HOW THE COMRADES JOURNEYED DOWN THE OLD, OLD ROAD
And now the season of the moonless
nights was drawing nigh and the King’s design
was ripe. Very secretly his preparations were
made. Already the garrison of Calais, which consisted
of five hundred archers and two hundred men-at-arms,
could, if forewarned, resist any attack made upon
it. But it was the King’s design not merely
to resist the attack, but to capture the attackers.
Above all it was his wish to find the occasion for
one of those adventurous passages of arms which had
made his name famous throughout Christendom as the
very pattern and leader of knight-errant chivalry.
But the affair wanted careful handling.
The arrival of any, reinforcements, or even the crossing
of any famous soldier, would have alarmed the French
and warned them that their plot had been discovered.
Therefore it was in twos and threes in the creyers
and provision ships which were continually passing
from shore to shore that the chosen warriors and their
squires were brought to Calais. There they were
passed at night through the water-gate into the castle
where they could lie hidden, unknown to the townsfolk,
until the hour for action had come.
Nigel had received word from Chandos
to join him at “The Sign of the Broom-Pod”
in Winchelsea. Three days beforehand he and Aylward
rode from Tilford all armed and ready for the wars.
Nigel was in hunting-costume, blithe and gay, with
his precious armor and his small baggage trussed upon
the back of a spare horse which Aylward led by the
bridle. The archer had himself a good black mare,
heavy and slow, but strong enough to be fit to carry
his powerful frame. In his brigandine of chain
mail and his steel cap, with straight strong sword
by his side, his yellow long-bow jutting over his
shoulder, and his quiver of arrows supported by a
scarlet baldric, he was such a warrior as any knight
might well be proud to have in his train. All
Tilford trailed behind them, as they rode slowly over
the long slope of heath land which skirts the flank
of Crooksbury Hill.
At the summit of the rise Nigel reined
in Pommers and looked back at the little village behind
him. There was the old dark manor house, with
one bent figure leaning upon a stick and gazing dimly
after him from beside the door. He looked at
the high-pitched roof, the timbered walls, the long
trail of swirling blue smoke which rose from the single
chimney, and the group of downcast old servants who
lingered at the gate, John the cook, Weathercote the
minstrel, and Red Swire the broken soldier. Over
the river amid the trees he could see the grim, gray
tower of Waverley, and even as he looked, the iron
bell, which had so often seemed to be the hoarse threatening
cry of an enemy, clanged out its call to prayer.
Nigel doffed his velvet cap and prayed also prayed
that peace might remain at home, and good warfare,
in which honor and fame should await him, might still
be found abroad. Then, waving his hand to the
people, he turned his horse’s head and rode slowly
eastward. A moment later Aylward broke from the
group of archers and laughing girls who clung to his
bridle and his stirrup straps, and rode on, blowing
kisses over his shoulder. So at last the two comrades,
gentle and simple, were fairly started on their venture.
There are two seasons of color in
those parts: the yellow, when the country-side
is flaming with the gorse-blossoms, and the crimson,
when all the long slopes are smoldering with the heather.
So it was now. Nigel looked back from time to
time, as he rode along the narrow track where the
ferns and the ling brushed his feet on either side,
and as he looked it seemed to him that wander where
he might he would never see a fairer scene than that
of his own home. Far to the westward, glowing
in the morning light, rolled billow after billow of
ruddy heather land, until they merged into the dark
shadows of Woolmer Forest and the pale clear green
of the Butser chalk downs. Never in his life had
Nigel wandered far beyond these limits, and the woodlands,
the down and the heather were dear to his soul.
It gave him a pang in his heart now as he turned his
face away from them; but if home lay to the westward,
out there to the eastward was the great world of adventure,
the noble stage where each of his kinsmen in turn
had played his manly part and left a proud name behind.
How often he had longed for this day!
And now it had come with no shadow cast behind it.
Dame Ermyntrude was under the King’s protection.
The old servants had their future assured. The
strife with the monks of Waverley had been assuaged.
He had a noble horse under him, the best of weapons,
and a stout follower at his back. Above all he
was bound on a gallant errand with the bravest knight
in England as his leader. All these thoughts
surged together in his mind, and he whistled and sang,
as he rode, out of the joy of his heart, while Pommers
sidled and curveted in sympathy with the mood of his
master. Presently, glancing back, he saw from
Aylward’s downcast eyes and Puckered brow that
the archer was clouded with trouble. He reined
his horse to let him come abreast of him.
“How now, Aylward?” said
he. “Surely of all men in England you and
I should be the most blithe this morning, since we
ride forward with all hopes of honorable advancement.
