The Fortunes of Garin by Mary Johnston (romantic novels in english .txt) đ
- Author: Mary Johnston
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Raimbaut did not deliver the meditated blowâtoo angered and concerned was Raimbaut to dispense slight tokens. He let his hand drop, but ground beneath his heavy foot the rushes on the floor. âI would I had had you chained in the pit below the dungeon before I let you go to Roche-de-FrĂȘne!â He turned on Foulque who stood, grey-faced and dry-lipped. âKnew you what this fool did?â
Foulque struck his hands together. âHe told me that eve. He did not know and I did not knowâHe thought it might be some wandering knightâAh, my Lord Raimbaut, as we owe you service, so do you owe us protection!â
Raimbaut strode up and down, heavy and black as his own ancient donjon. âComes to me yestereve,[64] as formal as you please, a herald from Montmaure! âHark and hear,â says he, puffing out his cheeks, âto what befell our young lord, Sir Jaufre, riding through the forest called La Belle, and for some matter or other sending a good way ahead those that rode with him. Came a squire out of the wood, drunken and, as it were, mad, and with him, plain to be seen, a stark fiend! Then did the two fall upon Sir Jaufre from behind and forced him to fight, and by necromancy overthrew and wounded him, and, ignobly and villainously, bound him to a tree. Which, when they had done, they vanished. And straightway his men found him and brought him home. And now that fiend may perchance not be found, but assuredly the man may be discovered! When he is, for his foul pride, treason, and wizardry, the Count of Montmaure will flay him alive and nail him head downward to a tree.ââ
Mistral sent into the hall a withering blast. The smoke from the fire blew out and went here and there in wreaths. It set the abbot coughing. Raimbaut the Six-fingered continued his striding up and down. âThen he puffs his cheeks out and says on, and wits me to know that Savaric of Montmaure calls on every man that owes him fealty to discoverâan he is known to themâthat churl and misdoer. And thereupon,â ended Raimbaut on a note of thunder, âto my face he describes Garin my esquire!â
Garin stood silent, but Foulque panted hard.[65] âAh, thou unhappy! Ah, the end of Castel-Noir! Ah, my Lord Raimbaut, have we not been faithful liegemen?â He caught his brother by the arm. âKneel, Garinâand I will kneelââ
But Garin did not kneel. He stood young, straight, pale with indignation. âBrother and Reverend Father and my Lord Raimbaut,â he cried, ânever in my life had I to do with a fiend! Nor was I drunken nor without sense! Nor did I come upon him from behind! Does he say that, then am I more glad than I was that I brought him fairly to the earth and, because of his own treachery, tied him to a tree and bound his hands with his stirrup leatherââ
Raimbaut, in his striding up and down being close to his squire, turned upon him at this and delivered the buffet. It brought Garin, hand and knee, upon the rushes, but he rose with lightness. Raimbaut, striding on by, came to the abbot, who, having ended coughing, sat, double chin on hand and foot in furred slipper, tapping the floor. He stopped short, feudal lord beside as massive ecclesiastic. âThe Church says it is her part to counsel! Out then with good counsel!â
The abbot looked at him aslant, then spoke with a golden voice. âDid you tell the countâs herald that it was your esquire?â
âNot I! I said that it had a sound of Aimeric of the Forestâs men.â Aimeric of the Forest was a lord with whom Raimbaut was wont to wage private war.
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The abbot murmured âAh!â then, âDid any in your castle betray him?â
âNo,â said Raimbaut. âOnly Guilhelm, and Hugonet heard surely and knew for certain. Six-fingered we may be and rude, but we wait a bit before we give our esquires to other menâs deaths!â Again he covered with his stride the space before the wide hearth. He was as huge as a boar and as grim, but a certain black tenseness and danger seemed to go out of the air of the hall. Turning, he again faced the abbot. âSo I think, now the best wit that I can find is to say âAyeâ twice where I have already said it once, and speed this same Garin the fighter into Churchâs fold! Let him as best he may convoy himself to the Abbey of Saint Pamphilius. There he may be turned at once into Brother Such-an-one. So he will be as safe and hid as if he were in Heaven and Our Lady drooped her mantle over him. By degrees Montmaure may forget, or he may flay the wrong manââ
The abbot covered his mouth with his hand and looked into the blaze that mistral drove this way and that. Foulque came close, with a haggard, wrinkling face; but Garin, having risen from Raimbautâs buffet, made no other motion.
The abbot dropped his hand and spoke. âDo you not know that last year the Count of Montmaure became Advocate and Protector of the Abbey of Saint Pamphilius? As little as Lord Raimbaut do I will openly to offend Count Savaric.â
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ââOpenly,ââ cried Foulque. âAh, Reverend Father, it would not be âopenlyâââ
But Abbot Arnaut shook his head. âI know your âsecret help,ââ he said goldenly. âIt is that which most in this world getteth simple and noble, lay and cleric, into trouble!â He spread his hands. âMoreover, our Squire-who-fights-knights hath just declined the tonsure.â
âHath he so?â exclaimed Raimbaut. âHe is the more to my liking!âSo the abbot will let Count Savaric take him?â
The abbot put his fingers together. âI will do nothing,â he said, âthat will imperil the least interest of Holy Mother Church. I will never act to the endangering of one small ornament upon her robe.â
Raimbaut made a sound like the grunt of a boar. Foulque covered his face with his hands.
