[Child Christopher by William Morris]@TWC D-Link book
Child Christopher

CHAPTER XVI
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Come quickly, dear maiden, and leave thine horse to crop the grass." So he hurried on to the thorn-bush aforesaid, and she went foot to foot with him, but he touched her not; and straightway she sat her down on the root of the thorn, and smiled frankly on him, and said: "Nay, sir, and now thou hast made me go all this way I am out of breath and weary, so I pray thee of the victual at once." But he had been busy with his scrip which he had left cast down there, and therewithal reached out to her a mighty hunch of bread and a piece of white cheese, and said: "Now shall I fetch thee milk." Wherewith he took up a bowl of aspen tree that had lain by the scrip, and ran off to one of the kine and milked the bowl full, and came back with it heedfully, and set it down beside her and said: "This was the nighest thing to hand, but when thou hast eaten and rested then shall we go to our house, if thou wilt be so kind to me; for there have we better meat and wine to boot." She looked up at him smiling, but her pleasure of the meat and the kindness was so exceeding, that she might not refrain from tears also, but she spake not.
As for him, he knelt beside her, looking on her wistfully; and at last he said: "I shall tell thee, that I am glad that thou wert hungry and that I have seen thee eating, else might I have deemed thee somewhat other than a woman of mankind even yet." She said: "Yea, and why wouldst thou not believe my word thereto ?" He said, reddening: "I almost fear to tell thee, lest thou think me overbold and be angry with me." "Nay," she said, "tell me, for I would know." Said he: "The words are not easy in my rude mouth; but this is what I mean: that though I be young I have seen fair women not a few, but beside any of them thou art a wonder;....and loth I were if thou wert not really of mankind, if it were but for the glory of the world." She hung her head and answered nought a while, and he also seemed ashamed: but presently she spake: "Thou hast been kind to us, wouldst thou tell us thy name?
and then, if it like thee, what thou art ?" "Lady," he said, "my name is easy to tell, I hight Christopher; and whiles folk in merry mockery call me Christopher King; meseems because I am of the least account of all carles.

As for what else I am, a woodman I am, an outlaw, and the friend of them: yet I tell thee I have never by my will done any harm to any child of man; and those friends of mine, who are outlaws also, are kind and loving with me, both man and woman, though needs must they dwell aloof from kings' courts and barons' halls." She looked at him wondering, and as if she did not altogether understand him; and she said: "Where dost thou dwell ?" He said: "To-day I dwell hard by; though where I shall dwell to-morrow, who knows?
And with me are dwelling three of my kind fellows; and the dearest is a young man of mine own age, who is my fellow in all matters, for us to live and die each for the other.

Couldst thou have seen him, thou wouldst love him I deem." "What name hath he ?" said Goldilind.
"He hight David," said Christopher.
But therewith he fell silent and knit his brow, as though he were thinking of some knotty point: but in a while his face cleared, and he said: "If I durst, I would ask thee thy name, and what thou art ?" "As to my name," said she, "I will not tell it thee as now.

As to what I am, I am a poor prisoner; and much have I been grieved and tormented, so that my body hath been but a thing whereby I might suffer anguish.
Something else am I, but I may not tell thee what as yet." He looked on her long, and then arose and went his way along the very track of their footsteps, and he took the horse and brought him back to the thorn, and stood by the lady and reddened, and said: "I must tell thee what I have been doing these last minutes." "Yea," said she, looking at him wonderingly, "hast thou not been fetching my horse to me ?" "So it is," said he; "but something else also.

Ask me, or I cannot tell thee." She laughed, and said: "What else, fair sir ?" Said he: "Ask me what, or I cannot tell thee." "Well, what, then ?" said she.
He answered, stammering and blushing: "I have been looking at thy foot prints, whereby thou camest up from the water, to see what new and fairer blossoms have come up in the meadow where thy feet were set e'en now." She answered him nothing, and he held his peace.


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