THEY HEAR TIDINGS OF BATTLE AND MAKE THEM READY
He left off as one who had yet something else to say; and, indeed, I thought
he would give us some word as to the trysting- place, and whither the army was
to go from it; because it was now clear to me that this gathering was but a band
of an army. But much happened before John Ball spoke again from the cross, and
it was on this wise.
When there was silence after the last shout that the crowd had raised a while
ago, I thought I heard a thin sharp noise far away, somewhat to the north of the
cross, which I took rather for the sound of a trumpet or horn, than for the
voice of a man or any beast. Will Green also seemed to have heard it, for he
turned his head sharply and then back again, and looked keenly into the crowd as
though seeking to catch some one's eye. There was a very tall man standing by
the prisoner on the horse near the outskirts of the crowd, and holding his
bridle. This man, who was well-armed, I saw look up and say something to the
prisoner, who stooped down and seemed to whisper him in turn. The tall man
nodded his head and the prisoner got off his horse, which was a cleaner-limbed,
better-built beast than the others belonging to the band, and the tall man
quietly led him a little way from the crowd, mounted him, and rode off northward
at a smart pace.
Will Green looked on sharply at all this, and when the man rode off, smiled
as one who is content, and deems that all is going well, and settled himself
down again to listen to the priest.
But now when John Ball had ceased speaking, and after another shout, and a
hum of excited pleasure and hope that followed it, there was silence again, and
as the priest addressed himself to speaking once more, he paused and turned his
head towards the wind, as if he heard something, which certainly I heard, and
belike every one in the throng, though it was not over-loud, far as sounds carry
in clear quiet evenings. It was the thump-a- thump of a horse drawing near at a
hand-gallop along the grassy upland road; and I knew well it was the tall man
coming back with tidings, the purport of which I could well guess.
I looked up at Will Green's face. He was smiling as one pleased, and said
softly as he nodded to me, "Yea, shall we see the grey- goose fly this eve?"
But John Ball said in a great voice from the cross, "Hear ye the tidings on
the way, fellows! Hold ye together and look to your gear; yet hurry not, for no
great matter shall this be. I wot well there is little force between Canterbury
and Kingston, for the lords are looking north of Thames toward Wat Tyler and his
men. Yet well it is, well it is!"
The crowd opened and spread out a little, and the men moved about in it, some
tightening a girdle, some getting their side arms more within reach of their
right hands, and those who had bows stringing them.
Will Green set hand and foot to the great shapely piece of polished red yew,
with its shining horn tips, which he carried, and bent it with no seeming
effort; then he reached out his hand over his shoulder and drew out a long
arrow, smooth, white, beautifully balanced, with a barbed iron head at one end,
a horn nock and three strong goose feathers at the other. He held it loosely
between the finger and thumb of his right hand, and there he stood with a
thoughtful look on his face, and in his hands one of the most terrible weapons
which a strong man has ever carried, the English long-bow and cloth-yard shaft.
But all this while the sound of the horse's hoofs was growing nearer, and
presently from the corner of the road amidst the orchards broke out our long
friend, his face red in the sun near sinking now. He waved his right hand as he
came in sight of us, and sang out, "Bills and bows! bills and bows!" and the
whole throng turned towards him and raised a great shout.
He reined up at the edge of the throng, and spoke in a loud voice, so that
all might hear him:
"Fellows, these are the tidings; even while our priest was speaking we heard
a horn blow far off; so I bade the sergeant we have taken, and who is now our
fellow-in-arms, to tell me where away it was that there would be folk
a-gathering, and what they were; and he did me to wit that mayhappen Sir John
Newton was stirring from Rochester Castle; or, maybe, it was the sheriff and
Rafe Hopton with him; so I rode off what I might towards Hartlip, and I rode
warily, and that was well, for as I came through a little wood between Hartlip
and Guildstead, I saw beyond it a gleam of steel, and lo in the field there a
company, and a pennon of Rafe Hopton's arms, and that is blue and thereon three
silver fish: and a pennon of the sheriff's arms, and that is a green tree; and
withal another pennon of three red kine, and whose they be I know not.[1]
[1] Probably one of the Calverlys, a Cheshire family, one of whom was a noted
captain in the French wars.
"There tied I my horse in the middle of the wood, and myself I crept along
the dyke to see more and to hear somewhat; and no talk I heard to tell of save
at whiles a big knight talking to five or six others, and saying somewhat,
wherein came the words London and Nicholas Bramber, and King Richard; but I saw
that of men-at-arms and sergeants there might be a hundred, and of bows not
many, but of those outland arbalests maybe a fifty; and so, what with one and
another of servants and tipstaves and lads, some three hundred, well armed, and
the men-at-arms of the best. Forsooth, my masters, there had I been but a
minute, ere the big knight broke off his talk, and cried out to the music to
blow up, `And let us go look on these villeins,' said he; and withal the men
began to gather in a due and ordered company, and their faces turned hitherward;
forsooth, I got to my horse, and led him out of the wood on the other side, and
so to saddle and away along the green roads; neither was I seen or chased. So
look ye to it, my masters, for these men will be coming to speak with us; nor is
there need for haste, but rather for good speed; for in some twenty or thirty
minutes will be more tidings to hand."
