HOW ROBIN HOOD MET HIS DEATH
“Give me my bent
bow in my hand,
And a broad arrow I’ll
let flee;
And where this arrow
is taken up,
There shall my grave
digg’d be.”
Now by good rights this story should
end with the wedding of Robin Hood and Maid Marian;
for do not many pleasant tales end with a wedding and
the saying, “and they lived happy ever after.”
But this is a true account in
so far as we can find the quaint old ballads which
tell of it and so we must follow one more
of these songs and learn how Robin, after living many
years longer, at last came to seek his grave.
And the story of it runs in this wise.
Robin Hood and his men, now the Royal
Archers, went with King Richard of the Lion Heart
through England settling certain private disputes which
had arisen among the Norman barons while the King was
gone to the Holy Land. Then the King proceeded
amid great pomp and rejoicing to the palace at London,
and Robin, the new Earl of Huntingdon, brought his
Countess thither, where she became one of the finest
ladies of the Court.
The Royal Archers were now divided
into two bands, and one-half of them were retained
in London, while the other half returned to Sherwood
and Barnesdale, there to guard the King’s preserves.
Several months passed by, and Robin
began to chafe under the restraint of city life.
He longed for the fresh pure air of the greenwood,
and the rollicking society of his yeomen. One
day, upon seeing some lads at archery practice upon
a green, he could not help but lament, saying, “Woe
is me! I fear my hand is fast losing its old time
cunning at the bow-string!”
Finally he became so distraught that
he asked leave to travel in foreign lands, and this
was granted him. He took Maid Marian with him,
and together they went through many strange countries.
Finally in an Eastern land a great grief came upon
Robin. Marian sickened of a plague and died.
They had been married but five years, and Robin felt
as though all the light had gone out of his life.
He wandered about the world for a
few months longer, trying to forget his grief, then
came back to the court, at London, and sought some
commission in active service. But unluckily, Richard
was gone again upon his adventures, and Prince John,
who acted as Regent, had never been fond of Robin.
He received him with a sarcastic smile.
“Go forth into the greenwood,”
said he, coldly, “and kill some more of the
King’s deer. Belike, then, the King will
make you Prime Minister, at the very least, upon his
return.”
The taunt fired Robin’s blood.
He had been in a morose mood, ever since his dear
wife’s death. He answered Prince John hotly,
and the Prince bade his guards seize him and cast
him into the Tower.
After lying there for a few weeks,
he was released by the faithful Stutely and the remnant
of the Royal Archers, and all together they fled the
city and made their way to the greenwood. There
Robin blew the old familiar call, which all had known
and loved so well. Up came running the remainder
of the band, who had been Royal Foresters, and when
they saw their old master they embraced his knees
and kissed his hands, and fairly cried for joy that
he had come again to them. And one and all forswore
fealty to Prince John, and lived quietly with Robin
in the greenwood, doing harm to none and only awaiting
the time when King Richard should come again.
But King Richard came not again, and
would never need his Royal Guard more. Tidings
presently reached them, of how he had met his death
in a foreign land, and how John reigned as King in
his stead. The proof of these events followed
soon after, when there came striding through the glade
the big, familiar form of Little John.
“Art come to arrest us?”
called out Robin, as he ran forward and embraced his
old comrade.
“Nay, I am not come as the Sheriff
of Nottingham, thanks be,” answered Little John.
“The new King has deposed me, and ’tis
greatly to my liking, for I have long desired to join
you here again in the greenwood.”
Then were the rest of the band right
glad at this news, and toasted Little John royally.
The new King waged fierce war upon
the outlaws, soon after this, and sent so many scouting
parties into Sherwood and Barnesdale that Robin and
his men left these woods for a time and went into Derbyshire,
near Haddon Hall. A curious pile of stone is
shown to this day as the ruins of Robin’s Castle,
where the bold outlaw is believed to have defied his
enemies for a year or more. At any rate King John
found so many troubles of his own, after a time, that
he ceased troubling the outlaws.
But in one of the last sorties Robin
was wounded. The cut did not seem serious, and
healed over the top; but it left a lurking fever.
