<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER VII. BROTHERHOOD.">CHAPTER VII. BROTHERHOOD.</SPAN></h2>
<p>True are the words of the Havamal, the song of the wisdom of
Odin, which say, "One may know and no other, but all men know if
three know."</p>
<p>Therefore for all these years my father told none of us the
secret of Havelok's birth; and when Arngeir married my sister Solva
he made him take oath that he would not tell what he knew to her,
while she, being but a child at the time of the flight, had
forgotten how this well-loved brother of hers came to us. But it
happened once that Grim was sick, and it seemed likely that he
would die, so that this secret weighed on him, and he did not
rightly know what to do for the best, Havelok at the time being but
seventeen, and the time that he should think of his own place not
being yet come. At that time he told Arngeir all that he foresaw,
and set things in order, that we three should not be backward when
need was.</p>
<p>He called us to him, Havelok not being present, and spoke to
us.</p>
<p>"Sons," he said, "well have you all obeyed me all these years,
and I think that you will listen to me now, for I must speak to you
of Havelok, who came to us as you know. Out of his saving from his
foes came our flight here; and I will not find fault with any of
the things that happened, for they have turned out well, save that
it seems that I may never see the land of my birth again, and at
times I weary for it. For me Denmark seems to lie within the four
square of the ancient stones; but if you will do my bidding, you
and Havelok shall see her again, though how I cannot tell."</p>
<p>Then I could hardly speak for trouble, but Withelm said softly,
"As we have been wont to do, father, so it shall be."</p>
<p>"Well shall my word be kept, therefore," Grim said, smiling on
us. "Listen, therefore. In the days to come, when time is ripe,
Arngeir shall tell you more of Havelok your foster-brother, and
there will be signs enough by which he shall know that it is time
to speak. And then Havelok will need all the help that you can give
him; and as your lord shall you serve him, with both hands, and
with life itself if need be. And I seem to see that each of you has
his place beside him -- <span lang="en-US">Radbard</span> as his
strong helper, and Raven as his watchful comrade, and Withelm as
his counsellor. For 'Bare is back without brother behind it,' son
Radbard and 'Ere one goes out, give heed to the doorways,' son
Raven; and 'Wisdom is wanted by him who fares widely' son Withelm.
So say the old proverbs, and they are true. No quarreller is
Havelok; but if he must fight, that will be no playground. Careful
is he; but he has met with no guile as yet, and he trusts all men.
Slow to think, if sure, are so mighty frames as his becomes, even
when quick wit is needed."</p>
<p>He was silent for a while, and I thought that he had no more to
say, and I knew that he had spoken rightly of what each was best
fitted for, but he went on once more.</p>
<p>"This is my will, therefore, that to you shall Havelok be as the
eldest brother from this time forward, that these places shall not
have to come suddenly to you hereafter. Then will you know that I
have spoken rightly, though maybe it seems hard to Radbard and
Raven now, they being so much older."</p>
<p>Then I said truly that already Havelok was first in our hearts.
And that was true, for he was as a king among us -- a king who was
served by all with loving readiness, and yet one who served all.
