IN THE HALL OF THE KNIGHT OF DUPLIN
The King had come and had gone.
Tilford Manor house stood once more dark and silent,
but joy and contentment reigned within its walls.
In one night every trouble had fallen away like some
dark curtain which had shut out the sun. A princely
sum of money had come from the King’s treasurer,
given in such fashion that there could be no refusal.
With a bag of gold pieces at his saddle-bow Nigel
rode once more into Guildford, and not a beggar on
the way who had not cause to bless his name.
There he had gone first to the goldsmith
and had bought back cup and salver and bracelet, mourning
with the merchant over the evil chance that gold and
gold-work had for certain reasons which only those
in the trade could fully understand gone up in value
during the last week, so that already fifty gold pieces
had to be paid more than the price which Nigel had
received. In vain the faithful Aylward fretted
and fumed and muttered a prayer that the day would
come when he might feather a shaft in the merchant’s
portly paunch. The money had to be paid.
Thence Nigel hurried to Wat the armorer’s
and there he bought that very suit for which he had
yearned so short a time before. Then and there
he tried it on in the booth, Wat and his boy walking
round him with spanner and wrench, fixing bolts and
twisting rivets.
“How is that, my fair sir?”
cried the armorer as he drew the bassinet over the
head and fastened it to the camail which extended to
the shoulders. “I swear by Tubal Cain that
it fits you as the shell fits the crab! A finer
suit never came from Italy or Spain.”
Nigel stood in front of a burnished
shield which served as a mirror, and he turned this
way and that, preening himself like a little shining
bird. His smooth breastplate, his wondrous joints
with their deft protection by the disks at knee and
elbow and shoulder, the beautifully flexible gauntlets
and sollerets, the shirt of mail and the close-fitting
greave-plates were all things of joy and of beauty
in his eyes. He sprang about the shop to show
his lightness, and then running out he placed his
hand on the pommel and vaulted into Pommers’
saddle, while Wat and his boy applauded in the doorway.
Then springing off and running into
the shop again he clanked down upon his knees before
the image of the Virgin upon the smithy wall.
There from his heart he prayed that no shadow or stain
should come upon his soul or his honor whilst these
arms incased his body, and that he might be strengthened
to use them for noble and godly ends. A strange
turn this to a religion of peace, and yet for many
a century the sword and the faith had upheld each
other and in a darkened world the best ideal of the
soldier had turned in some dim groping fashion toward
the light. “Benedictus dominus
deus meus qui docet manus meas
ad Praelium et dígitos meos ad bellum!”
There spoke the soul of the knightly soldier.
So the armor was trussed upon the
armorer’s mule and went back with them to Tilford,
where Nigel put it on once more for the pleasure of
the Lady Ermyntrude, who clapped her skinny hands
and shed tears of mingled pain and joy pain
that she should lose him, joy that he should go so
bravely to the wars. As to her own future, it
had been made easy for her, since it was arranged
that a steward should look to the Tilford estate whilst
she had at her disposal a suite of rooms in royal Windsor,
where with other venerable dames of her
own age and standing she could spend the twilight
of her days discussing long-forgotten scandals and
whispering sad things about the grandfathers and the
grandmothers of the young courtiers all around them.
There Nigel might leave her with an easy mind when
he turned his face to France.
But there was one more visit to be
paid and one more farewell to be spoken ere Nigel
could leave the moorlands where he had dwelled so long.
That evening he donned his brightest tunic, dark purple
velvet of Genoa, with trimming of miniver, his hat
with the snow-white feather curling round the front,
and his belt of embossed silver round his loins.
Mounted on lordly Pommers, with his hawk upon wrist
and his sword by his side, never did fairer young
gallant or one more modest in mind set forth upon
such an errand. It was but the old Knight of Duplin
to whom he would say farewell; but the Knight of Duplin
had two daughters, Edith and Mary, and Edith was the
fairest maid in all the heather-country.
