HOW ROBIN HOOD MET WILL SCARLET
The youngster was clothed
in scarlet red
In scarlet fine and
gay;
And he did frisk it
o’er the plain,
And chanted a roundelay.
One fine morning, soon after the proud
Sheriff had been brought to grief, Robin Hood and
Little John went strolling down a path through the
wood. It was not far from the foot bridge
where they had fought their memorable battle; and
by common impulse they directed their steps to the
brook to quench their thirst and rest them in the cool
bushes. The morning gave promise of a hot day.
The road even by the brook was dusty. So the
cooling stream was very pleasing and grateful to their
senses.
On each side of them, beyond the dusty
highway, stretched out broad fields of tender young
corn. On the yon side of the fields uprose the
sturdy oaks and beeches and ashes of the forest; while
at their feet modest violets peeped out shyly and
greeted the loiterers with an odor which made the
heart glad. Over on the far side of the brook
in a tiny bay floated three lily-pads; and from amid
some clover blossoms on the bank an industrious bee
rose with the hum of busy contentment. It was
a day so brimful of quiet joy that the two friends
lay flat on their backs gazing up at the scurrying
clouds, and neither caring to break the silence.
Presently they heard some one coming
up the road whistling gaily, as though he owned the
whole world and ’twas but made to whistle in.
Anon he chanted a roundelay with a merry note.
“By my troth, a gay bird!”
quoth Robin, raising up on his elbow. “Let
us lie still, and trust that his purse is not as light
as his heart.”
So they lay still, and in a minute
more up came a smart stranger dressed in scarlet and
silk and wearing a jaunty hat with a curling cock feather
in it. His whole costume was of scarlet, from
the feather to the silk hosen on his legs. A
goodly sword hung at his side, its scabbard all embossed
with tilting knights and weeping ladies. His hair
was long and yellow and hung clustering about his
shoulders, for all the world like a schoolgirl’s;
and he bore himself with as mincing a gait as the pertest
of them.
Little John clucked his teeth drolly
at this sight. “By my troth, a gay bird!”
he said echoing the other’s words then
added, “But not so bad a build for all his prettiness.
Look you, those calves and thighs are well rounded
and straight. The arms, for all that gold-wrought
cloak, hang stoutly from full shoulders. I warrant
you the fop can use his dainty sword right well on
occasion.”
“Nay,” retorted Robin,
“he is naught but a ladies’ man from court.
My long-bow ’gainst a plugged shilling that
he would run and bellow lustily at sight of a quarter-staff.
Stay you behind this bush and I will soon get some
rare sport out of him. Belike his silk purse may
contain more pennies than the law allows to one man
in Sherwood or Barnesdale.”
So saying Robin Hood stepped forth
briskly from the covert and planted himself in the
way of the scarlet stranger. The latter had walked
so slowly that he was scarce come to their resting-place;
and now on beholding Robin he neither slackened nor
quickened his pace but sauntered idly straight ahead,
looking to the right and to the left, with the finest
air in the world, but never once at Robin.
“Hold!” quoth the outlaw.
“What mean ye by running thus over a wayfarer,
rough shod?”
“Wherefore should I hold, good
fellow?” said the stranger in a smooth voice,
and looking at Robin for the first time.
“Because I bid you to,” replied Robin.
“And who may you be?” asked the other
as coolly as you please.
“What my name is matters not,”
said Robin; “but know that I am a public tax-gatherer
and equalizer of shillings. If your purse have
more than a just number of shillings or pence, I must
e’en lighten it somewhat; for there are many
worthy people round about these borders who have less
than the just amount. Wherefore, sweet gentleman,
I pray you hand over your purse without more ado,
that I may judge of its weight in proper fashion.”
The other smiled as sweetly as though
a lady were paying him a compliment.
“You are a droll fellow,”
he said calmly. “Your speech amuses me
mightily. Pray continue, if you have not done,
for I am in no hurry this morning.”
“I have said all with my tongue
that is needful,” retorted Robin, beginning
to grow red under the collar. “Nathless,
I have other arguments which may not be so pleasing
to your dainty skin. Prithee, stand and deliver.
I promise to deal fairly with the purse.”
