TROUBADOUR'S SONG
When
we went hunting in Fairyland,
(O
the chiming bells on her bridle-rein!)
And
the hounds broke leash at the queen's command,
(O
the toss of her palfrey's mane!)
Like
shadows we fled through the weaving shade
With
quivering moonbeams thick inlaid,
And
the shrilling bugles around us played —
I
dreamed that I fought the Dane.
Clatter
of faun-feet sudden and swift,
(O
the view-halloo in the dusky wood!)
And
satyrs crowding the mountain rift,
(O
the flare of her fierce wild mood!)
Boulders
and hollows alive, astir
With
a goat-thighed foe, all teeth and fur,
We
husked that foe like a chestnut bur —
I
thought of the Holy Rood.
We
trailed from our shallop a magic net,
(O
the spell of her voice with its crooning
By
the edge of the world, where the stars are set,
(O
the ripples that rocked our boat!)
But
into the mesh of the star-sown dream
A
mermaid swept on the lashing stream,
A
drift of spume and an emerald gleam—
I
remembered my love's white throat.
When
we held revel in Fairyland,
(O
the whirl of the dancers under the Hill!)
The
wind-harp sang to the queen's light hand,
(O
her eyes, so deep and still!)
But
I was a captive among them all,
And
the jeweled flagons were brimming with gall,
And
the arras of gold was a dungeon-wall, —
I
dreamed that they set me free!
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IV
THE
GRASSHOPPERS' LIBRARY
HOW
RANULPH LE PROVENCAL CEASED TO BE A MINSTREL AND BECAME A TROUBADOUR
ON
a hillside above a stone-terraced oval hollow, a youth lay singing
softly to himself and making such music as he could upon a rote. The
instrument was of the sort which King David had in mind when he said,
"Awake, psaltery and harp; I myself will awake early." It
was a box-shaped thing like a zither, which at one time had probably
owned ten strings. The player was adapting his music as best he might
to favor its peculiarities. Notwithstanding his debonair employment,
he did not look as if he were on very good terms with life. His cloak
and hose were shabby and weather-stained, his doublet was still less
presentable, his cheeks were hollow, and there were dark circles
under his eyes. Presently he abandoned the song altogether, and lay,
chin in hand, staring down into the grass-grown, ancient pit.
It
had begun its history as a Roman amphitheater, a thousand years
before. Gladiators had fought and wild beasts had raged in that
arena, whose encircling wall was high enough to defy the leap of the
most agile of lions. Up here, on the hillside, in the archways
outside the outermost ring of seats, the slaves had watched the
combats. The youth had heard something about these old imperial
customs, and he had guessed that he had come upon a haunt of the
Roman colonists who had founded a forgotten town near by. He
wondered, as he lay there, if he himself were in any better case than
those unknown captives, who had fought and died for the amusement of
their owners.
Ranulph
le Provencal, as he was one day to be known, was the son of a
Provencal father and a Norman mother. In the siege of a town his
father had been killed and his mother had died of starvation, and he
himself had barely escaped with life. That had been the penalty of
being on the wrong side of the struggle between the Normans of Anjou
and their unwilling subjects in Aquitaine. At the moment the
rebellious counts of Aquitaine were getting the best of it. Ranulph
knew little of the tangled politics of the time, but it seemed to him
that all France was turned into a cockpit in which the sovereign
counts of France, who were jealous of their independence, and the
fierce pride of the Angevin dukes who tried to keep a foothold in
both France and England, and the determined ambition of the King who
sat in Paris, were warring over the enslavement of an unhappy people.
He himself had no chance of becoming a knight; his life was broken
off before it had fairly begun. He got his living by wandering from
one place to another making songs. He had a voice, and could coax
music out of almost any sort of instrument; and he had a trick of
putting new words to familiar tunes that made folk laugh and listen.
Neighborhood
quarrels had drained money and spirit out of the part of the country
where he was, and he had almost forgotten what it was like to have
enough to eat. The little dog that had followed him through his
wanderings for a year foraged for scraps and fared better than his
master; but now small Zipero was hungry too. The little fellow had
been mauled by a mastiff that morning, and a blow from a porter's
staff had broken his leg. Ranulph had rescued his comrade at some
cost to himself, and might not have got off so easily if a sudden
sound of trumpets had not cleared the way for a kings vanguard. As
the soldiers rode in at the gates the young minstrel folded his dog
in his cloak and limped out along the highway. Up here in the shade
of some bushes by the deserted ruins, he had done what he could for
his pet, but the little whimper Zipero gave now and then seemed to go
through his heart.
Life
had been difficult before, but he had been stronger, or more
ignorant. He had made blithe songs when he was anything but gay at
heart; he had laughed when others were weeping and howling; he had
danced to his own music when every inch of his body ached with
weariness; and it had all come to this. He had been turned out of his
poor lodgings because he had no money; he had been driven out of the
town because he would not take money earned in a certain way. He
seemed to have come to the end.
