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Friar Tuck. I knew it!

(He sings.)

Veni Wakefeeld peramonum
Ubi quærens Georgium Grenum,
Non inveni, sed in lignum
Fixum repere Georgii signum,
Ubi allam bibi feram

Donec Georgio fortior eram!

Jenny (approaching). Please you, sirs, all is ready! Friar Tuck. Ah, Jenny, Jenny, Jenny, that's good news! [WILL SCARLETT comes out of the hut with his arm round his mother. They all sit down at the table of turfs.]

Shadow-of-a-Leaf (gliding timidly out of the ferns). Is there a place for me?

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Friar Tuck (singing as he settles his trencher in front of him).

Hinc diverso curso, sero

Quod audissem de Pindero
Wakefeeldensi, gloria mundi,
Ubi socii sunt jucundi.

Now, an you've heard enough of George-a-Green
The Pinder of Wakefield, Robin, whom I love

For drubbing you, black and blue,-give us the grace.
Robin (standing up). It is our custom, sir, since our repast
Is borrowed from the King, to drain one cup

To him, and his return from the Crusade,

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Before we dine. That same wine-bibbing friar
Calls it our
grace"; and constitutes himself
Remembrancer-without a cause, for never
Have we forgotten, never, while bugles ring
Through Sherwood, shall forget,-Outlaws, the King!

[All stand up except the KNIGHT.]

Cries. The King and his return from the Crusade!

[They drink and resume their seats.] Robin. You did not drink the health, Sir Knight. I hope You hold with Lion-Heart.

Knight.

You were too quick for me.

These gauntlets off.

Yes; I hold with him.

I had not drawn

But tell me, Lady Marian,

When is your bridal day with Robin Hood?

Marian. We shall be wedded when the King comes home From the Crusade.

Knight.

Ah, when the King comes home!

That's music-all the birds of April sing

In those four words for me-the King comes home.

Marian. I am glad you love him, sir.
Robin.

Your helmet's locked and barred!
Your visor?

Knight (laughing). Ha! ha! ha!

But you're not eating! Will you not raise

You see I am trapped!

I did not wish to raise it! Hunger and thirst
Break down all masks and all disguises, Robin.

[He rises and removes his helmet, revealing the face
of Richard Coeur de Lion.]

Robin. The King!

Outlaws.
Robin.

[They all leap to their feet.]

The King! The King!

But O, my liege,

I should have known, when we were hard beset
Around Will Scarlett by their swarming bands,
And when you rode out of the Eastern sky

And hurled our foemen down, I should have known
It was the King come home from the Crusade!
And when I was beset here in the wood

By treacherous hands again, I should have known
Whose armour suddenly burned between the leaves!
I should have known, either it was St George,

Or else the King come home from the Crusade!

Richard. Indeed there is one thing that might have told you, Robin-a lover's instinct, since it seems

So much for you and Marian depends

On my return.

Shadow-of-a-Leaf. Sire, you will pardon me,
For I am only a fool, and yet methinks

You know not half the meaning of those words—
The King, the King comes home from the Crusade!
Thrust up your swords, heft uppermost, my lads,
And shout-the King comes home from the Crusade!

[He leaps on a seat, and thrusts up the King's sword,
heft uppermost, as if it were a cross.]

Robin. Pardon him, sire, poor Shadow-of-a-Leaf has lost
His wits!

Shadow-of-a-Leaf. That's what Titania said you'd say,-
Poor sweet bells out of tune! But O, don't leave,
Don't leave the forest! There's darker things to come,
Don't leave the forest! I have wits enough at least
To wrap my legs around my neck for warmth

On winter nights.

Richard.

Well, you've no need to pass

The winter in these woods

Shadow-of-a-Leaf.

O, not that winter!

Robin. Shadow-of-a-Leaf, be silent!

[SHADOW-OF-A-LEAF goes aside and throws himself down sobbing among the ferns.]

Richard.

When even your cave

Methinks can scarce be cheery. Huntingdon,
Your earldom we restore to you this day!
You and my Lady Marian shall return

To Court with us, where your true bridal troth
Shall be fulfilled with golden marriage bells.
Now, friends, the venison pasty! We must hear
The Malmsey Butt and Down the Merry Red Lane
Ere we set out, at dawn, for London Town.

