In the part of Lincolnshire that is
a little to the northeastward of Stamford was a tract
of country that had been granted to the monks of St
Radigund’s at Dover by William the Conqueror.
These monks had drained this land many centuries before,
leaving the superintendence of the work at first to
priors by them appointed, and afterwards, when the
dykes, ditches, and flood walls were all made, to
knights and poor gentlemen, their tenants, who farmed
the land and kept up the defences against inundations,
paying scot and lot to a bailiff and water-wardens
and jurats, just as was done on the Romney marshes
by the bailiff and jurats of that level.
And one of these tenants, holding
two hundred acres in a simple fee from St Radigund’s
for a hundred and fifty years back, had been always
a man of the name of Hall. It was an Edward Hall
that Mary Lascelles had married when she was a maid
at the Duchess of Norfolk’s. This Edward
Hall was then a squire, a little above the condition
of a groom, in the Duchess’s service. His
parents dwelled still on the farm which was called
Neot’s End, because it was in the angle of the
great dyke called St Neot’s and the little sewer
where St Radigund’s land had its boundary stone.
But in the troublesome days of the
late Privy Seal, Edward Hall had informed Throckmorton
the spy of a conspiracy and rising that was hatching
amongst the Radigund’s men a little before the
Pilgrimage of Grace, when all the north parts rose.
For the Radigund’s men cried out and murmured
amongst themselves that if the Priory was done away
with there would be an end of their easy and comfortable
tenancy. Their rents had been estimated and appointed
a great number of years before, when all goods and
the produce of the earth were very low priced.
And the tenants said that if now the King took their
lands to himself or gave them to some great lord,
very heavy burdens would be laid upon them and exacted;
whereas in some years under easy priors the monks forgot
their distant territory, and in bad seasons they took
no rents at all. And even under hard and exacting
priors the monks could take no more than their rentals,
which were so small. They said, too, that the
King and Thomas Cromwell would make them into heathen
Greeks and turn their children to be Saracens.
So these Radigund’s men meditated a rising and
conspiracy.
But, because Edward Hall informed
Throckmorton of what was agate, a posse was sent into
that country, and most of the men were hanged and
their lands all taken from them. Those that survived
from the jailing betook themselves to the road, and
became sturdy beggars, so that many of them too came
to the gallows tree.
Most of the land was granted to the
Sieur Throckmorton with the abbey’s buildings
and tithe barns. But the Halls’ farm and
another of near three hundred acres were granted to
Edward Hall. Then it was that Edward Hall could
marry and take his wife, Mary Lascelles, down into
Lincolnshire to Neot’s End. But when the
Pilgrimage of Grace came, and the great risings all
over Lincolnshire, very early the rioters came to Neot’s
End, and they burned the farm and the byres, they
killed all the beasts or drove them off, they trampled
down the corn and laid waste the flax fields.
And, between two willow trees along the great dyke,
they set a pole, and from it they hanged Edward Hall
over the waters, so that he dried and was cured like
a ham in the smoke from his own stacks.
Then Mary Lascelles’ case was
a very miserable one; for she had to fend for the
aged father and bedridden mother of Edward Hall, and
there were no beasts left but only a few geese and
ducks that the rebels could not lay their hands on.
And the only home that they had was the farmhouse
that was upon Edward Hall’s other farm, and that
they had let fall nearly into ruin. And for a
long time no men would work for her.
But at last, after the rebellion was
pitifully ended, a few hinds came to her, and she
made a shift. And it was better still after Privy
Seal fell, for then came Throckmorton the spy into
his lands, and he brought with him carpenters and
masons and joiners to make his house fair, and some
of these men he lent to Mary Hall. But it had
been prophesied by a wise woman in those parts that
no land that had been taken from the monks would prosper.
And, because all the jurats, bailiffs, and water-wardens
had been hanged either on the one part or the other
and no more had been appointed, at about that time
the sewers began to clog up, the lands to swamp, murrain
and fluke to strike the beasts and the sheep, and
night mists to blight the grain and the fruit blossoms.
So that even Throckmorton had little good of his wealth
and lands.
Thus one morning to Mary Hall, who
stood before her door feeding her geese and ducks,
there came a little boy running to say that men-at-arms
stood on the other side of the dyke that was very swollen
and grey and broad. And they shouted that they
came from the Queen’s Highness, and would have
a boat sent to ferry them over.
The colour came into Mary Hall’s
pale face, for even there she had heard that her former
bedfellow was come to be Queen. And at times even
she had thought to write to the Queen to help her
in her misery. But always she had been afraid,
because she thought that the Queen might remember
her only as one that had wronged her childish innocence.
