I go to life and to death, and leave thee; and scarce do I know
whether to wish thee some dream of the days beyond thine to tell
what shall be, as thou hast told me, for I know not if that shall
help or hinder thee; but since we have been kind and very friends,
I will not leave thee without a wish of good-will, so at least I
wish thee what thou thyself wishest for thyself, and that is
hopeful strife and blameless peace, which is to say in one word,
life. Farewell, friend."
For some little time, although I had known that the daylight was
growing and what was around me, I had scarce seen the things I had
before noted so keenly; but now in a flash I saw all—the east
crimson with sunrise through the white window on my right hand; the
richly-carved stalls and gilded screen work, the pictures on the
walls, the loveliness of the faultless colour of the mosaic window
lights, the altar and the red light over it looking strange in the
daylight, and the biers with the hidden dead men upon them that lay
before the high altar. A great pain filled my heart at the sight of
all that beauty, and withal I heard quick steps coming up the paved
church-path to the porch, and the loud whistle of a sweet old tune
therewith; then the footsteps stopped at the door; I heard the
latch rattle, and knew that Will Green's hand was on the ring of
it.
Then I strove to rise up, but fell back again; a white light,
empty of all sights, broke upon me for a moment, and lo I behold, I
was lying in my familiar bed, the south-westerly gale rattling the
Venetian blinds and making their hold-fasts squeak.
I got up presently, and going to the window looked out on the
winter morning; the river was before me broad between outer bank
and bank, but it was nearly dead ebb, and there was a wide space of
mud on each side of the hurrying stream, driven on the faster as it
seemed by the push of the south-west wind. On the other side of the
water the few willow-trees left us by the Thames Conservancy looked
doubtfully alive against the bleak sky and the row of
wretched-looking blue-slated houses, although, by the way, the
latter were the backs of a sort of street of "villas" and not a
slum; the road in front of the house was sooty and muddy at once,
and in the air was that sense of dirty discomfort which one is
never quit of in London. The morning was harsh, too, and though the
wind was from the south-west it was as cold as a north wind; and
yet amidst it all, I thought of the corner of the next bight of the
river which I could not quite see from where I was, but over which
one can see clear of houses and into Richmond Park, looking like
the open country; and dirty as the river was, and harsh as was the
January wind, they seemed to woo me toward the country-side, where
away from the miseries of the "Great Wen" I might of my own will
carry on a daydream of the friends I had made in the dream of the
night and against my will.
But as I turned away shivering and downhearted, on a sudden came
the frightful noise of the "hooters," one after the other, that
call the workmen to the factories, this one the after-breakfast
one, more by token. So I grinned surlily, and dressed and got ready
for my day's "work" as I call it, but which many a man besides John
Ruskin (though not many in his position) would call "play."
A KING'S LESSON
It is told of Matthias Corvinus, king of Hungary—the Alfred the
Great of his time and people—that he once heard (once ONLY?) that
some (only SOME, my lad?) of his peasants were over-worked and
under-fed. So he sent for his Council, and bade come thereto also
some of the mayors of the good towns, and some of the lords of land
and their bailiffs, and asked them of the truth thereof; and in
diverse ways they all told one and the same tale, how the peasant
carles were stout and well able to work and had enough and to spare
of meat and drink, seeing that they were but churls; and how if
they worked not at the least as hard as they did, it would be ill
for them and ill for their lords; for that the more the churl hath
the more he asketh; and that when he knoweth wealth, he knoweth the
lack of it also, as it fared with our first parents in the Garden
of God. The King sat and said but little while they spake, but he
misdoubted them that they were liars. So the Council brake up with
nothing done; but the King took the matter to heart, being, as
kings go, a just man, besides being more valiant than they mostly
were, even in the old feudal time. So within two or three days,
says the tale, he called together such lords and councillors as he
deemed fittest, and bade busk them for a ride; and when they were
ready he and they set out, over rough and smooth, decked out in all
the glory of attire which was the wont of those days. Thus they
rode till they came to some village or thorpe of the peasant folk,
and through it to the vineyards where men were working on the sunny
southern slopes that went up from the river: my tale does not say
whether that were Theiss, or Donau, or what river. Well, I judge it
was late spring or early summer, and the vines but just beginning
to show their grapes; for the vintage is late in those lands, and
some of the grapes are not gathered till the first frosts have
touched them, whereby the wine made from them is the stronger and
sweeter. Anyhow there were the peasants, men and women, boys and
young maidens, toiling and swinking; some hoeing between the
vine-rows, some bearing baskets of dung up the steep slopes, some
in one way, some in another, labouring for the fruit they should
never eat, and the wine they should never drink. Thereto turned the
King and got off his horse and began to climb up the stony ridges
of the vineyard, and his lords in like manner followed him,
wondering in their hearts what was toward; but to the one who was
following next after him he turned about and said with a smile,
"Yea, lords, this is a new game we are playing to-day, and a new
knowledge will come from it." And the lord smiled, but somewhat
sourly.
