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<h2> III. THE YELLOW HORSE OF CROOKSBURY </h2>
<p>In those simple times there was a great wonder and mystery in life. Man
walked in fear and solemnity, with Heaven very close above his head, and
Hell below his very feet. God's visible hand was everywhere, in the
rainbow and the comet, in the thunder and the wind. The Devil too raged
openly upon the earth; he skulked behind the hedge-rows in the gloaming;
he laughed loudly in the night-time; he clawed the dying sinner, pounced
on the unbaptized babe, and twisted the limbs of the epileptic. A foul
fiend slunk ever by a man's side and whispered villainies in his ear,
while above him there hovered an angel of grace who pointed to the steep
and narrow track. How could one doubt these things, when Pope and priest
and scholar and King were all united in believing them, with no single
voice of question in the whole wide world?</p>
<p>Every book read, every picture seen, every tale heard from nurse or
mother, all taught the same lesson. And as a man traveled through the
world his faith would grow the firmer, for go where he would there were
the endless shrines of the saints, each with its holy relic in the center,
and around it the tradition of incessant miracles, with stacks of deserted
crutches and silver votive hearts to prove them. At every turn he was made
to feel how thin was the veil, and how easily rent, which screened him
from the awful denizens of the unseen world.</p>
<p>Hence the wild announcement of the frightened monk seemed terrible rather
than incredible to those whom he addressed. The Abbot's ruddy face paled
for a moment, it is true, but he plucked the crucifix from his desk and
rose valiantly to his feet.</p>
<p>"Lead me to him!" said he. "Show me the foul fiend who dares to lay his
grip upon brethren of the holy house of Saint Bernard! Run down to my
chaplain, brother! Bid him bring the exorcist with him, and also the
blessed box of relics, and the bones of Saint James from under the altar!
With these and a contrite and humble heart we may show front to all the
powers of darkness."</p>
<p>But the sacrist was of a more critical turn of mind. He clutched the
monk's arm with a grip which left its five purple spots for many a day to
come.</p>
<p>"Is this the way to enter the Abbot's own chamber, without knock or
reverence, or so much as a 'Pax vobiscum'?" said he sternly. "You were
wont to be our gentlest novice, of lowly carriage in chapter, devout in
psalmody and strict in the cloister. Pull your wits together and answer me
straightly. In what form has the foul fiend appeared, and how has he done
this grievous scathe to our brethren? Have you seen him with your own
eyes, or do you repeat from hearsay? Speak, man, or you stand on the
penance-stool in the chapter-house this very hour!"</p>
<p>Thus adjured, the frightened monk grew calmer in his bearing, though his
white lips and his startled eyes, with the gasping of his breath, told of
his inward tremors.</p>
<p>"If it please you, holy father, and you, reverend sacrist, it came about
in this way. James the subprior, and Brother John and I had spent our day
from sext onward on Hankley, cutting bracken for the cow-houses. We were
coming back over the five-virgate field, and the holy subprior was telling
us a saintly tale from the life of Saint Gregory, when there came a sudden
sound like a rushing torrent, and the foul fiend sprang over the high wall
which skirts the water-meadow and rushed upon us with the speed of the
wind. The lay brother he struck to the ground and trampled into the mire.
