Master Porges waited, but waited in vain. He was pained. "What,

silence?" he whispered awfully. "What, contumacy? Stubborn refusal?

Sinking in sin? Can I believe my ears? Very good, prisoner, very good.

Melot, my bird of paradise, give your evidence."

This had effect. "I confess," said the accused (speaking for the first

time), "I am not a man."

"There now, there now," cried Master Porges in an ecstasy, "the

sleeper awakened! The conscience astir! Oh, infallible fount of

justice! Oh, crown of the generation of Adam too weighty for the

generation of Eve! Observe now, my loving friends, how beautiful the

rills of logic flowing from this stricken wretch. Let me deduce them

for you. As thus. A woman seeketh naturally a man: but this is a

woman; therefore she sought naturally a man. My friends, that is just

what she did. For she sought Messire Prosper le Gai, a lord, the

friend of ladies. Again. A man should cleave unto his wife: but

Messire le Gai is a man, therefore Messire should cleave unto his

wife. 'La, la!' one will say, 'but he hath no wife, owl!' and think to

lay me flat. Oh, wise fool, I reply, take another syllogism conceived

in this manner and double-tongued. It is not good for man to live

alone; neither is it good for a lady to live alone, who hath a great

estate and the cares of it: but Messire Prosper is that man, and her

ladyship is that lady; therefore they should marry; therefore Messire

Prosper should cleave unto her ladyship, and what the devil hath this

woman to do between a man and his wife now? Aha, I have you clean in a

fork. I have purposely omitted a few steps in my ladder of inference

to bring it home. Then, look, cometh crawling this accurséd. O

tempora, O Mores! O Pudor! O Saecula Saeculorum! What incontinency,

you will say; and I say, What, indeed! Then cometh fairly your turn.

Seneschal, you go on threatening me, this is a Christian castle under

a Christian lady, the laws whereof are fixed and stable so that no

man may blink them. I say, Aye. You go on to plead, noble seneschal

(say you), give us our laws lest we perish. I see the tears; I say, Aye.

The penalty of incontinency is well known to you; I say, Aye. It is just.

I bow my head. I say, Take your incontinent incontinently, and deal!"

Master Porges got off the table, and, ceasing to be a justice, became

a creature of his day. Now, his day was a wild one as his dwelling a

barbarous, where the remedy for most offences was a drubbing.

Isoult bowed her head, set her teeth hard, and bent to the storm. The

storm burst over her, shrilled, whistled, and swept her down. In her

unformulate creed Love was, sure enough, a lord of terrible aspect,

gluttonous of blood, in whose service nevertheless the blood-letter

should take delight. No flagellant scored his back more deeply nor

with braver heart than she her smitten side. It would appear that she

was a better Christian than she suspected, since she laid down her

life for her friend, and found therein her reward. And her reward was

this, that Prosper le Gai, the gallant fighter, remained for Melot and

her kind a demi-god in steel, while she, his wife, was adjudged to the

black ram. To the black ram she was strapped, face to the tail, and so

ran the gauntlet of the yelling host in the courtyard, and of the

Countess of Hauterive's chill gaze from the parvise. By this time she

had become a mere doll, poor wretch; and as there is no pleasure in a

love of justice which is not quickened by a sense of judgment, the

pursuers tired after the first mad bout. Some, indeed, found that they

had hurt themselves severely by excess of zeal. This was looked upon

as clear evidence of the devil's possession of a tail, in spite of the

Realists. For if he had not a tail, how could he injure those who

drove him out? This is unanswerable.




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