HOW ROBIN HOOD MET LITTLE JOHN
“O here is my
hand,” the stranger reply’d,
“I’ll serve
you with all my whole heart.
My name is John Little,
a man of good mettle,
Ne’er doubt me
for I’ll play my part.”
“His name shall
be altered,” quoth William Stutely,
“And I will his
godfather be:
Prepare then a feast,
and none of the least,
For we will be merry,”
quoth he.
All that summer Robin Hood and his
merry men roamed in Sherwood Forest, and the fame
of their deeds ran abroad in the land. The Sheriff
of Nottingham waxed wroth at the report, but all his
traps and excursions failed to catch the outlaws.
The poor people began by fearing them, but when they
found that the men in Lincoln green who answered Robin
Hood’s horn meant them no harm, but despoiled
the oppressor to relieve the oppressed, they ’gan
to have great liking for them. And the band increased
by other stout hearts till by the end of the summer
fourscore good men and true had sworn fealty.
But the days of quiet which came on
grew irksome to Robin’s adventurous spirit.
Up rose he, one gay morn, and slung his quiver over
his shoulders.
“This fresh breeze stirs the
blood, my lads,” quoth he, “and I would
be seeing what the gay world looks like in the direction
of Nottingham town. But tarry ye behind in the
borders of the forest, within earshot of my bugle
call.”
Thus saying he strode merrily forward
to the edge of the wood, and paused there a moment,
his agile form erect, his brown locks flowing and
his brown eyes watching the road; and a goodly sight
he made, as the wind blew the ruddy color into his
cheeks.
The highway led clear in the direction
of the town, and thither he boldly directed his steps.
But at a bend in the road he knew of a by-path leading
across a brook which made the way nearer and less open,
into which he turned. As he approached the stream
he saw that it had become swollen by recent rains
into quite a pretty torrent. The log foot-bridge
was still there, but at this end of it a puddle intervened
which could be crossed only with a leap, if you would
not get your feet wet.
But Robin cared little for such a
handicap. Taking a running start, his nimble
legs carried him easily over and balanced neatly upon
the end of the broad log. But he was no sooner
started across than he saw a tall stranger coming
from the other side. Thereupon Robin quickened
his pace, and the stranger did likewise, each thinking
to cross first. Midway they met, and neither
would yield an inch.
“Give way, fellow!” roared
Robin, whose leadership of a band, I am afraid, had
not tended to mend his manners.
The stranger smiled. He was almost
a head taller than the other.
“Nay,” he retorted, “fair
and softly! I give way only to a better man than
myself.”
“Give way, I say”, repeated
Robin, “or I shall have to show you a better
man.”
His opponent budged not an inch, but
laughed loudly. “Now by my halidom!”
he said good-naturedly, “I would not move after
hearing that speech, even if minded to it before;
for this better man I have sought my life long.
Therefore show him to me, an it please you.”
“That will I right soon,”
quoth Robin. “Stay you here a little while,
till I cut me a cudgel like unto that you have been
twiddling in your fingers.” So saying he
sought his own bank again with a leap, laid aside
his long bow and arrows, and cut him a stout staff
of oak, straight, knotless, and a good six feet in
length. But still it was a full foot shorter
than his opponent’s. Then back came he boldly.
“I mind not telling you, fellow,”
said he, “that a bout with archery would have
been an easier way with me. But there are other
tunes in England besides that the arrow sings.”
Here he whirred the staff about his head by way of
practice. “So make you ready for the tune
I am about to play upon your ribs. Have at you!
One, two ”
“Three!” roared the giant smiting at him
instantly.
Well was it for Robin that he was
quick and nimble of foot; for the blow that grazed
a hair’s breadth from his shoulder would have
felled an ox. Nevertheless while swerving to
avoid this stroke, Robin was poising for his own,
and back came he forthwith whack!
Whack! parried the other.
Whack! whack! whack! whack!
The fight waxed fast and furious.
It was strength pitted against subtlety, and the match
was a merry one. The mighty blows of the stranger
went whistling around Robin’s ducking head, while
his own swift undercuts were fain to give the other
an attack of indigestion. Yet each stood firmly
in his place not moving backward or forward a foot
for a good half hour, nor thinking of crying “Enough!”
though some chance blow seemed likely to knock one
or the other off the narrow foot-bridge. The
giant’s face was getting red, and his breath
came snorting forth like a bull’s. He stepped
forward with a furious onslaught to finish this audacious
fellow. Robin dodged his blows lightly, then sprang
in swiftly and unexpectedly and dealt the stranger
such a blow upon the short ribs that you would have
sworn the tanner was trimming down his hides for market.
