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Crake, A. D. (Augustine David), 1836-1890

"The Rival Heirs; being the Third and Last Chronicle of Aescendune"

And this our Norman
pages thought the grandest thing in chivalry.
As yet they had kept from such direct insult as would necessitate
an appeal to sword or lance in Wilfred's case, which, indeed, pages
could not resort to without the permission of their feudal
superiors; but how long would this last?
The promise the poor lad had given to his beloved and lost mother
had made him patient for a time; but his patience had been tried to
the uttermost.
He looked on the woods which had once echoed to his father's horn:
for miles and miles they extended in trackless mazes of underwood,
swamp, and brake; and report already credited them with being the
haunt of outlaws innumerable.
"Where were all the fugitives from Aescendune?" thought our
Wilfred; "did the woods conceal them?"
Well, if so, the day might come when he would be glad to join them.
While he was thus musing, the sun rose high in the heavens, and he
heard the horns summon the hunters--he heard the loud baying of the
hounds, but he heeded not--he loathed society that day, and
satisfying his hunger with a crust of bread, obtained at the hut of
a thrall, he wandered deeper into the forest.
The day was hot, and he grew tired. He lay down at the foot of a
tree, and at length slept.


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