“Now Liddesdale has
layen lang in,
There is na
ryding there at a’;
The horses are a’ grown
sae lither fat,
They downa stir
out o’ the sta’.
Fair Johnie Armstrong to Willie
did say
’Billy,
a riding we will gae;
England and us have lang
been at feid;
Ablins we’ll
light on some bootie.’”
It was somewhere about the year 1592,
and Thomas, Lord Scroope, sat at ease in his own apartment
in Carlisle Castle. He had finished supper, and
was now resting in a great oak chair before a roaring
fire. A tankard of ale stood on a stool by his
side (for my Lord of Scroope loved good cheer above
all things), and his favourite hound lay stretched
on the floor at his feet.
To judge by the look on his face,
he was thinking pleasant thoughts just then.
He held the office of Warden of the English Marches,
as well as that of Governor of Carlisle Castle, and
in those lawless days the post was not an easy one.
There was generally some raid or foray which had to
be investigated, some turbulent Scot pursued, or mayhap
some noted freebooter hung; but just at present the
country-side was at peace, and the Scotts, and Elliots,
and Armstrongs, seemed to be content to stay
quietly at home on their own side of the Border.
So that very day he had sent off a
good report to his royal mistress, Queen Elizabeth,
then holding her court in far-off London, and now he
was dreaming of paying a long deferred visit to his
Castle of Bolton in Lancashire.
A sharp knock at the door came as
a sudden interruption to these dreams. “Enter,”
he cried hastily, wondering to himself what message
could have arrived at the castle at that hour of night.
It was his own poor fool who entered,
for in Carlisle Castle high state was kept, and Lord
Scroope had his jester, like any king.
The man was known to everyone as “Dick
o’ the Cow,” the reason probably being
that his wife helped to eke out his scanty wages by
keeping three cows, and selling their milk to the
honest burghers of Carlisle. He was a harmless,
light-hearted fellow, whom some men called half-witted,
but who was much cleverer than he appeared at first
sight to be.
As a rule he was always laughing and
making jokes, but to-night his face was long and doleful.
“What ails thee, man?”
cried Lord Scroope impatiently. “Methinks
thou hast forgot thine office, else why comest thou
here with a face that would make a merry man sad?”
“Alack, Master,” answered
the fool, “up till now I have been an honest
man, but at last I must turn my hand to thieving, and
for that reason I would crave thy leave to go over
the Border into Liddesdale.”
“Tush!” said the Warden
impatiently, “I love not such jesting. I
hear enough about thieving and reiving, and such-like
business, without my very fool dinning it into my
ears. Leave such matters for my Lord of Buccleuch
and me to settle, Sirrah, and bethink thee of thy duty.
’Tis easier to crack jokes and sing songs in
the safe shelter of Carlisle Castle than to ride out
armed against these Scottish knaves.”
But Dick knelt at his master’s feet.
“This is no jest, my lord,”
he said. “For once in his life this poor
fool is in earnest. For I am like to be ruined
if I cannot have revenge. Thou knowest how my
wife and I live in a little cottage just outside the
city walls, and how, with my small earnings, I bought
three milch cows. My wife is a steady woman and
industrious, and she sells the milk which these three
cows give, to the people in the city, and so she earns
an honest penny.”
“In good sooth, a very honest
penny,” repeated Lord Scroope, laughing, for
‘twas well known in Carlisle that the milk which
was sold by Dick o’ the Cow’s wife was
thinner and dearer than any other milk sold in the
town.
“Last night,” went on
the fool, “these Scottish thieves, the Armstrongs
of Liddesdale, rode past the house, and, of course,
they must needs drive these cows off, and, not content
with that, they broke open the door, and stole the
very coverlets off my bed. My wife bought these
coverlets at the Michaelmas fair, and, I trow, what
with the loss of them, and the loss of the cows, she
is like to lose her reason. So, to comfort her,
I have promised to bring them back. Therefore,
my lord, I crave leave of thee to go over into Liddesdale,
and see what I can lay my hands on there.”
