<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h3>LADY GREENSLEEVES</h3>
<p>On the evening of the next day King
Winwealth again fell into low spirits, and
gave orders that Snowflower and her wonderful
chair should be brought to the highest
hall. When Snowflower came, she at once
laid down her head on the chair, saying:
"Chair of my grandmother, tell me a
story."</p>
<p>"Listen," said the clear voice from under
the cushion, "to the story of Lady Greensleeves."</p>
<p>Once upon a time there lived two noble
lords in the east country. Their lands lay
between a broad river and an old oak forest.
In the midst of his land each lord had a
stately castle; one was built of white freestone,
the other of grey granite. So the
one was called Lord of the White Castle,
and the other Lord of the Grey.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>No lords in all the east country were so
noble and kind as they. Their people lived
in peace and plenty; all strangers were well
treated at their castles. Every autumn they
sent men with axes into the forest to hew
down the great trees, and chop them into
firewood for the poor. Neither hedge nor
ditch divided their lands, but these lords
never had a quarrel. They had been friends
from their youth. Their ladies had died
long ago, but the Lord of the Grey Castle
had a little son, and the Lord of the White
a little daughter; and when they feasted
in each other's halls it was their custom
to say, "When our children grow up they
will marry, and have our castles and our
lands, and keep our friendship in memory."</p>
<p>So the lords and their little children, and
their people, lived happily till one Michaelmas
night, as they were all feasting in the hall
of the White Castle, there came a traveller
to the gate, who was welcomed and feasted
as usual. He had seen many strange sights
and countries, and he liked to tell of his
travels. The lords were delighted with his<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[53]</SPAN></span>
tales as they sat round the fire after supper,
and at length the Lord of the White Castle,
who was always very eager to know all he
could about new countries, said:</p>
<p>"Good stranger, what was the greatest
wonder you ever saw in all your travels?"</p>
<p>"The most wonderful sight that ever I
saw," replied the traveller, "was at the end
of yonder forest, where in an old wooden
house there sits an old woman weaving her
own hair into grey cloth on an old worn-out
loom. When she wants more yarn she
cuts off her own grey hair, and it grows
so quickly that though I saw it cut in the
morning, it was out of the door before noon.
She told me she wished to sell the cloth,
but none of all who came that way had
yet bought any, she asked so great a price.
And, if the way were not so long and
dangerous through that wide forest, which
is full of bears and wolves, some rich lord
like you might buy it for a cloak."</p>
<p>All who heard this story were greatly
surprised; but when the traveller had gone
on his way, the Lord of the White Castle<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[54]</SPAN></span>
could neither eat nor sleep for wishing to
see the old woman that wove her own hair.
At length he made up his mind to go
through the forest in search of her old
house, and told the Lord of the Grey
Castle what he had made up his mind to
do. Being a wise man, this lord replied
that travellers' tales were not always to be
trusted, and tried hard to advise him against
undertaking such a long and dangerous journey,
for few that went far into that forest ever
returned.</p>
<p>However, when the curious lord would
go in spite of all he said, he vowed to go
with him for friendship's sake, and they
agreed to set out without letting anyone
know, lest the other lords of the land might
laugh at them. The Lord of the White
Castle had a steward who had served him
many years, and his name was Reckoning
Robin. To him he said:</p>
<p>"I am going on a journey with my friend.
