He had not gone far out of the Countess's borders before he saw what

had happened. The country had been wasted by fire and sword: cottages

burnt out, trampled gardens, green cornlands black and bruised--

desolation everywhere, but no life. Death he did come upon. In one

cottage he saw two children dead and bound together in the doorway; at

a four-went way a man and woman hung from an ash-tree; of a farmstead

the four walls stood, with a fire yet burning in the rick-yard; in the

duck-pond before the house the bodies of the owners were floating amid

the scum of green weed. That night he slept by a roadside shrine, and

next morning betimes took the lonely track again. Considering all this

as he rode, he reached a sign-post which told him that here the ways

of Wanmeeting and Waisford parted company. "Wanmeeting is my plain

road," thought he, "but plainer still it is that of Galors--and not of

Galors alone. I think the longer going is like to be my shorter. I

will go to Waisford." He did so. After a patch of woodland was a sandy

stretch of road fringed with heather and a few pines. A man was

sitting here, by whose side lay his dead young wife with a

handkerchief over her face. Prosper asked him what all this misery

meant; for at High March, he added, they had no conception of it.

The man turned his gaunt eyes upon him. "We call it the hand of God,

sir."

"Do you though? I see only the hand of man or the devil," said

Prosper.

"May be you are in the right, Messire. Only we think that if God is

Almighty He might stay all this havoc if He would. And since He stays

it not we say He winks at it, which is as good as a nod any day."

"You are out, sir," said Prosper. "As I read, God hath given men wits,

and suffers the devil in order that they may prove them. If they fail

in the test, and of two ways choose the wrong, is God to be blamed?"

"Some of us have no such choice. It is hard that the battle of the

wits should be over our acres, and that our skulls should be cracked

to prove which of them be the tougher."

"God is mighty enough to make laws and too mighty to break them, as I

understand the matter," said Prosper. "But who, under God or devil,

hath done this wrong?"

"Sir," said the man, "it is the Lord of Hauterive (so styled), who

hath taken Waisford and destroyed it with the country for ten miles

round about it, and killed all the women who could not run fast

enough, and such of the men as did not run to him. And this he did

upon the admirable conceit that the men, having no women of their own,

would take pains that they should not be singular in the country, but

full of lessons in butchery, would become butchers themselves. It

seems that there was ground for the opinion. As for me, I should

certainly have been killed had he found me, for butchering is not to

my taste--or was not then. But I was on a journey, and came back to

find my house in ashes and my new wife, what you see."




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