“Alack-a-day!” said the
stranger with a little shrug of his shoulders; “I
am deeply sorrowful that I cannot show my purse to
every rough lout that asks to see it. But I really
could not, as I have further need of it myself and
every farthing it contains. Wherefore, pray stand
aside.”
“Nay that will I not! and ’twill
go the harder with you if you do not yield at once.”
“Good fellow,” said the
other gently, “have I not heard all your speech
with patience? Now that is all I promised to do.
My conscience is salved and I must go on my way.
To-rol-o-rol-e-loo!” he caroled, making
as though to depart.
“Hold, I say!” quoth Robin
hotly; for he knew how Little John must be chuckling
at this from behind the bushes. “Hold I
say, else I shall have to bloody those fair locks
of yours!” And he swung his quarter-staff threateningly.
“Alas!” moaned the stranger
shaking his head. “The pity of it all!
Now I shall have to run this fellow through with my
sword! And I hoped to be a peaceable man henceforth!”
And sighing deeply he drew his shining blade and stood
on guard.
“Put by your weapon,”
said Robin. “It is too pretty a piece of
steel to get cracked with common oak cudgel; and that
is what would happen on the first pass I made at you.
Get you a stick like mine out of yon undergrowth,
and we will fight fairly, man to man.”
The stranger thought a moment with
his usual slowness, and eyed Robin from head to foot.
Then he unbuckled his scabbard, laid it and the sword
aside, and walked deliberately over to the oak thicket.
Choosing from among the shoots and saplings he found
a stout little tree to his liking, when he laid hold
of it, without stopping to cut it, and gave a tug.
Up it came root and all, as though it were a stalk
of corn, and the stranger walked back trimming it
as quietly as though pulling up trees were the easiest
thing in the world.
Little John from his hiding-place
saw the feat, and could hardly restrain a long whistle.
“By our Lady!” he muttered to himself,
“I would not be in Master Robin’s boots!”
Whatever Robin thought upon seeing
the stranger’s strength, he uttered not a word
and budged not an inch. He only put his oak staff
at parry as the other took his stand.
There was a threefold surprise that
day, by the brookside. The stranger and Robin
and Little John in the bushes all found a combat that
upset all reckoning. The stranger for all his
easy strength and cool nerve found an antagonist who
met his blows with the skill of a woodman. Robin
found the stranger as hard to hit as though fenced
in by an oak hedge. While Little John rolled
over and over in silent joy.
Back and forth swayed the fighters,
their cudgels pounding this way and that, knocking
off splinters and bark, and threatening direst damage
to bone and muscle and skin. Back and forth they
pranced kicking up a cloud of dust and gasping for
fresh air. From a little way off you would have
vowed that these two men were trying to put out a fire,
so thickly hung the cloud of battle over them.
Thrice did Robin smite the scarlet man with
such blows that a less stout fellow must have bowled
over. Only twice did the scarlet man smite Robin,
but the second blow was like to finish him. The
first had been delivered over the knuckles, and though
’twas a glancing stroke it well nigh broke Robin’s
fingers, so that he could not easily raise his staff
again. And while he was dancing about in pain
and muttering a dust-covered oath, the other’s
staff came swinging through the cloud at one side zip! and
struck him under the arm. Down went Robin as
though he were a nine-pin flat down into
the dust of the road. But despite the pain he
was bounding up again like an India rubber man to
renew the attack, when Little John interfered.
“Hold!” said he, bursting
out of the bushes and seizing the stranger’s
weapon. “Hold, I say!”
“Nay,” retorted the stranger
quietly, “I was not offering to smite him while
he was down. But if there be a whole nest of you
hatching here by the waterside, cluck out the other
chicks and I’ll make shift to fight them all.”
“Not for all the deer in Sherwood!”
cried Robin. “You are a good fellow and
a gentleman. I’ll fight no more with you,
for verily I feel sore in wrist and body. Nor
shall any of mine molest you henceforth.”
Sooth to say, Robin did not look in
good fighting trim. His clothes were coated with
dirt, one of his hosen had slipped halfway down from
his knee, the sleeve of his jerkin was split, and
his face was streaked with sweat and dirt. Little
John eyed him drolly.
“How now, good master,”
quoth he, “the sport you were to kick up has
left you in sorry plight. Let me dust your coat
for you.”