For she remembered that the maids’ dormitory
at the old Duchess’s had been no cloister of
pure nuns. So that, at best, she was afraid, and
she sent her yard-worker and a shepherd a great way
round to fetch the larger boat of two to ferry over
the Queen’s men. Then she went indoors to
redd up the houseplace and to attire herself.
To the old farmstead, that was made
of wood hung over here and there with tilework with
a base of bricks, she had added a houseplace for the
old folk to sit all day. It was built of wattles
that had had clay cast over them, and was whitened
on the outside and thatched nearly down to the ground
like any squatter’s hut; it had cupboards of
wood nearly all round it, and beneath the cupboards
were lockers worn smooth with men sitting upon them,
after the Dutch fashion-for there in Lincolnshire
they had much traffic with the Dutch. There was
a great table made of one slab of a huge oak from
near Boston. Here they all ate. And above
the ingle was another slab of oak from the same tree.
Her little old step-mother sat in a stuff chair covered
with a sheep-skin; she sat there night and day, shivering
with the shaking palsy. At times she let out
of her an eldritch shriek, very like the call of a
hedgehog; but she never spoke, and she was fed with
a spoon by a little misbegotten son of Edward Hall’s.
The old step-father sat always opposite her; he had
no use of his legs, and his head was always stiffly
screwed round towards the door as if he were peering,
but that was the rheumatism. To atone for his
wife’s dumbness, he chattered incessantly whenever
anyone was on that floor; but because he spoke always
in Lincolnshire, Mary Hall could scarce understand
him, and indeed she had long ceased to listen.
He spoke of forgotten floods and ploughings, ancient
fairs, the boundaries of fields long since flooded
over, of a visit to Boston that King Edward IV had
made, and of how he, for his fair speech and old lineage,
had been chosen of all the Radigund’s men to
present into the King’s hands three silver horseshoes.
Behind his back was a great dresser with railed shelves,
having upon them a little pewter ware and many wooden
bowls for the hinds’ feeding. A door on
the right side, painted black, went down into the
cellar beneath the old house. Another door, of
bars of iron with huge locks from the old monastery,
went into the old house where slept the maids and
the hinds. This was always open by day but locked
in the dark hours. For the hinds were accounted
brutish lumps that went savage at night, like wild
beasts, so that, if they spared the master’s
throat, which was unlikely, it was certain that they
would little spare the salted meat, the dried fish,
the mead, metheglin, and cyder that their poor cellar
afforded. The floor was of stamped clay, wet and
sweating but covered with rushes, so that the place
had a mouldering smell. Behind the heavy door
there were huge bolts and crossbars against robbers:
the raftered ceiling was so low that it touched her
hair when she walked across the floor. The windows
had no glass but were filled with a thin reddish sheep-skin
like parchment. Before the stairway was a wicket
gate to keep the dogs-of whom there were
many, large and fierce, to protect them alike from
robbers and the hinds-to keep the dogs from
going into the upper room.
Each time that Mary Hall came into
this home of hers her heart sank lower; for each day
the corner posts gave sideways a little more, the
cupboard bulged, the doors were loth to close or open.
And more and more the fields outside were inundated,
the lands grew sour, the sheep would not eat or died
of the fluke.
‘And surely,’ she would
cry out at times, ’God created me for other
guesswork than this!’
At nights she was afraid, and shivered
at the thought of the fens and the black and trackless
worlds all round her; and the ravens croaked, night-hawks
screamed, the dog-foxes cried out, and the flames danced
over the swampy grounds. Her mirror was broken
on the night that they hanged her husband: she
had never had another but the water in her buckets,
so that she could not tell whether she had much aged
or whether she were still brown-haired and pink-cheeked,
and she had forgotten how to laugh, and was sure that
there were crow’s-feet about her eyelids.
Her best gown was all damp and mouldy
in the attic that was her bower. She made it
meet as best she could, and indeed she had had so little
fat living, sitting at the head of her table with
a whip for unruly hinds and louts before her-so
little fat living that she could well get into her
wedding-gown of yellow cramosyn. She smoothed
her hair back into her cord hood that for so long
had not come out of its press. She washed her
face in a bucket of water: that and the press
and her bed with grey woollen curtains were all the
furnishing her room had. The straw of the roof
caught in her hood when she moved, and she heard her
old father-in-law cackling to the serving-maids through
the cracks of the floor.
When she came down there were approaching,
across the field before the door, six men in scarlet
and one in black, having all the six halberds and
swords, and one a little banner, but the man in black
had a sword only. Their horses were tethered
in a clump on the farther side of the dyke. Within
the room the serving-maids were throwing knives and
pewter dishes with a great din on to the table slab.
They dropped drinking-horns and the salt-cellar itself
all of a heap into the rushes. The grandfather
was cackling from his chair; a hen and its chickens
ran screaming between the maids’ feet.
Then Lascelles came in at the doorway.