Harp Song of the Dane Women
What is a woman that you forsake her, And the hearth-fire and the home-acre,
To go with the old grey Widow-maker?
She has no house to lay a guest in - But one chill bed for all to rest in,
That the pale suns and the stray bergs nest in.
She has no strong white arms to fold you, But the ten-times-fingering weed to
hold you Bound on the rocks where the tide has rolled you.
Yet, when the signs of summer thicken, And the ice breaks, and the birch-buds
quicken, Yearly you turn from our side, and sicken -
Sicken again for the shouts and the slaughters, - And steal away to the
lapping waters, And look at your ship in her winter quarters.
You forget our mirth, and talk at the tables, The kine in the shed and the
horse in the stables - To pitch her sides and go over her cables!
Then you drive out where the storm-clouds swallow: And the sound of your
oar-blades falling hollow Is all we have left through the months to follow.
Ah, what is a Woman that you forsake her, And the hearth-fire and the
home-acre, To go with the old grey Widow-maker?
It was too hot to run about in the open, so Dan asked their friend, old
Hobden, to take their own dinghy from the pond and put her on the brook at the
bottom of the garden. Her painted name was the Daisy, but for exploring
expeditions she was the Golden Hind or the Long Serpent, or some such suitable
name. Dan hiked and howked with a boat-hook (the brook was too narrow for
sculls), and Una punted with a piece of hop-pole. When they came to a very
shallow place (the Golden Hind drew quite three inches of water) they
disembarked and scuffled her over the gravel by her tow-rope, and when they
reached the overgrown banks beyond the garden they pulled themselves upstream by
the low branches.
That day they intended to discover the North Cape like 'Othere, the old
sea-captain', in the book of verses which Una had brought with her; but on
account of the heat they changed it to a voyage up the Amazon and the sources of
the Nile. Even on the shaded water the air was hot and heavy with drowsy scents,
while outside, through breaks in the trees, the sunshine burned the pasture like
fire. The kingfisher was asleep on his watching- branch, and the blackbirds
scarcely took the trouble to dive into the next bush. Dragonflies wheeling and
clashing were the only things at work, except the moorhens and a big Red
Admiral, who flapped down out of the sunshine for a drink.
When they reached Otter Pool the Golden Hind grounded comfortably on a
shallow, and they lay beneath a roof of close green, watching the water trickle
over the flood-gates down the mossy brick chute from the mill-stream to the
brook. A big trout - the children knew him well - rolled head and shoulders at
some fly that sailed round the bend, while, once in just so often, the brook
rose a fraction of an inch against all the wet pebbles, and they watched the
slow draw and shiver of a breath of air through the tree-tops. Then the little
voices of the slipping water began again.
'It's like the shadows talking, isn't it?' said Una. She had given up trying
to read. Dan lay over the bows, trailing his hands in the current. They heard
feet on the gravel-bar that runs half across the pool and saw Sir Richard
Dalyngridge standing over them.
'Was yours a dangerous voyage?' he asked, smiling.
'She bumped a lot, sir,' said Dan. 'There's hardly any water this summer.'
'Ah, the brook was deeper and wider when my children played at Danish
pirates. Are you pirate-folk?'
'Oh no. We gave up being pirates years ago,'explained Una. 'We're nearly
always explorers now. Sailing round the world, you know.'
'Round?' said Sir Richard. He sat him in the comfortable crotch of an old
ash-root on the bank. 'How can it be round?'
'Wasn't it in your books?' Dan suggested. He had been doing geography at his
last lesson.
'I can neither write nor read,' he replied. 'Canst thou read, child?'
'Yes,' said Dan, 'barring the very long words.'
'Wonderful! Read to me, that I may hear for myself.'
Dan flushed, but opened the book and began - gabbling a little - at 'The
Discoverer of the North Cape.'
'Othere, the old sea-captain, Who dwelt in Helgoland, To King Alfred, the
lover of truth, Brought a snow-white walrus-tooth, Which he held in his brown
right hand.'
'But - but - this I know! This is an old song! This I have heard sung! This
is a miracle,' Sir Richard interrupted. 'Nay, do not stop!' He leaned forward,
and the shadows of the leaves slipped and slid upon his chain-mail.
"'I ploughed the land with horses, But my heart was ill at ease, For the old
seafaring men Came to me now and then With their sagas of the seas."'
