HOW ROBIN HOOD FOUGHT GUY OF GISBORNE
“I dwell by dale
and down,” quoth he,
“And Robin to
take I’m sworn;
And when I am called
by my right name,
I am Guy of good Gisborne.”
Some weeks passed after the rescue
of the widow’s three sons; weeks spent by the
Sheriff in the vain effort to entrap Robin Hood and
his men. For Robin’s name and deeds had
come to the King’s ears, in London town, and
he sent word to the Sheriff to capture the outlaw,
under penalty of losing his office. So the Sheriff
tried every manner of means to surprise Robin Hood
in the forest, but always without success. And
he increased the price put upon Robin’s head,
in the hope that the best men of the kingdom could
be induced to try their skill at a capture.
Now there was a certain Guy of Gisborne,
a hireling knight of the King’s army, who heard
of Robin and of the price upon his head. Sir Guy
was one of the best men at the bow and the sword in
all the King’s service. But his heart was
black and treacherous. He obtained the King’s
leave forthwith to seek out the forester; and armed
with the King’s scroll he came before the Sheriff
at Nottingham.
“I have come to capture Robin
Hood,” quoth he, “and mean to have him,
dead or alive.”
“Right gladly would I aid you,”
answered the Sheriff, “even if the King’s
seal were not sufficient warrant. How many men
need you?”
“None,” replied Sir Guy,
“for I am convinced that forces of men can never
come at the bold robber. I must needs go alone.
But do you hold your men in readiness at Barnesdale,
and when you hear a blast from this silver bugle,
come quickly, for I shall have the sly Robin within
my clutches.”
“Very good,” said the
Sheriff. “Marry, it shall be done.”
And he set about giving orders, while Guy of Gisborne
sallied forth disguised.
Now as luck would have it, Will Scarlet
and Little John had gone to Barnesdale that very day
to buy suits of Lincoln green for certain of the yeomen
who had come out at the knees and elbows. But
not deeming it best for both of them to run their
necks into a noose, together, they parted just outside
the town, and Will went within the gates, while John
tarried and watched at the brow of the hill on the
outside.
Presently whom should he see but this
same Will flying madly forth from the gates again,
closely pursued by the Sheriff and threescore men.
Over the moat Will sprang, through the bushes and
briars, across the swamp, over stocks and stones,
up the woodland roads in long leaps like a scared
jack rabbit. And after him puffed the Sheriff
and his men, their force scattering out in the flight
as one man would tumble head-first into a ditch, another
mire up in the swamp, another trip over a rolling
stone, and still others sit down on the roadside and
gasp for wind like fish out of water.
Little John could not forbear laughing
heartily at the scene, though he knew that ’twould
be anything but a laughing matter if Will should stumble.
And in truth one man was like to come upon him.
It was William-a-Trent, the best runner among the
Sheriff’s men. He had come within twenty
feet of Scarlet and was leaping upon him with long
bounds like a greyhound, when John rose up quickly,
drew his bow and let fly one of his fatal shafts.
It would have been better for William-a-Trent to have
been abed with sorrow says the ballad than
to be that day in the greenwood slade to meet with
Little John’s arrow. He had run his last
race.
The others halted a moment in consternation,
when the shaft came hurtling down from the hill; but
looking up they beheld none save Little John, and
with a cry of fierce joy they turned upon him.
Meanwhile Will Scarlet had reached the brow of the
hill and sped down the other side.
“I’ll just send one more
little message of regret to the Sheriff,” said
Little John, “before I join Will.”
But this foolhardy deed was his undoing,
for just as the arrow left the string, the good yew
bow that had never before failed him snapped in twain.
“Woe worth, woe worth thee,
wicked wood, that ere thou grew on a tree!”
cursed Little John, and planted his feet resolutely
in the earth resolved to sell the path dearly; for
the soldiers were now so close upon him that he dared
not turn.
And a right good account of himself
he gave that day, dealing with each man as he came
up according to his merit. And so winded were
the pursuers when they reached the top of the hill
that he laid out the first ten of them right and left
with huge blows of his brawny fist.
But if five men can do more than three,
a score can overcome one.
A body of archers stood off at a prudent
distance and covered Little John with their arrows.
