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<h2> CHAPTER XXI. HOW AGOSTINO PISANO RISKED HIS HEAD. </h2>
<p>Even the squires' table at the Abbey of St. Andrew's at Bordeaux was on a
very sumptuous scale while the prince held his court there. Here first,
after the meagre fare of Beaulieu and the stinted board of the Lady
Loring, Alleyne learned the lengths to which luxury and refinement might
be pushed. Roasted peacocks, with the feathers all carefully replaced, so
that the bird lay upon the dish even as it had strutted in life, boars'
heads with the tusks gilded and the mouth lined with silver foil, jellies
in the shape of the Twelve Apostles, and a great pasty which formed an
exact model of the king's new castle at Windsor—these were a few of
the strange dishes which faced him. An archer had brought him a change of
clothes from the cog, and he had already, with the elasticity of youth,
shaken off the troubles and fatigues of the morning. A page from the inner
banqueting-hall had come with word that their master intended to drink
wine at the lodgings of the Lord Chandos that night, and that he desired
his squires to sleep at the hotel of the "Half Moon" on the Rue des
Apotres. Thither then they both set out in the twilight after the long
course of juggling tricks and glee-singing with which the principal meal
was concluded.</p>
<p>A thin rain was falling as the two youths, with their cloaks over their
heads, made their way on foot through the streets of the old town, leaving
their horses in the royal stables. An occasional oil lamp at the corner of
a street, or in the portico of some wealthy burgher, threw a faint glimmer
over the shining cobblestones, and the varied motley crowd who, in spite
of the weather, ebbed and flowed along every highway. In those scattered
circles of dim radiance might be seen the whole busy panorama of life in a
wealthy and martial city. Here passed the round-faced burgher, swollen
with prosperity, his sweeping dark-clothed gaberdine, flat velvet cap,
broad leather belt and dangling pouch all speaking of comfort and of
wealth. Behind him his serving wench, her blue whimple over her head, and
one hand thrust forth to bear the lanthorn which threw a golden bar of
light along her master's path. Behind them a group of swaggering,
half-drunken Yorkshire dalesmen, speaking a dialect which their own
southland countrymen could scarce comprehend, their jerkins marked with
the pelican, which showed that they had come over in the train of the
north-country Stapletons. The burgher glanced back at their fierce faces
and quickened his step, while the girl pulled her whimple closer round
her, for there was a meaning in their wild eyes, as they stared at the
purse and the maiden, which men of all tongues could understand. Then came
archers of the guard, shrill-voiced women of the camp, English pages with
their fair skins and blue wondering eyes, dark-robed friars, lounging
men-at-arms, swarthy loud-tongued Gascon serving-men, seamen from the
river, rude peasants of the Medoc, and becloaked and befeathered squires
of the court, all jostling and pushing in an ever-changing, many-colored
stream, while English, French, Welsh, Basque, and the varied dialects of
Gascony and Guienne filled the air with their babel. From time to time the
throng would be burst asunder and a lady's horse-litter would trot past
tow torch-bearing archers walking in front of Gascon baron or English
knight, as he sought his lodgings after the palace revels. Clatter of
hoofs, clinking of weapons, shouts from the drunken brawlers, and high
laughter of women, they all rose up, like the mist from a marsh, out of
the crowded streets of the dim-lit city.</p>
<p>One couple out of the moving throng especially engaged the attention of
the two young squires, the more so as they were going in their own
direction and immediately in front of them. They consisted of a man and a
girl, the former very tall with rounded shoulders, a limp of one foot, and
a large flat object covered with dark cloth under his arm. His companion
was young and straight, with a quick, elastic step and graceful bearing,
though so swathed in a black mantle that little could be seen of her face
save a flash of dark eyes and a curve of raven hair. The tall man leaned
heavily upon her to take the weight off his tender foot, while he held his
burden betwixt himself and the wall, cuddling it jealously to his side,
and thrusting forward his young companion to act as a buttress whenever
the pressure of the crowd threatened to bear him away. The evident anxiety
of the man, the appearance of his attendant, and the joint care with which
they defended their concealed possession, excited the interest of the two
young Englishmen who walked within hand-touch of them.</p>
<p>"Courage, child!" they heard the tall man exclaim in strange hybrid
French. "If we can win another sixty paces we are safe."</p>
<p>"Hold it safe, father," the other answered, in the same soft, mincing
dialect. "We have no cause for fear."</p>
<p>"Verily, they are heathens and barbarians," cried the man; "mad, howling,
drunken barbarians! Forty more paces, Tita mia, and I swear to the holy
Eloi, patron of all learned craftsmen, that I will never set foot over my
door again until the whole swarm are safely hived in their camp of Dax, or
wherever else they curse with their presence. Twenty more paces, my
treasure: Ah, my God! how they push and brawl! Get in their way, Tita mia!
