The Life And Death Of Richard Yea And Nay Volume 91 by Maurice Hewlett (free books to read .txt) π
I Like This Good Man's Account Of Leopards, And Find It More Pertinent
To My Matter Than You Might Think. Milo Was A Carthusian Monk, Abbot Of
The Cloister Of Saint Mary-Of-The-Pine By Poictiers; It Was His
Distinction To Be The Life-Long Friend Of A Man Whose Friendships Were
Few: Certainly It May Be Said Of Him That He Knew As Much Of Leopards As
Any One Of His Time And Nation, And That His Knowledge Was Better
Grounded.
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- Author: Maurice Hewlett
Read book online Β«The Life And Death Of Richard Yea And Nay Volume 91 by Maurice Hewlett (free books to read .txt) πΒ». Author - Maurice Hewlett
He Will Tell You, Come Back To Me, My Pleasant Joy, And Rest Upon My
Heart.'
Volume 91 Book 2 (The Book Of Nay) Chapter 15 (Oeconomic Reflections Of The Old Man Of Musse) Pg 189
Jehane Sighed, And Wrought With Her Fingers In Her Lap. 'If It Must Be,
Sire--'
'Why, Of Course It Must Be,' Said The Old Man Briskly.
He Sent Her Away To The Harem With A Kiss On Her Mouth, And Had In
Cogia, And Bohadin Son Of Falmy Of Balsora. To These Two Rapt Assassins
He Gave Careful Instructions, Which There Was No Mistaking. The Golden
Rose, Properly Attended, Would Accompany Them As Far As Marseilles. She
Would Journey On To Pampluna And Abide In The Court Of The King Of
Navarre (Who Loved Arabians, As His Father Before Him) Until Such Time
As Word Was Brought Her By One Of Them, The Survivor, That They Had
Found King Richard, And That He Would See Her. Then She Would Set Out,
Attended By The Vizier, The Chief Of The Eunuchs, And The Mother Of
Flowers, And Act As She Saw Proper.
Very Soon After This The Galley Left The Marble Quay Of Tortosa Upon A
Prosperous Voyage Through Blue Water. Jehane, Her Son Fulke Of Anjou,
And The Other Persons Named, Were In A Great Green Pavilion On The
Poop. But She Saw Nothing, And Knew Nothing, Of Cogia Ibn Hassan Ibn
Alnouk Or Of Bohadin Son Of Falmy Of Balsora.
Volume 91 Book 2 (The Book Of Nay) Chapter 16 (The Chapter Called Chaluz) Pg 190
When King Richard Said, Without Any Confirmatory Oath, That He Should
Hang AdhΓ©mar Of Limoges And The Count Of Saint-Pol, All Who Heard Him
Believed It. The Abbot Milo Believed It For One. Figuratively, You Can
See His Hands Up As You Read Him. 'To Hang Two Knights Of Such Eminent
Degree And Parts,' He Writes, 'Were Surely A Great Scandal In Any
Christian King. Not That The Punishment Were Undeserved Or The
Executioner Insufficient, God Knoweth! But Very Often True Policy Points
Out The Wisdom Of The Mean; And This Is Its Deliberative, That To Hang A
Bad Man When Another Vengeance Is Open--Such As Burning In His Castle,
Killing On His Walls, Or Stabbing By Apparent Mistake For A Common
Person--To Hang Him, I Say, Suggests To The Yet Unhanged A Way Of
Treating His Betters. There Are More Ways Of Killing A Dog Than Choking
Him With Butter; And So It Is With Lords And Other Rebels Against Kings.
In This Particular Case King Richard Only Thought To Follow His Great
Father (Whom At This Time He Much Resembled): What In The End He Did Was
Very Different From Any Act Of That Monarch's That I Ever Heard Tell Of,
Volume 91 Book 2 (The Book Of Nay) Chapter 16 (The Chapter Called Chaluz) Pg 192Laughed At The Summons To Surrender So Long As There Was A Horse To Eat,
Man To Shoot, Or Arrow For The Shooting. As For Fire, He Believed
Himself Impregnable By That Arm; And Any Day Succour Might Come From The
South. Surely His Queen Would Not Throw Him To The Dogs! Where Was Count
John If Not Hastening To Win A Realm; Where King Philip If Not Hopeful
To Chastise A Vassal? Daily King Richard, In No Hurry, But Desperately
Reckless, Rode Close To The Tower And Met The Hardy Eyes Of Saint-Pol
Watching Him From The Top. Richard Was A Galliard Fighter, As He Had
Always Been.
'Come Down, Saint-Pol,' He Would Say, 'And Dance With Limoges.'
'When I Come Down, Sire,' The Answer Would Be, 'There Will Be No Dancing
In Your Host.'
Richard Took His Time, And Also Intolerable Liberties With His Life.
Milo Lost His Hair With Anxiety, Not Daring To Speak; Gaston Of BΓ©arn
Did Dare, But Was Shaken Off By His Mad Master. Des Barres, Who Loved
Him, Perhaps, As Well As Any, Never Left Him For Long Together, And Wore
His Brain Out Devising Shifts Which Might Keep Him Away From The Walls.
But Richard, For This Present Whim Of His, Chose Out A Companion Devil
As Heedless As Himself, Mercadet Namely, His Brown Gascon Captain, Of
Like Proportions, Like Mettle, Like Foolhardiness; And With Him Made The
Daily Round, Never Omitting An Exchange Of Grim Banter With Saint-Pol.
It Was Terrible To See Him, Without Helm On His Head, Or Reason In It,
Canter Within Range Of The Bow.
