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<h2> XXVI. HOW NIGEL FOUND HIS THIRD DEED </h2>
<p>Four archers lay behind a clump of bushes ten yards in front of the thick
hedge which shielded their companions. Amid the long line of bowmen those
behind them were their own company, and in the main the same who were with
Knolles in Brittany. The four in front were their leaders: old Wat of
Carlisle, Ned Widdington the red-headed Dalesman, the bald bowyer
Bartholomew, and Samkin Alyward, newly rejoined after a week's absence.
All four were munching bread and apples, for Aylward had brought in a full
haversack and divided them freely amongst his starving comrades. The old
Borderer and the Yorkshireman were gaunt and hollow-eyed with privation,
while the bowyer's round face had fallen in so that the skin hung in loose
pouches under his eyes and beneath his jaws.</p>
<p>Behind them lines of haggard, wolfish men glared through the underwood,
silent and watchful save that they burst into a fierce yelp of welcome
when Chandos and Nigel galloped up, sprang from their horses and took
their station beneath them. All along the green fringe of bowmen might be
seen the steel-clad figures of knights and squires who had pushed their
way into the front line to share the fortune of the archers.</p>
<p>"I call to mind that I once shot six ends with a Kentish woldsman at
Ashford—" began the Bowyer.</p>
<p>"Nay, nay, we have heard that story!" said old Wat impatiently. "Shut thy
clap, Bartholomew, for it is no time for redeless gossip! Walk down the
line, I pray you, and see if there be no frayed string, nor broken nock
nor loosened whipping to be mended."</p>
<p>The stout bowyer passed down the fringe of bowmen, amidst a running fire
of rough wit. Here and there a bow was thrust out at him through the hedge
for his professional advice.</p>
<p>"Wax your heads!" he kept crying. "Pass down the wax-pot and wax your
heads. A waxed arrow will pass where a dry will be held. Tom Beverley, you
jack-fool! where is your bracer-guard? Your string will flay your arm ere
you reach your up-shot this day. And you, Watkin, draw not to your mouth,
as is your wont, but to your shoulder. You are so used to the wine-pot
that the string must needs follow it. Nay, stand loose, and give space for
your drawing arms, for they will be on us anon."</p>
<p>He ran back and joined his comrades in the front, who had now risen to
their feet. Behind them a half-mile of archers stood behind the hedge,
each with his great warbow strung, half a dozen shafts loose behind him,
and eighteen more in the quiver slung across his front. With arrow on
string, their feet firm-planted, their fierce eager faces peering through
the branches, they awaited the coming storm.</p>
<p>The broad flood of steel, after oozing slowly forward, had stopped about a
mile from the English front. The greater part of the army had then
descended from their horses, while a crowd of varlets and hostlers led
them to the rear. The French formed themselves now into three great
divisions, which shimmered in the sun like silvery pools, reed-capped with
many a thousand of banners and pennons. A space of several hundred yards
divided each. At the same time two bodies of horsemen formed themselves in
front. The first consisted of three hundred men in one thick column, the
second of a thousand, riding in a more extended line.</p>
<p>The Prince had ridden up to the line of archers. He was in dark armor, his
visor open, and his handsome aquiline face all glowing with spirit and
martial fire. The bowmen yelled at him, and he waved his hands to them as
a huntsman cheers his hounds.</p>
<p>"Well, John, what think you now?" he asked. "What would my noble father
not give to be by our side this day? Have you seen that they have left
their horses?"</p>
<p>"Yes, my fair lord, they have learned their lesson," said Chandos.
