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The Merry Adventures of Robin Hood by Howard
Pyle
Chapter Three
The Shooting Match at Nottingham
Town
Then the Sheriff was very
wroth because of this failure to take jolly Robin, for it came to his ears, as
ill news always does, that the people laughed at him and made a jest of his
thinking to serve a warrant upon such a one as the bold outlaw. And a man hates
nothing so much as being made a jest of; so he said: "Our gracious lord and
sovereign King himself shall know of this, and how his laws are perverted and
despised by this band of rebel outlaws. As for yon traitor Tinker, him will I
hang, if I catch him, upon the very highest gallows tree in all Nottinghamshire."
Then he bade all his
servants and retainers to make ready to go to London Town, to see and speak with
the King.
At this there was
bustling at the Sheriff's castle, and men ran hither and thither upon this
business and upon that, while the forge fires of Nottingham glowed red far into
the night like twinkling stars, for all the smiths of the town were busy making
or mending armor for the Sheriff's troop of escort. For two days this labor
lasted, then, on the third, all was ready for the journey. So forth they started
in the bright sunlight, from Nottingham Town to Fosse Way and thence to Watling
Street; and so they journeyed for two days, until they saw at last the spires
and towers of great London Town; and many folks stopped, as they journeyed along,
and gazed at the show they made riding along the highways with their flashing
armor and gay plumes and trappings.
In London King Henry and
his fair Queen Eleanor held their court, gay with ladies in silks and satins and
velvets and cloth of gold, and also brave knights and gallant courtiers.
Thither came the Sheriff
and was shown into the King's presence.
"A boon, a boon,"
quoth he, as he knelt upon the ground.
"Now what wouldst
thou have?" said the King. "Let us hear what may be thy desires."
"O good my Lord and
Sovereign," spake the Sheriff, "in Sherwood Forest in our own good
shire of Nottingham, liveth a bold outlaw whose name is Robin Hood."
"In good sooth,"
said the King, "his doings have reached even our own royal ears. He is a
saucy, rebellious varlet, yet, I am fain to own, a right merry soul withal."
"But hearken, O my
most gracious Sovereign," said the Sheriff. "I sent a warrant to him
with thine own royal seal attached, by a right lusty knave, but he beat the
messenger and stole the warrant. And he killeth thy deer and robbeth thine own
liege subjects even upon the great highways."
"Why, how now,"
quoth the King wrathfully. "What wouldst thou have me do? Comest thou not
to me with a great array of men-at-arms and retainers, and yet art not able to
take a single band of lusty knaves without armor on breast, in thine own county!
What wouldst thou have me do? Art thou not my Sheriff? Are not my laws in force
in Nottinghamshire? Canst thou not take thine own course against those that
break the laws or do any injury to thee or thine? Go, get thee gone, and think
well; devise some plan of thine own, but trouble me no further. But look well to
it, Master Sheriff, for I will have my laws obeyed by all men within my kingdom,
and if thou art not able to enforce them thou art no sheriff for me. So look
well to thyself, I say, or ill may befall thee as well as all the thieving
knaves in Nottinghamshire. When the flood cometh it sweepeth away grain as well
as chaff."
Then the Sheriff turned
away with a sore and troubled heart, and sadly he rued his fine show of
retainers, for he saw that the King was angry because he had so many men about
him and yet could not enforce the laws. So, as they all rode slowly back to
Nottingham, the Sheriff was thoughtful and full of care. Not a word did he speak
to anyone, and no one of his men spoke to him, but all the time he was busy
devising some plan to take Robin Hood.
"Aha!" cried
he suddenly, smiting his hand upon his thigh "I have it now! Ride on, my
merry men all, and let us get back to Nottingham Town as speedily as we may. And
mark well my words: before a fortnight is passed, that evil knave Robin Hood
will be safely clapped into Nottingham gaol."
But what was the
Sheriff's plan?
As a usurer takes each
one of a bag of silver angels, feeling each coin to find whether it be clipped
or not, so the Sheriff, as all rode slowly and sadly back toward Nottingham,
took up thought after thought in turn, feeling around the edges of each but
finding in every one some flaw. At last he thought of the daring soul of jolly
Robin and how, as he the Sheriff knew, he often came even within the walls of
Nottingham.