Then, seizing the good subprior in his teeth, he rushed round the field,
swinging him as though he were a fardel of old clothes.</p>
<p>"Amazed at such a sight, I stood without movement and had said a credo and
three aves, when the Devil dropped the subprior and sprang upon me. With
the help of Saint Bernard I clambered over the wall, but not before his
teeth had found my leg, and he had torn away the whole back skirt of my
gown." As he spoke he turned and gave corroboration to his story by the
hanging ruins of his long trailing garment.</p>
<p>"In what shape then did Satan appear?" the Abbot demanded.</p>
<p>"As a great yellow horse, holy father—a monster horse, with eyes of
fire and the teeth of a griffin."</p>
<p>"A yellow horse!" The sacrist glared at the scared monk. "You foolish
brother! How will you behave when you have indeed to face the King of
Terrors himself if you can be so frightened by the sight of a yellow
horse? It is the horse of Franklin Aylward, my father, which has been
distrained by us because he owes the Abbey fifty good shillings and can
never hope to pay it. Such a horse, they say, is not to be found betwixt
this and the King's stables at Windsor, for his sire was a Spanish
destrier, and his dam an Arab mare of the very breed which Saladin, whose
soul now reeks in Hell, kept for his own use, and even it has been said
under the shelter of his own tent. I took him in discharge of the debt,
and I ordered the varlets who had haltered him to leave him alone in the
water-meadow, for I have heard that the beast has indeed a most evil
spirit, and has killed more men than one."</p>
<p>"It was an ill day for Waverley that you brought such a monster within its
bounds," said the Abbot. "If the subprior and Brother John be indeed dead,
then it would seem that if the horse be not the Devil he is at least the
Devil's instrument."</p>
<p>"Horse or Devil, holy father, I heard him shout with joy as he trampled
upon Brother John, and had you seen him tossing the subprior as a dog
shakes a rat you would perchance have felt even as I did."</p>
<p>"Come then," cried the Abbot, "let us see with our own eyes what evil has
been done."</p>
<p>And the three monks hurried down the stair which led to the cloisters.</p>
<p>They had no sooner descended than their more pressing fears were set at
rest, for at that very moment, limping, disheveled and mud-stained, the
two sufferers were being led in amid a crowd of sympathizing brethren.
Shouts and cries from outside showed, however, that some further drama was
in progress, and both Abbot and sacrist hastened onward as fast as the
dignity of their office would permit, until they had passed the gates and
gained the wall of the meadow. Looking over it, a remarkable sight
presented itself to their eyes.</p>
<p>Fetlock deep in the lush grass there stood a magnificent horse, such a
horse as a sculptor or a soldier might thrill to see. His color was a
light chestnut, with mane and tail of a more tawny tint. Seventeen hands
high, with a barrel and haunches which bespoke tremendous strength, he
fined down to the most delicate lines of dainty breed in neck and crest
and shoulder. He was indeed a glorious sight as he stood there, his
beautiful body leaning back from his wide-spread and propped fore legs,
his head craned high, his ears erect, his mane bristling, his red nostrils
opening and shutting with wrath, and his flashing eyes turning from side
to side in haughty menace and defiance.</p>
<p>Scattered round in a respectful circle, six of the Abbey lay servants and
foresters, each holding a halter, were creeping toward him. Every now and
then, with a beautiful toss and swerve and plunge, the great creature
would turn upon one of his would-be captors, and with outstretched head,
flying mane and flashing teeth, would chase him screaming to the safety of
the wall, while the others would close swiftly in behind and cast their
ropes in the hope of catching neck or leg, but only in their turn to be
chased to the nearest refuge.</p>
<p>Had two of these ropes settled upon the horse, and had their throwers
found some purchase of stump or boulder by which they could hold them,
then the man's brain might have won its wonted victory over swiftness and
strength. But the brains were themselves at fault which imagined that one
such rope would serve any purpose save to endanger the thrower.</p>
<p>Yet so it was, and what might have been foreseen occurred at the very
moment of the arrival of the monks. The horse, having chased one of his
enemies to the wall, remained so long snorting his contempt over the
coping that the others were able to creep upon him from behind. Several
ropes were flung, and one noose settled over the proud crest and lost
