. The garland would topple
+over in a most impish way at every breath, although the arrows
+went through it. So Middle 'gan to feel better when he saw this
+one and that one tumbling on the sward.
+
+At last came Robin's turn. He shot carefully, but as ill luck
+would have it the shaft was ill-feathered and swerved sidewise so
+that it missed the garland by full three fingers. Then a great
+roar went up from the whole company; for 'twas rare that they saw
+their leader miss his mark. Robin flung his bow upon the ground
+from very vexation.
+
+"A murrain take it!" quoth he. "The arrow was sadly winged. I
+felt the poor feather upon it as it left my fingers!"
+
+Then suddenly seizing his bow again, he sped three shafts as fast
+as he could sent them, and every one went clean through the
+garland.
+
+"By Saint George!" muttered the knight. "Never before saw I such
+shooting in all Christendom!"
+
+The band cheered heartily at these last shots; but Will Scarlet
+came up gravely to Robin.
+
+"Pretty shooting, master!" quoth he, "but 'twill not save you
+from paying for the bad arrow. So walk up and take your
+medicine!"
+
+"Nay, that may not be!" protested Robin. "The good friar belongs
+to my company and has no authority to lift hands against me. But
+you, Sir Knight, stand as it were for the King. I pray you,
+serve out my blow."
+
+"Not so!" said Friar Tuck. "My son, you forget I stand for the
+church, which is greater even than the King."
+
+"Not in merry England," said the knight in a deep voice. Then
+rising to his feet, he added, "I stand ready to serve you, Master
+Hood."
+
+"Now out upon ye for an upstart knight!" cried Friar Tuck. "I
+told you last night, sirrah, that we should yet see who was the
+better man! So we will e'en prove it now, and thus settle who is
+to pay Robin Hood."
+
+"Good!" said Robin, "for I want not to start a dispute between
+church and state."
+
+"Good!" also said the knight. "'Tis an easy way to end
+prattling. Come, friar, strike and ye dare. I will give you
+first blow."
+
+"You have the advantage of an iron pot on your head and gloves on
+your hands," said the friar; "but have at ye! Down you shall go,
+if you were Goliath of Gath."
+
+Once more the priest's brawny arm flashed through the air, and
+struck with a "whoof!" But to the amazement of all, the knight
+did not budge from his tracks, though the upper half of his body
+swerved slightly to ease the force of the blow. A loud shout
+burst from the yeomen at this, for the friar's fist was
+proverbial, and few of those present had not felt the force of it
+in times past.
+
+"Now 'tis my turn," said his antagonist coolly, casting aside his
+gauntlet. And with one blow of his fist the knight sent the
+friar spinning to the ground.
+
+If there had been uproar and shouting before, it was as naught to
+the noise which now broke forth. Every fellow held his sides or
+rolled upon the ground from laughter; every fellow, save one, and
+that was Robin Hood.
+
+"Out of the frying-pan into the fire!" thought he. "I wish I had
+let the friar box my ears, after all!"
+
+Robin's plight did, indeed, seem a sorry one, before the steel
+muscles of his stranger. But he was saved from a tumble heels
+over head by an unlooked-for diversion. A horn winded in the
+glade, and a party of knights were seen approaching.
+
+"To your arms!" cried Robin, hurriedly seizing his sword and bow.
+
+"'Tis Sir Richard of the Lea!" cried another, as the troop came
+nearer.
+
+And so it was. Sir Richard spurred forward his horse and dashed
+up to the camp while the outlaws stood at stiff attention. When
+he had come near the spot where the Black Knight stood, he
+dismounted and knelt before him.
+
+"I trust Your Majesty has not needed our arms before," he said
+humbly.
+
+"It is the King!" cried Will Scarlet, falling upon his knees.
+
+"The King!" echoed Robin Hood after a moment of dumb wonderment;
+and he and all his men bent reverently upon their knees, as one
+man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD AND MAID MARIAN WERE WED
+
+"Stand up again," then said the King,
+"I'll thee thy pardon give;
+Stand up, my friend,who can contend,
+When I give leave to live?"
