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PAGE 2

Belhs Cavaliers
by [?]

He answered: “No, I have left love alone. For Love prefers to take rather than to give; against a single happy hour he balances a hundred miseries, and he appraises one pleasure to be worth a thousand pangs. Pardieu, let this immortal usurer contrive as may seem well to him, for I desire no more of his bounty or of his penalties.”

“No, we wish earnestly for nothing, either good or bad,” said Dona Biatritz–“we who have done with loving.”

They sat in silence, musing over ancient happenings, and not looking at each other, until the Prince came with his guests, who seemed to laugh too heartily.

Guillaume’s frail arm was about his kinsman, and Guillaume chuckled over jests and by-words that had been between the cousins as children. Raimbaut found them no food for laughter now. Guillaume told all of Raimbaut’s oath of fealty, and of how these two were friends and their unnatural feud was forgotten. “For we grow old,–eh, maker of songs?” he said; “and it is time we made our peace with Heaven, since we are not long for this world.”

“Yes,” said the knight; “oh yes, we both grow old.” He thought of another April evening, so long ago, when this Guillaume de Baux had stabbed him in a hedged field near Calais, and had left him under a hawthorn bush for dead; and Raimbaut wondered that there was no anger in his heart. “We are friends now,” he said. Biatritz, whom these two had loved, and whose vanished beauty had been the spur of their long enmity, sat close to them, and hardly seemed to listen.

Thus the evening passed and every one was merry, because the Prince had overcome Lovain of the Great-Tooth, and was to punish the upstart on the morrow. But Raimbaut de Vaquieras, a spent fellow, a derelict, barren of aim now that the Holy Wars were over, sat in this unfamiliar place–where when he was young he had laughed as a cock crows!–and thought how at the last he had crept home to die as a dependent on his cousin’s bounty.

Thus the evening passed, and at its end Makrisi followed the troubadour to his regranted fief of Vaquieras. This was a chill and brilliant night, swayed by a frozen moon so powerful that no stars showed in the unclouded heavens, and everywhere the bogs were curdled with thin ice. An obdurate wind swept like a knife-blade across a world which even in its spring seemed very old.

“This night is bleak and evil,” Makrisi said. He rode a coffin’s length behind his master. “It is like Prince Guillaume, I think. What man will sorrow when dawn comes?”

Raimbaut de Vaquieras replied: “Always dawn comes at last, Makrisi.”

“It comes the more quickly, messire, when it is prompted.”

The troubadour only smiled at words which seemed so meaningless. He did not smile when later in the night Makrisi brought Mahi de Vernoil, disguised as a mendicant friar. This outlaw pleaded with Sire Raimbaut to head the tatters of Lovain’s army, and showed Raimbaut how easy it would be to wrest Venaissin from Prince Guillaume. “We cannot save Lovain,” de Vemoil said, “for Guillaume has him fast. But Venaissin is very proud of you, my tres beau sire. Ho, maker of world-famous songs! stout champion of the faith! my men and I will now make you Prince of Orange in place of the fiend who rules us. You may then at your convenience wed Madona Biatritz, that most amiable lady whom you have loved so long. And by the Cross! you may do this before the week is out.”

The old knight answered: “It is true that I have always served Madona Biatritz, who is of matchless worth. I might not, therefore, presume to call myself any longer her servant were my honor stained in any particular. Oh no, Messire de Vernoil, an oath is an oath. I have this day sworn fealty to Guillaume de Baux.”