itself in the waving mane. In an instant the creature had turned and the
men were flying for their lives; but he who had cast the rope lingered,
uncertain what use to make of his own success. That moment of doubt was
fatal. With a yell of dismay, the man saw the great creature rear above
him. Then with a crash the fore feet fell upon him and dashed him to the
ground. He rose screaming, was hurled over once more, and lay a quivering,
bleeding heap, while the savage horse, the most cruel and terrible in its
anger of all creatures on earth, bit and shook and trampled the writhing
body.</p>
<p>A loud wail of horror rose from the lines of tonsured heads which skirted
the high wall—a wail which suddenly died away into a long hushed
silence, broken at last by a rapturous cry of thanksgiving and of joy.</p>
<p>On the road which led to the old dark manor-house upon the side of the
hill a youth had been riding. His mount was a sorry one, a weedy,
shambling, long-haired colt, and his patched tunic of faded purple with
stained leather belt presented no very smart appearance; yet in the
bearing of the man, in the poise of his head, in his easy graceful
carriage, and in the bold glance of his large blue eyes, there was that
stamp of distinction and of breed which would have given him a place of
his own in any assembly. He was of small stature, but his frame was
singularly elegant and graceful. His face, though tanned with the weather,
was delicate in features and most eager and alert in expression. A thick
fringe of crisp yellow curls broke from under the dark flat cap which he
was wearing, and a short golden beard hid the outline of his strong square
chin. One white osprey feather thrust through a gold brooch in the front
of his cap gave a touch of grace to his somber garb. This and other points
of his attire, the short hanging mantle, the leather-sheathed
hunting-knife, the cross belt which sustained a brazen horn, the soft
doe-skin boots and the prick spurs, would all disclose themselves to an
observer; but at the first glance the brown face set in gold and the
dancing light of the quick, reckless, laughing eyes, were the one strong
memory left behind.</p>
<p>Such was the youth who, cracking his whip joyously, and followed by half a
score of dogs, cantered on his rude pony down the Tilford Lane, and thence
it was that with a smile of amused contempt upon his face he observed the
comedy in the field and the impotent efforts of the servants of Waverley.</p>
<p>Suddenly, however, as the comedy turned swiftly to black tragedy, this
passive spectator leaped into quick strenuous life. With a spring he was
off his pony, and with another he was over the stone wall and flying
swiftly across the field. Looking up from his victim, the great yellow
horse saw this other enemy approach, and spurning the prostrate, but still
writhing body with its heels, dashed at the newcomer.</p>
<p>But this time there was no hasty flight, no rapturous pursuit to the wall.
The little man braced himself straight, flung up his metal-headed whip,
and met the horse with a crashing blow upon the head, repeated again and
again with every attack. In vain the horse reared and tried to overthrow
its enemy with swooping shoulders and pawing hoofs. Cool, swift and alert,
the man sprang swiftly aside from under the very shadow of death, and then
again came the swish and thud of the unerring blow from the heavy handle.</p>
<p>The horse drew off, glared with wonder and fury at this masterful man, and
then trotted round in a circle, with mane bristling, tail streaming and
ears on end, snorting in its rage and pain. The man, hardly deigning to
glance at his fell neighbor, passed on to the wounded forester, raised him
in his arms with a strength which could not have been expected in so
slight a body, and carried him, groaning, to the wall, where a dozen hands
were outstretched to help him over. Then, at his leisure, the young man
also climbed the wall, smiling back with cool contempt at the yellow
horse, which had come raging after him once more.</p>
<p>As he sprang down, a dozen monks surrounded him to thank him or to praise
him; but he would have turned sullenly away without a word had he not been
stopped by Abbot John in person.</p>
<p>"Nay, Squire Loring," said he, "if you be a bad friend to our Abbey, yet
we must needs own that you have played the part of a good Christian this
day, for if there is breath left in our servant's body it is to you next
to our blessed patron Saint Bernard that we owe it."</p>
<p>"By Saint Paul! I owe you no good-will, Abbot John," said the young man.
"The shadow of your Abbey has ever fallen across the house of Loring. As
to any small deed that I may have done this day, I ask no thanks for it.