“Marry, it has been dusted enough
already,” replied Robin; “and I now believe
the Scripture saying that all men are but dust, for
it has sifted me through and through and lined my
gullet an inch deep. By your leave” and
he went to the brookside and drank deep and laved his
face and hands.
All this while the stranger had been
eyeing Robin attentively and listening to his voice
as though striving to recall it.
“If I mistake not,” he
said slowly at last, “you are that famous outlaw,
Robin Hood of Barnesdale.”
“You say right,” replied
Robin; “but my fame has been tumbling sadly
about in the dust to-day.”
“Now why did I not know you
at once?” continued the stranger. “This
battle need not have happened, for I came abroad to
find you to-day, and thought to have remembered your
face and speech. Know you not me, Rob, my lad?
Hast ever been to Gamewell Lodge?”
“Ha! Will Gamewell! my
dear old chum, Will Gamewell!” shouted Robin,
throwing his arms about the other in sheer affection.
“What an ass I was not to recognize you!
But it has been years since we parted, and your gentle
schooling has polished you off mightily.”
Will embraced his cousin no less heartily.
“We are quits on not knowing
kinsmen,” he said, “for you have changed
and strengthened much from the stripling with whom
I used to run foot races in old Sherwood.”
“But why seek you me?”
asked Robin. “You know I am an outlaw and
dangerous company. And how left you mine uncle?
and have you heard aught of late of of
Maid Marian?”
“Your last question first,”
answered Will, laughing, “for I perceive that
it lies nearest your heart. I saw Maid Marian
not many weeks after the great shooting at Nottingham,
when you won her the golden arrow. She prizes
the bauble among her dearest possessions, though it
has made her an enemy in the Sheriff’s proud
daughter. Maid Marian bade me tell you, if I
ever saw you, that she must return to Queen Eleanor’s
court, but she could never forget the happy days in
the greenwood. As for the old Squire, he is still
hale and hearty, though rheumatic withal. He speaks
of you as a sad young dog, but for all that is secretly
proud of your skill at the bow and of the way you
are pestering the Sheriff, whom he likes not.
’Twas for my father’s sake that I am now
in the open, an outlaw like yourself. He has
had a steward, a surly fellow enough, who, while I
was away at school, boot-licked his way to favor until
he lorded it over the whole house. Then he grew
right saucy and impudent, but my father minded it
not, deeming the fellow indispensable in managing the
estate. But when I came back it irked me sorely
to see the fellow strut about as though he owned the
place. He was sly enough with me at first, and
would brow-beat the Squire only while I was out of
earshot. It chanced one day, however, that I
heard loud voices through an open window and paused
to hearken. That vile servant called my father
’a meddling old fool,’ ‘Fool and
meddler art thou thyself, varlet,’ I shouted,
springing through the window, ‘that for
thy impudence!’ and in my heat I smote him a
blow mightier than I intended, for I have some strength
in mine arm. The fellow rolled over and never
breathed afterwards, I think I broke his neck or something
the like. Then I knew that the Sheriff would
use this as a pretext to hound my father, if I tarried.
So I bade the Squire farewell and told him I would
seek you in Sherwood.”
“Now by my halidom!” said
Robin Hood; “for a man escaping the law, you
took it about as coolly as one could wish. To
see you come tripping along decked out in all your
gay plumage and trolling forth a roundelay, one would
think you had not a care in all the world. Indeed
I remarked to Little John here that I hoped your purse
was not as light as your heart.”
“Belike you meant head,”
laughed Will; “and is this Little John the Great?
Shake hands with me, an you will, and promise me to
cross a staff with me in friendly bout some day in
the forest!”
“That will I!” quoth Little
John heartily. “Here’s my hand on
it. What is your last name again, say you?”
“’Tis to be changed,”
interposed Robin; “then shall the men armed with
warrants go hang for all of us. Let me bethink
myself. Ah! I have it! In scarlet
he came to us, and that shall be his name henceforth.
Welcome to the greenwood, Will Scarlet!”
“Aye, welcome, Will Scarlet!”
said Little John; and they all clasped hands again
and swore to be true each to the other and to Robin
Hood’s men in Sherwood Forest.