+
+Then Robin Hood began a health
+To Marian, his only dear,
+And his yeomen all, both comely and tall,
+Did quickly bring up the rear.
+
+
+"Your pardon, sire!" exclaimed Robin Hood. "Pardon, from your
+royal bounty, for these my men who stand ready to serve you all
+your days!"
+
+Richard of the Lion Heart looked grimly about over the kneeling
+band.
+
+"Is it as your leader says?" he asked.
+
+"Aye, my lord King!" burst from sevenscore throats at once.
+
+"We be not outlaws from choice alone," continued Robin; "but have
+been driven to outlawry through oppression. Grant us grace and
+royal protection, and we will forsake the greenwood and follow
+the King."
+
+Richard's eyes sparkled as he looked from one to another of this
+stalwart band, and he thought within himself that here, indeed,
+was a royal bodyguard worth the while.
+
+"Swear!" he said in his full rich voice; "swear that you, Robin
+Hood, and all your men from this day henceforth will serve the
+King!"
+
+"We swear!" came once more the answering shout from the yeomen.
+
+"Arise, then," said King Richard. "I give you all free pardon,
+and will speedily put your service to the test. For I love such
+archers as you have shown yourselves to be, and it were a sad
+pity to decree such men to death. England could not produce the
+like again, for many a day. But, in sooth, I cannot allow you to
+roam in the forest and shoot my deer; nor to take the law of the
+land into your own hands. Therefore, I now appoint you to be
+Royal Archers and mine own especial body-guard. There be one or
+two civil matters to settle with certain Norman noblemen, in
+which I crave your aid. Thereafter, the half of your number, as
+may later be determined, shall come back to these woodlands as
+Royal Foresters. Mayhap you will show as much zeal in protecting
+my preserves as you have formerly shown in hunting them. Where,
+now, is that outlaw known as Little John? Stand forth!"
+
+"Here, sire," quoth the giant, doffing his cap.
+
+"Good master Little John," said the King, looking him over
+approvingly. "Could your weak sinews stand the strain of an
+office in the shire? If so, you are this day Sheriff of
+Nottingham; and I trust you will make a better official than the
+man you relieve."
+
+"I shall do my best, sire," said Little John, great astonishment
+and gladness in his heart.
+
+"Master Scarlet, stand forth," said the King; and then addressing
+him: "I have heard somewhat of your tale," quoth he, "and that
+your father was the friend of my father. Now, therefore, accept
+the royal pardon and resume the care of your family estates; for
+your father must be growing old. And come you to London next
+Court day and we shall see if there be a knighthood vacant."
+
+Likewise the King called for Will Stutely and made him Chief of
+the Royal Archers. Then he summoned Friar Tuck to draw near.
+
+"I crave my King's pardon," said the priest, humbly enough; "for
+who am I to lift my hand against the Lord's anointed?"
+
+"Nay, the Lord sent the smiter to thee without delay," returned
+Richard smiling; "and 'tis not for me to continue a quarrel
+between church and state. So what can I do for you in payment of
+last night's hospitality? Can I find some fat living where there
+are no wicked to chastise, and where the work is easy and
+comfortable?"
+
+"Not so, my lord," replied Tuck. "I wish only for peace in this
+life. Mine is a simple nature and I care not for the fripperies
+and follies of court life. Give me a good meal and a cup of
+right brew, health, and enough for the day, and I ask no more."
+
+Richard sighed. "You ask the greatest thing in the world,
+brother--contentment. It is not mine to give or to deny. But
+ask your God for it, an if belike he grant it, then ask it also
+in behalf of your King." He glanced around once more at the
+foresters. "Which one of you is Allan-a-Dale?" he asked; and
+Allan came forward. "So," said the King with sober face, "you
+are that errant minstrel who stole a bride at Plympton, despite
+her would-be groom and attending Bishop. I heard something of
+this in former days. Now what excuse have you to make?"