It is not for you nor for your house that I have done it, but only because
it was my pleasure so to do."</p>
<p>The Abbot flushed at the bold words, and bit his lip with vexation.</p>
<p>It was the sacrist, however, who answered: "It would be more fitting and
more gracious," said he, "if you were to speak to the holy Father Abbot in
a manner suited to his high rank and to the respect which is due to a
Prince of the Church."</p>
<p>The youth turned his bold blue eyes upon the monk, and his sunburned face
darkened with anger. "Were it not for the gown upon your back, and for
your silvering hair, I would answer you in another fashion," said he. "You
are the lean wolf which growls ever at our door, greedy for the little
which hath been left to us. Say and do what you will with me, but by Saint
Paul! if I find that Dame Ermyntrude is baited by your ravenous pack I
will beat them off with this whip from the little patch which still
remains of all the acres of my fathers."</p>
<p>"Have a care, Nigel Loring, have a care!" cried the Abbot, with finger
upraised. "Have you no fears of the law of England?"</p>
<p>"A just law I fear and obey."</p>
<p>"Have you no respect for Holy Church?"</p>
<p>"I respect all that is holy in her. I do not respect those who grind the
poor or steal their neighbor's land."</p>
<p>"Rash man, many a one has been blighted by her ban for less than you have
now said! And yet it is not for us to judge you harshly this day. You are
young and hot words come easily to your lips. How fares the forester?"</p>
<p>"His hurt is grievous, Father Abbot, but he will live," said a brother,
looking up from the prostrate form. "With a blood-letting and an
electuary, I will warrant him sound within a month."</p>
<p>"Then bear him to the hospital. And now, brother, about this terrible
beast who still gazes and snorts at us over the top of the wall as though
his thoughts of Holy Church were as uncouth as those of Squire Nigel
himself, what are we to do with him?"</p>
<p>"Here is Franklin Aylward," said one of the brethren. "The horse was his,
and doubtless he will take it back to his farm."</p>
<p>But the stout red-faced farmer shook his head at the proposal. "Not I, in
faith!" said he. "The beast hath chased me twice round the paddock; it has
nigh slain my boy Samkin. He would never be happy till he had ridden it,
nor has he ever been happy since. There is not a hind in my employ who
will enter his stall. Ill fare the day that ever I took the beast from the
Castle stud at Guildford, where they could do nothing with it and no rider
could be found bold enough to mount it! When the sacrist here took it for
a fifty-shilling debt he made his own bargain and must abide by it. He
comes no more to the Crooksbury farm."</p>
<p>"And he stays no more here," said the Abbot. "Brother sacrist, you have
raised the Devil, and it is for you to lay it again."</p>
<p>"That I will most readily," cried the sacrist. "The pittance-master can
stop the fifty shillings from my very own weekly dole, and so the Abbey be
none the poorer. In the meantime here is Wat with his arbalist and a bolt
in his girdle. Let him drive it to the head through this cursed creature,
for his hide and his hoofs are of more value than his wicked self."</p>
<p>A hard brown old woodman who had been shooting vermin in the Abbey groves
stepped forward with a grin of pleasure. After a lifetime of stoats and
foxes, this was indeed a noble quarry which was to fall before him.
Fitting a bolt on the nut of his taut crossbow, he had raised it to his
shoulder and leveled it at the fierce, proud, disheveled head which tossed
in savage freedom at the other side of the wall. His finger was crooked on
the spring, when a blow from a whip struck the bow upward and the bolt
flew harmless over the Abbey orchard, while the woodman shrank abashed
from Nigel Loring's angry eyes.</p>
<p>"Keep your bolts for your weasels!" said he. "Would you take life from a
creature whose only fault is that its spirit is so high that it has met
none yet who dare control it? You would slay such a horse as a king might
be proud to mount, and all because a country franklin, or a monk, or a
monk's varlet, has not the wit nor the hands to master him?"</p>
<p>The sacrist turned swiftly on the Squire. "The Abbey owes you an offering
for this day's work, however rude your words may be," said he. "If you
think so much of the horse, you may desire to own it. If I am to pay for
it, then with the holy Abbot's permission it is in my gift and I bestow it
freely upon you."</p>
<p>The Abbot plucked at his subordinate's sleeve. "Bethink you, brother
sacrist," he whispered, "shall we not have this man's blood upon our
heads?"</p>
<p>"His pride is as stubborn as the horse's, holy father," the sacrist
answered, his gaunt fact breaking into a malicious smile. "Man or beast,
one will break the other and the world will be the better for it. If you
