Introduction
England during the twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth centuries was
slowly taught the value of firm administrative government. In Saxon
England, the keeping of the peace and the maintenance of justice had
been left largely to private and family enterprise and to local and
trading communities. In Norman England, the royal authority was
asserted throughout the kingdom, though as yet the king had to
depend in large measure upon the co-operation of his barons and the
help of the burghers to supply the lack of a standing army and an
adequate police. Under the Plantagenets, the older chivalry was
slowly breaking up, and a new, wealthy burgher and trading community
was rapidly gaining influence in the land. It was therefore natural
that in these latter days a class of men should arise to avail
themselves of the unique opportunities of the time—men who, loving
liberty and hating oppression, took the law into their own hands and
executed a rough and ready justice between the rich and the poor
which embodied the best traditions of knight-errantry, whilst they
themselves lived a free and merry life on the tolls they exacted
from their wealthy victims. Such a man may well have been the
original Robin Hood, a man who, when once he had captured the
popular imagination, soon acquired heroic reputation and was
credited with every daring deed and every magnanimous action in two
centuries of ‘freebooting.’
Robin Hood Seeks a Guest
At one time Robin Hood lived in the noble forest of Barnesdale,
in Yorkshire. He had but few of his merry men with him, for his
headquarters were in the glorious forest of Sherwood. Just now,
however, the Sheriff of Nottinghamshire was less active in his
endeavours to put down the band of outlaws, and the leader had
wandered farther north than usual. Robin’s companions were his three
dearest comrades and most loyal followers, Little John (so called
because of his great stature), Will Scarlet, Robin’s cousin, and
Much, the miller’s son. These three were all devoted to their
leader, and never left his side, except at such times as he sent
them away on his business.
On this day Robin was leaning against a tree, lost in thought, and
his three followers grew impatient; they knew that before dinner
could be served there were the three customary Masses to hear, and
their leader gave no sign of being ready for Mass. Robin always
heard three Masses before his dinner, one of the Father, one of the
Holy Spirit, and the last of Our Lady, who was his patron saint and
protector. As the three yeomen were growing hungry, Little John
ventured to address him. “Master, it would do you good if you would
dine early to-day, for you have fasted long.” Robin aroused himself
and smiled. “Ah, Little John, methinks care for thine own appetite
hath a share in that speech, as well as care for me. But in sooth I
care not to dine alone. I would have a stranger guest, some abbot or
bishop or baron, who would pay us for our hospitality. I will not
dine till a guest be found, and I leave it to you three to find
him.” Robin turned away, laughing at the crestfallen faces of his
followers, who had not counted on such a vague commission; but
Little John, quickly recovering himself, called to him: “Master,
tell us, before we leave you, where we shall meet, and what sort of
people we are to capture and bring to you in the greenwood.”
The Outlaws’ Rules
“You know that already,” said their master. “You are to do no harm
to women, nor to any company in which a woman is travelling; this is
in honour of our dear Lady. You are to be kind and gentle to
husbandmen and toilers of all degrees, to worthy knights and yeomen,
to gallant squires, and to all children and helpless people; but
sheriffs (especially him of Nottingham), bishops, and prelates of
all kinds, and usurers in Church and State, you may regard as your
enemies, and may rob, beat, and despoil in any way. Meet me with
your guest at our great trysting oak in the forest, and be speedy,
for dinner must wait until the visitor has arrived.” “Now may God
send us a suitable traveller soon,” said Little John, “for I am
hungry for dinner now.” “So am I,” said each of the others, and
Robin laughed again. “Go ye all three, with bows and arrows in hand,
and I will stay alone at the trysting tree and await your coming. As
no man passes this way, you can walk up to the willow plantation and
take your stand on Watling Street; there you will soon meet with
likely travellers, and I will accept the first who appears. I will
find means to have dinner ready against your return, and we will
hope that our visitor’s generosity will compensate us for the
trouble of cooking his dinner.”
Robin Hood’s Guest
The three yeomen, taking their longbows in hand and arrows in their
belts, walked up through the willow plantation to a place on Watling
Street where another road crossed it; but there was no one in sight.
