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VIII
HOW ROBIN HOOD SLEW THE SHERIFF IT was a year
and a day since
Robin had lent the four hundred pounds to Sir Herbrand de Tranmire, and
again he sat in his bower and the rich odors of cooking pasties,
broiling and roasting capons and venison cutlets blew to and fro under
the trees. Anon Robin called John to him. "It is already
long past dinner
time," said Robin; "and the knight hath not come to repay me. I fear
Our Lady is wroth with me, for she hath not sent me my pay on the day
it is due."
"Doubt not,
master," replied
Little John; "the day is not yet over, and I clare swear that the
knight is faithful and will come ere the sun sinks to rest." "Take thy bow
in thy hand," said
Robin, "and let Arthur-a-Bland, Much, Will of Stuteley, with ten
others, wend with thee to the Roman way where thou didst meet the
knight last year, and see what Our Lady shall send us. I know not why
she should be wroth with me." So Little John
took his bow and
sword, and calling up the others, he disappeared with them into the
deeps of the forest which lay close about the outlaws' camp. For an
hour Robin sat making arrows, while the cooks cast anxious glances in
their pots now and then, and shook their heads over the capons and
steaks that were getting hard and overdone. At length a scout ran in
from the greenwood, and coming up to Robin said that Little John and
his party were coming with four monks and seven sumpter or baggage
horses, and six archers. In a little while, into the clearing before
Robin's bower came marching the tall forms of Little John and his
comrades, and in their midst were four monks on horseback, with their
disarmed guard behind them. At the first
glance at the face
of the foremost monk Robin laughed grimly. It was Abbot Robert of St.
Mary's Abbey! And the fat monk beside him was the cellarer. "Now, by the
black rood of
York!" said Robin, "ye be more welcome, my lord abbot, than ever I had
thought thou wouldst be. Lads," he said, turning to those of his
fellows who had run away from Birkencar, "here is the very cause of all
thy griefs and pains whilst thou wert villeins, swinking in the
weather, or getting thy backs scored by the scourge; it was he who
forced thee to flee and to gain the happy life ye have led these
several years in the greenwood. Now we will feast him for that great
kindness, and when he hath paid me what the Holy Mother oweth me — for
I doubt not she hath sent him to pay me her debt — he shall say mass
to us, and we will part the greatest friends." But the abbot
looked on with
black looks, while the cellarer, fat and frightened, looked this way
and that with such glances of dread that the foresters laughed with
glee, and jokingly threatened him with all manner of ill-usage. "Come, Little
John," said Robin,
"bring me that fat saddle-bag that hangs beside the cellarer, and count
me the gold and silver which it holds." Little John
did so, and having
poured out the money on his mantle before his master, counted it and
told out the sum. It was eight hundred pounds! "Ha!" said
Robin, "I told thee
so, lord abbot. Our Lady is the truest woman that ever yet I knew, or
heard tell of. For she not only pays me that which I lent her, but she
doubles it. A full gentle act indeed, and one that merits that her
humble messengers shall be gently entreated.'' "What meanest
thou, robber and
varlet?" cried the abbot, purple in the face and beside himself with
rage to see such wealth refted from his keeping. "Thou outlaw and
wolf's-head, thou vermin for any good man to slay-what meanest thou by
the tale of loan to Our Lady? Thou art a runaway rogue from her lands,
and hast forfeited all thou ever hadst and thy life also by thy evil
deeds!" "Gently, good
abbot," said
Robin; "not on my own account did Our Lady lend me this money, but she
was my pledge for the sum of four hundred pounds which I lent a year
ago to a certain poor knight who came this way and told a pitiful tale
of how a certain evil abbot and other enemies did oppress him. His
name, abbot, was Sir Herbrand de Tranmire." The abbot
started and went pale.
Then he turned his face away, and bit his lip in shame and rage to
think that it was Robin Hood who had helped Sir Herbrand, and so robbed
him and the lords of Wrangby of their revenge. "I see in all
this, sir abbot,"
said Robin, sternly, "the workings of a justice such as never was
within thy ken before. Thou didst set out to ruin and disgrace Sir
Herbrand. He fell in with me — was that by chance, I wonder? — and by
my aid he escaped thy plots. On his way home three evil knights set on
him from that nest of robber lords at Wrangby. Two were slain, and Sir
Herbrand and his squire went on their way unharmed." The abbot
glared with shame and rage at Robin, but would say no word. "Hadst thou
not better forsake
evil and oppressive ways, lord abbot," went on Robin, "and do acts and
deeds more in the spirit of Him Who died upon the tree for the sake of
the sinfulness of the world? But now, lads," he went on, turning
abruptly to his men, "we will dine our guests in our generous greenwood
way, and send them off lined well with venison and wine, though their
mail bags be empty." And right
royally did the
outlaws feast the abbot and the cellarer and their guard. The abbot
indeed made sorry cheer and would not be roused, and ate and drank
sparingly, almost grudgingly, for he felt the shame of his position. To
think that he, the lord abbot of St. Mary's, one of the richest and
proudest prelates in Yorshire, should have been outwitted, flouted and
thwarted by a runaway yeoman and his band of villeins, who now sat
around him casting their jokes at him, urging him to make merry and to
be a good trencherman! Shame, oh, shame! When dinner
was ended, Robin
said: "Now, lord abbot, thou must do me a priestly office this day. I
have not heard mass since yesterday forenoon. Do thou perform mass and
then thou mayest go." But the abbot
sullenly refused, and all Robin's persuasions were in vain. "So be it,"
said Robin, and
ordered ropes to be brought. "Then tie me this unpriestly priest to
that tree," he commanded. "He shall stay there till he is willing to do
his office, and if it be a week, no food shall pass his lips till he do
as I desire." Not all the
prayers and
entreaties of the high cellarer or of the other monks availed to move
the stubborn heart of the abbot at first, who stood tied to the tree
like a felon, looking with anger on all about him. The high cellarer
and the other monks appealed to him to do what the outlaw required, so
that he should get quickly out of their hands, but it was only after
long persuasion that the abbot consented. Reverently
Robin and his men
listened to the sacred words, and just as they had risen from their
knees a scout came running in to say that a knight and a party of
twenty men-at-arms were approaching. Robin guessed who this might be,
and therefore he commanded the abbot to wait awhile. When Sir Herbrand,
for he was the knight, rode into the camp, and after dismounting came
toward Robin, he was astonished to see the angry face of the abbot
beside the smiling outlaw. "God save
thee, good Robin," said Sir Herbrand, "and you also, lord abbot."