"Because we have had good fortune upon our feet at Crecy and elsewhere
they think that they have found the trick of it. But it is in my mind that
it is very different to stand when you are assailed, as we have done, and
to assail others when you must drag your harness for a mile and come weary
to the fray."</p>
<p>"You speak wisely, John. But these horsemen who form in front and ride
slowly towards us, what make you of them?"</p>
<p>"Doubtless they hope to cut the strings of our bowmen and so clear a way
for the others. But they are indeed a chosen band, for mark you, fair sir,
are not those the colors of Clermont upon the left, and of d'Andreghen
upon the right, so that both marshals ride with the vanguard?"</p>
<p>"By God's soul, John!" cried the Prince, "it is very sure that you can see
more with one eye than any man in this army with two. But it is even as
you say. And this larger band behind?"</p>
<p>"They should be Germans, fair sir, by the fashion of their harness."</p>
<p>The two bodies of horsemen had moved slowly over the plain, with a space
of nearly a quarter of a mile between them. Now, having come two bowshots
from the hostile line, they halted. All that they could see of the English
was the long hedge, with an occasional twinkle of steel through its leafy
branches, and behind that the spear-heads of the men-at-arms rising from
amidst the brushwood and the vines. A lovely autumn countryside with
changing many-tinted foliage lay stretched before them, all bathed in
peaceful sunshine, and nothing save those flickering fitful gleams to tell
of the silent and lurking enemy who barred their way. But the bold spirit
of the French cavaliers rose the higher to the danger. The clamor of their
war-cries filled the air, and they tossed their pennoned spears over their
heads in menace and defiance. From the English line it was a noble sight,
the gallant, pawing, curveting horses, the many-colored twinkling riders,
the swoop and wave and toss of plume and banner.</p>
<p>Then a bugle rang forth. With a sudden yell every spur struck deep, every
lance was laid in rest, and the whole gallant squadron flew like a
glittering thunderbolt for the center of the English line.</p>
<p>A hundred yards they had crossed, and yet another hundred, but there was
no movement in front of them, and no sound save their own hoarse
battle-cries and the thunder of their horses. Ever swifter and swifter
they flew. From behind the hedge it was a vision of horses, white, bay and
black, their necks stretched, their nostrils distended, their bellies to
the ground, whilst of the rider one could but see a shield with a
plume-tufted visor above it, and a spear-head twinkling in front.</p>
<p>Then of a sudden the Prince raised his hand and gave a cry. Chandos echoed
it, it swelled down the line, and with one mighty chorus of twanging
strings and hissing shafts the long-pent storm broke at last.</p>
<p>Alas for the noble steeds! Alas for the gallant men. When the lust of
battle is over who would not grieve to see that noble squadron break into
red ruin before the rain of arrows beating upon the faces and breasts of
the horses? The front rank crashed down, and the others piled themselves
upon the top of them, unable to check their speed, or to swerve aside from
the terrible wall of their shattered comrades which had so suddenly sprung
up before them. Fifteen feet high was that blood-spurting mound of
screaming, kicking horses and writhing, struggling men. Here and there on
the flanks a horseman cleared himself and dashed for the hedge, only to
have his steed slain under him and to be hurled from his saddle. Of all
the three hundred gallant riders, not one ever reached that fatal hedge.</p>
<p>But now in a long rolling wave of steel the German battalion roared
swiftly onward. They opened in the center to pass that terrible mound of
death, and then spurred swiftly in upon the archers. They were brave men,
well led, and in their open lines they could avoid the clubbing together
which had been the ruin of the vanguard; yet they perished singly even as
the others had perished together. A few were slain by the arrows. The
greater number had their horses killed under them, and were so shaken and
shattered by the fall that they could not raise their limbs, over-weighted
with iron, from the spot where they lay.</p>
<p>Three men riding together broke through the bushes which sheltered the
leaders of the archers, cut down Widdington the Dalesman, spurred onward
through the hedge, dashed over the bowmen behind it, and made for the
Prince. One fell with an arrow through his head, a second was beaten from
his saddle by Chandos, and the third was slain by the Prince's own hand. A
second band broke through near the river, but were cut off by Lord Audley
and his squires, so that all were slain. A single horseman whose steed was
mad with pain, an arrow in its eye and a second in its nostril, sprang
over the hedge and clattered through the whole army, disappearing amid
whoops and laughter into the woods behind. But none others won as far as
the hedge. The whole front of the position was fringed with a litter of
German wounded or dead, while one great heap in the center marked the
downfall of the gallant French three hundred.</p>
<p>Whilst these two waves of the attack had broken in front of the English
position, leaving this blood-stained wreckage behind them, the main
divisions had halted and made their last preparations for their own
assault. They had not yet begun their advance, and the nearest was still
half a mile distant, when the few survivors from the forlorn hope, their
maddened horses bristling with arrows, flew past them on either flank.</p>
<p>At the same moment the English archers and men-at-arms dashed through the
hedge, and dragged all who were living out of that tangled heap of
shattered horses and men. It was a mad wild rush, for in a few minutes the
fight must be renewed, and yet there was a rich harvest of wealth for the
lucky man who could pick a wealthy prisoner from amid the crowd. The
nobler spirits disdained to think of ransoms whilst the fight was still
unsettled; but a swarm of needy soldiers, Gascons and English, dragged the
wounded out by the leg or the arm, and with daggers at their throats
demanded their names, title and means. He who had made a good prize
hurried him to the rear where his own servants could guard him, while he
who was disappointed too often drove the dagger home and then rushed once
more into the tangle in the hope of better luck. Clermont, with an arrow
through the sky-blue Virgin on his surcoat, lay dead within ten paces of
the hedge; d'Andreghen was dragged by a penniless squire from under a
horse and became his prisoner. The Earl of Salzburg and of Nassau were
both found helpless on the ground and taken to the rear. Aylward cast his
thick arms round Count Otto von Langenbeck, and laid him, helpless from a
broken leg, behind his bush. Black Simon had made prize of Bernard, Count
of Ventadour, and hurried him through the hedge. Everywhere there was
rushing and shouting, brawling and buffeting, while amidst it all a swarm
of archers were seeking their shafts, plucking them from the dead, and
sometimes even from the wounded. Then there was a sudden cry of warning.
