HOW THE SHERIFF LOST THREE GOOD SERVANTS AND FOUND THEM AGAIN
“Make good cheer,”
said Robin Hood.
“Sheriff! for
charity!
And for the love of
Little John
Thy life is granted
thee!”
The cook gasped in amazement.
This Robin Hood! and under the Sheriff’s very
roof!
“Now by my troth you are a brave
fellow,” he said. “I have heard great
tales of your prowess, and the half has not been told.
But who might this tall slasher be?”
“Men do call me Little John, good fellow.”
“Then Little John, or Reynold
Greenleaf, I like you well, on my honor as Much the
miller’s son; and you too, bold Robin Hood.
An you take me, I will enter your service right gladly.”
“Spoken like a stout man!”
said Robin, seizing him by the hand. “But
I must back to my own bed, lest some sleepy warden
stumble upon me, and I be forced to run him through.
Lucky for you twain that wine flowed so freely in
the house to-day; else the noise of your combat would
have brought other onlookers besides Robin Hood.
Now if ye would flee the house to-night, I will join
you in the good greenwood to-morrow.”
“But, good master,” said
the cook, “you would not stay here over night!
Verily, it is running your head into a noose.
Come with us. The Sheriff has set strict watch
on all the gates, since ’tis Fair week, but I
know the warden at the west gate and could bring us
through safely. To-morrow you will be stayed.”
“Nay, that will I not,” laughed Robin,
“for I shall go through with no less escort
than the Sheriff himself. Now do you, Little
John, and do you, Much the miller’s son, go right
speedily. In the borders of the wood you will
find my merry men. Tell them to kill two fine
harts against to-morrow eve, for we shall have
great company and lordly sport.”
And Robin left them as suddenly as he had come.
“Comrade,” then said Little
John, “we may as well bid the Sheriff’s
roof farewell. But ere we go, it would seem a
true pity to fail to take such of the Sheriff’s
silver plate as will cause us to remember him, and
also grace our special feasts.”
“’Tis well said indeed,” quoth the
cook.
Thereupon they got a great sack and
filled it with silver plate from the shelves where
it would not at once be missed, and they swung the
sack between them, and away they went, out of the
house, out of the town, and into the friendly shelter
of Sherwood Forest.
The next morning the servants were
late astir in the Sheriff’s house. The
steward awoke from a heavy sleep, but his cracked head
was still in such a whirl that he could not have sworn
whether the Sheriff had ever owned so much as one
silver dish. So the theft went undiscovered for
the nonce.
Robin Hood met the Sheriff at breakfast,
when his host soon spoke of what was uppermost in
his heart the purchase of the fine herd
of cattle near Gamewell. ’Twas clear that
a vision of them, purchased for twenty paltry gold
pieces, had been with him all through the night, in
his dreams. And Robin again appeared such a silly
fellow that the Sheriff saw no need of dissembling,
but said that he was ready to start at once to look
at the herd.
Accordingly they set forth, Robin
in his little butcher’s cart, behind the lean
mare, and the Sheriff mounted on a horse. Out
of Nottingham town, through gates open wide, they
proceeded, and took the hill road leading through
Sherwood Forest. And as they went on and plunged
deeper among the trees, Robin whistled blithely and
sang snatches of tunes.
“Why are you so gay, fellow?”
said the Sheriff, for, sooth to say, the silence of
the woods was making him uneasy.
“I am whistling to keep my courage up,”
replied Robin.
“What is there to fear, when
you have the Sheriff of Nottingham beside you?”
quoth the other pompously.
Robin scratched his head.
“They do say that Robin Hood
and his men care little for the Sheriff,” he
said.
“Pooh!” said the Sheriff.
“I would not give that for their lives,
if I could once lay hands upon them.” And
he snapped his fingers angrily. “But Robin
Hood himself was on this very road the last time I
came to town,” said the other.
The Sheriff started at the crackling
of a twig under his horse’s feet, and looked
around.
“Did you see him?” he asked.
“Aye, that did I! He wanted
the use of this mare and cart to drive to Nottingham.
He said he would fain turn butcher. But see!”
As he spoke he came to a turn in the
road, and there before them stood a herd of the King’s
deer, feeding. Robin pointed to them and continued:
“There is my herd of cattle,
good Master Sheriff! How do you like them?
