without let or molestation.
"II. All other travellers through the forest shall be
graciously invited
to
partake of Robin's
hospitality; and if they come not
willingly they
shall be compelled; and the rich man shall pay well for his fare;
and the poor man shall feast scot free, and peradventure receive bounty
in pro
portion to his desert and necessity.
"The article of Chivalry is one:
"I. Every
forester shall, to the
extent of his power, aid and protect maids,
widows, and orphans, and all weak and distressed persons whomsoever:
and no woman shall be impeded or molested in any way; nor shall any company
receive harm which any woman is in.
"The article of Chastity is one:
"I. Every
forester, being Diana's
forester and minion of
the moon, shall
commend himself to the grace of the Virgin,
and shall have the gift of continency on pain of expulsion:
that the article of
chivalry may be secure from infringement,
and maids, wives, and widows pass without fear through the forest.
"The article of Courtesy is one:
"I. No one shall miscall a
forester. He who calls Robin Robert of Huntingdon,
or salutes him by any other title or designation
whatsoever except
plain Robin Hood; or who calls Marian Matilda Fitzwater, or salutes her
by any other title or designation
whatsoever except plain Maid Marian;
and so of all others; shall for every such offence
forfeit a mark,
to be paid to the friar.
"And these articles we swear to keep as we are good men and true.
Carried by acclamation. God save King Richard. "LITTLE JOHN, Secretary."
"Excellent laws," said the baron: "excellent, by the holy rood.
William of Normandy, with my great great
grandfather Fierabras
at his elbow, could not have made better. And now, sweet Mawd----"
"A fine, a fine," cried the friar, "a fine, by the article of
courtesy."
"Od's life," said the baron, "shall I not call my own
daughter Mawd? Methinks there should be a special exception
in my favour."
"It must not be," said Robin Hood: "our
constitution admits no privilege."
"But I will commute," said the friar; "for twenty marks a year
duly paid into my
ghostly pocket you shall call your daughter
Mawd two hundred times a day."
"Gramercy," said the baron, "and I agree, honest friar, when I can get
twenty marks to pay: for till Prince John be
beaten from Nottingham,
my rents are like to prove but scanty."
"I will trust," said the friar, "and thus let us
ratify the stipulation;
so shall our laws and your infringement run together in an amicable parallel."
"But," said Little John, "this is a bad
precedent, master friar.
It is turning
discipline into profit,
penalty into perquisite,
public justice into private
revenue. It is rank
corruption, master friar."
"Why are laws made?" said the friar. "For the profit of somebody.
Of whom? Of him who makes them first, and of others as it may happen.
Was not I
legislator in the last article, and shall I not thrive
by my own law?"
"Well then, sweet Mawd," said the baron, "I must leave you, Mawd:
your life is very well for the young and the
hearty, but it squares
not with my age or my
humour. I must house, Mawd. I must find refuge:
but where? That is the question."
"Where Sir Guy of Gamwell has found it," said Robin Hood, "near the borders
of Barnsdale. There you may dwell in safety with him and fair Alice,
till King Richard return, and Little John shall give you safe conduct.
You will have need to travel with
caution, in
disguise and without attendants,
for Prince John commands all this
vicinity, and will
doubtless lay the country
for you and Marian. Now it is first
expedient to
dismiss your retainers.
If there be any among them who like our life, they may stay with us
in the
greenwood; the rest may return to their homes."
Some of the baron's men
resolved to remain with Robin and Marian,
and were furnished
accordingly with suits of green, of which Robin
always kept good store.
Marian now declared that as there was danger in the way to Barnsdale,
she would accompany Little John and the baron, as she should not
be happy unless she herself saw her father placed in security.
Robin was very
unwilling to consent to this, and assured
her that there was more danger for her than the baron:
but Marian was
absolute.