The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 407 pages of information about The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood.

The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 407 pages of information about The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood.

As you may have seen two dogs that think to fight, walking slowly round and round each other, neither cur wishing to begin the combat, so those two stout yeomen moved slowly around, each watching for a chance to take the other unaware, and so get in the first blow.  At last Little John struck like a flash, and—­“rap!”—­the Tanner met the blow and turned it aside, and then smote back at Little John, who also turned the blow; and so this mighty battle began.  Then up and down and back and forth they trod, the blows falling so thick and fast that, at a distance, one would have thought that half a score of men were fighting.  Thus they fought for nigh a half an hour, until the ground was all plowed up with the digging of their heels, and their breathing grew labored like the ox in the furrow.  But Little John suffered the most, for he had become unused to such stiff labor, and his joints were not as supple as they had been before he went to dwell with the Sheriff.

All this time Robin Hood lay beneath the bush, rejoicing at such a comely bout of quarterstaff.  “By my faith!” quoth he to himself, “never had I thought to see Little John so evenly matched in all my life.  Belike, though, he would have overcome yon fellow before this had he been in his former trim.”

At last Little John saw his chance, and, throwing all the strength he felt going from him into one blow that might have felled an ox, he struck at the Tanner with might and main.  And now did the Tanner’s cowhide cap stand him in good stead, and but for it he might never have held staff in hand again.  As it was, the blow he caught beside the head was so shrewd that it sent him staggering across the little glade, so that, if Little John had had the strength to follow up his vantage, it would have been ill for stout Arthur.  But he regained himself quickly and, at arm’s length, struck back a blow at Little John, and this time the stroke reached its mark, and down went Little John at full length, his cudgel flying from his hand as he fell.  Then, raising his staff, stout Arthur dealt him another blow upon the ribs.

“Hold!” roared Little John.  “Wouldst thou strike a man when he is down?”

“Ay, marry would I,” quoth the Tanner, giving him another thwack with his staff.

“Stop!” roared Little John.  “Help!  Hold, I say!  I yield me!  I yield me, I say, good fellow!”

“Hast thou had enough?” asked the Tanner grimly, holding his staff aloft.

“Ay, marry, and more than enough.”

“And thou dost own that I am the better man of the two?”

“Yea, truly, and a murrain seize thee!” said Little John, the first aloud and the last to his beard.

“Then thou mayst go thy ways; and thank thy patron saint that I am a merciful man,” said the Tanner.

“A plague o’ such mercy as thine!” said Little John, sitting up and feeling his ribs where the Tanner had cudgeled him.  “I make my vow, my ribs feel as though every one of them were broken in twain.  I tell thee, good fellow, I did think there was never a man in all Nottinghamshire could do to me what thou hast done this day.”

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The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.