<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>THE WOOD BEYOND THE WORLD</h1>
<p style="text-align: center">BY WILLIAM MORRIS</p>
<p style="text-align: center"><span class="smcap">pocket
edition</span></p>
<p style="text-align: center">LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO.<br/>
<span class="smcap">39 paternoster row</span>, <span class="smcap">london</span><br/>
<span class="smcap">new york</span>, <span class="smcap">bombay</span>, <span class="smcap">and
calcutta</span><br/>
1913</p>
<h2>CHAPTER I: OF GOLDEN WALTER AND HIS FATHER</h2>
<p>Awhile ago there was a young man dwelling in a great and
goodly city by the sea which had to name Langton on
Holm. He was but of five and twenty winters, a
fair-faced man, yellow-haired, tall and strong; rather wiser than
foolisher than young men are mostly wont; a valiant youth, and a
kind; not of many words but courteous of speech; no roisterer,
nought masterful, but peaceable and knowing how to forbear: in a
fray a perilous foe, and a trusty war-fellow. His
father, with whom he was dwelling when this tale begins, was a
great merchant, richer than a baron of the land, a head-man of
the greatest of the Lineages of Langton, and a captain of the
Porte; he was of the Lineage of the Goldings, therefore was he
called Bartholomew Golden, and his son Golden Walter.</p>
<p>Now ye may well deem that such a youngling as this was looked
upon by all as a lucky man without a lack; but there was this
flaw in his lot, whereas he had fallen into the toils of love of
a woman exceeding fair, and had taken her to wife, she nought
unwilling as it seemed. But when they had been wedded
some six months he found by manifest tokens, that his fairness
was not so much to her but that she must seek to the foulness of
one worser than he in all ways; wherefore his rest departed from
him, whereas he hated her for her untruth and her hatred of him;
yet would the sound of her voice, as she came and went in the
house, make his heart beat; and the sight of her stirred desire
within him, so that he longed for her to be sweet and kind with
him, and deemed that, might it be so, he should forget all the
evil gone by. But it was not so; for ever when she
saw him, her face changed, and her hatred of him became manifest,
and howsoever she were sweet with others, with him she was hard
and sour.</p>
<p>So this went on a while till the chambers of his
father’s house, yea the very streets of the city, became
loathsome to him; and yet he called to mind that the world was
wide and he but a young man. So on a day as he sat
with his father alone, he spake to him and said: “Father, I
was on the quays even now, and I looked on the ships that were
nigh boun, and thy sign I saw on a tall ship that seemed to me
nighest boun. Will it be long ere she
sail?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said his father, “that ship, which
hight the Katherine, will they warp out of the haven in two
days’ time. But why askest thou of
her?”</p>
<p>“The shortest word is best, father,” said Walter,
“and this it is, that I would depart in the said ship and
see other lands.”</p>
<p>“Yea and whither, son?” said the merchant.</p>
<p>“Whither she goeth,” said Walter, “for I am
ill at ease at home, as thou wottest, father.”</p>
<p>The merchant held his peace awhile, and looked hard on his
son, for there was strong love between them; but at last he said:
“Well, son, maybe it were best for thee; but maybe also we
shall not meet again.”</p>
<p>“Yet if we do meet, father, then shalt thou see a new
man in me.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Bartholomew, “at least I know
on whom to lay the loss of thee, and when thou art gone, for thou
shalt have thine own way herein, she shall no longer abide in my
house. Nay, but it were for the strife that should
arise thenceforth betwixt her kindred and ours, it should go
somewhat worse with her than that.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “I pray thee shame her not more than needs
must be, lest, so doing, thou shame both me and thyself
also.”</p>
<p>Bartholomew held his peace again for a while; then he said:
“Goeth she with child, my son?”</p>
<p>Walter reddened, and said: “I wot not; nor of whom the
child may be.” Then they both sat silent, till
Bartholomew spake, saying: “The end of it is, son, that
this is Monday, and that thou shalt go aboard in the small hours
of Wednesday; and meanwhile I shall look to it that thou go not
away empty-handed; the skipper of the Katherine is a good man and
true, and knows the seas well; and my servant Robert the Low, who
is clerk of the lading, is trustworthy and wise, and as myself in
all matters that look towards chaffer. The Katherine
is new and stout-builded, and should be lucky, whereas she is
under the ward of her who is the saint called upon in the church
where thou wert christened, and myself before thee; and thy
mother, and my father and mother all lie under the chancel
thereof, as thou wottest.”</p>
<p>Therewith the elder rose up and went his ways about his
business, and there was no more said betwixt him and his son on
this matter.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER II: GOLDEN WALTER TAKES SHIP TO SAIL THE SEAS</h2>
<p>When Walter went down to the Katherine next morning, there was
the skipper Geoffrey, who did him reverence, and made him all
cheer, and showed him his room aboard ship, and the plenteous
goods which his father had sent down to the quays already, such
haste as he had made. Walter thanked his father’s
love in his heart, but otherwise took little heed to his affairs,
but wore away the time about the haven, gazing listlessly on the
ships that were making them ready outward, or unlading, and the
mariners and aliens coming and going: and all these were to him
as the curious images woven on a tapestry.</p>
<p>At last when he had wellnigh come back again to the Katherine,
he saw there a tall ship, which he had scarce noted before, a
ship all-boun, which had her boats out, and men sitting to the
oars thereof ready to tow her outwards when the hawser should be
cast off, and by seeming her mariners were but abiding for some
one or other to come aboard.</p>
<p>So Walter stood idly watching the said ship, and as he looked,
lo! folk passing him toward the gangway. These were three;
first came a dwarf, dark-brown of hue and hideous, with long arms
and ears exceeding great and dog-teeth that stuck out like the
fangs of a wild beast. He was clad in a rich coat of yellow
silk, and bare in his hand a crooked bow, and was girt with a
broad sax.</p>
<p>After him came a maiden, young by seeming, of scarce twenty
summers; fair of face as a flower; grey-eyed, brown-haired, with
lips full and red, slim and gentle of body. Simple was her
array, of a short and strait green gown, so that on her right
ankle was clear to see an iron ring.</p>
<p>Last of the three was a lady, tall and stately, so radiant of
visage and glorious of raiment, that it were hard to say what
like she was; for scarce might the eye gaze steady upon her
exceeding beauty; yet must every son of Adam who found himself
anigh her, lift up his eyes again after he had dropped them, and
look again on her, and yet again and yet again. Even so did
Walter, and as the three passed by him, it seemed to him as if
all the other folk there about had vanished and were nought; nor
had he any vision before his eyes of any looking on them, save
himself alone. They went over the gangway into the ship,
and he saw them go along the deck till they came to the house on
the poop, and entered it and were gone from his sight.</p>
<p>There he stood staring, till little by little the thronging
people of the quays came into his eye-shot again; then he saw how
the hawser was cast off and the boats fell to tugging the big
ship toward the harbour-mouth with hale and how of men.
Then the sail fell down from the yard and was sheeted home and
filled with the fair wind as the ship’s bows ran up on the
first green wave outside the haven. Even therewith the
shipmen cast abroad a banner, whereon was done in a green field a
grim wolf ramping up against a maiden, and so went the ship upon
her way.</p>
<p>Walter stood awhile staring at her empty place where the waves
ran into the haven-mouth, and then turned aside and toward the
Katherine; and at first he was minded to go ask shipmaster
Geoffrey of what he knew concerning the said ship and her alien
wayfarers; but then it came into his mind, that all this was but
an imagination or dream of the day, and that he were best to
leave it untold to any. So therewith he went his way from
the water-side, and through the streets unto his father’s
house; but when he was but a little way thence, and the door was
before him, him-seemed for a moment of time that he beheld those
three coming out down the steps of stone and into the street; to
wit the dwarf, the maiden, and the stately lady: but when he
stood still to abide their coming, and looked toward them, lo!
there was nothing before him save the goodly house of Bartholomew
Golden, and three children and a cur dog playing about the steps
thereof, and about him were four or five passers-by going about
their business. Then was he all confused in his mind, and
knew not what to make of it, whether those whom he had seemed to
see pass aboard ship were but images of a dream, or children of
Adam in very flesh.</p>
<p>Howsoever, he entered the house, and found his father in the
chamber, and fell to speech with him about their matters; but for
all that he loved his father, and worshipped him as a wise and
valiant man, yet at that hour he might not hearken the words of
his mouth, so much was his mind entangled in the thought of those
three, and they were ever before his eyes, as if they had been
painted on a table by the best of limners. And of the two
women he thought exceeding much, and cast no wyte upon himself
for running after the desire of strange women. For he said
to himself that he desired not either of the twain; nay, he might
not tell which of the twain, the maiden or the stately queen,
were clearest to his eyes; but sore he desired to see both of
them again, and to know what they were.</p>
<p>So wore the hours till the Wednesday morning, and it was time
that he should bid farewell to his father and get aboard ship;
but his father led him down to the quays and on to the Katherine,
and there Walter embraced him, not without tears and forebodings;
for his heart was full. Then presently the old man went
aland; the gangway was unshipped, the hawsers cast off; the oars
of the towing-boats splashed in the dark water, the sail fell
down from the yard, and was sheeted home, and out plunged the
Katherine into the misty sea and rolled up the grey slopes,
casting abroad her ancient withal, whereon was beaten the token
of Bartholomew Golden, to wit a B and a G to the right and the
left, and thereabove a cross and a triangle rising from the
midst.</p>
<p>Walter stood on the stern and beheld, yet more with the mind
of him than with his eyes; for it all seemed but the double of
what the other ship had done; and the thought of it as if the
twain were as beads strung on one string and led away by it into
the same place, and thence to go in the like order, and so on
again and again, and never to draw nigher to each other.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER III: WALTER HEARETH TIDINGS OF THE DEATH OF HIS FATHER</h2>
<p>Fast sailed the Katherine over the seas, and nought befell to
tell of, either to herself or her crew. She came to one
cheaping-town and then to another, and so on to a third and a
fourth; and at each was buying and selling after the manner of
chapmen; and Walter not only looked on the doings of his
father’s folk, but lent a hand, what he might, to help them
in all matters, whether it were in seaman’s craft, or in
chaffer. And the further he went and the longer the time
wore, the more he was eased of his old trouble wherein his wife
and her treason had to do.</p>
<p>But as for the other trouble, to wit his desire and longing to
come up with those three, it yet flickered before him; and though
he had not seen them again as one sees people in the streets, and
as if he might touch them if he would, yet were their images
often before his mind’s eye; and yet, as time wore, not so
often, nor so troublously; and forsooth both to those about him
and to himself, he seemed as a man well healed of his melancholy
mood.</p>
<p>Now they left that fourth stead, and sailed over the seas and
came to a fifth, a very great and fair city, which they had made
more than seven months from Langton on Holm; and by this time was
Walter taking heed and joyance in such things as were toward in
that fair city, so far from his kindred, and especially he looked
on the fair women there, and desired them, and loved them; but
lightly, as befalleth young men.</p>
<p>Now this was the last country whereto the Katherine was boun;
so there they abode some ten months in daily chaffer, and in
pleasuring them in beholding all that there was of rare and
goodly, and making merry with the merchants and the towns-folk,
and the country-folk beyond the gates, and Walter was grown as
busy and gay as a strong young man is like to be, and was as one
who would fain be of some account amongst his own folk.</p>
<p>But at the end of this while, it befell on a day, as he was
leaving his hostel for his booth in the market, and had the door
in his hand, there stood before him three mariners in the guise
of his own country, and with them was one of clerkly aspect, whom
he knew at once for his father’s scrivener, Arnold
Penstrong by name; and when Walter saw him his heart failed him
and he cried out: “Arnold, what tidings? Is all well
with the folk at Langton?”</p>
<p>Said Arnold: “Evil tidings are come with me; matters are
ill with thy folk; for I may not hide that thy father,
Bartholomew Golden, is dead, God rest his soul.”</p>
<p>At that word it was to Walter as if all that trouble which but
now had sat so light upon him, was once again fresh and heavy,
and that his past life of the last few months had never been; and
it was to him as if he saw his father lying dead on his bed, and
heard the folk lamenting about the house. He held his peace
awhile, and then he said in a voice as of an angry man:</p>
<p>“What, Arnold! and did he die in his bed, or how? for he
was neither old nor ailing when we parted.”</p>
<p>Said Arnold: “Yea, in his bed he died: but first he was
somewhat sword-bitten.”</p>
<p>“Yea, and how?” quoth Walter.</p>
<p>Said Arnold: “When thou wert gone, in a few days’
wearing, thy father sent thy wife out of his house back to her
kindred of the Reddings with no honour, and yet with no such
shame as might have been, without blame to us of those who knew
the tale of thee and her; which, God-a-mercy, will be pretty much
the whole of the city.”</p>
<p>“Nevertheless, the Reddings took it amiss, and would
have a mote with us Goldings to talk of booting. By
ill-luck we yea-said that for the saving of the city’s
peace. But what betid? We met in our Gild-hall, and
there befell the talk between us; and in that talk certain words
could not be hidden, though they were none too seemly nor too
meek. And the said words once spoken drew forth the whetted
steel; and there then was the hewing and thrusting! Two of
ours were slain outright on the floor, and four of theirs, and
many were hurt on either side. Of these was thy father, for
as thou mayst well deem, he was nought backward in the fray; but
despite his hurts, two in the side and one on the arm, he went
home on his own feet, and we deemed that we had come to our
above. But well-a-way! it was an evil victory, whereas in
ten days he died of his hurts. God have his soul! But
now, my master, thou mayst well wot that I am not come to tell
thee this only, but moreover to bear the word of the kindred, to
wit that thou come back with me straightway in the swift cutter
which hath borne me and the tidings; and thou mayst look to it,
that though she be swift and light, she is a keel full
weatherly.”</p>
<p>Then said Walter: “This is a bidding of war. Come
back will I, and the Reddings shall wot of my coming. Are
ye all-boun?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said Arnold, “we may up anchor this
very day, or to-morrow morn at latest. But what aileth
thee, master, that thou starest so wild over my shoulder? I
pray thee take it not so much to heart! Ever it is the wont
of fathers to depart this world before their sons.”</p>
<p>But Walter’s visage from wrathful red had become pale,
and he pointed up street, and cried out: “Look! dost thou
see?”</p>
<p>“See what, master?” quoth Arnold: “what!
here cometh an ape in gay raiment; belike the beast of some
jongleur. Nay, by God’s wounds! ’tis a man,
though he be exceeding mis-shapen like a very devil. Yea
and now there cometh a pretty maid going as if she were of his
meney; and lo! here, a most goodly and noble lady! Yea, I
see; and doubtless she owneth both the two, and is of the
greatest of the folk of this fair city; for on the maiden’s
ankle I saw an iron ring, which betokeneth thralldom amongst
these aliens. But this is strange! for notest thou not how
the folk in the street heed not this quaint show; nay not even
the stately lady, though she be as lovely as a goddess of the
gentiles, and beareth on her gems that would buy Langton twice
over; surely they must be over-wont to strange and gallant
sights. But now, master, but now!”</p>
<p>“Yea, what is it?” said Walter.</p>
<p>“Why, master, they should not yet be gone out of
eye-shot, yet gone they are. What is become of them, are
they sunk into the earth?”</p>
<p>“Tush, man!” said Walter, looking not on Arnold,
but still staring down the street; “they have gone into
some house while thine eyes were turned from them a
moment.”</p>
<p>“Nay, master, nay,” said Arnold, “mine eyes
were not off them one instant of time.”</p>
<p>“Well,” said Walter, somewhat snappishly,
“they are gone now, and what have we to do to heed such
toys, we with all this grief and strife on our hands? Now
would I be alone to turn the matter of thine errand over in my
mind. Meantime do thou tell the shipmaster Geoffrey and our
other folk of these tidings, and thereafter get thee all ready;
and come hither to me before sunrise to-morrow, and I shall be
ready for my part; and so sail we back to Langton.”</p>
<p>Therewith he turned him back into the house, and the others
went their ways; but Walter sat alone in his chamber a long
while, and pondered these things in his mind. And whiles he
made up his mind that he would think no more of the vision of
those three, but would fare back to Langton, and enter into the
strife with the Reddings and quell them, or die else. But
lo, when he was quite steady in this doom, and his heart was
lightened thereby, he found that he thought no more of the
Reddings and their strife, but as matters that were passed and
done with, and that now he was thinking and devising if by any
means he might find out in what land dwelt those three. And
then again he strove to put that from him, saying that what he
had seen was but meet for one brainsick, and a dreamer of
dreams. But furthermore he thought, Yea, and was Arnold,
who this last time had seen the images of those three, a dreamer
of waking dreams? for he was nought wonted in such wise; then
thought he: At least I am well content that he spake to me of
their likeness, not I to him; for so I may tell that there was at
least something before my eyes which grew not out of mine own
brain. And yet again, why should I follow them; and what
should I get by it; and indeed how shall I set about it?</p>
<p>Thus he turned the matter over and over; and at last, seeing
that if he grew no foolisher over it, he grew no wiser, he became
weary thereof, and bestirred him, and saw to the trussing up of
his goods, and made all ready for his departure, and so wore the
day and slept at nightfall; and at daybreak comes Arnold to lead
him to their keel, which hight the Bartholomew. He tarried
nought, and with few farewells went aboard ship, and an hour
after they were in the open sea with the ship’s head turned
toward Langton on Holm.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER IV: STORM BEFALLS THE BARTHOLOMEW, AND SHE IS DRIVEN OFF HER COURSE</h2>
<p>Now swift sailed the Bartholomew for four weeks toward the
north-west with a fair wind, and all was well with ship and
crew. Then the wind died out on even of a day, so that the
ship scarce made way at all, though she rolled in a great swell
of the sea, so great, that it seemed to ridge all the main
athwart. Moreover down in the west was a great bank of
cloud huddled up in haze, whereas for twenty days past the sky
had been clear, save for a few bright white clouds flying before
the wind. Now the shipmaster, a man right cunning in his
craft, looked long on sea and sky, and then turned and bade the
mariners take in sail and be right heedful. And when Walter
asked him what he looked for, and wherefore he spake not to him
thereof, he said surlily: “Why should I tell thee what any
fool can see without telling, to wit that there is weather to
hand?”</p>
<p>So they abode what should befall, and Walter went to his room
to sleep away the uneasy while, for the night was now fallen; and
he knew no more till he was waked up by great hubbub and clamour
of the shipmen, and the whipping of ropes, and thunder of
flapping sails, and the tossing and weltering of the ship
withal. But, being a very stout-hearted young man, he lay
still in his room, partly because he was a landsman, and had no
mind to tumble about amongst the shipmen and hinder them; and
withal he said to himself: What matter whether I go down to the
bottom of the sea, or come back to Langton, since either way my
life or my death will take away from me the fulfilment of
desire? Yet soothly if there hath been a shift of wind,
that is not so ill; for then shall we be driven to other lands,
and so at the least our home-coming shall be delayed, and other
tidings may hap amidst of our tarrying. So let all be as it
will.</p>
<p>So in a little while, in spite of the ship’s wallowing
and the tumult of the wind and waves, he fell asleep again, and
woke no more till it was full daylight, and there was the
shipmaster standing in the door of his room, the sea-water all
streaming from his wet-weather raiment. He said to Walter:
“Young master, the sele of the day to thee! For by
good hap we have gotten into another day. Now I shall tell
thee that we have striven to beat, so as not to be driven off our
course, but all would not avail, wherefore for these three hours
we have been running before the wind; but, fair sir, so big hath
been the sea that but for our ship being of the stoutest, and our
men all yare, we had all grown exceeding wise concerning the
ground of the mid-main. Praise be to St. Nicholas and all
Hallows! for though ye shall presently look upon a new sea, and
maybe a new land to boot, yet is that better than looking on the
ugly things down below.”</p>
<p>“Is all well with ship and crew then?” said
Walter.</p>
<p>“Yea forsooth,” said the shipmaster; “verily
the Bartholomew is the darling of Oak Woods; come up and look at
it, how she is dealing with wind and waves all free from
fear.”</p>
<p>So Walter did on his foul-weather raiment, and went up on to
the quarter-deck, and there indeed was a change of days; for the
sea was dark and tumbling mountain-high, and the white-horses
were running down the valleys thereof, and the clouds drave low
over all, and bore a scud of rain along with them; and though
there was but a rag of sail on her, the ship flew before the
wind, rolling a great wash of water from bulwark to bulwark.</p>
<p>Walter stood looking on it all awhile, holding on by a
stay-rope, and saying to himself that it was well that they were
driving so fast toward new things.</p>
<p>Then the shipmaster came up to him and clapped him on the
shoulder and said: “Well, shipmate, cheer up! and now come
below again and eat some meat, and drink a cup with
me.”</p>
<p>So Walter went down and ate and drank, and his heart was
lighter than it had been since he had heard of his father’s
death, and the feud awaiting him at home, which forsooth he had
deemed would stay his wanderings a weary while, and therewithal
his hopes. But now it seemed as if he needs must wander,
would he, would he not; and so it was that even this fed his
hope; so sore his heart clung to that desire of his to seek home
to those three that seemed to call him unto them.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER V: NOW THEY COME TO A NEW LAND</h2>
<p>Three days they drave before the wind, and on the fourth the
clouds lifted, the sun shone out and the offing was clear; the
wind had much abated, though it still blew a breeze, and was a
head wind for sailing toward the country of Langton. So
then the master said that, since they were bewildered, and the
wind so ill to deal with, it were best to go still before the
wind that they might make some land and get knowledge of their
whereabouts from the folk thereof. Withal he said that he
deemed the land not to be very far distant.</p>
<p>So did they, and sailed on pleasantly enough, for the weather
kept on mending, and the wind fell till it was but a light
breeze, yet still foul for Langton.</p>
<p>So wore three days, and on the eve of the third, the man from
the topmast cried out that he saw land ahead; and so did they all
before the sun was quite set, though it were but a cloud no
bigger than a man’s hand.</p>
<p>When night fell they struck not sail, but went forth toward
the land fair and softly; for it was early summer, so that the
nights were neither long nor dark.</p>
<p>But when it was broad daylight, they opened a land, a long
shore of rocks and mountains, and nought else that they could see
at first. Nevertheless as day wore and they drew nigher,
first they saw how the mountains fell away from the sea, and were
behind a long wall of sheer cliff; and coming nigher yet, they
beheld a green plain going up after a little in green bents and
slopes to the feet of the said cliff-wall.</p>
<p>No city nor haven did they see there, not even when they were
far nigher to the land; nevertheless, whereas they hankered for
the peace of the green earth after all the tossing and unrest of
the sea, and whereas also they doubted not to find at the least
good and fresh water, and belike other bait in the plain under
the mountains, they still sailed on not unmerrily; so that by
nightfall they cast anchor in five-fathom water hard by the
shore.</p>
<p>Next morning they found that they were lying a little way off
the mouth of a river not right great; so they put out their boats
and towed the ship up into the said river, and when they had gone
up it for a mile or thereabouts they found the sea water failed,
for little was the ebb and flow of the tide on that coast.
Then was the river deep and clear, running between smooth grassy
land like to meadows. Also on their left board they saw
presently three head of neat cattle going, as if in a meadow of a
homestead in their own land, and a few sheep; and thereafter,
about a bow-draught from the river, they saw a little house of
wood and straw-thatch under a wooded mound, and with orchard
trees about it. They wondered little thereat, for they knew
no cause why that land should not be builded, though it were in
the far outlands. However, they drew their ship up to the
bank, thinking that they would at least abide awhile and ask
tidings and have some refreshing of the green plain, which was so
lovely and pleasant.</p>
<p>But while they were busied herein they saw a man come out of
the house, and down to the river to meet them; and they soon saw
that he was tall and old, long-hoary of hair and beard, and clad
mostly in the skins of beasts.</p>
<p>He drew nigh without any fear or mistrust, and coming close to
them gave them the sele of the day in a kindly and pleasant
voice. The shipmaster greeted him in his turn, and said
withal: “Old man, art thou the king of this
country?”</p>
<p>The elder laughed; “It hath had none other a long
while,” said he; “and at least there is no other son
of Adam here to gainsay.”</p>
<p>“Thou art alone here then?” said the master.</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the old man; “save for the
beasts of the field and the wood, and the creeping things, and
fowl. Wherefore it is sweet to me to hear your
voices.”</p>
<p>Said the master: “Where be the other houses of the
town?”</p>
<p>The old man laughed. Said he: “When I said that I
was alone, I meant that I was alone in the land and not only
alone in this stead. There is no house save this betwixt
the sea and the dwellings of the Bears, over the cliff-wall
yonder, yea and a long way over it.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” quoth the shipmaster grinning, “and
be the bears of thy country so manlike, that they dwell in
builded houses?”</p>
<p>The old man shook his head. “Sir,” said he,
“as to their bodily fashion, it is altogether manlike, save
that they be one and all higher and bigger than most. For
they be bears only in name; they be a nation of half wild men;
for I have been told by them that there be many more than that
tribe whose folk I have seen, and that they spread wide about
behind these mountains from east to west. Now, sir, as to
their souls and understandings I warrant them not; for miscreants
they be, trowing neither in God nor his hallows.”</p>
<p>Said the master: “Trow they in Mahound then?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said the elder, “I wot not for sure
that they have so much as a false God; though I have it from them
that they worship a certain woman with mickle worship.”</p>
<p>Then spake Walter: “Yea, good sir, and how knowest thou
that? dost thou deal with them at all?”</p>
<p>Said the old man: “Whiles some of that folk come hither
and have of me what I can spare; a calf or two, or a half-dozen
of lambs or hoggets; or a skin of wine or cyder of mine own
making: and they give me in return such things as I can use, as
skins of hart and bear and other peltries; for now I am old, I
can but little of the hunting hereabout. Whiles, also, they
bring little lumps of pure copper, and would give me gold also,
but it is of little use in this lonely land. Sooth to say,
to me they are not masterful or rough-handed; but glad am I that
they have been here but of late, and are not like to come again
this while; for terrible they are of aspect, and whereas ye be
aliens, belike they would not hold their hands from off you; and
moreover ye have weapons and other matters which they would covet
sorely.”</p>
<p>Quoth the master: “Since thou dealest with these wild
men, will ye not deal with us in chaffer? For whereas we
are come from long travel, we hanker after fresh victual, and
here aboard are many things which were for thine
avail.”</p>
<p>Said the old man: “All that I have is yours, so that ye
do but leave me enough till my next ingathering: of wine and
cyder, such as it is, I have plenty for your service; ye may
drink it till it is all gone, if ye will: a little corn and meal
I have, but not much; yet are ye welcome thereto, since the
standing corn in my garth is done blossoming, and I have other
meat. Cheeses have I and dried fish; take what ye will
thereof. But as to my neat and sheep, if ye have sore need
of any, and will have them, I may not say you nay: but I pray you
if ye may do without them, not to take my milch-beasts or their
engenderers; for, as ye have heard me say, the Bear-folk have
been here but of late, and they have had of me all I might spare:
but now let me tell you, if ye long after flesh-meat, that there
is venison of hart and hind, yea, and of buck and doe, to be had
on this plain, and about the little woods at the feet of the
rock-wall yonder: neither are they exceeding wild; for since I
may not take them, I scare them not, and no other man do they see
to hurt them; for the Bear-folk come straight to my house, and
fare straight home thence. But I will lead you the nighest
way to where the venison is easiest to be gotten. As to the
wares in your ship, if ye will give me aught I will take it with
a good will; and chiefly if ye have a fair knife or two and a
roll of linen cloth, that were a good refreshment to me.