The blood rose to the Warden’s
face. “By my troth, but thou art not frightened
to speak, Sirrah,” he cried. “Am I
not set here to preserve law and order, and thou wouldst
have me give thee permission to steal?”
“Nay, not to steal,” said
the fool slyly; “I only crave leave to get back
my own, or, at least, the money’s worth for what
was my own.”
Lord Scroope pondered the request for a minute or
two.
“After all,” he thought
to himself, “what can this one poor man do against
such a powerful clan as the Armstrongs? He
will be killed, most likely, and that will be the
end of it. So there can be no great harm in letting
him go.”
“If I give thee leave, wilt
thou swear that thou wilt steal from no one but those
who stole from thee?” he asked at last.
“That I will,” said Dick
readily. “I give thee my troth, and there
is my right hand upon it. Thou canst hang me
for a thief myself, if I take as much as a bannock
of bread from the house of any man who hath done me
no harm.”
So my Lord of Scroope let him go.
A blithe man was Dick o’ the
Cow as he went down the streets of Carlisle next morning,
for he had money in his pocket, and a big scheme floating
in his brain. It mattered little to him that men
smiled to each other as they passed him, and whispered,
“There goes my Lord of Scroope’s poor
jester.”
“He laughs the longest who laughs
the last,” he thought to himself, “and
mayhap all men will envy me before long.”
First of all, he went and bought a
pair of spurs, and a new bridle, which he carefully
hid in his breeches pocket, then he turned his back
on Carlisle and set out to walk over Bewcastle Waste
into Liddesdale. It was a long walk, but he footed
it bravely, and at last he arrived at Pudding-burn
House, a strongly fortified place, held by John Armstrong,
“The Laird’s Jock,” as he was called,
son of the Laird of Mangerton, and a man of importance
in the clan. He was known to be both just and
generous, and the poor fool thought that he would go
to him, and tell him his story, in the hope that he
would force the rest of the Armstrongs to give
him back his three cows. But when he came near
the Pudding-burn House, he found to his dismay that
the two Armstrongs who had stolen his cows, Johnie
and Willie, had stopped there, on their way home,
with all their men-at-arms, and, from the sounds of
feasting and mirth which he heard as he approached,
he suspected that one, at least, of his three cows
had been killed to provide the supper.
“Ah well,” thought he
to himself, “I am but a poor fool, and there
are three-and-thirty armed men against me. To
fight is impossible, so I must e’en set my wits
to work against their strength of arms.”
So he walked boldly up to the house,
and demanded to see the Laird’s Jock. There
was much laughter among the men-at-arms as he was led
into the great hall, for everyone had heard of my
Lord of Scroope’s jester, and, when they knew
that it was he, they all crowded round to see what
he was like.
He knew his manners, and bowed right
low before the master of the house. “God
save thee, my good Laird’s Jock,” he said,
“although I fear me I cannot wish so well to
all thy company. For I come here to bring a complaint
against two of these men against Johnie
and Willie Armstrong, who, with their followers, broke
into my house near Carlisle these two nights past,
and drove away my three good milk cows, forbye stealing
three coverlets from my bed. And I crave that
I get my own again, and that justice may be meted
out to the dishonest varlets.”
These words were greeted by a shout
of laughter, for these were rough and lawless times,
when might was right, and the strong tyrannised over
the weak, and it seemed ridiculous to see this poor
fool standing in the middle of all these armed moss-troopers,
and expecting to be heard.
“He deserves to be hanged for
his insolence,” said Johnie Armstrong, who had
been the leader of the company.
“Run him through with a sword,”
said Willie, laughing; “’tis less trouble,
and ’twill serve the same end.”
“No,” cried another. “’Tis
not worth while to kill him. He is but a fool
at the best. Let us give him a good beating, and
then let him go.”
But the Laird’s Jock heard them,
and his voice rang out high above the rest. “Why
harm the poor man?” he said. “After
all, he hath but come to seek his own, and he must
be both hungry and footsore.” Then, turning
to the fool, he added kindly, “Sit thyself down,
my man, and rest thee a little. I am sorry that
we cannot exactly give thee thy cattle back again,
but at least we can give thee a slice from the leg
of one of them. Beshrew me if I have tasted finer
beef for many a long day.”