"Now," thought
the Sheriff, "could I but persuade Robin nigh to Nottingham Town so that I
could find him, I warrant I would lay hands upon him so stoutly that he would
never get away again." Then of a sudden it came to him like a flash that
were he to proclaim a great shooting match and offer some grand prize, Robin
Hood might be overpersuaded by his spirit to come to the butts; and it was this
thought which caused him to cry "Aha!" and smite his palm upon his
thigh.
So, as soon as he had
returned safely to Nottingham, he sent messengers north and south, and east and
west, to proclaim through town, hamlet, and countryside, this grand shooting
match, and everyone was bidden that could draw a longbow, and the prize was to
be an arrow of pure beaten gold.
When Robin Hood first
heard the news of this he was in Lincoln Town, and hastening back to Sherwood
Forest he soon called all his merry men about him and spoke to them thus:
"Now hearken, my
merry men all, to the news that I have brought from Lincoln Town today. Our
friend the Sheriff of Nottingham hath proclaimed a shooting match, and hath sent
messengers to tell of it through all the countryside, and the prize is to be a
bright golden arrow. Now I fain would have one of us win it, both because of the
fairness of the prize and because our sweet friend the Sheriff hath offered it.
So we will take our bows and shafts and go there to shoot, for I know right well
that merriment will be a-going. What say ye, lads?"
Then young David of
Doncaster spoke up and said, "Now listen, I pray thee, good master, unto
what I say. I have come straight from our friend Eadom o' the Blue Boar, and
there I heard the full news of this same match. But, master, I know from him,
and he got it from the Sheriff's man Ralph o' the Scar, that this same knavish
Sheriff hath but laid a trap for thee in this shooting match and wishes nothing
so much as to see thee there. So go not, good master, for I know right well he
doth seek to beguile thee, but stay within the greenwood lest we all meet dole
and woe."
"Now," quoth
Robin, "thou art a wise lad and keepest thine ears open and thy mouth shut,
as becometh a wise and crafty woodsman. But shall we let it be said that the
Sheriff of Nottingham did cow bold Robin Hood and sevenscore as fair archers as
are in all merry England? Nay, good David, what thou tellest me maketh me to
desire the prize even more than I else should do. But what sayeth our good
gossip Swanthold? Is it not `A hasty man burneth his mouth, and the fool that
keepeth his eyes shut falleth into the pit'? Thus he says, truly, therefore we
must meet guile with guile. Now some of you clothe yourselves as curtal friars,
and some as rustic peasants, and some as tinkers, or as beggars, but see that
each man taketh a good bow or broadsword, in case need should arise. As for
myself, I will shoot for this same golden arrow, and should I win it, we will
hang it to the branches of our good greenwood tree for the joy of all the band.
How like you the plan, my merry men all?"
Then "Good, good!"
cried all the band right heartily.
A fair sight was
Nottingham Town on the day of the shooting match. All along upon the green
meadow beneath the town wall stretched a row of benches, one above the other,
which were for knight and lady, squire and dame, and rich burghers and their
wives; for none but those of rank and quality were to sit there. At the end of
the range, near the target, was a raised seat bedecked with ribbons and scarfs
and garlands of flowers, for the Sheriff of Nottingham and his dame. The range
was twoscore paces broad. At one end stood the target, at the other a tent of
striped canvas, from the pole of which fluttered many-colored flags and
streamers. In this booth were casks of ale, free to be broached by any of the
archers who might wish to quench their thirst.
