HOW WILL STUTELY WAS RESCUED
Forth of the greenwood
are they gone,
Yea, all courageously,
Resolving to bring Stutely
home,
Or every man to die.
The next day dawned bright and sunny.
The whole face of nature seemed gay as if in despite
of the tragedy which was soon to take place in the
walls of Nottingham town. The gates were not opened
upon this day, for the Sheriff was determined to carry
through the hanging of Will Stutely undisturbed.
No man, therefore, was to be allowed entrance from
without, all that morning and until after the fatal
hour of noon, when Will’s soul was to be launched
into eternity.
Early in the day Robin had drawn his
men to a point, as near as he dared, in the wood where
he could watch the road leading to the East gate.
He himself was clad in a bright scarlet dress, while
his men, a goodly array, wore their suits of sober
Lincoln green. They were armed with broadswords,
and ’each man carried his bow and a full quiver
of new arrows, straightened and sharpened cunningly
by Middle, the tinker. Over their greenwood dress,
each man had thrown a rough mantle, making him look
not unlike a friar.
“I hold it good, comrades,”
then said Robin Hood, “to tarry here in hiding
for a season while we sent some one forth to obtain
tidings. For, in sooth, ’twill work no
good to march upon the gates if they be closed.”
“Look, master,” quoth
one of the widow’s sons. “There comes
a palmer along the road from the town. Belike
he can tell us how the land ties, and if Stutely be
really in jeopardy. Shall I go out and engage
him in speech?”
“Go,” answered Robin.
So Stout Will went out from the band
while the others hid themselves and waited. When
he had come close to the palmer, who seemed a slight,
youngish man, he doffed his hat full courteously and
said,
“I crave your pardon, holy man,
but can you tell me tidings of Nottingham town?
Do they intend to put an outlaw to death this day?”
“Yea,” answered the palmer
sadly. “’Tis true enough, sorry be the
day. I have passed the very spot where the gallows-tree
is going up. ’Tis out upon the roadway
near the Sheriff’s castle. One, Will Stutely,
is to be hung thereon at noon, and I could not bear
the sight, so came away.”
The palmer spoke in a muffled voice;
and as his hood was pulled well over his head, Stout
Will could not discern what manner of man he was.
Over his shoulder he carried a long staff, with the
fashion of a little cross at one end; and he had sandaled
feet like any monk. Stout Will notice idly that
the feet were very small and white, but gave no second
thought to the matter.
“Who will shrive the poor wretch,
if you have come away from him?” he asked reproachfully.
The question seemed to put a new idea
into the palmer’s head. He turned so quickly
that he almost dropped his hood.
“Do you think that I should undertake this holy
office?”
“By Saint Peter and the Blessed
Virgin, I do indeed! Else, who will do it?
The Bishop and all his whining clerks may be there,
but not one would say a prayer for his soul.”
“But I am only a poor palmer,”
the other began hesitatingly.
“Nathless, your prayers are
as good as any and better than some,” replied
Will.
“Right gladly would I go,”
then said the palmer; “but I fear me I cannot
get into the city. You may know that the gates
are fast locked, for this morning, to all who would
come in, although they let any pass out who will.”
“Come with me,” said Stout
Will, “and my master will see that you pass
through the gates.”
So the palmer pulled his cloak still
closer about him and was brought before Robin Hood,
to whom he told all he knew of the situation.
He ended with,
“If I may make so bold, I would
not try to enter the city from this gate, as ’tis
closely guarded since yesterday. But on the far
side, no attack is looked for.”
“My thanks, gentle palmer,”
quoth Robin, “your suggestion is good, and we
will deploy to the gate upon the far side.”
So the men marched silently but quickly
until they were near to the western gate. Then
Arthur-a-Bland asked leave to go ahead as a scout,
and quietly made his way to a point under the tower
by the gate. The moat was dry on this side, as
these were times of peace, and Arthur was further
favored by a stout ivy vine which grew out from an
upper window.
Swinging himself up boldly by means
of this friendly vine, he crept through the window
and in a moment more had sprung upon the warder from
behind and gripped him hard about the throat.
The warder had no chance to utter the slightest sound,
and soon lay bound and gagged upon the floor; while
Arthur-a-Bland slipped himself into his uniform and
got hold of his keys.
’Twas the work of but a few
moments more to open the gates, let down the bridge,
and admit the rest of the band; and they lot inside
the town so quietly that none knew of their coming.
Fortune also favored them in the fact that just at
this moment the prison doors had been opened for the
march of the condemned man, and every soldier and idle
lout in the market-lace had trooped thither to see
him pass along.
Presently out came Will Stutely with
firm step but dejected air. He looked eagerly
to the right hand and to the left, but saw none of
the band. And though more than one curious face
betrayed friendship in it, he knew there could be
no aid from such source.