“Now yield you!” panted
the Sheriff. “Yield you, Little John, or
Reynold Greenleaf, or whatever else name you carry
this day! Yield you, or some few of these shafts
will reach your heart!”
“Marry, my heart has been touched
by your words ere now,” said Little John; “and
I yield me.”
So the Sheriff’s men laid hold
of Little John and bound him fast with many cords,
so fearful were they lest he should escape. And
the Sheriff laughed aloud in glee, and thought of
how he should avenge his stolen plate, and determined
to make a good day’s work of it.
“By the Saints!” he said,
“you shall be drawn by dale and down, and hanged
high on a hill in Barnesdale this very day.”
“Hang and be hanged!”
retorted the prisoner. “You may fail of
your purpose if it be Heaven’s will.”
Back down the hill and across the
moor went the company speedily, for they feared a
rescue. And as they went the stragglers joined
them. Here a man got up feebly out of the ditch
and rubbed his pate and fell in like a chicken with
the pip going for its dinner. Yonder came hobbling
a man with a lame ankle, or another with his shins
torn by the briars or another with his jacket all
muddy from the marsh. So in truth it was a tatterdemalion
crew that limped and straggled and wandered back into
Barnesdale that day. Yet all were merry, for the
Sheriff had promised them flagons of wine, and moreover
they were to hang speedily the boldest outlaw in England,
next to Robin Hood himself.
The gallows was quickly put up and a new rope provided.
“Now up with you!” commanded
the Sheriff, “and let us see if your greenwood
tricks will avail you to-morrow.”
“I would that I had bold Robin’s
horn,” muttered poor John; “methinks ’tis
all up with me even as the Sheriff hath spoken.”
In good sooth the time was dire and
pressing. The rope was placed around the prisoner’s
neck and the men prepared to haul away.
“Are you ready?” called the Sheriff.
“One two ”
But before the “three”
left his lips the faint sound of a silver bugle came
floating over the hill.
“By my troth, that is Sir Guy
of Gisborne’s horn,” quoth the Sheriff;
“and he bade me not to delay answering its summons.
He has caught Robin Hood.”
“Pardon, Excellency,”
said one of his men; “but if he has caught Robin
Hood, this is a merry day indeed. And let us save
this fellow and build another gallows and hang them
both together.”
“That’s a brave thought!”
said the Sheriff slapping his knee. “Take
the rascal down and bind him fast to the gallows-tree
against our return.”
So Little John was made fast to the
gallows-tree, while the Sheriff and all his men who
could march or hobble went out to get Robin Hood and
bring him in for the double hanging.
Let us leave talking of Little John
and the Sheriff, and see what has become of Robin
Hood.
In the first place, he and Little
John had come near having a quarrel that self-same
morning because both had seen a curious looking yeoman,
and each wanted to challenge him singly. But Robin
would not give way to his lieutenant, and that is
why John, in a huff, had gone with Will to Barnesdale.
Meanwhile Robin approached the curious
looking stranger. He seemed to be a three-legged
creature at first sight, but on coming nearer you would
have seen that ’twas really naught but a poorly
clad man, who for a freak had covered up his rags
with a capul-hide, nothing more nor less than the
sun-dried skin of a horse, complete with head, tail,
and mane. The skin of the head made a helmet;
while the tail gave the curious three-legged appearance.
“Good-morrow, good fellow,”
said Robin cheerily, “methinks by the bow you
bear in your hand that you should be a good archer.”
“Indifferent good,” said
the other returning his greeting; “but ’tis
not of archery that I am thinking this morning, for
I have lost my way and would fain find it again.”
“By my faith, I could have believed
’twas your wits you’d lost!” thought
Robin smiling. Then aloud: “I’ll
lead you through the wood,” quoth he, “an
you will tell me your business. For belike your
speech is much gentler than your attire.”
“Who are you to ask me my business?”
asked the other roughly.
“I am one of the King’s
Rangers,” replied Robin, “set here to guard
his deer against curious looking strollers.”
“Curious looking I may be,”
returned the other, “but no stroller. Hark
ye, since you are a Ranger, I must e’en demand
your service. I am on the King’s business
and seek an outlaw. Men call him Robin Hood.
Are you one of his men?” eyeing him
keenly.
“Nay, God forbid!” said
Robin; “but what want you with him?”