Across the range from
where the seats for the better folk were raised was a railing to keep the poorer
people from crowding in front of the target. Already, while it was early, the
benches were beginning to fill with people of quality, who kept constantly
arriving in little carts or upon palfreys that curveted gaily to the merry
tinkle of silver bells at bridle reins. With these came also the poorer folk,
who sat or lay upon the green grass near the railing that kept them from off the
range. In the great tent the archers were gathering by twos and threes; some
talking loudly of the fair shots each man had made in his day; some looking well
to their bows, drawing a string betwixt the fingers to see that there was no
fray upon it, or inspecting arrows, shutting one eye and peering down a shaft to
see that it was not warped, but straight and true, for neither bow nor shaft
should fail at such a time and for such a prize. And never was such a company of
yeomen as were gathered at Nottingham Town that day, for the very best archers
of merry England had come to this shooting match. There was Gill o' the Red Cap,
the Sheriff's own head archer, and Diccon Cruikshank of Lincoln Town, and Adam
o' the Dell, a man of Tamworth, of threescore years and more, yet hale and lusty
still, who in his time had shot in the famous match at Woodstock, and had there
beaten that renowned archer, Clym o' the Clough. And many more famous men of the
longbow were there, whose names have been handed down to us in goodly ballads of
the olden time.
But now all the benches
were filled with guests, lord and lady, burgher and dame, when at last the
Sheriff himself came with his lady, he riding with stately mien upon his
milk-white horse and she upon her brown filly. Upon his head he wore a purple
velvet cap, and purple velvet was his robe, all trimmed about with rich ermine;
his jerkin and hose were of sea-green silk, and his shoes of black velvet, the
pointed toes fastened to his garters with golden chains. A golden chain hung
about his neck, and at his collar was a great carbuncle set in red gold. His
lady was dressed in blue velvet, all trimmed with swan's down. So they made a
gallant sight as they rode along side by side, and all the people shouted from
where they crowded across the space from the gentlefolk; so the Sheriff and his
lady came to their place, where men-at-arms, with hauberk and spear, stood about,
waiting for them.
Then when the Sheriff
and his dame had sat down, he bade his herald wind upon his silver horn; who
thereupon sounded three blasts that came echoing cheerily back from the gray
walls of Nottingham. Then the archers stepped forth to their places, while all
the folks shouted with a mighty voice, each man calling upon his favorite yeoman.
"Red Cap!" cried some; "Cruikshank!" cried others; "Hey
for William o' Leslie!" shouted others yet again; while ladies waved silken
scarfs to urge each yeoman to do his best.
Then the herald stood
forth and loudly proclaimed the rules of the game as follows:
"Shoot each man
from yon mark, which is sevenscore yards and ten from the target. One arrow
shooteth each man first, and from all the archers shall the ten that shooteth
the fairest shafts be chosen for to shoot again. Two arrows shooteth each man of
these ten, then shall the three that shoot the fairest shafts be chosen for to
shoot again. Three arrows shooteth each man of those three, and to him that
shooteth the fairest shafts shall the prize be given."
Then the Sheriff leaned
forward, looking keenly among the press of archers to find whether Robin Hood
was among them; but no one was there clad in Lincoln green, such as was worn by
Robin and his band. "Nevertheless," said the Sheriff to himself,
"he may still be there, and I miss him among the crowd of other men. But
let me see when but ten men shoot, for I wot he will be among the ten, or I know
him not."
And now the archers shot,
each man in turn, and the good folk never saw such archery as was done that day.
Six arrows were within the clout, four within the black, and only two smote the
outer ring; so that when the last arrow sped and struck the target, all the
people shouted aloud, for it was noble shooting.
And now but ten men were
left of all those that had shot before, and of these ten, six were famous
throughout the land, and most of the folk gathered there knew them. These six
men were Gilbert o' the Red Cap, Adam o' the Dell, Diccon Cruikshank, William o'
Leslie, Hubert o' Cloud, and Swithin o' Hertford. Two others were yeomen of
merry Yorkshire, another was a tall stranger in blue, who said he came from
London Town, and the last was a tattered stranger in scarlet, who wore a patch
over one eye.
"Now," quoth
the Sheriff to a man-at-arms who stood near him, "seest thou Robin Hood
among those ten?"
"Nay, that do I
not, Your Worship," answered the man. "Six of them I know right well.
Of those Yorkshire yeomen, one is too tall and the other too short for that bold
knave. Robin's beard is as yellow as gold, while yon tattered beggar in scarlet
hath a beard of brown, besides being blind of one eye. As for the stranger in
blue, Robin's shoulders, I ween, are three inches broader than his."