As they stood with bows in hand, looking towards the forest of
Barnesdale, they saw in the distance a knight riding in their
direction. As he drew nearer they were struck by his appearance, for
he rode as a man who had lost all interest in life; his clothes were
disordered, he looked neither to right nor left, but drooped his
head sadly, while one foot hung in the stirrup and the other dangled
slackly in the air. The yeomen had never seen so doleful a rider;
but, sad as he was, this was a visitor and must be taken to Robin;
accordingly Little John stepped forward and caught the horse by the
bridle.
“Little John caught the horse by the bridle”
Little John Escorts the Knight
The knight raised his head and looked blankly at the outlaw, who at
once doffed his cap, saying, “Welcome, Sir Knight! I give you, on my
master’s behalf, a hearty welcome to the greenwood. Gentle knight,
come now to my master, who hath waited three hours, fasting, for
your approach before he would dine. Dinner is prepared, and only
tarries your courteous appearance.” The stranger knight seemed to
consider this address carefully, for he sighed deeply, and then
said: “I cry thee mercy, good fellow, for the delay, though I wot
not how I am the cause thereof. But who is thy master?” Little John
replied: “My master’s name is Robin Hood, and I am sent to guide you
to him.” The knight said: “So Robin Hood is thy leader? I have heard
of him, and know him to be a good yeoman; therefore I am ready to
accompany thee, though, in good sooth, I had intended to eat my
midday meal at Blythe or Doncaster to-day. But it matters little
where a broken man dines!”
Robin Hood’s Feast
The three yeomen conducted the knight along the forest ways to the
trysting oak where Robin awaited them. As they went they
observed that the knight was weeping silently for some great
distress, but their courtesy forbade them to make any show of
noticing his grief. When the appointed spot was reached, Robin
stepped forward and courteously greeted his guest, with head
uncovered and bended knee, and welcomed him gladly to the wild
greenwood. “Welcome, Sir Knight, to our greenwood feast! I have
waited three hours for a guest, and now Our Lady has sent you to me
we can dine, after we have heard Mass.” The knight said nothing but,
“God save you, good Robin, and all your merry men”; and then very
devoutly they heard the three Masses, sung by Friar Tuck. By this
time others of the outlaw band had appeared, having returned from
various errands, and a gay company sat down to a banquet as good as
any the knight had ever eaten.
Robin Converses with the Knight
There was abundance of good things—venison and game of all kinds,
swans and river-fowl and fish, with bread and good wine. Every one
seemed joyous, and merry jests went round that jovial company, till
even the careworn guest began to smile, and then to laugh outright.
At this Robin was well pleased, for he saw that his visitor was a
good man, and was glad to have lifted the burden of his care, even
if only for a few minutes; so he smiled cheerfully at the knight and
said: “Be merry, Sir Knight, I pray, and eat heartily of our food,
for it is with great goodwill that we offer it to you.” “Thanks,
good Robin,” replied the knight. “I have enjoyed my dinner to-day
greatly; for three weeks I have not had so good a meal. If I ever
pass by this way again I will do my best to repay you in kind; as
good a dinner will I try to provide as you have given me.”
Robin Demands Payment
The outlaw chief seemed to be affronted by this suggestion, and
replied, with a touch of pride in his manner: “Thanks for your
proffer, Sir Knight, but, by Heaven! no man has ever yet deemed me a
glutton. While I eat one dinner I am not accustomed to look eagerly
for another—one is enough for me. But as for you, my guest, I think
it only fitting that you should pay before you go; a yeoman was
never meant to pay for a knight’s banquet.” The knight blushed, and
looked confused for a moment, and then said: “True, Robin, and
gladly would I reward you for my entertainment, but I have no money
worth offering; even all I have would not be worthy of your
acceptance, and I should be shamed in your eyes, and those of your
men.”