“That is another tale.
But I’d rather meet with that proud outlaw than
forty good pounds of the King’s money.”
Robin now saw how the land lay.
“Come with me, good yeoman,”
said he, “and belike, a little later in the
day, I can show you Robin’s haunts when he is
at home. Meanwhile let us have some pastime under
the greenwood tree. Let us first try the mastery
at shooting arrows.”
The other agreed, and they cut down
two willow wands of a summer’s growth that grew
beneath a brier, and set them up at a distance of
threescore yards.
“Lead on, good fellow,”
quoth Robin. “The first shot to you.”
“Nay, by my faith,” said
the other, “I will follow your lead.”
So Robin stepped forth and bent his
bow carelessly and sent his shaft whizzing toward
the wand, missing it by a scant inch. He of the
horse-hide followed with more care yet was a good three-fingers’
breadth away. On the second round, the stranger
led off and landed cleverly within the small garland
at the top of the wand; but Robin shot far better
and clave the wand itself, clean at the middle.
“A blessing on your heart!”
shouted Capul-Hide; “never saw I such shooting
as that! Belike you are better than Robin Hood
himself. But you have not yet told me your name.”
“Nay, by my faith,” quoth
Robin, “I must keep it secret till you have
told me your own.”
“I do not disdain to tell it,”
said the other. “I dwell by dale and down,
and to take bold Robin am I sworn. This would
I tell him to his face, were he not so great a craven.
When I am called by my right name, I am Guy of Gisborne.”
This he said with a great show of
pride, and he strutted back and forth, forgetful that
he had just been beaten at archery.
Robin eyed him quietly. “Methinks
I have heard of you elsewhere. Do you not bring
men to the gallows for a living?”
“Aye, but only outlaws such as Robin Hood.”
“But pray what harm has Robin Hood done you?”
“He is a highway robber,” said Sir Guy,
evading the question.
“Has he ever taken from the
rich that he did not give again to the poor?
Does he not protect the women and children and side
with weak and helpless? Is not his greatest crime
the shooting of a few King’s deer?”
“Have done with your sophistry,”
said Sir Guy impatiently. “I am more than
ever of opinion that you are one of Robin’s men
yourself.”
“I have told you I am not,”
quoth Robin briefly. “But if I am to help
you catch him, what is your plan?”
“Do you see this silver bugle?”
said the other. “A long blast upon it will
summon the Sheriff and all his men, when once I have
Robin within my grasp. And if you show him to
me, I’ll give you the half of my forty pounds
reward.”
“I would not help hang a man
for ten times forty pounds,” said the outlaw.
“Yet will I point out Robin to you for the reward
I find at my sword’s point. I myself am
Robin Hood of Sherwood and Barnesdale.”
“Then have at you!” cried
the other springing swiftly into action. His
sword leaped forth from beneath the horse’s hide
with the speed born of long practice, and before Robin
had come to guard, the other had smitten at him full
and foul. Robin eluded the lunge and drew his
own weapon.
“A scurvy trick!” quoth
he grimly, “to strike at a man unprepared.”
Then neither spoke more, but fell
sternly to work lunge and thrust and ward
and parry for two full hours the weapons
smote together sullenly, and neither Robin Hood nor
Sir Guy would yield an inch. I promise you that
if you could have looked forth on the fight from behind
the trunk of some friendly tree, you would have seen
deadly sport such as few men beheld in Sherwood Forest.
For the fighters glared sullenly at each other, the
fires of hatred burning in their eyes. One was
fighting for his life; the other for a reward and
the King’s favor.
Still circled the bright blades swiftly
in the air now gleaming in the peaceful
sunlight again hissing like maddened serpents.
Neither had yet touched the other, until Robin, in
an unlucky moment, stumbled over the projecting root
of a tree; when Sir Guy, instead of giving him the
chance to recover himself, as any courteous knight
would have done, struck quickly at the falling man
and wounded him in the left side.
“Ah, dear Lady in Heaven,”
gasped Robin uttering his favorite prayer, “shield
me now! ’Twas never a man’s destiny
to die before his day.”
And adroitly he sprang up again, and
came straight at the other with an awkward but unexpected
stroke. The knight had raised his weapon high
to give a final blow, when Robin reached beneath and
across his guard. One swift lunge, and Sir Guy
of Gisborne staggered backward with a deep groan,
Robin’s sword through his throat.