But in any case what I have to give is free to you and
welcome.”</p>
<p>The shipmaster laughed: “Friend,” said he,
“we can thee mickle thanks for all that thou biddest
us. And wot well that we be no lifters or sea-thieves to
take thy livelihood from thee. So to-morrow, if thou wilt,
we will go with thee and upraise the hunt, and meanwhile we will
come aland, and walk on the green grass, and water our ship with
thy good fresh water.”</p>
<p>So the old carle went back to his house to make them ready
what cheer he might, and the shipmen, who were twenty and one,
all told, what with the mariners and Arnold and Walter’s
servants, went ashore, all but two who watched the ship and abode
their turn. They went well-weaponed, for both the master
and Walter deemed wariness wisdom, lest all might not be so good
as it seemed. They took of their sail-cloths ashore and
tilted them in on the meadow betwixt the house and the ship, and
the carle brought them what he had for their avail, of fresh
fruits, and cheeses, and milk, and wine, and cyder, and honey,
and there they feasted nowise ill, and were right fain.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER VI: THE OLD MAN TELLS WALTER OF HIMSELF. WALTER SEES A SHARD IN THE CLIFF-WALL</h2>
<p>But when they had done their meat and drink the master and the
shipmen went about the watering of the ship, and the others
strayed off along the meadow, so that presently Walter was left
alone with the carle, and fell to speech with him and said:
“Father, meseemeth thou shouldest have some strange tale to
tell, and as yet we have asked thee of nought save meat for our
bellies: now if I ask thee concerning thy life, and how thou
camest hither, and abided here, wilt thou tell me
aught?”</p>
<p>The old man smiled on him and said: “Son, my tale were
long to tell; and mayhappen concerning much thereof my memory
should fail me; and withal there is grief therein, which I were
loth to awaken: nevertheless if thou ask, I will answer as I may,
and in any case will tell thee nought save the truth.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Well then, hast thou been long
here?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the carle, “since I was a young
man, and a stalwarth knight.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “This house, didst thou build it, and raise
these garths, and plant orchard and vineyard, and gather together
the neat and the sheep, or did some other do all this for
thee?”</p>
<p>Said the carle: “I did none of all this; there was one
here before me, and I entered into his inheritance, as though
this were a lordly manor, with a fair castle thereon, and all
well stocked and plenished.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Didst thou find thy foregoer alive
here?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the elder, “yet he lived but for
a little while after I came to him.”</p>
<p>He was silent a while, and then he said: “I slew him:
even so would he have it, though I bade him a better
lot.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Didst thou come hither of thine own
will?”</p>
<p>“Mayhappen,” said the carle; “who
knoweth? Now have I no will to do either this or
that. It is wont that maketh me do, or refrain.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Tell me this; why didst thou slay the man?
did he any scathe to thee?”</p>
<p>Said the elder: “When I slew him, I deemed that he was
doing me all scathe: but now I know that it was not so.
Thus it was: I would needs go where he had been before, and he
stood in the path against me; and I overthrew him, and went on
the way I would.”</p>
<p>“What came thereof?” said Walter.</p>
<p>“Evil came of it,” said the carle.</p>
<p>Then was Walter silent a while, and the old man spake nothing;
but there came a smile in his face that was both sly and somewhat
sad. Walter looked on him and said: “Was it from
hence that thou wouldst go that road?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the carle.</p>
<p>Said Walter: “And now wilt thou tell me what that road
was; whither it went and whereto it led, that thou must needs
wend it, though thy first stride were over a dead man?”</p>
<p>“I will not tell thee,” said the carle.</p>
<p>Then they held their peace, both of them, and thereafter got
on to other talk of no import.</p>
<p>So wore the day till night came; and they slept safely, and on
the morrow after they had broken their fast, the more part of
them set off with the carle to the hunting, and they went, all of
them, a three hours’ faring towards the foot of the cliffs,
which was all grown over with coppice, hazel and thorn, with here
and there a big oak or ash-tree; there it was, said the old man,
where the venison was most and best.</p>
<p>Of their hunting need nought be said, saving that when the
carle had put them on the track of the deer and shown them what
to do, he came back again with Walter, who had no great lust for
the hunting, and sorely longed to have some more talk with the
said carle. He for his part seemed nought loth thereto, and
so led Walter to a mound or hillock amidst the clear of the
plain, whence all was to be seen save where the wood covered it;
but just before where they now lay down there was no wood, save
low bushes, betwixt them and the rock-wall; and Walter noted that
whereas otherwhere, save in one place whereto their eyes were
turned, the cliffs seemed wellnigh or quite sheer, or indeed in
some places beetling over, in that said place they fell away from
each other on either side; and before this sinking was a slope or
scree, that went gently up toward the sinking of the wall.
Walter looked long and earnestly at this place, and spake nought,
till the carle said: “What! thou hast found something
before thee to look on. What is it then?”</p>
<p>Quoth Walter: “Some would say that where yonder slopes
run together up towards that sinking in the cliff-wall there will
be a pass into the country beyond.”</p>
<p>The carle smiled and said: “Yea, son; nor, so saying,
would they err; for that is the pass into the Bear-country,
whereby those huge men come down to chaffer with me.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said Walter; and therewith he turned him a
little, and scanned the rock-wall, and saw how a few miles from
that pass it turned somewhat sharply toward the sea, narrowing
the plain much there, till it made a bight, the face whereof
looked wellnigh north, instead of west, as did the more part of
the wall. And in the midst of that northern-looking bight
was a dark place which seemed to Walter like a downright shard in
the cliff. For the face of the wall was of a bleak grey,
and it was but little furrowed.</p>
<p>So then Walter spake: “Lo, old friend, there yonder is
again a place that meseemeth is a pass; whereunto doth that one
lead?” And he pointed to it: but the old man did not
follow the pointing of his finger, but, looking down on the
ground, answered confusedly, and said:</p>
<p>“Maybe: I wot not. I deem that it also leadeth
into the Bear-country by a roundabout road. It leadeth into
the far land.”</p>
<p>Walter answered nought: for a strange thought had come
uppermost in his mind, that the carle knew far more than he would
say of that pass, and that he himself might be led thereby to
find the wondrous three. He caught his breath hardly, and
his heart knocked against his ribs; but he refrained from
speaking for a long while; but at last he spake in a sharp hard
voice, which he scarce knew for his own: “Father, tell me,
I adjure thee by God and All-hallows, was it through yonder shard
that the road lay, when thou must needs make thy first stride
over a dead man?”</p>
<p>The old man spake not a while, then he raised his head, and
looked Walter full in the eyes, and said in a steady voice:
“<span class="smcap">No</span>, <span class="smcap">it was
not</span>.” Thereafter they sat looking at each
other a while; but at last Walter turned his eyes away, but knew
not what they beheld nor where he was, but he was as one in a
swoon. For he knew full well that the carle had lied to
him, and that he might as well have said aye as no, and told him,
that it verily was by that same shard that he had stridden over a
dead man. Nevertheless he made as little semblance thereof
as he might, and presently came to himself, and fell to talking
of other matters, that had nought to do with the adventures of
the land. But after a while he spake suddenly, and said:
“My master, I was thinking of a thing.”</p>
<p>“Yea, of what?” said the carle.</p>
<p>“Of this,” said Walter; “that here in this
land be strange adventures toward, and that if we, and I in
especial, were to turn our backs on them, and go home with
nothing done, it were pity of our lives: for all will be dull and
deedless there. I was deeming it were good if we tried the
adventure.”</p>
<p>“What adventure?” said the old man, rising up on
his elbow and staring sternly on him.</p>
<p>Said Walter: “The wending yonder pass to the eastward,
whereby the huge men come to thee from out of the Bear-country;
that we might see what should come thereof.”</p>
<p>The carle leaned back again, and smiled and shook his head,
and spake: “That adventure were speedily proven: death
would come of it, my son.”</p>
<p>“Yea, and how?” said Walter.</p>
<p>The carle said: “The big men would take thee, and offer
thee up as a blood-offering to that woman, who is their
Mawmet. And if ye go all, then shall they do the like with
all of you.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Is that sure?”</p>
<p>“Dead sure,” said the carle.</p>
<p>“How knowest thou this?” said Walter.</p>
<p>“I have been there myself,” said the carle.</p>
<p>“Yea,” said Walter, “but thou camest away
whole.”</p>
<p>“Art thou sure thereof?” said the carle.</p>
<p>“Thou art alive yet, old man,” said Walter,
“for I have seen thee eat thy meat, which ghosts use not to
do.” And he laughed.</p>
<p>But the old man answered soberly: “If I escaped, it was
by this, that another woman saved me, and not often shall that
befall. Nor wholly was I saved; my body escaped
forsooth. But where is my soul? Where is my heart,
and my life? Young man, I rede thee, try no such adventure;
but go home to thy kindred if thou canst. Moreover, wouldst
thou fare alone? The others shall hinder thee.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “I am the master; they shall do as I bid
them: besides, they will be well pleased to share my goods
amongst them if I give them a writing to clear them of all
charges which might be brought against them.”</p>
<p>“My son! my son!” said the carle, “I pray
thee go not to thy death!”</p>
<p>Walter heard him silently, but as if he were persuaded to
refrain; and then the old man fell to, and told him much
concerning this Bear-folk and their customs, speaking very freely
of them; but Walter’s ears were scarce open to this talk:
whereas he deemed that he should have nought to do with those
wild men; and he durst not ask again concerning the country
whereto led the pass on the northward.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER VII: WALTER COMES TO THE SHARD IN THE ROCK-WALL</h2>
<p>As they were in converse thus, they heard the hunters blowing
on their horns all together; whereon the old man arose, and said:
“I deem by the blowing that the hunt will be over and done,
and that they be blowing on their fellows who have gone
scatter-meal about the wood. It is now some five hours
after noon, and thy men will be getting back with their venison,
and will be fainest of the victuals they have caught; therefore
will I hasten on before, and get ready fire and water and other
matters for the cooking. Wilt thou come with me, young
master, or abide thy men here?”</p>
<p>Walter said lightly: “I will rest and abide them here;
since I cannot fail to see them hence as they go on their ways to
thine house. And it may be well that I be at hand to
command them and forbid, and put some order amongst them, for
rough playmates they be, some of them, and now all heated with
the hunting and the joy of the green earth.” Thus he
spoke, as if nought were toward save supper and bed; but inwardly
hope and fear were contending in him, and again his heart beat so
hard, that he deemed that the carle must surely hear it.
But the old man took him but according to his outward seeming,
and nodded his head, and went away quietly toward his house.</p>
<p>When he had been gone a little, Walter rose up heedfully; he
had with him a scrip wherein was some cheese and hard-fish, and a
little flasket of wine; a short bow he had with him, and a quiver
of arrows; and he was girt with a strong and good sword, and a
wood-knife withal. He looked to all this gear that it was
nought amiss, and then speedily went down off the mound, and when
he was come down, he found that it covered him from men coming
out of the wood, if he went straight thence to that shard of the
rock-wall where was the pass that led southward.</p>
<p>Now it is no nay that thitherward he turned, and went wisely,
lest the carle should make a backward cast, and see him, or lest
any straggler of his own folk might happen upon him.</p>
<p>For to say sooth, he deemed that did they wind him, they would
be like to let him of his journey. He had noted the
bearings of the cliffs nigh the shard, and whereas he could see
their heads everywhere except from the depths of the thicket, he
was not like to go astray.</p>
<p>He had made no great way ere he heard the horns blowing all
together again in one place, and looking thitherward through the
leafy boughs (for he was now amidst of a thicket) he saw his men
thronging the mound, and had no doubt therefore that they were
blowing on him; but being well under cover he heeded it nought,
and lying still a little, saw them go down off the mound and go
all of them toward the carle’s house, still blowing as they
went, but not faring scatter-meal. Wherefore it was clear
that they were nought troubled about him.</p>
<p>So he went on his way to the shard; and there is nothing to
say of his journey till he got before it with the last of the
clear day, and entered it straightway. It was in sooth a
downright breach or cleft in the rock-wall, and there was no hill
or bent leading up to it, nothing but a tumble of stones before
it, which was somewhat uneasy going, yet needed nought but labour
to overcome it, and when he had got over this, and was in the
very pass itself, he found it no ill going: forsooth at first it
was little worse than a rough road betwixt two great stony
slopes, though a little trickle of water ran down amidst of
it. So, though it was so nigh nightfall, yet Walter pressed
on, yea, and long after the very night was come. For the
moon rose wide and bright a little after nightfall. But at
last he had gone so long, and was so wearied, that he deemed it
nought but wisdom to rest him, and so lay down on a piece of
greensward betwixt the stones, when he had eaten a morsel out of
his satchel, and drunk of the water out of the stream.
There as he lay, if he had any doubt of peril, his weariness soon
made it all one to him, for presently he was sleeping as soundly
as any man in Langton on Holm.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER VIII: WALTER WENDS THE WASTE</h2>
<p>Day was yet young when he awoke: he leapt to his feet, and
went down to the stream and drank of its waters, and washed the
night off him in a pool thereof, and then set forth on his way
again. When he had gone some three hours, the road, which
had been going up all the way, but somewhat gently, grew steeper,
and the bent on either side lowered, and lowered, till it sank at
last altogether, and then was he on a rough mountain-neck with
little grass, and no water; save that now and again was a soft
place with a flow amidst of it, and such places he must needs
fetch a compass about, lest he be mired. He gave himself
but little rest, eating what he needs must as he went. The
day was bright and calm, so that the sun was never hidden, and he
steered by it due south. All that day he went, and found no
more change in that huge neck, save that whiles it was more and
whiles less steep. A little before nightfall he happened on
a shallow pool some twenty yards over; and he deemed it good to
rest there, since there was water for his avail, though he might
have made somewhat more out of the tail end of the day.</p>
<p>When dawn came again he awoke and arose, nor spent much time
over his breakfast; but pressed on all he might; and now he said
to himself, that whatsoever other peril were athwart his way, he
was out of the danger of the chase of his own folk.</p>
<p>All this while he had seen no four-footed beast, save now and
again a hill-fox, and once some outlandish kind of hare; and of
fowl but very few: a crow or two, a long-winged hawk, and twice
an eagle high up aloft.</p>
<p>Again, the third night, he slept in the stony wilderness,
which still led him up and up. Only toward the end of the
day, himseemed that it had been less steep for a long while:
otherwise nought was changed, on all sides it was nought but the
endless neck, wherefrom nought could be seen, but some other part
of itself. This fourth night withal he found no water
whereby he might rest, so that he awoke parched, and longing to
drink just when the dawn was at its coldest.</p>
<p>But on the fifth morrow the ground rose but little, and at
last, when he had been going wearily a long while, and now, hard
on noontide, his thirst grieved him sorely, he came on a spring
welling out from under a high rock, the water wherefrom trickled
feebly away. So eager was he to drink, that at first he
heeded nought else; but when his thirst was fully quenched his
eyes caught sight of the stream which flowed from the well, and
he gave a shout, for lo! it was running south. Wherefore it
was with a merry heart that he went on, and as he went, came on
more streams, all running south or thereabouts. He hastened
on all he might, but in despite of all the speed he made, and
that he felt the land now going down southward, night overtook
him in that same wilderness. Yet when he stayed at last for
sheer weariness, he lay down in what he deemed by the moonlight
to be a shallow valley, with a ridge at the southern end
thereof.</p>
<p>He slept long, and when he awoke the sun was high in the
heavens, and never was brighter or clearer morning on the earth
than was that. He arose and ate of what little was yet left
him, and drank of the water of a stream which he had followed the
evening before, and beside which he had laid him down; and then
set forth again with no great hope to come on new tidings that
day. But yet when he was fairly afoot, himseemed that there
was something new in the air which he breathed, that was soft and
bore sweet scents home to him; whereas heretofore, and that
especially for the last three or four days, it had been harsh and
void, like the face of the desert itself.</p>
<p>So on he went, and presently was mounting the ridge aforesaid,
and, as oft happens when one climbs a steep place, he kept his
eyes on the ground, till he felt he was on the top of the
ridge. Then he stopped to take breath, and raised his head
and looked, and lo! he was verily on the brow of the great
mountain-neck, and down below him was the hanging of the great
hill-slopes, which fell down, not slowly, as those he had been
those days a-mounting, but speedily enough, though with little of
broken places or sheer cliffs. But beyond this last of the
desert there was before him a lovely land of wooded hills, green
plains, and little valleys, stretching out far and wide, till it
ended at last in great blue mountains and white snowy peaks
beyond them.</p>
<p>Then for very surprise of joy his spirit wavered, and he felt
faint and dizzy, so that he was fain to sit down a while and
cover his face with his hands. Presently he came to his
sober mind again, and stood up and looked forth keenly, and saw
no sign of any dwelling of man. But he said to himself that
that might well be because the good and well-grassed land was
still so far off, and that he might yet look to find men and
their dwellings when he had left the mountain wilderness quite
behind him: So therewith he fell to going his ways down the
mountain, and lost little time therein, whereas he now had his
livelihood to look to.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER IX: WALTER HAPPENETH ON THE FIRST OF THOSE THREE CREATURES</h2>
<p>What with one thing, what with another, as his having to turn
out of his way for sheer rocks, or for slopes so steep that he
might not try the peril of them, and again for bogs impassable,
he was fully three days more before he had quite come out of the
stony waste, and by that time, though he had never lacked water,
his scanty victual was quite done, for all his careful husbandry
thereof. But this troubled him little, whereas he looked to
find wild fruits here and there and to shoot some small deer, as
hare or coney, and make a shift to cook the same, since he had
with him flint and fire-steel. Moreover the further he
went, the surer he was that he should soon come across a
dwelling, so smooth and fair as everything looked before
him. And he had scant fear, save that he might happen on
men who should enthrall him.</p>
<p>But when he was come down past the first green slopes, he was
so worn, that he said to himself that rest was better than meat,
so little as he had slept for the last three days; so he laid him
down under an ash-tree by a stream-side, nor asked what was
o’clock, but had his fill of sleep, and even when he awoke
in the fresh morning was little fain of rising, but lay betwixt
sleeping and waking for some three hours more; then he arose, and
went further down the next green bent, yet somewhat slowly
because of his hunger-weakness. And the scent of that fair
land came up to him like the odour of one great nosegay.</p>
<p>So he came to where the land was level, and there were many
trees, as oak and ash, and sweet-chestnut and wych-elm, and
hornbeam and quicken-tree, not growing in a close wood or tangled
thicket, but set as though in order on the flowery greensward,
even as it might be in a great king’s park.</p>
<p>So came he to a big bird-cherry, whereof many boughs hung low
down laden with fruit: his belly rejoiced at the sight, and he
caught hold of a bough, and fell to plucking and eating.
But whiles he was amidst of this, he heard suddenly, close anigh
him, a strange noise of roaring and braying, not very great, but
exceeding fierce and terrible, and not like to the voice of any
beast that he knew. As has been aforesaid, Walter was no
faint-heart; but what with the weakness of his travail and
hunger, what with the strangeness of his adventure and his
loneliness, his spirit failed him; he turned round towards the
noise, his knees shook and he trembled: this way and that he
looked, and then gave a great cry and tumbled down in a swoon;
for close before him, at his very feet, was the dwarf whose image
he had seen before, clad in his yellow coat, and grinning up at
him from his hideous hairy countenance.</p>
<p>How long he lay there as one dead, he knew not, but when he
woke again there was the dwarf sitting on his hams close by
him. And when he lifted up his head, the dwarf sent out
that fearful harsh voice again; but this time Walter could make
out words therein, and knew that the creature spoke and said:</p>
<p>“How now! What art thou? Whence
comest? What wantest?”</p>
<p>Walter sat up and said: “I am a man; I hight Golden
Walter; I come from Langton; I want victual.”</p>
<p>Said the dwarf, writhing his face grievously, and laughing
forsooth: “I know it all: I asked thee to see what wise
thou wouldst lie. I was sent forth to look for thee; and I
have brought thee loathsome bread with me, such as ye aliens must
needs eat: take it!”</p>
<p>Therewith he drew a loaf from a satchel which he bore, and
thrust it towards Walter, who took it somewhat doubtfully for all
his hunger.</p>
<p>The dwarf yelled at him: “Art thou dainty, alien?
Wouldst thou have flesh? Well, give me thy bow and an arrow
or two, since thou art lazy-sick, and I will get thee a coney or
a hare, or a quail maybe. Ah, I forgot; thou art dainty,
and wilt not eat flesh as I do, blood and all together, but must
needs half burn it in the fire, or mar it with hot water; as they
say my Lady does: or as the Wretch, the Thing does; I know that,
for I have seen It eating.”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said Walter, “this sufficeth;”
and he fell to eating the bread, which was sweet between his
teeth. Then when he had eaten a while, for hunger compelled
him, he said to the dwarf: “But what meanest thou by the
Wretch and the Thing? And what Lady is thy Lady?”</p>
<p>The creature let out another wordless roar as of furious
anger; and then the words came: “It hath a face white and
red, like to thine; and hands white as thine, yea, but whiter;
and the like it is underneath its raiment, only whiter still: for
I have seen It—yes, I have seen It; ah yes and yes and
yes.”</p>
<p>And therewith his words ran into gibber and yelling, and he
rolled about and smote at the grass: but in a while he grew quiet
again and sat still, and then fell to laughing horribly again,
and then said: “But thou, fool, wilt think It fair if thou
fallest into Its hands, and wilt repent it thereafter, as I
did. Oh, the mocking and gibes of It, and the tears and
shrieks of It; and the knife! What! sayest thou of my
Lady?—What Lady? O alien, what other Lady is
there? And what shall I tell thee of her? it is like that
she made me, as she made the Bear men. But she made not the
Wretch, the Thing; and she hateth It sorely, as I do. And
some day to come—”</p>
<p>Thereat he brake off and fell to wordless yelling a long
while, and thereafter spake all panting: “Now I have told
thee overmuch, and O if my Lady come to hear thereof. Now I
will go.”</p>
<p>And therewith he took out two more loaves from his wallet, and
tossed them to Walter, and so turned and went his ways; whiles
walking upright, as Walter had seen his image on the quay of
Langton; whiles bounding and rolling like a ball thrown by a lad;
whiles scuttling along on all-fours like an evil beast, and ever
and anon giving forth that harsh and evil cry.</p>
<p>Walter sat a while after he was out of sight, so stricken with
horror and loathing and a fear of he knew not what, that he might
not move. Then he plucked up a heart, and looked to his
weapons and put the other loaves into his scrip.</p>
<p>Then he arose and went his ways wondering, yea and dreading,
what kind of creature he should next fall in with. For
soothly it seemed to him that it would be worse than death if
they were all such as this one; and that if it were so, he must
needs slay and be slain.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER X: WALTER HAPPENETH ON ANOTHER CREATURE IN THE STRANGE LAND</h2>
<p>But as he went on through the fair and sweet land so bright
and sun-litten, and he now rested and fed, the horror and fear
ran off from him, and he wandered on merrily, neither did aught
befall him save the coming of night, when he laid him down under
a great spreading oak with his drawn sword ready to hand, and
fell asleep at once, and woke not till the sun was high.</p>
<p>Then he arose and went on his way again; and the land was no
worser than yesterday; but even better, it might be; the
greensward more flowery, the oaks and chestnuts greater.
Deer of diverse kinds he saw, and might easily have got his meat
thereof; but he meddled not with them since he had his bread, and
was timorous of lighting a fire. Withal he doubted little
of having some entertainment; and that, might be, nought evil;
since even that fearful dwarf had been courteous to him after his
kind, and had done him good and not harm. But of the
happening on the Wretch and the Thing, whereof the dwarf spake,
he was yet somewhat afeard.</p>
<p>After he had gone a while and whenas the summer morn was at
its brightest, he saw a little way ahead a grey rock rising up
from amidst of a ring of oak-trees; so he turned thither
straightway; for in this plain-land he had seen no rocks
heretofore; and as he went he saw that there was a fountain
gushing out from under the rock, which ran thence in a fair
little stream. And when he had the rock and the fountain
and the stream clear before him, lo! a child of Adam sitting
beside the fountain under the shadow of the rock. He drew a
little nigher, and then he saw that it was a woman, clad in green
like the sward whereon she lay. She was playing with the
welling out of the water, and she had trussed up her sleeves to
the shoulder that she might thrust her bare arms therein.
Her shoes of black leather lay on the grass beside her, and her
feet and legs yet shone with the brook.</p>
<p>Belike amidst the splashing and clatter of the water she did
not hear him drawing nigh, so that he was close to her before she
lifted up her face and saw him, and he beheld her, that it was
the maiden of the thrice-seen pageant. She reddened when
she saw him, and hastily covered up her legs with her gown-skirt,
and drew down the sleeves over her arms, but otherwise stirred
not. As for him, he stood still, striving to speak to her;
but no word might he bring out, and his heart beat sorely.</p>
<p>But the maiden spake to him in a clear sweet voice, wherein
was now no trouble: “Thou art an alien, art thou not?
For I have not seen thee before.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” he said, “I am an alien; wilt thou be
good to me?”</p>
<p>She said: “And why not? I was afraid at first, for
I thought it had been the King’s Son. I looked to see
none other; for of goodly men he has been the only one here in
the land this long while, till thy coming.”</p>
<p>He said: “Didst thou look for my coming at about this
time?”</p>
<p>“O nay,” she said; “how might I?”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “I wot not; but the other man seemed to be
looking for me, and knew of me, and he brought me bread to
eat.”</p>
<p>She looked on him anxiously, and grew somewhat pale, as she
said: “What other one?”</p>
<p>Now Walter did not know what the dwarf might be to her,
fellow-servant or what not, so he would not show his loathing of
him; but answered wisely: “The little man in the yellow
raiment.”</p>
<p>But when she heard that word, she went suddenly very pale, and
leaned her head aback, and beat the air with her hands; but said
presently in a faint voice: “I pray thee talk not of that
one while I am by, nor even think of him, if thou mayest
forbear.”</p>
<p>He spake not, and she was a little while before she came to
herself again; then she opened her eyes, and looked upon Walter
and smiled kindly on him, as though to ask his pardon for having
scared him. Then she rose up in her place, and stood before
him; and they were nigh together, for the stream betwixt them was
little.</p>
<p>But he still looked anxiously upon her and said: “Have I
hurt thee? I pray thy pardon.”</p>
<p>She looked on him more sweetly still, and said: “O nay;
thou wouldst not hurt me, thou!”</p>
<p>Then she blushed very red, and he in like wise; but afterwards
she turned pale, and laid a hand on her breast, and Walter cried
out hastily: “O me! I have hurt thee again.