By Saint Paul! ere we see these heather hills once
more we shall either worshipfully win worship, or we
shall venture our persons in the attempt. These
be glad thoughts, and why should you be downcast?”
Aylward shrugged his broad shoulders,
and a wry smile dawned upon his rugged face.
“I am indeed as limp as a wetted bowstring,”
said he. “It is the nature of a man that
he should be sad when he leaves the woman he loves.”
“In truth, yes!” cried
Nigel, and in a flash the dark eyes of Mary Buttesthorn
rose before him, and he heard her low, sweet, earnest
voice as he had heard it that night when they brought
her frailer sister back from Shalford Manor, a voice
which made all that was best and noblest in a man
thrill within his soul. “Yet, bethink you,
archer, that what a woman loves in man is not his
gross body, but rather his soul, his honor, his fame,
the deeds with which he has made his life beautiful.
Therefore you are winning love as well as glory when
you turn to the wars.”
“It may be so,” said Aylward;
“but indeed it goes to my heart to see the pretty
dears weep, and I would fain weep as well to keep them
company. When Mary or was it Dolly? nay,
it was Martha, the red-headed girl from the mill when
she held tight to my baldric it was like snapping my
heart-string to pluck myself loose.”
“You speak of one name and then
of another,” said Nigel. “How is she
called then, this maid whom you love?”
Aylward pushed back his steel cap
and scratched his bristling head with some embarrassment.
“Her name,” said he, “is Mary Dolly
Martha Susan Jane Cicely Theodosia Agnes Johanna Kate.”
Nigel laughed as Aylward rolled out
this prodigious title. “I had no right
to take you to the wars,” said he; “for
by Saint Paul! it is very clear that I have widowed
half the parish. But I saw your aged father the
franklin. Bethink you of the joy that will fill
his heart when he hears that you have done some small
deed in France, and so won honor in the eyes of all.”
“I fear that honor will not
help him to pay his arrears of rent to the sacrist
of Waverley,” said Aylward. “Out he
will go on the roadside, honor and all, if he does
not find ten nobles by next Epiphany. But if I
could win a ransom or be at the storming of a rich
city, then indeed the old man would be proud of me.
‘Thy sword must help my spade, Samkin,’
said he as he kissed me goodby. Ah! it would indeed
be a happy day for him and for all if I could ride
back with a saddle-bag full of gold pieces, and please
God, I shall dip my hand in somebody’s pocket
before I see Crooksbury Hill once more!”
Nigel shook his head, for indeed it
seemed hopeless to try to bridge the gulf between
them. Already they had made such good progress
along the bridle-path through the heather that the
little hill of Saint Catharine and the ancient shrine
upon its summit loomed up before them. Here they
crossed the road from the south to London, and at the
crossing two wayfarers were waiting who waved their
hands in greeting, the one a tall, slender, dark woman
upon a white jennet, the other a very thick and red-faced
old man, whose weight seemed to curve the back of the
stout gray cob which he bestrode.
“What how, Nigel!” he
cried. “Mary has told me that you make a
start this morning, and we have waited here this hour
and more on the chance of seeing you pass. Come,
lad, and have a last stoup of English ale, for many
a time amid the sour French wines you will long for
the white foam under your nose, and the good homely
twang of it.”
Nigel had to decline the draft, for
it meant riding into Guildford town, a mile out of
his course, but very gladly he agreed with Mary that
they should climb the path to the old shrine and offer
a last orison together. The knight and Aylward
waited below with the horses; and so it came about
that Nigel and Mary found themselves alone under the
solemn old Gothic arches, in front of the dark shadowed
recess in which gleamed the golden reliquary of the
saint. In silence they knelt side by side in
prayer, and then came forth once more out of the gloom
and the shadow into the fresh sunlit summer morning.
They stopped ere they descended the path, and looked
to right and left at the fair meadows and the blue
Wey curling down the valley.
“What have you prayed for, Nigel?” said
she.
“I have prayed that God and
His saints will hold my spirit high and will send
me back from France in such a fashion that I may dare
to come to you and to claim you for my own.”
“Bethink you well what it is
that you say, Nigel,” said she. “What
you are to me only my own heart can tell; but I would
never set eyes upon your face again rather than abate
by one inch that height of honor and worshipful achievement
to which you may attain.”
“Nay, my dear and most sweet
lady, how should you abate it, since it is the thought
of you which will nerve my arm and uphold my heart?”
“Think once more, my fair lord,
and hold yourself bound by no word which you have
said. Let it be as the breeze which blows past
our faces and is heard of no more. Your soul
yearns for honor. To that has it ever turned.
Is there room in it for love also? or is it possible
that both shall live at their highest in one mind?