forbid me—"</p>
<p>"Nay, brother, you have bought the horse, and you may have the bestowal of
it."</p>
<p>"Then I give it—hide and hoofs, tail and temper—to Nigel
Loring, and may it be as sweet and as gentle to him as he hath been to the
Abbot of Waverley!"</p>
<p>The sacrist spoke aloud amid the tittering of the monks, for the man
concerned was out of earshot. At the first words which had shown him the
turn which affairs had taken he had run swiftly to the spot where he had
left his pony. From its mouth he removed the bit and the stout bridle
which held it. Then leaving the creature to nibble the grass by the
wayside he sped back whence he came.</p>
<p>"I take your gift, monk," said he, "though I know well why it is that you
give it. Yet I thank you, for there are two things upon earth for which I
have ever yearned, and which my thin purse could never buy. The one is a
noble horse, such a horse as my father's son should have betwixt his
thighs, and here is the one of all others which I would have chosen, since
some small deed is to be done in the winning of him, and some honorable
advancement to be gained. How is the horse called?"</p>
<p>"Its name," said the franklin, "is Pommers. I warn you, young sir, that
none may ride him, for many have tried, and the luckiest is he who has
only a staved rib to show for it."</p>
<p>"I thank you for your rede," said Nigel, "and now I see that this is
indeed a horse which I would journey far to meet. I am your man, Pommers,
and you are my horse, and this night you shall own it or I will never need
horse again. My spirit against thine, and God hold thy spirit high,
Pommers, so that the greater be the adventure, and the more hope of honor
gained!"</p>
<p>While he spoke the young Squire had climbed on to the top of the wall and
stood there balanced, the very image of grace and spirit and gallantry,
his bridle hanging from one hand and his whip grasped in the other. With a
fierce snort, the horse made for him instantly, and his white teeth
flashed as he snapped; but again a heavy blow from the loaded whip caused
him to swerve, and even at the instant of the swerve, measuring the
distance with steady eyes, and bending his supple body for the spring,
Nigel bounded into the air and fell with his legs astride the broad back
of the yellow horse. For a minute, with neither saddle nor stirrups to
help him, and the beast ramping and rearing like a mad thing beneath him,
he was hard pressed to hold his own. His legs were like two bands of steel
welded on to the swelling arches of the great horse's ribs, and his left
hand was buried deep in the tawny mane.</p>
<p>Never had the dull round of the lives of the gentle brethren of Waverley
been broken by so fiery a scene. Springing to right and swooping to left,
now with its tangled wicked head betwixt its forefeet, and now pawing
eight feet high in the air, with scarlet, furious nostrils and maddened
eyes, the yellow horse was a thing of terror and of beauty. But the lithe
figure on his back, bending like a reed in the wind to every movement,
firm below, pliant above, with calm inexorable face, and eyes which danced
and gleamed with the joy of contest, still held its masterful place for
all that the fiery heart and the iron muscles of the great beast could do.</p>
<p>Once a long drone of dismay rose from the monks, as rearing higher and
higher yet a last mad effort sent the creature toppling over backward upon
its rider. But, swift and cool, he had writhed from under it ere it fell,
spurned it with his foot as it rolled upon the earth, and then seizing its
mane as it rose swung himself lightly on to its back once more. Even the
grim sacrist could not but join the cheer, as Pommers, amazed to find the
rider still upon his back, plunged and curveted down the field.</p>
<p>But the wild horse only swelled into a greater fury. In the sullen gloom
of its untamed heart there rose the furious resolve to dash the life from
this clinging rider, even if it meant destruction to beast and man. With
red, blazing eyes it looked round for death. On three sides the
five-virgate field was bounded by a high wall, broken only at one spot by
a heavy four-foot wooden gate. But on the fourth side was a low gray
building, one of the granges of the Abbey, presenting a long flank
unbroken by door or window. The horse stretched itself into a gallop, and
headed straight for that craggy thirty-foot wall. He would break in red
ruin at the base of it if he could but dash forever the life of this man,
who claimed mastery over that which had never found its master yet.</p>
<p>The great haunches gathered under it, the eager hoofs drummed the grass,
as faster and still more fast the frantic horse bore himself and his rider
toward the wall. Would Nigel spring off? To do so would be to bend his
will to that of the beast beneath him. There was a better way than that.