Wherein have I done amiss?”</p>
<p>“In nought, in nought,” she said; “but I am
troubled, I wot not wherefore; some thought hath taken hold of
me, and I know it not. Mayhappen in a little while I shall
know what troubles me. Now I bid thee depart from me a
little, and I will abide here; and when thou comest back, it will
either be that I have found it out or not; and in either case I
will tell thee.”</p>
<p>She spoke earnestly to him; but he said: “How long shall
I abide away?”</p>
<p>Her face was troubled as she answered him: “For no long
while.”</p>
<p>He smiled on her and turned away, and went a space to the
other side of the oak-trees, whence she was still within
eyeshot. There he abode until the time seemed long to him;
but he schooled himself and forbore; for he said: Lest she send
me away again. So he abided until again the time seemed
long to him, and she called not to him: but once again he forbore
to go; then at last he arose, and his heart beat and he trembled,
and he walked back again speedily, and came to the maiden, who
was still standing by the rock of the spring, her arms hanging
down, her eyes downcast. She looked up at him as he drew
nigh, and her face changed with eagerness as she said: “I
am glad thou art come back, though it be no long while since thy
departure” (sooth to say it was scarce half an hour in
all). “Nevertheless I have been thinking many things,
and thereof will I now tell thee.”</p>
<p>He said: “Maiden, there is a river betwixt us, though it
be no big one. Shall I not stride over, and come to thee,
that we may sit down together side by side on the green
grass?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” she said, “not yet; tarry a while
till I have told thee of matters. I must now tell thee of
my thoughts in order.”</p>
<p>Her colour went and came now, and she plaited the folds of her
gown with restless fingers. At last she said: “Now
the first thing is this; that though thou hast seen me first only
within this hour, thou hast set thine heart upon me to have me
for thy speech-friend and thy darling. And if this be not
so, then is all my speech, yea and all my hope, come to an end at
once.”</p>
<p>“O yea!” said Walter, “even so it is: but
how thou hast found this out I wot not; since now for the first
time I say it, that thou art indeed my love, and my dear and my
darling.”</p>
<p>“Hush,” she said, “hush! lest the wood have
ears, and thy speech is loud: abide, and I shall tell thee how I
know it. Whether this thy love shall outlast the first time
that thou holdest my body in thine arms, I wot not, nor dost
thou. But sore is my hope that it may be so; for I also,
though it be but scarce an hour since I set eyes on thee, have
cast mine eyes on thee to have thee for my love and my darling,
and my speech-friend. And this is how I wot that thou
lovest me, my friend. Now is all this dear and joyful, and
overflows my heart with sweetness. But now must I tell thee
of the fear and the evil which lieth behind it.”</p>
<p>Then Walter stretched out his hands to her, and cried out:
“Yea, yea! But whatever evil entangle us, now we both
know these two things, to wit, that thou lovest me, and I thee,
wilt thou not come hither, that I may cast mine arms about thee,
and kiss thee, if not thy kind lips or thy friendly face at all,
yet at least thy dear hand: yea, that I may touch thy body in
some wise?”</p>
<p>She looked on him steadily, and said softly: “Nay, this
above all things must not be; and that it may not be is a part of
the evil which entangles us. But hearken, friend, once
again I tell thee that thy voice is over loud in this wilderness
fruitful of evil. Now I have told thee, indeed, of two
things whereof we both wot; but next I must needs tell thee of
things whereof I wot, and thou wottest not. Yet this were
better, that thou pledge thy word not to touch so much as one of
my hands, and that we go together a little way hence away from
these tumbled stones, and sit down upon the open greensward;
whereas here is cover if there be spying abroad.”</p>
<p>Again, as she spoke, she turned very pale; but Walter said:
“Since it must be so, I pledge thee my word to thee as I
love thee.”</p>
<p>And therewith she knelt down, and did on her foot-gear, and
then sprang lightly over the rivulet; and then the twain of them
went side by side some half a furlong thence, and sat down,
shadowed by the boughs of a slim quicken-tree growing up out of
the greensward, whereon for a good space around was neither bush
nor brake.</p>
<p>There began the maiden to talk soberly, and said: “This
is what I must needs say to thee now, that thou art come into a
land perilous for any one that loveth aught of good; from which,
forsooth, I were fain that thou wert gotten away safely, even
though I should die of longing for thee. As for myself, my
peril is, in a measure, less than thine; I mean the peril of
death. But lo, thou, this iron on my foot is token that I
am a thrall, and thou knowest in what wise thralls must pay for
transgressions. Furthermore, of what I am, and how I came
hither, time would fail me to tell; but somewhile, maybe, I shall
tell thee. I serve an evil mistress, of whom I may say that
scarce I wot if she be a woman or not; but by some creatures is
she accounted for a god, and as a god is heried; and surely never
god was crueller nor colder than she. Me she hateth sorely;
yet if she hated me little or nought, small were the gain to me
if it were her pleasure to deal hardly by me. But as things
now are, and are like to be, it would not be for her pleasure,
but for her pain and loss, to make an end of me, therefore, as I
said e’en now, my mere life is not in peril with her;
unless, perchance, some sudden passion get the better of her, and
she slay me, and repent of it thereafter. For so it is,
that if it be the least evil of her conditions that she is
wanton, at least wanton she is to the letter. Many a time
hath she cast the net for the catching of some goodly young man;
and her latest prey (save it be thou) is the young man whom I
named, when first I saw thee, by the name of the King’s
Son. He is with us yet, and I fear him; for of late hath he
wearied of her, though it is but plain truth to say of her, that
she is the wonder of all Beauties of the World. He hath
wearied of her, I say, and hath cast his eyes upon me, and if I
were heedless, he would betray me to the uttermost of the wrath
of my mistress. For needs must I say of him, though he be a
goodly man, and now fallen into thralldom, that he hath no bowels
of compassion; but is a dastard, who for an hour’s pleasure
would undo me, and thereafter would stand by smiling and taking
my mistress’s pardon with good cheer, while for me would be
no pardon. Seest thou, therefore, how it is with me between
these two cruel fools? And moreover there are others of
whom I will not even speak to thee.”</p>
<p>And therewith she put her hands before her face, and wept, and
murmured: “Who shall deliver me from this death in
life?”</p>
<p>But Walter cried out: “For what else am I come hither,
I, I?”</p>
<p>And it was a near thing that he did not take her in his arms,
but he remembered his pledged word, and drew aback from her in
terror, whereas he had an inkling of why she would not suffer it;
and he wept with her.</p>
<p>But suddenly the Maid left weeping, and said in a changed
voice: “Friend, whereas thou speakest of delivering me, it
is more like that I shall deliver thee. And now I pray thy
pardon for thus grieving thee with my grief, and that more
especially because thou mayst not solace thy grief with kisses
and caresses; but so it was, that for once I was smitten by the
thought of the anguish of this land, and the joy of all the world
besides.”</p>
<p>Therewith she caught her breath in a half-sob, but refrained
her and went on: “Now dear friend and darling, take good
heed to all that I shall say to thee, whereas thou must do after
the teaching of my words. And first, I deem by the monster
having met thee at the gates of the land, and refreshed thee,
that the Mistress hath looked for thy coming; nay, by thy coming
hither at all, that she hath cast her net and caught thee.
Hast thou noted aught that might seem to make this more
like?”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Three times in full daylight have I seen
go past me the images of the monster and thee and a glorious
lady, even as if ye were alive.”</p>
<p>And therewith he told her in few words how it had gone with
him since that day on the quay at Langton.</p>
<p>She said: “Then it is no longer perhaps, but certain,
that thou art her latest catch; and even so I deemed from the
first: and, dear friend, this is why I have not suffered thee to
kiss or caress me, so sore as I longed for thee. For the
Mistress will have thee for her only, and hath lured thee hither
for nought else; and she is wise in wizardry (even as some deal
am I), and wert thou to touch me with hand or mouth on my naked
flesh, yea, or were it even my raiment, then would she scent the
savour of thy love upon me, and then, though it may be she would
spare thee, she would not spare me.”</p>
<p>Then was she silent a little, and seemed very downcast, and
Walter held his peace from grief and confusion and helplessness;
for of wizardry he knew nought.</p>
<p>At last the Maid spake again, and said: “Nevertheless we
will not die redeless. Now thou must look to this, that
from henceforward it is thee, and not the King’s Son, whom
she desireth, and that so much the more that she hath not set
eyes on thee. Remember this, whatsoever her seeming may be
to thee. Now, therefore, shall the King’s Son be
free, though he know it not, to cast his love on whomso he will;
and, in a way, I also shall be free to yeasay him. Though,
forsooth, so fulfilled is she with malice and spite, that even
then she may turn round on me to punish me for doing that which
she would have me do. Now let me think of it.”</p>
<p>Then was she silent a good while, and spoke at last:
“Yea, all things are perilous, and a perilous rede I have
thought of, whereof I will not tell thee as yet; so waste not the
short while by asking me. At least the worst will be no
worse than what shall come if we strive not against it. And
now, my friend, amongst perils it is growing more and more
perilous that we twain should be longer together. But I
would say one thing yet; and maybe another thereafter. Thou
hast cast thy love upon one who will be true to thee, whatsoever
may befall; yet is she a guileful creature, and might not help it
her life long, and now for thy very sake must needs be more
guileful now than ever before. And as for me, the guileful,
my love have I cast upon a lovely man, and one true and simple,
and a stout-heart; but at such a pinch is he, that if he
withstand all temptation, his withstanding may belike undo both
him and me. Therefore swear we both of us, that by both of
us shall all guile and all falling away be forgiven on the day
when we shall be free to love each the other as our hearts
will.”</p>
<p>Walter cried out: “O love, I swear it indeed! thou art
my Hallow, and I will swear it as on the relics of a Hallow; on
thy hands and thy feet I swear it.”</p>
<p>The words seemed to her a dear caress; and she laughed, and
blushed, and looked full kindly on him; and then her face grew
solemn, and she said: “On thy life I swear it!”</p>
<p>Then she said: “Now is there nought for thee to do but
to go hence straight to the Golden House, which is my
Mistress’s house, and the only house in this land (save one
which I may not see), and lieth southward no long way. How
she will deal with thee, I wot not; but all I have said of her
and thee and the King’s Son is true. Therefore I say
to thee, be wary and cold at heart, whatsoever outward semblance
thou mayst make. If thou have to yield thee to her, then
yield rather late than early, so as to gain time. Yet not
so late as to seem shamed in yielding for fear’s
sake. Hold fast to thy life, my friend, for in warding
that, thou wardest me from grief without remedy. Thou wilt
see me ere long; it may be to-morrow, it may be some days
hence. But forget not, that what I may do, that I am
doing. Take heed also that thou pay no more heed to me, or
rather less, than if thou wert meeting a maiden of no account in
the streets of thine own town. O my love! barren is this
first farewell, as was our first meeting; but surely shall there
be another meeting better than the first, and the last farewell
may be long and long yet.”</p>
<p>Therewith she stood up, and he knelt before her a little while
without any word, and then arose and went his ways; but when he
had gone a space he turned about, and saw her still standing in
the same place; she stayed a moment when she saw him turn, and
then herself turned about.</p>
<p>So he departed through the fair land, and his heart was full
with hope and fear as he went.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XI: WALTER HAPPENETH ON THE MISTRESS</h2>
<p>It was but a little after noon when Walter left the Maid
behind: he steered south by the sun, as the Maid had bidden him,
and went swiftly; for, as a good knight wending to battle, the
time seemed long to him till he should meet the foe.</p>
<p>So an hour before sunset he saw something white and gay
gleaming through the boles of the oak-trees, and presently there
was clear before him a most goodly house builded of white marble,
carved all about with knots and imagery, and the carven folk were
all painted of their lively colours, whether it were their
raiment or their flesh, and the housings wherein they stood all
done with gold and fair hues. Gay were the windows of the
house; and there was a pillared porch before the great door, with
images betwixt the pillars both of men and beasts: and when
Walter looked up to the roof of the house, he saw that it gleamed
and shone; for all the tiles were of yellow metal, which he
deemed to be of very gold.</p>
<p>All this he saw as he went, and tarried not to gaze upon it;
for he said, Belike there will be time for me to look on all this
before I die. But he said also, that, though the house was
not of the greatest, it was beyond compare of all houses of the
world.</p>
<p>Now he entered it by the porch, and came into a hall
many-pillared, and vaulted over, the walls painted with gold and
ultramarine, the floor dark, and spangled with many colours, and
the windows glazed with knots and pictures. Midmost thereof
was a fountain of gold, whence the water ran two ways in
gold-lined runnels, spanned twice with little bridges of
silver. Long was that hall, and now not very light, so that
Walter was come past the fountain before he saw any folk therein:
then he looked up toward the high-seat, and himseemed that a
great light shone thence, and dazzled his eyes; and he went on a
little way, and then fell on his knees; for there before him on
the high-seat sat that wondrous Lady, whose lively image had been
shown to him thrice before; and she was clad in gold and jewels,
as he had erst seen her. But now she was not alone; for by
her side sat a young man, goodly enough, so far as Walter might
see him, and most richly clad, with a jewelled sword by his side,
and a chaplet of gems on his head. They held each other by
the hand, and seemed to be in dear converse together; but they
spake softly, so that Walter might not hear what they said, till
at last the man spake aloud to the Lady: “Seest thou not
that there is a man in the hall?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” she said, “I see him yonder, kneeling
on his knees; let him come nigher and give some account of
himself.”</p>
<p>So Walter stood up and drew nigh, and stood there, all
shamefaced and confused, looking on those twain, and wondering at
the beauty of the Lady. As for the man, who was slim, and
black-haired, and straight-featured, for all his goodliness
Walter accounted him little, and nowise deemed him to look
chieftain-like.</p>
<p>Now the Lady spake not to Walter any more than erst; but at
last the man said: “Why doest thou not kneel as thou didst
erewhile?”</p>
<p>Walter was on the point of giving him back a fierce answer;
but the Lady spake and said: “Nay, friend, it matters not
whether he kneel or stand; but he may say, if he will, what he
would have of me, and wherefore he is come hither.”</p>
<p>Then spake Walter, for as wroth and ashamed as he was:
“Lady, I have strayed into this land, and have come to
thine house as I suppose, and if I be not welcome, I may well
depart straightway, and seek a way out of thy land, if thou
wouldst drive me thence, as well as out of thine
house.”</p>
<p>Thereat the Lady turned and looked on him, and when her eyes
met his, he felt a pang of fear and desire mingled shoot through
his heart. This time she spoke to him; but coldly, without
either wrath or any thought of him: “Newcomer,” she
said, “I have not bidden thee hither; but here mayst thou
abide a while if thou wilt; nevertheless, take heed that here is
no King’s Court. There is, forsooth, a folk that
serveth me (or, it may be, more than one), of whom thou wert best
to know nought. Of others I have but two servants, whom
thou wilt see; and the one is a strange creature, who should
scare thee or scathe thee with a good will, but of a good will
shall serve nought save me; the other is a woman, a thrall, of
little avail, save that, being compelled, she will work
woman’s service for me, but whom none else shall compel . .
. Yea, but what is all this to thee; or to me that I should tell
it to thee? I will not drive thee away; but if thine
entertainment please thee not, make no plaint thereof to me, but
depart at thy will. Now is this talk betwixt us overlong,
since, as thou seest, I and this King’s Son are in converse
together. Art thou a King’s Son?”</p>
<p>“Nay, Lady,” said Walter, “I am but of the
sons of the merchants.”</p>
<p>“It matters not,” she said; “go thy ways
into one of the chambers.”</p>
<p>And straightway she fell a-talking to the man who sat beside
her concerning the singing of the birds beneath her window in the
morning; and of how she had bathed her that day in a pool of the
woodlands, when she had been heated with hunting, and so forth;
and all as if there had been none there save her and the
King’s Son.</p>
<p>But Walter departed all ashamed, as though he had been a poor
man thrust away from a rich kinsman’s door; and he said to
himself that this woman was hateful, and nought love-worthy, and
that she was little like to tempt him, despite all the fairness
of her body.</p>
<p>No one else he saw in the house that even; he found meat and
drink duly served on a fair table, and thereafter he came on a
goodly bed, and all things needful, but no child of Adam to do
him service, or bid him welcome or warning. Nevertheless he
ate, and drank, and slept, and put off thought of all these
things till the morrow, all the more as he hoped to see the kind
maiden some time betwixt sunrise and sunset on that new day.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XII: THE WEARING OF FOUR DAYS IN THE WOOD BEYOND THE WORLD</h2>
<p>He arose betimes, but found no one to greet him, neither was
there any sound of folk moving within the fair house; so he but
broke his fast, and then went forth and wandered amongst the
trees, till he found him a stream to bathe in, and after he had
washed the night off him he lay down under a tree thereby for a
while, but soon turned back toward the house, lest perchance the
Maid should come thither and he should miss her.</p>
<p>It should be said that half a bow-shot from the house on that
side (i.e. due north thereof) was a little hazel-brake, and round
about it the trees were smaller of kind than the oaks and
chestnuts he had passed through before, being mostly of birch and
quicken-beam and young ash, with small wood betwixt them; so now
he passed through the thicket, and, coming to the edge thereof,
beheld the Lady and the King’s Son walking together hand in
hand, full lovingly by seeming.</p>
<p>He deemed it unmeet to draw back and hide him, so he went
forth past them toward the house. The King’s Son
scowled on him as he passed, but the Lady, over whose beauteous
face flickered the joyous morning smiles, took no more heed of
him than if he had been one of the trees of the wood. But
she had been so high and disdainful with him the evening before,
that he thought little of that. The twain went on, skirting
the hazel-copse, and he could not choose but turn his eyes on
them, so sorely did the Lady’s beauty draw them. Then
befell another thing; for behind them the boughs of the hazels
parted, and there stood that little evil thing, he or another of
his kind; for he was quite unclad, save by his fell of
yellowy-brown hair, and that he was girt with a leathern girdle,
wherein was stuck an ugly two-edged knife: he stood upright a
moment, and cast his eyes at Walter and grinned, but not as if he
knew him; and scarce could Walter say whether it were the one he
had seen, or another: then he cast himself down on his belly, and
fell to creeping through the long grass like a serpent, following
the footsteps of the Lady and her lover; and now, as he crept,
Walter deemed, in his loathing, that the creature was liker to a
ferret than aught else. He crept on marvellous swiftly, and
was soon clean out of sight. But Walter stood staring after
him for a while, and then lay down by the copse-side, that he
might watch the house and the entry thereof; for he thought, now
perchance presently will the kind maiden come hither to comfort
me with a word or two. But hour passed by hour, and still
she came not; and still he lay there, and thought of the Maid,
and longed for her kindness and wisdom, till he could not refrain
his tears, and wept for the lack of her. Then he arose, and
went and sat in the porch, and was very downcast of mood.</p>
<p>But as he sat there, back comes the Lady again, the
King’s Son leading her by the hand; they entered the porch,
and she passed by him so close that the odour of her raiment
filled all the air about him, and the sleekness of her side nigh
touched him, so that he could not fail to note that her garments
were somewhat disarrayed, and that she kept her right hand (for
her left the King’s Son held) to her bosom to hold the
cloth together there, whereas the rich raiment had been torn off
from her right shoulder. As they passed by him, the
King’s Son once more scowled on him, wordless, but even
more fiercely than before; and again the Lady heeded him
nought.</p>
<p>After they had gone on a while, he entered the hall, and found
it empty from end to end, and no sound in it save the tinkling of
the fountain; but there was victual set on the board. He
ate and drank thereof to keep life lusty within him, and then
went out again to the wood-side to watch and to long; and the
time hung heavy on his hands because of the lack of the fair
Maiden.</p>
<p>He was of mind not to go into the house to his rest that
night, but to sleep under the boughs of the forest. But a
little after sunset he saw a bright-clad image moving amidst the
carven images of the porch, and the King’s Son came forth
and went straight to him, and said: “Thou art to enter the
house, and go into thy chamber forthwith, and by no means to go
forth of it betwixt sunset and sunrise. My Lady will not
away with thy prowling round the house in the
night-tide.”</p>
<p>Therewith he turned away, and went into the house again; and
Walter followed him soberly, remembering how the Maid had bidden
him forbear. So he went to his chamber, and slept.</p>
<p>But amidst of the night he awoke and deemed that he heard a
voice not far off, so he crept out of his bed and peered around,
lest, perchance, the Maid had come to speak with him; but his
chamber was dusk and empty: then he went to the window and looked
out, and saw the moon shining bright and white upon the
greensward. And lo! the Lady walking with the King’s
Son, and he clad in thin and wanton raiment, but she in nought
else save what God had given her of long, crispy yellow
hair. Then was Walter ashamed to look on her, seeing that
there was a man with her, and gat him back to his bed; but yet a
long while ere he slept again he had the image before his eyes of
the fair woman on the dewy moonlit grass.</p>
<p>The next day matters went much the same way, and the next
also, save that his sorrow was increased, and he sickened sorely
of hope deferred. On the fourth day also the forenoon wore
as erst; but in the heat of the afternoon Walter sought to the
hazel-copse, and laid him down there hard by a little clearing
thereof, and slept from very weariness of grief. There,
after a while, he woke with words still hanging in his ears, and
he knew at once that it was they twain talking together.</p>
<p>The King’s Son had just done his say, and now it was the
Lady beginning in her honey-sweet voice, low but strong, wherein
even was a little of huskiness; she said: “Otto, belike it
were well to have a little patience, till we find out what the
man is, and whence he cometh; it will always be easy to rid us of
him; it is but a word to our Dwarf-king, and it will be done in a
few minutes.”</p>
<p>“Patience!” said the King’s Son, angrily;
“I wot not how to have patience with him; for I can see of
him that he is rude and violent and headstrong, and a low-born
wily one. Forsooth, he had patience enough with me the
other even, when I rated him in, like the dog that he is, and he
had no manhood to say one word to me. Soothly, as he
followed after me, I had a mind to turn about and deal him a
buffet on the face, to see if I could but draw one angry word
from him.”</p>
<p>The Lady laughed, and said: “Well, Otto, I know not;
that which thou deemest dastardy in him may be but prudence and
wisdom, and he an alien, far from his friends and nigh to his
foes. Perchance we shall yet try him what he is.
Meanwhile, I rede thee try him not with buffets, save he be
weaponless and with bounden hands; or else I deem that but a
little while shalt thou be fain of thy blow.”</p>
<p>Now when Walter heard her words and the voice wherein they
were said, he might not forbear being stirred by them, and to
him, all lonely there, they seemed friendly.</p>
<p>But he lay still, and the King’s Son answered the Lady
and said: “I know not what is in thine heart concerning
this runagate, that thou shouldst bemock me with his valiancy,
whereof thou knowest nought. If thou deem me unworthy of
thee, send me back safe to my father’s country; I may look
to have worship there; yea, and the love of fair women
belike.”</p>
<p>Therewith it seemed as if he had put forth his hand to the
Lady to caress her, for she said: “Nay, lay not thine hand
on my shoulder, for to-day and now it is not the hand of love,
but of pride and folly, and would-be mastery. Nay, neither
shalt thou rise up and leave me until thy mood is softer and
kinder to me.”</p>
<p>Then was there silence betwixt them a while, and thereafter
the King’s Son spake in a wheedling voice: “My
goddess, I pray thee pardon me! But canst thou wonder that
I fear thy wearying of me, and am therefore peevish and jealous?
thou so far above the Queens of the World, and I a poor youth
that without thee were nothing!”</p>
<p>She answered nought, and he went on again: “Was it not
so, O goddess, that this man of the sons of the merchants was
little heedful of thee, and thy loveliness and thy
majesty?”</p>
<p>She laughed and said: “Maybe he deemed not that he had
much to gain of us, seeing thee sitting by our side, and whereas
we spake to him coldly and sternly and disdainfully.
Withal, the poor youth was dazzled and shamefaced before us; that
we could see in the eyes and the mien of him.”</p>
<p>Now this she spoke so kindly and sweetly, that again was
Walter all stirred thereat; and it came into his mind that it
might be she knew he was anigh and hearing her, and that she
spake as much for him as for the King’s Son: but that one
answered: “Lady, didst thou not see somewhat else in his
eyes, to wit, that they had but of late looked on some fair woman
other than thee? As for me, I deem it not so unlike that on
the way to thine hall he may have fallen in with thy
Maid.”</p>
<p>He spoke in a faltering voice, as if shrinking from some storm
that might come. And forsooth the Lady’s voice was
changed as she answered, though there was no outward heat in it;
rather it was sharp and eager and cold at once. She said:
“Yea, that is not ill thought of; but we may not always
keep our thrall in mind. If it be so as thou deemest, we
shall come to know it most like when we next fall in with her; or
if she hath been shy this time, then shall she pay the heavier
for it; for we will question her by the Fountain in the Hall as
to what betid by the Fountain of the Rock.”</p>
<p>Spake the King’s Son, faltering yet more: “Lady,
were it not better to question the man himself? the Maid is
stout-hearted, and will not be speedily quelled into a true tale;
whereas the man I deem of no account.”</p>
<p>“No, no,” said the Lady sharply, “it shall
not be.”</p>
<p>Then was she silent a while; and then she said: “How if
the man should prove to be our master?”</p>
<p>“Nay, our Lady,” said the King’s Son,
“thou art jesting with me; thou and thy might and thy
wisdom, and all that thy wisdom may command, to be over-mastered
by a gangrel churl!”</p>
<p>“But how if I will not have it command, King’s
Son?” said the Lady. “I tell thee I know thine
heart, but thou knowest not mine. But be at peace!
For since thou hast prayed for this woman—nay, not with thy
words, I wot, but with thy trembling hands, and thine anxious
eyes, and knitted brow—I say, since thou hast prayed for
her so earnestly, she shall escape this time. But whether
it will be to her gain in the long run, I misdoubt me. See
thou to that, Otto! thou who hast held me in thine arms so
oft. And now thou mayest depart if thou wilt.”</p>
<p>It seemed to Walter as if the King’s Son were
dumbfoundered at her words: he answered nought, and presently he
rose from the ground, and went his ways slowly toward the
house. The Lady lay there a little while, and then went her
ways also; but turned away from the house toward the wood at the
other end thereof, whereby Walter had first come thither.</p>
<p>As for Walter, he was confused in mind and shaken in spirit;
and withal he seemed to see guile and cruel deeds under the talk
of those two, and waxed wrathful thereat. Yet he said to
himself, that nought might he do, but was as one bound hand and
foot, till he had seen the Maid again.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XIII: NOW IS THE HUNT UP</h2>
<p>Next morning was he up betimes, but he was cast down and heavy
of heart, not looking for aught else to betide than had betid
those last four days. But otherwise it fell out; for when
he came down into the hall, there was the lady sitting on the
high-seat all alone, clad but in a coat of white linen; and she
turned her head when she heard his footsteps, and looked on him,
and greeted him, and said: “Come hither, guest.”</p>
<p>So he went and stood before her, and she said: “Though
as yet thou hast had no welcome here, and no honour, it hath not
entered into thine heart to flee from us; and to say sooth, that
is well for thee, for flee away from our hand thou mightest not,
nor mightest thou depart without our furtherance. But for
this we can thee thank, that thou hast abided here our bidding
and eaten thine heart through the heavy wearing of four days, and
made no plaint. Yet I cannot deem thee a dastard; thou so
well knit and shapely of body, so clear-eyed and bold of
visage. Wherefore now I ask thee, art thou willing to do me
service, thereby to earn thy guesting?”</p>
<p>Walter answered her, somewhat faltering at first, for he was
astonished at the change which had come over her; for now she
spoke to him in friendly wise, though indeed as a great lady
would speak to a young man ready to serve her in all
honour. Said he: “Lady, I can thank thee humbly and
heartily in that thou biddest me do thee service; for these days
past I have loathed the emptiness of the hours, and nought better
could I ask for than to serve so glorious a Mistress in all
honour.”</p>
<p>She frowned somewhat, and said: “Thou shalt not call me
Mistress; there is but one who so calleth me, that is my thrall;
and thou art none such. Thou shalt call me Lady, and I
shall be well pleased that thou be my squire, and for this
present thou shalt serve me in the hunting. So get thy
gear; take thy bow and arrows, and gird thee to thy sword.
For in this fair land may one find beasts more perilous than be
buck or hart. I go now to array me; we will depart while
the day is yet young; for so make we the summer day the
fairest.”</p>
<p>He made obeisance to her, and she arose and went to her
chamber, and Walter dight himself, and then abode her in the
porch; and in less than an hour she came out of the hall, and
Walter’s heart beat when he saw that the Maid followed her
hard at heel, and scarce might he school his eyes not to gaze
over-eagerly at his dear friend. She was clad even as she
was before, and was changed in no wise, save that love troubled
her face when she first beheld him, and she had much ado to
master it: howbeit the Mistress heeded not the trouble of her, or
made no semblance of heeding it, till the Maiden’s face was
all according to its wont.</p>
<p>But this Walter found strange, that after all that disdain of
the Maid’s thralldom which he had heard of the Mistress,
and after all the threats against her, now was the Mistress
become mild and debonaire to her, as a good lady to her good
maiden. When Walter bowed the knee to her, she turned unto
the Maid, and said: “Look thou, my Maid, at this fair new
Squire that I have gotten! Will not he be valiant in the
greenwood? And see whether he be well shapen or not.