"Welcome be thou, gentle knight," replied Robin. "Thou hast
come doubtless to repay me what I lent thee."
"I have
indeed," answered the
knight, "with a poor present of a hundred good yewbows, and two
thousand steel-tipped arrows for your kindness." "Thou art too
late, Sir
Herbrand," said Robin, with a laugh; "Our Lady, who was thy warrant for
the sum, hath sent her messenger with twice the sum to repay me. The
good abbot hath come with eight hundred pounds in his saddle-bags which
he hath yielded up to me."
"Let me go,
thou mocker," cried
the abbot, his face red with shame. "I can bear no more. Thou hast put
greater shame upon me than ever I can forget." "Go then,"
said Robin, sternly,
"and remember that if I have put upon thee so grievous a shame, thou
and thy evil servants have put burdens upon poor folks that many times
have weighed them down in misery and death." Without
another word the abbot
was helped on his horse, and with his monks and guards rode out of the
camp back along the road to their abbey.
Then Robin related to Sir Herbrand how the abbot had fallen
into his hands, and Sir Herbrand said: "I doubt that
for so proud and
arrogant a prelate as Abbot Robert of St. Mary's, such a shame as thou
hast put upon him will eat out his life. But, by Our Lady, for his
high-handed deeds he deserves such a shame. He hath been a tyrant all
his life, and his underlings have but copied him." Robin would
not take back the
four hundred pounds which the knight had brought with him, but he
gladly accepted the hundred good bows and the store of bolts which he
had brought for a present. That night Sir Herbrand and his company
spent in the greenwood with Robin, and next morning, with many
courteous and kindly words they parted, the knight to go back to his
manor, and Robin to go deeper into the greenwood.
Now it befell
with the abbot as
Sir Herbrand had thought. Such great distress of mind did he suffer
from the shame and disgrace, that his proud mind broke down under the
thought, and never again was he so full of pride and arrogance. In a
month, indeed, he fell sick, and was ill and weak for all the rest of
that year, until, when the next spring came, he died of grief and
vexation, as the brothers of the abbey declared. And they buried him
richly and with great pomp. Then the monks
gathered together
and elected one of their order to be abbot in his stead, and sent him
they had elected to London, so that he might be formally accepted by
the high Chancellor of England, William de Longchamp, who ruled the
land while King Richard was in Palestine fighting with Saladin for the
possession of the Holy Sepulchre. But the Chancellor, urged by his own
wishes and the wishes of his cousin, Sir Isenbart de Belame, did reject
the man chosen by the monks, and in his stead appointed a nephew,
Robert de Longchamp, to be abbot. This Robert,
as might be
expected, was of a fierce and wily character, and he determined that in
some way he would capture Robin Hood and destroy him and his band. Therefore he
entered into plots
with his kinsmen at Wrangby, with Sir Guy of Gisborne, and with the
sheriff of Nottingham. Many ambuscades, sudden onfalls and stratagems
did they prepare either in the forest of Sherwood, or in that of
Barnisdale; but so wary was Robin, so many and watchful were his
scouts, and so zealously did the villeins in the forest villages aid
him by giving timely warning, that never did Robin lose a man in all
these attempts. Often, indeed, his enemies who were lying in ambush for
him fell themselves into an ambush which he had made for them, and
escaped only with the loss of many men. At length
there was peace for
some months, and some of Robin's men believed that the sheriff and the
Wrangby lords were tired of their continual defeats and would not
attempt to attack them any more. Then, one day, as Robin and Much were
walking disguised as merchants through the town of Doncaster, they saw
a man ride into the market-place, and checking his horse he cried out: "Oyez, oyez,
oyez! Hear, all
good people, archers, sergeants and men-at-arms, woodmen, foresters,
and all good men who bear bows. Know ye that my master, the noble
sheriff of Nottingham, doth make a great cry. And doth invite all the
best archers of the north to come to the butts at Nottingham on the
feast of St. Peter, to try their shooting one against the other. The
prize is a right good arrow, the shaft thereof made of pure silver and
the head and feathers of rich red gold. No arrow is like it in all
England, and he that beareth off that prize shall forever be known as
the greatest and best archer in all the northern parts of England
beyond Trent. God save King Richard and the Holy Sepulchre!" Then, turning
his horse, the
crier rode out of the town to carry his tidings throughout the
countries even up to the Roman Wall which ran from Carlisle to
Newcastle. "What think
you of that,
master?" asked Much. "Is it not some sly plot of the sheriff's to
attract thee into his power, since he knoweth that thou wilt never let
this shooting go without thou try thy bow upon it?" "I doubt not,
indeed, that such
may be their plot," said Robin, with a laugh, "nevertheless, we will go
to Nottingham, however it fall out, and we will see if the sheriff can
do any more in the open than he hath done in the greenwood." When they got
back to the camp
at the Stane Lea, where the outlaws were then staying, they found that
all the talk was of the trial at the butts of which many had heard the
cry made by the sheriff's messengers. Robin took counsel of his chief
men, and it was decided that the most part of the outlaws should go to
Nottingham on the day appointed, entering into the town by various
gates as if they came from many different parts. All should bear bows
and arrows, but be disguised, some as poor yeomen or villeins, others
as woodmen, or village hunters. "As for me,"
said Robin, "I will
go with a smudgy face and a tattered jerkin as if I am some wastrel,
and six others of ye shall shoot with me. The rest shall mingle with
the crowd, and should it be that the sheriff means ill, then there will
be bows bent and arrows buzzing when he shows his treachery." On the day
appointed, which was
fair and bright, great was the multitude of people which gathered by
the butts. These were pitched on a level piece of green sward outside
the northern gate and not far from where the gallows stood, from which
Little John had rescued Will Stuteley. Away to the north, beyond the
gently rising downs, lay the green and waving forest, and down the
roads from Mansfield and Oilerton the wayfarers still thronged, anxious
to see the great feats of archery which should give fame through all
the North Country. A scaffolding
of seats was set
up near the shooting-place, and in this sat the sheriff, some of the
knights of the castle of Nottingham and others of their friends. Near
by stood the officers of the sheriff, who were to keep the course and
regulate the trials.
