Page:Wood Beyond the World.djvu/39

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CHAPTER VI. THE OLD MAN TELLS WALTER OF HIMSELF. WALTER SEES A SHARD IN THE CLIFF-WALL.


BUT when they had done their meat and drink the master and the shipmen went about the watering of the ship, and the others strayed off along the meadow, so that presently Walter was left alone with the carle, and fell to speech with him and said: Father, meseemeth thou shouldest have some strange tale to tell, and as yet we have asked thee of nought save meat for our bellies: now if I ask thee concerning thy life, and how thou camest hither, and abided here, wilt thou tell me aught?

The old man smiled on him and said: Son, my tale were long to tell; and mayhappen concerning much thereof my memory should fail me; and withal there is grief

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