Doth he not touch thine heart, when thou thinkest of all the woe,
and fear, and trouble of the World beyond the Wood, which he hath
escaped, to dwell in this little land peaceably, and well-beloved
both by the Mistress and the Maid? And thou, my Squire,
look a little at this fair slim Maiden, and say if she pleaseth
thee not: didst thou deem that we had any thing so fair in this
lonely place?”</p>
<p>Frank and kind was the smile on her radiant visage, nor did
she seem to note any whit the trouble on Walter’s face, nor
how he strove to keep his eyes from the Maid. As for her,
she had so wholly mastered her countenance, that belike she used
her face guilefully, for she stood as one humble but happy, with
a smile on her face, blushing, and with her head hung down as if
shamefaced before a goodly young man, a stranger.</p>
<p>But the Lady looked upon her kindly and said: “Come
hither, child, and fear not this frank and free young man, who
belike feareth thee a little, and full certainly feareth me; and
yet only after the manner of men.”</p>
<p>And therewith she took the Maid by the hand and drew her to
her, and pressed her to her bosom, and kissed her cheeks and her
lips, and undid the lacing of her gown and bared a shoulder of
her, and swept away her skirt from her feet; and then turned to
Walter and said: “Lo thou, Squire! is not this a lovely
thing to have grown up amongst our rough oak-boles? What!
art thou looking at the iron ring there? It is nought, save
a token that she is mine, and that I may not be without
her.”</p>
<p>Then she took the Maid by the shoulders and turned her about
as in sport, and said: “Go thou now, and bring hither the
good grey ones; for needs must we bring home some venison to-day,
whereas this stout warrior may not feed on nought save manchets
and honey.”</p>
<p>So the Maid went her way, taking care, as Walter deemed, to
give no side glance to him. But he stood there shamefaced,
so confused with all this openhearted kindness of the great Lady
and with the fresh sight of the darling beauty of the Maid, that
he went nigh to thinking that all he had heard since he had come
to the porch of the house that first time was but a dream of
evil.</p>
<p>But while he stood pondering these matters, and staring before
him as one mazed, the Lady laughed out in his face, and touched
him on the arm and said: “Ah, our Squire, is it so that now
thou hast seen my Maid thou wouldst with a good will abide behind
to talk with her? But call to mind thy word pledged to me
e’en now! And moreover I tell thee this for thy
behoof now she is out of ear-shot, that I will above all things
take thee away to-day: for there be other eyes, and they nought
uncomely, that look at whiles on my fair-ankled thrall; and who
knows but the swords might be out if I take not the better heed,
and give thee not every whit of thy will.”</p>
<p>As she spoke and moved forward, he turned a little, so that
now the edge of that hazel-coppice was within his eye-shot, and
he deemed that once more he saw the yellow-brown evil thing
crawling forth from the thicket; then, turning suddenly on the
Lady, he met her eyes, and seemed in one moment of time to find a
far other look in them than that of frankness and kindness;
though in a flash they changed back again, and she said merrily
and sweetly: “So, so, Sir Squire, now art thou awake again,
and mayest for a little while look on me.”</p>
<p>Now it came into his head, with that look of hers, all that
might befall him and the Maid if he mastered not his passion, nor
did what he might to dissemble; so he bent the knee to her, and
spoke boldly to her in her own vein, and said: “Nay, most
gracious of ladies, never would I abide behind to-day since thou
farest afield. But if my speech be hampered, or mine eyes
stray, is it not because my mind is confused by thy beauty, and
the honey of kind words which floweth from thy mouth?”</p>
<p>She laughed outright at his word, but not disdainfully, and
said: “This is well spoken, Squire, and even what a squire
should say to his liege lady, when the sun is up on a fair
morning, and she and he and all the world are glad.”</p>
<p>She stood quite near him as she spoke, her hand was on his
shoulder, and her eyes shone and sparkled. Sooth to say,
that excusing of his confusion was like enough in seeming to the
truth; for sure never creature was fashioned fairer than she:
clad she was for the greenwood as the hunting-goddess of the
Gentiles, with her green gown gathered unto her girdle, and
sandals on her feet; a bow in her hand and a quiver at her back:
she was taller and bigger of fashion than the dear Maiden, whiter
of flesh, and more glorious, and brighter of hair; as a flower of
flowers for fairness and fragrance.</p>
<p>She said: “Thou art verily a fair squire before the hunt
is up, and if thou be as good in the hunting, all will be better
than well, and the guest will be welcome. But lo! here
cometh our Maid with the good grey ones. Go meet her, and
we will tarry no longer than for thy taking the leash in
hand.”</p>
<p>So Walter looked, and saw the Maid coming with two couple of
great hounds in the leash straining against her as she came
along. He ran lightly to meet her, wondering if he should
have a look, or a half-whisper from her; but she let him take the
white thongs from her hand, with the same half-smile of
shamefacedness still set on her face, and, going past him, came
softly up to the Lady, swaying like a willow-branch in the wind,
and stood before her, with her arms hanging down by her
sides. Then the Lady turned to her, and said: “Look
to thyself, our Maid, while we are away. This fair young
man thou needest not to fear indeed, for he is good and leal; but
what thou shalt do with the King’s Son I wot not. He
is a hot lover forsooth, but a hard man; and whiles evil is his
mood, and perilous both to thee and me. And if thou do his
will, it shall be ill for thee; and if thou do it not, take heed
of him, and let me, and me only, come between his wrath and
thee. I may do somewhat for thee. Even yesterday he
was instant with me to have thee chastised after the manner of
thralls; but I bade him keep silence of such words, and jeered
him and mocked him, till he went away from me peevish and in
anger. So look to it that thou fall not into any trap of
his contrivance.”</p>
<p>Then the Maid cast herself at the Mistress’s feet, and
kissed and embraced them; and as she rose up, the Lady laid her
hand lightly on her head, and then, turning to Walter, cried out:
“Now, Squire, let us leave all these troubles and wiles and
desires behind us, and flit through the merry greenwood like the
Gentiles of old days.”</p>
<p>And therewith she drew up the laps of her gown till the
whiteness of her knees was seen, and set off swiftly toward the
wood that lay south of the house, and Walter followed, marvelling
at her goodliness; nor durst he cast a look backward to the
Maiden, for he knew that she desired him, and it was her only
that he looked to for his deliverance from this house of guile
and lies.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XIV: THE HUNTING OF THE HART</h2>
<p>As they went, they found a change in the land, which grew
emptier of big and wide-spreading trees, and more beset with
thickets. From one of these they roused a hart, and Walter
let slip his hounds thereafter and he and the Lady followed
running. Exceeding swift was she, and well-breathed withal,
so that Walter wondered at her; and eager she was in the chase as
the very hounds, heeding nothing the scratching of briars or the
whipping of stiff twigs as she sped on. But for all their
eager hunting, the quarry outran both dogs and folk, and gat him
into a great thicket, amidmost whereof was a wide plash of
water. Into the thicket they followed him, but he took to
the water under their eyes and made land on the other side; and
because of the tangle of underwood, he swam across much faster
than they might have any hope to come round on him; and so were
the hunters left undone for that time.</p>
<p>So the Lady cast herself down on the green grass anigh the
water, while Walter blew the hounds in and coupled them up; then
he turned round to her, and lo! she was weeping for despite that
they had lost the quarry; and again did Walter wonder that so
little a matter should raise a passion of tears in her. He
durst not ask what ailed her, or proffer her solace, but was not
ill apaid by beholding her loveliness as she lay.</p>
<p>Presently she raised up her head and turned to Walter, and
spake to him angrily and said: “Squire, why dost thou stand
staring at me like a fool?”</p>
<p>“Yea, Lady,” he said; “but the sight of thee
maketh me foolish to do aught else but to look on
thee.”</p>
<p>She said, in a peevish voice: “Tush, Squire, the day is
too far spent for soft and courtly speeches; what was good there
is nought so good here. Withal, I know more of thine heart
than thou deemest.”</p>
<p>Walter hung down his head and reddened, and she looked on him,
and her face changed, and she smiled and said, kindly this time:
“Look ye, Squire, I am hot and weary, and ill-content; but
presently it will be better with me; for my knees have been
telling my shoulders that the cold water of this little lake will
be sweet and pleasant this summer noonday, and that I shall
forget my foil when I have taken my pleasure therein.
Wherefore, go thou with thine hounds without the thicket and
there abide my coming. And I bid thee look not aback as
thou goest, for therein were peril to thee: I shall not keep thee
tarrying long alone.”</p>
<p>He bowed his head to her, and turned and went his ways.
And now, when he was a little space away from her, he deemed her
indeed a marvel of women, and wellnigh forgat all his doubts and
fears concerning her, whether she were a fair image fashioned out
of lies and guile, or it might be but an evil thing in the shape
of a goodly woman. Forsooth, when he saw her caressing the
dear and friendly Maid, his heart all turned against her, despite
what his eyes and his ears told his mind, and she seemed like as
it were a serpent enfolding the simplicity of the body which he
loved.</p>
<p>But now it was all changed, and he lay on the grass and longed
for her coming; which was delayed for somewhat more than an
hour. Then she came back to him, smiling and fresh and
cheerful, her green gown let down to her heels.</p>
<p>He sprang up to meet her, and she came close to him, and spake
from a laughing face: “Squire, hast thou no meat in thy
wallet? For, meseemeth, I fed thee when thou wert hungry
the other day; do thou now the same by me.”</p>
<p>He smiled, and louted to her, and took his wallet and brought
out thence bread and flesh and wine, and spread them all out
before her on the green grass, and then stood by humbly before
her. But she said: “Nay, my Squire, sit down by me
and eat with me, for to-day are we both hunters
together.”</p>
<p>So he sat down by her trembling, but neither for awe of her
greatness, nor for fear and horror of her guile and sorcery.</p>
<p>A while they sat there together after they had done their
meat, and the Lady fell a-talking with Walter concerning the
parts of the earth, and the manners of men, and of his
journeyings to and fro.</p>
<p>At last she said: “Thou hast told me much and answered
all my questions wisely, and as my good Squire should, and that
pleaseth me. But now tell me of the city wherein thou wert
born and bred; a city whereof thou hast hitherto told me
nought.”</p>
<p>“Lady,” he said, “it is a fair and a great
city, and to many it seemeth lovely. But I have left it,
and now it is nothing to me.”</p>
<p>“Hast thou not kindred there?” said she.</p>
<p>“Yea,” said he, “and foemen withal; and a
false woman waylayeth my life there.”</p>
<p>“And what was she?” said the Lady.</p>
<p>Said Walter: “She was but my wife.”</p>
<p>“Was she fair?” said the Lady.</p>
<p>Walter looked on her a while, and then said: “I was
going to say that she was wellnigh as fair as thou; but that may
scarce be. Yet was she very fair. But now, kind and
gracious Lady, I will say this word to thee: I marvel that thou
askest so many things concerning the city of Langton on Holm,
where I was born, and where are my kindred yet; for meseemeth
that thou knowest it thyself.”</p>
<p>“I know it, I?” said the Lady.</p>
<p>“What, then! thou knowest it not?” said
Walter.</p>
<p>Spake the Lady, and some of her old disdain was in her words:
“Dost thou deem that I wander about the world and its
cheaping-steads like one of the chap-men? Nay, I dwell in
the Wood beyond the World, and nowhere else. What hath put
this word into thy mouth?”</p>
<p>He said: “Pardon me, Lady, if I have misdone; but thus
it was: Mine own eyes beheld thee going down the quays of our
city, and thence a ship-board, and the ship sailed out of the
haven. And first of all went a strange dwarf, whom I have
seen here, and then thy Maid; and then went thy gracious and
lovely body.”</p>
<p>The Lady’s face changed as he spoke, and she turned red
and then pale, and set her teeth; but she refrained her, and
said: “Squire, I see of thee that thou art no liar, nor
light of wit, therefore I suppose that thou hast verily seen some
appearance of me; but never have I been in Langton, nor thought
thereof, nor known that such a stead there was until thou namedst
it e’en now. Wherefore, I deem that an enemy hath
cast the shadow of me on the air of that land.”</p>
<p>“Yea, my Lady,” said Walter; “and what enemy
mightest thou have to have done this?”</p>
<p>She was slow of answer, but spake at last from a quivering
mouth of anger: “Knowest thou not the saw, that a
man’s foes are they of his own house? If I find out
for a truth who hath done this, the said enemy shall have an evil
hour with me.”</p>
<p>Again she was silent, and she clenched her hands and strained
her limbs in the heat of her anger; so that Walter was afraid of
her, and all his misgivings came back to his heart again, and he
repented that he had told her so much. But in a little
while all that trouble and wrath seemed to flow off her, and
again was she of good cheer, and kind and sweet to him and she
said: “But in sooth, however it may be, I thank thee, my
Squire and friend, for telling me hereof. And surely no
wyte do I lay on thee. And, moreover, is it not this vision
which hath brought thee hither?”</p>
<p>“So it is, Lady,” said he.</p>
<p>“Then have we to thank it,” said the Lady,
“and thou art welcome to our land.”</p>
<p>And therewith she held out her hand to him, and he took it on
his knees and kissed it: and then it was as if a red-hot iron had
run through his heart, and he felt faint, and bowed down his
head. But he held her hand yet, and kissed it many times,
and the wrist and the arm, and knew not where he was.</p>
<p>But she drew a little away from him, and arose and said:
“Now is the day wearing, and if we are to bear back any
venison we must buckle to the work. So arise, Squire, and
take the hounds and come with me; for not far off is a little
thicket which mostly harbours foison of deer, great and
small. Let us come our ways.”</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XV: THE SLAYING OF THE QUARRY</h2>
<p>So they walked on quietly thence some half a mile, and ever
the Lady would have Walter to walk by her side, and not follow a
little behind her, as was meet for a servant to do; and she
touched his hand at whiles as she showed him beast and fowl and
tree, and the sweetness of her body overcame him, so that for a
while he thought of nothing save her.</p>
<p>Now when they were come to the thicket-side, she turned to him
and said: “Squire, I am no ill woodman, so that thou mayst
trust me that we shall not be brought to shame the second time;
and I shall do sagely; so nock an arrow to thy bow, and abide me
here, and stir not hence; for I shall enter this thicket without
the hounds, and arouse the quarry for thee; and see that thou be
brisk and clean-shooting, and then shalt thou have a reward of
me.”</p>
<p>Therewith she drew up her skirts through her girdle again,
took her bent bow in her hand, and drew an arrow out of the
quiver, and stepped lightly into the thicket, leaving him longing
for the sight of her, as he hearkened to the tread of her feet on
the dry leaves, and the rustling of the brake as she thrust
through it.</p>
<p>Thus he stood for a few minutes, and then he heard a kind of
gibbering cry without words, yet as of a woman, coming from the
thicket, and while his heart was yet gathering the thought that
something had gone amiss, he glided swiftly, but with little
stir, into the brake.</p>
<p>He had gone but a little way ere he saw the Lady standing
there in a narrow clearing, her face pale as death, her knees
cleaving together, her body swaying and tottering, her hands
hanging down, and the bow and arrow fallen to the ground; and ten
yards before her a great-headed yellow creature crouching flat to
the earth and slowly drawing nigher.</p>
<p>He stopped short; one arrow was already notched to the string,
and another hung loose to the lesser fingers of his
string-hand. He raised his right hand, and drew and loosed
in a twinkling; the shaft flew close to the Lady’s side,
and straightway all the wood rung with a huge roar, as the yellow
lion turned about to bite at the shaft which had sunk deep into
him behind the shoulder, as if a bolt out of the heavens had
smitten him. But straightway had Walter loosed again, and
then, throwing down his bow, he ran forward with his drawn sword
gleaming in his hand, while the lion weltered and rolled, but had
no might to move forward. Then Walter went up to him warily
and thrust him through to the heart, and leapt aback, lest the
beast might yet have life in him to smite; but he left his
struggling, his huge voice died out, and he lay there moveless
before the hunter.</p>
<p>Walter abode a little, facing him, and then turned about to
the Lady, and she had fallen down in a heap whereas she stood,
and lay there all huddled up and voiceless. So he knelt
down by her, and lifted up her head, and bade her arise, for the
foe was slain. And after a little she stretched out her
limbs, and turned about on the grass, and seemed to sleep, and
the colour came into her face again, and it grew soft and a
little smiling. Thus she lay awhile, and Walter sat by her
watching her, till at last she opened her eyes and sat up, and
knew him, and smiling on him said: “What hath befallen,
Squire, that I have slept and dreamed?”</p>
<p>He answered nothing, till her memory came back to her, and
then she arose, trembling and pale, and said: “Let us leave
this wood, for the Enemy is therein.”</p>
<p>And she hastened away before him till they came out at the
thicket-side whereas the hounds had been left, and they were
standing there uneasy and whining; so Walter coupled them, while
the Lady stayed not, but went away swiftly homeward, and Walter
followed.</p>
<p>At last she stayed her swift feet, and turned round on Walter,
and said: “Squire, come hither.”</p>
<p>So did he, and she said: “I am weary again; let us sit
under this quicken-tree, and rest us.”</p>
<p>So they sat down, and she sat looking between her knees a
while; and at last she said: “Why didst thou not bring the
lion’s hide?”</p>
<p>He said: “Lady, I will go back and flay the beast, and
bring on the hide.”</p>
<p>And he arose therewith, but she caught him by the skirts and
drew him down, and said: “Nay, thou shalt not go; abide
with me. Sit down again.”</p>
<p>He did so, and she said: “Thou shalt not go from me; for
I am afraid: I am not used to looking on the face of
death.”</p>
<p>She grew pale as she spoke, and set a hand to her breast, and
sat so a while without speaking. At last she turned to him
smiling, and said: “How was it with the aspect of me when I
stood before the peril of the Enemy?” And she laid a
hand upon his.</p>
<p>“O gracious one,” quoth he, “thou wert, as
ever, full lovely, but I feared for thee.”</p>
<p>She moved not her hand from his, and she said: “Good and
true Squire, I said ere I entered the thicket e’en now that
I would reward thee if thou slewest the quarry. He is dead,
though thou hast left the skin behind upon the carcase. Ask
now thy reward, but take time to think what it shall
be.”</p>
<p>He felt her hand warm upon his, and drew in the sweet odour of
her mingled with the woodland scents under the hot sun of the
afternoon, and his heart was clouded with manlike desire of
her. And it was a near thing but he had spoken, and craved
of her the reward of the freedom of her Maid, and that he might
depart with her into other lands; but as his mind wavered betwixt
this and that, the Lady, who had been eyeing him keenly, drew her
hand away from him; and therewith doubt and fear flowed into his
mind, and he refrained him of speech.</p>
<p>Then she laughed merrily and said: “The good Squire is
shamefaced; he feareth a lady more than a lion. Will it be
a reward to thee if I bid thee to kiss my cheek?”</p>
<p>Therewith she leaned her face toward him, and he kissed her
well-favouredly, and then sat gazing on her, wondering what
should betide to him on the morrow.</p>
<p>Then she arose and said: “Come, Squire, and let us home;
be not abashed, there shall be other rewards
hereafter.”</p>
<p>So they went their ways quietly; and it was nigh sunset
against they entered the house again. Walter looked round
for the Maid, but beheld her not; and the Lady said to him:
“I go to my chamber, and now is thy service over for this
day.”</p>
<p>Then she nodded to him friendly and went her ways.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XVI: OF THE KING’S SON AND THE MAID</h2>
<p>But as for Walter, he went out of the house again, and fared
slowly over the woodlawns till he came to another close thicket
or brake; he entered from mere wantonness, or that he might be
the more apart and hidden, so as to think over his case.
There he lay down under the thick boughs, but could not so herd
his thoughts that they would dwell steady in looking into what
might come to him within the next days; rather visions of those
two women and the monster did but float before him, and fear and
desire and the hope of life ran to and fro in his mind.</p>
<p>As he lay thus he heard footsteps drawing near, and he looked
between the boughs, and though the sun had just set, he could see
close by him a man and a woman going slowly, and they hand in
hand; at first he deemed it would be the King’s Son and the
Lady, but presently he saw that it was the King’s Son
indeed, but that it was the Maid whom he was holding by the
hand. And now he saw of him that his eyes were bright with
desire, and of her that she was very pale. Yet when he
heard her begin to speak, it was in a steady voice that she said:
“King’s Son, thou hast threatened me oft and
unkindly, and now thou threatenest me again, and no less
unkindly. But whatever were thy need herein before, now is
there no more need; for my Mistress, of whom thou wert weary, is
now grown weary of thee, and belike will not now reward me for
drawing thy love to me, as once she would have done; to wit,
before the coming of this stranger. Therefore I say, since
I am but a thrall, poor and helpless, betwixt you two mighty
ones, I have no choice but to do thy will.”</p>
<p>As she spoke she looked all round about her, as one distraught
by the anguish of fear. Walter, amidst of his wrath and
grief, had wellnigh drawn his sword and rushed out of his lair
upon the King’s Son. But he deemed it sure that, so
doing, he should undo the Maid altogether, and himself also
belike, so he refrained him, though it were a hard matter.</p>
<p>The Maid had stayed her feet now close to where Walter lay,
some five yards from him only, and he doubted whether she saw him
not from where she stood. As to the King’s Son, he
was so intent upon the Maid, and so greedy of her beauty, that it
was not like that he saw anything.</p>
<p>Now moreover Walter looked, and deemed that he beheld
something through the grass and bracken on the other side of
those two, an ugly brown and yellow body, which, if it were not
some beast of the foumart kind, must needs be the monstrous
dwarf, or one of his kin; and the flesh crept upon Walter’s
bones with the horror of him. But the King’s Son
spoke unto the Maid: “Sweetling, I shall take the gift thou
givest me, neither shall I threaten thee any more, howbeit thou
givest it not very gladly or graciously.”</p>
<p>She smiled on him with her lips alone, for her eyes were
wandering and haggard. “My lord,” she said,
“is not this the manner of women?”</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “I say that I will take thy
love even so given. Yet let me hear again that thou lovest
not that vile newcomer, and that thou hast not seen him, save
this morning along with my Lady. Nay now, thou shalt swear
it.”</p>
<p>“What shall I swear by?” she said.</p>
<p>Quoth he, “Thou shalt swear by my body;” and
therewith he thrust himself close up against her; but she drew
her hand from his, and laid it on his breast, and said: “I
swear it by thy body.”</p>
<p>He smiled on her licorously, and took her by the shoulders,
and kissed her face many times, and then stood aloof from her,
and said: “Now have I had hansel: but tell me, when shall I
come to thee?”</p>
<p>She spoke out clearly: “Within three days at furthest; I
will do thee to wit of the day and the hour to-morrow, or the day
after.”</p>
<p>He kissed her once more, and said: “Forget it not, or
the threat holds good.”</p>
<p>And therewith he turned about and went his ways toward the
house; and Walter saw the yellow-brown thing creeping after him
in the gathering dusk.</p>
<p>As for the Maid, she stood for a while without moving, and
looking after the King’s Son and the creature that followed
him. Then she turned about to where Walter lay and lightly
put aside the boughs, and Walter leapt up, and they stood face to
face. She said softly but eagerly: “Friend, touch me
not yet!”</p>
<p>He spake not, but looked on her sternly. She said:
“Thou art angry with me?”</p>
<p>Still he spake not; but she said: “Friend, this at least
I will pray thee; not to play with life and death; with happiness
and misery. Dost thou not remember the oath which we swore
each to each but a little while ago? And dost thou deem
that I have changed in these few days? Is thy mind
concerning thee and me the same as it was? If it be not so,
now tell me. For now have I the mind to do as if neither
thou nor I are changed to each other, whoever may have kissed
mine unwilling lips, or whomsoever thy lips may have
kissed. But if thou hast changed, and wilt no longer give
me thy love, nor crave mine, then shall this steel” (and
she drew a sharp knife from her girdle) “be for the fool
and the dastard who hath made thee wroth with me, my friend, and
my friend that I deemed I had won. And then let come what
will come! But if thou be nought changed, and the oath yet
holds, then, when a little while hath passed, may we thrust all
evil and guile and grief behind us, and long joy shall lie before
us, and long life, and all honour in death: if only thou wilt do
as I bid thee, O my dear, and my friend, and my first
friend!”</p>
<p>He looked on her, and his breast heaved up as all the
sweetness of her kind love took hold on him, and his face
changed, and the tears filled his eyes and ran over, and rained
down before her, and he stretched out his hand toward her.</p>
<p>Then she said exceeding sweetly: “Now indeed I see that
it is well with me, yea, and with thee also. A sore pain it
is to me, that not even now may I take thine hand, and cast mine
arms about thee, and kiss the lips that love me. But so it
has to be. My dear, even so I were fain to stand here long
before thee, even if we spake no more word to each other; but
abiding here is perilous; for there is ever an evil spy upon my
doings, who has now as I deem followed the King’s Son to
the house, but who will return when he has tracked him home
thither: so we must sunder. But belike there is yet time
for a word or two: first, the rede which I had thought on for our
deliverance is now afoot, though I durst not tell thee thereof,
nor have time thereto. But this much shall I tell thee,
that whereas great is the craft of my Mistress in wizardry, yet I
also have some little craft therein, and this, which she hath
not, to change the aspect of folk so utterly that they seem other
than they verily are; yea, so that one may have the aspect of
another. Now the next thing is this: whatsoever my Mistress
may bid thee, do her will therein with no more nay-saying than
thou deemest may please her. And the next thing:
wheresoever thou mayst meet me, speak not to me, make no sign to
me, even when I seem to be all alone, till I stoop down and touch
the ring on my ankle with my right hand; but if I do so, then
stay thee, without fail, till I speak. The last thing I
will say to thee, dear friend, ere we both go our ways, this it
is. When we are free, and thou knowest all that I have
done, I pray thee deem me not evil and wicked, and be not wroth
with me for my deed; whereas thou wottest well that I am not in
like plight with other women. I have heard tell that when
the knight goeth to the war, and hath overcome his foes by the
shearing of swords and guileful tricks, and hath come back home
to his own folk, they praise him and bless him, and crown him
with flowers, and boast of him before God in the minster for his
deliverance of friend and folk and city. Why shouldst thou
be worse to me than this? Now is all said, my dear and my
friend; farewell, farewell!”</p>
<p>Therewith she turned and went her ways toward the house in all
speed, but making somewhat of a compass. And when she was
gone, Walter knelt down and kissed the place where her feet had
been, and arose thereafter, and made his way toward the house, he
also, but slowly, and staying oft on his way.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XVII: OF THE HOUSE AND THE PLEASANCE IN THE WOOD</h2>
<p>On the morrow morning Walter loitered a while about the house
till the morn was grown old, and then about noon he took his bow
and arrows and went into the woods to the northward, to get him
some venison. He went somewhat far ere he shot him a fawn,
and then he sat him down to rest under the shade of a great
chestnut-tree, for it was not far past the hottest of the
day. He looked around thence and saw below him a little
dale with a pleasant stream running through it, and he bethought
him of bathing therein, so he went down and had his pleasure of
the water and the willowy banks; for he lay naked a while on the
grass by the lip of the water, for joy of the flickering shade,
and the little breeze that ran over the down-long ripples of the
stream.</p>
<p>Then he did on his raiment, and began to come his ways up the
bent, but had scarce gone three steps ere he saw a woman coming
towards him from downstream. His heart came into his mouth
when he saw her, for she stooped and reached down her arm, as if
she would lay her hand on her ankle, so that at first he deemed
it had been the Maid, but at the second eye-shot he saw that it
was the Mistress. She stood still and looked on him, so
that he deemed she would have him come to her. So he went
to meet her, and grew somewhat shamefaced as he drew nigher, and
wondered at her, for now was she clad but in one garment of some
dark grey silky stuff, embroidered with, as it were, a garland of
flowers about the middle, but which was so thin that, as the wind
drifted it from side and limb, it hid her no more, but for the
said garland, than if water were running over her: her face was
full of smiling joy and content as she spake to him in a kind,
caressing voice, and said: “I give thee good day, good
Squire, and well art thou met.” And she held out her
hand to him. He knelt down before her and kissed it, and
abode still upon his knees, and hanging down his head.</p>
<p>But she laughed outright, and stooped down to him, and put her
hand to his arms, and raised him up, and said to him: “What
is this, my Squire, that thou kneelest to me as to an
idol?”</p>
<p>He said faltering: “I wot not; but perchance thou art an
idol; and I fear thee.”</p>
<p>“What!” she said, “more than yesterday,
whenas thou sawest me afraid?”</p>
<p>Said he: “Yea, for that now I see thee unhidden, and
meseemeth there hath been none such since the old days of the
Gentiles.”</p>
<p>She said: “Hast thou not yet bethought thee of a gift to
crave of me, a reward for the slaying of mine enemy, and the
saving of me from death?”</p>
<p>“O my Lady,” he said, “even so much would I
have done for any other lady, or, forsooth, for any poor man; for
so my manhood would have bidden me. Speak not of gifts to
me then. Moreover” (and he reddened therewith, and
his voice faltered), “didst thou not give me my sweet
reward yesterday? What more durst I ask?”</p>
<p>She held her peace awhile, and looked on him keenly; and he
reddened under her gaze. Then wrath came into her face, and
she reddened and knit her brows, and spake to him in a voice of
anger, and said: “Nay, what is this? It is growing in
my mind that thou deemest the gift of me unworthy! Thou, an
alien, an outcast; one endowed with the little wisdom of the
World without the Wood! And here I stand before thee, all
glorious in my nakedness, and so fulfilled of wisdom, that I can
make this wilderness to any whom I love more full of joy than the
kingdoms and cities of the world—and thou!—Ah, but it
is the Enemy that hath done this, and made the guileless
guileful! Yet will I have the upper hand at least, though
thou suffer for it, and I suffer for thee.”</p>
<p>Walter stood before her with hanging head, and he put forth
his hands as if praying off her anger, and pondered what answer
he should make; for now he feared for himself and the Maid; so at
last he looked up to her, and said boldly: “Nay, Lady, I
know what thy words mean, whereas I remember thy first welcome of
me. I wot, forsooth, that thou wouldst call me base-born,
and of no account, and unworthy to touch the hem of thy raiment;
and that I have been over-bold, and guilty towards thee; and
doubtless this is sooth, and I have deserved thine anger: but I
will not ask thee to pardon me, for I have done but what I must
needs.”</p>
<p>She looked on him calmly now, and without any wrath, but
rather as if she would read what was written in his inmost
heart. Then her face changed into joyousness again, and she
smote her palms together, and cried out: “This is but
foolish talk; for yesterday did I see thy valiancy, and to-day I
have seen thy goodliness; and I say, that though thou mightest
not be good enough for a fool woman of the earthly baronage, yet
art thou good enough for me, the wise and the mighty, and the
lovely. And whereas thou sayest that I gave thee but
disdain when first thou camest to us, grudge not against me
therefor, because it was done but to prove thee; and now thou art
proven.”</p>
<p>Then again he knelt down before her, and embraced her knees,
and again she raised him up, and let her arm hang down over his
shoulder, and her cheek brush his cheek; and she kissed his mouth
and said: “Hereby is all forgiven, both thine offence and
mine; and now cometh joy and merry days.”</p>
<p>Therewith her smiling face grew grave, and she stood before
him looking stately and gracious and kind at once, and she took
his hand and said: “Thou mightest deem my chamber in the
Golden House of the Wood over-queenly, since thou art no
masterful man. So now hast thou chosen well the place
wherein to meet me to-day, for hard by on the other side of the
stream is a bower of pleasance, which, forsooth, not every one
who cometh to this land may find; there shall I be to thee as one
of the up-country damsels of thine own land, and thou shalt not
be abashed.”</p>
<p>She sidled up to him as she spoke, and would he, would he not,
her sweet voice tickled his very soul with pleasure, and she
looked aside on him happy and well-content.</p>
<p>So they crossed the stream by the shallow below the pool
wherein Walter had bathed, and within a little they came upon a
tall fence of flake-hurdles, and a simple gate therein. The
Lady opened the same, and they entered thereby into a close all
planted as a most fair garden, with hedges of rose and woodbine,
and with linden-trees a-blossom, and long ways of green grass
betwixt borders of lilies and clove-gilliflowers, and other sweet
garland-flowers. And a branch of the stream which they had
crossed erewhile wandered through that garden; and in the midst
was a little house built of post and pan, and thatched with
yellow straw, as if it were new done.</p>
<p>Then Walter looked this way and that, and wondered at first,
and tried to think in his mind what should come next, and how
matters would go with him; but his thought would not dwell steady
on any other matter than the beauty of the Lady amidst the beauty
of the garden; and withal she was now grown so sweet and kind,
and even somewhat timid and shy with him, that scarce did he know
whose hand he held, or whose fragrant bosom and sleek side went
so close to him.</p>
<p>So they wandered here and there through the waning of the day,
and when they entered at last into the cool dusk house, then they
loved and played together, as if they were a pair of lovers
guileless, with no fear for the morrow, and no seeds of enmity
and death sown betwixt them.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XVIII: THE MAID GIVES WALTER TRYST</h2>
<p>Now, on the morrow, when Walter was awake, he found there was
no one lying beside him, and the day was no longer very young; so
he arose, and went through the garden from end to end, and all
about, and there was none there; and albeit that he dreaded to
meet the Lady there, yet was he sad at heart and fearful of what
might betide. Howsoever, he found the gate whereby they had
entered yesterday, and he went out into the little dale; but when
he had gone a step or two he turned about, and could see neither
garden nor fence, nor any sign of what he had seen thereof but
lately. He knit his brow and stood still to think of it,
and his heart grew the heavier thereby; but presently he went his
ways and crossed the stream, but had scarce come up on to the
grass on the further side, ere he saw a woman coming to meet him,
and at first, full as he was of the tide of yesterday and the
wondrous garden, deemed that it would be the Lady; but the woman
stayed her feet, and, stooping, laid a hand on her right ankle,
and he saw that it was the Maid. He drew anigh to her, and
saw that she was nought so sad of countenance as the last time
she had met him, but flushed of cheek and bright-eyed.</p>
<p>As he came up to her she made a step or two to meet him,
holding out her two hands, and then refrained her, and said
smiling: “Ah, friend, belike this shall be the last time
that I shall say to thee, touch me not, nay, not so much as my
hand, or if it were but the hem of my raiment.”</p>
<p>The joy grew up in his heart, and he gazed on her fondly, and
said: “Why, what hath befallen of late?”</p>
<p>“O friend,” she began, “this hath
befallen.”</p>
<p>But as he looked on her, the smile died from her face, and she
became deadly pale to the very lips; she looked askance to her
left side, whereas ran the stream; and Walter followed her eyes,
and deemed for one instant that he saw the misshapen yellow
visage of the dwarf peering round from a grey rock, but the next
there was nothing. Then the Maid, though she were as pale
as death, went on in a clear, steady, hard voice, wherein was no
joy or kindness, keeping her face to Walter and her back to the
stream: “This hath befallen, friend, that there is no
longer any need to refrain thy love nor mine; therefore I say to
thee, come to my chamber (and it is the red chamber over against
thine, though thou knewest it not) an hour before this next
midnight, and then thy sorrow and mine shall be at an end: and
now I must needs depart. Follow me not, but
remember!”</p>
<p>And therewith she turned about and fled like the wind down the
stream.</p>
<p>But Walter stood wondering, and knew not what to make of it,
whether it were for good or ill: for he knew now that she had
paled and been seized with terror because of the upheaving of the
ugly head; and yet she had seemed to speak out the very thing she
had to say. Howsoever it were, he spake aloud to himself:
Whatever comes, I will keep tryst with her.</p>
<p>Then he drew his sword, and turned this way and that, looking
all about if he might see any sign of the Evil Thing; but nought
might his eyes behold, save the grass, and the stream, and the
bushes of the dale. So then, still holding his naked sword
in his hand, he clomb the bent out of the dale; for that was the
only way he knew to the Golden House; and when he came to the
top, and the summer breeze blew in his face, and he looked down a
fair green slope beset with goodly oaks and chestnuts, he was
refreshed with the life of the earth, and he felt the good sword
in his fist, and knew that there was might and longing in him,
and the world seemed open unto him.</p>
<p>So he smiled, if it were somewhat grimly, and sheathed his
sword and went on toward the house.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XIX: WALTER GOES TO FETCH HOME THE LION’S HIDE</h2>
<p>He entered the cool dusk through the porch, and, looking down
the pillared hall, saw beyond the fountain a gleam of gold, and
when he came past the said fountain he looked up to the
high-seat, and lo! the Lady sitting there clad in her queenly
raiment. She called to him, and he came; and she hailed
him, and spake graciously and calmly, yet as if she knew nought
of him save as the leal servant of her, a high Lady.