+
+"Only that I loved her, sire, and she loved me," said Allan,
+simply; "and the Norman lord would have married her perforce,
+because of her lands."
+
+"Which have since been forfeited by the Bishop of Hereford,"
+added Richard. "But my lord Bishop must disgorge them; and from
+tomorrow you and Mistress Dale are to return to them and live in
+peace and loyalty. And if ever I need your harp at Court, stand
+ready to attend me, and bring also the lady. Speaking of
+ladies," he continued, turning to Robin Hood, who had stood
+silent, wondering if a special punishment was being reserved for
+him, "did you not have a sweetheart who was once at Court--one,
+Mistress Marian? What has become of her, that you should have
+forgotten her?"
+
+"Nay, Your Majesty," said the black-eyed page coming forward
+blushingly; "Robin has not forgotten me!"
+
+"So!" said the King, bending to kiss her small hand in all
+gallantry. "Verily, as I have already thought within myself,
+this Master Hood is better served than the King in his palace!
+But are you not the only child of the late Earl of Huntingdon?"
+
+"I am, sire, though there be some who say that Robin Hood's
+father was formerly the rightful Earl of Huntingdon. Nathless,
+neither he is advantaged nor I, for the estates are confiscate."
+
+"Then they shall be restored forthwith!" cried the King; "and
+lest you two should revive the ancient quarrel over them, I
+bestow them upon you jointly. Come forward, Robin Hood."
+
+Robin came and knelt before his king. Richard drew his sword and
+touched him upon the shoulder.
+
+"Rise, Robin Fitzooth, Earl of Huntingdon!" he exclaimed, while a
+mighty cheer arose from the band and rent the air of the forest.
+"The first command I give you, my lord Earl," continued the King
+when quiet was restored, "is to marry Mistress Marian without
+delay."
+
+"May I obey all Your Majesty's commands as willingly!" cried the
+new Earl of Huntingdon, drawing the old Earl's daughter close to
+him. "The ceremony shall take place to-morrow, an this maid is
+willing."
+
+"She makes little protest," said the King; "so I shall e'en give
+away the bride myself!"
+
+Then the King chatted with others of the foresters, and made
+himself as one of them for the evening, rejoicing that he could
+have this careless freedom of the woods. And Much, the miller's
+son, and Arthur-a-Bland, and Middle, and Stutely and Scarlet and
+Little John and others played at the quarter-staff, giving and
+getting many lusty blows. Then as the shades of night drew on,
+the whole company--knights and foresters--supped and drank around
+a blazing fire, while Allen sang sweetly to the thrumming of the
+harp, and the others joined in the chorus.
+
+'Twas a happy, care-free night--this last one together under the
+greenwood tree. Robin could not help feeling an undertone of
+sadness that it was to be the last; for the charm of the woodland
+was still upon him. But he knew 'twas better so, and that the
+new life with Marian and in the service of his King would bring
+its own joys.
+
+Then the night deepened, the fire sank, but was replenished and
+the company lay down to rest. The King, at his own request,
+spent the night in the open. Thus they slept--King and subject
+alike--out under the stars, cared for lovingly by Nature, kind
+mother of us all.
+
+In the morning the company was early astir and on their way to
+Nottingham. It was a goodly cavalcade. First rode King Richard
+of the Lion Heart, with his tall figure set forth by the black
+armor and waving plume in his helm. Then came Sir Richard of the
+Lea with fourscore knights and men-at-arms. And after them came
+Robin Hood and Maid Marian riding upon milk-white steeds.
+Allan-a-Dale also escorted Mistress Dale on horseback, for she
+was to be matron-of-honor at the wedding. These were followed by
+sevenscore archers clad in their bravest Lincoln green, and with
+their new bows unstrung in token of peace.
+
+Outside the gates of Nottingham town they were halted.
+
+"Who comes here?" asked the warder's surly voice.
+
+"Open to the King of England!" came back the clear answer, and
+the gates were opened and the bridge let down without delay.
+
+Almost before the company had crossed the moat the news spread
+through the town like wildfire.
