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<h2> CHAPTER V. HOW A STRANGE COMPANY GATHERED AT THE "PIED MERLIN." </h2>
<p>The night had already fallen, and the moon was shining between the rifts
of ragged, drifting clouds, before Alleyne Edricson, footsore and weary
from the unwonted exercise, found himself in front of the forest inn which
stood upon the outskirts of Lyndhurst. The building was long and low,
standing back a little from the road, with two flambeaux blazing on either
side of the door as a welcome to the traveller. From one window there
thrust forth a long pole with a bunch of greenery tied to the end of it—a
sign that liquor was to be sold within. As Alleyne walked up to it he
perceived that it was rudely fashioned out of beams of wood, with
twinkling lights all over where the glow from within shone through the
chinks. The roof was poor and thatched; but in strange contrast to it
there ran all along under the eaves a line of wooden shields, most
gorgeously painted with chevron, bend, and saltire, and every heraldic
device. By the door a horse stood tethered, the ruddy glow beating
strongly upon his brown head and patient eyes, while his body stood back
in the shadow.</p>
<p>Alleyne stood still in the roadway for a few minutes reflecting upon what
he should do. It was, he knew, only a few miles further to Minstead, where
his brother dwelt. On the other hand, he had never seen this brother since
childhood, and the reports which had come to his ears concerning him were
seldom to his advantage. By all accounts he was a hard and a bitter man.</p>
<p>It might be an evil start to come to his door so late and claim the
shelter of his roof. Better to sleep here at this inn, and then travel on
to Minstead in the morning. If his brother would take him in, well and
good.</p>
<p>He would bide with him for a time and do what he might to serve him. If,
on the other hand, he should have hardened his heart against him, he could
only go on his way and do the best he might by his skill as a craftsman
and a scrivener. At the end of a year he would be free to return to the
cloisters, for such had been his father's bequest. A monkish upbringing,
one year in the world after the age of twenty, and then a free selection
one way or the other—it was a strange course which had been marked
out for him. Such as it was, however, he had no choice but to follow it,
and if he were to begin by making a friend of his brother he had best wait
until morning before he knocked at his dwelling.</p>
<p>The rude plank door was ajar, but as Alleyne approached it there came from
within such a gust of rough laughter and clatter of tongues that he stood
irresolute upon the threshold. Summoning courage, however, and reflecting
that it was a public dwelling, in which he had as much right as any other
man, he pushed it open and stepped into the common room.</p>
<p>Though it was an autumn evening and somewhat warm, a huge fire of heaped
billets of wood crackled and sparkled in a broad, open grate, some of the
smoke escaping up a rude chimney, but the greater part rolling out into
the room, so that the air was thick with it, and a man coming from without
could scarce catch his breath. On this fire a great cauldron bubbled and
simmered, giving forth a rich and promising smell. Seated round it were a
dozen or so folk, of all ages and conditions, who set up such a shout as
Alleyne entered that he stood peering at them through the smoke, uncertain
what this riotous greeting might portend.</p>
<p>"A rouse! A rouse!" cried one rough looking fellow in a tattered jerkin.
"One more round of mead or ale and the score to the last comer."</p>
<p>"'Tis the law of the 'Pied Merlin,'" shouted another. "Ho there, Dame
Eliza! Here is fresh custom come to the house, and not a drain for the
company."</p>
<p>"I will take your orders, gentles; I will assuredly take your orders," the
landlady answered, bustling in with her hands full of leathern
drinking-cups. "What is it that you drink, then? Beer for the lads of the
forest, mead for the gleeman, strong waters for the tinker, and wine for
the rest. It is an old custom of the house, young sir. It has been the use
at the 'Pied Merlin' this many a year back that the company should drink
to the health of the last comer. Is it your pleasure to humor it?"</p>
<p>"Why, good dame," said Alleyne, "I would not offend the customs of your
house, but it is only sooth when I say that my purse is a thin one. As far
as two pence will go, however, I shall be right glad to do my part."</p>
<p>"Plainly said and bravely spoken, my suckling friar," roared a deep voice,
and a heavy hand fell upon Alleyne's shoulder. Looking up, he saw beside
him his former cloister companion the renegade monk, Hordle John.</p>
<p>"By the thorn of Glastonbury! ill days are coming upon Beaulieu," said he.