First came the
shooting at a
broad target. It was placed at two hundred and twenty yards, and a
hundred archers shot at it. Each man was
allowed three
shots, and he that did not hit within a certain ring twice out of
thrice was not allowed to shoot again. Then the mark was placed at
greater distances, and by the time it was set up at three hundred yards
the hundred archers had dwindled down to twenty. The excitement
among the crowd
now began to grow, and when the butt was removed and the "pricke" or
wand was set up, the names of favorites among the competing archers
were being shouted. Of the seven outlaws, one had fallen out, and there
remained Robin, Little John, Scadlock, who had become an excellent
bowman, Much, the Miller's son, an outlaw named Reynold, and Gilbert of
the White Hand, who by constant practice had become very skilful. At the first
contest of shooting
against the wand, seven of the twenty failed, among them being Scadlock
and Reynold. Then the wand was set further back at every shooting
until, when it stood at four hundred yards, there were not more than
seven archers remaining. Among these was Robin and Gilbert; three
others were bowmen in the service of the sheriff, the sixth was a man
of Sir Gosbert de Lambley, and the remaining one was an old gray man of
great frame and fierce aspect, who had said he was a yeoman, and called
himself Rafe of the Billhook. Now came the
hardest contest of
all — "shooting at roavers" as it was called, where a man was set to
shoot at a wand of which he had to guess the distance, so that he had
to use his own wit in the choice of his arrow, and as to the strength
of the breeze. "Now, bully
boys of Nottingham,
show thy mettle!" cried a stout man with a thick neck and a red face,
who stood near the sheriff's seat. He was Watkin, the chief officer or
bailiff of Sheriff Murdach. He had taken the place of Richard Illbeast,
and, like him, had got the worst in several attempts to capture Robin
Hood, whom, however, he had never seen. "Forward,
sheriff's men," cried
a citizen in the crowd, "show these scurvy strangers that Sherwood men
are not to be overborne." "Scurvy
thyself," said a voice
somewhere in the rear. "Yorkshire tykes be a breed that mak' Sherwood
dogs put their tails atween their legs." The horn
sounded its note to
show that the contest had begun, and all eyes were bent upon the rival
archers. The Nottingham men went first, and of these two failed to hit
the wand, the arrow of one going wide and the others falling short. The
third man struck the top of the wand with his bolt, and the roar of
triumph which went up showed how keenly the defeat of the other two
Nottingham men had been felt. Then Robin
stepped up to the
shooting-line. He had put aside the huge six-foot bow which he had used
for shooting at the butt, and now bore one which was but a yard in
length, but so thick that a laugh went up here and there, and a young
squire cried out mockingly: "Does this
ragged wastrel think he can shoot with that hedge pole?" "Stand at
twelve score paces and see!" said a quiet voice somewhere near at hand.
"He'll drill a bolt through thy ribs at fifteen score paces,"
said another, "and through thy mail shirt as well." Robin, in a
ragged and frayed
brown tunic and hose, with a hood of similar hue, raised his bow,
notched his arrow and looked for one long moment at the mark. He had
let his hair and beard grow longer than usual and both were unkempt and
untidy. With the aid of some red dye he had colored his face, so that
he looked to be but a dissipated haunter of ale-houses and town
taverns, and men wondered how he had shot so well as to keep up so far.
"Dry work,
toper, is't not?"
cried a waggish citizen. A great laughter rose from the crowd at the
joke. The archer seemed not to notice it and shot his bolt. All craned
their necks to see how it had sped, and a gasp of wonder came and then
a hearty shout. The wand had been split in two! "Well done,
yeoman!" cried a
well-dressed citizen, going up and clapping Robin on the back. "Thy
hand and eye must be steadier than it seems by thy face they ought to
be." He looked keenly in Robin's face, and Robin recognized him as a
burgher whom he had once befriended in the forest. The man knew him and
muttered as he turned away, "I thought 'twas thee. 'Ware the sheriff!
Treachery is about!" Then he
strolled back to his
place in the crowd. The other three now shot at the mark. Rafe of the
Billhook missed the wand by the width of three fingers' span, and the
bolt of Sir Gosbert's man flew wide. Young Gilbert of the White Hand
now shot his arrow. Very carefully he measured with his eye the
distance of the wand, chose an arrow with a straight-cut feather and
then discharged it. The bolt made a beautiful curve toward the wand and
for a moment it seemed that it must strike the mark. But a wandering
breeze caught it and turned it, so that it flew about a hand's space to
the left. The crowd cheered, however, for the youth and courteous
bearing of the lad made them feel kindly toward him. The contest
now lay between the
sheriff's man, by name Luke the Reid or Red, and Robin. In the next
shooting there was no difference between them, for the bolt of each
fairly struck the wand. Then the sheriff spoke: "Ye are fairly
matched, but you
cannot both have the golden arrow. Devise some play that shall show
which of you is the keener bowman." "By your
leave, my lord
sheriff," said Robin, "I would propose that we look not on the wand
while it is shifted to some distance you may choose, and that then we
turn and shoot while one may count three. He that splits the wand shall
then be judged the winner."