As for the peasants, great was their fear of those gay and
golden lords. I judge that they did not know the King, since it was
little likely that any one of them had seen his face; and they knew
of him but as the Great Father, the mighty warrior who kept the
Turk from harrying their thorpe. Though, forsooth, little matter
was it to any man there whether Turk or Magyar was their over-lord,
since to one master or another they had to pay the due tale of
labouring days in the year, and hard was the livelihood that they
earned for themselves on the days when they worked for themselves
and their wives and children.
Well, belike they knew not the King; but amidst those rich lords
they saw and knew their own lord, and of him they were sore afraid.
But nought it availed them to flee away from those strong men and
strong horses—they who had been toiling from before the rising of
the sun, and now it wanted little more than an hour of noon:
besides, with the King and lords was a guard of crossbowmen, who
were left the other side of the vineyard wall,—keen-eyed Italians
of the mountains, straight shooters of the bolt. So the poor folk
fled not; nay they made as if all this were none of their business,
and went on with their work. For indeed each man said to himself,
"If I be the one that is not slain, to-morrow I shall lack bread if
I do not work my hardest to-day; and maybe I shall be headman if
some of these be slain and I live."
Now comes the King amongst them and says: "Good fellows, which
of you is the headman?"
Spake a man, sturdy and sunburnt, well on in years and grizzled:
"I am the headman, lord."
"Give me thy hoe, then," says the King; "for now shall I order
this matter myself, since these lords desire a new game, and are
fain to work under me at vine-dressing. But do thou stand by me and
set me right if I order them wrong: but the rest of you go
play!"
The carle knew not what to think, and let the King stand with
his hand stretched out, while he looked askance at his own lord and
baron, who wagged his head at him grimly as one who says, "Do it,
dog!"
Then the carle lets the hoe come into the King's hand; and the
King falls to, and orders his lords for vine-dressing, to each his
due share of the work: and whiles the carle said yea and whiles nay
to his ordering. And then ye should have seen velvet cloaks cast
off, and mantles of fine Flemish scarlet go to the dusty earth; as
the lords and knights busked them to the work.
So they buckled to; and to most of them it seemed good game to
play at vine-dressing. But one there was who, when his scarlet
cloak was off, stood up in a doublet of glorious Persian web of
gold and silk, such as men make not now, worth a hundred florins
the Bremen ell. Unto him the King with no smile on his face gave
the job of toing and froing up and down the hill with the biggest
and the frailest dung-basket that there was; and thereat the silken
lord screwed up a grin, that was sport to see, and all the lords
laughed; and as he turned away he said, yet so that none heard him,
"Do I serve this son's son of a whore that he should bid me carry
dung?" For you must know that the King's father, John Hunyad, one
of the great warriors of the world, the Hammer of the Turks, was
not gotten in wedlock, though he were a king's son.