In a moment every man was back in his place once more, and the line of the
hedge was clear.</p>
<p>It was high time; for already the first division of the French was close
upon them. If the charge of the horsemen had been terrible from its rush
and its fire, this steady advance of a huge phalanx of armored footmen was
even more fearsome to the spectator. They moved very slowly, on account of
the weight of their armor, but their progress was the more regular and
inexorable. With elbows touching—their shields slung in front, their
short five-foot spears carried in their right hands, and their maces or
swords ready at their belts, the deep column of men-at-arms moved onward.
Again the storm of arrows beat upon them clinking and thudding on the
armor. They crouched double behind their shields as they met it. Many
fell, but still the slow tide lapped onward. Yelling, they surged up to
the hedge, and lined it for half a mile, struggling hard to pierce it.</p>
<p>For five minutes the long straining ranks faced each other with fierce
stab of spear on one side and heavy beat of ax or mace upon the other. In
many parts the hedge was pierced or leveled to the ground, and the French
men-at-arms were raging amongst the archers, hacking and hewing among the
lightly armed men. For a moment it seemed as if the battle was on the
turn.</p>
<p>But John de Vere, Earl of Oxford, cool, wise and crafty in war, saw and
seized his chance. On the right flank a marshy meadow skirted the river.
So soft was it that a heavily-armed man would sink to his knees. At his
order a spray of light bowmen was thrown out from the battle line and
forming upon the flank of the French poured their arrows into them. At the
same moment Chandos, with Audley, Nigel, Bartholomew Burghersh, the Captal
de Buch, and a score of other knights sprang upon their horses, and
charging down the narrow lane rode over the French line in front of them.
Once through it they spurred to left and right, trampling down the
dismounted men-at-arms.</p>
<p>A fearsome sight was Pommers that day, his red eyes rolling, his nostrils
gaping, his tawny mane tossing, and his savage teeth gnashing in fury, as
he tore and smashed and ground beneath his ramping hoofs all that came
before him. Fearsome too was the rider, ice-cool; alert, concentrated of
purpose, with, heart of fire and muscles of steel. A very angel of battle
he seemed as he drove his maddened horse through the thickest of the
press, but strive as he would: the tall figure of his master upon his
coal-black steed was ever half a length before him.</p>
<p>Already the moment of danger was passed. The French line had given back.