There were
murmurs of wonder and
some mocking at this proposal. It meant that a man must measure the
distance, choose his bolt and shoot it in a space of time that allowed
little judgment, if any. "Are you
content to accept that,
Luke the Reid?" asked the sheriff of his man. The latter stroked his
gray beard for a moment and said: "'Tis such a
shoot I have seen
but thrice made, and only once have I seen the wand struck, and that
was when I was a boy. Old Bat the Bandy, who was the chief archer to
Stephen of Gamwell was he who split the wand, and men reckoned that no
one north of Trent could match him in his day. If thou canst split the
wand, yeoman," he said, turning to Robin, "then for all thou lookest
like a worthless fellow, thou art such an archer as hath not been seen
in the north country for the last fifty years." "Oh," said
Robin, with a
careless laugh, "I served a good master who taught me the bow, but such
a shoot as I propose is not so hard as thou deemest. Wilt thou try it?"
"Ay, I am willing," returned Luke, puzzled at Robin's
careless air; "but I tell thee beforehand, I cannot hit the wand." The two
archers were then
commanded to turn their backs, while an officer of the sheriff's ran to
the wand and moved it ten paces further off. Then at the word of the
sheriff, Luke turned, and while Watkin the chief officer counted slowly
"One — two — three!" he shot his arrow. The great crowd held its
breath as the arrow sped, and a groan of disappointment broke from them
when they saw it curve to earth and stick in the ground, some six paces
short of the wand. "Now,
boaster!" cried the
bull-necked officer angrily to Robin. Then, speaking quickly, he
shouted, "Turn! on em two — three!" Robin's arrow
sped forth as the
word "three" was uttered, and men craned their necks to mark the
flight. Swiftly and true it sped and sliced the wand in two. Men
gasped, and then a great shout rose, for though Robin, being a stranger
and looking to be but a mean fellow, had turned most of the crowd
against him, the sense of fair play made them all recognize that he had
fairly won the prize. Luke the Reid
came up to Robin
and held out his hand to him. "Thou'rt a worthier man than thou
lookest, bowman," he said, and his honest eyes looked keenly into
Robin's. "So steady a hand and clear an eye go not with such a reckless
air as thou wearest, and I think thou must be a better man than thou
lookest." Robin shook
his hand and returned his keen look, but said no word in reply. The note of
the sheriff's horn
rose as a signal that the prizes were to be given. There were ten of
these for those who had shot the best according to certain rules, and
one by one the men were called up to the sheriff's seat and his wife
presented the gift to the successful archer. When it was Robin's turn
he went boldly to the place and bent his knee courteously to the lady.
Then the sheriff began to speak, and said:
"Yeoman, thou
hast shown thyself
to have the greatest skill of all who have shot this day. If thou
wouldst wish to change thy present condition and will get leave of thy
lord, I would willingly take thee into my service. Come, archer, and
take from my lady the golden arrow which thou hast fairly won." Robin
approached Dame Margaret,
and she held out the golden arrow to him, smiling kindly upon him as
she did so. He reached out his hand to take the gift and met the lady's
eyes. She went pale, her mouth opened as if she was about to speak;
then she bit her lips, returned Robin's final courtesy, and immediately
burst out laughing. Robin knew that she had recognized him, but that
she would not betray him. The knowledge that the sheriff was inviting
the outlaw who had once put him to such shame to become his man tickled
her sense of humor, so that she could not keep from bursting into a
long fit of laughter. The sheriff
looked keenly at his
wife and then suspiciously at Robin, as the latter turned away and
tried to get among the crowd. Men and women pressed about the outlaw,
however, congratulating him with rough good humor, and Robin could not
hide himself from the sheriff's eyes. Suddenly, something familiar in
the look of Robin struck the sheriff. He rose quickly and whispered in
the ear of the bull-necked man, who, turning, saw Robin in the midst of
a crowd of men bearing bows, who seemed to be talking to him as they
all walked away. Watkin the bailiff plunged forward and thrust this way
and that among the archers, bidding them in a thick fierce voice make
way in the name of the sheriff. Suddenly men
turned upon him and
shouldered him off. "Let me come, varlets," he cried. "I will have thee
whipped and branded. I am Watkin the sheriff's bailiff"
"Let him go, lads," rang out a clear voice. It was Robin who
thus commanded his men who had rallied about him.
"I arrest thee, Robin Hood, outlaw! in the name of the king!"
shouted Warkin, though he was still some paces away. "Enough of thy
bellowing, thou
town bull!" said Little John, who was beside Watkin, and picking up the
sheriff's man, the giant ran with him to the outskirts of the crowd and
dumped him heavily on the ground, where he lay dazed for a few moments.
A bugle note
rang clear and
shrill. It was the call of the greenwood men, and from all parts of the
wide grounds the outlaws gathered. Another horn sounded, and the
sheriff's men formed in ranks, with bows strung. Men and women in the
crowd between the two parties fled this way and that shrieking with
fear, and at a word from the sheriff his men shot a flight of arrows
against the men of the greenwood. Next moment, however, the great
clothyard arrows of the outlaws snored back in reply so thick and
strong, that the sheriff's men, or such as could run, darted this way
and that into shelter. Slowly and in
good order the
outlaws retreated, sending their arrows into the sheriff's men, who
now, under the furious leadership of Watkin, were following them
closely from cover to cover. Once they saw a man ride swiftly away from
where the sheriff stood, and enter the town. "That means,
lads, that they go
to beg help from the castle," said Little John. "Once we reach the
greenwood, however, little avail will that help be." The forest,
however, was still
nearly a mile away, and the outlaws would not run. From time to time
they turned and shot their arrows at their pursuers, while keeping a
good distance from them and taking care that none got round their
flanks. Suddenly with
a groan Little John fell, an arrow sticking from his knee. "I can go no
further, lads, I
fear," he cried. Robin came up to him and examined the wound, while the
sheriff's men, seeing the outlaws check, came on more swiftly. "Master," said
Little John, "for
the love thou bearest me, let not the sheriff and his men find and take
me alive. Take out thy brown sword instead, and smite my head off, I
beseech thee." "Nay, by the
sweet Virgin!"
cried Robin, and his eyes were pitiful, "I would not have thee slain
for all the gold in England. We will take thee with us." "Ay, that we
will," said Much;
"never shall I and thee part company, thou old rascal," he went on.
