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The Wood Beyond the World: XXXII Of the New King of the City and Land of Stark-Wall

The Wood Beyond the World
XXXII Of the New King of the City and Land of Stark-Wall
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Notes

table of contents
  1. Title Page
  2. Imprint
  3. I: Of Golden Walter and His Father
  4. II: Golden Walter Takes Ship to Sail the Seas
  5. III: Walter Heareth Tidings of the Death of His Father
  6. IV: Storm Befalls the Bartholomew, and She Is Driven Off Her Course
  7. V: Now They Come to a New Land
  8. VI: The Old Man Tells Walter of Himself. Walter Sees a Shard in the Cliff-Wall
  9. VII: Walter Comes to the Shard in the Rock-Wall
  10. VIII: Walter Wends the Waste
  11. IX: Walter Happeneth on the First of Those Three Creatures
  12. X: Walter Happeneth on Another Creature in the Strange Land
  13. XI: Walter Happeneth on the Mistress
  14. XII: The Wearing of Four Days in the Wood Beyond the World
  15. XIII: Now Is the Hunt Up
  16. XIV: The Hunting of the Hart
  17. XV: The Slaying of the Quarry
  18. XVI: Of the King’s Son and the Maid
  19. XVII: Of the House and the Pleasance in the Wood
  20. XVIII: The Maid Gives Walter Tryst
  21. XIX: Walter Goes to Fetch Home the Lion’s Hide
  22. XX: Walter Is Bidden to Another Tryst
  23. XXI: Walter and the Maid Flee from the Golden House
  24. XXII: Of the Dwarf and the Pardon
  25. XXIII: Of the Peaceful Ending of That Wild Day
  26. XXIV: The Maid Tells of What Had Befallen Her
  27. XXV: Of the Triumphant Summer Array of the Maid
  28. XXVI: They Come to the Folk of the Bears
  29. XXVII: Morning Amongst the Bears
  30. XXVIII: Of the New God of the Bears
  31. XXIX: Walter Strays in the Pass and Is Sundered from the Maid
  32. XXX: Now They Meet Again
  33. XXXI: They Come Upon New Folk
  34. XXXII: Of the New King of the City and Land of Stark-Wall
  35. XXXIII: Concerning the Fashion of King-Making in Stark-Wall
  36. XXXIV: Now Cometh the Maid to the King
  37. XXXV: Of the King of Stark-Wall and His Queen
  38. XXXVI: Of Walter and the Maid in the Days of the Kingship
  39. Colophon
  40. Uncopyright

XXXII Of the New King of the City and Land of Stark-Wall

When he awoke again the sun was shining brightly into that chamber, and he looked, and beheld that it was peerless of beauty and riches, amongst all that he had ever seen: the ceiling done with gold and oversea blue; the walls hung with arras of the fairest, though he might not tell what was the history done therein. The chairs and stools were of carven work well be-painted, and amidmost was a great ivory chair under a cloth of estate, of bawdekin of gold and green, much be-pearled; and all the floor was of fine work alexandrine.

He looked on all this, wondering what had befallen him, when lo! there came folk into the chamber, to wit, two serving-men well-bedight, and three old men clad in rich gowns of silk. These came to him and (still by signs, without speech) bade him arise and come with them; and when he bade them look to it that he was naked, and laughed doubtfully, they neither laughed in answer, nor offered him any raiment, but still would have him arise, and he did so perforce. They brought him with them out of the chamber, and through certain passages pillared and goodly, till they came to a bath as fair as any might be; and there the serving-men washed him carefully and tenderly, the old men looking on the while. When it was done, still they offered not to clothe him, but led him out, and through the passages again, back to the chamber. Only this time he must pass between a double hedge of men, some weaponed, some in peaceful array, but all clad gloriously, and full chieftain-like of aspect, either for valiancy or wisdom.

In the chamber itself was now a concourse of men, of great estate by deeming of their array; but all these were standing orderly in a ring about the ivory chair aforesaid. Now said Walter to himself: Surely all this looks toward the knife and the altar for me; but he kept a stout countenance despite of all.

So they led him up to the ivory chair, and he beheld on either side thereof a bench, and on each was laid a set of raiment from the shirt upwards; but there was much diversity betwixt these arrays. For one was all of robes of peace, glorious and be-gemmed, unmeet for any save a great king; while the other was war-weed, seemly, well-fashioned, but little adorned; nay rather, worn and bestained with weather, and the pelting of the spear-storm.

Now those old men signed to Walter to take which of those raiments he would, and do it on. He looked to the right and the left, and when he had looked on the war-gear, the heart arose in him, and he called to mind the array of the Goldings in the forefront of battle, and he made one step toward the weapons, and laid his hand thereon. Then ran a glad murmur through that concourse, and the old men drew up to him smiling and joyous, and helped him to do them on; and as he took up the helm, he noted that over its broad brown iron sat a golden crown.

So when he was clad and weaponed, girt with a sword, and a steel axe in his hand, the elders showed him to the ivory throne, and he laid the axe on the arm of the chair, and drew forth the sword from the scabbard, and sat him down, and laid the ancient blade across his knees; then he looked about on those great men, and spake: “How long shall we speak no word to each other, or is it so that God hath stricken you dumb?”

Then all they cried out with one voice: “All hail to the King, the King of Battle!”

Spake Walter: “If I be king, will ye do my will as I bid you?”

Answered the elder: “Nought have we will to do, lord, save as thou biddest.”

Said Walter: “Thou then, wilt thou answer a question in all truth?”

“Yea, lord,” said the elder, “if I may live afterward.”

Then said Walter: “The woman that came with me into your Camp of the Mountain, what hath befallen her?”

The elder answered: “Nought hath befallen her, either of good or evil, save that she hath slept and eaten and bathed her. What, then, is the King’s pleasure concerning her?”

“That ye bring her hither to me straightway,” said Walter.

“Yea,” said the elder; “and in what guise shall we bring her hither? shall she be arrayed as a servant, or a great lady?”

Then Walter pondered a while, and spake at last: “Ask her what is her will herein, and as she will have it, so let it be. But set ye another chair beside mine, and lead her thereto. Thou wise old man, send one or two to bring her in hither, but abide thou, for I have a question or two to ask of thee yet. And ye, lords, abide here the coming of my she-fellow, if it weary you not.”

So the elder spake to three of the most honourable of the lords, and they went their ways to bring in the Maid.

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