Those who had pierced the hedge had fallen like brave men amid the ranks
of their foemen. The division of Warwick had hurried up from the vineyards
to fill the gaps of Salisbury's battle-line. Back rolled the shining tide,
slowly at first, even as it had advanced, but quicker now as the bolder
fell and the weaker shredded out and shuffled with ungainly speed for a
place of safety. Again there was a rush from behind the hedge. Again there
was a reaping of that strange crop of bearded arrows which grew so thick
upon the ground, and again the wounded prisoners were seized and dragged
in brutal haste to the rear. Then the line was restored, and the English,
weary, panting and shaken, awaited the next attack.</p>
<p>But a great good fortune had come to them—so great that as they
looked down the valley they could scarce credit their own senses. Behind
the division of the Dauphin, which had pressed them so hard, stood a
second division hardly less numerous, led by the Duke of Orleans. The
fugitives from in front, blood-smeared and bedraggled, blinded with sweat
and with fear, rushed amidst its ranks in their flight, and in a moment,
without a blow being struck, had carried them off in their wild rout. This
vast array, so solid and so martial, thawed suddenly away like a
snow-wreath in the sun. It was gone, and in its place thousands of shining
dots scattered over the whole plain as each man made his own way to the
spot where he could find his horse and bear himself from the field. For a
moment it seemed that the battle was won, and a thundershout of joy pealed
up from the English line.</p>
<p>But as the curtain of the Duke's division was drawn away it was only to
disclose stretching far behind it, and spanning the valley from side to
side, the magnificent array of the French King, solid, unshaken, and
preparing its ranks for the attack. Its numbers were as great as those of
the English army; it was unscathed by all that was past, and it had a
valiant monarch to lead it to the charge. With the slow deliberation of
the man who means to do or to die, its leader marshaled its ranks for the
supreme effort of the day.</p>
<p>Meanwhile during that brief moment of exultation when the battle appeared
to be won, a crowd of hot-headed young knights and squires swarmed and
clamored round the Prince, beseeching that he would allow them to ride
forth.</p>
<p>"See this insolent fellow who bears three martlets upon a field gales!"
cried Sir Maurice Berkeley. "He stands betwixt the two armies as though he
had no dread of us."</p>
<p>"I pray you, sir, that I may ride out to him, since he seems ready to
attempt some small deed," pleaded Nigel.</p>
<p>"Nay, fair sirs, it is an evil thing that we should break our line, seeing
that we still have much to do," said the Prince. "See! he rides away, and
so the matter is settled."</p>
<p>"Nay, fair prince," said the young knight who had spoken first. "My gray
horse, Lebryte, could run him down ere he could reach shelter. Never since
I left Severn side have I seen steed so fleet as mine. Shall I not show
you?" In an instant he had spurred the charger and was speeding across the
plain.</p>
<p>The Frenchman, John de Helennes, a squire of Picardy, had waited with a
burning heart, his soul sick at the flight of the division in which he had
ridden. In the hope of doing some redeeming exploit, or of meeting his own
death, he had loitered betwixt the armies, but no movement had come from
the English lines. Now he had turned his horse's head to join the King's
array, when the low drumming of hoofs sounded behind him, and he turned to
find a horseman hard upon his heels. Each had drawn his sword, and the two
armies paused to view the fight. In the first bout Sir Maurice Berkeley's
lance was struck from his hand, and as he sprang down to recover it the
Frenchman ran him through the thigh, dismounted from his horse, and
received his surrender. As the unfortunate Englishman hobbled away at the
side of his captor a roar of laughter burst from both armies at the
spectacle.</p>
<p>"By my ten finger-bones!" cried Aylward, chuckling behind the remains of
his bush, "he found more on his distaff that time than he knew how to
spin. Who was the knight?"</p>
<p>"By his arms," said old Wat, "he should either be a Berkeley of the West
or a Popham of Kent."</p>
<p>"I call to mind that I shot a match of six ends once with a Kentish
woldsman—" began the fat Bowyer.</p>
<p>"Nay, nay, stint thy talk, Bartholomew!" cried old Wat. "Here is poor Ned
with his head cloven, and it would be more fitting if you were saying aves
for his soul, instead of all this bobance and boasting. Now, now, Tom of
Beverley?"</p>
<p>"We have suffered sorely in this last bout, Wat. There are forty of our
men upon their backs, and the Dean Foresters on the right are in worse
case still."</p>
<p>"Talking will not mend it, Tom, and if all but one were on their backs he
must still hold his ground."</p>
<p>Whilst the archers were chatting, the leaders of the army were in solemn
conclave just behind them. Two divisions of the French had been repulsed,
and yet there was many an anxious face as the older knights looked across
the plain at the unbroken array of the French King moving slowly toward
them. The line of the archers was much thinned and shredded. Many knights
and squires had been disabled in the long and fierce combat at the hedge.
Others, exhausted by want of food, had no strength left and were stretched
panting upon the ground. Some were engaged in carrying the wounded to the
rear and laying them under the shelter of the trees, whilst others were
replacing their broken swords or lances from the weapons of the slain. The
Captal de Buch, brave and experienced as he was, frowned darkly and
whispered his misgivings to Chandos.</p>
<p>But the Prince's courage flamed the higher as the shadow fell, while his
dark eyes gleamed with a soldier's pride as he glanced round him at his
weary comrades, and then at the dense masses of the King's battle which
now, with a hundred trumpets blaring and a thousand pennons waving, rolled
slowly over the plain. "Come what may, John, this has been a most noble
meeting," said he. "They will not be ashamed of us in England. Take heart,
my friends, for if we conquer we shall carry the glory ever with us; but
if we be slain then we die most worshipfully and in high honor, as we have
ever prayed that we might die, and we leave behind us our brothers and
kinsmen who will assuredly avenge us. It is but one more effort, and all
will be well. Warwick, Oxford, Salisbury, Suffolk, every man to the front!