Daily his strength ebbed away from him, until he was
in sore distress.
One day as he rode along on horseback,
near Kirklees Abbey, he was seized with so violent
a rush of blood to the head that he reeled and came
near falling from his saddle. He dismounted weakly
and knocked at the Abbey gate. A woman shrouded
in black peered forth.
“Who are you that knock here?
For we allow no man within these walls,” she
said.
“Open, for the love of Heaven!”
he begged. “I am Robin Hood, ill of a fever
and in sore straits.”
At the name of Robin Hood the woman
started back, and then, as though bethinking herself,
unbarred the door and admitted him. Assisting
his fainting frame up a flight of stairs and into
a front room, she loosed his collar and bathed his
face until he was revived. Then she spoke hurriedly
in a low voice:
“Your fever will sink, if you
are bled. See, I have provided a lancet and will
open your veins, while you lie quiet.”
So she bled him, and he fell into
a stupor which lasted nearly all that day, so that
he awoke weak and exhausted from loss of blood.
Now there is a dispute as to this
abbess who bled him. Some say that she did it
in all kindness of heart; while others aver that she
was none other than the former Sheriff’s daughter,
and found her revenge at last in this cruel deed.
Be that as it may, Robin’s eyes
swam from very weakness when he awoke.
He called wearily for help, but there
was no response. He looked longingly through
the window at the green of the forest; but he was too
weak to make the leap that would be needed to reach
the ground.
He then bethought him
of his horn,
Which hung down at his
knee;
He set his horn unto
his mouth,
And blew out weak blasts
three.
Little John was out in the forest
near by, or the blasts would never have been heard.
At their sound he sprang to his feet.
“Woe! woe!” he cried,
“I fear my master is near dead, he blows so
wearily!”
So he made haste and came running
up to the door of the abbey, and knocked loudly for
admittance. Failing to get reply, he burst in
the door with frenzied blows of his mighty fist, and
soon came running up to the room where Robin lay,
white and faint. “Alas, dear master!”
cried Little John in great distress; “I fear
you have met with treachery! If that be so, grant
me one last boon, I pray.”
“What is it?” asked Robin.
“Let me burn Kirklees-Hall with fire, and all
its nunnery.”
“Nay, good comrade,” answered
Robin Hood gently, “I cannot grant such a boon.
The dear Christ bade us forgive all our enemies.
Moreover, you know I never hurt woman in all my life;
nor man when in woman’s company.”
He closed his eyes and fell back,
so that his friend thought him dying. The great
tears fell from the giant’s eyes and wet his
master’s hand. Robin slowly rallied and
seized his comrade’s outstretched arm.
“Lift me up, good Little John,”
he said brokenly, “I want to smell the air from
the good greenwood once again. Give me my good
yew bow here here-and fix a
broad arrow upon the string. Out yonder among
the oaks where this arrow shall fall let
them dig my grave.”
And with one last mighty effort he
sped his shaft out of the open window, straight and
true, as in the days of old, till it struck the largest
oak of them all and dropped in the shadow of the trees.
Then he fell back upon the sobbing breast of his devoted
friend.
“’Tis the last!”
he murmured, “tell the brave hearts to lay me
there with the green sod under my head and feet.
And let them lay my bent bow
at my side, for it has made sweet music in mine ears.”
He rested a moment, and Little John
scarce knew that he was alive. But on a sudden
Robin’s eye brightened, and he seemed to think
himself back once more with the band in the open forest
glade. He struggled to rise.
“Ha! ’tis a fine stag,
Will! And Allan, thou never didst thrum the harp
more sweetly. How the light blazes! And Marian! ’tis
my Marian come at last!”
So died the body of Robin Hood; but
his spirit lives on through the centuries in the deathless
ballads which are sung of him, and in the hearts of
men who love freedom and chivalry.
They buried him where his last arrow
had fallen, and they set a stone to mark the spot.
And on the stone were graven these words:
“Here underneath
his little stone
Lies Robert, Earl of
Huntingdon;
Never archer as he so
good,
And people called him
Robin Hood.
Such outlaws as he and
his men
Will England never see
again.”