The Forest Lovers - Page 4/206

Labourers stayed their reaping to listen to him; but there was nothing

for them. He sang of adventure. Girls leaned at cottage doorways to

watch him down the way. There was nothing for them either, for all he

sang of love.

"She who now hath my heart

is so in every part;" etc., etc.

The words came tripping as a learnt lesson; but he had never loved a

girl, and fancied he never would. Women? Petticoats! For him there was

more than one adventure in life. Rather, my lady's chamber was the

last place in which he would have looked for adventure.

On the second day of his journey--in a country barren and stony, yet

with a hint of the leafy wildernesses to come in the ridges spiked

with pines, the cropping of heather here and there, and the ever-

increasing solitude of his way--he was set upon by four foot-pads, who

thought to beat the life out of his body as easily as boys that of a

dog. He asked nothing better than that they should begin; and he asked

so civilly that they very soon did. The fancy of glorious youth

transformed them into knights-at-arms, and their ashen cudgels into

blades. The only pity was that the end came so soon.

His sword dug its first sod, and might have carved four cowards

instead of one; but he was no vampire, so thereafter laid about him

with the flat of the tool. The three survivors claimed quarter.

"Quarter, you rogues!" cried he. "Kindly lend me one of your staves

for the purpose." He gave them a drubbing as one horsed his brother in

turn, and dropped them, a chapfallen trio, beside their dead. "Now,"

said he, "take that languid gentleman with you, and be so good for the

rest of your journey as to imitate his indifference to strangers. Thus

you will have a prosperous passage. Good day to you."

He slept on the scene of his exploit, rose early, rode fast, and by

noon was plainly in the selvage of the great woods. The country was

split into bleak ravines, a pell-mell of rocks and boulders, and a

sturdy crop of black pines between them. An overgrowth of brambles and

briony ran riot over all. Prosper rode up a dry river-bed, keeping

steadily west, so far as it would serve him; found himself quagged ere

a dozen painful miles, floundered out as best he might, and by evening

was making good pace over a rolling bit of moorland through which ran

a sandy road. It was the highway from Wanmouth to Market Basing and

the north, if he had known. Ahead of him a solitary wayfarer, a brown

bunch of a friar, from whose hood rose a thin neck and a shag of black

hair round his tonsure--like storm-clouds gathering about a full moon

--struck manfully forward on a pair of bare feet.