Amid roars of laughter a slice of
beef was cut from the enormous leg which lay roasted
on the great table, and placed before Dick. But
he could not eat it, he could only think what a fine
cow it had been when it was alive. At last he
slipped away unobserved out of the house, and, looking
about for somewhere to sleep, he found an old tumble-down
house filled with peats.
He crept into it, and lay there, wondering
and scheming how he could avenge himself.
Now it had always been the custom
at Mangerton Hall, where the Laird’s Jock had
been brought up, that whoever was not in time for one
meal had to wait till the next, and he made the same
rule hold good at Pudding-burn House.
As the poor fool lay among the peats,
he could see what was going on through a crack in
the door, and he noticed that, as the Armstrongs’
men were both tired and hungry, they did not take
time to put the key away safely after attending to
their horses and locking the stable door, but flung
it hastily up on the roof, where it could easily be
found if it were wanted, and hurried off in case they
were late for their supper.
“Here is my chance,” he
thought to himself, and, as soon as they were all
gone into the house, he crept out, and took down the
key, and entered the stable. Then he did a very
cruel thing. He cut every horse, except three,
on one of its hind legs, “tied it with St Mary’s
knot,” as it was called; so that he made them
all lame. Then he hastily drew the spurs and
the new bridle out of his breeches pocket. He
buckled on the spurs, and began to examine the three
horses which he had not lamed. He knew to whom
they belonged. Two of them, which were standing
together, belonged to Johnie and Willie Armstrong,
and were the very horses they had ridden when they
stole the cows. The third, a splendid animal,
which had a stall to itself, plainly belonged to the
Laird’s Jock.
“I will leave the Laird’s
Jock’s,” thought Dick to himself, “for
I cannot take three, and he is a kind man; but Johnie’s
and Willie’s must go. ’Twill perhaps
teach them what comes of dishonest ways.”
So saying, he slipped the bridle over
the head of one horse, and tied a rope round the neck
of the other, and, opening the stable door, he led
them out quietly, and then, mounting one of them, he
galloped away as fast as he could.
The next morning, when the men went
to the stable to see after their horses, there were
shouts of anger and consternation. And no wonder.
For it was easy to be seen that thirty of the horses
would never put foot to the ground again; other two
were stolen; and there was only one, the beautiful
bay mare which belonged to the Laird’s Jock,
which was of any use at all.
“Now who hath done this cruel
thing?” cried the master of the house in great
anger. “Let me know his name, and by my
soul, he shall be punished.”
“’Twas the varlet whom
we all took to be such a fool,” cried Johnie;
“the rascal who came here last night whining
for his precious cows. A thousand pities but
we had done as I said, and hanged him on the nearest
tree.”
“Hold thy tongue and take blame
to thyself,” said the Laird’s Jock sharply.
“Did I not tell thee, ere thou rode to Carlisle,
thou and Willie and thy thieving band, that the two
countries were at peace, and if thou began this work
once more, ’twas hard to say where it would end?
Truly the tables are indeed turned. For this poor
fool, as thou callest him, hath befooled us all, for
the men’s horses are maimed and useless, thine
own and thy brother’s are stolen, and there but
remains this good bay mare of mine. Beshrew me,
but it seems as if the fellow had some gratitude left
that he did not touch her, for I love her as I never
loved a horse before.”
“Give her to me,” cried
Johnie Armstrong quickly, stung by this well-earned
reproof, “and I will bring the two horses back,
and the cunning fool with them, either alive or dead.
’Tis a far cry from here to Carlisle, and I
trow he could ride but slowly in the darkness.”
“A likely story,” said
the Laird’s Jock. “The fool, as thou
callest him, hath already stolen two good horses,
and to send another after him would but be sending
good siller after bad.”