The Knight’s Poverty
“Is that the truth?” asked Robin, making a sign to Little John, who
arose, and, going to the knight’s steed, unstrapped a small coffer,
which he brought back and placed before his master. “Search it,
Little John,” said he, and “You, sir, tell me the very truth, by
your honour as a belted knight.” “It is truth, on my honour, that I
have but ten shillings,” replied the knight, “and if Little John
searches he will find no more.” “Open the coffer,” said Robin, and
Little John took it away to the other side of the trysting oak,
where he emptied its contents on his outspread cloak, and found
exactly ten shillings. Returning to his master, who sat at his ease,
drinking and gaily conversing with his anxious guest, Little John
whispered: “The knight has told the truth,” and thereupon Robin
exclaimed aloud: “Sir Knight, I will not take one penny from
you; you may rather borrow of me if you have need of more money, for
ten shillings is but a miserable sum for a knight. But tell me now,
if it be your pleasure, how you come to be in such distress.” As he
looked inquiringly at the stranger, whose blush had faded once, only
to be renewed as he found his word of honour doubted, he noticed how
thin and threadbare were his clothes and how worn his russet leather
shoes; and he was grieved to see so noble-seeming a man in such a
plight.
The Knight’s Story
Yet Robin meant to fathom the cause of the knight’s trouble, for
then, perhaps, he would be able to help him, so he continued
pitilessly: “Tell me just one word, which I will keep secret from
all other men: were you driven by compulsion to take up knighthood,
or urged to beg it by reason of the ownership of some small estate;
or have you wasted your old inheritance with fines for brawling and
strife, or in gambling and riotousness, or in borrowing at usury?
All of these are fatal to a good estate.”
The knight replied: “Alas! good Robin, none of these hath been my
undoing. My ancestors have all been knights for over a hundred
years, and I have not lived wastefully, but soberly and sparely. As
short a time ago as last year I had over four hundred pounds saved,
which I could spend freely among my neighbours, and my income was
four hundred pounds a year, from my land; but now my only
possessions are my wife and children. This is the work of God’s
hand, and to Him I commit me to amend my estate in His own good
time.”
How the Money was Lost
“But how have you so soon lost this great wealth?” asked Robin
incredulously; and the knight replied sadly: “Ah, Robin, you have no
son, or you would know that a father will give up all to save his
first-born. I have one gallant son, and when I went on the Crusade
with our noble Prince Edward I left him at home to guard my lands,
for he was twenty years old, and was a brave and comely youth. When
I returned, after two years’ absence, it was to find him in great
danger, for in a public tournament he had slain in open fight a
knight of Lancashire and a bold young squire. He would have died a
shameful death had I not spent all my ready money and other property
to save him from prison, for his enemies were mighty and unjust; and
even that was not enough, for I was forced to mortgage my estates
for more money. All my land lies in pledge to the abbot of St.
Mary’s Abbey, in York, and I have no hope to redeem it. I was riding
to York when your men found me.”
The Sum Required
“For what sum is your land pledged?” asked the master-outlaw; and
the knight replied: “The Abbot lent me four hundred pounds, though
the value of the land is far beyond that.” “What will you do if you
fail to redeem your land?” asked Robin. “I shall leave England at
once, and journey once more to Jerusalem, and tread again the sacred
Hill of Calvary, and never more return to my native land. That will
be my fate, for I see no likelihood of repaying the loan, and I will
not stay to see strangers holding my father’s land. Farewell, my
friend Robin, farewell to you all! Keep the ten shillings; I would
have paid more if I could, but that is the best I can give you.”
“Have you no friends at home?” asked Robin; and the knight said:
“Many friends I thought I had, sir. They were very kind and
helpful in my days of prosperity, when I did not need them; now they
will not know me, so much has my poverty seemed to alter my face and
appearance.”
Robin Offers a Loan
This pitiful story touched the hearts of the simple and kindly
outlaws; they wept for pity, and cared not to hide their tears from
each other, until Robin made them all pledge their guest in bumpers
of good red wine. Then their chief asked, as if continuing his own
train of thought: “Have you any friends who will act as sureties for
the repayment of the loan?” “None at all,” replied the knight
hopelessly, “but God Himself, who suffered on the Tree for us.” This
last reply angered Robin, who thought it savoured too much of
companionship with the fat and hypocritical monks whom he hated, and
he retorted sharply: “No such tricks for me! Do you think I will
take such a surety, or even one of the saints, in return for good
solid gold? Get some more substantial surety, or no gold shall you
have from me. I cannot afford to waste my money.”