My banner to the front also! Your horses, fair sirs! The archers are
spent, and our own good lances must win the field this day. Advance,
Walter, and may God and Saint George be with England!"</p>
<p>Sir Walter Woodland, riding a high black horse, took station by the
Prince, with the royal banner resting in a socket by his saddle. From all
sides the knights and squires crowded in upon it, until they formed a
great squadron containing the survivors of the battalions of Warwick and
Salisbury as well as those of the Prince. Four hundred men-at-arms who had
been held in reserve were brought up and thickened the array, but even so
Chandos' face was grave as he scanned it and then turned his eyes upon the
masses of the Frenchmen.</p>
<p>"I like it not, fair sir. The weight is overgreat," he whispered to the
Prince.</p>
<p>"How would you order it, John? Speak what is in your mind."</p>
<p>"We should attempt something upon their flank whilst we hold them in
front. How say you, Jean?" He turned to the Captal de Buch, whose dark,
resolute face reflected the same misgivings.</p>
<p>"Indeed, John, I think as you do," said he. "The French King is a very
valiant man, and so are those who are about him, and I know not how we may
drive them back unless we can do as you advise. If you will give me only a
hundred men I will attempt it."</p>
<p>"Surely the task is mine, fair sir, since the thought has come from me,"
said Chandos.</p>
<p>"Nay, John, I would keep you at my side. But you speak well, Jean, and you
shall do even as you have said. Go ask the Earl of Oxford for a hundred
men-at-arms and as many hobblers, that you may ride round the mound
yonder, and so fall upon them unseen. Let all that are left of the archers
gather on each side, shoot away their arrows, and then fight as best they
may. Wait till they are past yonder thorn-bush and then, Walter, bear my
banner straight against that of the King of France. Fair sirs, may God and
the thought of your ladies hold high your hearts!"</p>
<p>The French monarch, seeing that his footmen had made no impression upon
the English, and also that the hedge had been well-nigh leveled to the
ground in the course of the combat, so that it no longer presented an
obstacle, had ordered his followers to remount their horses, and it was as
a solid mass of cavalry that the chivalry of France advanced to their last
supreme effort. The King was in the center of the front line, Geoffrey de
Chargny with the golden oriflamme upon his right, and Eustace de
Ribeaumont with the royal lilies upon the left. At his elbow was the Duke
of Athens, High Constable of France, and round him were the nobles of the
court, fiery and furious, yelling their warcries as they waved their
weapons over their heads. Six thousand gallant men of the bravest race in
Europe, men whose very names are like blasts of a battle-trumpet—Beaujeus
and Chatillons, Tancarvilles and Ventadours—pressed hard behind the
silver lilies.</p>
<p>Slowly they moved at first, walking their horses that they might be the
fresher for the shock. Then they broke into a trot which was quickening
into a gallop when the remains of the hedge in front of them was beaten in
an instant to the ground and the broad line of the steel-clad chivalry of
England swept grandly forth to the final shock. With loose rein and busy
spur the two lines of horsemen galloped at the top of their speed straight
and hard for each other. An instant later they met with a thunder-crash
which was heard by the burghers on the wall of Poitiers, seven good miles
away.</p>
<p>Under that frightful impact horses fell dead with broken necks, and many a
rider, held in his saddle by the high pommel, fractured his thighs with
the shock. Here and there a pair met breast to breast, the horses rearing
straight upward and falling back upon their masters. But for the most part
the line had opened in the gallop, and the cavaliers, flying through the
gaps, buried themselves in the enemy's ranks. Then the flanks shredded
out, and the thick press in the center loosened until there was space to
swing a sword and to guide a steed. For ten acres there was one wild
tumultuous swirl of tossing heads, of gleaming weapons which rose and
fell, of upthrown hands, of tossing plumes and of lifted shields, whilst
the din of a thousand war-cries and the clash-clash of metal upon metal
rose and swelled like the roar and beat of an ocean surge upon a
rock-bound coast. Backward and forward swayed the mighty throng, now down
the valley and now up, as each side in turn put forth its strength for a
fresh rally. Locked in one long deadly grapple, great England and gallant
France with iron hearts and souls of fire strove and strove for mastery.</p>
<p>Sir Walter Woodland, riding hard upon his high black horse, had plunged
into the swelter and headed for the blue and silver banner of King John.