His hand fell on the hilt of the great sword. 'This is truth,' he cried, 'for
so did it happen to me,' and he beat time delightedly to the tramp of verse
after verse.
"'And now the land," said Othere, "Bent southward suddenly, And I followed
the curving shore, And ever southward bore Into a nameless sea."'
'A nameless sea!' he repeated. 'So did I - so did Hugh and I.'
'Where did you go? Tell us,' said Una.
'Wait. Let me hear all first.' So Dan read to the poem's very end.
'Good,' said the knight. 'That is Othere's tale - even so I have heard the
men in the Dane ships sing it. Not those same valiant words, but something like
to them.'
'Have you ever explored North?' Dan shut the book.
'Nay. My venture was South. Farther South than any man has fared, Hugh and I
went down with Witta and his heathen.' He jerked the tall sword forward, and
leaned on it with both hands; but his eyes looked long past them.
'I thought you always lived here,' said Una, timidly.
'Yes; while my Lady Aelueva lived. But she died. She died. Then, my eldest
son being a man, I asked De Aquila's leave that he should hold the Manor while I
went on some journey or pilgrimage - to forget. De Aquila, whom the Second
William had made Warden of Pevensey in Earl Mortain's place, was very old then,
but still he rode his tall, roan horses, and in the saddle he looked like a
little white falcon. When Hugh, at Dallington, over yonder, heard what I did, he
sent for my second son, whom being unmarried he had ever looked upon as his own
child, and, by De Aquila's leave, gave him the Manor of Dallington to hold till
he should return. Then Hugh came with me.'
'When did this happen?' said Dan.
'That I can answer to the very day, for as we rode with De Aquila by Pevensey
- have I said that he was Lord of Pevensey and of the Honour of the Eagle? - to
the Bordeaux ship that fetched him his wines yearly out of France, a Marsh man
ran to us crying that he had seen a great black goat which bore on his back the
body of the King, and that the goat had spoken to him. On that same day Red
William our King, the Conqueror's son, died of a secret arrow while he hunted in
a forest. "This is a cross matter," said De Aquila, "to meet on the threshold of
a journey. If Red William be dead I may have to fight for my lands. Wait a
little."
'My Lady being dead, I cared nothing for signs and omens, nor Hugh either. We
took that wine-ship to go to Bordeaux; but the wind failed while we were yet in
sight of Pevensey, a thick mist hid us, and we drifted with the tide along the
cliffs to the west. Our company was, for the most part, merchants returning to
France, and we were laden with wool and there were three couple of tall
hunting-dogs chained to the rail. Their master was a knight of Artois. His name
I never learned, but his shield bore gold pieces on a red ground, and he limped,
much as I do, from a wound which he had got in his youth at Mantes siege. He
served the Duke of Burgundy against the Moors in Spain, and was returning to
that war with his dogs. He sang us strange Moorish songs that first night, and
half persuaded us to go with him. I was on pilgrimage to forget - which is what
no pilgrimage brings. I think I would have gone, but ...
'Look you how the life and fortune of man changes! Towards morning a Dane
ship, rowing silently, struck against us in the mist, and while we rolled hither
and yon Hugh, leaning over the rail, fell outboard. I leaped after him, and we
two tumbled aboard the Dane, and were caught and bound ere we could rise. Our
own ship was swallowed up in the mist. I judge the Knight of the Gold Pieces
muzzled his dogs with his cloak, lest they should give tongue and betray the
merchants, for I heard their baying suddenly stop.
'We lay bound among the benches till morning, when the Danes dragged us to
the high deck by the steering- place, and their captain - Witta, he was called -
turned us over with his foot. Bracelets of gold from elbow to armpit he wore,
and his red hair was long as a woman's, and came down in plaited locks on his
shoulder. He was stout, with bowed legs and long arms. He spoiled us of all we
had, but when he laid hand on Hugh's sword and saw the runes on the blade
hastily he thrust it back. Yet his covetousness overcame him and he tried again
and again, and the third time the Sword sang loud and angrily, so that the
rowers leaned on their oars to listen. Here they all spoke together, screaming
like gulls, and a Yellow Man, such as I have never seen, came to the high deck
and cut our bonds. He was yellow - not from sickness, but by nature - yellow as
honey, and his eyes stood endwise in his head.'