Be careful of my goods, deal justly with my
people, and above all things be kind to my
little daughter Loveleaves till my return."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[55]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The steward answered: "Be sure, my
lord, I will."</p>
<p>The Lord of the Grey Castle also had a
steward who had served him many years,
and his name was Wary Will. To him he
said:</p>
<p>"I am going on a journey with my
friend. Be careful of my goods, deal justly
with my people, and above all be kind to
my little son Woodwender till my return."</p>
<p>His steward answered him: "Be sure,
my lord, I will."</p>
<p>So these lords kissed their children while
they slept, and set out each with his staff
and cloak before sunrise through the old
oak forest.</p>
<p>The children missed their fathers, and the
people missed their lords. None but the
stewards could tell what had become of
them; but seven months wore away, and
they did not come back. The lords had
thought their stewards faithful, because
they served so well under their eyes; but
instead of that, both were proud and cunning,
and thinking that some evil had happened<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</SPAN></span>
to their masters, they set themselves to be
lords in their places.</p>
<p>Reckoning Robin had a son called Hardhold,
and Wary Will a daughter named
Drypenny. There was not a sulkier girl
or boy in the country, but their fathers
made up their minds to make a young lord
and a young lady of them; so they took
the silk clothes which Woodwender and
Loveleaves used to wear, to dress them,
putting on the lords' children their coarse
clothes. Their toys were given to Hardhold
and Drypenny; and at last the stewards'
children sat at the chief tables, and slept
in the best rooms, while Woodwender and
Loveleaves were sent to herd the swine,
and sleep on straw in the granary.</p>
<p>The poor children had no one to take
their part. Every morning at sunrise they
were sent out—each with a barley loaf and
a bottle of sour milk, which was to serve
them for breakfast, dinner, and supper—to
watch a great herd of swine on a wide
field near the forest. The grass was scanty,
and the swine were always straying into the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</SPAN></span>
wood in search of acorns. The children knew
that if they were lost the wicked stewards
would punish them; and between gathering
and keeping their herds in order, they
were readier to sleep on the granary straw
at night than ever they had been within
their own silken curtains.</p>
<p>Still, Woodwender and Loveleaves were
a great help and comfort to each other,
saying their fathers would come back or
God would send them some friends. So,
in spite of swine-herding and hard living,
they looked as cheerful and handsome as
ever; while Hardhold and Drypenny grew
crosser and uglier every day, notwithstanding
their fine clothes.</p>
<p>The false stewards did not like this. They
thought their children ought to look genteel,
and Woodwender and Loveleaves like young
swineherds. So they sent them to a wilder
field, still nearer the forest, and gave them
two great black hogs, more unruly than all
the rest, to keep. One of these hogs belonged
to Hardhold, and the other to Drypenny.
Every evening when they came<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</SPAN></span>
home the stewards' children used to come
down and feed them, and it was their delight
to reckon up what price they would
bring when properly fattened.</p>
<p>One very hot day, about midsummer,
Woodwender and Loveleaves sat down in
the shadow of a mossy rock. The swine
grazed about them more quietly than usual;
and the children plaited rushes and talked
to each other, till, as the sun was sloping
down the sky, Woodwender saw that the
two great hogs were missing.</p>
<p>Thinking they must have gone to the
forest, the children ran to search for them.
They heard the thrush singing and the
wood-doves calling; they saw the squirrels
leaping from branch to branch, and the deer
bounding by. But though they searched for
hours, no trace of the hogs could be seen.</p>
<p>Loveleaves and Woodwender dared not
go home without them. Deeper and deeper
they ran into the forest, searching and calling,
but all in vain. And when the woods
began to darken with the fall of evening,
the children feared they had lost their way.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was known that they never feared the
forest, nor all the boars and wolves that
were in it. But being weary, they wished
for some place of shelter, and took a green
path through the trees, thinking it might
lead to the dwelling of some hermit or
forester.</p>
<p>A fairer way Woodwender and Loveleaves
had never walked. The grass was soft and
mossy, a hedge of wild roses and honeysuckle
grew on either side, and the red light of
the sunset streamed through the tall trees
above. On they went, and it led them
straight to a great open dell, covered with
the most lovely flowers, bordered with banks
of wild strawberries, and all overshadowed
by a huge oak, the like of which had never
been seen in grove or forest. Its branches
were as large as full-grown trees. Its trunk
was wider than a country church, and its
height like that of a castle.</p>
<p>There were mossy seats at its great root,
and when the tired children had gathered
as many strawberries as they cared for,
they sat down on one, close by a small<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</SPAN></span>
spring that bubbled up as clear as crystal.
The mighty oak was covered with thick
ivy, in which thousands of birds had their
nests. Woodwender and Loveleaves watched
them flying home from all parts of the forest,
and at last they saw a lady coming by the
same path which led them to the dell. She
wore a gown of a red colour; her yellow
hair was braided and bound with a red
band. In her right hand she carried a holly
branch; but the strangest part of her dress
was a pair of long sleeves, as green as the
very grass.</p>
<p>"Who are you," she said, "that sit so
late beside my well?"</p>
<p>And the children told her their story, how
they had first lost the hogs, and then their
way, and were afraid to go home to the
wicked stewards.</p>
<p>"Well," said the lady, "you are the
fairest swineherds that ever came this way.