If
that were the case he might as well make a song about it and see what
it would be like. He took up the rote, and began to work out a
refrain that was singing itself in his head. Zipero listened; he was
quieter when he heard the familiar sound. The song was flung like a
challenge into the silent arena.
The
Planet of Love in the cloud-swept night
Hangs
like a censer of gold,
And
Venus reigns on her starlit height
Even
as she ruled of old.
Yet
the Planet of War is abroad on earth
In
a chariot of scarlet flame,
And
Mercy and Loyalty, Love and Mirth
Must
die for his grisly fame.
Ravens
are croaking and gray wolves prowl
On
the desolate field of death,
The
smoke of the burning hangs like a cowl —
Grim
Terror throttles the breath.
Yet
a white bird flies in the silent night
To
your window that looks on the sea,
To
bear to my Lady of All Delight
This
one last song from me.
"Princess,
the planets that rule our life
Are
the same for beggar or King,
We
may win or lose in the hazard of strife,
There
is ever a song to sing!
We
are free as the wind, O heart of gold!
The
stars that rule our lot
Are
netted fast in a bond ninefold, —
The
twist of Solomon's Knot."
"So
you believe that, my son?" asked a voice behind him. He sat up
and looked about; an old man in a long dusky cloak and small flat cap
had come over the brow of the hill. He answered, a trifle defiantly.
"Perhaps
I do. At any rate, that is the song."
"Oh,
it is true," the old man said quietly as he knelt beside Zipero
on the turf. He examined the bandages on the little dog's neck and
forelegs, undid them, laid some bruised leaves from his basket on the
wounds. The small creature, with his eyes on his master's face,
licked the stranger's hand gratefully to show that he was more at
ease. "Man alone is free. This herb cannot change itself; it
must heal; that one must slay. Saturn is ever the Greater Malignant;
our Lady Venus cannot rule war, nor can Mars rule a Court of Love.
The most uncertain creature in the world is a man. The stars
themselves cannot force me to revile God."
Ranulph
was silent. After months and years among rude street crowds, the
dignity and kindliness of the old man's ways were like a voice from
another world.
"I
can cure this little animal," the stranger went on presently,
"if you will let me take him to my lodgings, where I have
certain salves and medicines. I shall be pleased if you will come
also, unless you are occupied."
Ranulph
laughed; that was absurd. "I am a street singer," he said.
"My time is not in demand at present. I must tell you, however,
that the Count is my enemy if a friendless beggar can have such a
thing. One of his varlets set his ban-dog on us both, this morning."
"He
will give me no trouble," said the old man quietly. "Come,
children."
Ranulph
got to his feet and followed with Zipero in his arms. At the foot of
the hill on the other side was a nondescript building which had grown
up around what was left of a Roman house. The unruined pillars and
strongly cemented stone-work contrasted oddly with the thatch and
tile of peasant workmen. They passed through a gate where an old and
wrinkled woman peered through a window at them, then they went up a
flight of stairs outside the wall to a tower-room in the third story.
A chorus of welcome arose from a strange company of creatures, caged
and free: finches, linnets, a parrot, a raven which sidled up at once
to have its head scratched, pigeons strutting and cooing on the
window-ledge, and a large cat of a slaty-blue color with solemn,
topaz eyes, which took no more note of Zipero than if he had been a
dog of stone. A basket was provided for the small patient, near the
window that looked out over the hills; the old serving-woman brought
food, simple but well-cooked and delicious, and Ranulph was motioned
to a seat at the table. It was all done so easily and quickly that
dinner was over before Ranulph found words for the gratitude which
filled his soul.
"Will
you not tell me," he said hesitatingly at last, "to whom I
may offer my thanks and service if I may not serve you in some way?"
"Give
to some one else in need, when you can," said his host calmly.
"I am Tomaso of Padua. A physician's business is healing,
wherever he finds sickness in man or beast. Your little friend there
needed certain things; your need is for other things; the man who is
now coming up the stairs needs something else." Taking a harp
from a corner he added, "Perhaps you will amuse yourself with
this for an hour, while I see what that knock at the door means, this
time."
Whoever
the visitor was, he was shown into another room, and Ranulph
presently forgot all his troubles and almost lost the consciousness
of his surroundings, as the harp sang under his hand. He began to put
into words a song which had been haunting him for days, a ballad of a
captive knight who spent seven long years in Fairyland, but in spite
of all that the Fairy Queen's enchantment could do, never forgot his
own people. Many of the popular romances of the time were fairytales
full of magic spells, giants, caverns within the hills, witches and
wood-folk hoofed and horned like Pan, sea-monsters, palaces which
appeared and vanished like moonshine. When they were sung to the
harp-music of a troubadour who knew his work, they seemed very real.
"That
is a good song," said a stranger who had come in so quietly that
Ranulph did not see him. "Did you rind it in Spain?"