Will’s hands were tied behind
his back. He marched between rows of soldiery,
and the Sheriff and the Bishop brought up the rear
on horses, looking mightily puffed up and important
over the whole proceeding. He would show these
sturdy rebels would the Sheriff whose
word was law! He knew that the gates were tightly
fastened; and further he believed that the outlaws
would hardly venture again within the walls, even if
the gates were open. And as he looked around at
the fivescore archers and pikemen who lined the way
to the gallows, he smiled with grim satisfaction.
Seeing that no help was nigh, the
prisoner paused at the foot of the scaffold and spoke
in a firm tone to the Sheriff.
“My lord Sheriff,” quoth
he, “since I must needs die, grant me one boon;
for my noble master ne’er yet had a man that
was hanged on a tree:
Give me a sword all
in my hand,
And let me be unbound,
And with thee and thy
men will I fight
Till I lie dead on the
ground.”
But the Sheriff would by no means
listen to his request; but swore that he should be
hanged a shameful death, and not die by the sword
valiantly.
“O no, no, no,”
the Sheriff said,
“Thou shalt on
the gallows die,
Aye, and so shall they
master too,
If ever it in me lie.”
“O dastard coward!”
Stutely cried,
“Faint-hearted
peasant slave!
If ever my master do
thee meet,
Thou shalt thy payment
have!”
“My noble master
thee doth scorn,
And all thy cowardly
crew,
Such silly imps unable
are
Bold Robin to subdue.”
This brave speech was not calculated
to soothe the Sheriff. “To the gallows
with him!” he roared, giving a sign to the hangman;
and Stutely was pushed into the rude cart which was
to bear him under the gallows until his neck was leashed.
Then the cart would be drawn roughly away and the
unhappy man would swing out over the tail of it into
another world.
But at this moment came a slight interruption.
A boyish-looking palmer stepped forth, and said:
“Your Excellency, let me at
least shrive this poor wretch’s soul ere it
be hurled into eternity.”
“No!” shouted the Sheriff, “let
him die a dog’s death!”
“Then his damnation will rest
upon you,” said the monk firmly. “You,
my lord Bishop, cannot stand by and see this wrong
done.”
The Bishop hesitated. Like the
Sheriff, he wanted no delay; but the people were beginning
to mutter among themselves and move about uneasily.
He said a few words to the Sheriff, and the latter
nodded to the monk ungraciously.
“Perform your duty, Sir Priest,”
quoth he, “and be quick about it!” Then
turning to his soldiers. “Watch this palmer
narrowly,” he commanded. “Belike
he is in league with those rascally outlaws.”
But the palmer paid no heed to his
last words. He began to tell his beads quickly,
and to speak in a low voice to the condemned man.
But he did not touch his bonds.
Then came another stir in the crowd,
and one came pushing through the press of people and
soldiery to come near to the scaffold.
“I pray you, Will, before you
die, take leave of all your friends!” cried
out the well-known voice of Much, the miller’s
son.
At the word the palmer stepped back
suddenly and looked to one side. The Sheriff
also knew the speaker.
“Seize him!” he shouted.
“’Tis another of the crew. He is the
villain cook who once did rob me of my silver plate.
We’ll make a double hanging of this!”
“Not so fast, good master Sheriff,”
retorted Much. “First catch your man and
then hang him. But meanwhile I would like to borrow
my friend of you awhile.”
And with one stroke of his keen hunting-knife
he cut the bonds which fastened the prisoner’s
arms, and Stutely leaped lightly from the cart.
“Treason!” screamed the
Sheriff, getting black with rage. “Catch
the varlets!”
So saying he spurred his horse fiercely
forward, and rising in his stirrups brought down his
sword with might and main at Much’s head.
But his former cook dodged nimbly underneath the horse
and came up on the other side, while the weapon whistled
harmlessly in the air.
“Nay, Sir Sheriff!” he
cried, “I must e’en borrow your sword for
the friend I have borrowed.”
Thereupon he snatched the weapon deftly
from the Sheriff’s hand.
“Here, Stutely!” said
he, “the Sheriff has lent you his own sword.
Back to back with me, man, and we’ll teach these
knaves a trick or two!”
Meanwhile the soldiers had recovered
from their momentary surprise and had flung themselves
into the fray. A clear bugle-note had also sounded
the same which the soldiers had learned to dread.
’Twas the rallying note of the green wood men.
Cloth yard shafts began to hurtle
through the air, and Robin and his men cast aside
their cloaks and sprang forward crying:
“Lockesley! Lockesley! a rescue! a rescue!”