Put your little elbow bravely out! Set your shoulders squarely against
them, girl! Why should you give way to these mad islanders? Ah, cospetto!
we are ruined and destroyed!"</p>
<p>The crowd had thickened in front, so that the lame man and the girl had
come to a stand. Several half-drunken English archers, attracted, as the
squires had been, by their singular appearance, were facing towards them,
and peering at them through the dim light.</p>
<p>"By the three kings!" cried one, "here is an old dotard shrew to have so
goodly a crutch! Use the leg that God hath given you, man, and do not bear
so heavily upon the wench."</p>
<p>"Twenty devils fly away with him!" shouted another. "What, how, man! are
brave archers to go maidless while an old man uses one as a
walking-staff?"</p>
<p>"Come with me, my honey-bird!" cried a third, plucking at the girl's
mantle.</p>
<p>"Nay, with me, my heart's desire!" said the first. "By St. George! our
life is short, and we should be merry while we may. May I never see
Chester Bridge again, if she is not a right winsome lass!"</p>
<p>"What hath the old toad under his arm?" cried one of the others. "He hugs
it to him as the devil hugged the pardoner."</p>
<p>"Let us see, old bag of bones; let us see what it is that you have under
your arm!" They crowded in upon him, while he, ignorant of their language,
could but clutch the girl with one hand and the parcel with the other,
looking wildly about in search of help.</p>
<p>"Nay, lads, nay!" cried Ford, pushing back the nearest archer. "This is
but scurvy conduct. Keep your hands off, or it will be the worse for you."</p>
<p>"Keep your tongue still, or it will be the worse for you," shouted the
most drunken of the archers. "Who are you to spoil sport?"</p>
<p>"A raw squire, new landed," said another. "By St. Thomas of Kent! we are
at the beck of our master, but we are not to be ordered by every babe
whose mother hath sent him as far as Aquitaine."</p>
<p>"Oh, gentlemen," cried the girl in broken French, "for dear Christ's sake
stand by us, and do not let these terrible men do us an injury."</p>
<p>"Have no fears, lady," Alleyne answered. "We shall see that all is well
with you. Take your hand from the girl's wrist, you north-country rogue!"</p>
<p>"Hold to her, Wat!" said a great black-bearded man-at-arms, whose steel
breast-plate glimmered in the dusk. "Keep your hands from your bodkins,
you two, for that was my trade before you were born, and, by God's soul! I
will drive a handful of steel through you if you move a finger."</p>
<p>"Thank God!" said Alleyne suddenly, as he spied in the lamp-light a shock
of blazing red hair which fringed a steel cap high above the heads of the
crowd. "Here is John, and Aylward, too! Help us, comrades, for there is
wrong being done to this maid and to the old man."</p>
<p>"Hola, mon petit," said the old bowman, pushing his way through the crowd,
with the huge forester at his heels. "What is all this, then? By the twang
of string! I think that you will have some work upon your hands if you are
to right all the wrongs that you may see upon this side of the water. It
is not to be thought that a troop of bowmen, with the wine buzzing in
their ears, will be as soft-spoken as so many young clerks in an orchard.
When you have been a year with the Company you will think less of such
matters. But what is amiss here? The provost-marshal with his archers is
coming this way, and some of you may find yourselves in the stretch-neck,
if you take not heed."</p>
<p>"Why, it is old Sam Aylward of the White Company!" shouted the
man-at-arms. "Why, Samkin, what hath come upon thee? I can call to mind
the day when you were as roaring a blade as ever called himself a free
companion. By my soul! from Limoges to Navarre, who was there who would
kiss a wench or cut a throat as readily as bowman Aylward of Hawkwood's
company?"</p>
<p>"Like enough, Peter," said Aylward, "and, by my hilt! I may not have
changed so much. But it was ever a fair loose and a clear mark with me.