The Knight Offers Surety
The knight replied, sighing heavily: “If you will not take these I
have no earthly surety to offer; and in Heaven there is only our
dear Lady. I have served her truly, and she has never failed me till
now, when her servant, the abbot, is playing me so cruel a trick.”
“Do you give Our Lady as your surety?” said Robin Hood. “I would
take her bond for any sum, for throughout all England you could find
no better surety than our dear Lady, who has always been gracious to
me. She is enough security. Go, Little John, to my treasury and
bring me four hundred pounds, well counted, with no false or clipped
coin therein.”
Robin Hood’s Gifts
Little John, accompanied by Much, the careful treasurer of the band,
went quickly to the secret place where the master-outlaw kept his
gold. Very carefully they counted out the coins, testing each, to
see that it was of full weight and value. Then, on the suggestion of
Little John, they provided the knight with new clothing, even to
boots and spurs, and finally supplied him with two splendid horses,
one for riding and one to carry his baggage and the coffer of gold.
The guest watched all these preparations with bewildered eyes, and
turned to Robin, crying, “Why have you done all this for me, a
perfect stranger?” “You are no stranger, but Our Lady’s messenger.
She sent you to me, and Heaven grant you may prove true.”
The Bond of Repayment
“God grant it,” echoed the knight. “But, Robin, when shall I repay
this loan, and where? Set me a day, and I will keep it.” “Here,”
replied the outlaw, “under this greenwood tree, and in a
twelvemonth’s time; so will you have time to regain your friends and
gather your rents from your redeemed lands. Now farewell, Sir
Knight; and since it is not meet for a worthy knight to journey
unattended, I will lend you also my comrade, Little John, to be your
squire, and to do you yeoman service, if need be.” The knight bade
farewell to Robin and his generous followers, and was turning to
ride away, when he suddenly stopped and addressed the master-outlaw:
“In faith, good Robin, I had forgotten one thing. You know not my
name. I am Sir Richard of the Lea, and my land lies in Uterysdale.”
“As for that,” said Robin Hood, “I trouble not myself. You are Our
Lady’s messenger; that is enough for me.” So Sir Richard rode
gladly away, blessing the generous outlaw who lent him money to
redeem his land, and a stout yeoman to defend the loan.
Sir Richard’s Journey
As the knight and his new servant rode on, Sir Richard called to his
man, saying, “I must by all means be in York to-morrow, to pay the
abbot of St. Mary’s four hundred pounds; if I fail of my day I shall
lose my land and lordship for ever”; and Little John answered: “Fear
not, master; we will surely be there in time enough.” Then they rode
on, and reached York early on the last day of the appointed time.
The Abbot and Prior of St. Mary’s
In the meantime the abbot of St. Mary’s was counting that Sir
Richard’s lands were safely his; he had no pity for the poor unlucky
knight, but rather exulted in the legal cruelty which he could
inflict. Very joyfully he called aloud, early that morn: “A
twelvemonth ago to-day we lent four hundred pounds to a needy
knight, Sir Richard of the Lea, and unless he comes by noon to-day
to repay the money he will lose all his land and be disinherited,
and our abbey will be the richer by a fat estate, worth four hundred
pounds a year. Our Lady grant that he keep not his day.” “Shame on
you!” cried the prior. “This poor knight may be ill, or beyond the
sea; he may be in hunger and cold as well as poverty, and it will be
a foul wrong if you declare his land forfeit.”
“This is the set day,” replied the abbot, “and he is not here.” “You
dare not escheat his estates yet,” replied the prior stubbornly. “It
is too early in the day; until noon the lands are still Sir
Richard’s, and no man shall take them ere the clock strikes.
Shame on your conscience and your greed, to do a good knight such
foul wrong! I would willingly pay a hundred pounds myself to prevent
it.”
“Beshrew your meddlesome temper!” cried the abbot. “You are always
crossing me! But I have with me the Lord Chief Justice, and he will
declare my legal right.” Just at that moment the high cellarer of
the abbey entered to congratulate the abbot on Sir Richard’s
absence. “He is dead or ill, and we shall have the spending of four
hundred pounds a year,” quoth he.
