登陆注册
5452800000077

第77章

But I said: 'Now will I answer thy first question, and tell thee that the Lady thou seekest is verily alive; and she has thriven, for she has drunk of the Well at the World's End, and has put from her the burden of the years.

O Geoffrey, and dost thou not know me?' And I held out my hand to him, and I also was weeping, because of my thought of the years gone by; for this old man had been that swain who had nigh died for me when I fled with my husband from the old king; and he became one of the Dry Tree, and had followed me with kind service about the woods in the days when I was at my happiest.

"But now he fell on his knees before me not like a vassal but like a lover, and kissed my feet, and was beside himself for joy.

And his sons, who were men of some forty summers, tall and warrior-like, kissed my hands and made obeisance before me.

"Now when we had come to ourselves again, old Geoffrey, who was now naught but glad, spake and said: 'It is told amongst us that when our host departed from the Land of the Tower, after thou hadst taken thy due seat upon the throne, that thou didst promise our chieftains how thou wouldst one day come back to the fellowship of the Dry Tree and dwell amongst us.

Wilt thou now hold to thy promise?' I said: 'O Geoffrey, if thou art the last of those seekers, and thou wert but a boy when I dwelt with you of old, who of the Dry Tree is left to remember me?' He hung his head awhile then, and spake:

'Old are we grown, yet art thou fittest to be amongst young folk: unless mine eyes are beguiled by some semblance which will pass away presently.' 'Nay,' quoth I, 'it is not so; as I am now, so shall I be for many and many a day.'

'Well,' said Geoffrey, 'wherever thou mayst be, thou shalt be Queen of men.'

"'I list not to be Queen again,' said I. He laughed and said:

'I wot not how thou mayst help it.'

"I said: 'Tell me of the Dry Tree, how the champions have sped, and have they grown greater or less.' Said he:

'They are warriors and champions from father to son; therefore have they thriven not over well; yet they have left the thick of the wood, and built them a great castle above the little town hight Hampton; so that is now called Hampton under Scaur, for upon the height of the said Scaur is our castle builded: and there we hold us against the Burg of the Four Friths which hath thriven greatly; there is none so great as the Burg in all the lands about.'

"I said: 'And the Land of the Tower, thriveth the folk thereof at all?'

'Nay,' he said, 'they have been rent to pieces by folly and war and greediness: in the Great City are but few people, grass grows in its streets; the merchants wend not the ways that lead thither.

Naught thriveth there since thou stolest thyself away from them.'

"'Nay,' I said, 'I fled from their malice, lest I should have been brought out to be burned once more; and there would have been none to rescue then.'

'Was it so?' said old Geoffrey; 'well it is all one now; their day is done.'

"'Well,' I said, 'come into my house, and eat and drink therein and sleep here to-night, and to-morrow I shall tell thee what I will do.'

"Even so they did; and on the morrow early I spake to Geoffrey and said:

'What hath befallen the Land of Abundance, and the castle my lord built for me there; which we held as our refuge all through the War of the Tower, both before we joined us to you in the wildwood, and afterwards?' He said:

'It is at peace still; no one hath laid hand on it; there is a simple folk dwelling there in the clearing of the wood, which forgetteth thee not; though forsooth strange tales are told of thee there; and the old men deem that it is but a little since thou hast ceased to come and go there; and they are ready to worship thee as somewhat more than the Blessed Saints, were it not for the Fathers of the Thorn who are their masters.'

"I pondered this a while, and then said: 'Geoffrey, ye shall bring me hence away to the peopled parts, and on the way, or when we are come amongst the cities and the kingdoms, we will settle it whither I shall go.

See thou! I were fain to be of the brotherhood of the Dry Tree; yet I deem it will scarce be that I shall go and dwell there straightway.'

"Therewith the old man seemed content; and indeed now that the first joy of our meeting, when his youth sprang up in him once more, was over, he found it hard to talk freely with me, and was downcast and shy before me, as if something had come betwixt us, which had made our lives cold to each other.

"So that day we left the House of the Sorceress, which I shall not see again, till I come there hand in hand with thee, beloved.

When we came to the peopled parts, Geoffrey and his sons brought me to the Land of Abundance, and I found it all as he had said to me: and I took up my dwelling in the castle, and despised not those few folk of the land, but was kind to them: but though they praised my gifts, and honoured me as the saints are honoured, and though they loved me, yet it was with fear, so that I had little part with them.

There I dwelt then; and the book which thou didst read there, part true and part false, and altogether of malice against me, I bought of a monk who came our way, and who at first was sore afeared when he found that he had come to my castle. As to the halling of the Chamber of Dais, I have told thee before how my lord, the King's Son, did do make it in memory of the wilderness wherein he found me, and the life of thralldom from which he brought me.