Are they not fat and fair to see?”
The Sheriff drew rein quickly.
“Now fellow,” quoth he, “I would
I were well out of this forest, for I care not to
see such herds as these, or such faces as yours.
Choose your own way, therefore, whoever you be, and
let me go mine.”
“Nay,” laughed Robin,
seizing the Sheriff’s bridle, “I have been
at too much pains to cultivate your company to forego
it now so easily. Besides I wish you to meet
some of my friends and dine with me, since you have
so lately entertained me at your board.”
So saying he clapped a horn on his
lips and winded three merry notes. The deer bounded
away; and before the last of them was seen, there came
a running and a rustling, and out from behind covert
and tree came full twoscore of men, clad in Lincoln
green, and bearing good yew bows in their hands and
short swords at their sides. Up they ran to Robin
Hood and doffed their caps to him respectfully, while
the Sheriff sat still from very amazement.
“Welcome to the greenwood!”
said one of the leaders, bending the knee with mock
reverence before the Sheriff.
The Sheriff glared. It was Little John.
“Woe the worth, Reynold Greenleaf,” he
said, “you have betrayed me!”
“I make my vow,” said
Little John, “that you are to blame, master.
I was misserved of my dinner, when I was at your house.
But we shall set you down to a feast we hope you will
enjoy.”
“Well spoken, Little John,”
said Robin Hood. “Take you his bridle and
let us do honor to the guest who has come to feast
with us.”
Then turning abruptly the whole company
plunged into the heart of the forest.
After twisting and turning till the
Sheriff’s bewildered head sat dizzily upon his
shoulders, the greenwood men passed through a narrow
alley amid the trees which led to a goodly open space
flanked by wide-spreading oaks. Under the largest
of these a pleasant fire was crackling, and near it
two fine harts lay ready for cooking.
Around the blaze were gathered another company of
yeomen quite as large as that which came with Robin
Hood. Up sprang they as the latter advanced and
saluted their leader with deference, but with hearty
gladness to see him back again.
That merry wag Will Stutely was in
command; and when he saw the palefaced Sheriff being
led in like any culprit, he took his cloak and laid
it humbly upon the ground and besought the Sheriff
to alight upon it, as the ground of Sherwood was unused
to such dignitaries.
“Bestir yourselves, good fellows!”
cried Robin Hood; “and while our new cook, whom
I see with us, is preparing a feast worthy of our high
guest, let us have a few games to do him honor!”
Then while the whole glade was filled
with the savory smell of roasting venison and fat
capóns, and brown pasties warmed beside the blaze,
and mulled wine sent forth a cordial fragrance, Robin
Hood placed the Sheriff upon a knoll beneath the largest
oak and sat himself down by him.
First stepped forward several pairs
of men armed with the quarter-staff, the widow’s
sons among them, and so skilfully did they thrust and
parry and beat down guards, that the Sheriff, who
loved a good game as well as any man, clapped his
hands, forgetting where he was, and shouted, “Well
struck! well struck! Never have I seen such blows
at all the Fairs of Nottingham!”
Then the best archers of the band
set up a small wand at eightscore paces distant, and
thereon they affixed a wreath of green. And the
archers began to shoot; and he who shot not through
the garland without disturbing its leaves and tendrils
was fain to submit to a good sound buffet from Little
John. But right cunning was the shooting, for
the men had spent a certain time in daily practice,
and many were the shafts which sped daintily through
the circle. Nathless now and again some luckless
fellow would shoot awry and would be sent winding from
a long arm blow from the tall lieutenant while the
glade roared with laughter. And none more hearty
a guffaw was given than came from the Sheriff’s
own throat, for the spirit of the greenwood was upon
him.
But presently his high mood was dashed.
The company sat down to meat, and the guest was treated
to two more disturbing surprise. The cook came
forward to serve the food, when the Sheriff beheld
in him his own former servant, and one whom he supposed
was at the moment in the scullery at Nottingham.
Much the miller’s son grinned
by way of answer to the Sheriff’s amazement,
and served the plates, and placed them before the party.
Then did the Sheriff gasp and fairly choke with rage.