Saying this, he lifted John upon his broad back, and the outlaws went
on again. Sometimes Much put John down for a moment, and notching an
arrow to his string, took a shot at the sheriff's men. Then they saw
a large company of
archers on horseback issue from the town gate, and Robin's face went
stern and grim at the sight. He could not hope to win the shelter of
the forest before this troop came upon him, and fight as they would,
they must in the end be over-whelmed. Robin looked around for some
means of escape, but saw none. Already the mounted men were gaining
upon them, and the sheriff's men were holding to the stirrup leathers
of their allies and leaping and running beside them over the down.
Three knights were at the head of the troop, and the sheriff rode in
front of all. Rapidly the
outlaws retreated,
and at Robin's command they fled along a hollow or combe in the downs
which would lead them to a knoll of trees, where he thought they could
make a desperate stand. Suddenly he remembered with some bitterness
that they were near the castle of Sir Richard at Lee. He knew that Sir
Richard loved him, and would help him if he begged aid of him, but
seeing that by helping an outlaw Sir Richard would lose lands and life,
Robin knew that he would have to make his last fight alone, although
within an arrow flight of his friend's castle. They gained
the knoll of trees,
and Robin arranged his men and gave them short sharp orders. Behind
them rose the castle of Sir Richard, but Robin looked not that way, all
his attention being given to their enemies who were now rapidly coming
up. Suddenly a small figure ran up the knoll and came to Robin. It was
Kef the Trow. "Master," he
said breathlessly,
"a troop hath been sent round by the Levin Oak to take thee in the
rear. Look, where they ride!" Robin looked,
and grim despair
entered his heart. He saw that it was impossible to make a stand. At
that moment a knight in armor came riding furiously from the direction
of the castle of Sir Richard at Lee. It was Sir Richard himself.
"Robin! Robin!" he cried. "Thou canst not hope to save
thyself. Withdraw to my castle. Come at once, man, or all is lost." "But thou
losest life and land if thou dost shelter me!" cried Robin.
"So be it!" said the knight. "I lose them any way, for if ye
stay here, I stay with thee, Robin, and end with thee." "Come then,"
replied the outlaw.
"Friend indeed as thou art, I will accept thy aid and requite thee to
the full for thy nobility." Not a moment
too soon did the
outlaws reach the drawbridge. In good order they retreated, and barely
did they avoid being caught in the rear by the horsemen who had ridden
to cut them off, but a strong flight of arrows dealt destruction among
them on the very verge of the ditch, and when they had recovered, they
saw Robin was the last to step across the drawbridge, which then
rattled and groaned its swift way up, putting the yawning water of the
ditch between them and their prey. For a moment the troop, headed by
Watkin, the sheriff's officer, stood shouting threats at the walls,
until a flight of bolts among them caused them quickly to draw off,
taking their dead and wounded with them. They rode to join the main
body of the sheriff's forces, who now came up and halted at a
respectful distance from the castle walls, on whose battlements steel
caps now gleamed amid the bonnets of the outlaws. The sheriff
sent a herald under
a flag of truce, charging Sir Richard with harboring and aiding an
outlaw against the king's rights and laws, to which Sir Richard made a
valiant answer, in legal form, saying that he was willing "to maintain
the deeds which he had done upon all the lands which he held from the
king, as he was a true knight." Thereupon the sheriff went his way,
since he had no authority to besiege Sir Richard, who would have to be
judged by the king or his chancellor. "Sir Richard,"
said Robin, when
the knight came from the wall after giving his reply to the sheriff,
"this is a brave deed thou hast done, and here I swear that whatever
befall me, I do avow that I and my men shall aid thee to the last, and
whatsoever help thou needest at any time, I will eagerly give it thee."
"Robin," said
Sir Richard, "I
love no man in the world more than I do thee, for a just man and a
brave, and rather than see thee fall into the hands of the sheriff I
would lose all. But I have ill news for thee. Walter, the steward of
Sir Richard FitzWalter, sent a message to me this morning, saying that
his master is dead, and that fair Marian is in danger of being seized
by the strongest lord among her neighbors, so that she may be wedded to
one of them and her lands meanwhile held and enjoyed by them." "Now, by the
black rood!" said
Robin, "the time hath come when I said I would take sweet Marian into
my keeping. Sir Richard, I will instantly set forth to Malaset and
bring fair Marian back to the greenwood. Father Tuck will wed us, and
she shall live in peace with me and my merry men." Quickly,
therefore, Robin
selected twenty of his best men, and as soon as harness, arms, and
horses had been obtained for them all from their secret stores in the
forest eaves, the band set off toward the western marches, where, in
the fair valleys of Lancashire, the castle of Malaset stood in the
midst of its broad lands. On the evening
of the second day
they approached the castle and found it shut up, dark and silent. A
clear call on a bugle brought a man to the guardroom over the gate.