There I dwelt till nigh upon these days in peace and quiet: not did I go to the Dry Tree for a long while, though many of them sought to me there at the Castle of Abundance; and, woe worth the while! there was oftenest but one end to their guesting, that of all gifts, they besought me but of one, which, alack! I might not give them: and that is the love that I have given to thee, beloved.--And, oh! my fear, that it will weigh too light with thee, to win me pardon of thee for all that thou must needs pardon me, ere thou canst give me all thy love, that I long for so sorely."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 舍与得人生经营课

    舍与得人生经营课

    舍得既是一种生活的哲学,更是一种处世与做人的艺术,是东方禅意中的超然状态。舍与得就如水与火、天与地、阴与阳一样,是既对立又统一的矛盾体,相生相克,相辅相成,存于天地,存于人生,存于心间,存于微妙的细节,囊括了万物运行的所有机理。万事万物均在舍得之中达到和谐,达到统一。要得便须舍,有舍才有得。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 总裁大人:独宠小娇妻

    总裁大人:独宠小娇妻

    她,本是著名设计师最骄傲的女儿,是新一代的设计大师,一夜之间,未婚夫与闺蜜的背叛,让她万念俱灰,因此差点放弃她心爱的设计领域。这还不算,被那个女人设计害她失了身后还处处相逼,真是当她苏柒好欺负吗?那个男人在事后说:我娶你,谁敢欺负你,就是欺负我;她笑笑说好!她说:你若娶我,便不负我,独宠我一人;男人嘴角上扬,摸着她的头开口道:我用时间慢慢证明给你看……
  • 抽出一个江湖

    抽出一个江湖

    正派魔教,江湖朝堂,暗潮汹涌,正所谓时势造英雄,无数英雄豪杰尽相涌现…穆云携抽奖系统穿越而来,成为苍雷派掌门,侠客、宝物、丹药万物皆可抽,且看他如何在这波澜诡谲的世界,重振门派,抽出自己的江湖!
  • 乐园东区16栋303室

    乐园东区16栋303室

    陆大壮向管教标准地鞠了一个躬,转身迈出灰色的铁门,咣啷一声,铁门在他的身后发出一声闷响,陆大壮六年的刑期就算结束了。陆大壮是坐公共汽车回的家。本来,他也想打车,可在这么个荒郊野岭,在监狱附近,他又穿着一身牢服,哪有出租车肯为他停下来。陆大壮是被减刑提前释放的,他的家人并不知情,又因为被关进来的那一年是冬天,现在是盛夏,所以陆大壮没有衣服可换,他只能背着冬天的棉衣,穿着灰色的牢服。他不怕路人的眼光,他想好了,到了市里,找一家商店把这身行头换下来,他就是要突然出现在家人面前,给他们一个惊喜。陆大壮一路打听,倒了三次车才到了传说中的新家——乐园东区。
  • 总裁霸爱:独宠傲娇萌妻

    总裁霸爱:独宠傲娇萌妻

    出国旅游本该多美好的一件事,却遭导游骗光钱财。眼看要追上这骗子了,却突然飞奔过来一个落跑新娘。最后骗子没追到,她反而被抓住了!不就是想坑一笔旅游费外加回国的钱,怎么莫名其妙的就成为了某人的新娘?面对着这个阴晴不定的总裁大人,林晓楠表示有点囧。他对她的溺宠,让林晓楠受宠若惊。从此,踏上了和总裁斗智斗勇的欢脱生活!面对某种行为,林晓楠咆哮:“总裁!不要这么霸道窝萌还是好朋友啊!!!”
  • 原来我是仙一代

    原来我是仙一代

    一股神秘力量降临人间,以一座城为祭坛,千万人为祭品,施行上古禁忌之术,阴阳秩序与天地法则由此动荡,人间祸端频生。妖物走出了封地,僵尸掘开了坟墓,阴魂厉鬼勾魂索命。南馗,一个从千万祭品中逃脱的青年,有一天,一位仙翁找到了他。“你本是仙!”“那您这是……要带我回天上吗?”“不,天庭被占领,我是来凡间避难的!”“……”“你的名字写在《天庭花名册》上,如果灾难降临这片土地,你……也逃不掉的!”“……”南馗两眼一翻,吐血不止:“日你个仙人板板!” _ _ _ 注:本文非修仙非玄幻,集都市、灵异、末世、神话、灵气复苏为一体,欢迎阅读。
  • 名人传记丛书:达·芬奇

    名人传记丛书:达·芬奇

    名人传记丛书——达·芬奇——名字与作品一样不朽于世:“立足课本,超越课堂”,以提高中小学生的综合素质为目的,让中小学生从课内受益到课外,是一生的良师益友。
  • 众神国度之拯救

    众神国度之拯救

    人生的意义是什么?是逃避?是享乐?还是争权夺利?面对命运的不公和生活的困苦,思想的枷锁和精神的束缚,该何去何从?希望在哪里?又该如何拯救?众神国度的故事不是终点,而是起点!
  • 客房管理

    客房管理

    本书主要内容包括客房产品的概念、种类及设计,客房部的组织机构及人力资源管理,客房价格决策和经营效益分析,客房预订与销售管理,客房对客服务与客服清洁保养及管理等。