âBut,â pursued the abbot, âkin is kin, and in the little, narrow lane that is left me I will do what I can!â He spoke to Raimbaut. âHas Count Savaric bands out in search of him?â
âAye. They will look here as elsewhere.â
Garin stood forth. Above his eye was a darkening mark, sign of Raimbautâs buffet. It was there, but it did not depreciate something else which was likewise there and which, for the moment, made of his whole body a symbol, enduing it to an extent with visible bloom, apparent power. For many hours there had been an inward glowing. But heretofore to-day, what with Foulque and Abbot Arnaut and disputes,[68] anxieties, and preoccupation, it had been somewhat pushed away, stifled under. Now it burst forth, to be seen and felt by others, though not understood. Anger and outrage at that knightâs false accusation helped it forth. Andâthough Garin himself did not understand thisâthat glade in the forest toward Roche-de-FrĂȘne, and that lawn of the poplar, the plane, and the cedar by the Convent of Our Lady in Egypt, that Tuesday and that Thursday, came somehow into contact, embraced, reinforced each the other. Aware, or unaware, in his conscious or in his unconscious experience, there was present a deep and harmonious vibration, an expansion and intensification of being. Something of this came outward and crossed space, to the othersâ apprehension. They felt bloom and they felt beauty, and they stared at him strangely, as though he were palely demigod.
He spoke. âBrother Foulque and Lord Raimbaut and Reverend Father, let me cut this knot! I must leave Castel-Noir and leave my Lord Raimbautâs castle, and I must take my leave without delay. That is plain. Plain, too, that I must not go in this green and brown that I wore when I fought him! Sicart can find me serfâs clothing. When it is night, I will quit Castel-Noir, and I will lie in the fir wood, near the little shrine, five miles west of here. In the morning you, Reverend Father, pass with your train. The help that Foulque and I ask is that you will let me join the Abbey people. They have[69] scarcely seen meâSicart shall cut my hair and darken my faceâthey will not know me. But do you, of your charity, bid one of the brothers take me up behind him. Let me overtravel in safe company sufficient leagues to put me out of instant clutch of Count Savaric and that noble knight, Sir Jaufre! I will leave you short of the Abbey of Saint Pamphilius.â
âAnd where then, Garin, where then?â cried Foulque.
âI will go,â said Garin, âtoward Toulouse and Foix and Spain. Give me, Foulque, what money you can. I will go in churlâs guise until I am out and away from Montmaureâs reach. Then in some town I will get me a fit squireâs dress. If you can give me enough to buy a horseâvery good will that be!â He lifted and stretched his armsâa gesture that ordinarily he would not have used in the presence of elder brother, lord, or churchman. âAh!â cried Garin, âthen will I truly begin lifeâhow, I know not now, but I will begin it! Moreover, I will live it, in some fashion, well!â
The three elder men still stared at him. Mature years, advantageous place, bulked large indeed in their day. A young Daniel might be very wise, but was he not young? A squire might propose the solution of a riddle, but it were unmannerly for the squire to take credit; a mouse might gnaw the lionâs net, but the mouse remained mouse, and the lion lion. The Abbot of Saint Pamphilius, and Raimbaut[70] the Six-fingered, and Foulque the elder brother looked doubtfully at Garin. But the air of bloom and light and power held long enough. They devised no better plan, and, for the time at least, their minds subdued themselves and put away anger and ceased to consider rebuke.
Raimbaut spoke. âI give you leave. I have not been a bad lord to you.â
His squire looked at him with shining eyes. âNo, lord, you have not. I thank you for much. And some day if I may I will return good for good, and pay the service that I owe!â
Foulque the Cripple limped from the hearth to a chest by the wall, unlocked it with a key hanging from his belt, and took out a bag of soft leatherâa small bag and a lank. He turned with it. âYou shall have wherewith to fit you out. Escape harm now, little brother! But when the wind has ceased to blow, come backââ
The abbot seemed to awake from a dream, and, awakening, became golden and expansive even beyond his wont. âYou hear him say himself that he has no vocation.... Nay, if he begins so early by overthrowing knights he may be called, who knoweth? to become a column and pattern of chivalry! I will bring him safe out of the immediate clutch of danger.â
An hour, and Raimbaut departed, and none outside the hall of Castel-Noir knew aught but that, hunting a stag, he had come riding that way. The[71] sun set, and the abbot and his following had supper and Garin served his brother and Abbot Arnaut. Afterwards, it was said about the place that the companyâhaving a long way to makeâwould ride away before dawn. So, after a few hours sleep, all did arise by torchlight and ate a hasty breakfast, and the horses and mules and the abbotâs palfrey stamped in the courtyard. Mistral was dead and the air cool, still, and dark. The swung torches confused shadow and substance. In the trampling and neighing and barking of dogs, clamour and shifting of shapes, it went unnoticed that only Foulque was there to bid farewell to the abbot and kinsman.
In the early night, under the one cypress between the tower and the wall, Foulque and Garin had said farewell. The light was gone from about Garin; he seemed but a youth, poor and stricken, fleeing before a very actual danger. The two brothers embraced. They shed tears, for in their time men wept when they felt like doing so. They commended each other to God and Our Lady and all the saints, and they parted, not knowing if ever they would
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