LONDON BELLS
London
town is fair and great,
Many
a tower and steeple.
Bells
ring early and ring late,
Mocking
all the people.
Some
they say, "Good provender,"
Some
they sing, "Sweet lavender,"
Some
they call, "The taverner,"
Some
they cry, "The fripperer
Is
lord of London Town!"
London
town is great and wide,
Many
a stately dwelling,
And
her folk that there abide
Are
beyond all telling.
But
by land or water-gate,
Aldgate,
Newgate, Bishopsgate,
Ludgate,
Moorgate, Cripplegate,
Bells
ring early and ring late,
The
bells of London Town.
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VIII
BARBARA,
THE LITTLE GOOSE-GIRL
HOW
BARBARA SOLD GEESE IN THE CHEPE AND WHAT FORTUNE SHE FOUND THERE
ANY
one who had happened to be traveling along the Islington Road between
two and three o'clock in the morning, when London was a walled city,
would have seen how London was to be fed that day. But very few were
on the road at that hour except the people whose business it was to
feed London, and to them it was an old story. There were men with
cattle and men with sheep and men with pigs; there were men with
little, sober, gray donkeys, not much bigger than a large dog,
trotting all so briskly along with the deep baskets known as paniers
hung on each side their backs; men with paniers or huge sacks on
their own backs, partly resting on the shoulders and partly held by a
leather strap around the forehead; men with flat, shallow baskets on
their heads, piled three and four deep and filled with vegetables.
That was the way in which all the butter, fruit, poultry, eggs, meat,
and milk for Londoners to eat came into medieval London. Before
London Wall was fairly finished there were laws against any one
within the city keeping cattle or pigs on the premises. Early every
morning the market folk started from the villages round about, there
were women as well as men in the business and by the time the city
gates opened they were there.
It
was not as exciting to Barbara Thwaite as it would have been if she
had not known every inch of the road, but it was exciting enough on
this particular summer morning, for in all her thirteen years she had
never been to market alone. Goody Thwaite had been trudging over the
road several times a week for years seven miles to London and seven
miles home and sometimes she had taken Barbara with her, but never
had she sent the child by herself. Now she was bedridden and unless
they were to lose all their work for the last month or more, Barbara
would have to go to market and tend their stall. Several of the
neighbors had stalls near by, and they would look after the child,
but this was the busy season, and they could not undertake to carry
any produce but their own. A neighbor, too old to do out-of-door
work, would tend the mother, and with much misgiving and many
cautions, consent was given, and Barbara set bravely forth alone.
She
had her hands full in more senses than one. Besides the basket she
carried on her head, full of cress from the brook, sallet herbs and
under these some early cherries, she had a basket of eggs on her arm,
and she was driving three geese. Barbara's geese were trained to walk
in the most orderly single file at home, but she had her doubts as to
their behavior in a strange place.
The
Islington Road, however, was not the broad and dusty highway that it
is to-day, and at first it was not very crowded. Now and again, from
one of the little wooded lanes that led up to farmsteads, a marketman
would turn into the highway with his load, and more and more of them
appeared as they neared the city, so that by the time they reached
the city gate it was really a dense throng. From roads in every
direction just such crowds were pressing toward all the other gates,
and boats laden with green stuff, fruits, butter and cheese were
heading for the wharves on Thames-side, all bound for the market.
"Barbara
knew exactly where to go"
Naturally
it had been discovered long before that some sort of order would have
to be observed, or there would be a frightful state of things among
the eatables. Like most cities, London was inhabited largely by
people who had come from smaller towns, and certain customs were
common more or less to every market-town in England. In the smaller
towns the cattle-market was held weekly or fortnightly, so that
people not anxious to deal in cattle could avoid the trampling herds.
London's cattle-market was not in the Chepe at all. It was in the
fields outside the walls, in the deep inbent angle which the wall
made between Aldersgate and Newgate, where Smithfield market is now.
Even in the Chepe each kind of goods had its own place, and once
through the gates the crowd separated.
Barbara
knew exactly where to go. From Aldersgate she turned to the left and
followed the narrow streets toward the spire of St. Michael's Church
in Cornhill, where the poultry-dealers had their stands. Close by was
Scalding Alley, sometimes known as the Poultry, where poultry were
sold by the score, and the fowls were scalded after being killed, to
make them ready for cooking. Goody Thwaite's little corner, wedged in
between two bigger stalls, was not much more than a board with a
coarse awning over it, but she had been there a long time and her
neighbors were friends. Barbara set down her loads, dropped on the
bench and scattered a little grain for her geese. They had really
behaved very well.
She
was not very much to look at, this little lass Barbara. Her
grandfather had come from the North Country, and she had black hair
and eyes like a gypsy. She was rather silent as a rule, though she
could sing like a blackbird when no one was about. People were likely
to forget about Barbara until they wanted something done; then they
remembered her.