Sir John Buttesthorn, the Knight of
Duplin, was so called because he had been present
at that strange battle, some eighteen years before,
when the full power of Scotland had been for a moment
beaten to the ground by a handful of adventurers and
mercenaries, marching under the banner of no nation,
but fighting in their own private quarrel. Their
exploit fills no pages of history, for it is to the
interest of no nation to record it, and yet the rumor
and fame of the great fight bulked large in those
times, for it was on that day when the flower of Scotland
was left dead upon the field, that the world first
understood that a new force had arisen in war, and
that the English archer, with his robust courage and
his skill with the weapon which he had wielded from
his boyhood, was a power with which even the mailed
chivalry of Europe had seriously to reckon.
Sir John after his return from Scotland
had become the King’s own head huntsman, famous
through all England for his knowledge of venery, until
at last, getting overheavy for his horses, he had settled
in modest comfort into the old house of Cosford upon
the eastern slope of the Hindhead hill. Here,
as his face grew redder and his beard more white,
he spent the evening of his days, amid hawks and hounds,
a flagon of spiced wine ever at his elbow, and his
swollen foot perched upon a stool before him.
There it was that many an old comrade broke his journey
as he passed down the rude road which led from London
to Portsmouth, and thither also came the young gallants
of the country to hear the stout knight’s tales
of old wars, or to learn, from him that lore of the
forest and the chase which none could teach so well
as he.
But sooth to say, whatever the old
knight might think, it was not merely his old tales
and older wine which drew the young men to Cosford,
but rather the fair face of his younger daughter,
or the strong soul and wise counsel of the elder.
Never had two more different branches sprung from
the same trunk. Both were tall and of a queenly
graceful figure. But there all resemblance began
and ended.
Edith was yellow as the ripe corn,
blue-eyed, winning, mischievous, with a chattering
tongue, a merry laugh, and a smile which a dozen of
young gallants, Nigel of Tilford at their head, could
share equally amongst them. Like a young kitten
she played with all things that she found in life,
and some there were who thought that already the claws
could be felt amid the patting of her velvet touch.
Mary was dark as night, grave-featured,
plain-visaged, with steady brown eyes looking bravely
at the world from under a strong black arch of brows.
None could call her beautiful, and when her fair sister
cast her arm round her and placed her cheek against
hers, as was her habit when company was there, the
fairness of the one and the plainness of the other
leaped visibly to the eyes of all, each the clearer
for that hard contrast. And yet, here and there,
there was one who, looking at her strange, strong
face, and at the passing gleams far down in her dark
eyes, felt that this silent woman with her proud bearing
and her queenly grace had in her something of strength,
of reserve and of mystery which was more to them than
all the dainty glitter of her sister.
Such were the ladies of Cosford toward
whom Nigel Loring rode that night with doublet of
Genoan velvet and the new white feather in his cap.
He had ridden over Thursley Ridge
past that old stone where in days gone by at the place
of Thor the wild Saxons worshiped their war-god.
Nigel looked at it with a wary eye and spurred Pommers
onward as he passed it, for still it was said that
wild fires danced round it on the moonless nights,
and they who had ears for such things could hear the
scream and sob of those whose lives had been ripped
from them that the fiend might be honored. Thor’s
stone, Thor’s jumps, Thor’s punch-bowl the
whole country-side was one grim monument to the God
of Battles, though the pious monks had changed his
uncouth name for that of the Devil his father, so
that it was the Devil’s jumps and the Devil’s
punch-bowl of which they spoke. Nigel glanced
back at the old gray boulder, and he felt for an instant
a shudder pass through his stout heart. Was it
the chill of the evening air, or was it that some
inner voice had whispered to him of the day when he
also might lie bound on such a rock and have such
a blood-stained pagan crew howling around him.
An instant later the rock and his
vague fear and all things else had passed from his
mind, for there, down the yellow sandy path, the setting
sun gleaming on her golden hair, her lithe figure bending
and swaying with every heave of the cantering horse,
was none other than the same fair Edith, whose face
had come so often betwixt him and his sleep. His
blood rushed hot to his face at the sight, for fearless
of all else, his spirit was attracted and yet daunted
by the delicate mystery of woman. To his pure
and knightly soul not Edith alone, but every woman,
sat high and aloof, enthroned and exalted, with a
thousand mystic excellencies and virtues which raised
her far above the rude world of man. There was
joy in contact with them; and yet there was fear, fear
lest his own unworthiness, his untrained tongue or
rougher ways should in some way break rudely upon
this delicate and tender thing. Such was his thought
as the white horse cantered toward him; but a moment
later his vague doubts were set at rest by the frank
voice of the young girl, who waved her whip in merry
greeting.