Sir Richard Returns
On his arrival Sir Richard had quietly gone round to his old tenants
in York, and had a goodly company of them ready to ride with him,
but he was minded to test the charity and true religion of the
abbot, and bade his followers assume pilgrims’ robes. Thus attired,
the company rode to the abbey gate, where the porter recognised Sir
Richard, and the news of his coming, carried to the abbot and
justice, caused them great grief; but the prior rejoiced, hoping
that a cruel injustice would be prevented. As they dismounted the
porter loudly called grooms to lead the horses into the stable and
have them relieved of their burdens, but Sir Richard would not allow
it, and left Little John to watch over them at the abbey portal.
The Abbot and Sir Richard
Then Sir Richard came humbly into the hall, where a great banquet
was in progress, and knelt down in courteous salutation to the abbot
and his guests; but the prelate, who had made up his mind what
conduct to adopt, greeted him coldly, and many men did not return
his salutation at all. Sir Richard spoke aloud: “Rejoice, Sir Abbot,
for I am come to keep my day.” “That is well,” replied the monk,
“but hast thou brought the money?” “No money have I, not one penny,”
continued Sir Richard sadly. “Pledge me in good red wine, Sir
Justice,” cried the abbot callously; “the land is mine. And what
dost thou here, Sir Richard, a broken man, with no money to pay thy
debt?” “I am come to beg you to grant me a longer time for
repayment.” “Not one minute past the appointed hour,” said the
exultant prelate. “Thou hast broken pledge, and thy land is
forfeit.”
Sir Richard Implores the Justice
Still kneeling, Sir Richard turned to the justice and said: “Good
Sir Justice, be my friend and plead for me.” “No,” he replied, “I
hold to the law, and can give thee no help.” “Gentle abbot, have
pity on me, and let me have my land again, and I will be the humble
servant of your monastery till I have repaid in full your four
hundred pounds.” Then the cruel prelate swore a terrible oath that
never should the knight have his land again, and no one in the hall
would speak for him, kneeling there poor, friendless, and alone; so
at last he began to threaten violence. “Unless I have my land
again,” quoth he, “some of you here shall dearly abide it. Now may I
see the poor man has no friends, for none will stand by me in my
need.”
The Justice Suggests a Compromise
The hint of violence made the abbot furiously angry, and, secure in
his position and the support of the justice, he shouted loudly:
“Out, thou false knight! Out of my hall!” Then at last Sir Richard
rose to his feet in just wrath. “Thou liest, Sir Abbot; foully thou
liest! I was never a false knight. In joust and tourney I have
adventured as far and as boldly as any man alive. There is no true
courtesy in thee, abbot, to suffer a knight to kneel so long.” The
quarrel now seemed so serious that the justice intervened, saying to
the angry prelate, “What will you give me if I persuade him to sign
a legal deed of release? Without it you will never hold this land in
peace.” “You shall have a hundred pounds for yourself,” said the
abbot, and the justice nodded in token of assent.
Sir Richard Pays the Money
Now Sir Richard thought it was time to drop the mask, for noon was
nigh, and he would not risk his land again. Accordingly he cried:
“Nay, but not so easily shall ye have my lands. Even if you were to
pay a thousand pounds more you should not hold my father’s estate.
Have here your money back again”; and, calling for Little John, he
bade him bring into the hall his coffer with the bags inside. Then
he counted out on the table four hundred good golden pounds, and
said sternly: “Abbot, here is your money again. Had you but been
courteous to me I would have rewarded you well; now take your money,
give me a quittance, and I will take my lands once more. Ye are all
witnesses that I have kept my day and have paid in full.” Thereupon
Sir Richard strode haughtily out of the hall, and rode home gladly
to his recovered lands in Uterysdale, where he and his family ever
prayed for Robin Hood. The abbot of St. Mary’s was bitterly enraged,
for he had lost the fair lands of Sir Richard of the Lea and had
received a bare four hundred pounds again. As for Little John, he
went back to the forest and told his master the whole story, to
Robin Hood’s great satisfaction, for he enjoyed the chance of
thwarting the schemes of a wealthy and usurious prelate.
