登陆注册
19876200000010

第10章 WHAT BEFELL OUTSIDE OF CHINON TOWN(1)

My old nurse,when I was a child,used to tell me a long story of a prince who,wandering through the world,made friends with many strange companions.One she called Lynx-eye,that could see through a mountain;one was Swift-foot,that could outrun the wind;one was Fine-ear,that could hear the grass growing;and there was Greedy-gut,that could swallow a river.All these were very serviceable to this gracious prince,of I know not what country,in his adventures;and they were often brought into my mind by the companions whom we picked up on the grass-grown roads.

These wanderers were as strange as the friends of the prince,and were as variously,but scarce as honourably,gifted.There was the one-armed soldier,who showed his stump very piteously when it was a question of begging from a burgess,but was as well furnished with limbs as other men when no burgess was in sight.There was a wretched woman violer,with her jackanapes,and with her husband,a hang-dog ruffian,she bearing the mark of his fist on her eye,and commonly trailing far behind him with her brat on her back.There was a blind man,with his staff,who might well enough answer to Keen-eye,that is,when no strangers were in sight.There was a layman,wearing cope and stole and selling indulgences,but our captain,Brother Thomas,soon banished him from our company,for that he divided the trade.Others there were,each one of them a Greedy-gut,a crew of broken men,who marched with us on the roads;but we never entered a town or a house with these discreditable attendants.

Now,it may seem strange,but the nearer we drew to Chinon and the Court,the poorer grew the country,for the Court and the men-at-arms had stripped it bare,like a flight of locusts.For this reason the Dauphin could seldom abide long at one place,for he was so much better known than trusted that the very cordwainer would not let him march off in a new pair of boots without seeing his money,and,as the song said,he even greased his old clouted shoon,and made them last as long as he might.For head-gear he was as ill provided,seeing that he had pawned the fleurons of his crown.

There were days when his treasurer at Tours (as I myself have heard him say)did not reckon three ducats in his coffers,and the heir of France borrowed money from his very cook.So the people told us,and I have often marvelled how,despite this poverty,kings and nobles,when I have seen them,go always in cloth of gold,with rich jewels.But,as you may guess,near the Court of a beggar Dauphin the country-folk too were sour and beggarly.

We had to tighten our belts before we came to the wood wherein cross-roads meet,from north,south,and east,within five miles of the town of Chinon.There was not a white coin among us;night was falling,and it seemed as if we must lie out under the stars,and be fed,like the wolves we heard howling,on wind.By the roadside,at the crossways,but not in view of the road,a council of our ragged regiment was held in a deep ditch.It would be late ere we reached the town,gates would scarce open for us,we could not fee the warders,houses would be shut and dark;the King's archers were apt to bear them unfriendly to wandering men with the devil dancing in their pouches.Resource we saw none;if there was a cottage,dogs,like wolves for hunger and fierceness,were baying round it.As for Brother Thomas,an evil bruit had gone before us concerning a cordelier that the fowls and geese were fain to follow,as wilder things,they say,follow the blessed St.Francis.So there sat Brother Thomas at the cross-roads,footsore,hungry,and sullen,in the midst of us,who dared not speak,he twanging at the string of his arbalest.He called himself our Moses,in his blasphemous way,and the blind man having girded at him for not leading us into the land of plenty,he had struck the man till he bled,and now stood stanching his wound.

Suddenly Brother Thomas ceased from his twanging,and holding up his hand for silence,leaned his ear to the ground.The night was still,though a cold wind came very stealthily from the east.

"Horses!"he said.

"It is but the noise of the brook by the way,"said the blind man,sullenly.

Brother Thomas listened again.

"No,it is horses,"he whispered."My men,they that ride horses can spare somewhat out of their abundance to feed the poor."And with that he began winding up his arbalest hastily."Aymeric,"he said to one of our afflicted company,"you draw a good bow for a blind man;hide yourself in the opposite ditch,and be ready when Igive the word "Pax vobiscum."You,Giles,"he spoke to the one-armed soldier,"go with him,and,do you hear,aim low,at the third man's horse.From the sound there are not more than five or six of them.We can but fail,at worst,and the wood is thick behind us,where none may pursue.You,Norman de Pitcullo,have your whinger ready,and fasten this rope tightly to yonder birch-tree stem,and then cross and give it a turn or two about that oak sapling on the other side of the way.That trap will bring down a horse or twain.

Be quick,you Scotch wine-bag!"

I had seen many ill things done,and,to my shame,had held my peace.But a Leslie of Pitcullo does not take purses on the high-road.Therefore my heart rose in sudden anger,I having all day hated him more and more for his bitter tongue,and I was opening my mouth to cry "A secours!"--a warning to them who were approaching,when,quick as lightning,Brother Thomas caught me behind the knee-joints,and I was on the ground with his weight above me.One cry Ihad uttered,when his hand was on my mouth.

"Give him the steel in his guts!"whispered the blind man.

"Slit his weasand,the Scotch pig!"said the one-armed soldier.