Maybe that is just what makes a good king when all is said and
done.</p>
<p>Then my father bade us carry him out of the house and down to
the shore where there was a lonely place in the sandhills, covered
with the sweet, short grass that the sheep love; and, while Raven
and I bore him, Withelm went and brought Havelok.</p>
<p>"This is well, father," he said gladly. "I had not thought you
strong enough to come thus far."</p>
<p>"Maybe it is the last time that I come living out of the house,"
Grim said; "but there is one thing yet to be done, and it must be
done here. See, son Havelok, these are your brothers in all but
blood, and they must be that also in the old Danish way."</p>
<p>"Nothing more is needed, father," Havelok said, wondering. "I
have no brothers but these of mine, and they could be no more
so."</p>
<p>Thereat my father smiled, as well content, but he said that the
ancient way must he kept.</p>
<p>"But I am sorely weak," he added. "Fetch hither Arngeir."</p>
<p>It was because of this illness that none of us were at the
fishing on that day, and Arngeir was not long in coming. And while
we waited for that little while my father was silent, looking ever
northward to the land that he had given up for Havelok; and I think
that foster-son of his knew it, for he knelt beside him and set his
strong arm round him, saying nothing. So Arngeir came with Raven,
who went for him, and my father told him what he needed to be done;
and Arngeir said that it was well thought of, and went to work with
his seax on the smooth turf.</p>
<p>He cut a long strip where it seemed to be toughest, leaving the
ends yet fast, and carefully he raised it and stretched it until it
would make an arch some three spans high, and so propped it at
either end with more turf that it stayed in that position.</p>
<p>Then my father said, "This is the old custom, that they who are
of different family should be brothers indeed. Out of one earth
should they be made afresh, as it were, that on the face of earth
they shall be one. Pass therefore under the arch, beginning with
Havelok."</p>
<p>Then, while my father spoke strange and ancient runes, Havelok
did as he was bidden, kneeling down and creeping under the uplifted
turf; and as I came after him he gave me his hand and raised me,
and so with each of the other two. And then, unbidden, Arngeir
followed, for he too loved Havelok, and would fain be his brother
indeed.</p>
<p>After that my father took a sharp flint knife that he had
brought with him, and with it cut Havelok's arm a little, and each
of us set his lips to that wound, and afterwards he to the like
marks in our right arms, and so the ancient rite was complete.</p>
<p>Yet it had not been needed, as I know, for not even I ever
thought of him but as the dearest of brothers, though I minded how
he came.</p>
<p>Now after this my father grew stronger, maybe because this was
off his mind; but he might never go to sea again, nor even to
Lincoln town, for he was not strong enough. What his illness was I
do not rightly know, hut I do not think that any one here
overlooked him, though it might be that from across the sea Hodulf
had power to work him harm. It was said that he had Finnish wizards
about his court; but if that was so, he never harmed the one whom
he had most to fear -- even Havelok. But then I suppose that even a
Finn could not harm one for whom great things are in store.</p>
<p>So two years more passed over, and then came the time of which
one almost fears to think -- the time of the great famine. Slowly
it came on the land; but we could see it coming, and the dread of
it was fearsome, but for the hope that never quite leaves a man
until the end. For first the wheat that was winter sown came not up
but in scattered blades here and there, and then ere the
spring-sown grain had lain in the land for three weeks it had
rotted, and over the rich, ploughed lands seemed to rise a sour
smell in the springtime air, when one longs for the sweetness of
growing things. And then came drought in April, and all day long
the sun shone, or if it were not shining the clouds that hid it
were hard and grey and high and still over land and sea.</p>
<p>Then before the marsh folk knew what they were doing, the
merchants of Lincoln had bought the stored corn, giving prices that
should have told men that it was precious to those who sold as to
the buyers; and then the grass failed in the drought, and the
farmers were glad to sell the cattle and sheep for what they could
gain, rather than see them starve.</p>
<p>Then my father bade us dry and store all the fish we might
against the time that he saw was coming, and hard we worked at
that. And even as we toiled, from day to day we caught less, for
the fish were leaving the shores, and we had to go farther and
farther for them, until at last a day came when the boats came home
empty, and the women wept at the shore as the men drew them up
silently, looking away from those whom they could feed no
longer.</p>
<p>That was the worst day, as I think, and it was in high summer. I
mind that I went to Stallingborough that day with the last of the
fresh fish of yesterday's catch for Witlaf's household, and it was
hotter than ever; and in all the orchards hung not one green apple,
and even the hardy blackberry briers had no leaves or sign of
blossom, and in the dikes the watercress was blackened and evil to
see.</p>
<p>But I will say that in Grimsby we felt not the worst, by reason
of that wisdom of my father, and always Witlaf and his house shared
with us. Hard it was here, but elsewhere harder.</p>
<p>And then came the pestilence that goes with famine always. I
have heard that men have prayed to their gods for that, for it has
seemed better to them to die than live.</p>
<p>With the first breath of the pestilence died Grim my father, and
about that I do not like to say much. He bade us remember the words
he had spoken of Havelok our brother, and he spoke long to Arngeir
in private of the same; and then he told us to lay him in mound in
the ancient way, but with his face toward Denmark, whence we came.