Do you not call to mind that Galahad and other great
knights of old have put women out of their lives that
they might ever give their whole soul and strength
to the winning of honor? May it not be that I
shall be a drag upon you, that your heart may shrink
from some honorable task, lest it should bring risk
and pain to me? Think well before you answer,
my fair lord, for indeed my very heart would break
if it should ever happen that through love of me your
high hopes and great promise should miss fulfilment.”
Nigel looked at her with sparkling
eyes. The soul which shone through her dark face
had transformed it for the moment into a beauty more
lofty and more rare than that of her shallow sister.
He bowed before the majesty of the woman, and pressed
his lips to her hand. “You are like a star
upon my path which guides me on the upward way,”
said he. “Our souls are set together upon
the finding of honor, and how shall we hold each other
back when our purpose is the same?”
She shook her proud head. “So
it seems to you now, fair lord, but it may be otherwise
as the years pass. How shall you prove that I
am indeed a help and not a hindrance?”
“I will prove it by my deeds,
fair and dear lady,” said Nigel. “Here
at the shrine of the holy Catharine, on this, the
Feast of Saint Margaret, I take my oath that I will
do three deeds in your honor as a proof of my high
love before I set eyes upon your face again, and these
three deeds shall stand as a proof to you that if
I love you dearly, still I will not let the thought
of you stand betwixt me and honorable achievement!”
Her face shone with her love and her
pride. “I also make my oath,” said
she, “and I do it in the name of the holy Catharine
whose shrine is hard by. I swear that I will
hold myself for you until these three deeds be done
and we meet once more; also that if which
may dear Christ forfend! you fall in doing them then
I shall take the veil in Shalford nunnery and look
upon no man’s face again! Give me your hand,
Nigel.”
She had taken a little bangle of gold
filigree work from her arm and fastened it upon his
sunburnt wrist, reading aloud to him the engraved
motto in old French: “Fais ce
que dois, adviegne que pourra c’est
commande au chevalier.” Then for
one moment they fell into each other’s arms
and with kiss upon kiss, a loving man and a tender
woman, they swore their troth to each other.
But the old knight was calling impatiently from below
and together they hurried down the winding path to
where the horses waited under the sandy bluff.
As far as the Shalford crossing Sir
John rode by Nigel’s arm, and many were the
last injunctions which he gave him concerning woodcraft,
and great his anxiety lest he confuse a spay with
a brocket, or either with a hind. At last when
they came to the reedy edge of the Wey the old knight
and his daughter reined up their horses. Nigel
looked back at them ere he entered the dark Chantry
woods, and saw them still gazing after him and waving
their hands. Then the path wound amongst the trees
and they were lost to sight; but long afterwards when
a clearing exposed once more the Shalford meadows
Nigel saw that the old man upon the gray cob was riding
slowly toward Saint Catharine’s Hill, but that
the girl was still where he had seen her last, leaning
forward in her saddle and straining her eyes to pierce
the dark forest which screened her lover from her
view. It was but a fleeting glance through a break
in the foliage, and yet in after days of stress and
toil in far distant lands it was that one little picture the
green meadow, the reeds, the slow blue-winding river,
and the eager bending graceful figure upon the white
horse which was the clearest and the dearest
image of that England which he had left behind him.
But if Nigel’s friends had learned
that this was the morning of his leaving, his enemies
too were on the alert. The two comrades had just
emerged from the Chantry woods and were beginning the
ascent of that curving path which leads upward to
the old Chapel of the Martyr when with a hiss like
an angry snake a long white arrow streaked under Pommers
and struck quivering in the grassy turf. A second
whizzed past Nigel’s ear, as he tried to turn;
but Aylward struck the great war-horse a sharp blow
over the haunches, and it had galloped some hundreds
of yards before its rider could pull it up. Aylward
followed as hard as he could ride, bending low over
his horse’s neck, while arrows whizzed all around
him.
“By Saint Paul!” said
Nigel, tugging at his bridle and white with anger,
“they shall not chase me across the country as
though I was a frighted doe. Archer, how dare
you to lash my horse when I would have turned and
ridden in upon them?”
“It is well that I did so,”
said Aylward, “or by these ten finger-bones!
our journey would have begun and ended on the same
day. As I glanced round I saw a dozen of them
at the least amongst the brushwood. See now how
the light glimmers upon their steel caps yonder in
the bracken under the great beech-tree. Nay,
I pray you, my fair lord, do not ride forward.
What chance has a man in the open against all these
who lie at their ease in the underwood? If you
will not think of yourself, then consider your horse,
which would have a cloth-yard shaft feathered in its
hide ere it could reach the wood.”
Nigel chafed in impotent anger.