'Oh, Saint-Pol,' He Said One Day, 'If Thou Wert Worth My Pains, I Would
Have Thee Down And Serve Thee As I Did Thy Brother Eudo. But No; Thou
Must Be Hanged, It Seems.' And Saint-Pol, Grinning Cheerfully, Answered,
'Have No Fear, King, Thou Wilt Never Hang Me.'
'By My Soul,' Said Richard Back Again, 'A Little More Of This Bold Gut
Of Thine, My Man, And I Let Thee Go Free.'
'Sire,' Said Saint-Pol Soberly, 'That Were The Worst Of All.'
'How So, Boy?'
'Because, If You Forgave Me, I Should Be Required By My Knighthood To
Forgive You; And That I Will Never Do If I Can Help It. So I Should Live
And Be Damned.'
'Have It Then As It Must Be,' Said Richard Laughing, And Turned His
Back. Saint-Pol Could Have Shot Him Dead, But Would Not. 'Look, De
Gurdun,' He Says, 'There Goes The King Unmailed. Wilt Thou Shoot Him In
The Back, And So End All?'
'By God, Eustace,' Says Gilles, 'That I Will Not.'
'Why Not, Then?'
Gurdun Said, 'Because I Dare Not. I Am More Afraid Of Him When He Scorns
Me Thus Than When His Face Is Upon Me. Let Him Lead An Assault Upon The
Walls, And I Will Split His Headpiece If I May; But I Will Never Again
Try Him Unarmed.'
'Pouf!' Said Saint-Pol; But He Was Of The Same Mind.
Then Came A Day When Des Barres Was Out Upon The Neighbouring Hills With
A Company Of Knights, Scouting. There Had Been Rumours Of Hostile
Volume 91 Book 2 (The Book Of Nay) Chapter 16 (The Chapter Called Chaluz) Pg 193Movement From The South, From Provence And Roussillon; Of A Juncture Of
Prince John, Known To Be In Gascony, With The Queen's Brother Of
Navarre. Nothing Was Known Certainly, But Richard Judged That John Might
Be Tempted Out. It Was A Bright Cold Day, Cloudless, With A Most Bitter
North-East Wind Singing In The Bents. Des Barres, Sitting His Horse On
The Hill, Blew Upon His Ungauntleted Hand, Then Flacked It Against His
Side To Drive The Blood Back. Surveying The Field With A Hunter's Eye,
He Saw King Richard Ride Out Of The Lines On His Chestnut Horse,
Mercadet With Him, And (In A Green Cloak) Gaston Of BΓ©arn. Richard Had A
Red Surcoat And A Blown Red Plume In His Cap. He Carried No Shield, And
By The Ease With Which He Turned His Body To Look Behind Him, One Hand
On The Crupper, Des Barres Was Sure That He Was Not In Mail.
'Folly Of A Fool!' He Snorted To His Neighbour, Savaric De Dreux: 'There
Pricks Our Lord The King, As If To A Party Of Hawks.'
'Wait,' Said Savaric. 'Where Away Now?
'To Bandy Gibes With Saint-Pol, Pardieu. Where Else Should He Go At This
Hour?'
'Saint-Pol Will Never Do Him A Villainy,' Said Savaric.
'No, No. But De Gurdun Is There.'
'Wait Now,' Says Savaric Again. 'Look, Look! Who Comes Out Of The
Smoke?'
They Could See The Beleaguered Tower Perfectly, Brown And Warm-Looking
In The Sun; Below It, Still Smoking, The Village Of Chaluz, A Heap Of
Charred Brickwork. They Saw A Man In Clean White Come Creeping Out Of
The Smoke, Stooping At A Run. He Hid Wherever He Could Behind The Broken
Wall, But Always Ran Nearer, Stooped And Ran With Bent Body Over His
Bent Knees. He Worked His Way Thus, Gradually Nearer And Nearer To The
Tower; And Des Barres Watched Him Anxiously.
'Some Camp-Thief Making Off--'
'Look, Look!' Cried Savaric. The White Man Had Come Out By The Tower,
Was Now Kneeling In The Open; At The Same Moment A Man Slipped Down A
Rope From The Tower-Top. Before He Had Touched Earth They Saw The
Kneeling Man Pull A Bowstring To His Ear And Let Fly. Next The Fellow On
The Rope, Touching Ground, Ran Fleetly Forward And, Springing On The
White-Robed Man, Drove Him To The Earth. They Saw The Flash Of A Blade.
'That Is Strange Warfare,' Said Des Barres, Greatly Interested.
'There Is Warfare In Heaven Also,' Said Savaric. 'See Those Two Eagles.'
Two Great Birds Were Battling In The Cold Blue. Feathers Fell Idly, Like
Black Snow-Flakes; Then One Of The Eagles Heeled Over, And Down He
Came.
But When They Looked Towards The Tower Again They Saw A Great Commotion.
Men Running, Horses Huddled Together, One In Red Held Up By One In
Green. Then A Riderless Chestnut Horse Looked About Him And Neighed. Des
Barres Gave A Short Cry. 'O God! They Have Shot King Richard Between
Them. Come, Savaric, We Must Go Down.'
'Stop Again,' Said That Other. 'Let Us Sweep Up Those Assassins As We
Go. There I See Another Thief In White.' Des Barres Saw Him Too. 'Spur,
Spur!' He Called To His Knights; 'Follow Me.' He Got His Line In Motion,
They All Galloped Across The Sunny Slopes Like A Light Cloud. But As
They Drove Forward The Play Was In Progress; They Saw It Done, As It
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