Sir Richard Sets Out to Repay the Loan
When a year had passed all but a few days, Sir Richard of the Lea
said to his wife: “Lady, I must shortly go to Barnesdale to repay
Robin Hood the loan which saved my lands, and would fain take him
some small gift in addition; what do you advise?” “Sir Richard, I
would take a hundred bows of Spanish yew and a hundred sheaves of
arrows, peacock-feathered, or grey-goose-feathered; methinks that
will be to Robin a most acceptable gift.”
Sir Richard followed his wife’s advice, and on the morning of the
appointed day set out to keep his tryst at the outlaws’ oak in
Barnesdale, with the money duly counted, and the bows and arrows for
his present to the outlaw chief.
The Wrestling
As he rode, however, at the head of his troop he passed through a
village where there was a wrestling contest, which he stayed to
watch. He soon saw that the victorious wrestler, who was a stranger
to the village, would be defrauded of his well-earned prize, which
consisted of a white bull, a noble charger gaily caparisoned, a gold
ring, a pipe of wine, and a pair of embroidered gloves. This seemed
so wrong to Sir Richard that he stayed to defend the right, for love
of Robin Hood and of justice, and kept the wrestling ring in awe
with his well-appointed troop of men, so that the stranger was
allowed to claim his prize and carry it off. Sir Richard, anxious
not to arouse the hostility of the villagers, bought the pipe of
wine from the winner, and, setting it abroach, allowed all who would
to drink; and so, in a tumult of cheers and blessings, he rode
away to keep his tryst. By this time, however, it was nearly three
in the afternoon, and he should have been there at twelve. He
comforted himself with the thought that Robin would forgive the
delay, for the sake of its cause, and so rode on comfortably enough
at the head of his gallant company.
Robin’s Impatience
In the meantime Robin had waited patiently at the trysting tree till
noon, but when the hour passed and Sir Richard had not appeared he
began to grow impatient. “Master, let us dine,” said Little John. “I
cannot; I fear Our Lady is angered with me, for she has not sent me
my money,” returned the leader; but his follower replied: “The money
is not due till sunset, master, and Our Lady is true, and so is Sir
Richard; have no fear.” “Do you three walk up through the willow
plantation to Watling Street, as you did last year, and bring me a
guest,” said Robin Hood. “He may be a messenger, a minstrel, a poor
man, but he will come in God’s name.”
The Monks Approach
Again the three yeomen, Little John, Will Scarlet, and Much the
miller’s son, took bow in hand and set out for Watling Street; but
this time they had not long to wait, for they at once saw a little
procession approaching. Two black monks rode at the head; then
followed seven sumpter-mules and a train of fifty-two men, so that
the clerics rode in almost royal state. “Seest thou yon monks?” said
Little John. “I will pledge my soul that they have brought our pay.”
“But they are fifty-four, and we are but three,” said Scarlet.
“Unless we bring them to dinner we dare not face our master,”
cried Little John. “Look well to your bows, your strings and arrows,
and have stout hearts and steady hands. I will take the foremost
monk, for life or death.”
The Capture of the Black Monk
The three outlaws stepped out into the road from the shelter of the
wood; they bent their bows and held their arrows on the string, and
Little John cried aloud: “Stay, churlish monk, or thou goest to thy
death, and it will be on thine own head! Evil on thee for keeping
our master fasting so long.” “Who is your master?” asked the
bewildered monk; and Little John replied: “Robin Hood.” The monk
tossed his head. “He is a foul thief,” cried he, “and will come to a
bad end. I have heard no good of him all my days.” So speaking, he
tried to ride forward and trample down the three yeomen; but Little
John cried: “Thou liest, churlish monk, and thou shalt rue the lie.
He is a good yeoman of this forest, and has bidden thee to dine with
him this day”; and Much, drawing his bow, shot the monk to the
heart, so that he fell to the ground dead. The other black monk was
taken, but all his followers fled, except a little page, and a groom
who tended the sumpter-mules; and thus, with Little John’s help and
guidance, the panic-stricken cleric and his train of baggage were
brought to Robin under the trysting tree.
