My story will take you into times and spaces alike rude and uncivil.

Blood will be spilt, virgins suffer distresses; the horn will sound

through woodland glades; dogs, wolves, deer, and men, Beauty and the

Beasts, will tumble each other, seeking life or death with their

proper tools. There should be mad work, not devoid of entertainment.

When you read the word Explicit, if you have laboured so far,

you will know something of Morgraunt Forest and the Countess Isabel;

the Abbot of Holy Thorn will have postured and schemed (with you

behind the arras); you will have wandered with Isoult and will know

why she was called La Desirous, with Prosper le Gai, and will

understand how a man may fall in love with his own wife. Finally, of

Galors and his affairs, of the great difference there may be between a

Christian and the brutes, of love and hate, grudging and open humour,

faith and works, cloisters and thoughts uncloistered--all in the green

wood--you will know as much as I do if you have cared to follow the

argument. I hope you will not ask me what it all means, or what the

moral of it is.

I rank myself with the historian in this business of

tale-telling, and consider that my sole affair is to hunt the argument

dispassionately. Your romancer must be neither a lover of his heroine

nor (as the fashion now sets) of his chief rascal. He must affect a

genial height, that of a jigger of strings; and his attitude should be

that of the Pulpiteer:--Heaven help you, gentlemen, but I know what is

best for you! Leave everything to me.

It is related of Prosper le Gai, that when his brother Malise, Baron

of Starning and Parrox, showed him the door of their father's house,

and showed it with a meaning not to be mistaken, he stuck a sprig of

green holly in his cap. He put on his armour; his horse and sword also

he took: he was for the wilds. Baron Jocelyn's soul, the priests

reported, was with God; his body lay indubitably under a black effigy

in Starning Church. Baron Malise was lord of the fee, with a twisted

face for Prosper whenever they met in the hall: had there been scores

no deeper this was enough. Prosper was a youth to whom life was a very

pretty thing; he could not afford to have tarnish on the glass; he

must have pleasant looks about him and a sweet air, or at least scope

for the making of them. Baron Malise blew like a miasma and cramped

him like a church-pew: then Adventure beaconed from far off, and his

heart leapt to greet the light. He left at dawn, and alone. Roy, his

page, had begged as hard as he dared for pillion or a donkey. He was

his master's only friend, but Prosper's temper needed no props. "Roy,"

said he, "what I do I will do alone, nor will I imperil any man's

bread. The bread of my brother Malise may be a trifle over-salt to my

taste, but to you it is better than none at all. Season your tongue,

Roy, enure it. Drink water, dry your eyes, and forget me not."




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