The
Gibbelins eat, as is well known, nothing less good than man. Their evil
tower is joined to Terra Cognita, to the lands we know, by a bridge.
Their hoard is beyond reason; avarice has no use for it; they have a
separate cellar for emeralds and a separate cellar for sapphires; they
have filled a hole with gold and dig it up when they need it. And the
only use that is known for their ridiculous wealth is to attract to
their larder a continual supply of food. In times of famine they have
even been known to scatter rubies abroad, a little trail of them to some
city of Man, and sure enough their larders would soon be full again.
Their tower stands on the other side of that river known to
Homer—δ ρόος
άχεανοίο,
as he called it—which surrounds the world. And where the river
is narrow and fordable the tower was built by the Gibbelins’
gluttonous sires, for they liked to see burglars rowing easily to their
steps. Some nourishment that common soil has not the huge trees drained
there with their colossal roots from both banks of the river.
There the Gibbelins lived and discreditably fed.
Alderic, Knight of the Order of the City and the Assault,
hereditary Guardian of the King’s Peace of Mind, a man not
unremembered among the makers of myth, pondered so long upon the
Gibbelins’ hoard that by now he deemed it his. Alas that I should say
of so perilous a venture, undertaken at dead of night by a valorous man,
that its motive was sheer avarice! Yet upon avarice only the Gibbelins
relied to keep their larders full, and once in every hundred years sent
spies into the cities of men to see how avarice did, and always the
spies returned again to the tower saying that all was well.
It may be thought that, as the years went on and men came by
fearful ends on that tower’s wall, fewer and fewer would come to the
Gibbelins’ table: but the Gibbelins found otherwise.
Not in the folly and frivolity of his youth did Alderic come to
the tower, but he studied carefully for several years the manner in
which burglars met their doom when they went in search of the treasure
that he considered his. In every
case they had entered by the door.
He consulted those who gave advice on this quest; he noted
every detail and cheerfully paid their fees, and determined to do
nothing that they advised, for what were their clients now? No more than
examples of the savoury art, mere half-forgotten memories of a meal;
and many, perhaps, no longer even that.
These were the requisites for the quest that these men used to
advise: a horse, a boat, mail armour, and at least three men-at-arms.
Some said, “Blow the horn at the tower door”; others said, “Do not
touch it.”
Alderic thus decided: he would take no horse down to the
river’s edge, he would not row along it in a boat, and he would go
alone and by way of the Forest Unpassable.
How pass, you may say, by the impassable? This was his plan:
there was a dragon he knew of who if peasants’ prayers are heeded
deserved to die, not alone because of the number of maidens he cruelly
slew, but because he was bad for the crops; he ravaged the very land and
was the bane of a dukedom.
Now Alderic determined to go up against him. So he took horse and
spear and pricked till he met the dragon, and the dragon came out
against him breathing bitter smoke. And to him Alderic shouted, “Hath
foul dragon ever slain true knight?” And well the dragon knew that
this had never been, and he hung his head and was silent, for he was
glutted with blood. “Then,” said the knight, “if thou would’st
ever taste maiden’s blood again thou shalt be my trusty steed, and if
not, by this spear there shall befall thee all that the troubadours tell
of the dooms of thy breed.”
And the dragon did not open his ravening mouth, nor rush upon the
knight, breathing out fire; for well he knew the fate of those that did
these things, but he consented to the terms imposed, and swore to the
knight to become his trusty steed.
It was on a saddle upon this dragon’s back that Alderic
afterwards sailed above the unpassable forest, even above the tops of
those measureless trees, children of wonder. But first he pondered
that subtle plan of his which was more profound than merely to avoid all
that had been done before; and he commanded a blacksmith, and the
blacksmith made him a pickaxe.
Now there was great rejoicing at the rumour of Alderic’s
quest, for all folk knew that he was a cautious man, and they deemed
that he would succeed and enrich the world, and they rubbed their hands
in the cities at the thought of largesse; and there was joy among all
men in Alderic’s country, except perchance among the lenders of
money, who feared they would soon be paid. And there was rejoicing also
because men hoped that when the Gibbelins were robbed of their hoard,
they would shatter their high-built bridge and break the golden chains
that bound them to the world, and drift back, they and their tower, to
the moon, from which they had come and to which they rightly belonged.
There was little love for the Gibbelins, though all men envied their
hoard.
So they all cheered, that day when he mounted his dragon, as
though he was already a conqueror, and what pleased them more than the
good that they hoped he would do to the world was that he scattered gold
as he rode away; for he would not need it, he said, if he found the
Gibbelins’ hoard, and he would not need it more if he smoked on the
Gibbelins’ table.
When they heard that he had rejected the advice of those that
gave it, some said that the knight was mad, and others said he was
greater than those that gave the advice, but none appreciated the
worth of his plan.
He reasoned thus: for centuries men had been well advised and had
gone by the cleverest way, while the Gibbelins came to expect them to
come by boat and to look for them at the door whenever their larder was
empty, even as a man looketh for a snipe in the marsh; but how, said
Alderic, if a snipe should sit in the top of a tree, and would men find
him there? Assuredly never! So Alderic decided to swim the river and
not to go by the door, but to pick his way into the tower through the
stone. Moreover, it was in his mind to work below the level of the
ocean, the river (as Homer knew) that girdles the world, so that as soon
as he made a hole in the wall the water should pour in, confounding the
Gibbelins, and flooding the cellars, rumoured to be twenty feet in
depth, and therein he would dive for emeralds as a diver dives for
pearls.
And on the day that I tell of he galloped away from his home
scattering largesse of gold, as I have said, and passed through many
kingdoms, the dragon snapping at maidens as he went, but being unable to
eat them because of the bit in his mouth, and earning no gentler reward
than a spurthurst where he was softest. And so they came to the swart
arboreal precipice of the unpassable forest. The dragon rose at it with
a rattle of wings. Many a farmer near the edge of the world saw him up
there where yet the twilight lingered, a faint, black, wavering line;
and mistaking him for a row of geese going inland from the ocean, went
into their houses cheerily rubbing their hands and saying that winter
was coming, and that we should soon have snow. Soon even there the
twilight faded away, and when they descended at the edge of the world it
was night and the moon was shining. Ocean, the ancient river, narrow and
shallow there, flowed by and made no murmur. Whether the Gibbelins
banqueted or whether they watched by the door, they also made no murmur.
And Alderic dismounted and took his armour off, and saying one prayer to
his lady, swam with his pickaxe. He did not part from his sword, for
fear that he meet with a Gibbelin. Landed the other side, he began to
work at once, and all went well with him. Nothing put out its head from
any window, and all were lighted so that nothing within could see him in
the dark. The blows of his pickaxe were dulled in the deep walls. All
night he worked, no sound came to molest him, and at dawn the last rock
swerved and tumbled inwards, and the river poured in after. Then Alderic
took a stone, and went to the bottom step, and hurled the stone at the
door; he heard the echoes roll into the tower, then he ran back and
dived through the hole in the wall.
He was in the emerald-cellar. There was no light in the lofty
vault above him, but, diving through twenty feet of water, he felt the
floor all rough with emeralds, and open coffers full of them. By a faint
ray of the moon he saw that the water was green with them, and, easily
filling a satchel, he rose again to the surface; and there were the
Gibbelins waist-deep in the water, with torches in their hands! And,
without saying a word, or even
smiling, they neatly hanged him on the outer wall—and the tale is
one of those that have not a happy ending.