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And saying this, he pommelled him beyond endurance. "He wants," he screamed, mocking him, "Siewert Halewyn wants strength and beauty, beauty and strength; seek then, Miserable."
And he pulled out his hair in handfuls, and tore his dress with his nails until he was all in rags, and kept saying, with great bursts of laughter: "Strength and beauty, beauty and strength; seek, seek, Miserable!" And he hung from his ears with his two hands, and kicked his stone feet in his face, notwithstanding that the Sire cried out with pain.
And the little mannikin said: "To get strength and beauty, seek, Halewyn, a song and a sickle, seek, Sir Miserable!" And the Miserable went on scratching out the earth with his piece of sword.
Suddenly the earth fell away under the stone, leaving a great hole open, and Halewyn, by the light of the mannikin's eyes, saw a sepulchre, and within the sepulchre a man lying, who was of marvellous beauty and had none of the appearance of death.
This man was clad all in white, and in his hands held a sickle, whereof both handle and blade were of gold.
"Take the sickle," quoth the little mannikin, thumping his head with his fists.
Sir Halewyn did as he was bid, and straightway the man in the tomb became dust, and from the dust came a white flame, tall and spreading, and from the white flame a wonderfully sweet song.
And suddenly all about the wood was spread a perfume of cinnamon, frankincense, and sweet marjoram.
"Sing," said the mannikin, and the Miserable repeated the song. While he was singing his harsh voice was changed to a voice sweeter than an angel's, and he saw coming out of the depths of the wood a virgin of heavenly beauty and wholly naked; and she came and stood before him.
"Ah," she said, weeping, "master of the golden sickle. I come, for I must obey; do not make me suffer too much in the taking of my heart, master of the golden sickle."
Then the virgin went away into the depths of the wood; and the mannikin, bursting out into laughter, threw Sir Halewyn down on to the ground, and said:
"Hast song and sickle; so shalt thou have strength and beauty; I am the Prince of the Stones; farewell, cousin."
And Halewyn, picking himself up, saw no more of either the mannikin or the naked maid; and studying well the golden sickle, and pondering in his mind what could be the meaning of the man in the tomb and the naked virgin, and inquiring within himself in perplexity what use he could make of the sickle and the sweet song, he saw suddenly on the blade a fair inscription, written in letters of fire.
But he could not read the writing, for he was ignorant of all the arts; and, weeping with rage, he threw himself into the bushes, crying out: "Help me, Prince of the Stones. Leave me not to die of despair."
Thereupon the mannikin reappeared, leapt upon his shoulder, and, giving him a stout rap on the nose, read on one side of the blade of the sickle this inscription which follows:
Song calls, Sickle reaps.
In the heart of a maid shalt thou find: Strength, beauty, honour, riches, From the hands of a dead virgin.
And upon the other side of the blade the mannikin read further:
Whoso thou art shalt do this thing, Writing read and song sing: Seek well, hark and go; No man shall lay thee low.
Song calls, Sickle reaps.
And having read this the mannikin went away once more.
Suddenly the Miserable heard a sad voice saying:
"Wilt thou seek strength and beauty in death, blood, and tears?"
"Yes," said he.
"Ambitious heart, heart of stone," answered the voice. Then he heard nothing more.
And he gazed at the sickle with its flaming letters until such time as My Lord Chanticleer called his hens awake.
VIII. What Halewyn did to the little girl cutting f.a.ggots.
The Miserable was overjoyed at what had come about, and inquired within himself whether it would be in the heart of a virgin child or of a marriageable virgin that he would find what was promised him, and so satisfy his great desire for worship and power.
Pondering this he went a little way through the wood and stationed himself near to some cottages where he knew there were maids of divers ages, and there waited until morning.
Soon after the sun was up, a little girl came out, nine years old, or rather less, and began collecting and cutting up f.a.ggots.
Going up to her, he sang the song and showed her the sickle.
Whereupon she cried out in fear, and ran away as fast as she could.
But Halewyn, having quickly overtaken her, dragged her off by force to his castle.
Going in, he met on the bridge his lady mother, who said to him: "Where goest thou, Miserable, with this child?"
He answered:
"To bring honour to our house."
And his lady mother let him pa.s.s, thinking him mad.
He went into his room, opened the side of the girl beneath a breast just budding, cut out the heart with the sickle, and drank the blood.
But he got no more strength from it than he had before.
And weeping bitter tears, he cried: "The sickle has played me false." And he threw down into the moat both the heart and the body.
And the lady Halewyn seeing this poor heart and body dropping into the water, ordered that they should be taken out and brought to her.
Seeing the body rent open under the breast, and the heart taken out, she became afraid lest Siewert her first-born was following dark practices.
And she put the girl's heart back in her breast, and gave her a very fine and Christian burial, and had a fair great cross made on her winding-sheet, and afterwards she was put in the ground and a fair ma.s.s said for the quiet of her soul.
IX. Of the heart of a maid and of the great strength which came to Sir Halewyn.
Sorely troubled, and falling on his knees, Halewyn said: "Alas, is the spell then impotent? I sang, and she would not come to my singing! What would you have me do now, Lord Prince of the Stones? If it is that I must wait until nightfall, that I will do. Then, without doubt, having no sun to hinder your powers, you will give me strength and beauty, and all prowess, and you will send me the virgin I need."
And he went at night to wander in the woods round about the cottages, and there, singing his song, and looking out to see if any were coming.