“Hail and well met, Nigel!”
she cried. “Whither away this evening?
Sure I am that it is not to see your friends of Cosford,
for when did you ever don so brave a doublet for us?
Come, Nigel, her name, that I may hate her for ever.”
“Nay, Edith,” said the
young Squire, laughing back at the laughing girl.
“I was indeed coming to Cosford.”
“Then we shall ride back together,
for I will go no farther. How think you that
I am looking?”
Nigel’s answer was in his eyes
as he glanced at the fair flushed face, the golden
hair, the sparkling eyes and the daintily graceful
figure set off in a scarlet-and-black riding-dress.
“You are as fair as ever, Edith.”
“Oh, cold of speech! Surely
you were bred for the cloisters, and not for a lady’s
bower, Nigel. Had I asked such a question from
young Sir George Brocas or the Squire of Fernhurst,
he would have raved from here to Cosford. They
are both more to my taste than you are, Nigel.”
“It is the worse for me, Edith,” said
Nigel ruefully.
“Nay, but you must not lose heart.”
“Have I not already lost it?” said he.
“That is better,” she
cried, laughing. “You can be quick enough
when you choose, Master Malapert. But you are
more fit to speak of high and weary matters with my
sister Mary. She will have none of the prattle
and courtesy of Sir George, and yet I love them well.
But tell me, Nigel, why do you come to Cosford to-night?”
“To bid you farewell.”
“Me alone?”
“Nay, Edith, you and your sister Mary and the
good knight your father.”
“Sir George would have said
that he had come for me alone. Indeed you are
but a poor courtier beside him. But is it true,
Nigel, that you go to France?”
“Yes, Edith.”
“It was so rumored after the
King had been to Tilford. The story goes that
the King goes to France and you in his train.
Is that true?”
“Yes, Edith, it is true.”
“Tell me, then, to what part you go, and when?”
“That, alas! I may not say.”
“Oh, in sooth!” She tossed
her fair head and rode onward in silence, with compressed
lips and angry eyes.
Nigel glanced at her in surprise and
dismay. “Surely, Edith,” said he at
last, “you have overmuch regard for my honor
that you should wish me to break the word that I have
given?”
“Your honor belongs to you,
and my likings belong to me,” said she.
“You hold fast to the one, and I will do the
same by the other.”
They rode in silence through Thursley
village. Then a thought came to her mind and
in an instant her anger was forgotten and she was hot
on a new scent.
“What would you do if I were
injured, Nigel? I have heard my father say that
small as you are there is no man in these parts could
stand against you. Would you be my champion if
I suffered wrong?”
“Surely I or any man of gentle
blood would be the champion of any woman who had suffered
wrong.”
“You or any and I or any what
sort of speech is that? Is it a compliment, think
you, to be mixed with a drove in that fashion?
My question was of you and me. If I were wronged
would you be my man?”
“Try me and see, Edith!”
“Then I will do so, Nigel.
Either Sir George Brocas or the Squire of Fernhurst
would gladly do what I ask, and yet I am of a mind,
Nigel, to turn to you.”
“I pray you to tell me what it is.”
“You know Paul de la Fosse of Shalford?”
“You mean the small man with the twisted back?”
“He is no smaller than yourself,
Nigel, and as to his back there are many folk that
I know who would be glad to have his face.”
“Nay, I am no judge of that,
and I spoke out of no discourtesy. What of the
man?”
“He has flouted me, Nigel, and I would have
revenge.”
“What on that poor twisted creature?”
“I tell you that he has flouted me!”
“But how?”
“I should have thought that
a true cavalier would have flown to my aid, withouten
all these questions. But I will tell you, since
I needs must. Know then that he was one of those
who came around me and professed to be my own.
Then, merely because he thought that there were others
who were as dear to me as himself he left me, and
now he pays court to Maude Twynham, the little freckle-faced
hussy in his village.”
“But how has this hurt you, since he was no
man of thine?”
“He was one of my men, was he
not? And he has made game of me to his wench.
