KING COMFORT
GATHERED together on the lea-slopes, trees jostle
elbows in sheer
jolliness; wind makes cornfields heave
in waves, like the sunny locks
spread over a little girl’s
shoulders, who on the nursery floor lies
laughing over
her Nonsense Book; and blue skies grow jealous of the
rival beauty of many streams, which gladden that land
where stands, under
steep tile roofs, the red-brick, slit-windowed, tail-
towered castle of
King Comfort.
This fortress was never even shaken by fierce assault or battery’s bluff
bluster; first, because the mortar its walls were built with had been welded
with dragon’s blood; secondly, as no one ever made attack or fired cannon
against its walls.
On its blue bosom a moat bore water-lilies beneath the ladies’ bower;
and
not infrequently apple-parings, crayfish claws, and other refuse swam
on
its shadow-blackened surface under the scullery-grate.
“Creak, creak,” went the well-winder, while chain and pail rattled down
to
the depths; the groom, scratching his poll, stood and watched pigeons,
whose nerves, never wrung with headache, give not the least start at the
harsh cry of the iron; which stopped, he ejaculates “I’ll swill ditch slush
rather than believe but what the king lives,” then bends his back and
lengthens his arms as he labours at the now weighted handle. But when
the bucket arrived at the top, mopping himself, he groaned out “By all the
wool-spools my mother’s spun, bless her heart, I’m as sure as that crabs
are
less sweet than pippins that good old Comfort’s stone dead.”
Then, the stable-lad flung the kennel doors open, and bulldogs, beagles,
harriers, spaniels, retrievers, black, piebald, fox-coloured,
milk-splashed,
rush yelping, barking, and bounding into the court, while
the pigeons wheel
into the air; a great mastiff oversets the newly drawn
water.
What Gunter said after the second descent of the pail, cannot be
recorded;
for it was more fit to have issued forth from the gargoyles, which
yawned,
like griffins, devils, belial-men, and bishops, round the roof, while
swallows built nests between their rumps and the coping.
Prince Pleasaunce, straddling his legs as wide as the arch of a stone
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bridge, stood in breeches of tan kid, which sprung, like sturdy oak saplings,
from green velvet shoes gashed with white puffs; his coat, lined with fox-
fur, hung open to the knees, within it a saffron doublet crossed by a maze
of straps shining with buckles, to which hung his hunting-horn, knives,
and
wallets; he held between his teeth the lithe end of a dog-lash, while
the short
handle, made from a hart’s foot, swung among a litter of
boar-hound pups;
they frisked, gambolled, and tumbled together in attempts
to seize it, while
their mother blinked at them from the sunlight that
streamed through the
hall-windows, over the head of his cousin Gascoigne.
Who, legs out-thrust, lounged on a settle, dressed scarcely less gaily than
the other (capped with grey blue satin, a black plume of cock’s feathers
a-top), now and again grabbing at motes which spun in the large rays above.
“Say, Pleassy, I don’t mind waging a sly couple of cousin Nell’s
kisses,
the old boy’s heart’s cold, that is to say, you’re king, lad.” Presently,
receiving no answer from his pup-engrossed cousin, he got up; strolled
out
over the drawbridge, then round by the moat, till he was under
the
bower-lattice; flopped down on the bank; and began to throw small
stones
in the moat, striking up at the same time a roundelay. In a few
moments a
display of wonderful caps flowered out from the windows, and
showerlike
little laughs, “Good morning, cousin,” “Holiday health to Sir
Gascoigne,”
“A merry matin,” “Fine day, Sir,” “Hope ye quit bed the
right side,” and
like pleasant phrases dropt in the grass all round.
“Is poor Leonine’s foot healed?”
“O, don’t bother about dogs! I can’t bear them, they always smell
fusty.”
“O, how can you! not when they’re kept sweet.”
“No, indeed, my sweet mistresses; there’s many a gallant, I assure you,
prefers his dogs to the ladies, though, in my opinion, with loss thereby of
right to the title.”
“Ah! they rank equally with you.”
“No! now give me a chance; I’d swop a whole pack against any of
your neat
selves.”
“Oh! oh! flattery.”
“ Does one of my witching queens know whether the king, haply, yet
lives ?
”
All the girl-flowers vanish instantly; presently one only returns with
“Hush, you must not shout so; but this moment there was light along the
gallery, and the king’s daughter walked.”
“Ah, you lazy lout, stealing the dripping! There you go, slobberin’ it
on
your face!—Body of me! if thou wasn’t such a wain-load, I’d ha’ caught
the
knave, and lugged his ear for’im,—them boys’s always got their lips to
sucking something they’d no right touch.—Bless my puckered thumbs!
what’s
a’ that? Lor! beg pardon, I’m sure, sir, but your black hat is that
tall,—well it just be nothing more nor less than a witch’s steeple.”
