Edward the Confessor, childless and waning, had
betook ensorcelled by some dreadful magic and the court were powerless to wake
him from his shadowed kine. In his long yearfulness did Edward well decline, as
all men do, who liveth under God’s unslighting eye.
Meanwhile in the City, there a hulking, figure
turned his piping-hood against the misting rains. He wore he of a ploughman’s
kit. He had no special undergarment; plain uncolored linen drawers encovered
him to adequate. Wore he hose of linen wode[1] on each
his separate legs, ill-fitting, and tied up upon his girdle with the
drawstrings knotted on the hips through slits on side of linen drawers. The
hose rose up to thigh-length and enclosed his feet entire for the warmth they
could provide. Atop, he wore a linen kyrtill, neither bleached nor colored, and
full-skirted to provide more warmth and manly dignity. Atop of this, we wore a
tunic made from linen and then lined with wool. Its length, down to the knee,
was that of any worker’s cut; the legs were then left free for ambulative
livery. The shoulder-seam was curved and at the wrists, the sleeve were tapered
down. These cuts were the style in the countryside in those days, allowing for
some mittens to be worn upon the hands without befouling the sleeve.
About his waist, he wore a decorated leather belt.
Ploughmen at the time and other laborers as well would wear this sort of belt
to demonstrate their industry: a decorated belt tied gaily bout shewed all who
saw it that its bearer made a tidy profit in the year, and spent it lavishly,
as noblemen may do. Upon the belt hung knife and purse and sword. This last
would mark this man as noble even in a ploughman’s wore. Upon his feet were
shoes of plain, brown leather with thin soles as was the custom. They rose
above his ankle, and then turned they down again, and tied with leather laces
in a tidy bow.
His hood was brown and woolen and it covered up
the head and neck quite pleasingly. Aback it had a liripipe[2] to tie it
to the tunic ‘gainst the wind or to his belt when not in use. His
hat, in brown, bycocketine, and wool, wore to the fore.
Finally, he carried on his belt a pair of mittens
with articulated fingers dyed with saffron and with wode, belike a ploughman
might he own. He didn’t like the pinch and so he left them well alone.
Careful was he to avoid ensoiling his boot up in
the horse manure left upon the street; the mud-cake would enow be evidence his
walk in London’s street. He turned him up to Moorsgate, never showing out his
face to any soul. Almost were the hour midnight and a witch he meant to call.
There near the Moorsgate is a postern passage that
you might have seen or known. But at this time, it was a secret way to pass the
wall, known only to the man who had it built and they who wrought the thing
along. This were that man, this giant, secreting out o’er the London ley. The
wintry mist upon his hands wrought red from white, and chilled the bones of
present wight. Considered he the mittens naught, for he was used to Thor’s
adversity.
The night were blackened up, with but a sliver of
the Moon onrising and some tense, low clouds to block the stars. The New Moon
held within its dainty crescent horns the Old Moon there, illuminated but a bit
somehow. Ere, he to the East and kept his hand along the wall. When he
approachethed up the ruins of the temple to Minerva (and then Freya in her
time), he turned him to the North, and walked a mile long the Ancient Aldgat
Road, unto a wee wic he ded ken up there which held the Devil’s bouns.[3]
Past the church and past the well, upon the edge
of moor and fen lived Hollace in a hovel made of peat. Not a body ken her years
or how her dwelling came to be. She lived alone and made her living hoarding
aught the pretty herbs that grow along the wood and in the blackened Earth, in
places cloistered up against most men’s good wisdom see. Her manner split the
distance twixt Minerva and gay Od; for had she goodly wisdom when not wrought
by madness; but with madness were she wrought a’regular.
Anon, this hooden gillie struk her door quite
sharply with the pommel of a sword he closely bore. He rapped again. Came then
she to the door, the crone, with shawl and nightcap on her. Bent was she with
age, the weight all men among us bear. She were a wee thing, dessicated like
unto the desert had been through her.
“Aye, well met, me Lordship,” said the little
crone.
“Aye, well met, my faithful friend,” replied the
giant, as he ducked to enter there.
She had no fittings and no roomware there inside,
save just a rocking chair to set, and table wee, just big enow to well suit
one, and wobbly. The giant sat upon her floor, unfinished, but quite dry and
warm. He then untipped his hood, and did reveal himself to God and every man
who woulds’t see him: Harold Godwinson were then apparent seen beneath the
shroud.
“I’ve ere walked forth from London for to ken the
forthshaft[4] as you
truly ken. Tell my forthtime and the towardness of ere this island Albion, ye
kenful oldwife Hollace.”
“Coin.”
Well-æthelgedly,[5] Harold
then produced the hoard within a gunny and put it on the table there.
Hollace held up each the sundry coin to see the
emberment of stovelight gleam against it, then emplaced it in her apron.
Counted up she thirty shillings; were enow for her to tell the future to this
man before her now.
She turned her good eye to him and she squinted at
his face. This man, this giant of a man, had cheek of ivory, quite fair. His
chin were noble too, and boued it forward in perpetual determination made. He
wore them clean, his cheek and chin, to shew how manly hath God wrought them.
However, had he broad mustaches, as they were the fashion of the time, in red
but with a little white. Here in the gloom and dour mist, his curly hair of red
hung down about his collar so, accentuating up his finely-cultured bones. His
father, Godwin, famously wore down his hair the same, but Godwin’s hair was
brown without the fire of Harold’s mane.