Choose whether you will go home and keep
hogs for Hardhold and Drypenny, or live
in the free forest with me."</p>
<p>"We will stay with you," said the children,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</SPAN></span>
"for we do not like keeping swine. Besides,
our fathers went through this forest,
and we may meet them some day coming
home."</p>
<p>While they spoke, the lady slipped her
holly branch through the ivy, as if it had
been a key,—soon a door opened in the
oak, and there was a fair house. The
windows were of rock crystal, but they
could not be seen from without. The walls
and floors were covered with thick green
moss, as soft as velvet. There were low
seats and a round table, vessels of carved
wood, a hearth inlaid with strange stones,
an oven, and a storeroom for food against
the winter.</p>
<p>When they stepped in, the lady said: "A
hundred years have I lived here, and my
name is Lady Greensleeves. No friend or
servant have I except my dwarf Corner,
who comes to me at the end of harvest
with his handmill, his basket, and his axe.
With these he grinds the nuts, and gathers
the berries, and splits the firewood; and
cheerily we live all the winter. But Corner<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</SPAN></span>
loves the frost and fears the sun; and when
the topmost branches begin to bud, he
returns to his country far in the north, so
I am lonely in the summertime."</p>
<p>By these words the children saw how welcome
they were. Lady Greensleeves gave
them deer's milk and cakes of nut-flour,
and soft green moss to sleep on. And
they forgot all their troubles, the wicked
stewards, and the straying swine.</p>
<p>Early in the morning a troop of does
came to be milked, fairies brought flowers,
and birds brought berries, to show Lady
Greensleeves what had bloomed and ripened.
She taught the children to make cheese of
the does' milk, and wine of the woodberries.
She showed them the stores of honey which
wild bees had made, and left in the hollow
trees, the rarest plants of the forest, and
the herbs that made all the creatures tame.</p>
<p>All that summer Woodwender and Loveleaves
lived with her in the great oak tree,
free from toil and care. The children would
have been happy, but they could hear no
news of their fathers. At last the leaves<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</SPAN></span>
began to fade, and the flowers to fall. Lady
Greensleeves said that Corner was coming.
One moonlight night she heaped sticks on
the fire, and set her door open, when Woodwender
and Loveleaves were going to sleep,
saying she expected some friends to tell her
the news of the forest.</p>
<p>Loveleaves was not quite so curious as
her father, the Lord of the White Castle,
but she kept awake to see what would
happen, and very much afraid the little
girl was when in walked a great brown
bear.</p>
<p>"Good evening, lady!" said the bear.</p>
<p>"Good evening, bear!" said Lady Greensleeves.
"What is the news in your part
of the forest?"</p>
<p>"Not much," said the bear; "only the
fawns are growing very cunning—one can't
catch above three in a day."</p>
<p>"That's bad news," said Lady Greensleeves;
and at once in walked a great wild
cat.</p>
<p>"Good evening, lady!" said the cat.</p>
<p>"Good evening, cat!" said Lady Greensleeves.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</SPAN></span>
"What is the news in your part
of the forest?"</p>
<p>"Not much," said the cat; "only the
birds are growing very plentiful—it is not
worth one's while to catch them."</p>
<p>"That's good news," said Lady Greensleeves;
and in flew a great black raven.</p>
<p>"Good evening, lady!" said the raven.</p>
<p>"Good evening, raven!" said Lady Greensleeves.
"What is the news in your part of
the forest?"</p>
<p>"Not much," said the raven; "only in a
hundred years or so we shall be very genteel
and private, the trees will be so thick."</p>
<p>"How is that?" said Lady Greensleeves.</p>
<p>"Oh!" said the raven, "have you not
heard how the king of the forest fairies laid
a spell on two lords, who were travelling
through his kingdom to see the old woman
that weaves her own hair? They had thinned
his oaks every year, cutting firewood for the
poor. So the king met them in the likeness
of a hunter, and asked them to drink
out of his oaken goblet, because the day
was warm. When the two lords drank, they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</SPAN></span>
forgot their lands and their people, their
castles and their children, and minded nothing
in all the world but the planting of
acorns, which they do day and night, by
the power of the spell, in the heart of the
forest. They will never stop till someone
makes them pause in their work before the
sun sets, and then the spell will be broken."</p>
<div class="figright"> <ANTIMG src="images/i071.jpg" width-obs="313" height-obs="500" alt="A DOOR OPENED IN THE ROCK" title="A DOOR OPENED IN THE ROCK" /> <span class="caption">A DOOR OPENED IN THE ROCK</span><br/> <span style="margin-left: 7em;"><i>See <SPAN href="#Page_61">page 61</SPAN></i></span></div>
<p>"Ah!" said Lady Greensleeves, "he is a
great prince, that king of the forest fairies;
and there is worse work in the world than
planting acorns."</p>
<p>Soon after, the bear, the cat, and the raven
bade Lady Greensleeves good night. She
closed the door, put out the light, and went
to sleep on the soft moss as usual.</p>
<p>In the morning Loveleaves told Woodwender
what she had heard, and they went
to Lady Greensleeves where she milked the
does, and said:</p>
<p>"We heard what the raven told you last
night, and we know the two lords are our
fathers. Tell us how the spell may be
broken."</p>
<p>"I fear the king of the forest fairies,"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</SPAN></span>
said Lady Greensleeves, "because I live
here alone, and have no friend but my dwarf
Corner. But I will tell you what you may
do. At the end of the path which leads
from this dell turn your faces to the north,
and you will find a narrow way sprinkled
over with black feathers. Keep that path,
no matter how it winds, and it will lead you
straight to that part of the forest in which
the ravens dwell. There you will find your
fathers planting acorns under the forest trees.