"Here they have got rid in one day of the only two men within their walls—for
I have had mine eyes upon thee, youngster, and I know that for all thy
baby-face there is the making of a man in thee. Then there is the Abbot,
too. I am no friend of his, nor he of mine; but he has warm blood in his
veins. He is the only man left among them. The others, what are they?"</p>
<p>"They are holy men," Alleyne answered gravely.</p>
<p>"Holy men? Holy cabbages! Holy bean-pods! What do they do but live and
suck in sustenance and grow fat? If that be holiness, I could show you
hogs in this forest who are fit to head the calendar. Think you it was for
such a life that this good arm was fixed upon my shoulder, or that head
placed upon your neck? There is work in the world, man, and it is not by
hiding behind stone walls that we shall do it."</p>
<p>"Why, then, did you join the brothers?" asked Alleyne.</p>
<p>"A fair enough question; but it is as fairly answered. I joined them
because Margery Alspaye, of Bolder, married Crooked Thomas of Ringwood,
and left a certain John of Hordle in the cold, for that he was a ranting,
roving blade who was not to be trusted in wedlock. That was why, being
fond and hot-headed, I left the world; and that is why, having had time to
take thought, I am right glad to find myself back in it once more. Ill
betide the day that ever I took off my yeoman's jerkin to put on the white
gown!"</p>
<p>Whilst he was speaking the landlady came in again, bearing a broad
platter, upon which stood all the beakers and flagons charged to the brim
with the brown ale or the ruby wine. Behind her came a maid with a high
pile of wooden plates, and a great sheaf of spoons, one of which she
handed round to each of the travellers. Two of the company, who were
dressed in the weather-stained green doublet of foresters, lifted the big
pot off the fire, and a third, with a huge pewter ladle, served out a
portion of steaming collops to each guest. Alleyne bore his share and his
ale-mug away with him to a retired trestle in the corner, where he could
sup in peace and watch the strange scene, which was so different to those
silent and well-ordered meals to which he was accustomed.</p>
<p>The room was not unlike a stable. The low ceiling, smoke-blackened and
dingy, was pierced by several square trap-doors with rough-hewn ladders
leading up to them. The walls of bare unpainted planks were studded here
and there with great wooden pins, placed at irregular intervals and
heights, from which hung over-tunics, wallets, whips, bridles, and
saddles. Over the fireplace were suspended six or seven shields of wood,
with coats-of-arms rudely daubed upon them, which showed by their varying
degrees of smokiness and dirt that they had been placed there at different
periods. There was no furniture, save a single long dresser covered with
coarse crockery, and a number of wooden benches and trestles, the legs of
which sank deeply into the soft clay floor, while the only light, save
that of the fire, was furnished by three torches stuck in sockets on the
wall, which flickered and crackled, giving forth a strong resinous odor.