+
+"The King is here! The King is here, and hath taken Robin Hood!"
+
+From every corner flocked the people to see the company pass; and
+wildly did they cheer for the King, who rode smilingly with bared
+head down through the market-place.
+
+At the far end of it, he was met by the Sheriff who came up
+puffing in his haste to do the King honor. He fairly turned
+green with rage when he saw Sir Richard of the Lea and Robin Hood
+in the royal company, but made low obeisance to his master.
+
+"Sir Sheriff," quoth the King, "I have come to rid the shire of
+outlaws, according to my promise. There be none left, for all
+have now taken service with their King. And lest there should be
+further outbreak, I have determined to place in charge of this
+shire a man who fears no other man in it. Master Little John is
+hereby created Sheriff of Nottingham, and you will turn over the
+keys to him forthwith."
+
+The Sheriff bowed, but dared utter no word. Then the King turned
+to the Bishop of Hereford, who had also come up to pay his
+respects.
+
+"Harkee, my lord Bishop," quoth he, "the stench of your evil
+actions had reached our nostrils. We shall demand strict
+accounting for certain seizures of the lands and certain acts of
+oppression which ill become a churchman. But of this later.
+This afternoon you must officiate at the wedding of two of our
+company, in Nottingham Church. So make you ready."
+
+The Bishop also bowed and departed, glad to escape a severer
+censure for the time.
+
+The company then rode on to the Mansion House, where the King
+held high levee through all the noon hours, and the whole town
+made a holiday.
+
+In the afternoon the way from the Mansion House to Nottingham
+Church was lined with cheering people, as the wedding party
+passed by. The famous bowmen were gazed at as curiously as
+though they had been wild animals, but were cheered none the
+less. Robin who had long been held in secret liking was now
+doubly popular since he had the King's favor.
+
+Along the way ahead of the King and the smiling bride and groom
+to be ran little maids strewing flowers; while streamers floated
+in greeting from the windows. I ween, the only hearts that were
+not glad this day were those of the old Sheriff, and of his proud
+daughter, who peered between the shutters of her window and was
+like to eat out her heart from envy and hatred.
+
+At last the party reached the church, where the King dismounted
+lightly from his horse and helped the bride to alight; while Will
+Scarlet, the best man, assisted Mistress Dale. Within the church
+they found the Bishop robed in state, and by his side Friar Tuck
+who had been especially deputed to assist.
+
+The service was said in Latin, while the organ pealed forth
+softly. The King gave away the bride, as he had said, and
+afterwards claimed first kiss for his pains. Then the happy
+party dispersed, and Robin and Marian passed out again through
+the portal, man and wife.
+
+Out through the cheering streets they fared, while the greenwood
+men ran ahead and flung gold pennies right and left in their joy,
+and bade the people drink the health of the young couple and the
+King. Then the whole party took horse at Will Scarlet's earnest
+wish, and went down to Gamewell Lodge, where the old Squire
+George wept for joy at seeing his son and the King and the
+wedding--party. That night they spent there, and feasted, and
+the next day, Sir Richard of the Lea claimed them.
+
+And thus, amid feasting and rejoicing and kingly favor, Robin
+Hood, the new Earl of Huntingdon, and his bride began their
+wedded life.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+HOW ROBIN HOOD MET HIS DEATH
+
+"Give me my bent bow in my hand,
+And a broad arrow I'll let flee;
+And where this arrow is taken up,
+There shall my grave digg'd be."
+
+
+Now by good rights this story should end with the wedding of
+Robin Hood and Maid Marian; for do not many pleasant tales end
+with a wedding and the saying, "and they lived happy ever after"?
+
+But this is a true account--in so far as we can find the quaint
+old ballads which tell of it--and so we must follow one more of
+these songs and learn how Robin, after living many years longer,
+at last came to seek his grave. And the story of it runs in this
+wise.