Watch till the sun is near setting, and tell
them the most wonderful things you know
to make them forget their work. But be
sure to tell nothing but truth, and drink
nothing but running water, or you will fall
into the power of the fairy king."</p>
<p>The children thanked her for this good
advice. She packed up cakes and cheese
for them in a bag of woven grass, and they
soon found the narrow way sprinkled over
with black feathers. It was very long, and
wound through the thick trees in so many
circles that the children were often weary,
and sat down to rest. When the night<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</SPAN></span>
came, they found a mossy hollow in the
trunk of an old tree, where they laid themselves
down, and slept all the summer night—for
Woodwender and Loveleaves never
feared the forest.</p>
<p>So they went, eating their cakes and cheese
when they were hungry, drinking from the
running stream, and sleeping in the hollow
trees, till on the evening of the seventh day
they came into that part of the forest where
the ravens lived. The tall trees were laden
with nests and black with ravens. There
was nothing to be heard but cawing.</p>
<p>In a great opening where the oaks grew
thinnest, the children saw their own fathers
busy planting acorns. Each lord had on
the velvet cloak in which he left his castle,
but it was worn to rags with rough work
in the forest. Their hair and beards had
grown long; their hands were soiled with
earth; each had an old wooden spade, and
on all sides lay heaps of acorns.</p>
<p>The children called their names, and ran
to kiss them, each saying: "Dear father,
come back to your castle and your people."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But the lords replied: "We know of
no castles and no people. There is nothing
in all this world but oak leaves and
acorns."</p>
<p>Woodwender and Loveleaves told them
of all their former state in vain. Nothing
would make them pause for a minute. So
the poor children first sat down and cried,
and then slept on the cold grass, for the
sun set, and the lords worked on.</p>
<p>When they awoke it was broad day.
Woodwender cheered up Loveleaves, saying:
"We are hungry, and there are two
cakes in the bag, let us share one of them—who
knows but something may happen."</p>
<p>So they divided the cake, and ran to the
lords, saying: "Dear fathers, eat with us."</p>
<p>But the lords said: "There is no use for
meat or drink. Let us plant our acorns."</p>
<p>Loveleaves and Woodwender sat down,
and ate that cake in great sorrow. When
they had finished, both went to a stream that
ran close by, and began to drink the clear
water with a large acorn shell. And as
they drank there came through the oaks a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</SPAN></span>
gay young hunter, his mantle was green
as the grass; about his neck there hung a
crystal bugle, and in his hand he carried
a huge oaken goblet, carved with flowers
and leaves, and rimmed with crystal.</p>
<p>Up to the brim the cup was filled with
milk, on which the rich cream floated. And
as the hunter came near, he said: "Fair
children, leave that muddy water, and come
and drink with me."</p>
<p>But Woodwender and Loveleaves answered:
"Thanks, good hunter, but we have promised
to drink nothing but running water."</p>
<p>Still the hunter came nearer with his goblet,
saying: "The water is dirty; it may do for
swineherds and woodcutters, but not for such
fair children as you. Tell me, are you not
the children of mighty kings? Were you
not brought up in palaces?"</p>
<p>But the boy and girl answered him: "No:
we were brought up in castles, and are the
children of yonder lords. Tell us how the
spell that is upon them may be broken."</p>
<p>At once the hunter turned from them
with an angry look, poured out the milk<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</SPAN></span>
upon the ground, and went away with his
empty goblet.</p>
<p>Loveleaves and Woodwender were sorry to
see the rich cream spilled, but they remembered
the warning of Lady Greensleeves;
and seeing they could do no better, each
got a withered branch and began to help
the lords, scratching up the ground with the
sharp end, and planting acorns. But their
fathers took no notice of them, nor of all
that they could say. When the sun grew
warm at noon, they went again to drink at
the running stream.</p>
<p>Then through the oaks came another
hunter, older than the first, and clothed in
yellow. About his neck there hung a silver
bugle, and in his hand he carried an oaken
goblet, carved with leaves and fruit, rimmed
with silver, and filled with mead to the brim.