All this was novel and strange to the cloister-bred youth; but most
interesting of all was the motley circle of guests who sat eating their
collops round the blaze. They were a humble group of wayfarers, such as
might have been found that night in any inn through the length and breadth
of England; but to him they represented that vague world against which he
had been so frequently and so earnestly warned. It did not seem to him
from what he could see of it to be such a very wicked place after all.</p>
<p>Three or four of the men round the fire were evidently underkeepers and
verderers from the forest, sunburned and bearded, with the quick restless
eye and lithe movements of the deer among which they lived. Close to the
corner of the chimney sat a middle-aged gleeman, clad in a faded garb of
Norwich cloth, the tunic of which was so outgrown that it did not fasten
at the neck and at the waist. His face was swollen and coarse, and his
watery protruding eyes spoke of a life which never wandered very far from
the wine-pot. A gilt harp, blotched with many stains and with two of its
strings missing, was tucked under one of his arms, while with the other he
scooped greedily at his platter. Next to him sat two other men of about
the same age, one with a trimming of fur to his coat, which gave him a
dignity which was evidently dearer to him than his comfort, for he still
drew it round him in spite of the hot glare of the faggots. The other,
clad in a dirty russet suit with a long sweeping doublet, had a cunning,
foxy face with keen, twinkling eyes and a peaky beard. Next to him sat
Hordle John, and beside him three other rough unkempt fellows with tangled
beards and matted hair—free laborers from the adjoining farms, where
small patches of freehold property had been suffered to remain scattered
about in the heart of the royal demesne. The company was completed by a
peasant in a rude dress of undyed sheepskin, with the old-fashioned
galligaskins about his legs, and a gayly dressed young man with striped
cloak jagged at the edges and parti-colored hosen, who looked about him
with high disdain upon his face, and held a blue smelling-flask to his
nose with one hand, while he brandished a busy spoon with the other. In
the corner a very fat man was lying all a-sprawl upon a truss, snoring
stertorously, and evidently in the last stage of drunkenness.</p>
<p>"That is Wat the limner," quoth the landlady, sitting down beside Alleyne,
and pointing with the ladle to the sleeping man. "That is he who paints
the signs and the tokens. Alack and alas that ever I should have been fool
enough to trust him! Now, young man, what manner of a bird would you
suppose a pied merlin to be—that being the proper sign of my
hostel?"</p>
<p>"Why," said Alleyne, "a merlin is a bird of the same form as an eagle or a
falcon. I can well remember that learned brother Bartholomew, who is deep
in all the secrets of nature, pointed one out to me as we walked together
near Vinney Ridge."</p>
<p>"A falcon or an eagle, quotha? And pied, that is of two several colors. So
any man would say except this barrel of lies. He came to me, look you,
saying that if I would furnish him with a gallon of ale, wherewith to
strengthen himself as he worked, and also the pigments and a board, he
would paint for me a noble pied merlin which I might hang along with the
blazonry over my door. I, poor simple fool, gave him the ale and all that
he craved, leaving him alone too, because he said that a man's mind must
be left untroubled when he had great work to do. When I came back the
gallon jar was empty, and he lay as you see him, with the board in front
of him with this sorry device." She raised up a panel which was leaning
against the wall, and showed a rude painting of a scraggy and angular
fowl, with very long legs and a spotted body.</p>
<p>"Was that," she asked, "like the bird which thou hast seen?"</p>
<p>Alleyne shook his head, smiling.</p>
<p>"No, nor any other bird that ever wagged a feather. It is most like a
plucked pullet which has died of the spotted fever. And scarlet too! What
would the gentles Sir Nicholas Boarhunte, or Sir Bernard Brocas, of Roche
Court, say if they saw such a thing—or, perhaps, even the King's own
Majesty himself, who often has ridden past this way, and who loves his
falcons as he loves his sons? It would be the downfall of my house."</p>
<p>"The matter is not past mending," said Alleyne. "I pray you, good dame, to
give me those three pigment-pots and the brush, and I shall try whether I
cannot better this painting."</p>
<p>Dame Eliza looked doubtfully at him, as though fearing some other
stratagem, but, as he made no demand for ale, she finally brought the
paints, and watched him as he smeared on his background, talking the while
about the folk round the fire.</p>