They were all on me now.

同类推荐
  • 奉天靖难记

    奉天靖难记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 内功四经

    内功四经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 锦州府志

    锦州府志

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 如来独证自誓三昧经

    如来独证自誓三昧经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • OLIVER TWIST

    OLIVER TWIST

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 不死龙套

    不死龙套

    人们常用“喝口凉水都塞牙”来形容运气不好,但是在正真倒霉的人面前,这句话差的远了。作为山里长大的孩子,没文化的父亲用数字给起名字根本不算啥,分家一分钱没捞着还不算完。上山打个猎被抓,出门打个工被骗,欠了一屁股债不说,还被拐到异国他乡成了黑户。你以为这就完了么?错!老板不给工钱还丢了工作,打个拳赛被扭断了脖子。虽然大难不死,但是身体里多了点东西,先不说脑子里那段莫名其妙的记忆,光是身体间歇性的失去控制就让人受不了。天哪,你想玩死我吗?在这个人人都抢着当主角的世界里,我只想跑个龙套混口饭吃而已,这有多难?恍然间他发现,除了自己手中的筷子,他再也放不下任何东西了。都想让我死是么?呸!偏要活给你们看!
  • 剑耀天穹

    剑耀天穹

    “我为武帝之日,便是娶你之时!”十年前,断崖峰上,张浩然许下了诺言。……“赵嫣然,赵女皇!哈哈哈!当日你骗我饮毒酒,让我筋脉尽毁,又推我下断崖峰,就是为了这皇权王位么?可天不亡我张浩然,让我重生一世,我必卷土重来,让这天地震颤!”
  • 文艺国度

    文艺国度

    我曾对理想有非分之想。我曾对成名有无限渴望。当我成了一名文娱搬运工的那一刻。我的脸却成了一扇门。人们说我创作出许多的经典。但那本不是属于我的荣耀。我只想说。我不生产“经典”,我只是“经典”的搬运工。我的心愿是。世界和平。
  • 仙武逆天

    仙武逆天

    仙武逆天,决战荒古。一个重生在仙荒大陆的天才少年,踏上修仙路,却意外的被废去丹田!入神秘空间,得武道记忆。悟仙武决,重劈第二丹田,重新踏上长生路。却发现世间种种与他前世有着不可割分的联系,甚至连他的穿越都透露着诡异,为求真相,他不得不的走上那逆天之路…
  • 葬神之名:落地花冰楹

    葬神之名:落地花冰楹

    她,权倾西南,操掌十界,却被那个最爱的人打下谷底。第二世,她无忧无虑,在他的羽翼下成长。然而又一次的毁灭让她生起报仇之心,从此走上成神之路。“楹儿,我等你回来,我们回神岛。我不做神子,你不问界权,好吗?”他一身暗红,手中一把火红凤尾扇,眼中尽显芳华。沉烈背影,烙人眼底。“此生,我了无牵挂,唯有她,我还放不下。夜阑,我希望你能帮我保护她。若是谁负她,不要手软。”他发染飞霜,樱色相衬,一只翠白玉鹿簪勾起三千青丝。他素手抚箫,医神顶冠。······更多请关注《葬神之名:落地花冰楹》
  • 魔陨

    魔陨

    这是一个武者与修真者共存的世界,在这里无论是武者还是修道者都是运用真气修行,当修行到巅峰时便可以飞身成仙,亦或者成魔。他是一个谜,没人知道他究竟是谁。只知道他有一双魔气凛然或妖异的眸子,和如同帝王般的气势。等级划分:修真者等级:淬体期、炼气期、筑基期、金丹期、元婴期、化神期、渡劫期。武者等级:炼体境、纳气境、凝气境、后天武境、先天武境、登峰境、虚空境。
  • 午夜日记

    午夜日记

    一家开在午夜的小店……店主夜夜坐在柜台里笑脸迎“人”……挂着咖啡屋的名号卖着奇怪的饰品……无意间救起的少女成了这店唯一的店员……在午夜时分,少女弹着手指写下了开店日记……
  • 浅浅寂寞浅浅笑

    浅浅寂寞浅浅笑

    凤九说,世界太大,心太小,我们装不了那么多,不如退而求其次,放过自己。我想或许她是对的。于是我决定放过自己,在时隔六年后,终于回国。离开这个城市的时候,我二十二岁,那年那月总觉得自己实在渺小,渺小到什么都承受不了。无法承受了,只好逃避。我知道我不勇敢,我不知道的是,原来我如此不够勇敢。
  • 悉昙字记

    悉昙字记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 一恋成瘾:简少宠妻无度

    一恋成瘾:简少宠妻无度

    一步步把她逼回自己身边“苏怀夏,我才是你的命中注定!”折断她的羽翼,囚禁她的身心既然招惹了他简绍衡,那他就拉着她一起下地狱腹黑大总裁X美貌小助理,某女终于忍受不了一次一次被扑倒。月黑风高,愤然反攻……情节虚构,请勿模仿