Nothing looked like battle; yet battle sounded in the
air; for now we heard the beat of the horse-hoofs of the
men-at-arms coming on towards us like the rolling of distant
thunder, and growing louder and louder every minute; we were none
too soon in turning to face them. Jack Straw was on our side of the
road, and with a few gestures and a word or two he got his men into
their places. Six archers lined the hedge along the road where the
banner of Adam and Eve, rising above the grey leaves of the
apple-trees, challenged the new-comers; and of the billmen also he
kept a good few ready to guard the road in case the enemy should
try to rush it with the horsemen. The road, not being a Roman one,
was, you must remember, little like the firm smooth country roads
that you are used to; it was a mere track between the hedges and
fields, partly grass-grown, and cut up by the deep-sunk ruts
hardened by the drought of summer. There was a stack of fagot and
small wood on the other side, and our men threw themselves upon it
and set to work to stake the road across for a rough defence
against the horsemen.
What befell more on the road itself I had not much time to note,
for our bowmen spread themselves out along the hedge that looked
into the pasture-field, leaving some six feet between man and man;
the rest of the billmen went along with the bowmen, and halted in
clumps of some half-dozen along their line, holding themselves
ready to help the bowmen if the enemy should run up under their
shafts, or to run on to lengthen the line in case they should try
to break in on our flank. The hedge in front of us was of quick. It
had been strongly plashed in the past February, and was stiff and
stout. It stood on a low bank; moreover, the level of the orchard
was some thirty inches higher than that of the field and the ditch
some two foot deeper than the face of the field. The field went
winding round to beyond the church, making a quarter of a circle
about the village, and at the western end of it were the butts
whence the folk were coming from shooting when I first came into
the village street.
Altogether, to me who knew nothing of war the place seemed
defensible enough. I have said that the road down which Long
Gregory came with his tidings went north; and that was its general
direction; but its first reach was nearly east, so that the low sun
was not in the eyes of any of us, and where Will Green took his
stand, and I with him, it was nearly at our backs.
Chapter 6
THE BATTLE AT THE TOWNSHIP'S END
Our men had got into their places leisurely and coolly enough,
and with no lack of jesting and laughter. As we went along the
hedge by the road, the leaders tore off leafy twigs from the low
oak bushes therein, and set them for a rallying sign in their hats
and headpieces, and two or three of them had horns for blowing.
Will Green, when he got into his place, which was thirty yards
from where Jack Straw and the billmen stood in the corner of the
two hedges, the road hedge and the hedge between the close and
field, looked to right and left of him a moment, then turned to the
man on the left and said:
"Look you, mate, when you hear our horns blow ask no more
questions, but shoot straight and strong at whatso cometh towards
us, till ye hear more tidings from Jack Straw or from me. Pass that
word onward."
Then he looked at me and said:
"Now, lad from Essex, thou hadst best sit down out of the way at
once: forsooth I wot not why I brought thee hither. Wilt thou not
back to the cross, for thou art little of a fighting-man?"
"Nay," said I, "I would see the play. What shall come of
it?"
"Little," said he; "we shall slay a horse or twain maybe. I will
tell thee, since thou hast not seen a fight belike, as I have seen
some, that these men-at-arms cannot run fast either to the play or
from it, if they be a-foot; and if they come on a-horseback, what
shall hinder me to put a shaft into the poor beast? But down with
thee on the daisies, for some shot there will be first."
As he spoke he was pulling off his belts and other gear, and his
coat, which done, he laid his quiver on the ground, girt him again,
did his axe and buckler on to his girdle, and hung up his other
attire on the nearest tree behind us. Then he opened his quiver and
took out of it some two dozen of arrows, which he stuck in the
ground beside him ready to his hand. Most of the bowmen within
sight were doing the like.
As I glanced toward the houses I saw three or four bright
figures moving through the orchards, and presently noted that they
were women, all clad more or less like the girl in the Rose, except
that two of them wore white coifs on their heads. Their errand
there was clear, for each carried a bundle of arrows under her
arm.