“Squire,” she said, “we have deemed it meet to
have the hide of the servant of the Enemy, the lion to wit, whom
thou slewest yesterday, for a carpet to our feet; wherefore go
now, take thy wood-knife, and flay the beast, and bring me home
his skin. This shall be all thy service for this day, so
mayst thou do it at thine own leisure, and not weary
thyself. May good go with thee.”</p>
<p>He bent the knee before her, and she smiled on him graciously,
but reached out no hand for him to kiss, and heeded him but
little. Wherefore, in spite of himself, and though he knew
somewhat of her guile, he could not help marvelling that this
should be she who had lain in his arms night-long but of
late.</p>
<p>Howso that might be, he took his way toward the thicket where
he had slain the lion, and came thither by then it was afternoon,
at the hottest of the day. So he entered therein, and came
to the very place whereas the Lady had lain, when she fell down
before the terror of the lion; and there was the mark of her body
on the grass where she had lain that while, like as it were the
form of a hare. But when Walter went on to where he had
slain that great beast, lo! he was gone, and there was no sign of
him; but there were Walter’s own footprints, and the two
shafts which he had shot, one feathered red, and one blue.
He said at first: Belike someone hath been here, and hath had the
carcase away. Then he laughed in very despite, and said:
How may that be, since there are no signs of dragging away of so
huge a body, and no blood or fur on the grass if they had cut him
up, and moreover no trampling of feet, as if there had been many
men at the deed. Then was he all abashed, and again laughed
in scorn of himself, and said: Forsooth I deemed I had done
manly; but now forsooth I shot nought, and nought there was
before the sword of my father’s son. And what may I
deem now, but that this is a land of mere lies, and that there is
nought real and alive therein save me. Yea, belike even
these trees and the green grass will presently depart from me,
and leave me falling down through the clouds.</p>
<p>Therewith he turned away, and gat him to the road that led to
the Golden House, wondering what next should befall him, and
going slowly as he pondered his case. So came he to that
first thicket where they had lost their quarry by water; so he
entered the same, musing, and bathed him in the pool that was
therein, after he had wandered about it awhile, and found nothing
new.</p>
<p>So again he set him to the homeward road, when the day was now
waning, and it was near sunset that he was come nigh unto the
house, though it was hidden from him as then by a low bent that
rose before him; and there he abode and looked about him.</p>
<p>Now as he looked, over the said bent came the figure of a
woman, who stayed on the brow thereof and looked all about her,
and then ran swiftly down to meet Walter, who saw at once that it
was the Maid.</p>
<p>She made no stay then till she was but three paces from him,
and then she stooped down and made the sign to him, and then
spake to him breathlessly, and said: “Hearken! but speak
not till I have done: I bade thee to-night’s meeting
because I saw that there was one anigh whom I must needs
beguile. But by thine oath, and thy love, and all that thou
art, I adjure thee come not unto me this night as I bade thee!
but be hidden in the hazel-copse outside the house, as it draws
toward midnight, and abide me there. Dost thou hearken, and
wilt thou? Say yes or no in haste, for I may not tarry a
moment of time. Who knoweth what is behind me?”</p>
<p>“Yes,” said Walter hastily; “but friend and
love—”</p>
<p>“No more,” she said; “hope the best;”
and turning from him she ran away swiftly, not by the way she had
come, but sideways, as though to reach the house by fetching a
compass.</p>
<p>But Walter went slowly on his way, thinking within himself
that now at that present moment there was nought for it but to
refrain him from doing, and to let others do; yet deemed he that
it was little manly to be as the pawn upon the board, pushed
about by the will of others.</p>
<p>Then, as he went, he bethought him of the Maiden’s face
and aspect, as she came running to him, and stood before him for
that minute; and all eagerness he saw in her, and sore love of
him, and distress of soul, all blent together.</p>
<p>So came he to the brow of the bent whence he could see lying
before him, scarce more than a bow-shot away, the Golden House
now gilded again and reddened by the setting sun. And even
therewith came a gay image toward him, flashing back the level
rays from gold and steel and silver; and lo! there was come the
King’s Son. They met presently, and the King’s
Son turned to go beside him, and said merrily: “I give thee
good even, my Lady’s Squire! I owe thee something of
courtesy, whereas it is by thy means that I shall be made happy,
both to-night, and to-morrow, and many to-morrows; and sooth it
is, that but little courtesy have I done thee
hitherto.”</p>
<p>His face was full of joy, and the eyes of him shone with
gladness. He was a goodly man, but to Walter he seemed an
ill one; and he hated him so much, that he found it no easy
matter to answer him; but he refrained himself, and said:
“I can thee thank, King’s Son; and good it is that
someone is happy in this strange land.”</p>
<p>“Art thou not happy then, Squire of my Lady?” said
the other.</p>
<p>Walter had no mind to show this man his heart, nay, nor even a
corner thereof; for he deemed him an enemy. So he smiled
sweetly and somewhat foolishly, as a man luckily in love, and
said: “O yea, yea, why should I not be so? How might
I be otherwise?”</p>
<p>“Yea then,” said the King’s Son, “why
didst thou say that thou wert glad someone is happy? Who is
unhappy, deemest thou?” and he looked on him keenly.</p>
<p>Walter answered slowly: “Said I so? I suppose then
that I was thinking of thee; for when first I saw thee, yea, and
afterwards, thou didst seem heavy-hearted and
ill-content.”</p>
<p>The face of the King’s Son cleared at this word, and he
said: “Yea, so it was; for look you, both ways it was: I
was unfree, and I had sown the true desire of my heart whereas it
waxed not. But now I am on the brink and verge of freedom,
and presently shall my desire be blossomed. Nay now,
Squire, I deem thee a good fellow, though it may be somewhat of a
fool; so I will no more speak riddles to thee. Thus it is:
the Maid hath promised me all mine asking, and is mine; and in
two or three days, by her helping also, I shall see the world
again.”</p>
<p>Quoth Walter, smiling askance on him: “And the Lady?
what shall she say to this matter?”</p>
<p>The King’s Son reddened, but smiled falsely enough, and
said: “Sir Squire, thou knowest enough not to need to ask
this. Why should I tell thee that she accounteth more of
thy little finger than of my whole body? Now I tell thee
hereof freely; first, because this my fruition of love, and my
freeing from thralldom, is, in a way, of thy doing. For
thou art become my supplanter, and hast taken thy place with
yonder lovely tyrant. Fear not for me! she will let me
go. As for thyself, see thou to it! But again I tell
thee hereof because my heart is light and full of joy, and
telling thee will pleasure me, and cannot do me any harm.
For if thou say: How if I carry the tale to my Lady? I
answer, thou wilt not. For I know that thine heart hath
been somewhat set on the jewel that my hand holdeth; and thou
knowest well on whose head the Lady’s wrath would fall, and
that would be neither thine nor mine.”</p>
<p>“Thou sayest sooth,” said Walter; “neither
is treason my wont.”</p>
<p>So they walked on silently a while, and then Walter said:
“But how if the Maiden had nay-said thee; what hadst thou
done then?”</p>
<p>“By the heavens!” said the King’s Son
fiercely, “she should have paid for her nay-say; then would
I—” But he broke off, and said quietly, yet
somewhat doggedly: “Why talk of what might have been?
She gave me her yea-say pleasantly and sweetly.”</p>
<p>Now Walter knew that the man lied, so he held his peace
thereon; but presently he said: “When thou art free wilt
thou go to thine own land again?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the King’s Son; “she will
lead me thither.”</p>
<p>“And wilt thou make her thy lady and queen when thou
comest to thy father’s land?” said Walter.</p>
<p>The King’s Son knit his brow, and said: “When I am
in mine own land I may do with her what I will; but I look for it
that I shall do no otherwise with her than that she shall be
well-content.”</p>
<p>Then the talk between them dropped, and the King’s Son
turned off toward the wood, singing and joyous; but Walter went
soberly toward the house. Forsooth he was not greatly cast
down, for besides that he knew that the King’s Son was
false, he deemed that under this double tryst lay something which
was a-doing in his own behalf. Yet was he eager and
troubled, if not down-hearted, and his soul was cast about
betwixt hope and fear.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XX: WALTER IS BIDDEN TO ANOTHER TRYST</h2>
<p>So came he into the pillared hall, and there he found the Lady
walking to and fro by the high-seat; and when he drew nigh she
turned on him, and said in a voice rather eager than angry:
“What hast thou done, Squire? Why art thou come
before me?”</p>
<p>He was abashed, and bowed before her and said: “O
gracious Lady, thou badest me service, and I have been about
it.”</p>
<p>She said: “Tell me then, tell me, what hath
betided?”</p>
<p>“Lady,” said he, “when I entered the thicket
of thy swooning I found there no carcase of the lion, nor any
sign of the dragging away of him.”</p>
<p>She looked full in his face for a little, and then went to her
chair, and sat down therein; and in a little while spake to him
in a softer voice, and said: “Did I not tell thee that some
enemy had done that unto me? and lo! now thou seest that so it
is.”</p>
<p>Then was she silent again, and knit her brows and set her
teeth; and thereafter she spake harshly and fiercely: “But
I will overcome her, and make her days evil, but keep death away
from her, that she may die many times over; and know all the
sickness of the heart, when foes be nigh, and friends afar, and
there is none to deliver!”</p>
<p>Her eyes flashed, and her face was dark with anger; but she
turned and caught Walter’s eyes, and the sternness of his
face, and she softened at once, and said: “But thou! this
hath little to do with thee; and now to thee I speak: Now cometh
even and night. Go thou to thy chamber, and there shalt
thou find raiment worthy of thee, what thou now art, and what
thou shalt be; do on the same, and make thyself most goodly, and
then come thou hither and eat and drink with me, and afterwards
depart whither thou wilt, till the night has worn to its midmost;
and then come thou to my chamber, to wit, through the ivory door
in the gallery above; and then and there shall I tell thee a
thing, and it shall be for the weal both of thee and of me, but
for the grief and woe of the Enemy.”</p>
<p>Therewith she reached her hand to him, and he kissed it, and
departed and came to his chamber, and found raiment therebefore
rich beyond measure; and he wondered if any new snare lay
therein: yet if there were, he saw no way whereby he might escape
it, so he did it on, and became as the most glorious of kings,
and yet lovelier than any king of the world.</p>
<p>Sithence he went his way into the pillared hall, when it was
now night, and without the moon was up, and the trees of the wood
as still as images. But within the hall shone bright with
many candles, and the fountain glittered in the light of them, as
it ran tinkling sweetly into the little stream; and the silvern
bridges gleamed, and the pillars shone all round about.</p>
<p>And there on the dais was a table dight most royally, and the
Lady sitting thereat, clad in her most glorious array, and behind
her the Maid standing humbly, yet clad in precious web of
shimmering gold, but with feet unshod, and the iron ring upon her
ankle.</p>
<p>So Walter came his ways to the high-seat, and the Lady rose
and greeted him, and took him by the hands, and kissed him on
either cheek, and sat him down beside her. So they fell to
their meat, and the Maid served them; but the Lady took no more
heed of her than if she were one of the pillars of the hall; but
Walter she caressed oft with sweet words, and the touch of her
hand, making him drink out of her cup and eat out of her
dish. As to him, he was bashful by seeming, but verily
fearful; he took the Lady’s caresses with what grace he
might, and durst not so much as glance at her Maid. Long
indeed seemed that banquet to him, and longer yet endured the
weariness of his abiding there, kind to his foe and unkind to his
friend; for after the banquet they still sat a while, and the
Lady talked much to Walter about many things of the ways of the
world, and he answered what he might, distraught as he was with
the thought of those two trysts which he had to deal with.</p>
<p>At last spake the Lady and said: “Now must I leave thee
for a little, and thou wottest where and how we shall meet next;
and meanwhile disport thee as thou wilt, so that thou weary not
thyself, for I love to see thee joyous.”</p>
<p>Then she arose stately and grand; but she kissed Walter on the
mouth ere she turned to go out of the hall. The Maid
followed her; but or ever she was quite gone, she stooped and
made that sign, and looked over her shoulder at Walter, as if in
entreaty to him, and there was fear and anguish in her face; but
he nodded his head to her in yea-say of the tryst in the
hazel-copse, and in a trice she was gone.</p>
<p>Walter went down the hall, and forth into the early night; but
in the jaws of the porch he came up against the King’s Son,
who, gazing at his attire glittering with all its gems in the
moonlight, laughed out, and said: “Now may it be seen how
thou art risen in degree above me, whereas I am but a
king’s son, and that a king of a far country; whereas thou
art a king of kings, or shalt be this night, yea, and of this
very country wherein we both are.”</p>
<p>Now Walter saw the mock which lay under his words; but he kept
back his wrath, and answered: “Fair sir, art thou as well
contented with thy lot as when the sun went down? Hast thou
no doubt or fear? Will the Maid verily keep tryst with
thee, or hath she given thee yea-say but to escape thee this
time? Or, again, may she not turn to the Lady and appeal to
her against thee?”</p>
<p>Now when he had spoken these words, he repented thereof, and
feared for himself and the Maid, lest he had stirred some
misgiving in that young man’s foolish heart. But the
King’s Son did but laugh, and answered nought but to
Walter’s last words, and said: “Yea, yea! this word
of thine showeth how little thou wottest of that which lieth
betwixt my darling and thine. Doth the lamb appeal from the
shepherd to the wolf? Even so shall the Maid appeal from me
to thy Lady. What! ask thy Lady at thy leisure what her
wont hath been with her thrall; she shall think it a fair tale to
tell thee thereof. But thereof is my Maid all whole now by
reason of her wisdom in leechcraft, or somewhat more. And
now I tell thee again, that the beforesaid Maid must needs do my
will; for if I be the deep sea, and I deem not so ill of myself,
that other one is the devil; as belike thou shalt find out for
thyself later on. Yea, all is well with me, and more than
well.”</p>
<p>And therewith he swung merrily into the litten hall. But
Walter went out into the moonlit night, and wandered about for an
hour or more, and stole warily into the hall and thence into his
own chamber. There he did off that royal array, and did his
own raiment upon him; he girt him with sword and knife, took his
bow and quiver, and stole down and out again, even as he had come
in. Then he fetched a compass, and came down into the
hazel-coppice from the north, and lay hidden there while the
night wore, till he deemed it would lack but little of
midnight.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXI: WALTER AND THE MAID FLEE FROM THE GOLDEN HOUSE</h2>
<p>There he abode amidst the hazels, hearkening every littlest
sound; and the sounds were nought but the night voices of the
wood, till suddenly there burst forth from the house a great
wailing cry. Walter’s heart came up into his mouth,
but he had no time to do aught, for following hard on the cry
came the sound of light feet close to him, the boughs were thrust
aside, and there was come the Maid, and she but in her white
coat, and barefoot. And then first he felt the sweetness of
her flesh on his, for she caught him by the hand and said
breathlessly: “Now, now! there may yet be time, or even too
much, it may be. For the saving of breath ask me no
questions, but come!”</p>
<p>He dallied not, but went as she led, and they were lightfoot,
both of them.</p>
<p>They went the same way, due south to wit, whereby he had gone
a-hunting with the Lady; and whiles they ran and whiles they
walked; but so fast they went, that by grey of the dawn they were
come as far as that coppice or thicket of the Lion; and still
they hastened onward, and but little had the Maid spoken, save
here and there a word to hearten up Walter, and here and there a
shy word of endearment. At last the dawn grew into early
day, and as they came over the brow of a bent, they looked down
over a plain land whereas the trees grew scatter-meal, and beyond
the plain rose up the land into long green hills, and over those
again were blue mountains great and far away.</p>
<p>Then spake the Maid: “Over yonder lie the outlying
mountains of the Bears, and through them we needs must pass, to
our great peril. Nay, friend,” she said, as he
handled his sword-hilt, “it must be patience and wisdom to
bring us through, and not the fallow blade of one man, though he
be a good one. But look! below there runs a stream through
the first of the plain, and I see nought for it but we must now
rest our bodies. Moreover I have a tale to tell thee which
is burning my heart; for maybe there will be a pardon to ask of
thee moreover; wherefore I fear thee.”</p>
<p>Quoth Walter: “How may that be?”</p>
<p>She answered him not, but took his hand and led him down the
bent. But he said: “Thou sayest, rest; but are we now
out of all peril of the chase?”</p>
<p>She said: “I cannot tell till I know what hath befallen
her. If she be not to hand to set on her trackers, they
will scarce happen on us now; if it be not for that
one.”</p>
<p>And she shuddered, and he felt her hand change as he held
it.</p>
<p>Then she said: “But peril or no peril, needs must we
rest; for I tell thee again, what I have to say to thee burneth
my bosom for fear of thee, so that I can go no further until I
have told thee.”</p>
<p>Then he said: “I wot not of this Queen and her
mightiness and her servants. I will ask thereof
later. But besides the others, is there not the
King’s Son, he who loves thee so unworthily?”</p>
<p>She paled somewhat, and said: “As for him, there had
been nought for thee to fear in him, save his treason: but now
shall he neither love nor hate any more; he died last
midnight.”</p>
<p>“Yea, and how?” said Walter.</p>
<p>“Nay,” she said, “let me tell my tale all
together once for all, lest thou blame me overmuch. But
first we will wash us and comfort us as best we may, and then
amidst our resting shall the word be said.”</p>
<p>By then were they come down to the stream-side, which ran fair
in pools and stickles amidst rocks and sandy banks. She
said: “There behind the great grey rock is my bath, friend;
and here is thine; and lo! the uprising of the sun!”</p>
<p>So she went her ways to the said rock, and he bathed him, and
washed the night off him, and by then he was clad again she came
back fresh and sweet from the water, and with her lap full of
cherries from a wilding which overhung her bath. So they
sat down together on the green grass above the sand, and ate the
breakfast of the wilderness: and Walter was full of content as he
watched her, and beheld her sweetness and her loveliness; yet
were they, either of them, somewhat shy and shamefaced each with
the other; so that he did but kiss her hands once and again, and
though she shrank not from him, yet had she no boldness to cast
herself into his arms.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXII: OF THE DWARF AND THE PARDON</h2>
<p>Now she began to say: “My friend, now shall I tell thee
what I have done for thee and me; and if thou have a mind to
blame me, and punish me, yet remember first, that what I have
done has been for thee and our hope of happy life. Well, I
shall tell thee—”</p>
<p>But therewithal her speech failed her; and, springing up, she
faced the bent and pointed with her finger, and she all deadly
pale, and shaking so that she might scarce stand, and might speak
no word, though a feeble gibbering came from her mouth.</p>
<p>Walter leapt up and put his arm about her, and looked
whitherward she pointed, and at first saw nought; and then nought
but a brown and yellow rock rolling down the bent: and then at
last he saw that it was the Evil Thing which had met him when
first he came into that land; and now it stood upright, and he
could see that it was clad in a coat of yellow samite.</p>
<p>Then Walter stooped down and gat his bow into his hand, and
stood before the Maid, while he nocked an arrow. But the
monster made ready his tackle while Walter was stooping down, and
or ever he could loose, his bow-string twanged, and an arrow flew
forth and grazed the Maid’s arm above the elbow, so that
the blood ran, and the Dwarf gave forth a harsh and horrible
cry. Then flew Walter’s shaft, and true was it aimed,
so that it smote the monster full on the breast, but fell down
from him as if he were made of stone. Then the creature set
up his horrible cry again, and loosed withal, and Walter deemed
that he had smitten the Maid, for she fell down in a heap behind
him. Then waxed Walter wood-wroth, and cast down his bow
and drew his sword, and strode forward towards the bent against
the Dwarf. But he roared out again, and there were words in
his roar, and he said “Fool! thou shalt go free if thou
wilt give up the Enemy.”</p>
<p>“And who,” said Walter, “is the
Enemy?”</p>
<p>Yelled the Dwarf: “She, the pink and white thing lying
there; she is not dead yet; she is but dying for fear of
me. Yea, she hath reason! I could have set the shaft
in her heart as easily as scratching her arm; but I need her body
alive, that I may wreak me on her.”</p>
<p>“What wilt thou do with her?” said Walter; for now
he had heard that the Maid was not slain he had waxed wary again,
and stood watching his chance.</p>
<p>The Dwarf yelled so at his last word, that no word came from
the noise a while, and then he said: “What will I with
her? Let me at her, and stand by and look on, and then
shalt thou have a strange tale to carry off with thee. For
I will let thee go this while.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “But what need to wreak thee? What
hath she done to thee?”</p>
<p>“What need! what need!” roared the Dwarf;
“have I not told thee that she is the Enemy? And thou
askest of what she hath done! of what! Fool, she is the
murderer! she hath slain the Lady that was our Lady, and that
made us; she whom all we worshipped and adored. O impudent
fool!”</p>
<p>Therewith he nocked and loosed another arrow, which would have
smitten Walter in the face, but that he lowered his head in the
very nick of time; then with a great shout he rushed up the bent,
and was on the Dwarf before he could get his sword out, and
leaping aloft dealt the creature a stroke amidmost of the crown;
and so mightily be smote, that he drave the heavy sword right
through to the teeth, so that he fell dead straightway.</p>
<p>Walter stood over him a minute, and when be saw that he moved
not, he went slowly down to the stream, whereby the Maid yet lay
cowering down and quivering all over, and covering her face with
her hands. Then he took her by the wrist and said:
“Up, Maiden, up! and tell me this tale of the
slaying.”</p>
<p>But she shrunk away from him, and looked at him with wild
eyes, and said: “What hast thou done with him? Is he
gone?”</p>
<p>“He is dead,” said Walter; “I have slain
him; there lies he with cloven skull on the bent-side: unless,
forsooth, he vanish away like the lion I slew! or else,
perchance, he will come to life again! And art thou a lie
like to the rest of them? let me hear of this slaying.”</p>
<p>She rose up, and stood before him trembling, and said:
“O, thou art angry with me, and thine anger I cannot
bear. Ah, what have I done? Thou hast slain one, and
I, maybe, the other; and never had we escaped till both these
twain were dead. Ah! thou dost not know! thou dost not
know! O me! what shall I do to appease thy
wrath!”</p>
<p>He looked on her, and his heart rose to his mouth at the
thought of sundering from her. Still he looked on her, and
her piteous friendly face melted all his heart; he threw down his
sword, and took her by the shoulders, and kissed her face over
and over, and strained her to him, so that he felt the sweetness
of her bosom. Then he lifted her up like a child, and set
her down on the green grass, and went down to the water, and
filled his hat therefrom, and came back to her; then he gave her
to drink, and bathed her face and her hands, so that the colour
came aback to the cheeks and lips of her: and she smiled on him
and kissed his hands, and said: “O now thou art kind to
me.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said he, “and true it is that if thou
hast slain, I have done no less, and if thou hast lied, even so
have I; and if thou hast played the wanton, as I deem not that
thou hast, I full surely have so done. So now thou shalt
pardon me, and when thy spirit has come back to thee, thou shalt
tell me thy tale in all friendship, and in all loving-kindness
will I hearken the same.”</p>
<p>Therewith he knelt before her and kissed her feet. But
she said: “Yea, yea; what thou willest, that will I
do. But first tell me one thing. Hast thou buried
this horror and hidden him in the earth?”</p>
<p>He deemed that fear had bewildered her, and that she scarcely
yet knew how things had gone. But he said: “Fair
sweet friend, I have not done it as yet; but now will I go and do
it, if it seem good to thee.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” she said, “but first must thou smite
off his head, and lie it by his buttocks when he is in the earth;
or evil things will happen else. This of the burying is no
idle matter, I bid thee believe.”</p>
<p>“I doubt it not,” said he; “surely such
malice as was in this one will be hard to slay.” And
he picked up his sword, and turned to go to the field of
deed.</p>
<p>She said: “I must needs go with thee; terror hath so
filled my soul, that I durst not abide here without
thee.”</p>
<p>So they went both together to where the creature lay.
