THE HOUSE OF LORING
In the month of July of the year 1348,
between the feasts of St. Benedict and of St. Swithin,
a strange thing came upon England, for out of the
east there drifted a monstrous cloud, purple and piled,
heavy with evil, climbing slowly up the hushed heaven.
In the shadow of that strange cloud the leaves drooped
in the trees, the birds ceased their calling, and
the cattle and the sheep gathered cowering under the
hedges. A gloom fell upon all the land, and men
stood with their eyes upon the strange cloud and a
heaviness upon their hearts. They crept into
the churches where the trembling people were blessed
and shriven by the trembling priests. Outside
no bird flew, and there came no rustling from the
woods, nor any of the homely sounds of Nature.
All was still, and nothing moved, save only the great
cloud which rolled up and onward, with fold on fold
from the black horizon. To the west was the light
summer sky, to the east this brooding cloud-bank, creeping
ever slowly across, until the last thin blue gleam
faded away and the whole vast sweep of the heavens
was one great leaden arch.
Then the rain began to fall.
All day it rained, and all the night and all the week
and all the month, until folk had forgotten the blue
heavens and the gleam of the sunshine. It was
not heavy, but it was steady and cold and unceasing,
so that the people were weary of its hissing and its
splashing, with the slow drip from the eaves.
Always the same thick evil cloud flowed from east
to west with the rain beneath it. None could
see for more than a bow-shot from their dwellings for
the drifting veil of the rain-storms. Every morning
the folk looked upward for a break, but their eyes
rested always upon the same endless cloud, until at
last they ceased to look up, and their hearts despaired
of ever seeing the change. It was raining at
Lammas-tide and raining at the Feast of the Assumption
and still raining at Michaelmas. The crops and
the hay, sodden and black, had rotted in the fields,
for they were not worth the garnering. The sheep
had died, and the calves also, so there was little
to kill when Martinmas came and it was time to salt
the meat for the winter. They feared a famine,
but it was worse than famine which was in store for
them.
For the rain had ceased at last, and
a sickly autumn sun shone upon a land which was soaked
and sodden with water. Wet and rotten leaves
reeked and festered under the foul haze which rose
from the woods. The fields were spotted with
monstrous fungi of a size and color never matched
before scarlet and mauve and liver and black.
It was as though the sick earth had burst into foul
pustules; mildew and lichen mottled the walls, and
with that filthy crop Death sprang also from the water-soaked
earth. Men died, and women and children, the baron
of the castle, the franklin on the farm, the monk
in the abbey and the villein in his wattle-and-daub
cottage. All breathed the same polluted reek and
all died the same death of corruption. Of those
who were stricken none recovered, and the illness
was ever the same gross boils, raving, and
the black blotches which gave its name to the disease.
All through the winter the dead rotted by the wayside
for want of some one to bury them. In many a
village no single man was left alive. Then at
last the spring came with sunshine and health and
lightness and laughter the greenest, sweetest,
tenderest spring that England had ever known but
only half of England could know it. The other
half had passed away with the great purple cloud.
Yet it was there in that stream of
death, in that reek of corruption, that the brighter
and freer England was born. There in that dark
hour the first streak of the new dawn was seen.
For in no way save by a great upheaval and change
could the nation break away from that iron feudal
system which held her limbs. But now it was a
new country which came out from that year of death.
The barons were dead in swaths. No high turret
nor cunning moat could keep out that black commoner
who struck them down.
Oppressive laws slackened for want
of those who could enforce them, and once slackened
could never be enforced again. The laborer would
be a slave no longer. The bondsman snapped his
shackles. There was much to do and few left to
do it. Therefore the few should be freemen, name
their own price, and work where and for whom they
would. It was the black death which cleared the
way for that great rising thirty years later which
left the English peasant the freest of his class in
Europe.
But there were few so far-sighted
that they could see that here, as ever, good was coming
out of evil. At the moment misery and ruin were
brought into every family. The dead cattle, the
ungarnered crops, the untilled lands every
spring of wealth had dried up at the same moment.
Those who were rich became poor; but those who were
poor already, and especially those who were poor with
the burden of gentility upon their shoulders, found
themselves in a perilous state. All through England
the smaller gentry were ruined, for they had no trade
save war, and they drew their living from the work
of others. On many a manor-house there came evil
times, and on none more than on the Manor of Tilford,
where for many generations the noble family of the
Lorings had held their home.