"Then," quoth
the Sheriff, smiting his thigh angrily, "yon knave is a coward as well as a
rogue, and dares not show his face among good men and true."
Then, after they had
rested a short time, those ten stout men stepped forth to shoot again. Each man
shot two arrows, and as they shot, not a word was spoken, but all the crowd
watched with scarce a breath of sound; but when the last had shot his arrow
another great shout arose, while many cast their caps aloft for joy of such
marvelous shooting.
"Now by our
gracious Lady fair," quoth old Sir Amyas o' the Dell, who, bowed with
fourscore years and more, sat near the Sheriff, "ne'er saw I such archery
in all my life before, yet have I seen the best hands at the longbow for
threescore years and more."
And now but three men
were left of all those that had shot before. One was Gill o' the Red Cap, one
the tattered stranger in scarlet, and one Adam o' the Dell of Tamworth Town.
Then all the people called aloud, some crying, "Ho for Gilbert o' the Red
Cap!" and some, "Hey for stout Adam o' Tamworth!" But not a
single man in the crowd called upon the stranger in scarlet.
"Now, shoot thou
well, Gilbert," cried the Sheriff, "and if thine be the best shaft,
fivescore broad silver pennies will I give to thee beside the prize."
"Truly I will do my
best," quoth Gilbert right sturdily. "A man cannot do aught but his
best, but that will I strive to do this day." So saying, he drew forth a
fair smooth arrow with a broad feather and fitted it deftly to the string, then
drawing his bow with care he sped the shaft. Straight flew the arrow and lit
fairly in the clout, a finger's-breadth from the center. "A Gilbert, a
Gilbert!" shouted all the crowd; and, "Now, by my faith," cried
the Sheriff, smiting his hands together, "that is a shrewd shot."
Then the tattered
stranger stepped forth, and all the people laughed as they saw a yellow patch
that showed beneath his arm when he raised his elbow to shoot, and also to see
him aim with but one eye. He drew the good yew bow quickly, and quickly loosed a
shaft; so short was the time that no man could draw a breath betwixt the drawing
and the shooting; yet his arrow lodged nearer the center than the other by twice
the length of a barleycorn.
"Now by all the
saints in Paradise!" cried the Sheriff, "that is a lovely shaft in
very truth!"
Then Adam o' the Dell
shot, carefully and cautiously, and his arrow lodged close beside the stranger's.
Then after a short space they all three shot again, and once more each arrow
lodged within the clout, but this time Adam o' the Dell's was farthest from the
center, and again the tattered stranger's shot was the best. Then, after another
time of rest, they all shot for the third time. This time Gilbert took great
heed to his aim, keenly measuring the distance and shooting with shrewdest care.
Straight flew the arrow, and all shouted till the very flags that waved in the
breeze shook with the sound, and the rooks and daws flew clamoring about the
roofs of the old gray tower, for the shaft had lodged close beside the spot that
marked the very center.
"Well done, Gilbert!"
cried the Sheriff right joyously. "Fain am I to believe the prize is thine,
and right fairly won. Now, thou ragged knave, let me see thee shoot a better
shaft than that."
Nought spake the
stranger but took his place, while all was hushed, and no one spoke or even
seemed to breathe, so great was the silence for wonder what he would do.
Meanwhile, also, quite still stood the stranger, holding his bow in his hand,
while one could count five; then he drew his trusty yew, holding it drawn but a
moment, then loosed the string. Straight flew the arrow, and so true that it
smote a gray goose feather from off Gilbert's shaft, which fell fluttering
through the sunlit air as the stranger's arrow lodged close beside his of the
Red Cap, and in the very center. No one spoke a word for a while and no one
shouted, but each man looked into his neighbor's face amazedly.
"Nay," quoth
old Adam o' the Dell presently, drawing a long breath and shaking his head as he
spoke, "twoscore years and more have I shot shaft, and maybe not all times
bad, but I shoot no more this day, for no man can match with yon stranger,
whosoe'er he may be." Then he thrust his shaft into his quiver, rattling,
and unstrung his bow without another word.