Cool, quick and decided, the man swiftly passed both whip and bridle into
the left hand which still held the mane. Then with the right he slipped
his short mantle from his shoulders and lying forward along the creature's
strenuous, rippling back he cast the flapping cloth over the horse's eyes.</p>
<p>The result was but too successful, for it nearly brought about the
downfall of the rider. When those red eyes straining for death were
suddenly shrouded in unexpected darkness the amazed horse propped on its
forefeet and came to so dead a stop that Nigel was shot forward on to its
neck and hardly held himself by his hair-entwined hand. Ere he had slid
back into position the moment of danger had passed, for the horse, its
purpose all blurred in its mind by this strange thing which had befallen,
wheeled round once more, trembling in every fiber, and tossing its
petulant head until at last the mantle had been slipped from its eyes and
the chilling darkness had melted into the homely circle of sunlit grass
once more.</p>
<p>But what was this new outrage which had been inflicted upon it? What was
this defiling bar of iron which was locked hard against its mouth? What
were these straps which galled the tossing neck, this band which spanned
its chest? In those instants of stillness ere the mantle had been plucked
away Nigel had lain forward, had slipped the snaffle between the champing
teeth, and had deftly secured it.</p>
<p>Blind, frantic fury surged in the yellow horse's heart once more at this
new degradation, this badge of serfdom and infamy. His spirit rose high
and menacing at the touch. He loathed this place, these people, all and
everything which threatened his freedom. He would have done with them
forever; he would see them no more. Let him away to the uttermost parts of
the earth, to the great plains where freedom is. Anywhere over the far
horizon where he could get away from the defiling bit and the insufferable
mastery of man.</p>
<p>He turned with a rush, and one magnificent deer-like bound carried him
over the four-foot gate. Nigel's hat had flown off, and his yellow curls
streamed behind him as he rose and fell in the leap. They were in the
water-meadow now, and the rippling stream twenty feet wide gleamed in
front of them running down to the main current of the Wey. The yellow
horse gathered his haunches under him and flew over like an arrow. He took
off from behind a boulder and cleared a furze-bush on the farther side.
Two stones still mark the leap from hoof-mark to hoof-mark, and they are
eleven good paces apart. Under the hanging branch of the great oak-tree on
the farther side (that Quercus Tilfordiensis ordiensis is still shown as
the bound of the Abby's immediate precincts) the great horse passed. He
had hoped to sweep off his rider, but Nigel sank low on the heaving back
with his face buried in the flying mane. The rough bough rasped him
rudely, but never shook his spirit nor his grip. Rearing, plunging and
struggling, Pommers broke through the sapling grove and was out on the
broad stretch of Hankley Down.</p>
<p>And now came such a ride as still lingers in the gossip of the lowly
country folk and forms the rude jingle of that old Surrey ballad, now
nearly forgotten, save for the refrain:</p>
<p>The Doe that sped on Hinde Head,<br/>
The Kestril on the winde,<br/>
And Nigel on the Yellow Horse<br/>
Can leave the world behinde.<br/></p>
<p>Before them lay a rolling ocean of dark heather, knee-deep, swelling in
billow on billow up to the clear-cut hill before them. Above stretched one
unbroken arch of peaceful blue, with a sun which was sinking down toward
the Hampshire hills. Through the deep heather, down the gullies, over the
watercourses, up the broken slopes, Pommers flew, his great heart bursting
with rage, and every fiber quivering at the indignities which he had
endured.</p>
<p>And still, do what he would, the man clung fast to his heaving sides and
to his flying mane, silent, motionless, inexorable, letting him do what he
would, but fixed as Fate upon his purpose. Over Hankley Down, through
Thursley Marsh, with the reeds up to his mud-splashed withers, onward up
the long slope of the Headland of the Hinds, down by the Nutcombe Gorge,
slipping, blundering, bounding, but never slackening his fearful speed, on
went the great yellow horse. The villagers of Shottermill heard the wild
clatter of hoofs, but ere they could swing the ox-hide curtains of their
cottage doors horse and rider were lost amid the high bracken of the
Haslemere Valley. On he went, and on, tossing the miles behind his flying
hoofs. No marsh-land could clog him, no hill could hold him back. Up the
slope of Linchmere and the long ascent of Fernhurst he thundered as on the
level, and it was not until he had flown down the incline of Henley Hill,
and the gray castle tower of Midhurst rose over the coppice in front, that
at last the eager outstretched neck sank a little on the breast, and the
breath came quick and fast. Look where he would in woodland and on down,
his straining eyes could catch no sign of those plains of freedom which he
sought.</p>
<p>And yet another outrage! It was bad that this creature should still cling
so tight upon his back, but now he would even go to the intolerable length
of checking him and guiding him on the way that he would have him go.