She
penned in the geese with a small hurdle of wicker so that they should
not get away; she set out the cherries and cress on one side and the
eggs on the other; then she put the eggs in a bed of cress to set off
their whiteness; then she waited. An apprentice boy came by and asked
the price of the cherries, whistled and went on; a sharp-faced woman
stopped and looked over what she had, and went on. They were all in a
hurry; they were all going on some errand of their own. The next
person who came by was an old woman with a fresh bright face, white
cap and neat homespun gown. She too asked the price of the cherries
and shook her head when she heard it. "How good that cress
looks!" she said smiling.
Barbara
held out a bunch of the cress.
"I
can't give away the cherries," she said, "they are not
mine, but you're welcome to this."
"Thank
you kindly, little maid," the old woman said, "my
grandson's o'er fond of it. Never was such a chap for sallets and the
like."
A
few minutes later a stout, rather fussy man stopped and bought the
whole basket of eggs. As he paid for them and signed to the boy who
followed to take them, Michael the poultryman in the next stall
grinned at Barbara.
"Ye
don't know who that was, do you"?" he said. "That was
old Gamelyn Bouverel the goldsmith. You'll be sorry if any of those
eggs be addled, my maiden."
"They're
not," said Barbara. "I know where all our hens' nests are,
and Gaffer Edmunds' too. We sell for him since he had the palsy."
Then
a tall man in a sort of uniform stopped, eyed the staff, and without
asking leave took one of the geese from the pen and strode off with
it hissing and squawking under his arm. But Michael shook his head
soberly as Barbara sprang up with a startled face.
"That
was one o' the purveyors of my lord Fitz-Walter," he said. "He
may pay for the bird and he may not, but you can't refuse him.
There's one good thing London folk don't have to feed the King's
soldiers nor his household. Old King Henry, rest his soul! settled
that in the Charter he gave the City, and this one has kept to it. My
grand-dad used to tell how any time you might have a great roaring
archer or man-at-arms, or more likely two or three or a dozen,
quartered in your house, willy nilly, for nobody knew how long. There
goes the bell for Prime that ends the privilege."
Then
Barbara remembered that the stewards of great houses were allowed to
visit the market and choose what they wished until Prime (about six
o'clock) after which the market was open to common folk. A merchant's
wife bought another goose and some cherries, and the remaining goose
was taken off her hands by the good-natured Michael, to make up a
load of his own for a tavern-keeper. The rest of the cherries were
sold to a young man who was very particular about the way in which
they were arranged in the basket, and Barbara guessed that he was
going to take them as a present to some one. The cress had gone a
handful at a time with the other things, and she had some of it for
her own dinner, with bread from the bakeshop and some cold meat which
Goody Collins, her neighbor on the other side, had sent for. She
started for home in good time, and brought her little store of money
to her mother before any one had even begun to worry over her
absence.
The
next market-day Barbara set forth with a light heart, but when she
reached her stall she found it occupied. A rough lout had set up shop
there, with dressed poultry for sale. A-plenty had been said about it
before Barbara arrived, both by Michael and the rough-tongued,
kind-hearted market-women. But Michael was old and fat, and no match
for the invader. Barbara stood in dismay, a great basket of red roses
on her head, her egg-basket on the ground, and the cherries from
their finest tree in a panier hung from her shoulder. The merchant's
wife had asked her if she could not bring some roses for rose-water
and conserve, and if she had to hawk them about in the sun they would
be fit for nothing. The Poultry was crowded, and unless she could
have her little foothold here she would be obliged to go about the
streets peddling, which she knew her mother would not like at all.
"What's
the trouble here?" asked a decided voice behind her. She turned
to look up into the cool gray eyes of a masterful young fellow with a
little old woman tucked under his arm. He was brown and lithe and had
an air of outdoor freshness, and suddenly she recognized the old
woman. It was that first customer, and this must be the grandson of
whom she had spoken so fondly.
"This
man says he has this place and means to keep it," Barbara
explained in a troubled but firm little voice. "He says that
only the poultry dealers have any right here, but it's Mother's
corner and she has had it a long time."
"Aye,
that she has," chorused two or three voices. "And if there
was a man belonging to them you'd see yon scamp go packing, like a
cat out o' the dairy. 'Tis a downright shame, so 'tis."
"Maybe
a man that don't belong to them will do as well," said the youth
coolly. "Back here, gammer, out of the way and you go stand by
her, little maid. Now then, you lummox, are you going to pick up your
goods and go, or do I have to throw them after you?"
The
surly fellow eyed the new-comer's broad shoulders and hard-muscled
arms for a moment, picked up his poultry and began to move, but as he
loaded his donkeys he said something under his breath which Barbara
did not hear. An instant later she beheld him lying on his back in a
none-too-clean gutter with her defender standing over him. He lost no
time in making his way out of the street, followed by the laughter of
the Poultry. Even the ducks, geese and chickens joined in the cackle
of merriment.
