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.

Now Bull had done his wailing for his kinsman, and he seemed to wake up as from a dream, and looked about the ring of men and spake:  “Here is a great to do, my masters!  What will ye with me?  Have ye heard, or is it your custom, that when a man cometh on the dead corpse of his brother, his own mother’s son, he turneth it over with his foot, as if it were the carcase of a dog, and so goeth on his way?  This I ask, that albeit I be but a war-taken thrall, I be suffered to lay my brother in earth and heap a howe over him in these mountains.”

They all murmured a yeasay to this save Ralph.  He had been sobered by his fall, and was standing up now betwixt Clement and the captain, who had unbound his hands, now that the others had come up; he hung his head, and was ashamed of his fury by seeming.  But when Bull had spoken, and the others had answered, Ralph said to Bull, wrathfully still, but like a man in his wits:  “Why didst thou say that thou wouldest slay her?” “Hast thou found her?” said Bull.  “Nay,” quoth Ralph, sullenly.  “Well, then,” said Bull, “when thou dost find her, we will speak of it.”  Said Ralph:  “Why didst thou say that she hath slain him?” “I was put out of my wits by the sight of him dead,” said Bull; “But now I say mayhappen she hath slain him.”

“And mayhappen not,” said Clement; “look here to the cleaving of his skull right through this iron headpiece, which he will have bought at Cheaping Knowe (for I have seen suchlike in the armourers’ booth there):  it must have taken a strong man to do this.”

“Yea,” quoth the captain, “and a big sword to boot:  this is the stroke of a strong man wielding a good weapon.”

Said Bull:  “Well, and will my master bid me forego vengeance for my brother’s slaying, or that I bear him to purse?  Then let him slay me now, for I am his thrall.”  Said Ralph:  “Thou shalt do as thou wilt herein, and I also will do as I will.  For if she slew him, the taking of her captive should be set against the slaying.”  “That is but right,” said the captain; “but Sir Ralph, I bid thee take the word of an old man-at-arms for it, that she slew him not; neither she, nor any other woman.”

Said Clement:  “Well, let all this be.  But tell me, lord Ralph, what thou wouldst do, since now thou art come to thyself again?” Said Ralph:  “I would seek the wilderness hereabout, if perchance the damsel be thrust into some cleft or cavern, alive or dead.”

“Well,” said Clement, “this is my rede.  Since Bull Shockhead would bury his brother, and lord Ralph would seek the damsel, and whereas there is water anigh, and the sun is well nigh set, let us pitch our tents and abide here till morning, and let night bring counsel unto some of us.  How say ye, fellows?”

None naysaid it, and they fell to pitching the tents, and lighting the cooking-fires; but Bull at once betook him to digging a grave for his brother, whilst Ralph with the captain and four others went and sought all about the place, and looked into all clefts of rocks, and found not the maiden, nor any token of her.  They were long about it, and when they were come back again, and it was night, though the moon shone out, there was Bull Shockhead standing by the howe of his brother Bull Nosy, which was heaped up high over the place where they had found him.

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