This was Walter the steward, and quickly, with the aid of the
menservants, the bridge was lowered, the portcullis raised, and Robin
and his men were welcomed by the brave steward into the great hall. "Where is the
lady Marian,
Walter?" asked Robin. "Alas, Master Robin, I know not!" replied Walter,
wringing his hands and the tears starting from his eyes. "If thou dost
not know, then I am indeed forlorn, for I had thought she had fled to
thee. She slept here last night, but this morning no sign could be
found of her anywhere about the castle!" "This is hard
to hear," said
Robin, and his face was full of grief. "Hath any robber lord or
thieving kinsman seized her, think you?" "Several have
been here since
when, three days ago, my lord was laid in his tomb in the church,"
replied Walter, "but ever with her wit and ready tongue my lady spoke
them fair and sent them all away, each satisfied that they were the
kinsmen to whom she would come when her grief was past. Yesterday there
came the sacrist of St. Mary's Abbey, and did bring with him the order
of the king's chancellor, William de Longchamp himself, the Lord Bishop
of Ely, commanding her to hold herself and all she possessed as the
ward of the king, and telling her that tomorrow would come Sir Scrivel
of Catsty, to be the king's steward and to guard her from ill." "Scrivel of
Catsty!" cried Robin
angrily, "Scrivel the catspaw rather, for he's naught but a reiving
mountain cat, close kin to Isenbart de Belame! I see it all! The new
abbot of St. Mary's hath got his uncle the chancellor to do this, and
under cover of being but the steward of the king's rights, he will let
that evil crew of Wrangby take possession. But, by the black rood, I
must find what hath befallen Marian, and that speedily!" Next day and
for several days
thereafter Robin and his men scoured the marches of Lancashire for many
miles, asking of the poor folk, the villeins, beggars and wandering
people of the road, whether they had seen a tall maid, brown of hair,
straight and queenly of figure, pass either alone, or in the power of a
band of knights or men-at-arms. But all was in vain. No one had seen
such a maid, and at the end of a week Robin was in despair. Meanwhile word
was sent to him
by Walter that Scrivel of Catsty with a hundred men had taken
possession of the castle, and was furious to learn that the lady Marian
had disappeared. He also was sending everywhere to learn where she had
fled. So earnest did he seem in this that Walter thought that he and
the Wrangby lords had not had any hand in kidnapping Marian, and that
either she must have fled herself or been taken by some party of her
kinsmen. Full of
sorrow, Robin at length
turned his horse's head toward Barnisdale, and he and his band rode
with heavy hearts into their camp by the Stane Lea one morning when the
sun shone warmly, when the birds sang in the boughs and all seemed
bright and fair. Hardly had Robin alighted, when there came the beat of
horses' feet rapidly approaching from the south, and through the trees
they saw the figure of a lady riding swiftly toward them, followed by
another. Robin quickly rose, and for the moment joy ran through his
heart to think that this was Mariani But next instant he recognized the
lady as the wife of Sir Richard at Lee.
When she rode up to Robin, he knelt courteously on his knee
for a moment. She was greatly agitated and was breathless. "God Save you,
Robin Hood," she said, "and all thy company. I crave a boon of thee." "It shall be
granted, lady," replied Robin, "for thine own and thy dear lord's
sake." "It is for his
behalf I crave
it. He hath been seized by the sheriff — he was hawking but an hour
agone by the stream which runs by a hunting-bower of his at Woodserr,
when the sheriff and his men rushed from the wood and seized him. They
have tied him on a horse and he is now on his way to Nottingham, and if
ye go not quickly, I doubt not he will soon be slain or in foul
prison." "Now by the
Virgin," said Robin,
and he was wondrous wroth, "the sheriff shall pay for this. Lady," he
said, "wait here with thy woman until we return. If we have not Sir
Richard with us, I shall not return alive." Then he
sounded his horn with
curious notes which resounded far and wide through the forest, so that
scouts and watchers a mile off heard the clear call through the trees.
Quickly they ran to the Stane Lea, and when all had assembled, there
were seven score men in all. Standing with bows in hand they waited for
their master to speak. He stood by the lady where she sat on her
palfrey, and they could see by his flashing eyes that he was greatly
moved. "Lads," he
cried, "those that
were with me when we shot at the butts in Nottingham, know how
courteously this lady's brave lord befriended us, and saved us from
death. Now he hath himself been seized by the sheriff, who, learning
that I was far from Barnisdale, hath dared to venture into our forest
roads and hath seized Sir Richard at Woodserr, where the knight hath a
hunting-seat. Now, lads, I go to rescue the knight and to fight the
sheriff. Who comes with me?" Every outlaw
of all that throng
held up his bow in sign that he would volunteer, and a great shout went
up. Robin smiled proudly at their eagerness. "I thank thee,
but you cannot
all go, lads," he cried. "As the sheriff hath a stout force with him,
eighty of you shall go with me. The others must stay to guard the camp
and the knight's lady." Soon all was
ready, and silently
the band, with Robin at their head, sank into the forest, and quickly
yet stealthily made their way to the southeast, toward the road which
the sheriff must take on his way back to Nottingham. The sheriff's
spies had learned that Robin had disappeared from Barnisdale, and that
Little John, still unable to move because of the wound in his knee, had
been left in command. Therefore, hearing that Sir Richard had left his
castle at Linden Lea and had gone to a hunting-lodge on' the outskirts
of Barnisdale, the sheriff had thought this would be a good opportunity
of capturing the knight, and thus gain the commendation of the Bishop
of Ely, the king's chancellor, who had been furious when he had heard
how the knight had rescued Robin and defied the law. Now that the
sheriff had
captured the knight, he was very anxious to leave the dangerous
neighborhood, for he feared that Robin might return at any time. He
therefore pushed his men to do their utmost, and while he himself rode
beside Sir Richard, who was bound securely on a horse, the company of
fifty men-at-arms had to walk, and in the hot noonday sun of the summer
they moiled and sweated woefully at the pace set by the sheriff. When they
reached the town of
Worksop, which lay upon their route, the sheriff would only stay long
enough before the chief inn to allow each man to have a stoup from a
black jack, and would allow no one to rest beneath the wide
chestnut-tree that threw its dark and pleasant shade in the scorching
road. Then onward they had to go, their own feet kicking up the dust
which in less than a mile caked their throats again.
At length they
got among the
deep woods and hills of Clumber Forest, and the sheriff felt more at
ease in his mind, though he did not abate the pace at which he went.
Under the shade of the great oaks and chestnuts, however, the
men felt less exhausted and pushed on with a will. There was a
long steep hill upon
their road called Hagger Scar, and up this they were toiling manfully,
when suddenly a stern voice rang out. "Halt!" it
cried, and at the
same moment as the men-at-arms looked about them, they saw that on each
side of the forest way stood archers with bent bows, the gleaming
arrows pointing at each of their breasts. The whole company stood
still, and men angrily murmured beneath their breath.