Robin. Allan-a-Dale shall touch a golden string
To speed our feast, sire, for he soars above
The gross needs of the Churchman!

Richard.

Allan-a-Dale?

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Reynold Greenleaf. Was to be wedded, sire, against her will Last May, to a rich old baron.

Richard (munching).

Pigeon-pie

And malmsey-yes-a rich old baron-tell!

Robin. Sire, on the wedding-day my merry men
Crowded the aisles with uninvited guests;

And, as the old man drew forth the golden ring,
They threw aside their cloaks with one great shout
Of "SHERWOOD"; and for all its crimson panes,
The church was one wild sea of Lincoln green!
The Forest had broken in, sire, and the bride
Like a wild rose tossing on those green boughs
Was borne away and wedded here by Tuck
To her true lover; and so-his harp is ours.

Allan-a-Dale. No feasting-song, sire, but the royal theme Of chivalry,—a song I made last night

In yonder ruined chapel, telling how

A war-worn knight, returning to the shrine

Where first, a maiden knight, he watched his arms,

Keeps vigil once again, a broken man,

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II.

"Swift with Thy dawn," I said,
"Set the lists ringing!
Soon shall Thy foe be sped,

And the world singing!

Bless my bright plume for me,
Christ, King of Chivalry."

[SHADOW-OF-A-LEAF rises to his knees among the ferns.]

III.

"War-worn I kneel to-night
Lord, by Thine altar!
O, in to-morrow's fight
Let me not falter!

Bless my dark arms for me,
Christ, King of Chivalry.

IV.

"Keep Thou my broken sword
All the long night through,
While I keep watch and ward!
Then the red fight through
Bless the wrenched haft for me,
Christ, King of Chivalry.

V.

"Keep, in Thy piercéd hands,
Still the bruised helmet:
Let not their hostile bands
Wholly o'erwhelm it!
Bless my poor shield for me,
Christ, King of Chivalry.

VI.

"Keep Thou the sullied mail, Lord, that I tender

Here at Thine altar-rail !

Then let Thy splendour Touch it once ... and I go,

Stainless to meet the foe!"

[SHADOW-OF-A-LEAF rises to his feet and takes a step towards the minstrel !

MUSINGS

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LITERARY ANODYNES-ALFRED DE MUSSET AND LA SAND- A STRONG LOVE-INTEREST"-THE FRIENDS OF KINGS-CATHERINE THE GREAT-AN AMATORY EXPERT-VICTORIA LADY WELBY

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THERE has always been, there will probably always be, a kind of printed matter which bears the most distant relation either to literature or research. Devised as a kind of anodyne, it lulls to a happy forgetfulness those who are too tired to talk, too idle to play bridge. That is a modest office-if it be modestly discharged. There is a vast public which would not think very deeply, even if it could, and which desires such amusement as ink and paper may afford. For more than a century fiction has come to the aid of this vast public. Novels have been poured forth from the press in an unceasing, overwhelming stream. They have been nicely adjusted to the demand. Those who manufactured them have gladly given what was expected of them. The "problem" has given way to the cape and sword, the cape and sword in their turn have retreated before the jests of social comedy. Then from time to time the pseudo-profound has claimed a transitory popularity. The sorriest trash has appeared in the guise of emancipated theology, and Rome has yielded a rich harvest to the thoughtful tripper. The tripper indeed has reaped bravely where others have sown. We all know the

hasty romance of the Latin Quarter dished up by a Cook's tourist within the limit of a monthly return-ticket; and we

can

be happy only in the thought that an ignorance of English prevents the most of Frenchmen from discovering the intolerable licence taken by our literary journeymen with their life and thought.

To-day the undisputed reign of fiction is over. Of course we do not mean that there will be no more novels. As an eloquent method of expression, fiction will serve the masters unto the end of time. The request, "Tell us a story,' will always meet with a ready response from the artist. But henceforth the industrious hack, who saw in fiction a means of paying his butcher's bill, will not work without a rival. The concocter of sugared history, the vamper of sentimental biography, is hard upon the novelist's trail. He knows as well as any

of

them how to tickle the reader's palate. His confectionery is as sweet as syrup, and it looks as pretty as a birthday cake. And it possesses a value which

none save historical novels possess. Great names are lavishly sprinkled up and down its pages. As you open

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