登陆注册
38610100000039

第39章 CHAPTER XXIV: (1)

THE MAID TELLS OF WHAT HAD BEFALLEN HER

"Now, friend, by the clear of the moon and this firelight will I tell what I may and can of my tale. Thus it is: If I be wholly of the race of Adam I wot not nor can I tell thee how many years old I may be. For there are, as it were, shards or gaps in my life, wherein are but a few things dimly remembered, and doubtless many things forgotten. I remember well when I was a little child, and right happy, and there were people about me whom I loved, and who loved me. It was not in this land; but all things were lovely there; the year's beginning, the happy mid-year, the year's waning, the year's ending, and then again its beginning. That passed away, and then for a while is more than dimness, for nought I remember save that I was. Thereafter I remember again, and am a young maiden, and I know some things, and long to know more. I am nowise happy; I am amongst people who bid me go, and I go; and do this, and I do it: none loveth me, none tormenteth me; but I wear my heart in longing for I scarce know what. Neither then am I in this land, but in a land that I love not, and a house that is big and stately, but nought lovely. Then is a dim time again, and sithence a time not right clear; an evil time, wherein I am older, wellnigh grown to womanhood. There are a many folk about me, and they foul, and greedy, and hard; and my spirit is fierce, and my body feeble; and I am set to tasks that I would not do, by them that are unwiser than I; and smitten I am by them that are less valiant than I; and I know lack, and stripes, and divers misery. But all that is now become but a dim picture to me, save that amongst all these unfriends is a friend to me; an old woman, who telleth me sweet tales of other life, wherein all is high and goodly, or at the least valiant and doughty, and she setteth hope in my heart and learneth me, and maketh me to know much . . . O much . . . so that at last I am grown wise, and wise to be mighty if I durst. Yet am I nought in this land all this while, but, as meseemeth, in a great and a foul city."

"And then, as it were, I fall asleep; and in my sleep is nought, save here and there a wild dream, somedeal lovely, somedeal hideous: but of this dream is my Mistress a part, and the monster, withal, whose head thou didst cleave to-day. But when I am awaken from it, then am I verily in this land, and myself, as thou seest me to-day.

And the first part of my life here is this, that I am in the pillared ball yonder, half-clad and with bound hands; and the Dwarf leadeth me to the Lady, and I hear his horrible croak as he sayeth:

'Lady, will this one do?' and then the sweet voice of the Lady saying: 'This one will do; thou shalt have thy reward: now, set thou the token upon her.' Then I remember the Dwarf dragging me away, and my heart sinking for fear of him: but for that time he did me no more harm than the rivetting upon my leg this iron ring which here thou seest."

"So from that time forward I have lived in this land, and been the thrall of the Lady; and I remember my life here day by day, and no part of it has fallen into the dimness of dreams. Thereof will I tell thee but little: but this I will tell thee, that in spite of my past dreams, or it may be because of them, I had not lost the wisdom which the old woman had erst learned me, and for more wisdom I longed. Maybe this longing shall now make both thee and me happy, but for the passing time it brought me grief. For at first my Mistress was indeed wayward with me, but as any great lady might be with her bought thrall, whiles caressing me, and whiles chastising me, as her mood went; but she seemed not to be cruel of malice, or with any set purpose. But so it was (rather little by little than by any great sudden uncovering of my intent), that she came to know that I also had some of the wisdom whereby she lived her queenly life. That was about two years after I was first her thrall, and three weary years have gone by since she began to see in me the enemy of her days. Now why or wherefore I know not, but it seemeth that it would not avail her to slay me outright, or suffer me to die; but nought withheld her from piling up griefs and miseries on my head. At last she set her servant, the Dwarf, upon me, even he whose head thou clavest to-day. Many things I bore from him whereof it were unseemly for my tongue to tell before thee; but the time came when he exceeded, and I could bear no more; and then I showed him this sharp knife (wherewith I would have thrust me through to the heart if thou hadst not pardoned me e'en now), and I told him that if he forbore me not, I would slay, not him, but myself; and this he might not away with because of the commandment of the Lady, who had given him the word that in any case I must be kept living.