On the instant, a terrible scene of
hand to hand fighting followed. The Sheriff’s
men, though once more taken by surprise, were determined
to sell this rescue dearly. They packed in closely
and stubbornly about the condemned man and Much and
the palmer, and it was only by desperate rushes that
the foresters made an opening in the square. Ugly
cuts and bruises were exchanged freely; and lucky
was the man who escaped with only these. Many
of the onlookers, who had long hated the Sheriff and
felt sympathy for Robin’s men, also plunged into
the conflict although they could not well
keep out of it, in sooth! and aided the
rescuers no little.
At last with a mighty onrush, Robin
cleaved a way through the press to the scaffold itself,
and not a second too soon; for two men with pikes
had leaped upon the cart, and were in the act of thrusting
down upon the palmer and Will Stutely. A mighty
upward blow from Robin’s good blade sent the
pike flying from the hand of one, while a well-directed
arrow from the outskirt pierced the other fellow’s
throat.
“God save you, master!”
cried Will Stutely joyfully. “I had begun
to fear that I would never see your face again.”
“A rescue!” shouted the
outlaws afresh, and the soldiery became fainthearted
and ’gan to give back. But the field was
not yet won, for they retreated in close order toward
the East gate, resolved to hem the attackers within
the city walls. Here again, however, they were
in error, since the outlaws did not go out by their
nearest gate. They made a sally in that direction,
in order to mislead the soldiery, then abruptly turned
and headed for the West gate, which was still guarded
by Arthur-a-Bland.
The Sheriff’s men raised an
exultant shout at this, thinking they had the enemy
trapped. Down they charged after them, but the
outlaws made good their lead, and soon got through
the gate and over the bridge which had been let down
by Arthur-a-Bland.
Close upon their heels came the soldiers so
close, that Arthur had no time to close the gate again
or raise the bridge. So he threw away his key
and fell in with the yeomen, who now began their retreat
up the long hill to the woods.
On this side the town, the road leading
to the forest was long and almost unprotected.
The greenwood men were therefore in some distress,
for the archers shot at them from loop-holes in the
walls, and the pikemen were reinforced by a company
of mounted men from the castle. But the outlaws
retreated stubbornly and now and again turned to hold
their pursuers at bay by a volley of arrows.
Stutely was in their midst, fighting with the energy
of two; and the little palmer was there also, but
took no part save to keep close to Robin’s side
and mutter silent words as though in prayer.
Robin put his horn to his lips to
sound a rally, when a flying arrow from the enemy
pierced his hand. The palmer gave a little cry
and sprang forward. The Sheriff, who followed
close with the men on horseback, also saw the wound
and gave a great huzza.
“Ha! you will shoot no more
bows for a season, master outlaw!” he shouted.
“You lie!” retorted Robin
fiercely, wrenching the shaft from his hand despite
the streaming blood; “I have saved one shot for
you all this day. Here take it!”
And he fitted the same arrow, which
had wounded him, upon the string of his bow and let
it fly toward the Sheriff’s head. The Sheriff
fell forward upon his horse in mortal terror, but
not so quickly as to escape unhurt. The sharp
point laid bare a deep gash upon his scalp and must
certainly have killed him if it had come closer.
The fall of the Sheriff discomfited
his followers for the moment, and Robin’s men
took this chance to speed on up the hill. The
palmer had whipped out a small white handkerchief
and tried to staunch Robin’s wound as they went.
At sight of the palmer’s hand, Robin turned with
a start, and pushed back the other’s hood.
“Marian!” he exclaimed, “you here!”
It was indeed Maid Marian, who had
helped save Will, and been in the stress of battle
from the first. Now she hung her head as though
caught in wrong.
“I had to come, Robin,”
she said simply, “and I knew you would not let
me come, else.”
Their further talk was interrupted
by an exclamation from Will Scarlet.
“By the saints, we are trapped!”
he said, and pointed to the top of the hill, toward
which they were pressing.
There from out a gray castle poured
a troop of men, armed with pikes and axes, who shouted
and came running down upon them. At the same instant,
the Sheriff’s men also renewed the pursuit.
“Alas!” cried poor Marian,
“we are undone! There is no way of escape!”
“Courage, dear heart!”
said Robin, drawing her close to him. But his
own spirit sank as he looked about for some outlet.
Then oh, joyful sight! he
recognized among the foremost of those coming from
the castle the once doleful knight, Sir Richard of
the Lea. He was smiling now, and greatly excited.
“A Hood! a Hood!” he cried;
“a rescue! a rescue!” Never were there
more welcome sights and sounds than these. With
a great cheer the outlaws raced up the hill to meet
their new friends; and soon the whole force had gained
the shelter of the castle. Bang! went the bridge
as it swung back, with great clanking of chains.
Clash! went one great door upon the other, as they
shut in the outlaw band, and shut out the Sheriff,
who dashed up at the head of his men, his bandaged
face streaked with blood and inflamed with rage.