'How do you mean?' said Una, her chin on her hand.
'Thus,' said Sir Richard. He put a finger to the corner of each eye, and
pushed it up till his eyes narrowed to slits.
'Why, you look just like a Chinaman!' cried Dan. 'Was the man a Chinaman?'
'I know not what that may be. Witta had found him half dead among ice on the
shores of Muscovy. We thought he was a devil. He crawled before us and brought
food in a silver dish which these sea-wolves had robbed from some rich abbey,
and Witta with his own hands gave us wine. He spoke a little in French, a little
in South Saxon, and much in the Northman's tongue. We asked him to set us
ashore, promising to pay him better ransom than he would get price if he sold us
to the Moors - as once befell a knight of my acquaintance sailing from Flushing.
"'Not by my father Guthrum's head," said he. "The Gods sent ye into my ship
for a luck-offering."
'At this I quaked, for I knew it was still the Danes' custom to sacrifice
captives to their Gods for fair weather.
"'A plague on thy four long bones!" said Hugh. "What profit canst thou make
of poor old pilgrims that can neither work nor fight?"
"'Gods forbid I should fight against thee, poor Pilgrim with the Singing
Sword," said he. "Come with us and be poor no more. Thy teeth are far apart,
which is a sure sign thou wilt travel and grow rich."
"'What if we will not come?" said Hugh. "'Swim to England or France," said
Witta. "We are midway between the two. Unless ye choose to drown yourselves no
hair of your head will be harmed here aboard. We think ye bring us luck, and I
myself know the runes on that Sword are good." He turned and bade them hoist
sail.
'Hereafter all made way for us as we walked about the ship, and the ship was
full of wonders.'
'What was she like?' said Dan.
'Long, low, and narrow, bearing one mast with a red sail, and rowed by
fifteen oars a side,' the knight answered. 'At her bows was a deck under which
men might lie, and at her stern another shut off by a painted door from the
rowers' benches. Here Hugh and I slept, with Witta and the Yellow Man, upon
tapestries as soft as wool. I remember' - he laughed to himself -'when first we
entered there a loud voice cried, "Out swords! Out swords! Kill, kill!" Seeing
us start Witta laughed, and showed us it was but a great-beaked grey bird with a
red tail. He sat her on his shoulder, and she called for bread and wine
hoarsely, and prayed him to kiss her. Yet she was no more than a silly bird. But
- ye knew this?' He looked at their smiling faces.
'We weren't laughing at you,' said Una. 'That must have been a parrot. It's
just what Pollies do.'
'So we learned later. But here is another marvel. The Yellow Man, whose name
was Kitai, had with him a brown box. In the box was a blue bowl with red marks
upon the rim, and within the bowl, hanging from a fine thread, was a piece of
iron no thicker than that grass stem, and as long, maybe, as my spur, but
straight. In this iron, said Witta, abode an Evil Spirit which Kitai, the Yellow
Man, had brought by Art Magic out of his own country that lay three years'
journey southward. The Evil Spirit strove day and night to return to his
country, and therefore, look you, the iron needle pointed continually to the
South.'
'South?' said Dan suddenly, and put his hand into his pocket.
'With my own eyes I saw it. Every day and all day long, though the ship
rolled, though the sun and the moon and the stars were hid, this blind Spirit in
the iron knew whither it would go, and strained to the South. Witta called it
the Wise Iron, because it showed him his way across the unknowable seas.' Again
Sir Richard looked keenly at the children. 'How think ye? Was it sorcery?'
'Was it anything like this?' Dan fished out his old brass pocket-compass,
that generally lived with his knife and key-ring. 'The glass has got cracked,
but the needle waggles all right, sir.'
The knight drew a long breath of wonder. 'Yes, yes! The Wise Iron shook and
swung in just this fashion. Now it is still. Now it points to the South.'
'North,' said Dan.
'Nay, South! There is the South,'said Sir Richard. Then they both laughed,
for naturally when one end of a straight compass-needle points to the North, the
other must point to the South.
'Te,' said Sir Richard, clicking his tongue. 'There can be no sorcery if a
child carries it. Wherefore does it point South - or North?'
'Father says that nobody knows,' said Una.
Sir Richard looked relieved. 'Then it may still be magic. It was magic to us.