+
+Robin Hood and his men, now the Royal Archers, went with King
+Richard of the Lion Heart through England settling certain
+private disputes which had arisen among the Norman barons while
+the King was gone to the Holy Land. Then the King proceeded amid
+great pomp and rejoicing to the palace at London, and Robin, the
+new Earl of Huntingdon, brought his Countess thither, where she
+became one of the finest ladies of the Court.
+
+The Royal Archers were now divided into two bands, and one-half
+of them were retained in London, while the other half returned to
+Sherwood and Barnesdale, there to guard the King's preserves.
+
+Several months passed by, and Robin began to chafe under the
+restraint of city life. He longed for the fresh pure air of the
+greenwood, and the rollicking society of his yeomen. One day,
+upon seeing some lads at archery practice upon a green, he could
+not help but lament, saying, "Woe is me! I fear my hand is fast
+losing its old time cunning at the bow-string!"
+
+Finally he became so distraught that he asked leave to travel in
+foreign lands, and this was granted him. He took Maid Marian
+with him, and together they went through many strange countries.
+Finally in an Eastern land a great grief came upon Robin. Marian
+sickened of a plague and died. They had been married but five
+years, and Robin felt as though all the light had gone out of his
+life.
+
+He wandered about the world for a few months longer, trying to
+forget his grief, then came back to the court, at London, and
+sought some commission in active service. But unluckily, Richard
+was gone again upon his adventures, and Prince John, who acted as
+Regent, had never been fond of Robin. He received him with a
+sarcastic smile.
+
+"Go forth into the greenwood," said he, coldly, "and kill some
+more of the King's deer. Belike, then, the King will make you
+Prime Minister, at the very least, upon his return."
+
+The taunt fired Robin's blood. He had been in a morose mood,
+ever since his dear wife's death. He answered Prince John hotly,
+and the Prince bade his guards seize him and cast him into the
+Tower.
+
+After lying there for a few weeks, he was released by the
+faithful Stutely and the remnant of the Royal Archers, and all
+together they fled the city and made their way to the greenwood.
+There Robin blew the old familiar call, which all had known and
+loved so well. Up came running the remainder of the band, who
+had been Royal Foresters, and when they saw their old master they
+embraced his knees and kissed his hands, and fairly cried for joy
+that he had come again to them. And one and all forswore fealty
+to Prince John, and lived quietly with Robin in the greenwood,
+doing harm to none and only awaiting the time when King Richard
+should come again.
+
+But King Richard came not again, and would never need his Royal
+Guard more. Tidings presently reached them, of how he had met
+his death in a foreign land, and how John reigned as King in his
+stead. The proof of these events followed soon after, when there
+came striding through the glade the big, familiar form of Little
+John.
+
+"Art come to arrest us?" called out Robin, as he ran forward and
+embraced his old comrade.
+
+"Nay, I am not come as the Sheriff of Nottingham, thanks be,"
+answered Little John. "The new King has deposed me, and 'tis
+greatly to my liking, for I have long desired to join you here
+again in the greenwood."
+
+Then were the rest of the band right glad at this news, and
+toasted Little John royally.
+
+The new King waged fierce war upon the outlaws, soon after this,
+and sent so many scouting parties into Sherwood and Barnesdale
+that Robin and his men left these woods for a time and went into
+Derbyshire, near Haddon Hall. A curious pile of stone is shown
+to this day as the ruins of Robin's Castle, where the bold outlaw
+is believed to have defied his enemies for a year or more. At
+any rate King John found so many troubles of his own, after a
+time, that he ceased troubling the outlaws.
+
+But in one of the last sorties Robin was wounded. The cut did
+not seem serious, and healed over the top; but it left a lurking
+fever. Daily his strength ebbed away from him, until he was in
+sore distress.
+
+One day as he rode along on horseback, near Kirklees Abbey, he
+was seized with so violent a rush of blood to the head that he
+reeled and came near falling from his saddle. He dismounted
+weakly and knocked at the Abbey gate. A woman shrouded in black
+peered forth.
+
+"Who are you that knock here? For we allow no man within these
+walls," she said.