Close at his heels in a solid wedge rode the Prince, Chandos, Nigel, Lord
Reginald Cobham, Audley with his four famous squires, and a score of the
flower of the English and Gascon knighthood. Holding together and bearing
down opposition by a shower of blows and by the weight of their powerful
horses, their progress was still very slow, for ever fresh waves of French
cavaliers surged up against them and broke in front only to close in again
upon their rear. Sometimes they were swept backward by the rush, sometimes
they gained a few paces, sometimes they could but keep their foothold, and
yet from minute to minute that blue and silver flag which waved above the
press grew ever a little closer. A dozen furious hard-breathing French
knights had broken into their ranks, and clutched at Sir Walter Woodland's
banner, but Chandos and Nigel guarded it on one side, Audley with his
squires on the other, so that no man laid his hand upon it and lived.</p>
<p>But now there was a distant crash and a roar of "Saint George for
Guienne!" from behind. The Captal de Buch had charged home. "Saint George
for England!" yelled the main attack, and ever the counter-cry came back
to them from afar. The ranks opened in front of them. The French were
giving way. A small knight with golden scroll-work upon his armor threw
himself upon the Prince and was struck dead by his mace. It was the Duke
of Athens, Constable of France, but none had time to note it, and the
fight rolled on over his body. Looser still were the French ranks. Many
were turning their horses, for that ominous roar from the rear had shaken
their resolution. The little English wedge poured onward, the Prince,
Chandos, Audley and Nigel ever in the van.</p>
<p>A huge warrior in black, bearing a golden banner, appeared suddenly in a
gap of the shredding ranks. He tossed his precious burden to a squire, who
bore it away. Like a pack of hounds on the very haunch of a deer the
English rushed yelling for the oriflamme. But the black warrior flung
himself across their path. "Chargny! Chargny a la recousse!" he roared
with a voice of thunder. Sir Reginald Cobham dropped before his battle-ax,
so did the Gascon de Clisson. Nigel was beaten down on to the crupper of
his horse by a sweeping blow; but at the same instant Chandos' quick blade
passed through the Frenchman's camail and pierced his throat. So died
Geoffrey de Chargny; but the oriflamme was saved.</p>
<p>Dazed with the shock, Nigel still kept his saddle, and Pommers, his yellow
hide mottled with blood, bore him onward with the others. The French
horsemen were now in full flight; but one stern group of knights stood
firm, like a rock in a rushing torrent, beating off all, whether friend or
foe, who tried to break their ranks. The oriflamme had gone, and so had
the blue and silver banner, but here were desperate men ready to fight to
the death. In their ranks honor was to be reaped. The Prince and his
following hurled themselves upon them, while the rest of the English
horsemen swept onward to secure the fugitives and to win their ransoms.
But the nobler spirits—Audley, Chandos and the others—would
have thought it shame to gain money whilst there was work to be done or
honor to be won. Furious was the wild attack, desperate the prolonged
defense. Men fell from their saddles for very exhaustion.</p>
<p>Nigel, still at his place near Chandos' elbow, was hotly attacked by a
short broad-shouldered warrior upon a stout white cob, but Pommers reared
with pawing fore feet and dashed the smaller horse to the ground. The
falling rider clutched Nigel's arm and tore him from the saddle, so that
the two rolled upon the grass under the stamping hoofs, the English squire
on the top, and his shortened sword glimmered before the visor of the
gasping, breathless Frenchman.</p>
<p>"Je me rends! je axe rends!" he panted.</p>
<p>For a moment a vision of rich ransoms passed through Nigel's brain. That
noble palfrey, that gold-flecked armor, meant fortune to the captor. Let
others have it! There was work still to be done. How could he desert the
Prince and his noble master for the sake of a private gain? Could he lead
a prisoner to the rear when honor beckoned him to the van? He staggered to
his feet, seized Pommers by the mane, and swung himself into the saddle.</p>
<p>An instant later he was by Chandos' side once more and they were bursting
together through the last ranks of the gallant group who had fought so
bravely to the end. Behind them was one long swath of the dead and the
wounded. In front the whole wide plain was covered with the flying French
and their pursuers.</p>
<p>The Prince reined up his steed and opened his visor, whilst his followers
crowded round him with waving weapons and frenzied shouts of victory.