“Am I to be shot at like a popinjay at a fair,
by any reaver or outlaw that seeks a mark for his bow?”
he cried. “By Saint Paul! Aylward,
I will put on my harness and go further into the matter.
Help me to untruss, I pray you!”
“Nay, my fair lord, I will not
help you to your own downfall. It is a match
with cogged dice betwixt a horseman on the moor and
archers amid the forest. But these men are no
outlaws, or they would not dare to draw their bows
within a league of the sheriff of Guildford.”
“Indeed, Aylward, I think that
you speak truth,” said Nigel. “It
may be that these are the men of Paul de la Fosse
of Shalford, whom I have given little cause to love
me. Ah! there is indeed the very man himself.”
They sat their horses with their backs
to the long slope which leads up to the old chapel
on the hill. In front of them was the dark ragged
edge of the wood, with a sharp twinkle of steel here
and there in its shadows which spoke of these lurking
foes. But now there was a long moot upon a horn,
and at once a score of russet-clad bowmen ran forward
from amid the trees, spreading out into a scattered
line and closing swiftly in upon the travelers.
In the midst of them, upon a great gray horse, sat
a small misshapen man, waving and cheering as one
sets hounds on a badger, turning his head this way
and that as he whooped and pointed, urging his bowmen
onward up the slope.
“Draw them on, my fair lord!
Draw them on until we have them out on the down!”
cried Aylward, his eyes shining with joy. “Five
hundred paces more, and then we may be on terms with
them. Nay, linger not, but keep them always just
clear of arrowshot until our turn has come.”
Nigel shook and trembled with eagerness,
as with his hand on his sword-hilt he looked at the
line of eager hurrying men. But it flashed through
his mind what Chandos had said of the cool head which
is better for the warrior than the hot heart.
Aylward’s words were true and wise. He
turned Pommers’ head therefore, and amid a cry
of derision from behind them the comrades trotted
over the down. The bowmen broke into a run, while
their leader screamed and waved more madly than before.
Aylward cast many a glance at them over his shoulder.
“Yet a little farther!
Yet a little farther still!” he muttered.
“The wind is towards them and the fools have
forgot that I can overshoot them by fifty paces.
Now, my good lord, I pray you for one instant to hold
the horses, for my weapon is of more avail this day,
than thine can be. They may make sorry cheer
ere they gain the shelter of the wood once more.”
He had sprung from his horse, and
with a downward wrench of his arm and a push with
his knee he slipped the string into the upper nock
of his mighty war-bow. Then in a flash he notched
his shaft and drew it to the pile, his keen blue eyes
glowing fiercely behind it from under his knotted
brows. With thick legs planted sturdily apart,
his body laid to the bow, his left arm motionless
as wood, his right bunched into a double curve of
swelling muscles as he stretched the white well-waxed
string, he looked so keen and fierce a fighter that
the advancing line stopped for an instant at the sight
of him. Two or three loosed off their arrows,
but the shafts flew heavily against the head wind,
and snaked along the hard turf some score of paces
short of the mark. One only, a short bandy-legged
man, whose squat figure spoke of enormous muscular
strength, ran swiftly in and then drew so strong a
bow that the arrow quivered in the ground at Aylward’s
very feet.
“It is Black Will of Lynchmere,”
said the bowman. “Many a match have I shot
with him, and I know well that no other man on the
Surrey marches could have sped such a shaft.
I trust that you are houseled and shriven, Will, for
I have known you so long that I would not have your
damnation upon my soul.”
He raised his bow as he spoke, and
the string twanged with a rich deep musical note.
Aylward leaned upon his bow-stave as he keenly watched
the long swift flight of his shaft, skimming smoothly
down the wind.
“On him, on him! No, over
him, by my hilt!” he cried. “There
is more wind than I had thought. Nay, nay, friend,
now that I have the length of you, you can scarce
hope to loose again.”
Black Will had notched an arrow and
was raising his bow when Aylward’s second shaft
passed through the shoulder of his drawing arm.
With a shout of anger and pain he dropped his weapon,
and dancing in his fury he shook his fist and roared
curses at his rival.
“I could slay him; but I will
not, for good bowmen are not so common,” said
Aylward. “And now, fair sir, we must on,
for they are spreading round on either side, and if
once they get behind us, then indeed our journey has
come to a sudden end. But ere we go I would send
a shaft through yonder horseman who leads them on.”
“Nay, Aylward, I pray you to
leave him,” said Nigel. “Villain as
he is, he is none the less a gentleman of coat-armor,
and should die by some other weapon than thine.”
“As you will,” said Aylward,
with a clouded brow. “I have been told that
in the late wars many a French prince and baron has
not been too proud to take his death wound from an
English yeoman’s shaft, and that nobles of England
have been glad enough to stand by and see it done.”