The wench must be willing, or the man must be standing up against me,
else, by these ten finger bones I either were safe enough for me."</p>
<p>A glance at Aylward's resolute face, and at the huge shoulders of Hordle
John, had convinced the archers that there was little to be got by
violence. The girl and the old man began to shuffle on in the crowd
without their tormentors venturing to stop them. Ford and Alleyne followed
slowly behind them, but Aylward caught the latter by the shoulder.</p>
<p>"By my hilt! camarade," said he, "I hear that you have done great things
at the Abbey to-day, but I pray you to have a care, for it was I who
brought you into the Company, and it would be a black day for me if aught
were to befall you."</p>
<p>"Nay, Aylward, I will have a care."</p>
<p>"Thrust not forward into danger too much, mon petit. In a little time your
wrist will be stronger and your cut more shrewd. There will be some of us
at the 'Rose de Guienne' to-night, which is two doors from the hotel of
the 'Half Moon,' so if you would drain a cup with a few simple archers you
will be right welcome."</p>
<p>Alleyne promised to be there if his duties would allow, and then, slipping
through the crowd, he rejoined Ford, who was standing in talk with the two
strangers, who had now reached their own doorstep.</p>
<p>"Brave young signor," cried the tall man, throwing his arms round Alleyne,
"how can we thank you enough for taking our parts against those horrible
drunken barbarians. What should we have done without you? My Tita would
have been dragged away, and my head would have been shivered into a
thousand fragments."</p>
<p>"Nay, I scarce think that they would have mishandled you so," said Alleyne
in surprise.</p>
<p>"Ho, ho!" cried he with a high crowing laugh, "it is not the head upon my
shoulders that I think of. Cospetto! no. It is the head under my arm which
you have preserved."</p>
<p>"Perhaps the signori would deign to come under our roof, father," said the
maiden. "If we bide here, who knows that some fresh tumult may not break
out."</p>
<p>"Well said, Tita! Well said, my girl! I pray you, sirs, to honor my
unworthy roof so far. A light, Giacomo! There are five steps up. Now two
more. So! Here we are at last in safety. Corpo di Bacco! I would not have
given ten maravedi for my head when those children of the devil were
pushing us against the wall. Tita mia, you have been a brave girl, and it
was better that you should be pulled and pushed than that my head should
be broken."</p>
<p>"Yes indeed, father," said she earnestly.</p>
<p>"But those English! Ach! Take a Goth, a Hun, and a Vandal, mix them
together and add a Barbary rover; then take this creature and make him
drunk—and you have an Englishman. My God I were ever such people
upon earth! What place is free from them? I hear that they swarm in Italy
even as they swarm here. Everywhere you will find them, except in heaven."</p>
<p>"Dear father," cried Tita, still supporting the angry old man, as he
limped up the curved oaken stair. "You must not forget that these good
signori who have preserved us are also English."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes. My pardon, sirs! Come into my rooms here. There are some who
might find some pleasure in these paintings, but I learn the art of war is
the only art which is held in honor in your island."</p>
<p>The low-roofed, oak-panelled room into which he conducted them was
brilliantly lit by four scented oil lamps. Against the walls, upon the
table, on the floor, and in every part of the chamber were great sheets of
glass painted in the most brilliant colors. Ford and Edricson gazed around
them in amazement, for never had they seen such magnificent works of art.</p>
<p>"You like them then," the lame artist cried, in answer to the look of
pleasure and of surprise in their faces. "There are then some of you who
have a taste for such trifling."</p>
<p>"I could not have believed it," exclaimed Alleyne. "What color! What
outlines! See to this martyrdom of the holy Stephen, Ford. Could you not
yourself pick up one of these stones which lie to the hand of the wicked
murtherers?"</p>
<p>"And see this stag, Alleyne, with the cross betwixt its horns. By my
faith! I have never seen a better one at the Forest of Bere."</p>
<p>"And the green of this grass—how bright and clear! Why all the
painting that I have seen is but child's play beside this. This worthy
gentleman must be one of those great painters of whom I have oft heard
brother Bartholomew speak in the old days at Beaulieu."</p>
<p>The dark mobile face of the artist shone with pleasure at the unaffected
delight of the two young Englishmen. His daughter had thrown off her
mantle and disclosed a face of the finest and most delicate Italian
beauty, which soon drew Ford's eyes from the pictures in front of him.
Alleyne, however, continued with little cries of admiration and of
wonderment to turn from the walls to the table and yet again to the walls.</p>
<p>"What think you of this, young sir?" asked the painter, tearing off the
cloth which concealed the flat object which he had borne beneath his arm.