"What now, John!" cried the smiling Prince, wiping his streaming face with
his ungauntleted hand. "How fares it then?"</p>
<p>"I am little hurt, fair lord, save for a crushed hand and a spear-prick in
the shoulder. But you, sir? I trust you have no scathe?"</p>
<p>"In truth, John, with you at one elbow and Lord Audley at the other, I
know not how I could come to harm. But alas! I fear that Sir James is
sorely stricken."</p>
<p>The gallant Lord Audley had dropped upon the ground and the blood oozed
from every crevice of his battered armor. His four brave Squires—Dutton
of Dutton, Delves of Doddington, Fowlhurst of Crewe and Hawkstone of
Wainhill—wounded and weary themselves, but with no thought save for
their master, unlaced his helmet and bathed his pallid blood-stained face.</p>
<p>He looked up at the Prince with burning eyes. "I thank you, sir, for
deigning to consider so poor a knight as myself," said he in a feeble
voice.</p>
<p>The Prince dismounted and bent over him. "I am bound to honor you very
much, James," said he, "for by your valor this day you have won glory and
renown above us all, and your prowess has proved you to be the bravest
knight."</p>
<p>"My Lord," murmured the wounded man, "you have a right to say what you
please; but I wish it were as you say."</p>
<p>"James," said the Prince, "from this time onward I make you a knight of my
own household, and I settle upon you five hundred marks of yearly income
from my own estates in England."</p>
<p>"Sir," the knight answered, "God make me worthy of the good fortune you
bestow upon me. Your knight I will ever be, and the money I will divide
with your leave amongst these four squires who have brought me whatever
glory I have won this day." So saying his head fell back, and he lay white
and silent upon the grass.</p>
<p>"Bring water!" said the Prince. "Let the royal leech see to him; for I had
rather lose many men than the good Sir James. Ha, Chandos, what have we
here?"</p>
<p>A knight lay across the path with his helmet beaten down upon his
shoulders. On his surcoat and shield were the arms of a red griffin.</p>
<p>"It is Robert de Duras the spy," said Chandos.</p>
<p>"Well for him that he has met his end," said the angry Prince. "Put him on
his shield, Hubert, and let four archers bear him to the monastery. Lay
him at the feet of the Cardinal and say that by this sign I greet him.
Place my flag on yonder high bush, Walter, and let my tent be raised
there, that my friends may know where to seek me."</p>
<p>The flight and pursuit had thundered far away, and the field was deserted
save for the numerous groups of weary horsemen who were making their way
back, driving their prisoners before them. The archers were scattered over
the whole plain, rifling the saddle-bags and gathering the armor of those
who had fallen, or searching for their own scattered arrows.</p>
<p>Suddenly, however, as the Prince was turning toward the bush which he had
chosen for his headquarters, there broke out from behind him an
extraordinary uproar and a group of knights and squires came pouring
toward him, all arguing, swearing and abusing each other in French and
English at the tops of their voices. In the midst of them limped a stout
little man in gold-spangled armor, who appeared to be the object of the
contention, for one would drag him one way and one another, as though they
would pull him limb from limb. "Nay, fair sirs, gently, gently, I pray
you!" he pleaded. "There is enough for all, and no need to treat me so
rudely." But ever the hubbub broke out again, and swords gleamed as the
angry disputants glared furiously at each other. The Prince's eyes fell
upon the small prisoner, and he staggered back with a gasp of
astonishment.</p>
<p>"King John!" he cried.</p>
<p>A shout of joy rose from the warriors around him. "The King of France! The
King of France a prisoner!" they cried in an ecstasy.</p>
<p>"Nay, nay, fair sirs, let him not hear that we rejoice! Let no word bring
pain to his soul!" Running forward the Prince clasped the French King by
the two hands.</p>
<p>"Most welcome, sire!" he cried. "Indeed it is good for us that so gallant
a knight should stay with us for some short time, since the chance of war
has so ordered it. Wine there! Bring wine for the King!"</p>
<p>But John was flushed and angry. His helmet had been roughly torn off, and
blood was smeared upon his cheek. His noisy captors stood around him in a
circle, eying him hungrily like dogs who have been beaten from their