The stranger reeled and came within
an ace of falling, but regained his footing right
quickly.
“By my life, you can hit hard!”
he gasped forth, giving back a blow almost while he
was yet staggering.
This blow was a lucky one. It
caught Robin off his guard. His stick had rested
a moment while he looked to see the giant topple into
the water, when down came the other upon his head,
whack! Robin saw more stars in that one moment
than all the astronomers have since discovered, and
forthwith he dropped neatly into the stream.
The cool rushing current quickly brought
him to his senses, howbeit he was still so dazed that
he groped blindly for the swaying reeds to pull himself
up on the bank. His assailant could not forbear
laughing heartily at his plight, but was also quick
to lend his aid. He thrust down his long staff
to Robin crying, “Lay hold of that, an your fists
whirl not so much as your head!”
Robin laid hold and was hauled to
dry land for all the world like a fish, except that
the fish would never have come forth so wet and dripping.
He lay upon the warm bank for a space to regain his
senses. Then he sat up and gravely rubbed his
pate.
“By all the saints!” said
he, “you hit full stoutly. My head hums
like a hive of bees on a summer morning.”
Then he seized his horn, which lay
near, and blew thereon three shrill notes that echoed
against the trees. A moment of silence ensued,
and then was heard the rustling of leaves and crackling
of twigs like the coming of many men; and forth from
the glade burst a score or two of stalwart yeomen,
all clad in Lincoln green, like Robin, with good Will
Stutely and the widow’s three sons at their head.
“Good master,” cried Will
Stutely, “how is this? In sooth there is
not a dry thread on your body.”
“Why, marry,” replied
Robin, “this fellow would not let me pass the
footbridge, and when I tickled him in the ribs, he
must needs answer by a pat on the head which landed
me overboard.”
“Then shall he taste some of
his own porridge,” quoth Will. “Seize
him, lads!”
“Nay, let him go free,”
said Robin. “The fight was a fair one and
I abide by it. I surmise you also are quits?”
he continued, turning to the stranger with a twinkling
eye.
“I am content,” said the
other, “for verily you now have the best end
of the cudgel. Wherefore, I like you well, and
would fain know your name.”
“Why,” said Robin, “my
men and even the Sheriff of Nottingham know me as
Robin Hood, the outlaw.”
“Then am I right sorry that
I beat you,” exclaimed the man, “for I
was on my way to seek you and to try to join your
merry company. But after my unmannerly use of
the cudgel, I fear we are still strangers.”
“Nay, never say it!” cried
Robin, “I am glad I fell in with you; though,
sooth to say, I did all the falling!”
And amid a general laugh the two men
clasped hands, and in that clasp the strong friendship
of a lifetime was begun.
“But you have not yet told us
your name,” said Robin, bethinking himself.
“Whence I came, men call me John Little.”
“Enter our company then, John
Little; enter and welcome. The rites are few,
the fee is large. We ask your whole mind and body
and heart even unto death.”
“I give the bond, upon my life,” said
the tall man.
Thereupon Will Stutely, who loved
a good jest, spoke up and said: “The infant
in our household must be christened, and I’ll
stand godfather. This fair little stranger is
so small of bone and sinew, that his old name is not
to the purpose.” Here he paused long enough
to fill a horn in the stream. “Hark ye,
my son,” standing on tiptoe to splash
the water on the giant “take your
new name on entering the forest. I christen you
Little John.”
At this jest the men roared long and loud.
“Give him a bow, and find a
full sheath of arrows for Little John,” said
Robin joyfully. “Can you shoot as well as
fence with the staff, my friend?”
“I have hit an ash twig at forty
yards,” said Little John.
Thus chatting pleasantly the band
turned back into the woodland and sought their secluded
dell, where the trees were the thickest, the moss
was the softest, and a secret path led to a cave, at
once a retreat and a stronghold. Here under a
mighty oak they found the rest of the band, some of
whom had come in with a brace of fat does. And
here they built a ruddy fire and sat down to the meat
and ale, Robin Hood in the center with Will Stutely
on the one hand and Little John on the other.
And Robin was right well pleased with the day’s
adventure, even though he had got a drubbing; for
sore ribs and heads will heal, and ’tis not
every day that one can find a recruit as stout of bone
and true of soul as Little John.