Ranulph
stood up and bowed with the grace that had not left him in all his
wandering life. "No," he said, his dark eyes glinting with
laughter, "I learned it in the Grasshoppers' Library. I beg your
pardon, master, that is a saying we have in Provence. You will guess
the meaning. A learned physician found me there, studying diligently
though perhaps not over-profitably upon a hillside."
"Not
bad at all," said the stranger, sitting down by Ranulph in the
window and running over the melody on the harp. His fingers swept the
strings in a confident power that showed him a master-musician, and
he began a song so full of wonder, mystery and sweetness that Ranulph
listened spellbound. Neither of them knew that for centuries after
they sat there singing in a ruined Roman tower, the song would be
known to all the world as the legend of Parzifal.
"I
too have studied in the Grasshoppers' Library," said the singer,
"but I found in an ancient book among the infidels in Spain this
tale of a cup of enchantment, and made use of it. I think that it is
one of those songs which do not die, but travel far and wide in many
disguises, and end perhaps in the Church. You are one of us, are you
not?"
"I
am a street singer," Ranulph answered, "a jongleur a
jester. I make songs for this," he took up his battered rote and
hummed a camp-chorus.
"Do
you mean to say that you play like that on that?" asked the
other. "Your studies must have led you indeed to Fairyland. You
ought to go to England. The Plantagenets are friendly to us
troubadours, and the English are a merry people, who delight in songs
and the hearing of tales."
Ranulph
did not answer. Going to England and going to Fairyland were not in
the same class of undertaking. Fairyland might be just over the
border of the real world, but it cost money to cross the seas.
Tomaso
came in just then, his deep-set eyes twinkling. "It is all
right," he said, nodding to the troubadour.
"I
have been telling our friend here that he should go to England,"
said the latter, rising and putting on his cloak. "If, as you
say, his father was loyal to the House of Anjou, Henry will remember
it. He is a wise old fox, is Henry, and he needs men whom he can
trust. He is changing laws, and that is no easy thing to do when you
have a stubborn people with all sorts of ideas in their heads about
custom, and tradition, and what not. He wants to make things safe for
his sons, and the throne on which he sits is rocking. The French king
is greedy and the Welsh are savage, and Italian galleys crowd the
very Pool of London. I remember me when I was a student in Paris, a
Welsh clerk he calls himself now Giraldus Cambrensis, but his name
then was Gerald Barri, had the room over mine, the year that Philip
was born. We woke up one night to find the whole street ablaze with
torches and lanterns, and two old crones dancing under our windows
with lighted torches in their hands, howling for joy. Barri stuck his
head out of window and asked what ailed them, and one of them
screamed in her cracked voice, 'We have got a Prince now who will
drive you all out of France some day, you Englishmen!' I can see his
face now as he shouted back something that assuredly was not French.
I tell you, Philip will hate the English like his father before him,
and these are times when a troubadour who can keep a merry face and a
close tongue will learn much."
As
the door closed the physician sat down in his round-backed chair,
resting his long, wrinkled hands upon the arms. "Well, my son,"
he said in his unperturbed voice, "I find somebody yonder is
very sorry that you were thrown out of the gates this morning."
Ranulph
glanced up quickly, but said nothing.
"He
had no idea that you were here, of course. He came to get me to ask
the stars what had become of you, as you could not be found on the
road. When he found that you would not serve him in the matter of the
dagger and the poison, he never intended to let you leave the town,
but as you know, your dog, seeing you mishandled, flew at his varlet,
and the thick-headed fellow drove you out before he had any further
orders. By such small means," old Tomaso stroked Zipero's head,
"are evil plans made of no account."
Ranulph
drew a long breath. He had lost color.
"But
you," he faltered, "you must not shelter me if he is thus
determined. He will take vengeance on you."
The
physician smiled. "He dares not. He is afraid of the stars. He
knows also that I hold the death of every soul in his house in some
small vial such as this and he does not know which one. He knows that
I have only to reveal to any minstrel what I know of his plans and
his doings, and he would be driven from the court of his own
sovereign. He can never be sure what I am going to do, and he does
not know himself what he is going to do, so that he fears every one.
By the twelve Houses of Fate, it must be unpleasant to be so given
over to hatred!
"Now,
my son, let us consider. You heard what Christian said but now of the
need of the House of Anjou for faithful service. A trouvère can go
where others cannot. He knows what others dare not ask. He can say
what others cannot. Were it not for that prince of mischief and
minstrelsy, Bertran de Born, Henry and his folk would have been at
peace long ago. Know men's hearts, and though you are a beggar in the
market-place, you can turn them as a man turns a stream with a wooden
dam. You shall go with Christian to Troyes and thence to Tours, and I
will keep your little friend here until he is restored, and bring him
to you when I come to that place. If search is made for you it will
be made in Venice, where they think you have gone."
Ranulph,
with the aid of his new friends, went forth with proper harp and new
raiment a day or two afterward, and repaid the loan of old Tomaso
when he met the latter in Tours some six months later. He did not
give up his studies in the Grasshoppers' Library, but the lean years
were at an end both for him and for Zipero.
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