HOW ROBIN HOOD WAS SOUGHT OF THE TINKER
And while the tinker
fell asleep,
Robin made haste away,
And left the tinker
in the lurch,
For the great shot to
pay.
King Henry was as good as his word.
Robin Hood and his party were suffered to depart from
London the parting bringing keen sorrow
to Marian and for forty days no hand was
raised against them. But at the end of that time,
the royal word was sent to the worthy Sheriff at Nottingham
that he must lay hold upon the outlaws without further
delay, as he valued his office.
Indeed, the exploits of Robin and
his band, ending with the great tourney in Finsbury
Field, had made a mighty stir through all England,
and many there were to laugh boldly at the Nottingham
official for his failures to capture the outlaws.
The Sheriff thereupon planned three
new expeditions into the greenwood, and was even brave
enough to lead them, since he had fifteen-score men
at his beck and call each time. But never the
shadow of an outlaw did he see, for Robin’s
men lay close, and the Sheriff’s men knew not
how to come at their chief hiding-place in the cove
before the cavern.
Now the Sheriff’s daughter had
hated Robin Hood bitterly in her heart ever since
the day he refused to bestow upon her the golden arrow,
and shamed her before all the company. His tricks,
also, upon her father were not calculated to lessen
her hatred, and so she sought about for means to aid
the Sheriff in catching the enemy.
“There is no need to go against
this man with force of arms,” she said.
“We must meet his tricks with other tricks of
our own.”
“Would that we could!”
groaned the Sheriff. “The fellow is becoming
a nightmare unto me.”
“Let me plan a while,”
she replied. “Belike I can cook up some
scheme for his undoing.”
“Agreed,” said the Sheriff,
“and if anything comes of your planning, I will
e’en give you an hundred silver pennies for a
new gown, and a double reward to the man who catches
the outlaws.”
Now upon that same day, while the
Sheriff’s daughter was racking her brains for
a scheme, there came to the Mansion House a strolling
tinker named Middle, a great gossip and braggart.
And as he pounded away upon some pots and pans in
the scullery, he talked loudly about what he
would do, if he once came within reach of that rascal
Robin Hood.
“It might be that this simple
fellow could do something through his very simplicity,”
mused the Sheriff’s daughter, overhearing his
prattle. “Odds bodikins! ’twill do
no harm to try his service, while I bethink myself
of some better plan.”
And she called him to her, and looked
him over a big brawny fellow enough, with
an honest look about the eye, and a countenance so
open that when he smiled his mouth seemed the only
country on the map.
“I am minded to try your skill
at outlaw catching,” she said, “and will
add goodly measure to the stated reward if you succeed.
Do you wish to make good your boasted prowess?”
The tinker grinned broadly.
“Yes, your ladyship,” he said.
“Then here is a warrant made
out this morning by the Sheriff himself. See
that you keep it safely and use it to good advantage.”
And she dismissed him.
Middle departed from the house mightily
pleased with himself, and proud of his commission.
He swung his crab-tree-staff recklessly in his glee so
recklessly that he imperiled the shins of more than
one angry passer-by and vowed he’d
crack the ribs of Robin Hood with it, though he was
surrounded by every outlaw in the whole greenwood.
Spurred on by the thoughts of his
own coming bravery, he left the town and proceeded
toward Barnesdale. The day was hot and dusty,
and at noontime he paused at a wayside inn to refresh
himself. He began by eating and drinking and
dozing, in turn, then sought to do all at once.
Mine host of the “Seven Does”
stood by, discussing the eternal Robin with a drover.
“Folk do say that my lord Sheriff
has sent into Lincoln for more men-at-arms and horses,
and that when he has these behind him, he’ll
soon rid the forest of these fellows.”
“Of whom speak you?” asked the tinker
sitting up.
“Of Robin Hood and his men,”
said the host; “but go to sleep again. You
will never get the reward!”
“And why not?” asked the
tinker, rising with great show of dignity.
“Where our Sheriff has failed,
and the stout Guy of Gisborne, and many more beside,
it behoves not a mere tinker to succeed.”
The tinker laid a heavy hand upon
the innkeeper’s fat shoulder, and tried to look
impressive.
“There is your reckoning, host,
upon the table. I must e’en go upon my
way, because I have more important business than to
stand here gossiping with you. But be not surprised,
if, the next time you see me, I shall have with me
no less person than Robin Hood himself!”
And he strode loftily out the door
and walked up the hot white road toward Barnesdale.
He had not gone above a quarter of
a mile when he met a young man with curling brown
hair and merry eyes. The young man carried his
light cloak over his arm, because of the heat, and
was unarmed save for a light sword at his side.
The newcomer eyed the perspiring tinker in a friendly
way, and seeing he was a stout fellow accosted him.
“Good-day to you!” said he.
“Good-day to you!” said the tinker; “and
a morrow less heating.”
“Aye,” laughed the other. “Whence
come you? And know you the news?”