+
+"Open, for the love of Heaven!" he begged. "I am Robin Hood, ill
+of a fever and in sore straits."
+
+At the name of Robin Hood the woman started back, and then, as
+though bethinking herself, unbarred the door and admitted him.
+Assisting his fainting frame up a flight of stairs and into a
+front room, she loosed his collar and bathed his face until he
+was revived. Then she spoke hurriedly in a low voice:
+
+"Your fever will sink, if you are bled. See, I have provided a
+lancet and will open your veins, while you lie quiet."
+
+So she bled him, and he fell into a stupor which lasted nearly
+all that day, so that he awoke weak and exhausted from loss of
+blood.
+
+Now there is a dispute as to this abbess who bled him. Some say
+that she did it in all kindness of heart; while others aver that
+she was none other than the former Sheriff's daughter, and found
+her revenge at last in this cruel deed.
+
+Be that as it may, Robin's eyes swam from very weakness when he
+awoke.
+
+He called wearily for help, but there was no response. He looked
+longingly through the window at the green of the forest; but he
+was too weak to make the leap that would be needed to reach the
+ground.
+
+He then bethought him of his horn,
+Which hung down at his knee;
+He set his horn unto his mouth,
+And blew out weak blasts three.
+
+Little John was out in the forest near by, or the blasts would
+never have been heard. At their sound he sprang to his feet.
+
+"Woe! woe!" he cried, "I fear my master is near dead, he blows so
+wearily!"
+
+So he made haste and came running up to the door of the abbey,
+and knocked loudly for admittance. Failing to get reply, he
+burst in the door with frenzied blows of his mighty fist, and
+soon came running up to the room where Robin lay, white and
+faint. "Alas, dear master!" cried Little John in great distress;
+"I fear you have met with treachery! If that be so, grant me one
+last boon, I pray."
+
+"What is it?" asked Robin.
+
+"Let me burn Kirklees-Hall with fire, and all its nunnery."
+
+"Nay, good comrade," answered Robin Hood gently, "I cannot grant
+such a boon. The dear Christ bade us forgive all our enemies.
+Moreover, you know I never hurt woman in all my life; nor man
+when in woman's company."
+
+He closed his eyes and fell back, so that his friend thought him
+dying. The great tears fell from the giant's eyes and wet his
+master's hand. Robin slowly rallied and seized his comrade's
+outstretched arm.
+
+"Lift me up, good Little John," he said brokenly, "I want to
+smell the air from the good greenwood once again. Give me my
+good yew bow--here--here-and fix a broad arrow upon the string.
+Out yonder--among the oaks--where this arrow shall fall--let
+them dig my grave."
+
+And with one last mighty effort he sped his shaft out of the open
+window, straight and true, as in the days of old, till it struck
+the largest oak of them all and dropped in the shadow of the
+trees. Then he fell back upon the sobbing breast of his devoted
+friend.
+
+"'Tis the last!" he murmured, "tell the brave hearts to lay me
+there with the green sod under my head and feet. And--let them
+lay--my bent bow at my side, for it has made sweet music in mine
+ears."
+
+He rested a moment, and Little John scarce knew that he was
+alive. But on a sudden Robin's eye brightened, and he seemed to
+think himself back once more with the band in the open forest
+glade. He struggled to rise.
+
+"Ha! 'tis a fine stag, Will! And Allan, thou never didst thrum
+the harp more sweetly. How the light blazes! And Marian!--'tis
+my Marian--come at last!"
+
+So died the body of Robin Hood; but his spirit lives on through
+the centuries in the deathless ballads which are sung of him, and
+in the hearts of men who love freedom and chivalry.
+
+They buried him where his last arrow had fallen, and they set a
+stone to mark the spot. And on the stone were graven these
+words:
+
+"Here underneath his little stone
+Lies Robert, Earl of Huntingdon;
+Never archer as he so good,
+And people called him Robin Hood.
+Such outlaws as he and his men
+Will England never see again."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of Robin Hood by J. Walker McSpadden
+
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