rocky fissures; in her breast were yellow roses, and there was a tuft of pretty feathers in her hair. She reached up and touched him on the breast with her staff, then she laughed again, and sang a snatch of song in mockery:
"I am a king,
I have no crown,
I have no throne to sit in—"
"Pull me up, boy," she said. She wound a leg about the staff, and, taking hold, he drew her up as if she had been a feather.
"If I had a hundred mouths I would kiss you for that," she said, still mocking; "but having only one, I’ll give it to the cat, and weep for Golgothar."
"Silly jade," he said, and turned towards his tent.
As they passed a slippery and dangerous place, where was one strong solitary tree, she suddenly threw a noose over him, drew it fast and sprang far out over the precipice into the air. Even as she did so, he jumped behind the tree, and clasped it, else on the slippery place he would have gone over with her. The rope came taut, and presently he drew her up again to safety, and while she laughed at him and mocked him, he held her tight under his arm, and carried her to his lodge, where he let her go.
"Why did you do it, devil’s madcap?" he asked.
"Why didn’t you wait for the hundred men so strong?" she laughed. "Why did you jump behind the tree?
"‘If I had a hundred men, heigho,
I would buy my corn for a penny a gill.
If I had a hundred men or so,
I would dig a grave for the maid of the hill, heigho!’"