Then the Sheriff came
down from his dais and drew near, in all his silks and velvets, to where the
tattered stranger stood leaning upon his stout bow, while the good folk crowded
around to see the man who shot so wondrously well. "Here, good fellow,"
quoth the Sheriff, "take thou the prize, and well and fairly hast thou won
it, I bow. What may be thy name, and whence comest thou?"
"Men do call me
Jock o' Teviotdale, and thence am I come," said the stranger.
"Then, by Our Lady,
Jock, thou art the fairest archer that e'er mine eyes beheld, and if thou wilt
join my service I will clothe thee with a better coat than that thou hast upon
thy back; thou shalt eat and drink of the best, and at every Christmastide
fourscore marks shall be thy wage. I trow thou drawest better bow than that same
coward knave Robin Hood, that dared not show his face here this day. Say, good
fellow, wilt thou join my service?"
"Nay, that will I
not," quoth the stranger roughly. "I will be mine own, and no man in
all merry England shall be my master."
"Then get thee gone,
and a murrain seize thee!" cried the Sheriff, and his voice trembled with
anger. "And by my faith and troth, I have a good part of a mind to have
thee beaten for thine insolence!" Then he turned upon his heel and strode
away.
It was a right motley
company that gathered about the noble greenwood tree in Sherwood's depths that
same day. A score and more of barefoot friars were there, and some that looked
like tinkers, and some that seemed to be sturdy beggars and rustic hinds; and
seated upon a mossy couch was one all clad in tattered scarlet, with a patch
over one eye; and in his hand he held the golden arrow that was the prize of the
great shooting match. Then, amidst a noise of talking and laughter, he took the
patch from off his eye and stripped away the scarlet rags from off his body and
showed himself all clothed in fair Lincoln green; and quoth he, "Easy come
these things away, but walnut stain cometh not so speedily from yellow hair."
Then all laughed louder than before, for it was Robin Hood himself that had won
the prize from the Sheriff's very hands.
Then all sat down to the
woodland feast and talked among themselves of the merry jest that had been
played upon the Sheriff, and of the adventures that had befallen each member of
the band in his disguise. But when the feast was done, Robin Hood took Little
John apart and said, "Truly am I vexed in my blood, for I heard the Sheriff
say today, `Thou shootest better than that coward knave Robin Hood, that dared
not show his face here this day.' I would fain let him know who it was who won
the golden arrow from out his hand, and also that I am no coward such as he
takes me to be."
Then Little John said,
"Good master, take thou me and Will Stutely, and we will send yon fat
Sheriff news of all this by a messenger such as he doth not expect."
That day the Sheriff sat
at meat in the great hall of his house at Nottingham Town. Long tables stood
down the hall, at which sat men-at-arms and household servants and good stout
villains,[1] in all fourscore and more. There they talked of the day's shooting
as they ate their meat and quaffed their ale. The Sheriff sat at the head of the
table upon a raised seat under a canopy, and beside him sat his dame.
[1] Bond-servants.
"By my troth,"
said he, "I did reckon full roundly that that knave Robin Hood would be at
the game today. I did not think that he was such a coward. But who could that
saucy knave be who answered me to my beard so bravely? I wonder that I did not
have him beaten; but there was something about him that spoke of other things
than rags and tatters."
Then, even as he
finished speaking, something fell rattling among the dishes on the table, while
those that sat near started up wondering what it might be. After a while one of
the men-at-arms gathered courage enough to pick it up and bring it to the
Sheriff. Then everyone saw that it was a blunted gray goose shaft, with a fine
scroll, about the thickness of a goose quill, tied near to its head. The Sheriff
opened the scroll and glanced at it, while the veins upon his forehead swelled
and his cheeks grew ruddy with rage as he read, for this was what he saw:
"Now Heaven bless Thy Grace this day
Say all in sweet Sherwood
For thou didst give the prize away
To merry Robin Hood."
"Whence came this?"
cried the Sheriff in a mighty voice.
"Even through the
window, Your Worship," quoth the man who had handed the shaft to him.
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