“What is the news?” said
the gossipy tinker, pricking up his ear; “I am
a tinker by trade, Middle by name, and come from over
against Banbury.”
“Why as for the news,”
laughed the stranger, “I hear that two tinkers
were set i’ the stocks for drinking too much
ale and beer.”
“If that be all your news,”
retorted Middle, “I can beat you clear to the
end of the lane.”
“What news have you? Seeing
that you go from town to town, I ween you can outdo
a poor country yokel at tidings.”
“All I have to tell,”
said the other, “is that I am especially commissioned” he
felt mightily proud of these big words “especially
commissioned to seek a bold outlaw which they call
Robin Hood.”
“So?” said the other arching
his brows. “How ’especially commissioned’?”
“I have a warrant from the Sheriff,
sealed with the King’s own seal, to take him
where I can; and if you can tell me where he is, I
will e’en make a man of you.”
“Let me see the warrant,”
said the other, “to satisfy myself if it be
right; and I will do the best I can to bring him to
you.”
“That will I not,” replied
the tinker; “I will trust none with it.
And if you’ll not help me to come at him I must
forsooth catch him by myself.”
And he made his crab-tree-staff whistle
shrill circles in the air.
The other smiled at the tinker’s simplicity,
and said:
“The middle of the road on a
hot July day is not a good place to talk things over.
Now if you’re the man for me and I’m the
man for you, let’s go back to the inn, just
beyond the bend of road, and quench our thirst and
cool our heads for thinking.”
“Marry come up!” quoth
the tinker. “That will I! For though
I’ve just come from there, my thirst rises mightily
at the sound of your voice.”
So back he turned with the stranger
and proceeded to the “Seven Does.”
The landlord arched his eyebrows silently
when he saw the two come in, but served them willingly.
The tinker asked for wine, and Robin
for ale. The wine was not the most cooling drink
in the cellar, nor the clearest headed. Nathless,
the tinker asked for it, since it was expensive and
the other man had invited him to drink. They
lingered long over their cups, Master Middle emptying
one after another while the stranger expounded at great
length on the best plans for coming at and capturing
Robin Hood.
In the end the tinker fell sound asleep
while in the act of trying to get a tankard to his
lips. Then the stranger deftly opened the snoring
man’s pouch, took out the warrant, read it, and
put it in his own wallet. Calling mine host to
him, he winked at him with a half smile and told him
that the tinker would pay the whole score when he awoke.
Thus was Master Middle left in the lurch “for
the great shot to pay.”
Nathless, the stranger seemed in no
great hurry. He had the whim to stay awhile and
see what the droll tinker might do when he awoke.
So he hid behind a window shutter, on the outside,
and awaited events.
Presently the tinker came to himself
with a prodigious yawn, and reached at once for another
drink.
“What were you saying, friend,
about the best plan (ya-a-a-ah!) for catching
this fellow? Hello! where’s
the man gone?”
He had looked around and saw no one
with him at the table.
“Host! host!” he shouted,
“where is that fellow who was to pay my reckoning?”
“I know not,” answered
the landlord sharply. “Mayhap he left the
money in your purse.”
“No he didn’t!”
roared Middle, looking therein. “Help!
Help! I’ve been robbed! Look you,
host, you are liable to arrest for high treason!
I am here upon the King’s business, as I told
you earlier in the day. And yet while I did rest
under your roof, thinking you were an honest man (hic!)
and one loving of the King, my pouch has been opened
and many matters of state taken from it.”
“Cease your bellowing!”
said the landlord. “What did you lose?”
“Oh, many weighty matters, I
do assure you. I had with me, item, a warrant,
granted under the hand of my lord High Sheriff of Nottingham,
and sealed with the Kings’s own seal, for the
capture (hic!) and arrest and
overcoming of a notorious rascal, one Robin Hood of
Barnesdale. Item, one crust of bread. Item,
one lump (hic!) of solder. Item, three pieces
of twine. Item, six single keys (hic!), useful
withal. Item, twelve silver pennies, the which
I earned this week (hic!) in fair labor. Item ”
“Have done with your items!”
said the host. “And I marvel greatly to
hear you speak in such fashion of your friend, Robin
Hood of Barnesdale. For was he not with you in
all good-fellowship?”
“Wh-a-at? That Robin
Hood?” gasped Middle with staring eyes.
“Why did you not tell me?”
“Faith, I saw no need
o’ telling you! Did you not tell me the
first time you were here to-day, that I need not be
surprised if you came back with no less person than
Robin Hood himself?”
“Jesu give me pardon!”
moaned the tinker. “I see it all now.
He got me to drinking, and then took my warrant, and
my pennies, and my crust ”
“Yes, yes,” interrupted
the host. “I know all about that. But
pay me the score for both of you.”
“But I have no money, gossip.
Let me go after that vile bag-o’-bones, and
I’ll soon get it out of him.”
“Not so,” replied the
other. “If I waited for you to collect from
Robin Hood, I would soon close up shop.”
