The Well at the World's End: a tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 801 pages of information about The Well at the World's End.
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The Well at the World's End: a tale eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 801 pages of information about The Well at the World's End.

“When I came to Swevenham with two old men that I had known young, the folk made much of me, and made me good cheer, whereof were over long to tell thee; but to speak shortly, I drew the talk round to the matter that we would wot of:  for we spake of the Men of the Dry Tree, and an old man began to say, as master Clement the other day, that this name of theirs was but a token and an armoury which those champions have taken from the Tree itself, which Alexander the Champion saw in his wayfarings; and he said that this tree was on the hither side of the mountains called the Wall of the World, and no great way from the last of the towns whereto Clement will wend; for Clement told me the name thereof, to wit, Goldburg.  Then another and an older man, one that I remember a stout carle ere I left Swevenham, said that this was not so, but that the Tree was on the further side of the Wall of the World, and that he who could lay his hand on the bole thereof was like enough to drink of the Well at the World’s End.  Thereafter another spake, and told a tale of how the champions at Hampton first took the Dry Tree for a token; and he said that the rumour ran, that a woman had brought the tidings thereof to those valiant men, and had fixed the name upon them, though wherefore none knew.  So the talk went on.

“But there was a carline sitting in the ingle, and she knew me and I her.  And indeed in days past, when I was restless and longing to depart, she might have held me at Swevenham, for she was one of the friends that I loved there:  a word and a kiss had done it, or maybe the kiss without the word:  but if I had the word, I had not the kiss of her.  Well, when the talk began to fall, she spake and said to me: 

“’Now it is somewhat strange that the talk must needs fall on this seeking of that which shall not be found, whereas it was but the month before thou wert last at Swevenham, that Wat Miller and Simon Bowyer set off to seek the Well at the World’s End, and took with them Alice of Queenhough, whom Simon loved as well as might be, and Wat somewhat more than well.  Mindest thou not?  There are more than I alive that remember it.’

“‘Yea,’ said I, ‘I remember it well.’

“For indeed, foster-son, these were the very three of whom I told thee, though I told thee not their names.

“‘Well,’ said I; ‘how sped they?  Came they back, or any of them?’ ‘Nay,’ she said, ‘that were scarce to be looked for.’  Said I:  ‘Have any other to thy knowledge gone on this said quest?’

“‘Yea,’ she said, ’I will tell thee all about it, and then there will be an end of the story, for none knoweth better thereof than I. First there was that old man, the wizard, to whom folk from Swevenham and other places about were used to seek for his lore in hidden matters; and some months after those three had departed, folk who went to his abode amongst the mountains found him not; and soon the word was about that he also, for as feeble as

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The Well at the World's End: a tale from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.