e naught lighthanded."
Ralph marvelled that the wild-man knew him and Richard, but the
wild-man spake again: "Hearken, thou lover, thou young man!"
But therewith was the Sage come to him and kneeling beside him with the
water, and he drank thereof, while Ralph said to him: "What is this
woodman? and canst thou speak my Latin? What art thou?"
Then the wild-man when he had drunk raised him up a little, and said:
"Young man, thou and Richard are deft leeches; ye have let me blood to
a purpose, and have brought back to me my wits, which were wandering
wide. Yet am I indeed where my fool's brains told me I was."
Then he lay back again, and turned his head as well as he could toward
the cavern in the cliff. But Ralph deemed he had heard his voice
before, and his heart was softened toward him, he knew not why; but he
said: "Yea, but wherefore didst thou fall upon the Lady?" The wild-man
strove with his weakness, and said angrily: "What did another woman
there?" Then he said in a calmer but weaker voice: "Nay, my wits shall
wander no more from me; we will make the journey together, I and my
wits. But O, young man, this I will say if I can. Thou fleddest from
her and forgattest her. I came to her and forgat all but her; yea, my
very life I forgat."
Again he spoke, and his voice was weaker yet: "Kneel down by me, or I
may not tell thee what I would; my voice dieth before me."
Then Ralph knelt down by him, for he began to have a deeming of what he
was, and he put his face close to the dying man's, and said to him; "I
am here, what wouldst thou?"
Said the wild-man very feebly: "I did not much for thee time was; how
might I, when I loved her so sorely? But I did a little. Believe it,
and do so much for me that I may lie by her side when I am dead, who
never lay by her living. For into the cave I durst go never."
Then Ralph knew him, that he was the tall champion whom he had met
first at the churchyard gate of Netherton; so he said: "I know thee
now, and I will promise to do thy will herein. I am sorry that I have
slain thee; forgive it me."
A mocking smile came into the dying man's eyes, and he spake
whispering: "Richard it was; not thou."
The smile spread over his face, he strove to turn more toward Ralph,
and said in a very faint whisper: "The last time!"
No more he said, but gave up the ghost presently. The Sage rose up
from his side and said: "Ye may now bury this man as he craved of
th
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