There was a sharp pluck at his mouth, and his head was turned north once
more. As well go that way as another, but the man was mad indeed if he
thought that such a horse as Pommers was at the end of his spirit or his
strength. He would soon show him that he was unconquered, if it strained
his sinews or broke his heart to do so. Back then he flew up the long,
long ascent. Would he ever get to the end of it? Yet he would not own that
he could go no farther while the man still kept his grip. He was white
with foam and caked with mud. His eyes were gorged with blood, his mouth
open and gasping, his nostrils expanded, his coat stark and reeking. On he
flew down the long Sunday Hill until he reached the deep Kingsley Marsh at
the bottom. No, it was too much! Flesh and blood could go no farther. As
he struggled out from the reedy slime with the heavy black mud still
clinging to his fetlocks, he at last eased down with sobbing breath and
slowed the tumultuous gallop to a canter.</p>
<p>Oh, crowning infamy! Was there no limit to these degradations? He was no
longer even to choose his own pace. Since he had chosen to gallop so far
at his own will he must now gallop farther still at the will of another. A
spur struck home on either flank. A stinging whip-lash fell across his
shoulder. He bounded his own height in the air at the pain and the shame
of it. Then, forgetting his weary limbs, forgetting his panting, reeking
sides, forgetting everything save this intolerable insult and the burning
spirit within, he plunged off once more upon his furious gallop. He was
out on the heather slopes again and heading for Weydown Common. On he flew
and on. But again his brain failed him and again his limbs trembled
beneath him, and yet again he strove to ease his pace, only to be driven
onward by the cruel spur and the falling lash. He was blind and giddy with
fatigue.</p>
<p>He saw no longer where he placed his feet, he cared no longer whither he
went, but his one mad longing was to get away from this dreadful thing,
this torture which clung to him and would not let him go. Through Thursley
village he passed, his eyes straining in his agony, his heart bursting
within him, and he had won his way to the crest of Thursley Down, still
stung forward by stab and blow, when his spirit weakened, his giant
strength ebbed out of him, and with one deep sob of agony the yellow horse
sank among the heather. So sudden was the fall that Nigel flew forward
over his shoulder, and beast and man lay prostrate and gasping while the
last red rim of the sun sank behind Butser and the first stars gleamed in
a violet sky.</p>
<p>The young Squire was the first to recover, and kneeling by the panting,
overwrought horse he passed his hand gently over the tangled mane and down
the foam-flecked face. The red eye rolled up at him; but it was wonder not
hatred, a prayer and not a threat, which he could read in it. As he
stroked the reeking muzzle, the horse whinnied gently and thrust his nose
into the hollow of his hand. It was enough. It was the end of the contest,
the acceptance of new conditions by a chivalrous foe from a chivalrous
victor.</p>
<p>"You are my horse, Pommers," Nigel whispered, and he laid his cheek
against the craning head. "I know you, Pommers, and you know me, and with
the help of Saint Paul we shall teach some other folk to know us both. Now
let us walk together as far as this moorland pond, for indeed I wot not
whether it is you or I who need the water most."</p>
<p>And so it was that some belated monks of Waverley passing homeward from
the outer farms saw a strange sight which they carried on with them so
that it reached that very night the ears both of sacrist and of Abbot.
For, as they passed through Tilford they had seen horse and man walking
side by side and head by head up the manor-house lane. And when they had
raised their lanterns on the pair it was none other than the young Squire
himself who was leading home, as a shepherd leads a lamb, the fearsome
yellow horse of Crooksbury.</p>
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