He has told her things about me. He has made me
foolish in her eyes. Yes, yes, I can read it
in her saffron face and in her watery eyes when we
meet at the church door on Sundays. She smiles yes,
smiles at me! Nigel, go to him! Do not slay
him, nor even wound him, but lay his face open with
thy riding-whip, and then come back to me and tell
me how I can serve you.”
Nigel’s face was haggard with
the strife within, for desire ran hot in every vein,
and yet reason shrank with horror. “By Saint
Paul! Edith,” he cried, “I see no
honor nor advancement of any sort in this thing which
you have asked me to do. Is it for me to strike
one who is no better than a cripple? For my manhood
I could not do such a deed, and I pray you, dear lady,
that you will set me some other task.”
Her eyes flashed at him in contempt.
“And you are a man-at-arms!” she cried,
laughing in bitter scorn. “You are afraid
of a little man who can scarce walk. Yes, yes,
say what you will, I shall ever believe that you have
heard of his skill at fence and of his great spirit,
and that your heart has failed you! You are right,
Nigel. He is indeed a perilous man. Had
you done what I asked he would have slain you, and
so you have shown your wisdom.”
Nigel flushed and winced under the
words, but he said no more, for his mind was fighting
hard within him, striving to keep that high image
of woman which seemed for a moment to totter on the
edge of a fall. Together in silence, side by
side, the little man and the stately woman, the yellow
charger and the white jennet, passed up the sandy winding
track with the gorse and the bracken head-high on either
side. Soon a path branched off through a gateway
marked with the boar-heads of the Buttesthorns, and
there was the low widespread house heavily timbered,
loud with the barking of dogs. The ruddy Knight
limped forth with outstretched hand and roaring voice
“What how, Nigel! Good
welcome and all hail! I had thought that you had
given over poor friends like us, now that the King
had made so much of you. The horses, varlets,
or my crutch will be across you! Hush, Lydiard!
Down, Pelamon! I can scarce hear my voice for
your yelping. Mary, a cup of wine for young Squire
Loring!”
She stood framed in the doorway, tall,
mystic, silent, with strange, wistful face and deep
soul shining in her dark, questioning eyes. Nigel
kissed the hand that she held out, and all his faith
in woman and his reverence came back to him as he
looked at her. Her sister had slipped behind
her and her fair elfish face smiled her forgiveness
of Nigel over Mary’s shoulder.
The Knight of Duplin leaned his weight
upon the young man’s arm and limped his way
across the great high-roofed hall to his capacious
oaken chair. “Come, come, the stool, Edith!”
he cried. “As God is my help, that girl’s
mind swarms with gallants as a granary with rats.
Well, Nigel, I hear strange tales of your spear-running
at Tilford and of the visit of the King. How
seemed he? And my old friend Chandos many
happy hours in the woodlands have we had together and
Manny too, he was ever a bold and a hard rider what
news of them all?”
Nigel told to the old Knight all that
had occurred, saying little of his own success and
much of his own failure, yet the eyes of the dark woman
burned the brighter as she sat at her tapestry and
listened.
Sir John followed the story with a
running fire of oaths, prayers, thumps with his great
fist and flourishes of his crutch. “Well,
well, lad, you could scarce expect to hold your saddle
against Manny, and you have carried yourself well.
We are proud of you, Nigel, for you are our own man,
reared in the heather country. But indeed I take
shame that you are not more skilled in the mystery
of the woods, seeing that I have had the teaching
of you, and that no one in broad England is my master
at the craft. I pray you to fill your cup again
whilst I make use of the little time that is left
to us.”
And straightway the old Knight began
a long and weary lecture upon the times of grace and
when each beast and bird was seasonable, with many
anecdotes, illustrations, warnings and exceptions,
drawn from his own great experience. He spoke
also of the several ranks and grades of the chase:
how the hare, hart and boar must ever take precedence
over the buck, the doe, the fox, the marten and the
roe, even as a knight banneret does over a knight,
while these in turn are of a higher class to the badger,
the wildcat or the otter, who are but the common populace
of the world of beasts. Of blood-stains also he
spoke how the skilled hunter may see at
a glance if blood be dark and frothy, which means a
mortal hurt, or thin and clear, which means that the
arrow has struck a bone.