This hunter also asked them to drink, told
them the stream was full of frogs, and asked
them if they were not a young prince and
princess dwelling in the woods for their
pleasure.</p>
<p>But when Woodwender and Loveleaves<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</SPAN></span>
answered as before: "We have promised
to drink only running water, and are the
children of yonder lords; tell us how the
spell may be broken," he turned from them
with an angry look, poured out the mead,
and went his way.</p>
<p>All that afternoon the children worked
beside their fathers, planting acorns with
the withered branches. But the lords would
mind neither them nor their words. And
when the evening drew near they were very
hungry. So the children divided their last
cake; and since they could not make the
lords eat with them, they went to the banks
of the stream, and began to eat and drink,
though their hearts were very heavy.</p>
<p>The sun was getting low, and the ravens
were coming home to their nests in the high
trees. But one, that seemed old and weary,
alighted near them to drink at the stream.
As they ate, the raven lingered, and picked
up the small crumbs that fell.</p>
<p>"Brother," said Loveleaves, "this raven
is surely hungry. Let us give it a little bit,
though it is our last cake."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[72]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Woodwender agreed, and each gave a bit
to the raven. But its great bill finished the
morsels in a moment, and hopping nearer,
it looked them in the face by turns.</p>
<p>"The poor raven is still hungry," said
Woodwender, and he gave it another bit.
When that was gobbled, it came to Loveleaves,
who gave it a bit too, and so on till
the raven had eaten the whole of their last
cake.</p>
<p>"Well," said Woodwender, "at least we
can have a drink."</p>
<p>But as they stooped to the water, there
came through the oaks another hunter, older
than the last, and clothed in scarlet. About
his neck there hung a golden bugle, and in
his hand he carried a huge oaken goblet,
carved with ears of corn and clusters of
grapes, rimmed with gold, and filled to the
brim with wine.</p>
<p>He also said: "Leave this muddy water,
and drink with me. It is full of toads, and
not fit for such fair children. Surely you
are from fairyland, and were brought up in
its queen's palace!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[73]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>But the children said: "We will drink
nothing but this water, and yonder lords
are our fathers. Tell us how the spell
may be broken."</p>
<p>And the hunter turned from them with
an angry look, poured out the wine on the
grass, and went his way.</p>
<p>When he was gone, the old raven looked
up into their faces, and said: "I have eaten
your last cake, and I will tell you how the
spell may be broken. Yonder is the sun,
going down behind the western trees. Before
it sets, go to the lords, and tell them
how their stewards used you, and made you
herd hogs for Hardhold and Drypenny.
When you see them listening, catch up
their wooden spades, and keep them if you
can till the sun goes down."</p>
<p>Woodwender and Loveleaves thanked the
raven, and where it flew they never stopped
to see, but running to the lords began to
tell as they were bidden. At first the lords
would not listen; but as the children told
how they had been made to sleep on straw,
how they had been sent to herd hogs in the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[74]</SPAN></span>
wild pasture, and what trouble they had with
the unruly swine, the acorn planting grew
slower, and at last the lords dropped their
spades.</p>
<p>Then Woodwender, catching up his father's
spade, ran to the stream and threw it in.
Loveleaves did the same for the Lord of
the White Castle. That moment the sun
went down behind the western oaks, and
the lords stood up, looking, like men just
awakened, on the forest, on the sky, and
on their children.</p>
<p>So this strange story has ended, for Woodwender
and Loveleaves went home rejoicing
with their fathers. Each lord returned to his
castle, and all their people were merry. The
fine toys and the silk clothes, the flower
gardens and the best rooms, were taken
from Hardhold and Drypenny, and the lords'
children got them again. And the wicked
stewards, with their cross boy and girl, were
sent to herd swine, and live in huts in the
wild pasture, which everybody said became
them better.</p>
<p>The Lord of the White Castle never again<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[75]</SPAN></span>
wished to see the old woman that wove her
own hair, and the Lord of the Grey Castle
continued to be his friend. As for Woodwender
and Loveleaves, they met with no
more misfortunes, but grew up, and were
married, and got the two castles and broad
lands of their fathers. Nor did they forget
the lonely Lady Greensleeves, for it was
known in the east country that she and her
dwarf Corner always came to feast with them
in the Christmas time, and at midsummer
they always went to live with her in the
great oak in the forest.</p>
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