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Robin Hood And The Knight Of The Rueful Countenance
by
“Where are your friends?” asked Robin.
“Where are the last year’s leaves of your trees?” asked the knight. “They were fair enough while the summer sun shone; they dropped from me when the winter of trouble came.”
“Can you not borrow the sum?” asked Robin. “Not a groat,” answered the knight. “I have no more credit than a beggar.”
“Mayhap not with the usurers,” said Robin. “But the greenwood is not quite bare, and your face, Sir Knight, is your pledge of faith. Go to my treasury, Little John, and see if it will not yield four hundred pounds.”
“I can promise you that, and more if need be,” answered the woodman. “But our worthy knight is poorly clad, and we have rich cloths to spare, I wot. Shall we not add a livery to his purse?”
“As you will, good fellow, and forget not a horse, for our guest’s mount is of the sorriest.”
The knight’s sorrow gave way to hope as he saw the eagerness, of the generous woodmen. Little John’s count of the money added ample interest; the cloths were measured with a bow-stick for a yard, and a palfrey was added to the courser, to bear their welcome gifts. In the end Robin lent him Little John for a squire, and gave him twelve months in which to repay his loan. Away he went, no longer a knight of rueful countenance.
“Nowe as the knight went on his way,
This game he thought full good,
When he looked on Bernysdale
He blyssed Robin Hode;
“And when he thought on Bernysdale,
On Scathelock, Much, and John,
He blyssed them for the best company
That ever he in come.”
The next day was that fixed for the payment of the loan to the abbot of St. Mary’s. Abbot and prior waited in hope and excitement. If the cash was not paid by night a rich estate would fall into their hands. The knight must pay to the last farthing, or be beggared. As they sat awaiting the cellarer burst in upon them, full of exultation.
“He is dead or hanged!” he cried. “We shall have our four hundred pounds many times over.”
With them were the high-justice of England and the sheriff of the shire, brought there to give the proceeding the warrant of legality. Time was passing, an hour or two more would end the knight’s grace, only a narrow space of time lay between him and beggary. The justice had just turned with congratulations to the abbot, when, to the discomfiture of the churchmen, the debtor, Sir Richard of the Lee, appeared at the gate of the abbey, and made his way into the hall.
Yet he was shabbily clad; his face was sombre; there seemed little occasion for alarm. There seemed none when he began to speak.
“Sir Abbot,” he said, “I come to hold my day.”
“Hast thou brought my pay?” asked the abbot.
“Not one penny,” answered the knight.
“Thou art a shrewd debtor,” declared the abbot, with a look of satisfaction. “Sir Justice, drink to me. What brings you here then, sirrah, if you fetch no money?”
“To pray your grace for a longer day,” said Sir Richard, humbly.
“Your day is ended; not an hour more do you get,” cried the abbot.
Sir Richard now appealed to the justice for relief, and after him to the sheriff, but to both in vain. Then, turning to the abbot again, he offered to be his servant, and work for him till the four hundred pounds were earned, if he would take pity on him.
This appeal was lost on the merciless churchman. In the end hot words passed, and the abbot angrily exclaimed,–
“Out of my hall, thou false knight! Speed thee out, sirrah!”
“Abbot, thou liest, I was never false to my word,” said Sir Richard, proudly. “You lack courtesy, to suffer a knight to kneel and beg so long. I am a true knight and a true man, as all who have seen me in tournament or battle will say.”