The Lady of Blossholme eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 350 pages of information about The Lady of Blossholme.

The Lady of Blossholme eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 350 pages of information about The Lady of Blossholme.

“Now,” said Emlyn, when she had finished setting out this fearful vow, “will you be a man and swear and thereby avenge the dead and save the innocent from death; or will you who have my secret be a crawling monk and go back to Blossholme Abbey and betray me?”

He thought a moment, rubbing his red head, for the thing frightened him, as well it might.  The scales of the balance of his mind hung evenly, and Emlyn knew not which way they would turn.  She saw, and put out all her woman’s strength.  Resting her hand upon his shoulder, she leaned forward and whispered into his ear.

“Do you remember, Thomas, how first we told our young love that spring day down in the copse by the water, and how sweet the daffodils bloomed about our feet—­the daffodils and the wood-lilies?  Do you remember how we swore ourselves each to each for all our lives, aye, and all the lives that were to come, and how for us two the earth was turned to heaven?  And then—­do you remember how that monk walked by—­it was this Clement Maldon—­and froze us with his cruel eyes, and said, ’What do you with the witch’s daughter?  She is not for you.’  And—­oh!  Thomas, I can no more of it,” and she broke down and sobbed, then added, “Swear nothing; get you gone and betray me, if you will.  I’ll bear you no malice, even when I die for it, for after more than twenty years of monkcraft, how could I hope that you would still remain a man?  Come, get you gone swiftly, ere they take us together, and your fair fame is besmirched.  Quick, now, and leave me and my lady and her unborn child to the doom Maldon brews for us.  Alas! for the copse by the river; alas! for the withered lilies!”

Thomas heard; the big blue veins stood out upon his forehead, his great breast heaved, his utterance choked.  At length the words came in a thick torrent.

“I’ll not go, dearie; I’ll swear what you will, by your eyes and by your lips, by the flowers on which we trod, by all the empty years of aching woe and shame, by God upon His throne in heaven, and by the devil in his fires in hell.  Come, come,” and he ran to the altar and clasped the crucifix that stood there.  “Say the words again, or any others that you will, and I’ll repeat them and take the oath, and may fiery worms eat me living for ever and ever if I break a letter of it.”

With a little smile of triumph in her dark eyes Emlyn bent over the kneeling man and whispered—­whispered through the gathering bloom, while he whispered after her, and kissed the Rood in token.

It was done, and they drew away from the altar back to the painted saint.

“So you are a man after all,” she said, laughing aloud.  “Now, man—­my man—­who, if we live through this, shall be my husband if you will—­yes, my husband, for I’ll pay, and be proud of it—­listen to my commands.  See you, I am Moses, and yonder in the Abbey sits Pharaoh with a hardened heart, and you are the angel—­the destroying angel with

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The Lady of Blossholme from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.