The Well at the World's End: a tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 801 pages of information about The Well at the World's End.
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The Well at the World's End: a tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 801 pages of information about The Well at the World's End.

But she cast her arms about him and kissed and caressed him, and cried out:  “Yea, then fair have been the days of our journeying, and fair this hour of the green oak!  And bold and true thine heart that hath led thee thus far, and won thee thy desire of my love.”

So then they armed them, and mounted their horses and set forward.  They lived well while they were in the wood, but on the third day they came to where it thinned and at last died out into a stony waste like unto that which they had passed through before they came to the House of the Sorceress, save that this lay in ridges as the waves of a great sea; and these same ridges they were bidden to cross over at their highest, lest they should be bewildered in a maze of little hills and dales leading no whither.

So they entered on this desert, having filled their water-skins at a clear brook, whereat they rejoiced when they found that the face of the wilderness was covered with a salt scurf, and that naught grew there save a sprinkling of small sage bushes.

Now on the second day of their riding this ugly waste, as they came up over the brow of one of these stony ridges, Ralph the far-sighted cried out suddenly:  “Hold! for I see a man weaponed.”

“Where is he?” quoth Ursula, “and what is he about?” Said Ralph:  “He is up yonder on the swell of the next ridge, and by seeming is asleep leaning against a rock.”

Then he bent the Turk bow and set an arrow on the string and they went on warily.  When they were down at the foot of the ridge Ralph hailed the man with a lusty cry, but gat no answer of him; so they went on up the bent, till Ralph said:  “Now I can see his face under his helm, and it is dark and the eyes are hollow:  I will off horse and go up to him afoot, but do thou, beloved, sit still in thy saddle.”

But when he had come nigher, he turned and cried out to her:  “The man is dead, come anigh.”  So she went up to him and dismounted, and they both together stood over the man, who was lying up against a big stone like one at rest.  How long he had lain there none knows but God; for in the saltness of the dry desert the flesh had dried on his bones without corrupting, and was as hardened leather.  He was in full armour of a strange and ancient fashion, and his sword was girt to his side, neither was there any sign of a wound about him.  Under a crag anigh him they found his horse, dead and dry like to himself; and a little way over the brow of the ridge another horse in like case; and close by him a woman whose raiment had not utterly perished, nor her hair; there were gold rings on her arms, and her shoes were done with gold:  she had a knife stuck in her breast, with her hand still clutching the handle thereof; so that it seemed that she had herself given herself death.

Ralph and Ursula buried these two with the heaping of stones and went their ways; but some two miles thence they came upon another dead man-at-arms, and near him an old man unweaponed, and they heaped stones on them.

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The Well at the World's End: a tale from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.