Out of the wood some ten paces from the sheriff stepped
Robin, his bow strung and a fierce look on his face. "So, sheriff,"
he cried; "you
learned that I was away, and therefore stole up to seize my friend. By
the Virgin, but thou hadst better have stayed within thy town walls. I
tell thee I will spare thee no more. Not since seven years have I had
to go so fast on foot as I have had to do this morn, and it bodes no
good to thee. Say thy last prayer, for thy end hath come." Now that he
knew that his last hour had really come the sheriff was brave. "Thou lawless
wolf's-head!" he
cried, "the chancellor will harry every thicket in these woods to catch
thee for this deed!" He spoke no
more. Robin's arrow
pierced the chainmail coat he wore, and he swayed and fell from the
saddle to the ground, dead. Then Robin went to the knight and cut his
bonds and helped him from the horse. "Now," said he
to the sheriff's men, "throw down thy weapons!" When they had
done this he told
them to march forward, take up the body of their master and proceed on
their way. They did as he commanded them, and soon the fifty
men-at-arms, weaponless and sore at heart for having been so completely
conquered by the bold outlaw, disappeared over the crest of the hill. Turning to the
knight, Robin
said: "Sir Richard, welcome to the greenwood! thou must stay with me
and my fellows now, and learn to go on foot through mire, moss and fen.
Sorry I am that a knight should have to leave his castle to his enemies
without a blow and to take to the woods, but needs must when naught
else can be done!" "I thank thee,
Robin, from my
heart," said the knight, "for taking me thus from prison and death. As
for living with thee and thy fellows in the greenwood, I wish no better
life, since I could not live with braver men." Thereupon they
set off through
the leafy wilderness, and before evening had rejoined the lady of the
knight, and great was her joy and gratitude to Robin and his men for
having restored her husband to her. A feast was prepared, and Sir
Richard at Lee and his dame were entertained right royally, and they
said that though they had lost castle and lands, they had never been
happier than on this the first night of their lives as outlaws in the
greenwood. When the camp
was hushed in
slumber, and there was no sound but the crackle of the dying embers of
the fires and the rustle of the wind in the trees overhead, or the
murmur of the little stream beside the camp, Robin took his way into
the dark forest. He was very unhappy and much distressed by reason of
the disappearance of Fair Marian. He pictured her a captive in some
castle, pining for liberty, oppressed by the demands of some tyrant
kinsman or other robber knight, who had captured her for the rich dowry
which would go to him she wedded. Filled with
these fears,
therefore, Robin determined to walk through the forest to the green
mounds where Ket the Trow and Hob o' the Hill lived, to hear whether
either of those little men had learned any news of Marian. As soon as
he had learned of his lady's danger when he had reached Sir Richard's
castle, he had sent off Ket the Trow to Malaset to watch over Marian,
but had since heard nothing from the troll, and this silence was very
disquieting. Though the
woodland paths were
sunk in the deepest darkness, Robin found his way unerringly through
the forest, and when he had greeted and left the last scout, watchful
at his post, he passed through the dark ways as stealthily as a wild
animal. Thus for some miles he went, until he knew that he was
approaching Twinbarrow Lea, as the glade was called where the green
homes of the little men lay. Cautiously he neared the edge of the
clearing and looked out between the leaves of the tree beside him. From where he
stood, his eyes
being now quite used to the darkness, he could plainly see the two
green mounds, for he was on that side of them which was nearer to the
forest. Everything seemed to be held in the silence and quiet of the
night. Only the wind rustled in the long grass or whispered among the
leaves. From far away on the other side of the glade came faint cries
of a hunting owl, like a ceaseless question — "Hoo-hoo-hoo!" Near by,
he heard a stealthy footfall, and turning his head he could see the
gaunt form of a wolf standing just on the edge of the forest, its head
thrown up to sniff the breeze from the mounds. Suddenly there came a
scurry away in the thickets to the rear, a quick shriek, and then
stillness. A wild cat had struck down a hare. The wolf disappeared in
the direction of the sound to see if he could rob the cat of its prey.
A long fiendish snarl greeted his approach, and Robin expected to hear
the fury of battle rise next moment as the wolf and wild cat closed in
mortal combat. But the snarl died down. The wolf had declined the
contest. Looking
intently toward the
mound Robin was now aware of a dark space on the flank of the further
one which looked like the outstretched figure of a man. He knew that
this mound was the one in which the brothers dwelt, and he wondered
whether Ket or Hob was lying out there sleeping. He thought to give the
call of the night-jar, which was their signal by night; but suddenly he
saw the figure move stealthily. He watched intently. He knew this could
not be either of the brothers, for the man's form was too large, and it
wriggled with infinite slowness upward toward the top of the mound. Robin knew
then that this was
some enemy trying to spy out the place where the two little men lived.
He wondered if it was one of his own outlaws, and he grew angry at the
thought. He had always commanded that no one should approach the mounds
or seek to force his company on the little people. If it was indeed one
of his men, he should smart for it. By this time
the figure had
almost reached the top of the mound, and Robin stepped quietly forth
with the intention of going to the man to bid him be gone. Suddenly,
against the sky-line there leaped from the top of the mound the small
figure of a man, which precipitated itself upon the form which Robin
had first seen. For a moment the latter was taken by surprise; it half
rose, but was pushed back, and instantly the two forms were closed in a
deadly grapple. Robin rushed up the mound toward them, catching the
glint of knives as he approached. He heard the fierce panting of the
two fighters as they struggled on the steep slippery side of the mound.
They pressed this way and that, losing their footing one moment, but
regaining it the next. Just as Robin reached them and could see that it
was Ket the Trow and one of his own outlaws, Ket thrust the other from
him and the man fell, rolling like a log down the side of the mound,
and lay at the bottom still and inert.
"What is this, Ket?" asked Robin. "Hath one of my own men
tried to break into thy house?" "He's not one
of the band,
master," said the panting man, staunching a wound on his shoulder with
one hand. "He is a spy who hath followed me these three days, but he'll
spy no more."
Together they
descended the
mound, and Ket turned over the dead man. Though the body was dressed
like one of Robin's men he knew by the face that it was not one of his
outlaws.
"How is it he
wears the Lincoln
green?" asked Robin. "He slew a poor lad of thine, Dring by name, by
Brambury Burn," said Ket, "and took his clothes to cover his spying." "Poor lad,"
said Robin; "Dring
was ever faithful. But what hast thou been doing by Brambury Burn? 'Tis
far north for thee to roam on the quest I gave thee. How ran the search
so far?" asked Robin eagerly, wondering if Ket had aught to tell.