Well, they sped the work bravely for a while, and loud was the
laughter as the hoes smote the earth and the flint stones tinkled
and the cloud of dust rose up; the brocaded dung-bearer went up and
down, cursing and swearing by the White God and the Black; and one
would say to another, "See ye how gentle blood outgoes churls'
blood, even when the gentle does the churl's work: these lazy loons
smote but one stroke to our three." But the King, who worked no
worse than any, laughed not at all; and meanwhile the poor folk
stood by, not daring to speak a word one to the other; for they
were still sore afraid, not now of being slain on the spot, but
this rather was in their hearts: "These great and strong lords and
knights have come to see what work a man may do without dying: if
we are to have yet more days added to our year's tale of lords'
labour, then are we lost without remedy." And their hearts sank
within them.
So sped the work; and the sun rose yet higher in the heavens,
and it was noon and more. And now there was no more laughter among
those toiling lords, and the strokes of the hoe and mattock came
far slower, while the dung-bearer sat down at the bottom of the
hill and looked out on the river; but the King yet worked on
doggedly, so for shame the other lords yet kept at it. Till at last
the next man to the King let his hoe drop with a clatter, and swore
a great oath. Now he was a strong black-bearded man in the prime of
life, a valiant captain of that famous Black Band that had so often
rent the Turkish array; and the King loved him for his sturdy
valour; so he says to him, "Is aught wrong, Captain?"
"Nay, lord," says he, "ask the headman carle yonder what ails
us."
"Headman," says the King, "what ails these strong knights? Have
I ordered them wrongly?"
"Nay, but shirking ails them, lord," says he, "for they are
weary; and no wonder, for they have been playing hard, and are of
gentle blood."
"Is that so, lord," says the King, "that ye are weary
already?"
Then the rest hung their heads and said nought, all save that
captain of war; and he said, being a bold man and no liar: "King, I
see what thou wouldst be at; thou hast brought us here to preach us
a sermon from that Plato of thine; and to say sooth, so that I may
swink no more, and go eat my dinner, now preach thy worst! Nay, if
thou wilt be priest I will be thy deacon. Wilt thou that I ask this
labouring carle a thing or two?"
"Yea," said the King. And there came, as it were, a cloud of
thought over his face.
Then the captain straddled his legs and looked big, and said to
the carle: "Good fellow, how long have we been working here?"
"Two hours or thereabout, judging by the sun above us," says
he.
"And how much of thy work have we done in that while?" says the
captain, and winks his eye at him withal.
"Lord," says the carle, grinning a little despite himself, "be
not wroth with my word. In the first half-hour ye did
five-and-forty minutes' work of ours, and in the next half-hour
scant a thirty minutes' work, and the third half-hour a fifteen
minutes' work, and in the fourth half-hour two minutes' work." The
grin now had faded from his face, but a gleam came into his eyes as
he said: "And now, as I suppose, your day's work is done, and ye
will go to your dinner, and eat the sweet and drink the strong; and
we shall eat a little rye-bread, and then be working here till
after the sun has set and the moon has begun to cast shadows. Now
for you, I wot not how ye shall sleep nor where, nor what white
body ye shall hold in your arms while the night flits and the stars
shine; but for us, while the stars yet shine, shall we be at it
again, and bethink ye for what! I know not what game and play ye
shall be devising for to-morrow as ye ride back home; but for us
when we come back here to-morrow, it shall be as if there had been
no yesterday and nothing done therein, and that work of that to-day
shall be nought to us also, for we shall win no respite from our
toil thereby, and the morrow of to-morrow will all be to begin
again once more, and so on and on till no to-morrow abideth us.
Therefore, if ye are thinking to lay some new tax or tale upon us,
think twice of it, for we may not bear it. And all this I say with
the less fear, because I perceive this man here beside me, in the
black velvet jerkin and the gold chain on his neck, is the King;
nor do I think he will slay me for my word since he hath so many a
Turk before him and his mighty sword!"
Then said the captain: "Shall I smite the man, O King? or hath
he preached thy sermon for thee?"
"Smite not, for he hath preached it," said the King.
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