“By such signs,” said
he, “you will surely know whether to lay on the
hounds and cast down the blinks which hinder the stricken
deer in its flight. But above all I pray you,
Nigel, to have a care in the use of the terms of the
craft, lest you should make some blunder at table,
so that those who are wiser may have the laugh of
you, and we who love you may be shamed.”
“Nay, Sir John,” said
Nigel. “I think that after your teaching
I can hold my place with the others.”
The old Knight shook his white head
doubtfully. “There is so much to be learned
that there is no one who can be said to know all,”
said he. “For example, Nigel, it is sooth
that for every collection of beasts of the forest,
and for every gathering of birds of the air, there
is their own private name so that none may be confused
with another.”
“I know it, fair sir.”
“You know it, Nigel, but you
do not know each separate name, else are you a wiser
man than I had thought you. In truth none
can say that they know all, though I have myself picked
off eighty, and six for a wager at court, and it is
said that the chief huntsman of the Duke of Burgundy
has counted over a hundred but it is in
my mind that he may have found them as he went, for
there was none to say him nay. Answer me now,
lad, how would you say if you saw ten badgers together
in the forest?”
“A cete of badgers, fair sir.”
“Good, Nigel good,
by my faith! And if you walk in Woolmer Forest
and see a swarm of foxes, how would you call it?”
“A skulk of foxes.”
“And if they be lions?”
“Nay, fair sir, I am not like to meet several
lions in Woolmer Forest.”
“Aye, lad, but there are other
forests besides Woolmer, and other lands besides England,
and who can tell how far afield such a knight errant
as Nigel of Tilford may go, when he sees worship to
be won? We will say that you were in the deserts
of Nubia, and that afterward at the court of the great
Sultan you wished to say that you had seen several
lions, which is the first beast of the chase, being
the king of all animals. How then would you say
it?”
Nigel scratched his head. “Surely,
fair sir, I would be content to say that I had seen
a number of lions, if indeed I could say aught after
so wondrous an adventure.”
“Nay, Nigel, a huntsman would
have said that he had seen a pride of lions, and so
proved that he knew the language of the chase.
Now had it been boars instead of lions?”
“One says a singular of boars.”
“And if they be swine?”
“Surely it is a herd of swine.”
“Nay, nay, lad, it is indeed
sad to see how little you know. Your hands, Nigel,
were always better than your head. No man of gentle
birth would speak of a herd of swine; that is the
peasant speech. If you drive them it is a herd.
If you hunt them it is other. What call you them,
then, Edith?”
“Nay, I know not,” said
the girl listlessly. A crumpled note brought in
by a varlet was clinched in her right hand and her
blue eyes looked afar into the deep shadows of the
roof.
“But you can tell us, Mary?”
“Surely, sweet sir, one talks of a sounder of
swine.”
The old Knight laughed exultantly.
“Here is a pupil who never brings me shame!”
he cried. “Be it lore of chivalry
or heraldry or woodcraft or what you will, I can always
turn to Mary. Many a man can she put to the blush.”
“Myself among them,” said Nigel.
“Ah, lad, you are a Solomon
to some of them. Hark ye! only last week that
jack-fool, the young Lord of Brocas, was here
talking of having seen a covey of pheasants in the
wood. One such speech would have been the ruin
of a young Squire at the court. How would you
have said it, Nigel?”
“Surely, fair sir, it should be a nye of pheasants.”
“Good, Nigel a nye
of pheasants, even as it is a gaggle of geese or a
badling of ducks, a fall of woodcock or a wisp of snipe.
But a covey of pheasants! What sort of talk is
that? I made him sit even where you are sitting,
Nigel, and I saw the bottom of two pots of Rhenish
ere I let him up. Even then I fear that he had
no great profit from his lesson, for he was casting
his foolish eyes at Edith when he should have been
turning his ears to her father. But where is the
wench?”
“She hath gone forth, father.”
“She ever doth go forth when
there is a chance of learning aught that is useful
indoors. But supper will soon be ready, and there
is a boar’s ham fresh from the forest with which
I would ask your help, Nigel, and a side of venison
from the King’s own chase. The tinemen and
verderers have not forgotten me yet, and my larder
is ever full. Blow three moots on the horn, Mary,
that the varlets may set the table, for the growing
shadow and my loosening belt warn me that it is time.”