There was a time when the Lorings
had held the country from the North Downs to the Lakes
of Frensham, and when their grim castle-keep rising
above the green meadows which border the River Wey
had been the strongest fortalice betwixt Guildford
Castle in the east and Winchester in the west.
But there came that Barons’ War, in which the
King used his Saxon subjects as a whip with which
to scourge his Norman barons, and Castle Loring, like
so many other great strongholds, was swept from the
face of the land. From that time the Lorings,
with estates sadly curtailed, lived in what had been
the dower-house, with enough for splendor.
And then came their lawsuit with Waverley
Abbey, and the Cistercians laid claim to their richest
land, with peccary, turbary and feudal rights over
the remainder. It lingered on for years, this
great lawsuit, and when it was finished the men of
the Church and the men of the Law had divided all
that was richest of the estate between them. There
was still left the old manor-house from which with
each generation there came a soldier to uphold the
credit of the name and to show the five scarlet roses
on the silver shield where it had always been shown in
the van. There were twelve bronzes in the little
chapel where Matthew the priest said mass every morning,
all of men of the house of Loring. Two lay with
their legs crossed, as being from the Crusades.
Six others rested their feet upon lions, as having
died in war. Four only lay with the effigy of
their hounds to show that they had passed in peace.
Of this famous but impoverished family,
doubly impoverished by law and by pestilence, two
members were living in the year of grace 1349 Lady
Ermyntrude Loring and her grandson Nigel. Lady
Ermyntrude’s husband had fallen before the Scottish
spearsmen at Stirling, and her son Eustace, Nigel’s
father, had found a glorious death nine years before
this chronicle opens upon the poop of a Norman galley
at the sea-fight of Sluys. The lonely old woman,
fierce and brooding like the falcon mewed in her chamber,
was soft only toward the lad whom she had brought up.
All the tenderness and love of her nature, so hidden
from others that they could not imagine their existence,
were lavished upon him. She could not bear him
away from her, and he, with that respect for authority
which the age demanded, would not go without her blessing
and consent.
So it came about that Nigel, with
his lion heart and with the blood of a hundred soldiers
thrilling in his veins, still at the age of two and
twenty, wasted the weary days reclaiming his hawks
with leash and lure or training the alans and spaniels
who shared with the family the big earthen-floored
hall of the manor-house.
Day by day the aged Lady Ermyntrude
had seen him wax in strength and in manhood, small
of stature, it is true, but with muscles of steel and
a soul of fire. From all parts, from the warden
of Guildford Castle, from the tilt-yard of Farnham,
tales of his prowess were brought back to her, of
his daring as a rider, of his debonair courage, of
his skill with all weapons; but still she, who had
both husband and son torn from her by a bloody death,
could not bear that this, the last of the Lorings,
the final bud of so famous an old tree, should share
the same fate. With a weary heart, but with a
smiling face, he bore with his uneventful days, while
she would ever put off the evil time until the harvest
was better, until the monks of Waverley should give
up what they had taken, until his uncle should die
and leave money for his outfit, or any other excuse
with which she could hold him to her side.
And indeed, there was need for a man
at Tilford, for the strife betwixt the Abbey and the
manor-house had never been appeased, and still on one
pretext or another the monks would clip off yet one
more slice of their neighbor’s land. Over
the winding river, across the green meadows, rose
the short square tower and the high gray walls of the
grim Abbey, with its bell tolling by day and night,
a voice of menace and of dread to the little household.
It is in the heart of the great Cistercian
monastery that this chronicle of old days must take
its start, as we trace the feud betwixt the monks
and the house of Loring, with those events to which
it gave birth, ending with the coming of Chandos,
the strange spear-running of Tilford Bridge and the
deeds with which Nigel won fame in the wars. Elsewhere,
in the chronicle of the White Company, it has been
set forth what manner of man was Nigel Loring.
Those who love him may read herein those things which
went to his making. Let us go back together and
gaze upon this green stage of England, the scenery,
hill, plain and river even as now, the actors in much
our very selves, in much also so changed in thought
and act that they might be dwellers in another world
to ours.