The Maid durst not look on the dead monster, but Walter noted
that he was girt with a big ungainly sax; so he drew it from the
sheath, and there smote off the hideous head of the fiend with
his own weapon. Then they twain together laboured the
earth, she with Walter’s sword, he with the ugly sax, till
they had made a grave deep and wide enough; and therein they
thrust the creature, and covered him up, weapons and all
together.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXIII: OF THE PEACEFUL ENDING OF THAT WILD DAY</h2>
<p>Thereafter Walter led the Maid down again, and said to her:
“Now, sweetling, shall the story be told.”</p>
<p>“Nay, friend,” she said, “not here.
This place hath been polluted by my craven fear, and the horror
of the vile wretch, of whom no words may tell his vileness.
Let us hence and onward. Thou seest I have once more come
to life again.”</p>
<p>“But,” said he, “thou hast been hurt by the
Dwarf’s arrow.”</p>
<p>She laughed, and said: “Had I never had greater hurt
from them than that, little had been the tale thereof: yet
whereas thou lookest dolorous about it, we will speedily heal
it.”</p>
<p>Therewith she sought about, and found nigh the stream-side
certain herbs; and she spake words over them, and bade Walter lay
them on the wound, which, forsooth, was of the least, and he did
so, and bound a strip of his shirt about her arm; and then would
she set forth. But he said: “Thou art all unshod; and
but if that be seen to, our journey shall be stayed by thy
foot-soreness: I may make a shift to fashion thee
brogues.”</p>
<p>She said: “I may well go barefoot. And in any
case, I entreat thee that we tarry here no longer, but go away
hence, if it be but for a mile.”</p>
<p>And she looked piteously on him, so that he might not gainsay
her.</p>
<p>So then they crossed the stream, and set forward, when amidst
all these haps the day was worn to midmorning. But after
they had gone a mile, they sat them down on a knoll under the
shadow of a big thorn-tree, within sight of the mountains.
Then said Walter: “Now will I cut thee the brogues from the
skirt of my buff-coat, which shall be well meet for such work;
and meanwhile shalt thou tell me thy tale.”</p>
<p>“Thou art kind,” she said; “but be kinder
yet, and abide my tale till we have done our day’s
work. For we were best to make no long delay here; because,
though thou hast slain the King-dwarf, yet there be others of his
kindred, who swarm in some parts of the wood as the rabbits in a
warren. Now true it is that they have but little
understanding, less, it may be, than the very brute beasts; and
that, as I said afore, unless they be set on our slot like to
hounds, they shall have no inkling of where to seek us, yet might
they happen upon us by mere misadventure. And moreover,
friend,” quoth she, blushing, “I would beg of thee
some little respite; for though I scarce fear thy wrath any more,
since thou hast been so kind to me, yet is there shame in that
which I have to tell thee. Wherefore, since the fairest of
the day is before us, let us use it all we may, and, when thou
hast done me my new foot-gear, get us gone forward
again.”</p>
<p>He kissed her kindly and yea-said her asking: he had already
fallen to work on the leather, and in a while had fashioned her
the brogues; so she tied them to her feet, and arose with a smile
and said: “Now am I hale and strong again, what with the
rest, and what with thy loving-kindness, and thou shalt see how
nimble I shall be to leave this land, for as fair as it is.
Since forsooth a land of lies it is, and of grief to the children
of Adam.”</p>
<p>So they went their ways thence, and fared nimbly indeed, and
made no stay till some three hours after noon, when they rested
by a thicket-side, where the strawberries grew plenty; they ate
thereof what they would: and from a great oak hard by Walter shot
him first one culver, and then another, and hung them to his
girdle to be for their evening’s meal; sithence they went
forward again, and nought befell them to tell of, till they were
come, whenas it lacked scarce an hour of sunset, to the banks of
another river, not right great, but bigger than the last
one. There the Maid cast herself down and said:
“Friend, no further will thy friend go this even; nay, to
say sooth, she cannot. So now we will eat of thy venison,
and then shall my tale be, since I may no longer delay it; and
thereafter shall our slumber be sweet and safe as I
deem.”</p>
<p>She spake merrily now, and as one who feared nothing, and
Walter was much heartened by her words and her voice, and he fell
to and made a fire, and a woodland oven in the earth, and
sithence dighted his fowl, and baked them after the manner of
wood-men. And they ate, both of them, in all love, and in
good-liking of life, and were much strengthened by their
supper. And when they were done, Walter eked his fire, both
against the chill of the midnight and dawning, and for a guard
against wild beasts, and by that time night was come, and the
moon arisen. Then the Maiden drew up to the fire, and
turned to Walter and spake.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXIV: THE MAID TELLS OF WHAT HAD BEFALLEN HER</h2>
<p>“Now, friend, by the clear of the moon and this
firelight will I tell what I may and can of my tale. Thus
it is: If I be wholly of the race of Adam I wot not nor can I
tell thee how many years old I may be. For there are, as it
were, shards or gaps in my life, wherein are but a few things
dimly remembered, and doubtless many things forgotten. I
remember well when I was a little child, and right happy, and
there were people about me whom I loved, and who loved me.
It was not in this land; but all things were lovely there; the
year’s beginning, the happy mid-year, the year’s
waning, the year’s ending, and then again its
beginning. That passed away, and then for a while is more
than dimness, for nought I remember save that I was.
Thereafter I remember again, and am a young maiden, and I know
some things, and long to know more. I am nowise happy; I am
amongst people who bid me go, and I go; and do this, and I do it:
none loveth me, none tormenteth me; but I wear my heart in
longing for I scarce know what. Neither then am I in this
land, but in a land that I love not, and a house that is big and
stately, but nought lovely. Then is a dim time again, and
sithence a time not right clear; an evil time, wherein I am
older, wellnigh grown to womanhood. There are a many folk
about me, and they foul, and greedy, and hard; and my spirit is
fierce, and my body feeble; and I am set to tasks that I would
not do, by them that are unwiser than I; and smitten I am by them
that are less valiant than I; and I know lack, and stripes, and
divers misery. But all that is now become but a dim picture
to me, save that amongst all these unfriends is a friend to me;
an old woman, who telleth me sweet tales of other life, wherein
all is high and goodly, or at the least valiant and doughty, and
she setteth hope in my heart and learneth me, and maketh me to
know much . . . O much . . . so that at last I am grown wise, and
wise to be mighty if I durst. Yet am I nought in this land
all this while, but, as meseemeth, in a great and a foul
city.”</p>
<p>“And then, as it were, I fall asleep; and in my sleep is
nought, save here and there a wild dream, somedeal lovely,
somedeal hideous: but of this dream is my Mistress a part, and
the monster, withal, whose head thou didst cleave to-day.
But when I am awaken from it, then am I verily in this land, and
myself, as thou seest me to-day. And the first part of my
life here is this, that I am in the pillared ball yonder,
half-clad and with bound hands; and the Dwarf leadeth me to the
Lady, and I hear his horrible croak as he sayeth: ‘Lady,
will this one do?’ and then the sweet voice of the Lady
saying: ‘This one will do; thou shalt have thy reward: now,
set thou the token upon her.’ Then I remember the
Dwarf dragging me away, and my heart sinking for fear of him: but
for that time he did me no more harm than the rivetting upon my
leg this iron ring which here thou seest.”</p>
<p>“So from that time forward I have lived in this land,
and been the thrall of the Lady; and I remember my life here day
by day, and no part of it has fallen into the dimness of
dreams. Thereof will I tell thee but little: but this I
will tell thee, that in spite of my past dreams, or it may be
because of them, I had not lost the wisdom which the old woman
had erst learned me, and for more wisdom I longed. Maybe
this longing shall now make both thee and me happy, but for the
passing time it brought me grief. For at first my Mistress
was indeed wayward with me, but as any great lady might be with
her bought thrall, whiles caressing me, and whiles chastising me,
as her mood went; but she seemed not to be cruel of malice, or
with any set purpose. But so it was (rather little by
little than by any great sudden uncovering of my intent), that
she came to know that I also had some of the wisdom whereby she
lived her queenly life. That was about two years after I
was first her thrall, and three weary years have gone by since
she began to see in me the enemy of her days. Now why or
wherefore I know not, but it seemeth that it would not avail her
to slay me outright, or suffer me to die; but nought withheld her
from piling up griefs and miseries on my head. At last she
set her servant, the Dwarf, upon me, even he whose head thou
clavest to-day. Many things I bore from him whereof it were
unseemly for my tongue to tell before thee; but the time came
when he exceeded, and I could bear no more; and then I showed him
this sharp knife (wherewith I would have thrust me through to the
heart if thou hadst not pardoned me e’en now), and I told
him that if he forbore me not, I would slay, not him, but myself;
and this he might not away with because of the commandment of the
Lady, who had given him the word that in any case I must be kept
living. And her hand, withal, fear held somewhat
hereafter. Yet was there need to me of all my wisdom; for
with all this her hatred grew, and whiles raged within her so
furiously that it overmastered her fear, and at such times she
would have put me to death if I had not escaped her by some turn
of my lore.”</p>
<p>“Now further, I shall tell thee that somewhat more than
a year ago hither to this land came the King’s Son, the
second goodly man, as thou art the third, whom her sorceries have
drawn hither since I have dwelt here. Forsooth, when he
first came, he seemed to us, to me, and yet more to my Lady, to
be as beautiful as an angel, and sorely she loved him; and he
her, after his fashion: but he was light-minded, and
cold-hearted, and in a while he must needs turn his eyes upon me,
and offer me his love, which was but foul and unkind as it turned
out; for when I nay-said him, as maybe I had not done save for
fear of my Mistress, he had no pity upon me, but spared not to
lead me into the trap of her wrath, and leave me without help, or
a good word. But, O friend, in spite of all grief and
anguish, I learned still, and waxed wise, and wiser, abiding the
day of my deliverance, which has come, and thou art
come.”</p>
<p>Therewith she took Walter’s hands and kissed them; but
he kissed her face, and her tears wet her lips. Then she
went on: “But sithence, months ago, the Lady began to weary
of this dastard, despite of his beauty; and then it was thy turn
to be swept into her net; I partly guess how. For on a day
in broad daylight, as I was serving my Mistress in the hall, and
the Evil Thing, whose head is now cloven, was lying across the
threshold of the door, as it were a dream fell upon me, though I
strove to cast it off for fear of chastisement; for the pillared
hall wavered, and vanished from my sight, and my feet were
treading a rough stone pavement instead of the marble wonder of
the hall, and there was the scent of the salt sea and of the
tackle of ships, and behind me were tall houses, and before me
the ships indeed, with their ropes beating and their sails
flapping and their masts wavering; and in mine ears was the hale
and how of mariners; things that I had seen and heard in the
dimness of my life gone by.”</p>
<p>“And there was I, and the Dwarf before me, and the Lady
after me, going over the gangway aboard of a tall ship, and she
gathered way and was gotten out of the haven, and straightway I
saw the mariners cast abroad their ancient.”</p>
<p>Quoth Walter: “What then! Sawest thou the blazon
thereon, of a wolf-like beast ramping up against a maiden?
And that might well have been thou.”</p>
<p>She said: “Yea, so it was; but refrain thee, that I may
tell on my tale! The ship and the sea vanished away, but I
was not back in the hall of the Golden House; and again were we
three in the street of the self-same town which we had but just
left; but somewhat dim was my vision thereof, and I saw little
save the door of a goodly house before me, and speedily it died
out, and we were again in the pillared hall, wherein my thralldom
was made manifest.”</p>
<p>“Maiden,” said Walter, “one question I would
ask thee; to wit, didst thou see me on the quay by the
ships?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” she said, “there were many folk
about, but they were all as images of the aliens to me. Now
hearken further: three months thereafter came the dream upon me
again, when we were all three together in the Pillared Hall; and
again was the vision somewhat dim. Once more we were in the
street of a busy town, but all unlike to that other one, and
there were men standing together on our right hands by the door
of a house.”</p>
<p>“Yea, yea,” quoth Walter; “and, forsooth,
one of them was who but I.”</p>
<p>“Refrain thee, beloved!” she said; “for my
tale draweth to its ending, and I would have thee hearken
heedfully: for maybe thou shalt once again deem my deed past
pardon. Some twenty days after this last dream, I had some
leisure from my Mistress’s service, so I went to disport me
by the Well of the Oak-tree (or forsooth she might have set in my
mind the thought of going there, that I might meet thee and give
her some occasion against me); and I sat thereby, nowise loving
the earth, but sick at heart, because of late the King’s
Son had been more than ever instant with me to yield him my body,
threatening me else with casting me into all that the worst could
do to me of torments and shames day by day. I say my heart
failed me, and I was wellnigh brought to the point of yea-saying
his desires, that I might take the chance of something befalling
me that were less bad than the worst. But here must I tell
thee a thing, and pray thee to take it to heart. This, more
than aught else, had given me strength to nay-say that dastard,
that my wisdom both hath been, and now is, the wisdom of a wise
maid, and not of a woman, and all the might thereof shall I lose
with my maidenhead. Evil wilt thou think of me then, for
all I was tried so sore, that I was at point to cast it all away,
so wretchedly as I shrank from the horror of the Lady’s
wrath.”</p>
<p>“But there as I sat pondering these things, I saw a man
coming, and thought no otherwise thereof but that it was the
King’s Son, till I saw the stranger drawing near, and his
golden hair, and his grey eyes; and then I heard his voice, and
his kindness pierced my heart, and I knew that my friend had come
to see me; and O, friend, these tears are for the sweetness of
that past hour!”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “I came to see my friend, I also. Now
have I noted what thou badest me; and I will forbear all as thou
commandest me, till we be safe out of the desert and far away
from all evil things; but wilt thou ban me from all
caresses?”</p>
<p>She laughed amidst of her tears, and said: “O, nay, poor
lad, if thou wilt be but wise.”</p>
<p>Then she leaned toward him, and took his face betwixt her
hands and kissed him oft, and the tears started in his eyes for
love and pity of her.</p>
<p>Then she said: “Alas, friend! even yet mayst thou doom
me guilty, and all thy love may turn away from me, when I have
told thee all that I have done for the sake of thee and me.
O, if then there might be some chastisement for the guilty woman,
and not mere sundering!”</p>
<p>“Fear nothing, sweetling,” said he; “for
indeed I deem that already I know partly what thou hast
done.”</p>
<p>She sighed, and said: “I will tell thee next, that I
banned thy kissing and caressing of me till to-day because I knew
that my Mistress would surely know if a man, if thou, hadst so
much as touched a finger of mine in love, it was to try me herein
that on the morning of the hunting she kissed and embraced me,
till I almost died thereof, and showed thee my shoulder and my
limbs; and to try thee withal, if thine eye should glister or thy
cheek flush thereat; for indeed she was raging in jealousy of
thee. Next, my friend, even whiles we were talking together
at the Well of the Rock, I was pondering on what we should do to
escape from this land of lies. Maybe thou wilt say: Why
didst thou not take my hand and flee with me as we fled
to-day? Friend, it is most true, that were she not dead we
had not escaped thus far. For her trackers would have
followed us, set on by her, and brought us back to an evil
fate. Therefore I tell thee that from the first I did plot
the death of those two, the Dwarf and the Mistress. For no
otherwise mightest thou live, or I escape from death in
life. But as to the dastard who threatened me with a
thrall’s pains, I heeded him nought to live or die, for
well I knew that thy valiant sword, yea, or thy bare hands, would
speedily tame him. Now first I knew that I must make a show
of yielding to the King’s Son; and somewhat how I did
therein, thou knowest. But no night and no time did I give
him to bed me, till after I had met thee as thou wentest to the
Golden House, before the adventure of fetching the lion’s
skin; and up to that time I had scarce known what to do, save
ever to bid thee, with sore grief and pain, to yield thee to the
wicked woman’s desire. But as we spake together there
by the stream, and I saw that the Evil Thing (whose head thou
clavest e’en now) was spying on us, then amidst the
sickness of terror which ever came over me whensoever I thought
of him, and much more when I saw him (ah! he is dead now!), it
came flashing into my mind how I might destroy my enemy.
Therefore I made the Dwarf my messenger to her, by bidding thee
to my bed in such wise that he might hear it. And wot thou
well, that he speedily carried her the tidings. Meanwhile I
hastened to lie to the King’s Son, and all privily bade him
come to me and not thee. And thereafter, by dint of waiting
and watching, and taking the only chance that there was, I met
thee as thou camest back from fetching the skin of the lion that
never was, and gave thee that warning, or else had we been undone
indeed.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Was the lion of her making or of thine
then?”</p>
<p>She said: “Of hers: why should I deal with such a
matter?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said Walter, “but she verily swooned,
and she was verily wroth with the Enemy.”</p>
<p>The Maid smiled, and said: “If her lie was not like very
sooth, then had she not been the crafts-master that I knew her:
one may lie otherwise than with the tongue alone: yet indeed her
wrath against the Enemy was nought feigned; for the Enemy was
even I, and in these latter days never did her wrath leave
me. But to go on with my tale.”</p>
<p>“Now doubt thou not, that, when thou camest into the
hall yester eve, the Mistress knew of thy counterfeit tryst with
me, and meant nought but death for thee; yet first would she have
thee in her arms again, therefore did she make much of thee at
table (and that was partly for my torment also), and therefore
did she make that tryst with thee, and deemed doubtless that thou
wouldst not dare to forgo it, even if thou shouldst go to me
thereafter.”</p>
<p>“Now I had trained that dastard to me as I have told
thee, but I gave him a sleepy draught, so that when I came to the
bed he might not move toward me nor open his eyes: but I lay down
beside him, so that the Lady might know that my body had been
there; for well had she wotted if it had not. Then as there
I lay I cast over him thy shape, so that none might have known
but that thou wert lying by my side, and there, trembling, I
abode what should befall. Thus I passed through the hour
whenas thou shouldest have been at her chamber, and the time of
my tryst with thee was come as the Mistress would be deeming; so
that I looked for her speedily, and my heart wellnigh failed me
for fear of her cruelty.”</p>
<p>“Presently then I heard a stirring in her chamber, and I
slipped from out the bed, and hid me behind the hangings, and was
like to die for fear of her; and lo, presently she came stealing
in softly, holding a lamp in one hand and a knife in the
other. And I tell thee of a sooth that I also had a sharp
knife in my hand to defend my life if need were. She held
the lamp up above her head before she drew near to the bed-side,
and I heard her mutter: ‘She is not there then! but she
shall be taken.’ Then she went up to the bed and
stooped over it, and laid her hand on the place where I had lain;
and therewith her eyes turned to that false image of thee lying
there, and she fell a-trembling and shaking, and the lamp fell to
the ground and was quenched (but there was bright moonlight in
the room, and still I could see what betid). But she
uttered a noise like the low roar of a wild beast, and I saw her
arm and hand rise up, and the flashing of the steel beneath the
hand, and then down came the hand and the steel, and I went nigh
to swooning lest perchance I had wrought over well, and thine
image were thy very self. The dastard died without a groan:
why should I lament him? I cannot. But the Lady drew
him toward her, and snatched the clothes from off his shoulders
and breast, and fell a-gibbering sounds mostly without meaning,
but broken here and there with words. Then I heard her say:
‘I shall forget; I shall forget; and the new days shall
come.’ Then was there silence of her a little, and
thereafter she cried out in a terrible voice: ‘O no, no,
no! I cannot forget; I cannot forget;’ and she raised
a great wailing cry that filled all the night with horror (didst
thou not hear it?), and caught up the knife from the bed and
thrust it into her breast, and fell down a dead heap over the bed
and on to the man whom she had slain. And then I thought of
thee, and joy smote across my terror; how shall I gainsay
it? And I fled away to thee, and I took thine hands in
mine, thy dear hands, and we fled away together. Shall we
be still together?”</p>
<p>He spoke slowly, and touched her not, and she, forbearing all
sobbing and weeping, sat looking wistfully on him. He said:
“I think thou hast told me all; and whether thy guile slew
her, or her own evil heart, she was slain last night who lay in
mine arms the night before. It was ill, and ill done of me,
for I loved not her, but thee, and I wished for her death that I
might be with thee. Thou wottest this, and still thou
lovest me, it may be overweeningly. What have I to say
then? If there be any guilt of guile, I also was in the
guile; and if there be any guilt of murder, I also was in the
murder. Thus we say to each other; and to God and his
Hallows we say: ‘We two have conspired to slay the woman
who tormented one of us, and would have slain the other; and if
we have done amiss therein, then shall we two together pay the
penalty; for in this have we done as one body and one
soul.’”</p>
<p>Therewith he put his arms about her and kissed her, but
soberly and friendly, as if he would comfort her. And
thereafter he said to her: “Maybe to-morrow, in the
sunlight, I will ask thee of this woman, what she verily was; but
now let her be. And thou, thou art over-wearied, and I bid
thee sleep.”</p>
<p>So he went about and gathered of bracken a great heap for her
bed, and did his coat thereover, and led her thereto, and she lay
down meekly, and smiled and crossed her arms over her bosom, and
presently fell asleep. But as for him, he watched by the
fire-side till dawn began to glimmer, and then he also laid him
down and slept.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXV: OF THE TRIUMPHANT SUMMER ARRAY OF THE MAID</h2>
<p>When the day was bright Walter arose, and met the Maid coming
from the river-bank, fresh and rosy from the water. She
paled a little when they met face to face, and she shrank from
him shyly. But he took her hand and kissed her frankly; and
the two were glad, and had no need to tell each other of their
joy, though much else they deemed they had to say, could they
have found words thereto.</p>
<p>So they came to their fire and sat down, and fell to
breakfast; and ere they were done, the Maid said: “My
Master, thou seest we be come nigh unto the hill-country, and
to-day about sunset, belike, we shall come into the Land of the
Bear-folk; and both it is, that there is peril if we fall into
their hands, and that we may scarce escape them. Yet I deem
that we may deal with the peril by wisdom.”</p>
<p>“What is the peril?” said Walter; “I mean,
what is the worst of it?”</p>
<p>Said the Maid: “To be offered up in sacrifice to their
God.”</p>
<p>“But if we escape death at their hands, what
then?” said Walter.</p>
<p>“One of two things,” said she; “the first
that they shall take us into their tribe.”</p>
<p>“And will they sunder us in that case?” said
Walter.</p>
<p>“Nay,” said she.</p>
<p>Walter laughed and said: “Therein is little harm
then. But what is the other chance?”</p>
<p>Said she: “That we leave them with their goodwill, and
come back to one of the lands of Christendom.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “I am not all so sure that this is the
better of the two choices, though, forsooth, thou seemest to
think so. But tell me now, what like is their God, that
they should offer up new-comers to him?”</p>
<p>“Their God is a woman,” she said, “and the
Mother of their nation and tribes (or so they deem) before the
days when they had chieftains and Lords of Battle.”</p>
<p>“That will be long ago,” said he; “how then
may she be living now?”</p>
<p>Said the Maid: “Doubtless that woman of yore agone is
dead this many and many a year; but they take to them still a new
woman, one after other, as they may happen on them, to be in the
stead of the Ancient Mother. And to tell thee the very
truth right out, she that lieth dead in the Pillared Hall was
even the last of these; and now, if they knew it, they lack a
God. This shall we tell them.”</p>
<p>“Yea, yea!” said Walter, “a goodly welcome
shall we have of them then, if we come amongst them with our
hands red with the blood of their God!”</p>
<p>She smiled on him and said: “If I come amongst them with
the tidings that I have slain her, and they trow therein, without
doubt they shall make me Lady and Goddess in her
stead.”</p>
<p>“This is a strange word,” said Walter “but
if so they do, how shall that further us in reaching the kindreds
of the world, and the folk of Holy Church?”</p>
<p>She laughed outright, so joyous was she grown, now that she
knew that his life was yet to be a part of hers.