Nigel shook his head sadly. “It
is sooth you say, archer, and indeed it is no new
thing, for that good knight Richard of the Lion Heart
met his end in such a lowly fashion, and so also did
Harold the Saxon. But this is a private matter,
and I would not have you draw your bow against him.
Neither can I ride at him myself, for he is weak in
body, though dangerous in spirit. Therefore,
we will go upon our way, since there is neither profit
nor honor to be gained, nor any hope of advancement.”
Aylward, having unstrung his bow,
had remounted his horse during this conversation,
and the two rode swiftly past the little squat Chapel
of the Martyr and over the brow of the hill.
From the summit they looked back. The injured
archer lay upon the ground, with several of his comrades
gathered in a knot around him. Others ran aimlessly
up the hill, but were already far behind. The
leader sat motionless upon his horse, and as he saw
them look back he raised his hand and shrieked his
curses at them. An instant later the curve of
the ground had hid them from view. So, amid love
and hate, Nigel bade adieu to the home of his youth.
And now the comrades were journeying
upon that old, old road which runs across the south
of England and yet never turns toward London, for the
good reason that the place was a poor hamlet when first
the road was laid. From Winchester, the Saxon
capital, to Canterbury, the holy city of Kent, ran
that ancient highway, and on from Canterbury to the
narrow straits where, on a clear day, the farther
shore can be seen. Along this track as far back
as history can trace the metals of the west have been
carried and passed the pack-horses which bore the goods
which Gaul sent in exchange. Older than the Christian
faith and older than the Romans, is the old road.
North and south are the woods and the marshes, so
that only on the high dry turf of the chalk land could
a clear track be found. The Pilgrim’s Way,
it still is called; but the pilgrims were the last
who ever trod it, for it was already of immemorial
age before the death of Thomas a Becket gave a new
reason why folk should journey to the scene of his
murder.
From the hill of Weston Wood the travelers
could see the long white band which dipped and curved
and rose over the green downland, its course marked
even in the hollows by the line of the old yew-trees
which flanked it. Neither Nigel nor Aylward had
wandered far from their own country, and now they
rode with light hearts and eager eyes taking note
of all the varied pictures of nature and of man which
passed before them. To their left was a hilly
country, a land of rolling heaths and woods, broken
here and there into open spaces round the occasional
farm-house of a franklin. Hackhurst Down, Dunley
Hill, and Ranmore Common swelled and sank, each merging
into the other. But on the right, after passing
the village of Shere and the old church of Gomshall,
the whole south country lay like a map at their feet.
There was the huge wood of the Weald, one unbroken
forest of oak-trees stretching away to the South Downs,
which rose olive-green against the deep blue sky.
Under this great canopy of trees strange folk lived
and evil deeds were done. In its recesses were
wild tribes, little changed from their heathen ancestors,
who danced round the altar of Thor, and well was it
for the peaceful traveler that he could tread the
high open road of the chalk land with no need to wander
into so dangerous a tract, where soft clay, tangled
forest and wild men all barred his progress.
But apart from the rolling country
upon the left and the great forest-hidden plain upon
the right, there was much upon the road itself to
engage the attention of the wayfarers. It was
crowded with people. As far as their eyes could
carry they could see the black dots scattered thickly
upon the thin white band, sometimes single, sometimes
several abreast, sometimes in moving crowds, where
a drove of pilgrims held together for mutual protection,
or a nobleman showed his greatness by the number of
retainers who trailed at his heels. At that time
the main roads were very crowded, for there were many
wandering people in the land. Of all sorts and
kinds, they passed in an unbroken stream before the
eyes of Nigel and of Aylward, alike only in the fact
that one and all were powdered from their hair to
their shoes with the gray dust of the chalk.
There were monks journeying from one
cell to another, Benedictines with their black gowns
looped up to show their white skirts, Carthusians
in white, and pied Cistercians. Friars also of
the three wandering orders Dominicans in
black, Carmélites in white and Franciscans
in gray. There was no love lost between the cloistered
monks and the free friars, each looking on the other
as a rival who took from him the oblations of the
faithful; so they passed on the high road as cat passes
dog, with eyes askance and angry faces.
Then besides the men of the church
there were the men of trade, the merchant in dusty
broadcloth and Flanders hat riding at the head of
his line of pack-horses. He carried Cornish tin,
Welt-country wool, or Sussex iron if he traded eastward,
or if his head should be turned westward then he bore
with him the velvets of Genoa, the ware of Venice,
the wine of France, or the armor of Italy and Spain.
