A Dream of John Ball

A Dream of John Ball
William Morris
Published: 1888
Categorie(s): Fiction, Historical, Political
Source: http://www.BookishMall.com
About Morris:
William Morris (24 March 1834–3 October 1896) was an English
artist, writer, and socialist. He was a member of the
Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood and one of the principal founders of the
British Arts and Crafts movement, a pioneer of the socialist
movement in Britain, and a writer of poetry and fiction. He is
perhaps best known as a designer of wallpaper and patterned
fabrics. Source: Wikipedia
Also available on Feedbooks
Morris:
News from
Nowhere (1890)
The
Well at the World's End (1892)
The
Wood Beyond the World (1894)
The
Sundering Flood (1897)
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Chapter 1
THE MEN OF KENT
Sometimes I am rewarded for fretting myself so much about
present matters by a quite unasked-for pleasant dream. I mean when
I am asleep. This dream is as it were a present of an architectural
peep-show. I see some beautiful and noble building new made, as it
were for the occasion, as clearly as if I were awake; not vaguely
or absurdly, as often happens in dreams, but with all the detail
clear and reasonable. Some Elizabethan house with its scrap of
earlier fourteenth-century building, and its later degradations of
Queen Anne and Silly Billy and Victoria, marring but not destroying
it, in an old village once a clearing amid the sandy woodlands of
Sussex. Or an old and unusually curious church, much
churchwardened, and beside it a fragment of fifteenth-century
domestic architecture amongst the not unpicturesque lath and
plaster of an Essex farm, and looking natural enough among the
sleepy elms and the meditative hens scratching about in the litter
of the farmyard, whose trodden yellow straw comes up to the very
jambs of the richly carved Norman doorway of the church. Or
sometimes 'tis a splendid collegiate church, untouched by restoring
parson and architect, standing amid an island of shapely trees and
flower-beset cottages of thatched grey stone and cob, amidst the
narrow stretch of bright green water-meadows that wind between the
sweeping Wiltshire downs, so well beloved of William Cobbett. Or
some new-seen and yet familiar cluster of houses in a grey village
of the upper Thames overtopped by the delicate tracery of a
fourteenth-century church; or even sometimes the very buildings of
the past untouched by the degradation of the sordid utilitarianism
that cares not and knows not of beauty and history: as once, when I
was journeying (in a dream of the night) down the well-remembered
reaches of the Thames betwixt Streatley and Wallingford, where the
foothills of the White Horse fall back from the broad stream, I
came upon a clear-seen mediaeval town standing up with roof and
tower and spire within its walls, grey and ancient, but untouched
from the days of its builders of old. All this I have seen in the
dreams of the night clearer than I can force myself to see them in
dreams of the day. So that it would have been nothing new to me the
other night to fall into an architectural dream if that were all,
and yet I have to tell of things strange and new that befell me
after I had fallen asleep. I had begun my sojourn in the Land of
Nod by a very confused attempt to conclude that it was all right
for me to have an engagement to lecture at Manchester and Mitcham
Fair Green at half-past eleven at night on one and the same Sunday,
and that I could manage pretty well. And then I had gone on to try
to make the best of addressing a large open-air audience in the
costume I was really then wearing—to wit, my night-shirt,
reinforced for the dream occasion by a pair of braceless trousers.
The consciousness of this fact so bothered me, that the earnest
faces of my audience—who would NOT notice it, but were clearly
preparing terrible anti-Socialist posers for me—began to fade away
and my dream grew thin, and I awoke (as I thought) to find myself
lying on a strip of wayside waste by an oak copse just outside a
country village.
I got up and rubbed my eyes and looked about me, and the
landscape seemed unfamiliar to me, though it was, as to the lie of
the land, an ordinary English low-country, swelling into rising
ground here and there. The road was narrow, and I was convinced
that it was a piece of Roman road from its straightness. Copses
were scattered over the country, and there were signs of two or
three villages and hamlets in sight besides the one near me,
between which and me there was some orchard-land, where the early
apples were beginning to redden on the trees. Also, just on the
other side of the road and the ditch which ran along it, was a
small close of about a quarter of an acre, neatly hedged with
quick, which was nearly full of white poppies, and, as far as I
could see for the hedge, had also a good few rose-bushes of the
bright-red nearly single kind, which I had heard are the ones from
which rose-water used to be distilled. Otherwise the land was quite
unhedged, but all under tillage of various kinds, mostly in small
strips. From the other side of a copse not far off rose a tall
spire white and brand-new, but at once bold in outline and
unaffectedly graceful and also distinctly English in character.
This, together with the unhedged tillage and a certain unwonted
trimness and handiness about the enclosures of the garden and
orchards, puzzled me for a minute or two, as I did not understand,
new as the spire was, how it could have been designed by a modern
architect; and I was of course used to the hedged tillage and
tumbledown bankrupt-looking surroundings of our modern agriculture.
So that the garden-like neatness and trimness of everything
surprised me. But after a minute or two that surprise left me
entirely; and if what I saw and heard afterwards seems strange to
you, remember that it did not seem strange to me at the time,
except where now and again I shall tell you of it. Also, once for
all, if I were to give you the very words of those who spoke to me
you would scarcely understand them, although their language was
English too, and at the time I could understand them at once.
Well, as I stretched myself and turned my face toward the
village, I heard horse-hoofs on the road, and presently a man and
horse showed on the other end of the stretch of road and drew near
at a swinging trot with plenty of clash of metal. The man soon came
up to me, but paid me no more heed than throwing me a nod. He was
clad in armour of mingled steel and leather, a sword girt to his
side, and over his shoulder a long-handled bill-hook.
His armour was fantastic in form and well wrought; but by this
time I was quite used to the strangeness of him, and merely
muttered to myself, "He is coming to summon the squire to the
leet;" so I turned toward the village in good earnest. Nor, again,
was I surprised at my own garments, although I might well have been
from their unwontedness. I was dressed in a black cloth gown
reaching to my ankles, neatly embroidered about the collar and
cuffs, with wide sleeves gathered in at the wrists; a hood with a
sort of bag hanging down from it was on my head, a broad red
leather girdle round my waist, on one side of which hung a pouch
embroidered very prettily and a case made of hard leather chased
with a hunting scene, which I knew to be a pen and ink case; on the
other side a small sheath-knife, only an arm in case of dire
necessity.
Well, I came into the village, where I did not see (nor by this
time expected to see) a single modern building, although many of
them were nearly new, notably the church, which was large, and
quite ravished my heart with its extreme beauty, elegance, and
fitness. The chancel of this was so new that the dust of the stone
still lay white on the midsummer grass beneath the carvings of the
windows. The houses were almost all built of oak frame-work filled
with cob or plaster well whitewashed; though some had their lower
stories of rubble-stone, with their windows and doors of
well-moulded freestone. There was much curious and inventive
carving about most of them; and though some were old and much worn,
there was the same look of deftness and trimness, and even beauty,
about every detail in them which I noticed before in the
field-work. They were all roofed with oak shingles, mostly grown as
grey as stone; but one was so newly built that its roof was yet
pale and yellow.
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