And so we voyaged. When the wind served we hoisted sail, and lay all up along
the windward rail, our shields on our backs to break the spray. When it failed,
they rowed with long oars; the Yellow Man sat by the Wise Iron, and Witta
steered. At first I feared the great white-flowering waves, but as I saw how
wisely Witta led his ship among them I grew bolder. Hugh liked it well from the
first. My skill is not upon the water; and rocks and whirlpools such as we saw
by the West Isles of France, where an oar caught on a rock and broke, are much
against my stomach. We sailed South across a stormy sea, where by moonlight,
between clouds, we saw a Flanders ship roll clean over and sink. Again, though
Hugh laboured with Witta all night, I lay under the deck with the Talking Bird,
and cared not whether I lived or died. There is a sickness of the sea which for
three days is pure death! When we next saw land Witta said it was Spain, and we
stood out to sea. That coast was full of ships busy in the Duke's war against
the Moors, and we feared to be hanged by the Duke's men or sold into slavery by
the Moors. So we put into a small harbour which Witta knew. At night men came
down with loaded mules, and Witta exchanged amber out of the North against
little wedges of iron and packets of beads in earthen pots. The pots he put
under the decks, and the wedges of iron he laid on the bottom of the ship after
he had cast out the stones and shingle which till then had been our ballast.
Wine, too, he bought for lumps of sweet-smelling grey amber - a little morsel no
bigger than a thumb-nail purchased a cask of wine. But I speak like a merchant.'
'No, no! Tell us what you had to eat,' cried Dan.
'Meat dried in the sun, and dried fish and ground beans, Witta took in; and
corded frails of a certain sweet, soft fruit, which the Moors use, which is like
paste of figs, but with thin, long stones. Aha! Dates is the name.
"'Now," said Witta, when the ship was loaded, "I counsel you strangers to
pray to your Gods, for, from here on, our road is No Man's road." He and his men
killed a black goat for sacrifice on the bows; and the Yellow Man brought out a
small, smiling image of dull- green stone and burned incense before it. Hugh and
I commended ourselves to God, and Saint Barnabas, and Our Lady of the
Assumption, who was specially dear to my Lady. We were not young, but I think no
shame to say whenas we drove out of that secret harbour at sunrise over a still
sea, we two rejoiced and sang as did the knights of old when they followed our
great Duke to England. Yet was our leader an heathen pirate; all our proud fleet
but one galley perilously overloaded; for guidance we leaned on a pagan
sorcerer; and our port was beyond the world's end. Witta told us that his father
Guthrum had once in his life rowed along the shores of Africa to a land where
naked men sold gold for iron and beads. There had he bought much gold, and no
few elephants' teeth, and thither by help of the Wise Iron would Witta go. Witta
feared nothing - except to be poor.
"'My father told me," said Witta, "that a great Shoal runs three days' sail
out from that land, and south of the shoal lies a Forest which grows in the sea.
South and east of the Forest my father came to a place where the men hid gold in
their hair; but all that country, he said, was full of Devils who lived in
trees, and tore folk limb from limb. How think ye?"
"'Gold or no gold," said Hugh, fingering his sword, "it is a joyous venture.
Have at these Devils of thine, Witta!"
"'Venture!" said Witta sourly. "I am only a poor sea-thief. I do not set my
life adrift on a plank for joy, or the venture. Once I beach ship again at
Stavanger, and feel the wife's arms round my neck, I'll seek no more ventures. A
ship is heavier care than a wife or cattle."
'He leaped down among the rowers, chiding them for their little strength and
their great stomachs. Yet Witta was a wolf in fight, and a very fox in cunning.
'We were driven South by a storm, and for three days and three nights he took
the stern-oar, and threddled the longship through the sea. When it rose beyond
measure he brake a pot of whale's oil upon the water, which wonderfully smoothed
it, and in that anointed patch he turned her head to the wind and threw out oars
at the end of a rope, to make, he said, an anchor at which we lay rolling
sorely, but dry. This craft his father Guthrum had shown him. He knew, too, all
the Leech-Book of Bald, who was a wise doctor, and he knew the Ship-Book of Hlaf
the Woman, who robbed Egypt. He knew all the care of a ship.