Pilgrims were everywhere, poor people for the most
part, plodding wearily along with trailing feet and
bowed heads, thick staves in their hands and bundles
over their shoulders. Here and there on a gaily
caparisoned palfrey, or in the greater luxury of a
horse-litter, some West-country lady might be seen
making her easy way to the shrine of Saint Thomas.
Besides all these a constant stream
of strange vagabonds drifted along the road:
minstrels who wandered from fair to fair, a foul and
pestilent crew; jugglers and acrobats, quack doctors
and tooth-drawers, students and beggars, free workmen
in search of better wages, and escaped bondsmen who
would welcome any wages at all. Such was the throng
which set the old road smoking in a haze of white
dust from Winchester to the narrow sea.
But of all the wayfarers those which
interested Nigel most were the soldiers. Several
times they passed little knots of archers or men-at-arms,
veterans from France, who had received their discharge
and were now making their way to their southland homes.
They were half drunk all of them, for the wayfarers
treated them to beer at the frequent inns and ale-stakes
which lined the road, so that they cheered and sang
lustily as they passed. They roared rude pleasantries
at Aylward, who turned in his saddle and shouted his
opinion of them until they were out of hearing.
Once, late in the afternoon, they
overtook a body of a hundred archers all marching
together with two knights riding at their head.
They were passing from Guildford Castle to Reigate
Castle, where they were in garrison. Nigel rode
with the knights for some distance, and hinted that
if either was in search of honorable advancement, or
wished to do some small deed, or to relieve himself
of any vow, it might be possible to find some means
of achieving it. They were both, however, grave
and elderly men, intent upon their business and with
no mind for fond wayside adventures, so Nigel quickened
his pace and left them behind.
They had left Boxhill and Headley
Heath upon the left, and the towers of Reigate were
rising amid the trees in front of them, when they overtook
a large, cheery, red-faced man, with a forked beard,
riding upon a good horse and exchanging a nod or a
merry word with all who passed him. With him
they rode nearly as far as Bletchingley, and Nigel
laughed much to hear him talk; but always under the
raillery there was much earnestness and much wisdom
in all his words. He rode at his ease about the
country, he said, having sufficient money to keep
him from want and to furnish him for the road.
He could speak all the three languages of England,
the north, the middle and the south, so that he was
at home with the people of every shire and could hear
their troubles and their joys. In all parts in
town and in country there was unrest, he said; for
the poor folk were weary of their masters both of
the Church and State, and soon there would be such
doings in England as had never been seen before.
But above all this man was earnest
against the Church its enormous wealth, its possession
of nearly one-third of the whole land of the country,
its insatiable greed for more at the very time when
it claimed to be poor and lowly. The monks and
friars, too, he lashed with his tongue: their
roguish ways, their laziness and their cunning.
He showed how their wealth and that of the haughty
lord must always be founded upon the toil of poor
humble Peter the Plowman, who worked and strove in
rain and cold out in the fields, the butt and laughing-stock
of everyone, and still bearing up the whole world
upon his weary shoulders. He had set it all out
in a fair parable; so now as he rode he repeated some
of the verses, chanting them and marking time with
his forefinger, while Nigel and Aylward on either
side of him with their heads inclined inward listened
with the same attention, but with very different feelings Nigel
shocked at such an attack upon authority, and Aylward
chuckling as he heard the sentiments of his class so
shrewdly expressed. At last the stranger halted
his horse outside the “Five Angels” at
Gatton.
“It is a good inn, and I know
the ale of old,” said he. “When I
had finished that ‘Dream of Piers the Plowman’
from which I have recited to you, the last verses
were thus:
“’Now have
I brought my little booke to an ende
God’s
blessing be on him who a drinke will me sende’
“I pray you come in with me and share it.”
“Nay,” said Nigel, “we
must on our way, for we have far to go. But give
me your name, my friend, for indeed we have passed
a merry hour listening to your words.”
“Have a care!” the stranger
answered, shaking his head. “You and your
class will not spend a merry hour when these words
are turned into deeds and Peter the Plowman grows
weary of swinking in the fields and takes up his bow
and his staff in order to set this land in order.”
“By Saint Paul! I expect
that we shall bring Peter to reason and also those
who have put such evil thoughts into his head,”
said Nigel. “So once more I ask your name,
that I may know it if ever I chance to hear that you
have been hanged?”
The stranger laughed good-humoredly.
“You can call me Thomas Lackland,” said
he. “I should be Thomas Lack-brain if I
were indeed to give my true name, since a good many
robbers, some in black gowns and some in steel, would
be glad to help me upwards in the way you speak of.
So good-day to you, Squire, and to you also, archer,
and may you find your way back with whole bones from
the wars!”