Robin looked at the slain man regretfully.
“You did bring it upon yourself,”
said he; “and traitor and hireling though you
were, I would not willingly have killed you.”
He looked to his own wound. It
was not serious, and he soon staunched the blood and
bound up the cut. Then he dragged the dead body
into the bushes, and took off the horse’s hide
and put it upon himself. He placed his own cloak
upon Sir Guy, and marked his face so none might tell
who had been slain. Robin’s own figure
and face were not unlike the other’s.
Pulling the capul-hide well over himself,
so that the helmet hid most of his face, Robin seized
the silver bugle and blew a long blast. It was
the blast that saved the life of Little John, over
in Barnesdale, for you and I have already seen how
it caused the fond Sheriff to prick up his ears and
stay the hanging, and go scurrying up over the hill
and into the wood with his men in search of another
victim.
In five-and-twenty minutes up came
running a score of the Sheriff’s best archers.
“Did you signal us, lording?”
they asked, approaching Robin.
“Aye,” said he, going to meet the puffing
Sheriff.
“What news, what news, Sir Guy?” said
that officer.
“Robin Hood and Guy of Gisborne
had a fight; and he that wears Robin’s cloak
lies under the covert yonder.”
“The best news I have heard
in all my life!” exclaimed the Sheriff rubbing
his hands. “I would that we could have saved
him for the hanging though I cannot now
complain.”
“The hanging?” repeated Robin.
“Yes. This is our lucky
day on the calendar. After you left me we narrowly
missed running one of the fellows I believe
’twas Will Scarlet to earth; and
another who came to his relief we were just about
to hang, when your horn blew.”
“Who was the other?” asked the disguised
outlaw.
“Whom do you suppose?”
laughed the Sheriff. “The best man in the
greenwood, next to Robin Hood himself Little
John, Reynold Greenleaf!” For the Sheriff could
not forget the name Little John had borne under his
own roof at Nottingham.
“Little John!” thought
Robin with a start. Verily that was a lucky blast
of the bugle! “But I see you have not escaped
without a scratch,” continued the Sheriff, becoming
talkative through pure glee. “Here, one
of you men! Give Sir Guy of Gisborne your horse;
while others of you bury that dog of an outlaw where
he lies. And let us hasten back to Barnesdale
and finish hanging the other.”
So they put spurs to their horses,
and as they rode Robin forced himself to talk merrily,
while all the time he was planning the best way to
succor Little John.
“A boon, Sheriff,” he
said as they reached the gates of the town.
“What is it, worthy sir? You have but to
speak.”
“I do not want any of your gold,
for I have had a brave fight. But now that I
have slain the master, let me put an end to the man;
so it shall be said that Guy of Gisborne despatched
the two greatest outlaws of England in one day.”
“Have it as you will,”
said the Sheriff, “but you should have asked
a knight’s fee and double your reward, and it
would have been yours. It isn’t every man
that can take Robin Hood.” “No, Excellency,”
answered Robin. “I say it without boasting,
that no man took Robin Hood yesterday and none shall
take him to-morrow.”
Then he approached Little John, who
was still tied to the gallows-tree; and he said to
the Sheriff’s men, “Now stand you back
here till I see if the prisoner has been shrived.”
And he stooped swiftly, and cut Little John’s
bonds, and thrust into his hands Sir Guy’s bow
and arrows, which he had been careful to take.
“’Tis I, Robin!”
he whispered. But in truth, Little John knew it
already, and had decided there was to be no hanging
that day.
Then Robin blew three loud blasts
upon his own horn, and drew forth his own bow; and
before the astonished Sheriff and his men could come
to arms the arrows were whistling in their midst in
no uncertain fashion.
And look! Through the gates and
over the walls came pouring another flight of arrows!
Will Scarlet and Will Stutely had watched and planned
a rescue ever since the Sheriff and Robin rode back
down the hill. Now in good time they came; and
the Sheriff’s demoralized force turned tail
and ran, while Robin and Little John stood under the
harmless gallows, and sped swift arrows after them,
and laughed to see them go.
Then they joined their comrades and
hasted back to the good greenwood, and there rested.
They had got enough sport for one day.