quarry. There were Gascons and English, knights, squires and archers, all
pushing and straining.</p>
<p>"I pray you, fair Prince, to get rid of these rude fellows," said King
John, "for indeed they have plagued me sorely. By Saint Denis! my arm has
been well-nigh pulled from its socket."</p>
<p>"What wish you then?" asked the Prince, turning angrily upon the noisy
swarm of his followers.</p>
<p>"We took him, fair lord. He is ours!" cried a score of voices. They closed
in, all yelping together like a pack of wolves. "It was I, fair lord!"—"Nay,
it was I!"—"You lie, you rascal, it was I!" Again their fierce eyes
glared and their blood-stained hands sought the hilts of their weapons.</p>
<p>"Nay, this must be settled here and now!" said the Prince. "I crave your
patience, fair and honored sir, for a few brief minutes, since indeed much
ill-will may spring from this if it be not set at rest. Who is this tall
knight who can scarce keep his hands from the King's shoulder?"</p>
<p>"It is Denis de Morbecque, my lord, a knight of St. Omer, who is in our
service, being an outlaw from France."</p>
<p>"I call him to mind. How then, Sir Denis? What say you in this matter?"</p>
<p>"He gave himself to me, fair lord. He had fallen in the press, and I came
upon him and seized him. I told him that I was a knight from Artois, and
he gave me his glove. See here, I bear it in my hand."</p>
<p>"It is true, fair lord! It is true!" cried a dozen French voices.</p>
<p>"Nay, sir, judge not too soon!" shouted an English squire, pushing his way
to the front. "It was I who had him at my mercy, and he is my prisoner,
for he spoke to this man only because he could tell by his tongue that he
was his own countryman. I took him, and here are a score to prove it."</p>
<p>"It is true, fair lord. We saw it and it was even so," cried a chorus of
Englishmen.</p>
<p>At all times there was growling and snapping betwixt the English and their
allies of France. The Prince saw how easily this might set a light to such
a flame as could not readily be quenched. It must be stamped out now ere
it had time to mount.</p>
<p>"Fair and honored lord," he said to the King, "again I pray you for a
moment of patience. It is your word and only yours which can tell us what
is just and right. To whom were you graciously pleased to commit your
royal person?"</p>
<p>King John looked up from the flagon which had been brought to him and
wiped his lips with the dawnings of a smile upon his ruddy face.</p>
<p>"It was not this Englishman," he said, and a cheer burst from the Gascons,
"nor was it this bastard Frenchman," he added. "To neither of them did I
surrender."</p>
<p>There was a hush of surprise.</p>
<p>"To whom then, sir?" asked the Prince.</p>
<p>The King looked slowly round. "There was a devil of a yellow horse," said
he. "My poor palfrey went over like a skittle-pin before a ball. Of the
rider I know nothing save that he bore red roses on a silver shield. Ah!
by Saint Denis, there is the man himself, and there his thrice-accursed
horse!"</p>
<p>His head swimming, and moving as if in a dream, Nigel found himself the
center of the circle of armed and angry men.</p>
<p>The Prince laid his hand upon his shoulder. "It is the little cock of
Tilford Bridge," said he. "On my father's soul, I have ever said that you
would win your way. Did you receive the King's surrender?"</p>
<p>"Nay, fair lord, I did not receive it."</p>
<p>"Did you hear him give it?"</p>
<p>"I heard, sir, but I did not know that it was the King. My master Lord
Chandos had gone on, and I followed after."</p>
<p>"And left him lying. Then the surrender was not complete, and by the laws
of war the ransom goes to Denis de Morbecque, if his story be true."</p>
<p>"It is true," said the King. "He was the second."</p>
<p>"Then the ransom is yours, Denis. But for my part I swear by my father's
soul that I had rather have the honor this Squire has gathered than all
the richest ransoms of France."</p>
<p>At these words spoken before that circle of noble warriors Nigel's heart
gave one great throb, and he dropped upon his knee before the Prince.
"Fair lord, how can I thank you?" he murmured. "These words at least are
more than any ransom."</p>
<p>"Rise up!" said the smiling Prince, and he smote with his sword upon his
shoulder. "England has lost a brave Squire, and has gained a gallant
knight. Nay, linger not, I pray! Rise up, Sir Nigel!"</p>
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