By this time one of our best-armed men had got through the throng and was
standing on the cross beside John Ball. When the long man had done, there was
confused noise of talk for a while, and the throng spread itself out more and
more, but not in a disorderly manner; the bowmen drawing together toward the
outside, and the billmen forming behind them. Will Green was still standing
beside me and had hold of my arm, as though he knew both where he and I were to
go.
"Fellows," quoth the captain from the cross, "belike this stour shall not
live to be older than the day, if ye get not into a plump together for their
arbalestiers to shoot bolts into, and their men-at-arms to thrust spears into.
Get you to the edge of the crofts and spread out there six feet between man and
man, and shoot, ye bowmen, from the hedges, and ye with the staves keep your
heads below the level of the hedges, or else for all they be thick a bolt may
win its way in."
He grinned as he said this, and there was laughter enough in the throng to
have done honour to a better joke.
Then he sung out, "Hob Wright, Rafe Wood, John Pargetter, and thou Will
Green, bestir ye and marshal the bowshot; and thou Nicholas Woodyer shall be
under me Jack Straw in ordering of the staves. Gregory Tailor and John Clerk,
fair and fine are ye clad in the arms of the Canterbury bailiffs; ye shall shine
from afar; go ye with the banner into the highway, and the bows on either side
shall ward you; yet jump, lads, and over the hedge with you when the bolts begin
to fly your way! Take heed, good fellows all, that our business is to bestride
the highway, and not let them get in on our flank the while; so half to the
right, half to the left of the highway. Shoot straight and strong, and waste no
breath with noise; let the loose of the bowstring cry for you! and look you!
think it no loss of manhood to cover your bodies with tree and bush; for one of
us who know is worth a hundred of those proud fools. To it, lads, and let them
see what the grey goose bears between his wings! Abide us here, brother John
Ball, and pray for us if thou wilt; but for me, if God will not do for Jack
Straw what Jack Straw would do for God were he in like case, I can see no help
for it."
"Yea, forsooth," said the priest, "here will I abide you my fellows if ye
come back; or if ye come not back, here will I abide the foe. Depart, and the
blessing of the Fellowship be with you."
Down then leapt Jack Straw from the cross, and the whole throng set off
without noise or hurry, soberly and steadily in outward seeming. Will Green led
me by the hand as if I were a boy, yet nothing he said, being forsooth intent on
his charge. We were some four hundred men in all; but I said to myself that
without some advantage of the ground we were lost men before the men-at- arms
that long Gregory Tailor had told us of; for I had not seen as yet the yard-long
shaft at its work.
We and somewhat more than half of our band turned into the orchards on the
left of the road, through which the level rays of the low sun shone brightly.
The others took up their position on the right side of it. We kept pretty near
to the road till we had got through all the closes save the last, where we were
brought up by a hedge and a dyke, beyond which lay a wide-open nearly treeless
space, not of tillage, as at the other side of the place, but of pasture, the
common grazing ground of the township. A little stream wound about through the
ground, with a few willows here and there; there was only a thread of water in
it in this hot summer tide, but its course could easily be traced by the deep
blue-green of the rushes that grew plenteously in the bed. Geese were lazily
wandering about and near this brook, and a herd of cows, accompanied by the town
bull, were feeding on quietly, their heads all turned one way; while half a
dozen calves marched close together side by side like a plump of soldiers, their
tails swinging in a kind of measure to keep off the flies, of which there was
great plenty. Three or four lads and girls were sauntering about, heeding or not
heeding the cattle. They looked up toward us as we crowded into the last close,
and slowly loitered off toward the village. Nothing looked like battle; yet
battle sounded in the air; for now we heard the beat of the horse-hoofs of the
men-at-arms coming on towards us like the rolling of distant thunder, and
growing louder and louder every minute; we were none too soon in turning to face
them. Jack Straw was on our side of the road, and with a few gestures and a word
or two he got his men into their places. Six archers lined the hedge along the
road where the banner of Adam and Eve, rising above the grey leaves of the
apple-trees, challenged the new-comers; and of the billmen also he kept a good
few ready to guard the road in case the enemy should try to rush it with the
horsemen. The road, not being a Roman one, was, you must remember, little like
the firm smooth country roads that you are used to; it was a mere track between
the hedges and fields, partly grass-grown, and cut up by the deep-sunk ruts
hardened by the drought of summer. There was a stack of fagot and small wood on
the other side, and our men threw themselves upon it and set to work to stake
the road across for a rough defence against the horsemen.
What befell more on the road itself I had not much time to note, for our
bowmen spread themselves out along the hedge that looked into the pasture-field,
leaving some six feet between man and man; the rest of the billmen went along
with the bowmen, and halted in clumps of some half-dozen along their line,
holding themselves ready to help the bowmen if the enemy should run up under
their shafts, or to run on to lengthen the line in case they should try to break
in on our flank. The hedge in front of us was of quick. It had been strongly
plashed in the past February, and was stiff and stout. It stood on a low bank;
moreover, the level of the orchard was some thirty inches higher than that of
the field. and the ditch some two foot deeper than the face of the field. The
field went winding round to beyond the church, making a quarter of a circle
about the village, and at the western end of it were the butts whence the folk
were coming from shooting when I first came into the village street.
Altogether, to me who knew nothing of war the place seemed defensible enough.
I have said that the road down which Long Gregory came with his tidings went
north; and that was its general direction; but its first reach was nearly east,
so that the low sun was not in the eyes of any of us, and where Will
Green took his stand, and I with him, it was nearly at our backs.
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