“Sweetheart,” she said, “now I see that thou
desirest wholly what I desire; yet in any case, abiding with them
would be living and not dying, even as thou hadst it e’en
now. But, forsooth, they will not hinder our departure if
they deem me their God; they do not look for it, nor desire it,
that their God should dwell with them daily. Have no
fear.” Then she laughed again, and said: “What!
thou lookest on me and deemest me to be but a sorry image of a
goddess; and me with my scanty coat and bare arms and naked
feet! But wait! I know well how to array me when the
time cometh. Thou shalt see it! And now, my Master,
were it not meet that we took to the road?”</p>
<p>So they arose, and found a ford of the river that took the
Maid but to the knee, and so set forth up the greensward of the
slopes whereas there were but few trees; so went they faring
toward the hill-country.</p>
<p>At the last they were come to the feet of the very hills, and
in the hollows betwixt the buttresses of them grew nut and berry
trees, and the greensward round about them was both thick and
much flowery. There they stayed them and dined, whereas
Walter had shot a hare by the way, and they had found a bubbling
spring under a grey stone in a bight of the coppice, wherein now
the birds were singing their best.</p>
<p>When they had eaten and had rested somewhat, the Maid arose
and said: “Now shall the Queen array herself, and seem like
a very goddess.”</p>
<p>Then she fell to work, while Walter looked on; and she made a
garland for her head of eglantine where the roses were the
fairest; and with mingled flowers of the summer she wreathed her
middle about, and let the garland of them hang down to below her
knees; and knots of the flowers she made fast to the skirts of
her coat, and did them for arm-rings about her arms, and for
anklets and sandals for her feet. Then she set a garland
about Walter’s head, and then stood a little off from him
and set her feet together, and lifted up her arms, and said:
“Lo now! am I not as like to the Mother of Summer as if I
were clad in silk and gold? and even so shall I be deemed by the
folk of the Bear. Come now, thou shalt see how all shall be
well.”</p>
<p>She laughed joyously; but he might scarce laugh for pity of
his love. Then they set forth again, and began to climb the
hills, and the hours wore as they went in sweet converse; till at
last Walter looked on the Maid, and smiled on her, and said:
“One thing I would say to thee, lovely friend, to wit: wert
thou clad in silk and gold, thy stately raiment might well suffer
a few stains, or here and there a rent maybe; but stately would
it be still when the folk of the Bear should come up against
thee. But as to this flowery array of thine, in a few hours
it shall be all faded and nought. Nay, even now, as I look
on thee, the meadow-sweet that hangeth from thy girdle-stead has
waxen dull, and welted; and the blossoming eyebright that is for
a hem to the little white coat of thee is already forgetting how
to be bright and blue. What sayest thou then?”</p>
<p>She laughed at his word, and stood still, and looked back over
her shoulder, while with her fingers she dealt with the flowers
about her side like to a bird preening his feathers. Then
she said: “Is it verily so as thou sayest? Look
again!”</p>
<p>So he looked, and wondered; for lo! beneath his eyes the
spires of the meadow-sweet grew crisp and clear again, the
eyebright blossoms shone once more over the whiteness of her
legs; the eglantine roses opened, and all was as fresh and bright
as if it were still growing on its own roots.</p>
<p>He wondered, and was even somedeal aghast; but she said:
“Dear friend, be not troubled! did I not tell thee that I
am wise in hidden lore? But in my wisdom shall be no longer
any scathe to any man. And again, this my wisdom, as I told
thee erst, shall end on the day whereon I am made all
happy. And it is thou that shall wield it all, my
Master. Yet must my wisdom needs endure for a little season
yet. Let us on then, boldly and happily.”</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXVI: THEY COME TO THE FOLK OF THE BEARS</h2>
<p>On they went, and before long they were come up on to the
down-country, where was scarce a tree, save gnarled and knotty
thorn-bushes here and there, but nought else higher than the
whin. And here on these upper lands they saw that the
pastures were much burned with the drought, albeit summer was not
worn old. Now they went making due south toward the
mountains, whose heads they saw from time to time rising deep
blue over the bleak greyness of the down-land ridges. And
so they went, till at last, hard on sunset, after they had
climbed long over a high bent, they came to the brow thereof,
and, looking down, beheld new tidings.</p>
<p>There was a wide valley below them, greener than the downs
which they had come over, and greener yet amidmost, from the
watering of a stream which, all beset with willows, wound about
the bottom. Sheep and neat were pasturing about the dale,
and moreover a long line of smoke was going up straight into the
windless heavens from the midst of a ring of little round houses
built of turfs, and thatched with reed. And beyond that,
toward an eastward-lying bight of the dale, they could see what
looked like to a doom-ring of big stones, though there were no
rocky places in that land. About the cooking-fire amidst of
the houses, and here and there otherwhere, they saw, standing or
going to and fro, huge figures of men and women, with children
playing about betwixt them.</p>
<p>They stood and gazed down at it for a minute or two, and
though all were at peace there, yet to Walter, at least, it
seemed strange and awful. He spake softly, as though he
would not have his voice reach those men, though they were,
forsooth, out of earshot of anything save a shout: “Are
these then the children of the Bear? What shall we do
now?”</p>
<p>She said: “Yea, of the Bear they be, though there be
other folks of them far and far away to the northward and
eastward, near to the borders of the sea. And as to what we
shall do, let us go down at once, and peacefully. Indeed,
by now there will be no escape from them; for lo you! they have
seen us.”</p>
<p>Forsooth, some three or four of the big men had turned them
toward the bent whereon stood the twain, and were hailing them in
huge, rough voices, wherein, howsoever, seemed to be no anger or
threat. So the Maid took Walter by the hand, and thus they
went down quietly, and the Bear-folk, seeing them, stood all
together, facing them, to abide their coming. Walter saw of
them, that though they were very tall and bigly made, they were
not so far above the stature of men as to be marvels. The
carles were long-haired, and shaggy of beard, and their hair all
red or tawny; their skins, where their naked flesh showed, were
burned brown with sun and weather, but to a fair and pleasant
brown, nought like to blackamoors. The queans were comely
and well-eyed; nor was there anything of fierce or evil-looking
about either the carles or the queans, but somewhat grave and
solemn of aspect were they. Clad were they all, saving the
young men-children, but somewhat scantily, and in nought save
sheep-skins or deer-skins.</p>
<p>For weapons they saw amongst them clubs, and spears headed
with bone or flint, and ugly axes of big flints set in wooden
handles; nor was there, as far as they could see, either now or
afterward, any bow amongst them. But some of the young men
seemed to have slings done about their shoulders.</p>
<p>Now when they were come but three fathom from them, the Maid
lifted up her voice, and spake clearly and sweetly: “Hail,
ye folk of the Bears! we have come amongst you, and that for your
good and not for your hurt: wherefore we would know if we be
welcome.”</p>
<p>There was an old man who stood foremost in the midst, clad in
a mantle of deer-skins worked very goodly, and with a gold ring
on his arm, and a chaplet of blue stones on his head, and he
spake: “Little are ye, but so goodly, that if ye were but
bigger, we should deem that ye were come from the Gods’
House. Yet have I heard, that how mighty soever may the
Gods be, and chiefly our God, they be at whiles nought so bigly
made as we of the Bears. How this may be, I wot not.
But if ye be not of the Gods or their kindred, then are ye mere
aliens; and we know not what to do with aliens, save we meet them
in battle, or give them to the God, or save we make them children
of the Bear. But yet again, ye may be messengers of some
folk who would bind friendship and alliance with us: in which
case ye shall at the least depart in peace, and whiles ye are
with us shall be our guests in all good cheer. Now,
therefore, we bid you declare the matter unto us.”</p>
<p>Then spake the Maid: “Father, it were easy for us to
declare what we be unto you here present. But, meseemeth,
ye who be gathered round the fire here this evening are less than
the whole tale of the children of the Bear.”</p>
<p>“So it is, Maiden,” said the elder, “that
many more children hath the Bear.”</p>
<p>“This then we bid you,” said the Maid, “that
ye send the tokens round and gather your people to you, and when
they be assembled in the Doom-ring, then shall we put our errand
before you; and according to that, shall ye deal with
us.”</p>
<p>“Thou hast spoken well,” said the elder;
“and even so had we bidden you ourselves. To-morrow,
before noon, shall ye stand in the Doom-ring in this Dale, and
speak with the children of the Bear.”</p>
<p>Therewith he turned to his own folk and called out something,
whereof those twain knew not the meaning; and there came to him,
one after another, six young men, unto each of whom he gave a
thing from out his pouch, but what it was Walter might not see,
save that it was little and of small account: to each, also, he
spake a word or two, and straight they set off running, one after
the other, turning toward the bent which was over against that
whereby the twain had come into the Dale, and were soon out of
sight in the gathering dusk.</p>
<p>Then the elder turned him again to Walter and the Maid, and
spake: “Man and woman, whatsoever ye may be, or whatsoever
may abide you to-morrow, to-night, ye are welcome guests to us;
so we bid you come eat and drink at our fire.”</p>
<p>So they sat all together upon the grass round about the embers
of the fire, and ate curds and cheese, and drank milk in
abundance; and as the night grew on them they quickened the fire,
that they might have light. This wild folk talked merrily
amongst themselves, with laughter enough and friendly jests, but
to the new-comers they were few-spoken, though, as the twain
deemed, for no enmity that they bore them. But this found
Walter, that the younger ones, both men and women, seemed to find
it a hard matter to keep their eyes off them; and seemed, withal,
to gaze on them with somewhat of doubt, or, it might be, of
fear.</p>
<p>So when the night was wearing a little, the elder arose and
bade the twain to come with him, and led them to a small house or
booth, which was amidmost of all, and somewhat bigger than the
others, and he did them to wit that they should rest there that
night, and bade them sleep in peace and without fear till the
morrow. So they entered, and found beds thereon of heather
and ling, and they laid them down sweetly, like brother and
sister, when they had kissed each other. But they noted
that four brisk men lay without the booth, and across the door,
with their weapons beside them, so that they must needs look upon
themselves as captives.</p>
<p>Then Walter might not refrain him, but spake: “Sweet and
dear friend, I have come a long way from the quay at Langton, and
the vision of the Dwarf, the Maid, and the Lady; and for this
kiss wherewith I have kissed thee e’en now, and the
kindness of thine eyes, it was worth the time and the
travail. But to-morrow, meseemeth, I shall go no further in
this world, though my journey be far longer than from Langton
hither. And now may God and All Hallows keep thee amongst
this wild folk, whenas I shall be gone from thee.”</p>
<p>She laughed low and sweetly, and said: “Dear friend,
dost thou speak to me thus mournfully to move me to love thee
better? Then is thy labour lost; for no better may I love
thee than now I do; and that is with mine whole heart. But
keep a good courage, I bid thee; for we be not sundered yet, nor
shall we be. Nor do I deem that we shall die here, or
to-morrow; but many years hence, after we have known all the
sweetness of life. Meanwhile, I bid thee good-night, fair
friend!”</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXVII: MORNING AMONGST THE BEARS</h2>
<p>So Walter laid him down and fell asleep, and knew no more till
he awoke in bright daylight with the Maid standing over
him. She was fresh from the water, for she had been to the
river to bathe her, and the sun through the open door fell
streaming on her feet close to Walter’s pillow. He
turned about and cast his arm about them, and caressed them,
while she stood smiling upon him; then he arose and looked on
her, and said: “How thou art fair and bright this
morning! And yet . . . and yet . . . were it not well that
thou do off thee all this faded and drooping bravery of leaves
and blossoms, that maketh thee look like to a jongleur’s
damsel on a morrow of May-day?”</p>
<p>And he gazed ruefully on her.</p>
<p>She laughed on him merrily, and said: “Yea, and belike
these others think no better of my attire, or not much better;
for yonder they are gathering small wood for the burnt-offering;
which, forsooth, shall be thou and I, unless I better it all by
means of the wisdom I learned of the old woman, and perfected
betwixt the stripes of my Mistress, whom a little while ago thou
lovedst somewhat.”</p>
<p>And as she spake her eyes sparkled, her cheek flushed, and her
limbs and her feet seemed as if they could scarce refrain from
dancing for joy. Then Walter knit his brow, and for a
moment a thought half-framed was in his mind: Is it so, that she
will bewray me and live without me? and he cast his eyes on to
the ground. But she said: “Look up, and into mine
eyes, friend, and see if there be in them any falseness toward
thee! For I know thy thought; I know thy thought.
Dost thou not see that my joy and gladness is for the love of
thee, and the thought of the rest from trouble that is at
hand?”</p>
<p>He looked up, and his eyes met the eyes of her love, and he
would have cast his arms about her; but she drew aback and said:
“Nay, thou must refrain thee awhile, dear friend, lest
these folk cast eyes on us, and deem us over lover-like for what
I am to bid them deem me. Abide a while, and then shall all
be in me according to thy will. But now I must tell thee
that it is not very far from noon, and that the Bears are
streaming into the Dale, and already there is an host of men at
the Doom-ring, and, as I said, the bale for the burnt-offering is
wellnigh dight, whether it be for us, or for some other
creature. And now I have to bid thee this, and it will be a
thing easy for thee to do, to wit, that thou look as if thou wert
of the race of the Gods, and not to blench, or show sign of
blenching, whatever betide: to yea-say both my yea-say and my
nay-say: and lastly this, which is the only hard thing for thee
(but thou hast already done it before somewhat), to look upon me
with no masterful eyes of love, nor as if thou wert at once
praying me and commanding me; rather thou shalt so demean thee as
if thou wert my man all simply, and nowise my master.”</p>
<p>“O friend beloved,” said Walter, “here at
least art thou the master, and I will do all thy bidding, in
certain hope of this, that either we shall live together or die
together.”</p>
<p>But as they spoke, in came the elder, and with him a young
maiden, bearing with them their breakfast of curds arid cream and
strawberries, and he bade them eat. So they ate, and were
not unmerry; and the while of their eating the elder talked with
them soberly, but not hardly, or with any seeming enmity: and
ever his talk gat on to the drought, which was now burning up the
down-pastures; and how the grass in the watered dales, which was
no wide spread of land, would not hold out much longer unless the
God sent them rain. And Walter noted that those two, the
elder and the Maid, eyed each other curiously amidst of this
talk; the elder intent on what she might say, and if she gave
heed to his words; while on her side the Maid answered his speech
graciously and pleasantly, but said little that was of any
import: nor would she have him fix her eyes, which wandered
lightly from this thing to that; nor would her lips grow stern
and stable, but ever smiled in answer to the light of her eyes,
as she sat there with her face as the very face of the gladness
of the summer day.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXVIII: OF THE NEW GOD OF THE BEARS</h2>
<p>At last the old man said: “My children, ye shall now
come with me unto the Doom-ring of our folk, the Bears of the
Southern Dales, and deliver to them your errand; and I beseech
you to have pity upon your own bodies, as I have pity on them; on
thine especially, Maiden, so fair and bright a creature as thou
art; for so it is, that if ye deal us out light and lying words
after the manner of dastards, ye shall miss the worship and glory
of wending away amidst of the flames, a gift to the God and a
hope to the people, and shall be passed by the rods of the folk,
until ye faint and fail amongst them, and then shall ye be thrust
down into the flow at the Dale’s End, and a stone-laden
hurdle cast upon you, that we may thenceforth forget your
folly.”</p>
<p>The Maid now looked full into his eyes, and Walter deemed that
the old man shrank before her; but she said: “Thou art old
and wise, O great man of the Bears, yet nought I need to learn of
thee. Now lead us on our way to the Stead of the
Errands.”</p>
<p>So the elder brought them along to the Doom-ring at the
eastern end of the Dale; and it was now all peopled with those
huge men, weaponed after their fashion, and standing up, so that
the grey stones thereof but showed a little over their
heads. But amidmost of the said Ring was a big stone,
fashioned as a chair, whereon sat a very old man, long-hoary and
white-bearded, and on either side of him stood a great-limbed
woman clad in war-gear, holding, each of them, a long spear, and
with a flint-bladed knife in the girdle; and there were no other
women in all the Mote.</p>
<p>Then the elder led those twain into the midst of the Mote, and
there bade them go up on to a wide, flat-topped stone, six feet
above the ground, just over against the ancient chieftain; and
they mounted it by a rough stair, and stood there before that
folk; Walter in his array of the outward world, which had been
fair enough, of crimson cloth and silk, and white linen, but was
now travel-stained and worn; and the Maid with nought upon her,
save the smock wherein she had fled from the Golden House of the
Wood beyond the World, decked with the faded flowers which she
had wreathed about her yesterday. Nevertheless, so it was,
that those big men eyed her intently, and with somewhat of
worship.</p>
<p>Now did Walter, according to her bidding, sink down on his
knees beside her, and drawing his sword, hold it before him, as
if to keep all interlopers aloof from the Maid. And there
was silence in the Mote, and all eyes were fixed on those
twain.</p>
<p>At last the old chief arose and spake: “Ye men, here are
come a man and a woman, we know not whence; whereas they have
given word to our folk who first met them, that they would tell
their errand to none save the Mote of the People; which it was
their due to do, if they were minded to risk it. For either
they be aliens without an errand hither, save, it may be, to
beguile us, in which case they shall presently die an evil death;
or they have come amongst us that we may give them to the God
with flint-edge and fire; or they have a message to us from some
folk or other, on the issue of which lieth life or death.
Now shall ye hear what they have to say concerning themselves and
their faring hither. But, meseemeth, it shall be the woman
who is the chief and hath the word in her mouth; for, lo you! the
man kneeleth at her feet, as one who would serve and worship
her. Speak out then, woman, and let our warriors hear
thee.”</p>
<p>Then the Maid lifted up her voice, and spake out clear and
shrilling, like to a flute of the best of the minstrels:
“Ye men of the Children of the Bear, I would ask you a
question, and let the chieftain who sitteth before me answer
it.”</p>
<p>The old man nodded his head, and she went on: “Tell me,
Children of the Bear, how long a time is worn since ye saw the
God of your worship made manifest in the body of a
woman!”</p>
<p>Said the elder: “Many winters have worn since my
father’s father was a child, and saw the very God in the
bodily form of a woman.”</p>
<p>Then she said again: “Did ye rejoice at her coming, and
would ye rejoice if once more she came amongst you?”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the old chieftain, “for she gave
us gifts, and learned us lore, and came to us in no terrible
shape, but as a young woman as goodly as thou.”</p>
<p>Then said the Maid: “Now, then, is the day of your
gladness come; for the old body is dead, and I am the new body of
your God, come amongst you for your welfare.”</p>
<p>Then fell a great silence on the Mote, till the old man spake
and said: “What shall I say and live? For if thou be
verily the God, and I threaten thee, wilt thou not destroy
me? But thou hast spoken a great word with a sweet mouth,
and hast taken the burden of blood on thy lily hands; and if the
Children of the Bear be befooled of light liars, how shall they
put the shame off them? Therefore I say, show to us a
token; and if thou be the God, this shall be easy to thee; and if
thou show it not, then is thy falsehood manifest, and thou shalt
dree the weird. For we shall deliver thee into the hands of
these women here, who shall thrust thee down into the flow which
is hereby, after they have wearied themselves with whipping
thee. But thy man that kneeleth at thy feet shall we give
to the true God, and he shall go to her by the road of the flint
and the fire. Hast thou heard? Then give to us the
sign and the token.”</p>
<p>She changed countenance no whit at his word; but her eyes were
the brighter, and her cheek the fresher and her feet moved a
little, as if they were growing glad before the dance; and she
looked out over the Mote, and spake in her clear voice:
“Old man, thou needest not to fear for thy words.
Forsooth it is not me whom thou threatenest with stripes and a
foul death, but some light fool and liar, who is not here.
Now hearken! I wot well that ye would have somewhat of me,
to wit, that I should send you rain to end this drought, which
otherwise seemeth like to lie long upon you: but this rain, I
must go into the mountains of the south to fetch it you;
therefore shall certain of your warriors bring me on my way, with
this my man, up to the great pass of the said mountains, and we
shall set out thitherward this very day.”</p>
<p>She was silent a while, and all looked on her, but none spake
or moved, so that they seemed as images of stone amongst the
stones.</p>
<p>Then she spake again and said: “Some would say, men of
the Bear, that this were a sign and a token great enough; but I
know you, and how stubborn and perverse of heart ye be; and how
that the gift not yet within your hand is no gift to you; and the
wonder ye see not, your hearts trow not. Therefore look ye
upon me as here I stand, I who have come from the fairer country
and the greenwood of the lands, and see if I bear not the summer
with me, and the heart that maketh increase and the hand that
giveth.”</p>
<p>Lo then! as she spake, the faded flowers that hung about her
gathered life and grew fresh again; the woodbine round her neck
and her sleek shoulders knit itself together and embraced her
freshly, and cast its scent about her face. The lilies that
girded her loins lifted up their heads, and the gold of their
tassels fell upon her; the eyebright grew clean blue again upon
her smock; the eglantine found its blooms again, and then began
to shed the leaves thereof upon her feet; the meadow-sweet
wreathed amongst it made clear the sweetness of her legs, and the
mouse-ear studded her raiment as with gems. There she stood
amidst of the blossoms, like a great orient pearl against the
fretwork of the goldsmiths, and the breeze that came up the
valley from behind bore the sweetness of her fragrance all over
the Man-mote.</p>
<p>Then, indeed, the Bears stood up, and shouted and cried, and
smote on their shields, and tossed their spears aloft. Then
the elder rose from his seat, and came up humbly to where she
stood, and prayed her to say what she would have done; while the
others drew about in knots, but durst not come very nigh to
her. She answered the ancient chief, and said, that she
would depart presently toward the mountains, whereby she might
send them the rain which they lacked, and that thence she would
away to the southward for a while; but that they should hear of
her, or, it might be, see her, before they who were now of middle
age should be gone to their fathers.</p>
<p>Then the old man besought her that they might make her a
litter of fragrant green boughs, and so bear her away toward the
mountain pass amidst a triumph of the whole folk. But she
leapt lightly down from the stone, and walked to and fro on the
greensward, while it seemed of her that her feet scarce touched
the grass; and she spake to the ancient chief where he still
kneeled in worship of her, and said “Nay; deemest thou of
me that I need bearing by men’s hands, or that I shall tire
at all when I am doing my will, and I, the very heart of the
year’s increase? So it is, that the going of my feet
over your pastures shall make them to thrive, both this year and
the coming years: surely will I go afoot.”</p>
<p>So they worshipped her the more, and blessed her; and then
first of all they brought meat, the daintiest they might, both
for her and for Walter. But they would not look on the Maid
whiles she ate, or suffer Walter to behold her the while.
Afterwards, when they had eaten, some twenty men, weaponed after
their fashion, made them ready to wend with the Maiden up into
the mountains, and anon they set out thitherward all
together. Howbeit, the huge men held them ever somewhat
aloof from the Maid; and when they came to the resting-place for
that night, where was no house, for it was up amongst the
foot-hills before the mountains, then it was a wonder to see how
carefully they built up a sleeping-place for her, and tilted it
over with their skin-cloaks, and how they watched nightlong about
her. But Walter they let sleep peacefully on the grass, a
little way aloof from the watchers round the Maid.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXIX: WALTER STRAYS IN THE PASS AND IS SUNDERED FROM THE MAID</h2>
<p>Morning came, and they arose and went on their ways, and went
all day till the sun was nigh set, and they were come up into the
very pass; and in the jaws thereof was an earthen howe.
There the Maid bade them stay, and she went up on to the howe,
and stood there and spake to them, and said: “O men of the
Bear, I give you thanks for your following, and I bless you, and
promise you the increase of the earth. But now ye shall
turn aback, and leave me to go my ways; and my man with the iron
sword shall follow me. Now, maybe, I shall come amongst the
Bear-folk again before long, and yet again, and learn them
wisdom; but for this time it is enough. And I shall tell
you that ye were best to hasten home straightway to your houses
in the downland dales, for the weather which I have bidden for
you is even now coming forth from the forge of storms in the
heart of the mountains. Now this last word I give you, that
times are changed since I wore the last shape of God that ye have
seen, wherefore a change I command you. If so be aliens
come amongst you, I will not that ye send them to me by the flint
and the fire; rather, unless they be baleful unto you, and worthy
of an evil death, ye shall suffer them to abide with you; ye
shall make them become children of the Bears, if they be goodly
enough and worthy, and they shall be my children as ye be;
otherwise, if they be ill-favoured and weakling, let them live
and be thralls to you, but not join with you, man to woman.
Now depart ye with my blessing.”</p>
<p>Therewith she came down from the mound, and went her ways up
the pass so lightly, that it was to Walter, standing amongst the
Bears, as if she had vanished away. But the men of that
folk abode standing and worshipping their God for a little while,
and that while he durst not sunder him from their company.
But when they had blessed him and gone on their way backward, he
betook him in haste to following the Maid, thinking to find her
abiding him in some nook of the pass.</p>
<p>Howsoever, it was now twilight or more, and, for all his
haste, dark night overtook him, so that perforce he was stayed
amidst the tangle of the mountain ways. And, moreover, ere
the night was grown old, the weather came upon him on the back of
a great south wind, so that the mountain nooks rattled and
roared, and there was the rain and the hail, with thunder and
lightning, monstrous and terrible, and all the huge array of a
summer storm. So he was driven at last to crouch under a
big rock and abide the day.</p>
<p>But not so were his troubles at an end. For under the
said rock he fell asleep, and when he awoke it was day indeed;
but as to the pass, the way thereby was blind with the driving
rain and the lowering lift; so that, though he struggled as well
as he might against the storm and the tangle, he made but little
way.</p>
<p>And now once more the thought came on him, that the Maid was
of the fays, or of some race even mightier; and it came on him
now not as erst, with half fear and whole desire, but with a
bitter oppression of dread, of loss and misery; so that he began
to fear that she had but won his love to leave him and forget him
for a new-comer, after the wont of fay-women, as old tales
tell.</p>
<p>Two days he battled thus with storm and blindness, and wanhope
of his life; for he was growing weak and fordone. But the
third morning the storm abated, though the rain yet fell heavily,
and he could see his way somewhat as well as feel it: withal he
found that now his path was leading him downwards. As it
grew dusk, he came down into a grassy valley with a stream
running through it to the southward, and the rain was now but
little, coming down but in dashes from time to time. So he
crept down to the stream-side, and lay amongst the bushes there;
and said to himself, that on the morrow he would get him victual,
so that he might live to seek his Maiden through the wide
world. He was of somewhat better heart: but now that he was
laid quiet, and had no more for that present to trouble him about
the way, the anguish of his loss fell upon him the keener, and he
might not refrain him from lamenting his dear Maiden aloud, as
one who deemed himself in the empty wilderness: and thus he
lamented for her sweetness and her loveliness, and the kindness
of her voice and her speech, and her mirth. Then he fell to
crying out concerning the beauty of her shaping, praising the
parts of her body, as her face, and her hands, and her shoulders,
and her feet, and cursing the evil fate which had sundered him
from the friendliness of her, and the peerless fashion of
her.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXX: NOW THEY MEET AGAIN</h2>
<p>Complaining thus-wise, he fell asleep from sheer weariness,
and when he awoke it was broad day, calm and bright and
cloudless, with the scent of the earth refreshed going up into
the heavens, and the birds singing sweetly in the bushes about
him: for the dale whereunto he was now come was a fair and lovely
place amidst the shelving slopes of the mountains, a paradise of
the wilderness, and nought but pleasant and sweet things were to
be seen there, now that the morn was so clear and sunny.</p>
<p>He arose and looked about him, and saw where, a hundred yards
aloof, was a thicket of small wood, as thorn and elder and
whitebeam, all wreathed about with the bines of wayfaring tree;
it hid a bight of the stream, which turned round about it, and
betwixt it and Walter was the grass short and thick, and sweet,
and all beset with flowers; and he said to himself that it was
even such a place as wherein the angels were leading the Blessed
in the great painted paradise in the choir of the big church at
Langton on Holm. But lo! as he looked he cried aloud for
joy, for forth from the thicket on to the flowery grass came one
like to an angel from out of the said picture, white-clad and
bare-foot, sweet of flesh, with bright eyes and ruddy cheeks; for
it was the Maid herself. So he ran to her, and she abode
him, holding forth kind hands to him, and smiling, while she wept
for joy of the meeting. He threw himself upon her, and
spared not to kiss her, her cheeks and her mouth, and her arms
and her shoulders, and wheresoever she would suffer it.