The service was his own silverware from the Mansion
House!
“You rascals! you rogues!”
he spluttered. “Was it not enough to defraud
me out of three of my servants, that you must also
rob me of my best silver service? Nay, by my
life, but I will not touch your food!”
But Robin Hood bade him pause.
“Gramercy!” quoth he,
“servants come and go, in merry England, and
so does service. The platters are but used to
do your worship honor. And as for your life,
it is forfeit to your eagerness to buy my herd of cattle
so cheaply. Now sit you down again and make good
cheer, Sheriff, for charity! And for the love
of Little John your life is granted you!”
So the Sheriff sat him down again,
with the best face he could assume, and soon the cook’s
viands were disappearing down his gullet as rapidly
as the next man’s. And they feasted royally
and clinked each other’s cups until the sun
had ceased to print the pattern of the leaves upon
the forest carpet.
Then the Sheriff arose and said:
“I thank you, Robin Hood, one-time butcher,
and you, Little John, one-time beggar, and you, Much,
one-time cook, and all you good men who have entertained
me in Sherwood so well. Promises I make not as
to how I shall requite you when next you come to Nottingham,
for I am in the King’s service. So for the
present the score rests with you. But the shadows
grow long and I must away, if you will be pleased
to pilot me to the road.”
Then Robin Hood and all his men arose
and drank the Sheriff’s health, and Robin said:
“If you must needs go at once we will not detain
you except that you have forgotten two things.”
“What may they be?” asked
the Sheriff, while his heart sank within him.
“You forget that you came with
me to-day to buy a herd of horned beasts; likewise
that he who dines at the Greenwood Inn must pay the
landlord.”
The Sheriff fidgeted like a small
boy who has forgotten his lesson.
“Nay, I have but a small sum
with me,” he began apologetically.
“What is that sum, gossip?”
questioned Little John, “for my own wage should
also come out of it!”
“And mine!” said Much.
“And mine!” smiled Robin.
The Sheriff caught his breath.
“By my troth, are all these silver dishes worth
anything?”
The outlaws roared heartily at this.
“I’ll tell you what it
is, worship,” said Robin, “we three rascally
servants will compound our back wages for those plates.
And we will keep the herd of cattle free for our own
use and the King’s. But this
little tavern bill should be settled! Now, what
sum have you about you?”
“I have only those twenty pieces
of gold, and twenty others,” said the Sheriff:
and well it was that he told the truth for once, for
Robin said:
“Count it, Little John.”
Little John turned the Sheriff’s
wallet inside out. “’Tis true enough,”
he said.
“Then you shall pay no more
than twenty pieces for your entertainment, excellence,”
decreed Robin. “Speak I soothly, men of
greenwood?”
“Good!” echoed the others.
“The Sheriff should swear by
his patron saint that he will not molest us,”
said Will Stutely; and his addition was carried unanimously.
“So be it, then,” cried
Little John, approaching the sheriff. “Now
swear by your life and your patron saint ”
“I will swear it by St. George,
who is patron of us all,” said the Sheriff vigorously,
“that I will never disturb or distress the outlaws
in Sherwood.”
“But let me catch any of you
out of Sherwood!” thought he to himself.
Then the twenty pieces of gold were
paid over, and the Sheriff once more prepared to depart.
“Never had we so worshipful
a guest before,” said Robin; “and as the
new moon is beginning to silver the leaves, I shall
bear you company myself for part of the way.
’Twas I who brought you into the wood.”
“Nay, I protest against your
going needlessly far,” said Sheriff.
“But I protest that I am loath
to lose your company,” replied Robin. “The
next time I may not be so pleased.”
And he took the Sheriff’s horse
by the bridle rein, and led him through the lane and
by many a thicket till the main road was reached.
“Now fare you well, good Sheriff,”
he said, “and when next you think to despoil
a poor prodigal, remember the herd you would have bought
over against Gamewell. And when next you employ
a servant, make certain that he is not employing you.”
So saying he smote the nag’s
haunch, and off went the Sheriff upon the road to
Nottingham.
And that is how you will
find from many ballads that came to be sung at the
Sheriff’s expense, and which are known even to
the present day that, I say, is how the
Sheriff lost three good servants and found them again.