'After the storm we saw a mountain whose top was covered with snow and
pierced the clouds. The grasses under this mountain, boiled and eaten, are a
good cure for soreness of the gums and swelled ankles. We lay there eight days,
till men in skins threw stones at us. When the heat increased Witta spread a
cloth on bent sticks above the rowers, for the wind failed between the Island of
the Mountain and the shore of Africa, which is east of it. That shore is sandy,
and we rowed along it within three bowshots. Here we saw whales, and fish in the
shape of shields, but longer than our ship. Some slept, some opened their mouths
at us, and some danced on the hot waters. The water was hot to the hand, and the
sky was hidden by hot, grey mists, out of which blew a fine dust that whitened
our hair and beards of a morning. Here, too, were fish that flew in the air like
birds. They would fall on the laps of the rowers, and when we went ashore we
would roast and eat them.'
The knight paused to see if the children doubted him, but they only nodded
and said, 'Go on.'
'The yellow land lay on our left, the grey sea on our right. Knight though I
was, I pulled my oar amongst the rowers. I caught seaweed and dried it, and
stuffed it between the pots of beads lest they should break. Knighthood is for
the land. At sea, look you, a man is but a spurless rider on a bridleless horse.
I learned to make strong knots in ropes - yes, and to join two ropes end to end,
so that even Witta could scarcely see where they had been married. But Hugh had
tenfold more sea-cunning than I. Witta gave him charge of the rowers of the left
side. Thorkild of Borkum, a man with a broken nose, that wore a Norman steel
cap, had the rowers of the right, and each side rowed and sang against the
other. They saw that no man Was idle. Truly, as Hugh said, and Witta would laugh
at him, a ship is all more care than a Manor.
'How? Thus. There was water to fetch from the shore when we could find it, as
well as wild fruit and grasses, and sand for scrubbing of the decks and benches
to keep them sweet. Also we hauled the ship out on low islands and emptied all
her gear, even to the iron wedges, and burned off the weed, that had grown on
her, with torches of rush, and smoked below the decks with rushes dampened in
salt water, as Hlaf the Woman orders in her Ship-Book. Once when we were thus
stripped, and the ship lay propped on her keel, the bird cried, "Out swords!" as
though she saw an enemy. Witta vowed he would wring her neck.'
'Poor Polly! Did he?' said Una.
'Nay. She was the ship's bird. She could call all the rowers by name ...
Those were good days - for a wifeless man - with Witta and his heathen - beyond
the world's end ... After many weeks we came on the great Shoal which stretched,
as Witta's father had said, far out to sea. We skirted it till we were giddy
with the sight and dizzy with the sound of bars and breakers, and when we
reached land again we found a naked black people dwelling among woods, who for
one wedge of iron loaded us with fruits and grasses and eggs. Witta scratched
his head at them in sign he would buy gold. They had no gold, but they
understood the sign (all the gold-traders hide their gold in their thick hair),
for they pointed along the coast. They beat, too, on their chests with their
clenched hands, and that, if we had known it, was an evil sign.'
'What did it mean?' said Dan.
'Patience. Ye shall hear. We followed the coast eastward sixteen days
(counting time by sword-cuts on the helm-rail) till we came to the Forest in the
Sea. Trees grew there out of mud, arched upon lean and high roots, and many
muddy waterways ran allwhither into darkness, under the trees. Here we lost the
sun. We followed the winding channels between the trees, and where we could not
row we laid hold of the crusted roots and hauled ourselves along. The water was
foul, and great glittering flies tormented us. Morning and evening a blue mist
covered the mud, which bred fevers. Four of our rowers sickened, and were bound
to their benches, lest they should leap overboard and be eaten by the monsters
of the mud. The Yellow Man lay sick beside the Wise Iron, rolling his head and
talking in his own tongue. Only the Bird throve. She sat on Witta's shoulder and
screamed in that noisome, silent darkness. Yes; I think it was the silence we
most feared.'
He paused to listen to the comfortable home noises of the brook.
'When we had lost count of time among those black gullies and swashes we
heard, as it were, a drum beat far off, and following it we broke into a broad,
brown river by a hut in a clearing among fields of pumpkins. We thanked God to
see the sun again. The people of the village gave the good welcome, and Witta
scratched his head at them (for gold), and showed them our iron and beads. They
ran to the bank - we were still in the ship - and pointed to our swords and
bows, for always when near shore we lay armed. Soon they fetched store of gold
in bars and in dust from their huts, and some great blackened elephants' teeth.