<p>"The four forest lads must be jogging soon," she said. "They bide at Emery
Down, a mile or more from here. Yeomen prickers they are, who tend to the
King's hunt. The gleeman is called Floyting Will. He comes from the north
country, but for many years he hath gone the round of the forest from
Southampton to Christchurch. He drinks much and pays little but it would
make your ribs crackle to hear him sing the 'Jest of Hendy Tobias.' Mayhap
he will sing it when the ale has warmed him."</p>
<p>"Who are those next to him?" asked Alleyne, much interested. "He of the
fur mantle has a wise and reverent face."</p>
<p>"He is a seller of pills and salves, very learned in humors, and rheums,
and fluxes, and all manner of ailments. He wears, as you perceive, the
vernicle of Sainted Luke, the first physician, upon his sleeve. May good
St. Thomas of Kent grant that it may be long before either I or mine need
his help! He is here to-night for herbergage, as are the others except the
foresters. His neighbor is a tooth-drawer. That bag at his girdle is full
of the teeth that he drew at Winchester fair. I warrant that there are
more sound ones than sorry, for he is quick at his work and a trifle dim
in the eye. The lusty man next him with the red head I have not seen
before. The four on this side are all workers, three of them in the
service of the bailiff of Sir Baldwin Redvers, and the other, he with the
sheepskin, is, as I hear, a villein from the midlands who hath run from
his master. His year and day are well-nigh up, when he will be a free
man."</p>
<p>"And the other?" asked Alleyne in a whisper. "He is surely some very great
man, for he looks as though he scorned those who were about him."</p>
<p>The landlady looked at him in a motherly way and shook her head. "You have
had no great truck with the world," she said, "or you would have learned
that it is the small men and not the great who hold their noses in the
air. Look at those shields upon my wall and under my eaves. Each of them
is the device of some noble lord or gallant knight who hath slept under my
roof at one time or another. Yet milder men or easier to please I have
never seen: eating my bacon and drinking my wine with a merry face, and
paying my score with some courteous word or jest which was dearer to me
than my profit. Those are the true gentles. But your chapman or your
bearward will swear that there is a lime in the wine, and water in the
ale, and fling off at the last with a curse instead of a blessing. This
youth is a scholar from Cambrig, where men are wont to be blown out by a
little knowledge, and lose the use of their hands in learning the laws of
the Romans. But I must away to lay down the beds. So may the saints keep
you and prosper you in your undertaking!"</p>
<p>Thus left to himself, Alleyne drew his panel of wood where the light of
one of the torches would strike full upon it, and worked away with all the
pleasure of the trained craftsman, listening the while to the talk which
went on round the fire. The peasant in the sheepskins, who had sat glum
and silent all evening, had been so heated by his flagon of ale that he
was talking loudly and angrily with clenched hands and flashing eyes.</p>
<p>"Sir Humphrey Tennant of Ashby may till his own fields for me," he cried.
"The castle has thrown its shadow upon the cottage over long. For three
hundred years my folk have swinked and sweated, day in and day out, to
keep the wine on the lord's table and the harness on the lord's back. Let
him take off his plates and delve himself, if delving must be done."</p>
<p>"A proper spirit, my fair son!" said one of the free laborers. "I would
that all men were of thy way of thinking."</p>
<p>"He would have sold me with his acres," the other cried, in a voice which
was hoarse with passion. "'The man, the woman and their litter'—so
ran the words of the dotard bailiff. Never a bullock on the farm was sold
more lightly. Ha! he may wake some black night to find the flames licking
about his ears—for fire is a good friend to the poor man, and I have
seen a smoking heap of ashes where over night there stood just such
another castlewick as Ashby."</p>
<p>"This is a lad of mettle!" shouted another of the laborers. "He dares to
give tongue to what all men think. Are we not all from Adam's loins, all
with flesh and blood, and with the same mouth that must needs have food
and drink? Where all this difference then between the ermine cloak and the
leathern tunic, if what they cover is the same?"</p>
<p>"Aye, Jenkin," said another, "our foeman is under the stole and the
vestment as much as under the helmet and plate of proof. We have as much
to fear from the tonsure as from the hauberk. Strike at the noble and the
priest shrieks, strike at priest and the noble lays his hand upon glaive.