“An’ dost thou think that
he could take the horse from me?” asked Johnie
indignantly, and he pleaded so hard to be allowed to
pursue Dick, that at last the Laird’s Jock gave
him leave.
He wasted no time in seeking his armour,
but, snatching up hastily his kinsman’s doublet,
sword, and helmet, he leaped on the bay mare and galloped
away.
He rode so furiously that by midday
he overtook Dick on Canonbie Lee, not far from Longtown.
The poor fool had had to ride slowly,
for he was not very much accustomed to horses, and
it was not easy for him to manage two. He looked
round in alarm when he heard the thunder of hoofs behind
him, but his face cleared when he saw that Johnie
Armstrong was alone.
“I have outwitted a whole household,”
he thought to himself; “beshrew me if I cannot
tackle one man, even although it be Johnie Armstrong.”
All the same he put his horses to
the gallop, and went on as fast as he could.
“Now hold, thou traitor thief,
and stand for thy life,” shouted Johnie in a
passion.
Dick glanced hastily over his shoulder,
and then he pulled his horses round suddenly.
He could fight better than most men thought, when he
was put to it.
“Art thou alone, Johnie?”
he said tauntingly. “Then must I tell thee
a little story. I am an unlettered man, being
but a poor fool, as thou knowest, but I try to do
my duty, and every Sunday I go to church in Carlisle
city with my betters. And at our church we have
a right good preacher, though his sermons run through
my poor brain as if it were a sieve; but there are
three words which I aye remember. The first two
of these are ‘faith’ and ‘conscience,’
and it seems to me that ye lacked both of them when
ye came stealing in the dark to my humble cottage,
knowing full well that I could not defend myself, and
stole my cows, and took my wife’s coverlets.
What the third word is, I cannot at this moment remember,
but it means that when a man lacks faith and conscience
he deserves to be punished, and therefore have I punished
thee.”
Johnie Armstrong felt that he was
being laughed at, and, blind with fury, he took his
lance and flung it at the fool, thinking to kill him.
But he missed his aim, and it only glanced against
Dick’s doublet, and fell harmless to the ground.
Dick saw his advantage, and rode his
horse straight at his enemy, and, taking his cudgel
by the wrong end, he struck Johnie such a blow on the
head that he fell senseless to the ground.
Then was the fool a proud man.
“Lord Scroope shall hear of this, Johnie,”
he said to himself, with a chuckle of delight, as he
dismounted, and stripped the unconscious man of his
coat-of-mail, his steel helmet, and his two-handed
sword. He knew that if he went home empty-handed,
and told his master that he had fought with Johnie
Armstrong and defeated him, Lord Scroope would laugh
him to scorn, for Johnie was known to be one of the
best fighters on the Borders; but these would serve
as proofs that his story was true.
Then, taking the bay mare by the bridle,
he mounted his horse once more, and rode on to Carlisle
in triumph.
When Johnie Armstrong came to his
senses, he cursed the English and all belonging to
them with right goodwill. “Now verily,”
he said to himself, as he turned his face ruefully
towards Liddesdale, “’twill be a hundred
years and more ere anyone finds me fighting with a
man who is called a fool again.”
When Dick o’ the Cow rode into
the courtyard of Carlisle Castle with his three horses,
the first man he met was My Lord of Scroope. Now
the Warden knew the Laird’s Jock’s bay
mare at once, and at the sight of her he flew into
a violent passion. For he knew well enough that
if Dick had stolen three horses from the Armstrongs,
that powerful clan would soon ride over into Cumberland
to avenge themselves, and had he not written to Queen
Elizabeth, not three days before, of the peace which
prevailed on the Borders?
“By my troth, fellow,”
he said in deep vexation, “I’ll have thee
hanged for this.”
Poor Dick was much taken aback at
this unlooked-for welcome. He had expected to
be greeted as a hero, instead of being threatened with
death.
“’Twas thyself gave me
leave to go, my Lord,” he said sullenly.
“Ay, I gave thee leave to go
and steal from those who stole from thee, an thou
couldst,” said Lord Scroope in reply; “but
beshrew me if I ever gave thee leave to steal from
the good Laird’s Jock. He is a peaceful
man, and a true, and meddles not the Border folk.