These they piled on the bank, as though to tempt us, and made signs of dealing
blows in battle, and pointed up to the tree-tops, and to the forest behind.
Their captain or chief sorcerer then beat on his chest with his fists, and
gnashed his teeth.
'Said Thorkild of Borkum: "Do they mean we must fight for all this gear?" and
he half drew sword.
"'Nay," said Hugh. "I think they ask us to league against some enemy."
"'I like this not," said Witta, of a sudden. "Back into mid-stream."
'So we did, and sat still all, watching the black folk and the gold they
piled on the bank. Again we heard drums beat in the forest, and the people fled
to their huts, leaving the gold unguarded.
'Then Hugh, at the bows, pointed without speech, and we saw a great Devil
come out of the forest. He shaded his brows with his hand, and moistened his
pink tongue between his lips - thus.'
'A Devil!' said Dan, delightfully horrified.
'Yea. Taller than a man; covered with reddish hair. When he had well regarded
our ship, he beat on his chest with his fists till it sounded like rolling
drums, and came to the bank swinging all his body between his long arms, and
gnashed his teeth at us. Hugh loosed arrow, and pierced him through the throat.
He fell roaring, and three other Devils ran out of the forest and hauled him
into a tall tree out of sight. Anon they cast down the blood- stained arrow, and
lamented together among the leaves.
Witta saw the gold on the bank; he was loath to leave it. "Sirs," said he (no
man had spoken till then), "yonder is what we have come so far and so painfully
to find, laid out to our very hand. Let us row in while these Devils bewail
themselves, and at least bear off what we may."
'Bold as a wolf, cunning as a fox was Witta! He set four archers on the
fore-deck to shoot the Devils if they should leap from the tree, which was close
to the bank. He manned ten oars a side, and bade them watch his hand to row in
or back out, and so coaxed he them toward the bank. But none would set foot
ashore, though the gold was within ten paces. No man is hasty to his hanging!
They whimpered at their oars like beaten hounds, and Witta bit his fingers for
rage.
'Said Hugh of a sudden, "Hark!" At first we thought it was the buzzing of the
glittering flies on the water; but it grew loud and fierce, so that all men
heard.'
'What?' said Dan and Una.
'It was the Sword.' Sir Richard patted the smooth hilt. 'It sang as a Dane
sings before battle. "I go," said Hugh, and he leaped from the bows and fell
among the gold. I was afraid to my four bones' marrow, but for shame's sake I
followed, and Thorkild of Borkum leaped after me. None other came. "Blame me
not," cried Witta behind us, "I must abide by my ship." We three had no time to
blame or praise. We stooped to the gold and threw it back over our shoulders,
one hand on our swords and one eye on the tree, which nigh overhung us.
'I know not how the Devils leaped down, or how the fight began. I heard Hugh
cry: "Out! out!" as though he were at Santlache again; I saw Thorkild's steel
cap smitten off his head by a great hairy hand, and I felt an arrow from the
ship whistle past my ear. They say that till Witta took his sword to the rowers
he could not bring his ship inshore; and each one of the four archers said
afterwards that he alone had pierced the Devil that fought me. I do not know. I
went to it in my mail-shirt, which saved my skin. With long-sword and
belt-dagger I fought for the life against a Devil whose very feet were hands,
and who whirled me back and forth like a dead branch. He had me by the waist, my
arms to my side, when an arrow from the ship pierced him between the shoulders,
and he loosened grip. I passed my sword twice through him, and he crutched
himself away between his long arms, coughing and moaning. Next, as I remember, I
saw Thorkild of Borkum, bare-headed and smiling, leaping up and down before a
Devil that leaped and gnashed his teeth. Then Hugh passed, his sword shifted to
his left hand, and I wondered why I had not known that Hugh was a left-handed
man; and thereafter I remembered nothing till I felt spray on my face, and we
were in sunshine on the open sea. That was twenty days after.'
'What had happened? Did Hugh die?'the children asked.
'Never was such a fight fought by christened man,' said Sir Richard. 'An
arrow from the ship had saved me from my Devil, and Thorkild of Borkum had given
back before his Devil, till the bowmen on the ship could shoot it all full of
arrows from near by; but Hugh's Devil was cunning, and had kept behind trees,
where no arrow could reach. Body to body there, by stark strength of sword and
hand, had Hugh slain him, and, dying, the Thing had clenched his teeth on the
sword. Judge what teeth they were!'