“Good cook, have no fears. I come from my prince, commissioned to
add a wee
pinch of spice, some little tit-bit, dainty morsel, or as the French
20
put it ‘bonne bouche,’ to the apple charlotte I hear you have prepared so skil-
fully for the daughter of our royal master.”
“O, sir, it’s no great matter to make a charlotte; I’ve done billions on
’em in my time.—Well! I wouldn’t have thought that white powder ’Id make
mickle difference; looks just like sugar.”
“Yes, my good woman, it indeed is a subtle sweetener, most calming to
the
constitution. Have you a boy, haply, who might precede me with it to the
king’s chamber? I would not let it out of my sight, for fear of accidents.”
“Aye, sir, I bet there be a plenty hanging round ready to filch some’at
when one’s back’sturned.—Here,Tom—Sid—one o’ you lubbers; make your-
self
a bit spruce off to the pump.—He’ll be back ’fore a flea jumps, your
worship.”
The upper hall, weakly illumined with tallow dips; a gallery across its
further end, to which leads a stairway on the left; on the right a huge hearth
with its piled unlit logs; stray gleams twinkle like stars from false
eyes, jetty
claws, or shiny teeth all round; a long table runs under the
gallery loaded
with viands; servants move to and fro.
While, at the near end of the hall, under windows against which rain
rattles, talk, almost lost in shadows, a group of courtiers.
“I say she’s a witch.”
“Nay, nay, for she’s my sister.”
“I beg your highness’s pardon, but I think you must admit there’s excuse.”
“Well, may be so.”
“I hope that your highness would not take it ill, should she die
suddenly?”
“No, my fondness could bear the strain.”
“Master Fustian is barely descended to the kitchen, so if you’d rather—”
“No, she is a traitor; for any who intercepts the authority of a sovereign
is such.”
“What I’m afraid of is, frankly, her tricks.”
“I fear failure.”
“Failure, pooh! barely possible, so far as I see.”
“But look, here comes Master Fustian with the dish.”
“There!”
“Bah! what a clumsy clown! he’s got stumbling at the first step.”
“Up they go.”
Along the gallery light shines, and the king’s daughter walks.
The boy stumbles and falls back on Master Fustian; they finish the descent
together. Master Fustian, spitting all over the floor,—
“Gracious me! I believe—Oh! have pity, pity, my God! I think I have
got some
of it on my lips, my tongue. Oh! I’m lost, as good as dead!
Poisoned!
Arsenic!”
Confusion.
In which enters from a side door the prince’s pretty wife and her maidens.
Her he had married and a bad temper; he rather would have had her
alone,
but could in no way help himself.
21
That night, getting her tantrums, she broke from its gold mount the
coral
branch which stood on the dressing-table for her rings to hang on;
caught
her foot in the new silver-embroidered bed-testers, tearing loose half
a
dozen yards; flounced about; stamped her feet so hard she hurt them;
then
cried, and said it was his fault; at last said she would not have him
in
bed with her, and with an “I hate you” bade him crawl under.
Which he, though brave enough on horseback, began to do.
When a draught blew open the half-latched door, and a light shone in;
outside there walked the king’s lonely daughter.
The prince scrambled out and slammed the door; nevertheless, seemingly,
the
tantrums had found time to escape, for his wife said no more about going
under the bed.
If on getting in he was pinched black and blue, as she had threatened, he
made no one wiser about it.
Gusts teased the jolly trees till, wrathful, they cursed; the sky, black and
rugged as an old tarred barge-bottom, took a rusty glow of resentment from
the torches; all the folk stood shivering round the Home of Comfort.
The prince advances towards a great pile of combustibles heaped against
the
walls, a torch in his hand.
Flames leap, roar, and flare up into the sky; but the spiteful wind drives
them over, not on the castle but on the crowd, scattering it on all sides.
They would, in another instant, have caught autumn-dried hedge and tree,
and have stretched devastating away over the country. But the king’s
daughter’s taper gleams out of the great hall-window where she walks; at
the same instant the flames gobble one another up, and die away like fire-
works.
Then a voice roared out from the interior, as from a giant’s huge
chest—
“Both hale and well and blithe and bland
I live when no one cares for me:
But he that would close grasp my hand
A dwindling death is sure to see.
But I’m King Comfort after all;
Sins I can pardon great and small,
And need none handy to my call
Save my dear daughter, Privacy.”
T. STURGE MOORE.
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MLA citation:
Moore, T. Sturge. “King Comfort.” The Dial, vol. 2, 1892, pp. 19-22. Dial Digital Edition, edited by Lorraine Janzen Kooistra, 2018-2020. Yellow Nineties 2.0, Ryerson University Centre for Digital Humanities, 2019. https://1890s.ca/dialv2-moore-king-comfort/