’Twas not he who stole thy cows.”
Then Dick held up the coat-of-mail,
and the helmet, and the two-handed sword. “On
my honour, I won them all in fair and open fight,”
he cried. “Johnie Armstrong stole my cows,
and ’twas he who followed me on the Laird’s
Jock’s mare, and clad in the Laird’s Jock’s
armour. He would fain have slain me with his
lance, but by God’s grace it glanced from my
doublet, and I felled him to the ground with my cudgel.”
“Well done!” cried the
Warden, slapping his thigh in his delight. “By
my soul, but it was well done. My poor fool is
more of a man than I thought he was. If the horse
be the fair spoil of war, then will I buy her of thee.
See, I will give thee fifteen pounds for her, and throw
a milk cow into the bargain. ’Twill please
thy wife to have milk again.”
But Dick was not satisfied with this
offer. “May the mother of all the witches
fly away with me,” he said, “if the horse
is not worth more than fifteen pounds. No, no,
my Lord, twenty pounds is her price, an if thou wilt
not pay that for her, she goes with me to-morrow to
be sold at Morton Fair.”
Now Lord Scroope happened to know
the worth of the mare, so he paid the money down without
more ado, and he kept his word about the milk cow.
As Dick pocketed the money, and took
possession of the cow, he thought what a very clever
fellow he was, and he held his head high as he rode
out of the courtyard, and down the streets of Carlisle,
still leading one horse, and driving the cow in front
of him.
He had not gone very far before he
met Lord Scroope’s brother.
“Well met, fool,” he cried,
laying his hand on Dick’s bridle rein.
“Where in all the world didst get Johnie Armstrong’s
horse? I know ’tis his by the white feet
and white forelock. Has my brother been having
a fray with Scotland?”
“No,” said the fool proudly,
“but I have. The horse is mine by right
of arms.”
“Wilt sell him me?” asked
the Warden’s brother, who loved a good horse
if only he could get him cheaply. “I will
give thee ten pounds for him, and a milk cow into
the bargain.”
“Say twenty pounds,” said
Dick contemptuously, “and keep thy word about
the milk cow, else the horse goes with me to Morton
Fair.”
Now the Warden’s brother needed
the horse, and, besides, it was not dear even at twenty
pounds, so he paid down the money, and told the fool
where to go for the milk cow.
An hour later Dick appeared at his
own cottage door, and shouted for his wife. She
rubbed her eyes and blinked with astonishment when
she saw her husband mounted on a good black horse,
and driving two fat milk cows before him.
Like everyone else, she had always
counted him a fool, and had never looked for much
help from him. So the loss of the three cows had
been a serious matter to her, for the money which
their milk brought had done much towards keeping up
the house, and clothing the children.
“Here, woman,” he cried
joyously, leaping from his horse, and emptying the
gold out of his pockets into her apron. “Thou
madest a great to-do over thy coverlets, but I trow
that forty pounds of good red money will pay for them
fully, and the three cows which we lost were but thin,
starved creatures, compared with these two that I have
brought back, and here is a good horse into the bargain.”
It all seemed too good to be true,
and Dick’s wife rubbed her eyes once more.
“Take care that they be not taken from thee,”
she said. “Methinks the Armstrongs
will demand vengeance.”
“They will not get it from My
Lord of Scroope,” answered Dick, “for
’twas he who gave me leave to go and steal from
them. But mayhap we live too near the Borders
for our own comfort, now that we are so rich.
When a man hath made his fortune by his wits, as I
have, he deserves a little peace in his old age.
What wouldst thou think of going further South into
Westmoreland, and taking up house near thy mother’s
kinsfolk?”
“I would think ’twas the
wisest plan that ever entered that silly pate of thine,”
answered his wife, who had never liked to live in such
an unsettled region.
So they packed up their belongings,
and, getting leave from Lord Scroope, they went to
live at Burghunder-Stanmuir, where they passed for
quite rich and clever people.