"Thereby hangs my tale, master," said Ket. "But do thou come
into the mound and listen while I bind my wound." Robin followed
Ket up the flank
of the great barrow. He had only once been inside Ket's home, and he
knew that the method of entry was not by the door on the side, which
indeed was too small for a man of ordinary girth to enter, but by the
chimney, which could be made wide enough to admit him. On the top of
the mound was a dark hole, down which Ket disappeared, after telling
Robin to wait until he showed a light.
Soon Ket's
face appeared in the
light of the torch at the bottom of a slanting hole, the sides of which
were made of stones. Taking out one here and there Ket made the
aperture wider, and then Robin, by alternately sliding and stepping,
climbed down the slanting chimney. There was still another similar
passage to descend, but at length he stood on the floor of the
apartment which was the home of Ket and Hob and of his mother and two
sisters. By the light of Ket's torch, which he stuck between two
stones, Robin saw that the walls of the cave were made of stones,
deftly arranged, without mortar, one above the other, so that the whole
chamber was arched in the form of a beehive, the height being some
eight feet. When Robin had
helped Ket to
bind up a deep wound on his left shoulder, and a cut or two on his arm,
the little man looked up into his master's face with a bright merry
air, and said:
"If thou'It promise to make no sound I'll show thee a
treasure I ha' found but lately."
"Ket!" said Robin in eager tones; "hast thou really found my
dear lady? Oh, good little man!" For answer Ket
beckoned Robin to
follow him to a part of a chamber which was curtained off by a piece of
arras that must at one time have adorned a lord's hall. Peering behind
this, Robin saw reclining on a horse-cloth thrown over a couch of
sweet-smelling ferns, the form of Marian, sleeping as softly as if she
was in her own bed of linen at Malaset. Beside her was the small,
slight form of one of Ket's sisters, her dark hair and pale skin
showing vividly against the auburn locks and brown skin of Marian. A
long time he gazed happily on her face until at length Ket roused him
by whispering: "Look not on
her with such intentness, or her eyes will surely open and seek thine!"
Silently Robin and Ket crept away to the furthest corner of
the chamber, and Ket then told his tale.
"When you sent
me away to watch
over the lady Marian until you came," said Ket the Trow, "I reached the
castle by Malaset Wood at evening, and I crept into the castle when no
one saw me. I found the lady Marian in her chamber, and already she had
resolved to fly to you, leaving no word behind, so that steward Walter
and her people should not be judged guilty of hiding her escape. I bade
her wait for you, but she yearned for the open moors and would not
stay. By a secret way we issued from the castle at dawn and took to the
moors. Master Robin, thy lady is a wood-wise lass, though over quick to
act. She feared that there were those of her enemies who watched the
castle, and therefore she would not have us walk together lest, as she
said, if both were taken or I was slain, there would be no one to tell
you. We started out on the way which should lead us to meet you; but
not two miles had we wended ere from the thickets on Catrail Ring
twenty men sprang out and seized her. I barely 'scaped them by creeping
back, for they would not believe she was alone, and they sought for me.
They were men of the Thurlstan Lord, whom ye know to be close sib to
him of Wrangby. Fierce and evil-looking were they, and not over gentle
with my lady, so that more than once I had it in mind to loose a bolt
in the throat of Grame Gaptooth their leader. They put her on a spare
horse which with others lay in the covered way to the Ring, where they
had lain and watched the Castle in the valley below. All through the
live-long day I followed them, and grievous was that journey. Fast they
traveled, keeping to the moors and the lone lands, so that hard was I
put to it to hold to them on my two feet. That night they reached
Grame's Black Tower on the Wall and when I heard the gate clang down,
well, my heart dropped with it, for, as thou know'st, that peel tower
is a fearsome place,
We started out
on the way which should lead us
and not to be
broken into like a
cheese. Next day they sent two riders south, and I knew that they went
to tell the evil man Isenbart that they held thy dear lady and could
strike at thee through thy tenderest part. Two days I wandered round
that evil and black tower, conning how I could win into it and out
again with my dear lady unscathed. On the evening of the third day the
riders returned with others, and these were from Sir Isenbart, and at
their head was Baldwin the Killer, come to take my lady to the dungeons
of Wrangby. Thou know'st, master, that we little people have many
secrets and strange lore, and some unkent powers, and how we can break
and overcome hard things. It was so now, and by the aid of that
knowledge I was able to see the weak part of that strong peel. I think,
master, there is no castle that I cannot break into, however high and
strong it be, so I put my thinking to it. I entered that peel tower in
the dark, and I let down my brave lady from the wall, but ere I left I
put so heavy a mark on some that slept that never will they rise to do
evil more. Far did we go that night, and ever was she bold and brave.
She lay hid by day while I fared abroad to get us food; but by Brambury
Burn I met young Dring, and he was hot to go and find thee and tell
thee the good news. That rogue that lies dead on the mound outside saw
me and Dring as we spoke and knew me for thy friend, and thinking to
win the favor of the Wrangby lords, he slew Dring, and putting on his
clothes followed me. I reached here but four hours agone, and ever
since my lady hath slept." "Let her sleep
long, brave
lass," said Robin, "for she must have sore need of it. I cannot thank
thee enough, good Ket," he went on, "for having brought her safe and
sound out of such peril. What reward shall I make thee that is
fitting?" "Master," said
Ket; "there is no
need to talk of rewards between thee and me. I and mine owe our lives
to thee, and whatsoever we do, you or I, is for the love we bear each
other. Is it not so?"
"It is so," replied Robin, and they gripped hands in a silent
oath of renewed loyalty to each other. Robin slept in
the trolls' mound
that night on a bed of fern with Ket beside him, and in the morning
great was the joy of Marian when she awoke to find Robin himself was
near by. Much loving talk passed between them, and both said that never
more would they part from each other while life should last. That very
day, indeed, Robin went to Father Tuck to prepare him for their
marriage. |