And thereafter he said no more, but lay still until there came up
suddenly through the thick air a thunderstorm from the north; and
in that he passed, and with his passing the rain came.</p>
<p>Thereof Withelm said that surely Odin fetched him, and that at
once he had made prayer for us. But the Welsh folk said that not
Odin but the White Christ had taken the man who had been a father
to them, and had staved off the worst of the famine from them.</p>
<p>Then pined and died my mother Leva, for she passed in her sleep
on the day before we made the mound over her husband, and so we
laid them in it together, and that was well for both, as I think,
for so they would have wished.</p>
<p>So we made a great bale fire over my father's mound, where it
stood over the highest sandhill; and no warrior was ever more wept,
for English and Welsh and Danes were at one in this. We set his
weapons with him, and laid him in the boat that was the best -- and
a Saxon gave that -- and in it oars and mast and sail, and so
covered him therein. And so he waits for the end of all things that
are now, and the beginning of those better ones that shall be.</p>
<p>That thunderstorm was nothing to the land, for it skirted the
shores and died away to the south, and after it came the heat
again; but at least it brought a little hope. There were fish along
the shore that night, too, if not many; and though they were gone
again in the morning, there was a better store in every house, for
men were mindful of Grim's teaching.</p>
<p>Now, of all men, Havelok seemed to feel the trouble of the
famine the most, because he could not bear to see the children
hungry in the cottages of the fishers. It seemed to him that he had
more than his share of the stores, because so mighty a frame of his
needed feeding mightily, as he said. And so for two days after my
father died and was left in his last resting, Havelok went silent
about the place. Here by the shore the pestilence hardly came, and
so that trouble was not added to us, though the weak and old went,
as had Grim and Leva, here and there.</p>
<p>Then, on the third day, Havelok called Arngeir and us, and spoke
what was in his mind.</p>
<p>"Brothers, I may not bear this any longer, and I must go away. I
can do no more to help than can the weakest in the town; and even
my strength is an added trouble to those who have not enough
without me. Day by day grows the store in the house less; and it
will waste more slowly if I am elsewhere."</p>
<p>Then Arngeir said quickly, "This is foolishness, Havelok, my
brother. Whither will you go? For worse is the famine inland; and I
think that we may last out here. The fish will come back
presently."</p>
<p>"I will go to Lincoln. All know that there is plenty there, for
the townsfolk were wise in time. There is the court, and at the
court a strong man is likely to be welcome, if only as one who
shall keep the starving poor from the doors, as porter."</p>
<p>He spoke bitterly, for Alsi, the king, had no good name for
kindness, and at that Withelm laughed sadly.</p>
<p>"Few poor would Havelok turn away," he said, under his breath;
"rather were he likely to take the king's food from the very board,
and share it among them."</p>
<p>That made us laugh a little, for it was true enough; and one
might seem to see our mighty one sweeping the table, while none
dared try to stay him.</p>
<p>But many times of late Havelok had gone dinnerless, that he
might feed some weak one in the village. Maybe some of us did
likewise; but, if so, we learned from him.</p>
<p>"Well, then," Havelok said, when we had had our wretched laugh,
"Alsi, the king, can better afford to feed me than can anyone else.