And her hand, withal, fear held somewhat hereafter. Yet was there need to me of all my wisdom; for with all this her hatred grew, and whiles raged within her so furiously that it overmastered her fear, and at such times she would have put me to death if I had not escaped her by some turn of my lore."

"Now further, I shall tell thee that somewhat more than a year ago hither to this land came the King's Son, the second goodly man, as thou art the third, whom her sorceries have drawn hither since I have dwelt here. Forsooth, when he first came, he seemed to us, to me, and yet more to my Lady, to be as beautiful as an angel, and sorely she loved him; and he her, after his fashion: but he was light-minded, and cold-hearted, and in a while he must needs turn his eyes upon me, and offer me his love, which was but foul and unkind as it turned out; for when I nay-said him, as maybe I had not done save for fear of my Mistress, he had no pity upon me, but spared not to lead me into the trap of her wrath, and leave me without help, or a good word. But, O friend, in spite of all grief and anguish, I learned still, and waxed wise, and wiser, abiding the day of my deliverance, which has come, and thou art come."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 天网绝命

    天网绝命

    末世是灾难,是机遇,是进化,当天网笼罩末世的时候,请吼出你的心声吧:“末世真爽!!!!!'
  • 刺猬的梦

    刺猬的梦

    一场成长的心路历程,诉说了心中的渴望。。。
  • 折花神眼

    折花神眼

    “折花神眼?这不是逼着我去泡妞么!”小保安沐风拥有了折花神眼,从此逍遥世间!什么校花、总裁,什么熟女、萝莉,统统拿下!就算你是天上的嫦娥仙子,也得听我的!否则,嘿嘿,把你搬到床上,让天雷打屁股!
  • 崩坏的圣光骑士

    崩坏的圣光骑士

    崩坏,带来苦痛与灾难,人们艰难地挣扎着。万物皆有裂缝,那是光照进来的地方!(本书时间线并没有跟随官方的,请不要纠结这个问题!)
  • 武功少年在异世界

    武功少年在异世界

    听从师傅的话下山行侠仗义的华山派弟子非莫修,被一道雷劈到了异世界。看着出现在面前的牛头人,狗头人,人头狗……,非莫修大惊,原来这世上真的有妖怪吗?行侠仗义要变成降妖伏魔了吗?且看,中华功夫和异界魔法撞击在一起,会发生什么让人啼笑皆非的故事。
  • 女主驾到:女配靠边站

    女主驾到:女配靠边站

    一朝穿越,然而却发现自己拿的是女配文里的女主剧本?而且还不是一本女配文,而是好多本女配文?带着金大腿的女配们一方唱罢我登场,然而正牌女主莫妄只想说:女主驾到,女配靠边站!
  • 江湖三书生

    江湖三书生

    武林正义殿的掌门人神秘死去。‘灰衣书生’上官琦完成师父留给他的任务为线索,查明师父遇害原因,同暗藏江湖多年的神秘帮派之间的斗智斗勇的故事。
  • 破天霸神

    破天霸神

    当灾祸来临,众人绝望之际,他孤身而出,奋力拼搏,机缘巧合之下,走出一片天空……
  • 你像是

    你像是

    很久之后有人问顾成笙觉得姜虞到底是什么样的一个人,有人觉得他会说像带刺的红玫瑰,有人觉得他会说像心头的白月光。可顾成笙只是说了一句如果她像是,我觉得是爱情。
  • 宿命爱恋

    宿命爱恋

    明明喜欢他,却不敢告白,可当沐汐玥放手后林雨轩却发现原来自己一直喜欢的人是沐汐玥,当两个人在一起后,又发生了什么导致惨剧上演?