That night the comrades slept in Godstone
Priory, and early next morning they were well upon
their road down the Pilgrim’s Way. At Titsey
it was said that a band of villeins were out in Westerham
Wood and had murdered three men the day before; so
that Nigel had high hopes of an encounter; but the
brigands showed no sign, though the travelers went
out of their way to ride their horses along the edges
of the forest. Farther on they found traces of
their work, for the path ran along the hillside at
the base of a chalk quarry, and there in the cutting
a man was lying dead. From his twisted limbs
and shattered frame it was easy to see that he had
been thrown over from above, while his pockets turned
outward showed the reason for his murder. The
comrades rode past without too close a survey, for
dead men were no very uncommon objects on the King’s
highway, and if sheriff or bailiff should chance upon
you near the body you might find yourself caught in
the meshes of the law.
Near Sevenoaks their road turned out
of the old Canterbury way and pointed south toward
the coast, leaving the chalk lands and coming down
into the clay of the Weald. It was a wretched,
rutted mule-track running through thick forests with
occasional clearings in which lay the small Kentish
villages, where rude shock-headed peasants with smocks
and galligaskins stared with bold, greedy eyes at
the travelers. Once on the right they caught
a distant view of the Towers of Penshurst, and once
they heard the deep tolling of the bells of Bayham
Abbey, but for the rest of their day’s journey
savage peasants and squalid cottages were all that
met their eyes, with endless droves of pigs who fed
upon the litter of acorns. The throng of travelers
who crowded the old road were all gone, and only here
and there did they meet or overtake some occasional
merchant or messenger bound for Battle Abbey, Pevensey
Castle or the towns of the south.
That night they slept in a sordid
inn, overrun with rats and with fleas, one mile south
of the hamlet of Mayfield. Aylward scratched vigorously
and cursed with fervor. Nigel lay without movement
or sound. To the man who had learned the old
rule of chivalry there were no small ills in life.
It was beneath the dignity of his soul to stoop to
observe them. Cold and heat, hunger and thirst,
such things did not exist for the gentleman.
The armor of his soul was so complete that it was proof
not only against the great ills of life but even against
the small ones; so the flea-bitten Nigel lay grimly
still while Aylward writhed upon his couch.
They were now but a short distance
from their destination; but they had hardly started
on their journey through the forest next morning, when
an adventure befell them which filled Nigel with the
wildest hopes.
Along the narrow winding path between
the great oak trees there rode a dark sallow man in
a scarlet tabard who blew so loudly upon a silver
trumpet that they heard the clanging call long before
they set eyes on him. Slowly he advanced, pulling
up every fifty paces to make the forest ring with
another warlike blast. The comrades rode forward
to meet him.
“I pray you,” said Nigel,
“to tell me who you are and why you blow upon
this trumpet.”
The fellow shook his head, so Nigel
repeated the question in French, the common language
of chivalry, spoken at that age by every gentleman
in Western Europe.
The man put his lips to the trumpet
and blew another long note before he answered.
“I am Gaston de Castrier,” said he, “the
humble Squire of the most worthy and valiant knight
Raoul de Tubiers, de Pestels, de Grimsard, de Mersac,
de Leoy, de Bastanac, who also writes himself Lord
of Pons. It is his order that I ride always a
mile in front of him to prepare all to receive him,
and he desires me to blow upon a trumpet not out of
vainglory, but out of greatness of spirit, so that
none may be ignorant of his coming should they desire
to encounter him.”
Nigel sprang from his horse with a
cry of joy, and began to unbutton his doublet.
“Quick, Aylward, quick!” he said.
“He comes, a knight errant comes! Was there
ever such a chance of worshipfully winning worship?
Untruss the harness whilst I loose my clothes!
Good sir, I beg you to warn your noble and valiant
master that a poor Squire of England would implore
him to take notice of him and to do some small deed
upon him as he passes.”
But already the Lord of Pons had come
in sight. He was a huge man upon an enormous
horse, so that together they seemed to fill up the
whole long dark archway under the oaks. He was
clad in full armor of a brazen hue with only his face
exposed, and of this face there was little visible
save a pair of arrogant eyes and a great black beard,
which flowed through the open visor and down over
his breastplate. To the crest of his helmet was
tied a small brown glove, nodding and swinging above
him. He bore a long lance with a red square banner
at the end, charged with a black boar’s head,
and the same symbol was engraved upon his shield.
Slowly he rode through the forest, ponderous, menacing,
with dull thudding of his charger’s hoofs and
constant clank of metal, while always in front of
him came the distant peal of the silver trumpet calling
all men to admit his majesty and to clear his path
ere they be cleared from it.