“What is the account?” asked Middle.
“Ten shillings, just.”
“Then take here my working-bag
and my good hammer too; and if I light upon that knave
I will soon come back after them.”
“Give me your leathern coat
as well,” said mine host; “the hammer and
bag of tools are as naught to me.”
“Gramercy!” cried Master
Middle, losing what was left of his temper. “It
seems that I have escaped one thief only to fall into
the hands of another. If you will but walk with
me out into the middle of the road, I’ll give
you such a crack as shall drive some honesty into your
thick skull.”
“You are wasting your breath
and my time,” retorted the landlord.
“Give me your things, and get
you gone after your man, speedily.”
Middle thought this to be good advice;
so he strode forth from the “Seven Does”
in a black mood.
Ere he had gone half a mile, he saw
Robin Hood walking demurely among the trees a little
in front of him.
“Ho there, you villain!”
roared the tinker. “Stay your steps!
I am desperately in need of you this day!”
Robin turned about with a surprised face.
“What knave is this?” he asked gently,
“who comes shouting after me?”
“No knave! no knave at all!”
panted the other, rushing up. “But an honest man who
would have that warrant and the
money for drink!”
“Why, as I live, it is our honest
tinker who was seeking Robin Hood! Did you find
him, gossip?”
“Marry, that did I! and I’m
now going to pay him my respects!”
And he plunged at him, making a sweeping
stroke with his crab-tree-cudgel.
Robin tried to draw his sword, but
could not do it for a moment through dodging the other’s
furious blows. When he did get it in hand, the
tinker had reached him thrice with resounding thwacks.
Then the tables were turned, for he dashed in right
manfully with his shining blade and made the tinker
give back again.
The greenwood rang with the noise
of the fray. ’Twas steel against wood,
and they made a terrible clattering when they came
together. Robin thought at first that he could
hack the cudgel to pieces, for his blade was one of
Toledo finely tempered steel which the Queen
had given him. But the crab-tree-staff had been
fired and hardened and seasoned by the tinker’s
arts until it was like a bar of iron no
pleasant neighbor for one’s ribs.
Robin presently found this out to
his sorrow. The long reach and long stick got
to him when ’twas impossible for him to touch
his antagonist. So his sides began to ache sorely.
“Hold your hand, tinker,”
he said at length. “I cry a boon of you.”
“Before I do it,” said
the tinker, “I’d hang you on this tree.”
But even as he spoke, Robin found
the moment’s grace for which he longed; and
immediately grasped his horn and blew the three well-known
blasts of the greenwood.
“A murrain seize you!”
roared the tinker commencing afresh. “Up
to your old tricks again, are you? Well, I’ll
have time to finish my job, if I hurry.”
But Robin was quite able to hold his
own at a pinch, and they had not exchanged many lunges
and passes when up came Little John and Will Scarlet
and a score of yeomen at their heels. Middle was
seized without ceremony, while Robin sat himself down
to breathe. “What is the matter?”
quoth Little John, “that you should sit so weariedly
upon the highway side?”
“Faith, that rascally tinker
yonder has paid his score well upon my hide,”
answered Robin ruefully.
“That tinker, then,” said
Little John, “must be itching for more work.
Fain would I try if he can do as much for me.”
“Or me,” said Will Scarlet,
who like Little John was always willing to swing a
cudgel.
“Nay,” laughed Robin.
“Belike I could have done better, an he had given
me time to pull a young tree up by the roots.
But I hated to spoil the Queen’s blade upon
his tough stick or no less tough hide. He had
a warrant for my arrest which I stole from him.”
“Also, item, twelve silver pennies,”
interposed the tinker, unsubdued; “item, one
crust of bread, ’gainst my supper. Item,
one lump of solder. Item, three pieces of twine.
Item, six single keys. Item ”
“Yes, I know,” quoth the
merry Robin; “I stood outside the landlord’s
window and heard you count over your losses. Here
they are again; and the silver pennies are turned
by magic into gold. Here also, if you will, is
my hand.”
“I take it heartily, with the
pence!” cried Middle. “By my leathern
coat and tools, which I shall presently have out of
that sly host, I swear that I never yet met a man
I liked as well as you! An you and your men here
will take me, I swear I’ll serve you honestly.
Do you want a tinker? Nay, but verily you must!
Who else can mend and grind your swords and patch
your pannikins and fight, too, when occasion
serve? Mend your pots! mend your pa-a-ans!”
And he ended his speech with the sonorous
cry of his craft.
By this time the whole band was laughing
uproariously at the tinker’s talk.
“What say you, fellows?”
asked Robin. “Would not this tinker be a
good recruit?”
“That he would!” answered
Will Scarlet, clapping the new man on the back.
“He will keep Friar Tuck and Much the miller’s
son from having the blues.”
So amid great merriment and right
good fellowship the outlaws shook Middle by the hand,
and he took oath of fealty, and thought no more of
the Sheriff’s daughter.