One of them came straight up to Will Green, and I could see at
once that she was his daughter. She was tall and strongly made,
with black hair like her father, somewhat comely, though no great
beauty; but as they met, her eyes smiled even more than her mouth,
and made her face look very sweet and kind, and the smile was
answered back in a way so quaintly like to her father's face, that
I too smiled for goodwill and pleasure.
"Well, well, lass," said he, "dost thou think that here is Crecy
field toward, that ye bring all this artillery? Turn back, my girl,
and set the pot on the fire; for that shall we need when we come
home, I and this ballad-maker here."
"Nay," she said, nodding kindly at me, "if this is to be no
Crecy, then may I stop to see, as well as the ballad-maker, since
he hath neither sword nor staff?"
"Sweetling," he said, "get thee home in haste. This play is but
little, yet mightest thou be hurt in it; and trust me the time may
come, sweetheart, when even thou and such as thou shalt hold a
sword or a staff. Ere the moon throws a shadow we shall be
back."
She turned away lingering, not without tears on her face, laid
the sheaf of arrows at the foot of the tree, and hastened off
through the orchard. I was going to say something, when Will Green
held up his hand as who would bid us hearken. The noise of the
horse-hoofs, after growing nearer and nearer, had ceased suddenly,
and a confused murmur of voices had taken the place of it.
"Get thee down, and take cover, old lad," said Will Green; "the
dance will soon begin, and ye shall hear the music presently."
Sure enough as I slipped down by the hedge close to which I had
been standing, I heard the harsh twang of the bow-strings, one,
two, three, almost together, from the road, and even the whew of
the shafts, though that was drowned in a moment by a confused but
loud and threatening shout from the other side, and again the
bowstrings clanged, and this time a far-off clash of arms followed,
and therewithal that cry of a strong man that comes without his
will, and is so different from his wonted voice that one has a
guess thereby of the change that death is. Then for a while was
almost silence; nor did our horns blow up, though some half-dozen
of the billmen had leapt into the road when the bows first shot.
But presently came a great blare of trumpets and horns from the
other side, and therewith as it were a river of steel and bright
coats poured into the field before us, and still their horns blew
as they spread out toward the left of our line; the cattle in the
pasture-field, heretofore feeding quietly, seemed frightened silly
by the sudden noise, and ran about tail in air and lowing loudly;
the old bull with his head a little lowered, and his stubborn legs
planted firmly, growling threateningly; while the geese about the
brook waddled away gobbling and squeaking; all which seemed so
strange to us along with the threat of sudden death that rang out
from the bright array over against us, that we laughed outright,
the most of us, and Will Green put down his head in mockery of the
bull and grunted like him, whereat we laughed yet more. He turned
round to me as he nocked his arrow, and said:
"I would they were just fifty paces nigher, and they move not.
Ho! Jack Straw, shall we shoot?"
For the latter-named was nigh us now; he shook his head and said
nothing as he stood looking at the enemy's line.
"Fear not but they are the right folk, Jack," quoth Will
Green.
"Yea, yea," said he, "but abide awhile; they could make nought
of the highway, and two of their sergeants had a message from the
grey-goose feather. Abide, for they have not crossed the road to
our right hand, and belike have not seen our fellows on the other
side, who are now for a bushment to them."
I looked hard at the man. He was a tall, wiry, and
broad-shouldered fellow, clad in a handsome armour of bright steel
that certainly had not been made for a yeoman, but over it he had a
common linen smock-frock or gabardine, like our field workmen wear
now or used to wear, and in his helmet he carried instead of a
feather a wisp of wheaten straw. He bore a heavy axe in his hand
besides the sword he was girt with, and round his neck hung a great
horn for blowing. I should say that I knew that there were at least
three "Jack Straws" among the fellowship of the discontented, one
of whom was over in Essex.
As we waited there, every bowman with his shaft nocked on the
string, there was a movement in the line opposite, and presently
came from it a little knot of three men, the middle one on
horseback, the other two armed with long-handled glaives; all three
well muffled up in armour. As they came nearer I could see that the
horseman had a tabard over his armour, gaily embroidered with a
green tree on a gold ground, and in his hand a trumpet.
"They are come to summon us.
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