Therefore, I will go and see about it. And if not the king, then,
doubtless, some rich merchant will give me food for work, seeing
that I can lift things handily. But <span lang=
"en-US">Radbard</span> here is a great and hungry man also, and it
will be well that he come with me; or else, being young and
helpless, I may fall into bad hands."</p>
<p>So he spoke, jesting and making little of the matter. But I saw
that he was right, and that we who were strong to take what might
come should go away. It was likely that a day of our meals would
make a week's fare for Arngeir's three little ones, and they were
to be thought for.</p>
<p>Now for a little while Arngeir tried to keep us back; but it was
plain that he knew also that our going was well thought of, and
only his care for Havelok stood in the way. Indeed, he said that I
and Raven might go.</p>
<p>"Raven knows as much about the fish as did our father," Havelok
said. "He will go out in the morning, and look at sky and sea, and
sniff at the wind; and if I say it will be fine, he says that the
herrings will be in such a place; and so they are, while maybe it
rains all day to spite my weather wisdom. You cannot do without
Raven; for it is ill to miss any chance of the sea just now. Nor
can Withelm go, for he knows all in the place, and who is most in
want. It will not do to be without house steward. So we two will
go. Never have I been to Lincoln yet, and Radbard knows the place
well."</p>
<p>I think that I have never said that Grim would never take
Havelok to the city, lest he should be known by some of the Danish
folk who came now and then to the court, some from over seas, and
others from the court of King Ethelwald, of whom I have spoken, the
Norfolk king. But that danger was surely over now, for Havelok
would be forgotten in Denmark; and Ethelwald was long dead, and his
wife also, leaving his daughter Goldberga to her uncle Alsi, as his
ward. So Alsi held both kingdoms until the princess was of age,
when she would take her own. It was said that she lived at Dover
until that time, and so none of her Danes were likely to be at
court if we went there and found places.</p>
<p>So Havelok's plan was to be carried out, and he and I were to
set forth next morning. Arngeir was yet uneasy about it,
nevertheless, as one could see; but I did not at that time know why
it should be so doubtful a matter that two strong men should go
forth and seek their fortune but thirty miles away. So we laughed
at him.</p>
<p>"Well," he said, "every one knows Radbard; but they will want to
know who his tall comrade may be. Old foes has Havelok, as Radbard
knows, and therefore it may be well to find a new name for
him."</p>
<p>"No need to go far for that," Withelm said. "The marsh folk call
him Curan."</p>
<p>"Curan, the wonder, is good," Arngeir said, after a little
thought, for we all knew Welsh enough by this time. "Or if you like
a Danish name better, brother, call it 'Kwaran,' but silent about
yourself you must surely be."</p>
<p>We used to call him that at times -- for it means "the quiet" in
our old tongue -- seeing how gentle and courtly he was in all his
ways. So the name was well fitting in either way.</p>
<p>"Silent and thoughtful should the son of a king be," says the
Havamal, and so it was with Havelok, son of Gunnar.</p>
<p>Now when I came to think, it was plain that we three stood in
the mind of our brother in the place which my father had boded for
us, and I was glad. Well I knew that Raven, the watchful, and
Withelm, the wise and thoughtful, would do their parts; and I
thought that whether I could do mine was to be seen very shortly.
If I failed in help at need it should not be my fault. It had been
long growing in my mind who Havelok must be, though I said nothing
of what I thought, because my father had bidden me be silent long
ago, and I thought that I knew why.</p>
<p>We were to start early in the morning, so that we should get to
the city betimes in the evening; and there was one thing that
troubled the good sisters more than it did us. They would have had
us go in all our finery, such as we were wont to wear on holidays
and at feastings; but none of that was left. It had gone in buying
corn, while there was any left to buy, along with every silver
penny that we had. So we must go in the plain fisher gear, that is
made for use and not for show, frayed and stained, and a trifle
tarry, but good enough. It would not do to go in our war gear into
a peaceful city; and so we took but the seax that every Englishman
wears, and the short travelling spear that all wayfarers use.
Hardly was it likely that even the most hungry outlaw of the wild
woldland would care to fall on us; for by this time such as we
seemed had spent their all in food for themselves and their
families, and all the money in Lindsey seemed to have gone away to
places where there was yet somewhat to buy.</p>
<p>Busy were those kind sisters of ours that night in making ready
the last meal that we should need to take from them. And all the
while they foretold pleasant things for us at the king's court --
how that we should find high honour and the like. So they set us
forth well and cheerfully.</p>
<p>With the dawn we started, and Havelok was thoughtful beyond his
wont after we had bidden farewell to the home folk, so that I
thought that he grieved for leaving them at the last.</p>
<p>"Downhearted, are you, brother?" I said, when we had gone a
couple of miles in silence across the level. "I have been to
Lincoln two or three times in a month sometimes in the summer, and