The Outlaws’ Feast
Robin Hood doffed his cap and greeted his guest with all courtesy,
but the monk would not reply, and Little John’s account of their
meeting made it evident that he was a churlish and unwilling guest.
However, he was obliged to celebrate the three usual Masses, was
given water for his ablutions before the banquet, and then when the
whole fellowship was assembled he was set in the place of honour at
the feast, and reverently served by Robin himself. “Be of good
cheer, Sir Monk,” said Robin. “Where is your abbey when you are at
home, and who is your patron saint?” “I am of St. Mary’s Abbey, in
York, and, simple though I be, I am the high cellarer.”
The High Cellarer and the Suretyship
“For Our Lady’s sake,” said Robin, “we will give this monk the best
of cheer. Drink to me, Sir Monk; the wine is good. But I fear Our
Lady is wroth with me, for she has not sent me my money.” “Fear not,
master,” returned Little John; “this monk is her cellarer, and no
doubt she has made him her messenger and he carries our money with
him.” “That is likely,” replied Robin. “Sir Monk, Our Lady was
surety for a little loan between a good knight and me, and to-day
the money was to be repaid. If you have brought it, pay it to me
now, and I will thank you heartily.” The monk was quite amazed, and
cried aloud: “I have never heard of such a suretyship”; and as he
spoke he looked so anxiously at his sumpter-mules that Robin guessed
there was gold in their pack-saddles.
The Monk is Searched
Accordingly the leader feigned sudden anger. “Sir Monk, how dare you
defame our dear Lady? She is always true and faithful, and as you
say you are her servant, no doubt she has made you her messenger to
bring my money. Tell me truly how much you have in your coffers, and
I will thank you for coming so punctually.” The monk replied: “Sir,
I have only twenty marks in my bags”; to which Robin answered:
“If that be all, and you have told the truth I will not touch one
penny; rather will I lend you some if you need it; but if I find
more, I will leave none, Sir Monk, for a religious man should have
no silver to spend in luxury.” Now the monk looked very greatly
alarmed, but he dared make no protest, as Little John began to
search his bags and coffers.
Success of the Search
When Little John opened the first coffer he emptied its contents, as
before, into his cloak, and counted eight hundred pounds, with which
he went to Robin Hood, saying, “Master, the monk has told the truth;
here are twenty marks of his own, and eight hundred pounds which Our
Lady has sent you in return for your loan.” When Robin heard that he
cried to the miserable monk: “Did I not say so, monk? Is not Our
Lady the best surety a man could have? Has she not repaid me twice?
Go back to your abbey and say that if ever St. Mary’s monks need a
friend they shall find one in Robin Hood.”
The Monk Departs
“Where were you journeying?” asked the outlaw leader. “To settle
accounts with the bailiffs of our manors,” replied the cellarer; but
he was in truth journeying to London, to obtain powers from the king
against Sir Richard of the Lea. Robin thought for a moment, and then
said: “Ah, then we must search your other coffer,” and in spite of
the cellarer’s indignant protests he was deprived of all the money
that second coffer contained. Then he was allowed to depart, vowing
bitterly that a dinner in Blythe or Doncaster would have cost him
much less dear.
Sir Richard Arrives
Late that afternoon Sir Richard of the Lea and his little company
arrived at the trysting tree, and full courteously the knight
greeted his deliverer and apologised for his delay. Robin asked of
his welfare, and the knight told of his protection of the poor
wrestler, for which Robin thanked him warmly. When he would fain
have repaid the loan the generous outlaw refused to accept the
money, though he took with hearty thanks the bows and arrows. In
answer to the knight’s inquiries, Robin said that he had been paid
the money twice over before he came; and he told, to his debtor’s
great amusement, the story of the high cellarer and his eight
hundred pounds, and concluded: “Our Lady owed me no more than four
hundred pounds, and she now gives you, by me, the other four
hundred. Take them, with her blessing, and if ever you need more
come to Robin Hood.”
So Sir Richard returned to Uterysdale, and long continued to use his
power to protect the bold outlaws, and Robin Hood dwelt securely in
the greenwood, doing good to the poor and worthy, but acting as a
thorn in the sides of all oppressors and tyrants.