Sir Richard turned the sword again that the children might see the two great
chiselled gouges on either side of the blade.
'Those same teeth met in Hugh's right arm and side,' Sir Richard went on. 'I?
Oh, I had no more than a broken foot and a fever. Thorkild's ear was bitten, but
Hugh's arm and side clean withered away. I saw him where he lay along, sucking a
fruit in his left hand. His flesh was wasted off his bones, his hair was patched
with white, and his hand was blue-veined like a woman's. He put his left arm
round my neck and whispered, "Take my sword. It has been thine since Hastings, O
my brother, but I can never hold hilt again." We lay there on the high deck
talking of Santlache, and, I think, of every day since Santlache, and it came so
that we both wept. I was weak, and he little more than a shadow.
"'Nay - nay," said Witta, at the helm-rail. "Gold is a good right arm to any
man. Look - look at the gold!" He bade Thorkild show us the gold and the
elephants' teeth, as though we had been children. He had brought away all the
gold on the bank, and twice as much more, that the people of the village gave
him for slaying the Devils. They worshipped us as Gods, Thorkild told me: it was
one of their old women healed up Hugh's poor arm.'
'How much gold did you get?'asked Dan. 'How can I say? Where we came out with
wedges of iron under the rowers' feet we returned with wedges of gold hidden
beneath planks. There was dust of gold in packages where we slept and along the
side, and cross- wise under the benches we lashed the blackened elephants'
teeth.
"'I had sooner have my right arm," said Hugh, when he had seen all.
"'Ahai! That was my fault," said Witta. "I should have taken ransom and
landed you in France when first you came aboard, ten months ago."
"'It is over-late now," said Hugh, laughing.
'Witta plucked at his long shoulder-lock. "But think!" said he. "If I had let
ye go - which I swear I would never have done, for I love ye more than brothers
- if I had let ye go, by now ye might have been horribly slain by some mere Moor
in the Duke of Burgundy's war, or ye might have been murdered by land-thieves,
or ye might have died of the plague at an inn. Think of this and do not blame me
overmuch, Hugh. See! I will only take a half of the gold."
"'I blame thee not at all, Witta," said Hugh. "It was a joyous venture, and
we thirty-five here have done what never men have done. If I live till England,
I will build me a stout keep over Dallington out of my share."
"'I will buy cattle and amber and warm red cloth for the wife," said Witta,
"and I will hold all the land at the head of Stavanger Fiord. Many will fight
for me now. But first we must turn North, and with this honest treasure aboard I
pray we meet no pirate ships."
'We did not laugh. We were careful. We were afraid lest we should lose one
grain of our gold, for which we had fought Devils.
"'Where is the Sorcerer?" said I, for Witta was looking at the Wise Iron in
the box, and I could not see the Yellow Man.
"'He has gone to his own country," said he. "He rose up in the night while we
were beating out of that forest in the mud, and said that he could see it behind
the trees. He leaped out on the mud, and did not answer when we called; so we
called no more. He left the Wise Iron, which is all that I care for - and see,
the Spirit still points to the South."
'We were troubled for fear that the Wise Iron should fail us now that its
Yellow Man had gone, and when we saw the Spirit still served us we grew afraid
of too strong winds, and of shoals, and of careless leaping fish, and of all the
people on all the shores where we landed.'
'Why?' said Dan.
'Because of the gold - because of our gold. Gold changes men altogether.
Thorkild of Borkum did not change. He laughed at Witta for his fears, and at us
for our counselling Witta to furl sail when the ship pitched at all.
"'Better be drowned out of hand," said Thorkild of Borkum, "than go tied to a
deck-load of yellow dust."
'He was a landless man, and had been slave to some King in the East. He would
have beaten out the gold into deep bands to put round the oars, and round the
prow.
'Yet, though he vexed himself for the gold, Witta waited upon Hugh like a
woman, lending him his shoulder when the ship rolled, and tying of ropes from
side to side that Hugh might hold by them. But for Hugh, he said - and so did
all his men - they would never have won the gold. I remember Witta made a
little, thin gold ring for our Bird to swing in.
