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.

Then spake Ralph:  “Yet how wilt thou say but that the foemen whom we go to meet in Upmeads may be some of those very Burgers:  hast thou heard whether they have found a new dwelling among some unhappy folk, or be still roving:  maybe they shall deem Upmeads fair.”

Spake Michael a-Hurst:  “By thy leave, fair Sir, we have had a word of those riders and strong-thieves that they have fetched a far compass, and got them armour, and be come into the woodland north of the Wood Debateable.  For like all strong-thieves, they love the wood.”

Roger laughed:  “Yea, as we did, friend Michael, when we were thieves; whereas now we be lords and gentlemen.  But as to thy tidings, I set not much by them; for of the same message was this word that they had already fallen on Higham by the Way; and we know that this cannot be true; since though forsooth the Abbot has had unpeace on his hands, we know where his foemen came from, the West to wit, and the Banded Barons.”

“Yea, yea,” quoth the Sage, “but may not the Burgers have taken service with them?” “Yea, forsooth,” quoth Roger, “but I deem not, or we had been surer thereof.”

Thus they spake, and they lighted down all of them to breathe their horses, and Ursula spake with Ralph as they walked the greensward together a little apart, and said:  “Sweetheart, I am afraid of to-day.”

“Yea, dear,” said he, “and wherefore?” She said:  “It will be hard for me to enter that grim house yonder, and sit in the seat whence I was erewhile threatened by the evil hag with hair like a grey she-bear.”

He made much of her and said:  “Yet belike a Friend of the Well may overcome this also; and withal the hall shall be far other to-day when it was.”

She looked about on the warriors as they lay on the grass or loitered by their horses; then she smiled, and her face lightened, and she reddened and cast down her eyes and said:  “Yea, that is sooth; that day there were few men in the hall, and they old and evil of semblance.  It was a band of women who took me in the thorp and brought me up into the Castle, and mishandled me there, and cast me into prison there; whereas these be good fellows, and frank and free of aspect.  But O, my heart, look thou how fearful the piled-up rocks rise from the plain and the walls wind up amongst them; and that huge tower, the crown of all!  Surely there is none more fearful in the world.”

He kissed her and laughed merrily, and said:  “Yea, sweetheart, and there will be another change in the folk of the hall when we come there this time, to wit, that thou shouldst not be alone therein, even were all these champions, and Richard and the Sage away from thee.  Wilt thou tell me how that shall be?”

She turned to him and kissed him and caressed him, and then they turned back again toward their fellows, for by now they had walked together a good way along the ridge.

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