Till at last she drew aback a little, laughing on him for love,
and said: “Forbear now, friend, for it is enough for this
time, and tell me how thou hast sped.”</p>
<p>“Ill, ill,” said he.</p>
<p>“What ails thee?” she said.</p>
<p>“Hunger,” he said, “and longing for
thee.”</p>
<p>“Well,” she said, “me thou hast; there is
one ill quenched; take my hand, and we will see to the other
one.”</p>
<p>So he took her hand, and to hold it seemed to him sweet beyond
measure. But he looked up, and saw a little blue smoke
going up into the air from beyond the thicket; and he laughed,
for he was weak with hunger, and he said: “Who is at the
cooking yonder?”</p>
<p>“Thou shalt see,” she said; and led him therewith
into the said thicket and through it, and lo! a fair little
grassy place, full of flowers, betwixt the bushes and the bight
of the stream; and on the little sandy ere, just off the
greensward, was a fire of sticks, and beside it two trouts lying,
fat and red-flecked.</p>
<p>“Here is the breakfast,” said she; “when it
was time to wash the night off me e’en now, I went down the
strand here into the rippling shallow, and saw the bank below it,
where the water draws together yonder, and deepens, that it
seemed like to hold fish; and whereas I looked to meet thee
presently, I groped the bank for them, going softly; and lo
thou! Help me now, that we cook them.”</p>
<p>So they roasted them on the red embers, and fell to and ate
well, both of them, and drank of the water of the stream out of
each other’s hollow hands; and that feast seemed glorious
to them, such gladness went with it.</p>
<p>But when they were done with their meat, Walter said to the
Maid: “And how didst thou know that thou shouldst see me
presently?”</p>
<p>She said, looking on him wistfully: “This needed no
wizardry. I lay not so far from thee last night, but that I
heard thy voice and knew it.”</p>
<p>Said he, “Why didst thou not come to me then, since thou
heardest me bemoaning thee?”</p>
<p>She cast her eyes down, and plucked at the flowers and grass,
and said: “It was dear to hear thee praising me; I knew not
before that I was so sore desired, or that thou hadst taken such
note of my body, and found it so dear.”</p>
<p>Then she reddened sorely, and said: “I knew not that
aught of me had such beauty as thou didst bewail.”</p>
<p>And she wept for joy. Then she looked on him and smiled,
and said: “Wilt thou have the very truth of it? I
went close up to thee, and stood there hidden by the bushes and
the night. And amidst thy bewailing, I knew that thou
wouldst soon fall asleep, and in sooth I out-waked
thee.”</p>
<p>Then was she silent again; and he spake not, but looked on her
shyly; and she said, reddening yet more: “Furthermore, I
must needs tell thee that I feared to go to thee in the dark
night, and my heart so yearning towards thee.”</p>
<p>And she hung her head adown; but he said: “Is it so
indeed, that thou fearest me? Then doth that make me
afraid—afraid of thy nay-say. For I was going to
entreat thee, and say to thee: Beloved, we have now gone through
many troubles; let us now take a good reward at once, and wed
together, here amidst this sweet and pleasant house of the
mountains, ere we go further on our way; if indeed we go further
at all. For where shall we find any place sweeter or
happier than this?”</p>
<p>But she sprang up to her feet, and stood there trembling
before him, because of her love; and she said: “Beloved, I
have deemed that it were good for us to go seek mankind as they
live in the world, and to live amongst them. And as for me,
I will tell thee the sooth, to wit, that I long for this
sorely. For I feel afraid in the wilderness, and as if I
needed help and protection against my Mistress, though she be
dead; and I need the comfort of many people, and the throngs of
the cities. I cannot forget her: it was but last night that
I dreamed (I suppose as the dawn grew a-cold) that I was yet
under her hand, and she was stripping me for the torment; so that
I woke up panting and crying out. I pray thee be not angry
with me for telling thee of my desires; for if thou wouldst not
have it so, then here will I abide with thee as thy mate, and
strive to gather courage.”</p>
<p>He rose up and kissed her face, and said: “Nay, I had in
sooth no mind to abide here for ever; I meant but that we should
feast a while here, and then depart: sooth it is, that if thou
dreadest the wilderness, somewhat I dread the city.”</p>
<p>She turned pale, and said: “Thou shalt have thy will, my
friend, if it must be so. But bethink thee we be not yet at
our journey’s end, and may have many things and much strife
to endure, before we be at peace and in welfare. Now shall
I tell thee—did I not before?—that while I am a maid
untouched, my wisdom, and somedeal of might, abideth with me, and
only so long. Therefore I entreat thee, let us go now, side
by side, out of this fair valley, even as we are, so that my
wisdom and might may help thee at need. For, my friend, I
would not that our lives be short, so much of joy as hath now
come into them.”</p>
<p>“Yea, beloved,” he said, “let us on
straightway then, and shorten the while that sundereth
us.”</p>
<p>“Love,” she said, “thou shalt pardon me one
time for all. But this is to be said, that I know somewhat
of the haps that lie a little way ahead of us; partly by my lore,
and partly by what I learned of this land of the wild folk whiles
thou wert lying asleep that morning.”</p>
<p>So they left that pleasant place by the water, and came into
the open valley, and went their ways through the pass; and it
soon became stony again, as they mounted the bent which went up
from out the dale. And when they came to the brow of the
said bent, they had a sight of the open country lying fair and
joyous in the sunshine, and amidst of it, against the blue hills,
the walls and towers of a great city.</p>
<p>Then said the Maid: “O, dear friend, lo you! is not that
our abode that lieth yonder, and is so beauteous? Dwell not
our friends there, and our protection against uncouth wights, and
mere evil things in guileful shapes? O city, I bid thee
hail!”</p>
<p>But Walter looked on her, and smiled somewhat; and said:
“I rejoice in thy joy. But there be evil things in
yonder city also, though they be not fays nor devils, or it is
like to no city that I wot of. And in every city shall foes
grow up to us without rhyme or reason, and life therein shall be
tangled unto us.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” she said; “but in the wilderness
amongst the devils, what was to be done by manly might or
valiancy? There hadst thou to fall back upon the guile and
wizardry which I had filched from my very foes. But when we
come down yonder, then shall thy valiancy prevail to cleave the
tangle for us. Or at the least, it shall leave a tale of
thee behind, and I shall worship thee.”</p>
<p>He laughed, and his face grew brighter: “Mastery mows
the meadow,” quoth he, “and one man is of little
might against many. But I promise thee I shall not be
slothful before thee.”</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXXI: THEY COME UPON NEW FOLK</h2>
<p>With that they went down from the bent again, and came to
where the pass narrowed so much, that they went betwixt a steep
wall of rock on either side; but after an hour’s going, the
said wall gave back suddenly, and, or they were ware almost, they
came on another dale like to that which they had left, but not so
fair, though it was grassy and well watered, and not so big
either. But here indeed befell a change to them; for lo!
tents and pavilions pitched in the said valley, and amidst of it
a throng of men, mostly weaponed, and with horses ready saddled
at hand. So they stayed their feet, and Walter’s
heart failed him, for he said to himself: Who wotteth what these
men may be, save that they be aliens? It is most like that
we shall be taken as thralls; and then, at the best, we shall be
sundered; and that is all one with the worst.</p>
<p>But the Maid, when she saw the horses, and the gay tents, and
the pennons fluttering, and the glitter of spears, and gleaming
of white armour, smote her palms together for joy, and cried out:
“Here now are come the folk of the city for our welcoming,
and fair and lovely are they, and of many things shall they be
thinking, and a many things shall they do, and we shall be
partakers thereof. Come then, and let us meet them, fair
friend!”</p>
<p>But Walter said: “Alas! thou knowest not: would that we
might flee! But now is it over late; so put we a good face
on it, and go to them quietly, as erewhile we did in the
Bear-country.”</p>
<p>So did they; and there sundered six from the men-at-arms and
came to those twain, and made humble obeisance to Walter, but
spake no word. Then they made as they would lead them to
the others, and the twain went with them wondering, and came into
the ring of men-at-arms, and stood before an old hoar knight,
armed all, save his head, with most goodly armour, and he also
bowed before Walter, but spake no word. Then they took them
to the master pavilion, and made signs to them to sit, and they
brought them dainty meat and good wine. And the while of
their eating arose up a stir about them; and when they were done
with their meat, the ancient knight came to them, still bowing in
courteous wise, and did them to wit by signs that they should
depart: and when they were without, they saw all the other tents
struck, and men beginning to busy them with striking the
pavilion, and the others mounted and ranked in good order for the
road; and there were two horse-litters before them, wherein they
were bidden to mount, Walter in one, and the Maid in the other,
and no otherwise might they do. Then presently was a horn
blown, and all took to the road together; and Walter saw betwixt
the curtains of the litter that men-at-arms rode on either side
of him, albeit they had left him his sword by his side.</p>
<p>So they went down the mountain-passes, and before sunset were
gotten into the plain; but they made no stay for nightfall, save
to eat a morsel and drink a draught, going through the night as
men who knew their way well. As they went, Walter wondered
what would betide, and if peradventure they also would be for
offering them up to their Gods; whereas they were aliens for
certain, and belike also Saracens. Moreover there was a
cold fear at his heart that he should be sundered from the Maid,
whereas their masters now were mighty men of war, holding in
their hands that which all men desire, to wit, the manifest
beauty of a woman. Yet he strove to think the best of it
that he might. And so at last, when the night was far
spent, and dawn was at hand, they stayed at a great and mighty
gate in a huge wall. There they blew loudly on the horn
thrice, and thereafter the gates were opened, and they all passed
through into a street, which seemed to Walter in the glimmer to
be both great and goodly amongst the abodes of men. Then it
was but a little ere they came into a square, wide-spreading, one
side whereof Walter took to be the front of a most goodly
house. There the doors of the court opened to them or ever
the horn might blow, though, forsooth, blow it did loudly three
times; all they entered therein, and men came to Walter and
signed to him to alight. So did he, and would have tarried
to look about for the Maid, but they suffered it not, but led him
up a huge stair into a chamber, very great, and but dimly lighted
because of its greatness. Then they brought him to a bed
dight as fair as might be, and made signs to him to strip and lie
therein. Perforce he did so, and then they bore away his
raiment, and left him lying there. So he lay there quietly,
deeming it no avail for him, a mother-naked man, to seek escape
thence; but it was long ere he might sleep, because of his
trouble of mind. At last, pure weariness got the better of
his hopes and fears, and he fell into slumber just as the dawn
was passing into day.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXXII: OF THE NEW KING OF THE CITY AND LAND OF STARK-WALL</h2>
<p>When he awoke again the sun was shining brightly into that
chamber, and he looked, and beheld that it was peerless of beauty
and riches, amongst all that he had ever seen: the ceiling done
with gold and over-sea blue; the walls hung with arras of the
fairest, though he might not tell what was the history done
therein. The chairs and stools were of carven work well
be-painted, and amidmost was a great ivory chair under a cloth of
estate, of bawdekin of gold and green, much be-pearled; and all
the floor was of fine work alexandrine.</p>
<p>He looked on all this, wondering what had befallen him, when
lo! there came folk into the chamber, to wit, two serving-men
well-bedight, and three old men clad in rich gowns of silk.
These came to him and (still by signs, without speech) bade him
arise and come with them; and when he bade them look to it that
he was naked, and laughed doubtfully, they neither laughed in
answer, nor offered him any raiment, but still would have him
arise, and he did so perforce. They brought him with them
out of the chamber, and through certain passages pillared and
goodly, till they came to a bath as fair as any might be; and
there the serving-men washed him carefully and tenderly, the old
men looking on the while. When it was done, still they
offered not to clothe him, but led him out, and through the
passages again, back to the chamber. Only this time he must
pass between a double hedge of men, some weaponed, some in
peaceful array, but all clad gloriously, and full chieftain-like
of aspect, either for valiancy or wisdom.</p>
<p>In the chamber itself was now a concourse of men, of great
estate by deeming of their array; but all these were standing
orderly in a ring about the ivory chair aforesaid. Now said
Walter to himself: Surely all this looks toward the knife and the
altar for me; but he kept a stout countenance despite of all.</p>
<p>So they led him up to the ivory chair, and he beheld on either
side thereof a bench, and on each was laid a set of raiment from
the shirt upwards; but there was much diversity betwixt these
arrays. For one was all of robes of peace, glorious and
be-gemmed, unmeet for any save a great king; while the other was
war-weed, seemly, well-fashioned, but little adorned; nay rather,
worn and bestained with weather, and the pelting of the
spear-storm.</p>
<p>Now those old men signed to Walter to take which of those
raiments he would, and do it on. He looked to the right and
the left, and when he had looked on the war-gear, the heart arose
in him, and he called to mind the array of the Goldings in the
forefront of battle, and he made one step toward the weapons, and
laid his hand thereon. Then ran a glad murmur through that
concourse, and the old men drew up to him smiling and joyous, and
helped him to do them on; and as he took up the helm, he noted
that over its broad brown iron sat a golden crown.</p>
<p>So when he was clad and weaponed, girt with a sword, and a
steel axe in his hand, the elders showed him to the ivory throne,
and he laid the axe on the arm of the chair, and drew forth the
sword from the scabbard, and sat him down, and laid the ancient
blade across his knees; then he looked about on those great men,
and spake: “How long shall we speak no word to each other,
or is it so that God hath stricken you dumb?”</p>
<p>Then all they cried out with one voice: “All hail to the
King, the King of Battle!”</p>
<p>Spake Walter: “If I be king, will ye do my will as I bid
you?”</p>
<p>Answered the elder: “Nought have we will to do, lord,
save as thou biddest.”</p>
<p>Said Walter: “Thou then, wilt thou answer a question in
all truth?”</p>
<p>“Yea, lord,” said the elder, “if I may live
afterward.”</p>
<p>Then said Walter: “The woman that came with me into your
Camp of the Mountain, what hath befallen her?”</p>
<p>The elder answered: “Nought hath befallen her, either of
good or evil, save that she hath slept and eaten and bathed
her. What, then, is the King’s pleasure concerning
her?”</p>
<p>“That ye bring her hither to me straightway,” said
Walter.</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the elder; “and in what guise
shall we bring her hither? shall she be arrayed as a servant, or
a great lady?”</p>
<p>Then Walter pondered a while, and spake at last: “Ask
her what is her will herein, and as she will have it, so let it
be. But set ye another chair beside mine, and lead her
thereto. Thou wise old man, send one or two to bring her in
hither, but abide thou, for I have a question or two to ask of
thee yet. And ye, lords, abide here the coming of my
she-fellow, if it weary you not.”</p>
<p>So the elder spake to three of the most honourable of the
lords, and they went their ways to bring in the Maid.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXXIII: CONCERNING THE FASHION OF KING-MAKING IN STARK-WALL</h2>
<p>Meanwhile the King spake to the elder, and said: “Now
tell me whereof I am become king, and what is the fashion and
cause of the king-making; for wondrous it is to me, whereas I am
but an alien amidst of mighty men.”</p>
<p>“Lord,” said the old man, “thou art become
king of a mighty city, which hath under it many other cities and
wide lands, and havens by the sea-side, and which lacketh no
wealth which men desire. Many wise men dwell therein, and
of fools not more than in other lands. A valiant host shall
follow thee to battle when needs must thou wend afield; an host
not to be withstood, save by the ancient God-folk, if any of them
were left upon the earth, as belike none are. And as to the
name of our said city, it hight the City of the Stark-wall, or
more shortly, Stark-wall. Now as to the fashion of our
king-making: If our king dieth and leaveth an heir male, begotten
of his body, then is he king after him; but if he die and leave
no heir, then send we out a great lord, with knights and
sergeants, to that pass of the mountain whereto ye came
yesterday; and the first man that cometh unto them, they take and
lead to the city, as they did with thee, lord. For we
believe and trow that of old time our forefathers came down from
the mountains by that same pass, poor and rude, but full of
valiancy, before they conquered these lands, and builded the
Stark-wall. But now furthermore, when we have gotten the
said wanderer, and brought him home to our city, we behold him
mother-naked, all the great men of us, both sages and warriors;
then if we find him ill-fashioned and counterfeit of his body, we
roll him in a great carpet till he dies; or whiles, if he be but
a simple man, and without guile, we deliver him for thrall to
some artificer amongst us, as a shoemaker, a wright, or what not,
and so forget him. But in either case we make as if no such
man had come to us, and we send again the lord and his knights to
watch the pass; for we say that such an one the Fathers of old
time have not sent us. But again, when we have seen to the
new-comer that he is well-fashioned of his body, all is not done;
for we deem that never would the Fathers send us a dolt or a
craven to be our king. Therefore we bid the naked one take
to him which he will of these raiments, either the ancient
armour, which now thou bearest, lord, or this golden raiment
here; and if he take the war-gear, as thou takedst it, King, it
is well; but if he take the raiment of peace, then hath he the
choice either to be thrall of some goodman of the city, or to be
proven how wise he may be, and so fare the narrow edge betwixt
death and kingship; for if he fall short of his wisdom, then
shall he die the death. Thus is thy question answered,
King, and praise be to the Fathers that they have sent us one
whom none may doubt, either for wisdom or valiancy.”</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXXIV: NOW COMETH THE MAID TO THE KING</h2>
<p>Then all they bowed before the King, and he spake again:
“What is that noise that I hear without, as if it were the
rising of the sea on a sandy shore, when the south-west wind is
blowing.”</p>
<p>Then the elder opened his mouth to answer; but before he might
get out the word, there was a stir without the chamber door, and
the throng parted, and lo! amidst of them came the Maid, and she
yet clad in nought save the white coat wherewith she had won
through the wilderness, save that on her head was a garland of
red roses, and her middle was wreathed with the same. Fresh
and fair she was as the dawn of June; her face bright,
red-lipped, and clear-eyed, and her cheeks flushed with hope and
love. She went straight to Walter where he sat, and lightly
put away with her hand the elder who would lead her to the ivory
throne beside the King; but she knelt down before him, and laid
her hand on his steel-clad knee, and said: “O my lord, now
I see that thou hast beguiled me, and that thou wert all along a
king-born man coming home to thy realm. But so dear thou
hast been to me; and so fair and clear, and so kind withal do
thine eyes shine on me from under the grey war-helm, that I will
beseech thee not to cast me out utterly, but suffer me to be thy
servant and handmaid for a while. Wilt thou not?”</p>
<p>But the King stooped down to her and raised her up, and stood
on his feet, and took her hands and kissed them, and set her down
beside him, and said to her: “Sweetheart, this is now thy
place till the night cometh, even by my side.”</p>
<p>So she sat down there meek and valiant, her hands laid in her
lap, and her feet one over the other; while the King said:
“Lords, this is my beloved, and my spouse. Now,
therefore, if ye will have me for King, ye must worship this one
for Queen and Lady; or else suffer us both to go our ways in
peace.”</p>
<p>Then all they that were in the chamber cried out aloud:
“The Queen, the Lady! The beloved of our
lord!”</p>
<p>And this cry came from their hearts, and not their lips only;
for as they looked on her, and the brightness of her beauty, they
saw also the meekness of her demeanour, and the high heart of
her, and they all fell to loving her. But the young men of
them, their cheeks flushed as they beheld her, and their hearts
went out to her, and they drew their swords and brandished them
aloft, and cried out for her as men made suddenly drunk with
love: “The Queen, the Lady, the lovely one!”</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXXV: OF THE KING OF STARK-WALL AND HIS QUEEN</h2>
<p>But while this betid, that murmur without, which is aforesaid,
grew louder; and it smote on the King’s ear, and he said
again to the elder: “Tell us now of that noise withoutward,
what is it?”</p>
<p>Said the elder: “If thou, King, and the Queen, wilt but
arise and stand in the window, and go forth into the hanging
gallery thereof, then shall ye know at once what is this rumour,
and therewithal shall ye see a sight meet to rejoice the heart of
a king new come into kingship.”</p>
<p>So the King arose and took the Maid by the hand, and went to
the window and looked forth; and lo! the great square of the
place all thronged with folk as thick as they could stand, and
the more part of the carles with a weapon in hand, and many armed
right gallantly. Then he went out into the gallery with his
Queen, still holding her hand, and his lords and wise men stood
behind him. Straightway then arose a cry, and a shout of
joy and welcome that rent the very heavens, and the great place
was all glittering and strange with the tossing up of spears and
the brandishing of swords, and the stretching forth of hands.</p>
<p>But the Maid spake softly to King Walter and said: “Here
then is the wilderness left behind a long way, and here is
warding and protection against the foes of our life and
soul. O blessed be thou and thy valiant heart!”</p>
<p>But Walter spake nothing, but stood as one in a dream; and
yet, if that might be, his longing toward her increased
manifold.</p>
<p>But down below, amidst of the throng, stood two neighbours
somewhat anigh to the window; and quoth one to the other:
“See thou! the new man in the ancient armour of the Battle
of the Waters, bearing the sword that slew the foeman king on the
Day of the Doubtful Onset! Surely this is a sign of
good-luck to us all.”</p>
<p>“Yea,” said the second, “he beareth his
armour well, and the eyes are bright in the head of him: but hast
thou beheld well his she-fellow, and what the like of her
is?”</p>
<p>“I see her,” said the other, “that she is a
fair woman; yet somewhat worse clad than simply. She is in
her smock, man, and were it not for the balusters I deem ye
should see her barefoot. What is amiss with her?”</p>
<p>“Dost thou not see her,” said the second
neighbour, “that she is not only a fair woman, but yet
more, one of those lovely ones that draw the heart out of a
man’s body, one may scarce say for why? Surely
Stark-wall hath cast a lucky net this time. And as to her
raiment, I see of her that she is clad in white and wreathed with
roses, but that the flesh of her is so wholly pure and sweet that
it maketh all her attire but a part of her body, and halloweth
it, so that it hath the semblance of gems. Alas, my friend!
let us hope that this Queen will fare abroad unseldom amongst the
people.”</p>
<p>Thus, then, they spake; but after a while the King and his
mate went back into the chamber, and he gave command that the
women of the Queen should come and fetch her away, to attire her
in royal array. And thither came the fairest of the
honourable damsels, and were fain of being her
waiting-women. Therewithal the King was unarmed, and dight
most gloriously, but still he bore the Sword of the King’s
Slaying: and sithence were the King and the Queen brought into
the great hall of the palace, and they met on the dais, and
kissed before the lords and other folk that thronged the
hall. There they ate a morsel and drank a cup together
while all beheld them; and then they were brought forth, and a
white horse of the goodliest, well bedight, brought for each of
them, and thereon they mounted and went their ways together, by
the lane which the huge throng made for them, to the great
church, for the hallowing and the crowning; and they were led by
one squire alone, and he unarmed; for such was the custom of
Stark-wall when a new king should be hallowed: so came they to
the great church (for that folk was not miscreant, so to say),
and they entered it, they two alone, and went into the choir: and
when they had stood there a little while wondering at their lot,
they heard how the bells fell a-ringing tunefully over their
heads; and then drew near the sound of many trumpets blowing
together, and thereafter the voices of many folk singing; and
then were the great doors thrown open, and the bishop and his
priests came into the church with singing and minstrelsy, and
thereafter came the whole throng of the folk, and presently the
nave of the church was filled by it, as when the water follows
the cutting of the dam, and fills up the dyke. Thereafter
came the bishop and his mates into the choir, and came up to the
King, and gave him and the Queen the kiss of peace. This
was mass sung gloriously; and thereafter was the King anointed
and crowned, and great joy was made throughout the church.
Afterwards they went back afoot to the palace, they two alone
together, with none but the esquire going before to show them the
way. And as they went, they passed close beside those two
neighbours, whose talk has been told of afore, and the first one,
he who had praised the King’s war-array, spake and said:
“Truly, neighbour, thou art in the right of it; and now the
Queen has been dight duly, and hath a crown on her head, and is
clad in white samite done all over with pearls, I see her to be
of exceeding goodliness; as goodly, maybe, as the Lord
King.”</p>
<p>Quoth the other: “Unto me she seemeth as she did
e’en now; she is clad in white, as then she was, and it is
by reason of the pure and sweet flesh of her that the pearls
shine out and glow, and by the holiness of her body is her rich
attire hallowed; but, forsooth, it seemed to me as she went past
as though paradise had come anigh to our city, and that all the
air breathed of it. So I say, praise be to God and His
Hallows who hath suffered her to dwell amongst us!”</p>
<p>Said the first man: “Forsooth, it is well; but knowest
thou at all whence she cometh, and of what lineage she may
be?”</p>
<p>“Nay,” said the other, “I wot not whence she
is; but this I wot full surely, that when she goeth away, they
whom she leadeth with her shall be well bestead. Again, of
her lineage nought know I; but this I know, that they that come
of her, to the twentieth generation, shall bless and praise the
memory of her, and hallow her name little less than they hallow
the name of the Mother of God.”</p>
<p>So spake those two; but the King and Queen came back to the
palace, and sat among the lords and at the banquet which was held
thereafter, and long was the time of their glory, till the night
was far spent and all men must seek to their beds.</p>
<h2>CHAPTER XXXVI: OF WALTER AND THE MAID IN THE DAYS OF THE KINGSHIP</h2>
<p>Long it was, indeed, till the women, by the King’s
command, had brought the Maid to the King’s chamber; and he
met her, and took her by the shoulders and kissed her, and said:
“Art thou not weary, sweetheart? Doth not the city,
and the thronging folk, and the watching eyes of the great ones .
. . doth it not all lie heavy on thee, as it doth upon
me?”</p>
<p>She said: “And where is the city now? is not this the
wilderness again, and thou and I alone together
therein?”</p>
<p>He gazed at her eagerly, and she reddened, so that her eyes
shone light amidst the darkness of the flush of her cheeks.</p>
<p>He spake trembling and softly, and said: “Is it not in
one matter better than the wilderness? is not the fear gone, yea,
every whit thereof?”</p>
<p>The dark flush had left her face, and she looked on him
exceeding sweetly, and spoke steadily and clearly: “Even so
it is, beloved.” Therewith she set her hand to the
girdle that girt her loins, and did it off, and held it out
toward him, and said: “Here is the token; this is a
maid’s girdle, and the woman is ungirt.”</p>
<p>So he took the girdle and her hand withal, and cast his arms
about her: and amidst the sweetness of their love and their
safety, and assured hope of many days of joy, they spake together
of the hours when they fared the razor-edge betwixt guile and
misery and death, and the sweeter yet it grew to them because of
it; and many things she told him ere the dawn, of the evil days
bygone, and the dealings of the Mistress with her, till the grey
day stole into the chamber to make manifest her loveliness;
which, forsooth, was better even than the deeming of that man
amidst the throng whose heart had been so drawn towards
her. So they rejoiced together in the new day.</p>
<p>But when the full day was, and Walter arose, he called his
thanes and wise men to the council; and first he bade open the
prison-doors, and feed the needy and clothe them, and make good
cheer to all men, high and low, rich and unrich; and thereafter
he took counsel with them on many matters, and they marvelled at
his wisdom and the keenness of his wit; and so it was, that some
were but half pleased thereat, whereas they saw that their will
was like to give way before his in all matters. But the
wiser of them rejoiced in him, and looked for good days while his
life lasted.</p>
<p>Now of the deeds that he did, and his joys and his griefs, the
tale shall tell no more; nor of how he saw Langton again, and his
dealings there.</p>
<p>In Stark-wall he dwelt, and reigned a King, well beloved of
his folk, sorely feared of their foemen. Strife he had to
deal with, at home and abroad; but therein he was not quelled,
till he fell asleep fair and softly, when this world had no more
of deeds for him to do. Nor may it be said that the needy
lamented him; for no needy had he left in his own land. And
few foes he left behind to hate him.</p>
<p>As to the Maid, she so waxed in loveliness and kindness, that
it was a year’s joy for any to have cast eyes upon her in
street or on field. All wizardry left her since the day of
her wedding; yet of wit and wisdom she had enough left, and to
spare; for she needed no going about, and no guile, any more than
hard commands, to have her will done. So loved she was by
all folk, forsooth, that it was a mere joy for any to go about
her errands. To be short, she was the land’s
increase, and the city’s safeguard, and the bliss of the
folk.</p>
<p>Somewhat, as the days passed, it misgave her that she had
beguiled the Bear-folk to deem her their God; and she considered
and thought how she might atone it.</p>
<p>So the second year after they had come to Stark-wall, she went
with certain folk to the head of the pass that led down to the
Bears; and there she stayed the men-at-arms, and went on further
with a two score of husbandmen whom she had redeemed from
thralldom in Stark-wall; and when they were hard on the dales of
the Bears, she left them there in a certain little dale, with
their wains and horses, and seed-corn, and iron tools, and went
down all bird-alone to the dwelling of those huge men, unguarded
now by sorcery, and trusting in nought but her loveliness and
kindness. Clad she was now, as when she fled from the Wood
beyond the World, in a short white coat alone, with bare feet and
naked arms; but the said coat was now embroidered with the
imagery of blossoms in silk and gold, and gems, whereas now her
wizardry had departed from her.</p>
<p>So she came to the Bears, and they knew her at once, and
worshipped and blessed her, and feared her. But she told
them that she had a gift for them, and was come to give it; and
therewith she told them of the art of tillage, and bade them
learn it; and when they asked her how they should do so, she told
them of the men who were abiding them in the mountain dale, and
bade the Bears take them for their brothers and sons of the
ancient Fathers, and then they should be taught of them.
This they behight her to do, and so she led them to where her
freedmen lay, whom the Bears received with all joy and
loving-kindness, and took them into their folk.</p>
<p>So they went back to their dales together; but the Maid went
her ways back to her men-at-arms and the city of Stark-wall.</p>
<p>Thereafter she sent more gifts and messages to the Bears, but
never again went herself to see them; for as good a face as she
put on it that last time, yet her heart waxed cold with fear, and
it almost seemed to her that her Mistress was alive again, and
that she was escaping from her and plotting against her once
more.</p>
<p>As for the Bears, they throve and multiplied; till at last
strife arose great and grim betwixt them and other peoples; for
they had become mighty in battle: yea, once and again they met
the host of Stark-wall in fight, and overthrew and were
overthrown. But that was a long while after the Maid had
passed away.</p>
<p>Now of Walter and the Maid is no more to be told, saving that
they begat between them goodly sons and fair daughters; whereof
came a great lineage in Stark-wall; which lineage was so strong,
and endured so long a while, that by then it had died out, folk
had clean forgotten their ancient Custom of king-making, so that
after Walter of Langton there was never another king that came
down to them poor and lonely from out of the Mountains of the
Bears.</p>
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