They are twin thieves who live upon our labor."</p>
<p>"It would take a clever man to live upon thy labor, Hugh," remarked one of
the foresters, "seeing that the half of thy time is spent in swilling mead
at the 'Pied Merlin.'"</p>
<p>"Better that than stealing the deer that thou art placed to guard, like
some folk I know."</p>
<p>"If you dare open that swine's mouth against me," shouted the woodman,
"I'll crop your ears for you before the hangman has the doing of it, thou
long-jawed lackbrain."</p>
<p>"Nay, gentles, gentles!" cried Dame Eliza, in a singsong heedless voice,
which showed that such bickerings were nightly things among her guests.
"No brawling or brabbling, gentles! Take heed to the good name of the
house."</p>
<p>"Besides, if it comes to the cropping of ears, there are other folk who
may say their say," quoth the third laborer. "We are all freemen, and I
trow that a yeoman's cudgel is as good as a forester's knife. By St.
Anselm! it would be an evil day if we had to bend to our master's servants
as well as to our masters."</p>
<p>"No man is my master save the King," the woodman answered. "Who is there,
save a false traitor, who would refuse to serve the English king?"</p>
<p>"I know not about the English king," said the man Jenkin. "What sort of
English king is it who cannot lay his tongue to a word of English? You
mind last year when he came down to Malwood, with his inner marshal and
his outer marshal, his justiciar, his seneschal, and his four and twenty
guardsmen. One noontide I was by Franklin Swinton's gate, when up he rides
with a yeoman pricker at his heels. 'Ouvre,' he cried, 'ouvre,' or some
such word, making signs for me to open the gate; and then 'Merci,' as
though he were adrad of me. And you talk of an English king?"</p>
<p>"I do not marvel at it," cried the Cambrig scholar, speaking in the high
drawling voice which was common among his class. "It is not a tongue for
men of sweet birth and delicate upbringing. It is a foul, snorting,
snarling manner of speech. For myself, I swear by the learned Polycarp
that I have most ease with Hebrew, and after that perchance with Arabian."</p>
<p>"I will not hear a word said against old King Ned," cried Hordle John in a
voice like a bull. "What if he is fond of a bright eye and a saucy face. I
know one of his subjects who could match him at that. If he cannot speak
like an Englishman I trow that he can fight like an Englishman, and he was
hammering at the gates of Paris while ale-house topers were grutching and
grumbling at home."</p>
<p>This loud speech, coming from a man of so formidable an appearance,
somewhat daunted the disloyal party, and they fell into a sullen silence,
which enabled Alleyne to hear something of the talk which was going on in
the further corner between the physician, the tooth-drawer and the
gleeman.</p>
<p>"A raw rat," the man of drugs was saying, "that is what it is ever my use
to order for the plague—a raw rat with its paunch cut open."</p>
<p>"Might it not be broiled, most learned sir?" asked the tooth-drawer. "A
raw rat sounds a most sorry and cheerless dish."</p>
<p>"Not to be eaten," cried the physician, in high disdain. "Why should any
man eat such a thing?"</p>
<p>"Why indeed?" asked the gleeman, taking a long drain at his tankard.</p>
<p>"It is to be placed on the sore or swelling. For the rat, mark you, being
a foul-living creature, hath a natural drawing or affinity for all foul
things, so that the noxious humors pass from the man into the unclean
beast."</p>
<p>"Would that cure the black death, master?" asked Jenkin.</p>
<p>"Aye, truly would it, my fair son."</p>
<p>"Then I am right glad that there were none who knew of it. The black death
is the best friend that ever the common folk had in England."</p>
<p>"How that then?" asked Hordle John.</p>
<p>"Why, friend, it is easy to see that you have not worked with your hands
or you would not need to ask. When half the folk in the country were dead
it was then that the other half could pick and choose who they would work
for, and for what wage. That is why I say that the murrain was the best
friend that the borel folk ever had."</p>
<p>"True, Jenkin," said another workman; "but it is not all good that is