'Three months we rowed and sailed and went ashore for fruits or to clean the
ship. When we saw wild horsemen, riding among sand-dunes, flourishing spears, we
knew we were on the Moors' coast, and stood over north to Spain; and a strong
south-west wind bore us in ten days to a coast of high red rocks, where we heard
a hunting-horn blow among the yellow gorse and knew it was England.
"'Now find ye Pevensey yourselves," said Witta. "I love not these narrow
ship-filled seas."
'He set the dried, salted head of the Devil, which Hugh had killed, high on
our prow, and all boats fled from us. Yet, for our gold's sake, we were more
afraid than they. We crept along the coast by night till we came to the chalk
cliffs, and so east to Pevensey. Witta would not come ashore with us, though
Hugh promised him wine at Dallington enough to swim in. He was on fire to see
his wife, and ran into the Marsh after sunset, and there he left us and our
share of gold, and backed out on the same tide. He made no promise; he swore no
oath; he looked for no thanks; but to Hugh, an armless man, and to me, an old
cripple whom he could have flung into the sea, he passed over wedge upon wedge,
packet upon packet of gold and dust of gold, and only ceased when we would take
no more. As he stooped from the rail to bid us farewell he stripped off his
right-arm bracelets and put them all on Hugh's left, and he kissed Hugh on the
cheek. I think when Thorkild of Borkum bade the rowers give way we were near
weeping. It is true that Witta was an heathen and a pirate; true it is he held
us by force many months in his ship, but I loved that bow-legged, blue-eyed man
for his great boldness, his cunning, his skill, and, beyond all, for his
simplicity.'
'Did he get home all right?' said Dan.
'I never knew. We saw him hoist sail under the moon- track and stand away. I
have prayed that he found his wife and the children.'
'And what did you do?'
'We waited on the Marsh till the day. Then I sat by the gold, all tied in an
old sail, while Hugh went to Pevensey, and De Aquila sent us horses.'
Sir Richard crossed hands on his sword-hilt, and stared down stream through
the soft warm shadows.
'A whole shipload of gold!' said Una, looking at the little Golden Hind. 'But
I'm glad I didn't see the Devils.'
'I don't believe they were Devils,'Dan whispered back.
'Eh?' said Sir Richard. 'Witta's father warned him they were unquestionable
Devils. One must believe one's father, and not one's children. What were my
Devils, then?'
Dan flushed all over. 'I - I only thought,' he stammered; 'I've got a book
called The Gorilla Hunters - it's a continuation of Coral Island, sir - and it
says there that the gorillas (they're big monkeys, you know) were always chewing
iron up.'
'Not always,' said Una. 'Only twice.' They had been reading The Gorilla
Hunters in the orchard.
'Well, anyhow, they always drummed on their chests, like Sir Richard's did,
before they went for people. And they built houses in trees, too.'
'Ha!' Sir Richard opened his eyes. 'Houses like flat nests did our Devils
make, where their imps lay and looked at us. I did not see them (I was sick
after the fight), but Witta told me, and, lo, ye know it also? Wonderful! Were
our Devils only nest-building apes? Is there no sorcery left in the world?'
'I don't know,' answered Dan, uncomfortably. 'I've seen a man take rabbits
out of a hat, and he told us we could see how he did it, if we watched hard. And
we did.'
'But we didn't,' said Una, sighing. 'Oh! there's Puck!'
The little fellow, brown and smiling, peered between two stems of an ash,
nodded, and slid down the bank into the cool beside them.
'No sorcery, Sir Richard?' he laughed, and blew on a full dandelion head he
had picked.
'They tell me that Witta's Wise Iron was a toy. The boy carries such an iron
with him. They tell me our Devils were apes, called gorillas!' said Sir Richard,
indignantly.
'That is the sorcery of books,' said Puck. 'I warned thee they were wise
children. All people can be wise by reading of books.'
'But are the books true?' Sir Richard frowned. 'I like not all this reading
and writing.' 'Ye-es,' said Puck, holding the naked dandelion head at arm's
length. 'But if we hang all fellows who write falsely, why did De Aquila not
begin with Gilbert the Clerk? He was false enough.'
'Poor false Gilbert. Yet, in his fashion, he was bold,' said Sir Richard.
'What did he do?' said Dan.
'He wrote,' said Sir Richard. 'Is the tale meet for children, think you?' He
looked at Puck; but 'Tell us! Tell us!' cried Dan and Una together.
|