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The Iron Trevet or Jocelyn the Champion

Chapter 2 THE AMENDE HONORABLE .

Word Count: 2742    |    Released on: 06/12/2017

f which were constructed of wood, sculptured with no little art, were topped with slated roofs, pointed and deeply incl

, made of tender cordwain, tapered upward like a gilded ram's horn. From his half red, half yellow velvet bonnet, ornamented with a chain of precious stones, waved a tuft of ostrich feathers-altogether a head-gear of exorbitant value. The friends of the Sire of Nointel were, like himself, dressed in parti-colored garb. Behind this brilliant company, stood the pages and equerries of the seigneur carrying his colors. One of them held his banner, emblazoned w

lle, Cramoisy, Saint-Leu and other places the privilege of demanding the first wedded day of all the maids who are not noble, and who sha

never-lied, a female serf of the parish of Cramoisy, was marr

azurec the Lambkin, her husband, having sought to oppose himself thereto by using unseemly words towards the said seigneur, and the said married woman having been required to submit to the said right and having obstinately refused, the said sei

o ascertain and establish that the said seigneur of Nointel has the said right to the first fruits; and the information bei

secrate such infamy! To what human power can these wretched vassals appeal in their d

otary proce

Beauvoisis, in view of the criminal charges of the said seigneur and the information and inquests taken, rendering justice to the parties concerned, says and declares that the said seigneur is well grounded in law and in reason in claiming the first fruits from all maids, not noble, married in his seigniory; and by reason of that which is declared herein above, the said court has sentenced and now condemns the said Aveline-who-never-lied and the said Mazurec the Lambkin to render obedience to the said seigneur in what concerns

y had been able to escape the ignominy, imagined themselves in the place of the condemned man and were somewhat moved with pity for him; finally, the larger number, married or not, serfs, villeins or townsmen, felt violent indignation, hardly repressed by fear. Hollow murmurs ran through the crowd at the last words of the notary. But all these sentiments soon made place for those of anguish and compassion when, led by the seigneur's men-at-arms, the condemned man appeared at the portico of the church. Mazurec was about twenty years of age, and the benignity of his face and the mildness of

an to his seigneur must have for witness those who assi

long distance. Struck, at first, by the determined mien of Adam the Devil, Jocelyn saw him, as well as his friend William Caillet, suddenly metamorphose himself, so to speak. Affecting dullness and humble timidity, dropping their eyes, d

st been laid up with the fever which they caught draining the swamp of our good seigneur. Their teeth are clattering and they are shaking on the stra

le continuing to laugh aloud with his friends at the stupid and timorous appearance of the two boors. All the while, on his knees a few paces from his seigneur, Mazurec could not repress his t

is fists with rage and did n

tone. "Don't you hear what this kind gentleman says? He told you to cr

raised his head, and understood the meaning of the rapid glance that Caillet darted at him

eigneur and repeat my words: 'Seigneur, I humbly repent hav

olent effort, he repeated in a hollow voice: "Seigneur, I humbly repent

of having wickedly wished to oppose your exercise of your right of the

obs, fell forward with his face on the ground. At that spectacle, Jocelyn, whose indignation threatened to overpower his prudence, was about to leap forward, when he again heard the cry of William Caillet. Stooping down to Mazurec as if to help him rise, he said two words in his ears so

had told them over again: "I repent no less humbly, my seigneur, having wickedly wished to oppose you

neur," pursued the notary, "I hu

stammered Mazurec in a fainting voice

hour of the tourney, and let the daughter be delivered to her father;" and stepping away with his friends towards the door of the church, the young seigneur said to them, laughing: "The lesson will do Jacques Bonhomme good. Do you know, gentlemen, that that stupid pack has of late been pricking up its ears and commenced to bridle up against our rights? Although she was a comely lassie, I cared little

ess of this region, seeing that after the death of the Count of Chivry, his seigniory, in default of male heirs, will fall from the lance

of tight hands, seeing that, in order to triumph over the desperate resistance of his victim, the Sire of Nointel had her bound fast. Crushed with shame at the thought of being thus exposed to the gaze of the crowd, the moment she stepped upon the parvise Aveline closed her eyes with an involuntary movement, and did not at first see Mazurec who was being taken back to prison. However, at the heart-rending cry that he uttered, a shudder went over her frame, she trembled at every limb, and her eyes met the gaze of her husb

er knees yielded under her, she lost consciousness and would have rolled upon the ground without Caillet, who, hastening to meet her, received her in his arms, saying

ne, rushed into the vault that opened upon the parvise,

onder has been summoned to a jud

is to combat with the knight Gerard

peak to t

ommunicate

venture to keep me from seeing and speaking with

you are Jacques Bonhomme's judicial sec

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