Harold, was he tall, perhaps six foot and then a
little bit; and had he shoulders broader by a hand perhaps than were his narrow
hips. This night he bore no armor, for to travel in disguise; but even aught
his case were he to look upon, with sparkling blue eyes.
“There is a tide upon this New Universe, and upon
it do we rise and fall, bestruck by fated stars, m’lord,” did Hollace cast,
while opening the shutter on her window. She struggled with the latch. “My
hands. My hands…” Harold breathed frustration and impatience with the witch.
She finally got the latch to spry and peered up into Heaven with her one
remaining eye.
“The Moon is dark tonight. I scarcely spy its
aftlimbs. Darked and blooded.” She turned to him with some alacrity and grasped
his wrist within her claw. “Better for to see our stars, my Lord, and hide
these secret things, these weirds we say.”
“Make weird be plainer, pray,” replied the Lord of
Wessex, Edward’s second, backing off the clying crone. He thought to doubt the
wisdom of this gallant forth from castle home.
Hollace answered, “The old King dies. The spell
he’s under shall not lift again. Not outright, no.” She poked about her hearth
a bit. “The spirits mark his passing right before Epiphany, when Magi from the
Orient would come to bring your Savior ‘is.”
“The day before?”
“Aye.”
“Do the spirits tells’t what time of day he passes
on?”
“Night, as all good things befouled by the baleful
dark.”
“And when this dark thing dost transpire, would he
name an erve? Would he name me ere his erve?”[6]
“This is up the hand that makes it so. Whosoever
dost this gill last see, will name that man the Anglish king .”
“Then that man must be me, wise Hollace! How to
make this so? For Fate, that mistress to the meek and to the passive men dost
take to men upon the cusp of History. She taken by these men, well fore they
take Her to their marriage bed. The small among us are like afterbear:[7] small in stature
and responsibility. They are bound to Her by apron-string, and beaten to
obedience by that which Fate should bring.
But among the atheldom, among the haletheeling
wiclords, thegns and kings,[8] She doth
submit to just and ruly strikes, and finds good discipline to us. To me.
I shall bind to me this Lady Fate, for fair
Fortuna woulds’t for me slake.”
“What?” Asked Hollace, as she’d lost into the
fire. “Oh. Aye. How to make it so. The spirits know.”
Hollace poked the fire once again and turned to
Harold, sharply. “Thirty shillings more. Wortcraft such as spirits shew is
never given free.”
This angered Harold and he thought to thrash the
woman. But he stayed his hand and handed her more coins. She looked again upon
the glinting, one by one, before the firelight.
“To make you up the king, ye’ll need two pretty gifts
to woo this Fate you seem to moon for, Lord.”
“What they? Pray, speakest of these gifts.”
“The first of these, a brew I sh’ave[9] concocted.
Cordial is it in its scent, but gale to do it galder[10] when
it’s work be rent. Pour it down the gullet of the king.”
“What then?”
“He will awake, anon, up from his spirit’s foul
abreet. He will spy you with his newly-daven eyes. And then, descent again into
foreheawen late eternity. His life’s reward you’ll bring.”
“It kills him?”
“Aye. It’s this you wish for, Lord, by faith?”
Harold stopped to contemplate this thing. He saw
the light from Devil’s Moon through cracks within the walls. “This do I beg of
Fate.
“Now, what the second pretty shall I need to woo
this fickle puterelle?”
Hollace stood with some distress, and stepped
perhaps four steps, and opened up a box upon the floor beside her filthy
bedding. She made some grunt of satisfaction, and pulled out the brew, and also
something like a looking-glass. Straightened up her back again (as well she
could in her decrepitude), and came to set again across from Harold.
“This, the second afterleen,”[11] she
said, “a viewcraft-lens marked up by Jews direct from Orient. Marry, stand
before my fire. Hold it up and let the fire-light shone through against the
other wall.”
Harold did. Upon the wall, an apparition summoned
up! It were clear as blessed sunlight, thereupon! Harold gasped and pulled his
arms to him. And when he did, the apparition disappeared! “What spiritcraft is
this! You witch! You sorceress!”
Hollace grinned, and was well pleased. She
cackled, and the flecks of spittle went upon the table, and then some upon the
nobleman. She held her innards in with both her bony arms, she cackling and on.
Harold smelt upon her newly urine.
Hollace caught herself again and told the
nobleman, “It is the viewcrafter. It shews the ghostly apparition on the wall
when placed before a fireplace or lantern, or a torch! How riotous! How dear!
“Make of this a miracle. Shew upon the wall this
markup of a ghost. Tell the host about that this kelpie wraith, and that it
dids’t appear to you and Edward right before his life were claim’d! Make a show
of it! A show for all the peoplement of Edward’s home. And tells’t them this
spirit said for you to take the throne!”
“Dissemblement. Dark dissemblement. But for the
purposes of England’s light and weal. For the hand of Fate, I do submit to
Devil’s deal,” said Harold with finality.
He practiced with the viewcrafter a bit. When he
was satisfied, he stood and thanked the crone, and placed the gifts within the
pocket of his purse.
And when he had departed, Hollace only then recalled
and spoke the rest: “Those who summon up this apparition suffer rhotic
yieldback[12] in
this cast, as all men do and in all things.”
No comments:
Post a Comment