Never in his dreams had so perfect
a vision come to cheer Nigel’s heart, and as
he struggled with his clothes, glancing up continually
at this wondrous traveler, he pattered forth prayers
of thanksgiving to the good Saint Paul who had shown
such loving-kindness to his unworthy servant and thrown
him in the path of so excellent and debonair a gentleman.
But alas! how often at the last instant
the cup is dashed from the lips! This joyful
chance was destined to change suddenly to unexpected
and grotesque disaster disaster so strange
and so complete that through all his life Nigel flushed
crimson when he thought of it. He was busily
stripping his hunting-costume, and with feverish haste
he had doffed boots, hat, hose, doublet and cloak,
so that nothing remained save a pink jupon and pair
of silken drawers. At the same time Aylward was
hastily unbuckling the load with the intention of handing
his master his armor piece by piece, when the Squire
gave one last challenging peal from his silver trumpet
into the very ear of the spare horse.
In an instant it had taken to its
heels, the precious armor upon its back, and thundered
away down the road which they had traversed. Aylward
jumped upon his mare, drove his prick spurs into her
sides and galloped after the runaway as hard as he
could ride. Thus it came about that in an instant
Nigel was shorn of all his little dignity, had lost
his two horses, his attendant and his outfit, and
found himself a lonely and unarmed man standing in
his shirt and drawers upon the pathway down which
the burly figure of the Lord of Pons was slowly advancing.
The knight errant, whose mind had
been filled by the thought of the maiden whom he had
left behind at St. Jean the same whose glove
dangled from his helmet had observed nothing
that had occurred. Hence, all that met his eyes
was a noble yellow horse, which was tethered by the
track, and a small young man, who appeared to be a
lunatic since he had undressed hastily in the heart
of the forest, and stood now with an eager anxious
face clad in his underlinen amid the scattered debris
of his garments. Of such a person the high Lord
of Pons could take no notice, and so he pursued his
inexorable way, his arrogant eyes looking out into
the distance and his thoughts set intently upon the
maiden of St. Jean. He was dimly aware that the
little crazy man in the undershirt ran a long way
beside him in his stockings, begging, imploring and
arguing.
“Just one hour, most fair sir,
just one hour at the longest, and a poor Squire of
England shall ever hold himself your debtor! Do
but condescend to rein your horse until my harness
comes back to me! Will you not stoop to show
me some small deed of arms? I implore you, fair
sir, to spare me a little of your time and a handstroke
or two ere you go upon your way!”
Lord de Pons motioned impatiently
with his gauntleted hand, as one might brush away
an importunate fly, but when at last Nigel became desperate
in his clamor he thrust his spurs into his great war-horse,
and clashing like a pair of cymbals he thundered off
through the forest. So he rode upon his majestic
way, until two days later he was slain by Lord Reginald
Cobham in a field near Weybridge.
When after a long chase Aylward secured
the spare horse and brought it back, he found his
master seated upon a fallen tree, his face buried in
his hands and his mind clouded with humiliation and
grief. Nothing was said, for the matter was beyond
words, and so in moody silence they rode upon their
way.
But soon they came upon a scene which
drew Nigel’s thoughts away from his bitter trouble,
for in front of them there rose the towers of a great
building with a small gray sloping village around it,
and they learned from a passing hind that this was
the hamlet and Abbey of Battle. Together they
drew rein upon the low ridge and looked down into
that valley of death from which even now the reek of
blood seems to rise. Down beside that sinister
lake and amid those scattered bushes sprinkled over
the naked flank of the long ridge was fought that
long-drawn struggle betwixt two most noble foes with
broad England as the prize of victory. Here,
up and down the low hill, hour by hour the grim struggle
had waxed and waned, until the Saxon army had died
where it stood, King, court, house-carl and fyrdsman,
each in their ranks even as they had fought.
And now, after all the stress and toil, the tyranny,
the savage revolt, the fierce suppression, God had
made His purpose complete, for here were Nigel the
Norman and Aylward the Saxon with good-fellowship
in their hearts and a common respect in their minds,
with the same banner and the same cause, riding forth
to do battle for their old mother England.
And now the long ride drew to an end.
In front of them was the blue sea, flecked with the
white sails of ships. Once more the road passed
upward from the heavy-wooded plain to the springy
turf of the chalk downs. Far to the right rose
the grim fortalice of Pevensey, squat and powerful,
like one great block of rugged stone, the parapet twinkling
with steel caps and crowned by the royal banner of
England. A flat expanse of reeded marshland lay
before them, out of which rose a single wooded hill,
crowned with towers, with a bristle of masts rising
out of the green plain some distance to the south
of it. Nigel looked at it with his hand shading
his eyes, and then urged Pommers to a trot. The
town was Winchelsea, and there amid that cluster of
houses on the hill the gallant Chandos must be awaiting
him.