"Sit
thee down and rest," said the youth to Barbara kindly. "We
must be getting on, grandmother. If he makes any more trouble, send
some one, or come yourself, to our lodging ask for Robert Edrupt at
the house of Master Hardel the wool-merchant."
"Thank
you," said Barbara shyly. "There's plenty cress in the
brook, and I'll bring some next market-day and strawberries too, but
not for pay."
"Kindness
breeds kindness, little maid," added the old woman, and Barbara
reflected that it sometimes breeds good fortune also.
This
was not the end of Barbara's acquaintance with Dame Lysbeth and her
grandson. The old dame had taken a fancy to the self-possessed,
quaintly dignified little maid, and the Thwaite garden proved to have
in it many fruits and herbs which she needed in her housekeeping. It
was a very oldfashioned garden planted a long time ago by a
tavern-keeper from the south of France, and he had brought some pears
and plums from his old home in the south and grafted and planted and
tended them very carefully. There was one tree which had two kinds of
pears on it, one for the north side and one for the south.
Barbara's
mother did not get any better. One day Robert Edrupt stopped in the
Poultry to buy a goose for dinner, to celebrate his home-coming from
a long wool-buying journey, and the stall was empty.
"Aye,"
said Goody Collins, wiping her eyes, "she was a good-hearted
woman, was Alison Thwaite, and there's many who will miss her. She
died two days ago, rest her soul."
Edrupt
bought his goose of Michael and went on his way looking sober. A plan
had occurred to him, and when he talked it over with Dame Lysbeth she
heartily agreed. A day or two later Barbara, standing in the door of
the little lonely cottage and wondering what she should do now, saw
the two of them coming down the lane. Dame Lysbeth opened the gate
and came in, but Robert, after a bow and a pleasant word or two to
Barbara, went on to the next farm on an errand.
Barbara
could hardly believe her ears when she heard what the old dame had to
say. The young wool-merchant had brought his grandmother to London to
keep house for him because he did not like to leave her alone in her
cottage in the west country, nor could he live there so far from the
great markets. But neither of them liked the city, and for the next
few years he would have to be away more than ever. He and Master Gay
had been considering a scheme for importing foreign sheep to see if
they would improve the quality of English wool. Before they did this
Edrupt would have to go to Spain, to Aquitaine, to Lombardy and
perhaps even further. While he was abroad he might well study the
ways of the weavers as well as the sheep that grew the fleece. He
wanted to buy a farm he had seen, with a tidy house on it, where Dame
Lysbeth could have the sort of home she was used to, but with maids
to do the heavy farm work. If Barbara would come and live there, and
help see to things, she would be very welcome indeed as long as she
chose to stay. Dame Lysbeth had never had a daughter, and she had
often thought in the last few months that if she had one, she would
like to have just such a girl as Barbara. The young girl, on her
side, already loved her old friend better than she had ever loved
anybody but her own mother, and so it came about that when the spring
turned the apple orchards white about King's Barton, three very happy
people went from London to the farm near that village, known as the
Long Lea. It had land about it which was not good enough for corn,
but would do very well for geese and for sheep, and there was room
for a large garden, as well as the orchard. Even in those early days,
people who bought an English farm usually inherited some of the work
of the previous owner, and as Robert said, they would try to farm
Long Lea in such a way as to leave it richer than they found it, and
still lose no profit.
"Don't
forget to take cuttings from this garden, lass," he said to
Barbara in his blunt, kindly way, as they stood there together for
the last time. "There are things here which we can make thrive
in the years to come."
"I
have," said Barbara staidly. She motioned to a carefully packed
and tied parcel in a sack. "And there's a whole basket of eggs
from all our fowls."
Edrupt
laughed. He liked her business-like little way.
"Did
you take any red-rose cuttings?" he inquired. "There's a
still-room where the old castle used to be, and they'd use some, I
believe."
"It's
the Provence rose," Barbara said. "I took the whole bush up
and set it in a wooden bucket. Michael won't want that."
Michael
the poultryman was adding the little garden and the stall in the
Poultry to his own business. He would cart away the little tumbledown
cottage and plant kale there.
"The
Provence rose, is it?" queried Edrupt thoughtfully. "We'll
have it beside our door, Barbara, and that will make you feel more at
home."
Both
Barbara and the roses throve by transplanting. When Edrupt came home
from his long foreign journey, more than a year later, it was
rose-time, and Barbara, with a basket of roses on her arm, was
marshaling a flock of most important mother-ducks with their
ducklings into the poultry-yard. The house with its tiled and
thatched roofs sat in the middle of its flocks and fruits and seemed
to welcome all who came, and Dame Lysbeth, beaming from the window,
looked so well content that it did him good to see her.
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