It was a leaf-shaped sheet of glass bearing upon it a face with a halo
round it, so delicately outlined, and of so perfect a tint, that it might
have been indeed a human face which gazed with sad and thoughtful eyes
upon the young squire. He clapped his hands, with that thrill of joy which
true art will ever give to a true artist.</p>
<p>"It is great!" he cried. "It is wonderful! But I marvel, sir, that you
should have risked a work of such beauty and value by bearing it at night
through so unruly a crowd."</p>
<p>"I have indeed been rash," said the artist. "Some wine, Tita, from the
Florence flask! Had it not been for you, I tremble to think of what might
have come of it. See to the skin tint: it is not to be replaced, for paint
as you will, it is not once in a hundred times that it is not either
burned too brown in the furnace or else the color will not hold, and you
get but a sickly white. There you can see the very veins and the throb of
thee blood. Yes, diavolo! if it had broken, my heart would have broken
too. It is for the choir window in the church of St. Remi, and we had
gone, my little helper and I, to see if it was indeed of the size for the
stonework. Night had fallen ere we finished, and what could we do save
carry it home as best we might? But you, young sir, you speak as if you
too knew something of the art."</p>
<p>"So little that I scarce dare speak of it in your presence," Alleyne
answered. "I have been cloister-bred, and it was no very great matter to
handle the brush better than my brother novices."</p>
<p>"There are pigments, brush, and paper," said the old artist. "I do not
give you glass, for that is another matter, and takes much skill in the
mixing of colors. Now I pray you to show me a touch of your art. I thank
you, Tita! The Venetian glasses, cara mia, and fill them to the brim. A
seat, signor!"</p>
<p>While Ford, in his English-French, was conversing with Tita in her Italian
French, the old man was carefully examining his precious head to see that
no scratch had been left upon its surface. When he glanced up again,
Alleyne had, with a few bold strokes of the brush, tinted in a woman's
face and neck upon the white sheet in front of him.</p>
<p>"Diavolo!" exclaimed the old artist, standing with his head on one side,
"you have power; yes, cospetto! you have power, it is the face of an
angel!"</p>
<p>"It is the face of the Lady Maude Loring!" cried Ford, even more
astonished.</p>
<p>"Why, on my faith, it is not unlike her!" said Alleyne, in some confusion.</p>
<p>"Ah! a portrait! So much the better. Young man, I am Agostino Pisano, the
son of Andrea Pisano, and I say again that you have power. Further, I say,
that, if you will stay with me, I will teach you all the secrets of the
glass-stainers' mystery: the pigments and their thickening, which will
fuse into the glass and which will not, the furnace and the glazing—every
trick and method you shall know."</p>
<p>"I would be right glad to study under such a master," said Alleyne; "but I
am sworn to follow my lord whilst this war lasts."</p>
<p>"War! war!" cried the old Italian. "Ever this talk of war. And the men
that you hold to be great—what are they? Have I not heard their
names? Soldiers, butchers, destroyers! Ah, per Bacco! we have men in Italy
who are in very truth great. You pull down, you despoil; but they build
up, they restore. Ah, if you could but see my own dear Pisa, the Duomo,
the cloisters of Campo Santo, the high Campanile, with the mellow throb of
her bells upon the warm Italian air! Those are the works of great men. And
I have seen them with my own eyes, these very eyes which look upon you. I
have seen Andrea Orcagna, Taddeo Gaddi, Giottino, Stefano, Simone Memmi—men
whose very colors I am not worthy to mix. And I have seen the aged Giotto,
and he in turn was pupil to Cimabue, before whom there was no art in
Italy, for the Greeks were brought to paint the chapel of the Gondi at
Florence. Ah, signori, there are the real great men whose names will be
held in honor when your soldiers are shown to have been the enemies of
humankind."</p>
<p>"Faith, sir," said Ford, "there is something to say for the soldiers also,
for, unless they be defended, how are all these gentlemen whom you have
mentioned to preserve the pictures which they have painted?"</p>
<p>"And all these!" said Alleyne. "Have you indeed done them all?—and
where are they to go?"</p>
<p>"Yes, signor, they are all from my hand. Some are, as you see, upon one
sheet, and some are in many pieces which may fasten together. There are
some who do but paint upon the glass, and then, by placing another sheet
of glass upon the top and fastening it, they keep the air from their
painting. Yet I hold that the true art of my craft lies as much in the
furnace as in the brush. See this rose window, which is from the model of
the Church of the Holy Trinity at Vendome, and this other of the 'Finding
of the Grail,' which is for the apse of the Abbey church. Time was when
none but my countrymen could do these things; but there is Clement of
Chartres and others in France who are very worthy workmen. But, ah! there
is that ever shrieking brazen tongue which will not let us forget for one
short hour that it is the arm of the savage, and not the hand of the
master, which rules over the world."</p>
<p>A stern, clear bugle call had sounded close at hand to summon some
following together for the night.</p>
<p>"It is a sign to us as well," said Ford. "I would fain stay here forever
amid all these beautiful things—" staring hard at the blushing Tita
as he spoke—"but we must be back at our lord's hostel ere he reach
it." Amid renewed thanks and with promises to come again, the two squires
bade their leave of the old Italian glass-stainer and his daughter. The
streets were clearer now, and the rain had stopped, so they made their way
quickly from the Rue du Roi, in which their new friends dwelt, to the Rue
des Apotres, where the hostel of the "Half Moon" was situated.</p>
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