it is no great distance after all. I think nothing of the journey,
or of going so short a way from home."</p>
<p>"Nor do I," he answered. "First, I was thinking of the many
times my father, Grim, went this way, and now he can walk no more;
and then I was thinking of that empty cottage we passed just now,
where there was a pleasant little family enough three months ago,
who are all gone. And then -- ay, I will tell you -- I had a dream
last night that stays in my mind, so that I think that out of this
journey of ours will come somewhat."</p>
<p>"Food and shelter, to wit," said I, "which is all we want for a
month or two. Let us hear it."</p>
<p>"If we get all that I had in that dream, we shall want no more
all our lives," he said, with a smile; "but it seems a foolish
dream, now that I come to tell it."</p>
<p>"That is mostly the way with dreams. It is strange how wonderful
they seem until daylight comes. I have heard Witlaf's gleeman say
that the best lays he ever made were in his sleep; but if he
remembered aught of them, they were naught."</p>
<p>"It is not like that altogether with my dream," Havelok said,
"for it went thus. I thought that I was in Denmark -- though how I
knew it was Denmark I cannot say -- and on a hill I sat, and at my
feet was stretched out all the land, so that I could see all over
it at once. Then I longed for it, and I stretched out my arms to
gather it in, and so long were they that they could well fathom it,
and so I drew it to myself. With towns and castles it was gathered
in, and the keys of the strongholds fell rattling at my feet, while
the weight of the great land seemed to lie on my knees. Then said
one, and the voice was the voice of Grim, 'This is not all the
dream that I have made for you, but it is enough for now.' That is
the dream, therefore, and what make you of it?"</p>
<p>"A most amazing hunger, brother, certainly, and promise of
enough to satisfy it withal. I think that the sisters have talked
about our advancement at court until you have dreamed thereof."</p>
<p>"Why," he said, "that is surely at the bottom of the dream, and
I am foolish to think more of it."</p>
<p>Then we went on, and grew light hearted as the miles passed. But
though I had seemed to think little of the dream, it went strangely
with my thoughts of what might lie before Havelok in days to
come.</p>
<p>As we went inland from the sea, the track of the pestilence was
more dread, for we passed house after house that had none living in
them, and some held the deserted dead. I might say many things of
what we saw, but I do not like to think of them much. Many a
battlefield have I seen since that day, but I do not think them so
terrible as the field over which has gone the foe that is unseen
ere he smites. One knows the worst of the battle when it is over
and the roll is called, but who knows where famine and pestilence
stay? And those have given life for king or land willingly, but
these were helpless.</p>
<p>It was good to climb the welds and look back, for in the high
lands there was none of this. Below us the levels, with their
bright waters, were wrapped in a strange blue haze, that had come
with the famine at its worst, and, as men said, had brought or made
the sickness. I had heard of it; but it was not so plain when one
was in it, or else our shore was free, which is likely, seeing how
little we suffered.</p>
<p>After that we kept to the high land, not so much fearing the
blue robe of the pestilence as what things of its working we might
see; and so it was late in the afternoon that we came in sight of
Lincoln town, on its hill, with the wide meres and river at its
feet. I have seen no city that stands more wonderfully than this of
ours, with the grey walls of the Roman town to crown the gathering
of red and brown roofs that nestle on the slope and within them.
And ever as we drew nearer Havelok became more silent, as I thought
because he had never seen so great a town before, until we passed
the gates of the stockade that keeps the town that lies without the
old walls, and then he said, looking round him strangely, "Brother,
you will laugh at me, no doubt, for an arrant dreamer, but this is
the place whereto in dreams I have been many a time. Now we shall
come to yon turn of the road among the houses, and beyond that we
shall surely see a stone-arched gate in a great wall, and spearmen
on guard thereat."</p>
<p>It was so, and the gate and guard were before us in a few more
steps. It was the gate of the old Roman town, inside which was the
palace of the king and one or two more great houses only. Our
English kin hate a walled town or a stone house, and they would not
live within the strong walls, whose wide span was, save for the
king's palace, which was built partly of the house of the Roman
governor, and these other halls, which went for naught in so wide a
meadow, empty and green, and crossed by two paved roads, with grass
growing between the stones. There were brown marks, as of the
buried stones of other foundations, on the grass where the old
streets had been.</p>
<p>All the straggling English town was outside the walls, and only
in time of war would the people use them as a stronghold, as they
used the still more ancient camps on the hills.</p>
<p>"Many times have you heard us tell of this place, Havelok," I
said. "It is no wonder that you seem to know it."</p>
<p>"Nay," he answered, "but this is the city of my dreams, and
somewhat is to happen here."</p>
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