brought by it either. We well know that through it corn-land has been
turned into pasture, so that flocks of sheep with perchance a single
shepherd wander now where once a hundred men had work and wage."</p>
<p>"There is no great harm in that," remarked the tooth-drawer, "for the
sheep give many folk their living. There is not only the herd, but the
shearer and brander, and then the dresser, the curer, the dyer, the
fuller, the webster, the merchant, and a score of others."</p>
<p>"If it come to that." said one of the foresters, "the tough meat of them
will wear folks teeth out, and there is a trade for the man who can draw
them."</p>
<p>A general laugh followed this sally at the dentist's expense, in the midst
of which the gleeman placed his battered harp upon his knee, and began to
pick out a melody upon the frayed strings.</p>
<p>"Elbow room for Floyting Will!" cried the woodmen. "Twang us a merry
lilt."</p>
<p>"Aye, aye, the 'Lasses of Lancaster,'" one suggested.</p>
<p>"Or 'St. Simeon and the Devil.'"</p>
<p>"Or the 'Jest of Hendy Tobias.'"</p>
<p>To all these suggestions the jongleur made no response, but sat with his
eye fixed abstractedly upon the ceiling, as one who calls words to his
mind. Then, with a sudden sweep across the strings, he broke out into a
song so gross and so foul that ere he had finished a verse the pure-minded
lad sprang to his feet with the blood tingling in his face.</p>
<p>"How can you sing such things?" he cried. "You, too, an old man who should
be an example to others."</p>
<p>The wayfarers all gazed in the utmost astonishment at the interruption.</p>
<p>"By the holy Dicon of Hampole! our silent clerk has found his tongue,"
said one of the woodmen. "What is amiss with the song then? How has it
offended your babyship?"</p>
<p>"A milder and better mannered song hath never been heard within these
walls," cried another. "What sort of talk is this for a public inn?"</p>
<p>"Shall it be a litany, my good clerk?" shouted a third; "or would a hymn
be good enough to serve?"</p>
<p>The jongleur had put down his harp in high dudgeon. "Am I to be preached
to by a child?" he cried, staring across at Alleyne with an inflamed and
angry countenance. "Is a hairless infant to raise his tongue against me,
when I have sung in every fair from Tweed to Trent, and have twice been
named aloud by the High Court of the Minstrels at Beverley? I shall sing
no more to-night."</p>
<p>"Nay, but you will so," said one of the laborers. "Hi, Dame Eliza, bring a
stoup of your best to Will to clear his throat. Go forward with thy song,
and if our girl-faced clerk does not love it he can take to the road and
go whence he came."</p>
<p>"Nay, but not too last," broke in Hordle John. "There are two words in
this matter. It may be that my little comrade has been over quick in
reproof, he having gone early into the cloisters and seen little of the
rough ways and words of the world. Yet there is truth in what he says,
for, as you know well, the song was not of the cleanest. I shall stand by
him, therefore, and he shall neither be put out on the road, nor shall his
ears be offended indoors."</p>
<p>"Indeed, your high and mighty grace," sneered one of the yeomen, "have you
in sooth so ordained?"</p>
<p>"By the Virgin!" said a second, "I think that you may both chance to find
yourselves upon the road before long."</p>
<p>"And so belabored as to be scarce able to crawl along it," cried a third.</p>
<p>"Nay, I shall go! I shall go!" said Alleyne hurriedly, as Hordle John
began to slowly roll up his sleeve, and bare an arm like a leg of mutton.
"I would not have you brawl about me."</p>
<p>"Hush! lad," he whispered, "I count them not a fly. They may find they
have more tow on their distaff than they know how to spin. Stand thou
clear and give me space."</p>
<p>Both the foresters and the laborers had risen from their bench, and Dame
Eliza and the travelling doctor had flung themselves between the two
parties with soft words and soothing gestures, when the door of the "Pied
Merlin" was flung violently open, and the attention of the company was
drawn from their own quarrel to the new-comer who had burst so
unceremoniously upon them.</p>
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