Friday, May 1, 2026

A-Maying by Maude Radford Warren

Robin Dadd watercolor of Robin Hood.
       The end of April had come in Robin Hood's forest. The crocuses were gone, and the cowslips and primroses were showing their yellow heads in the grass. The leaves on the trees were long; even the oaks were thickly enough clad to cast a shade. The young birds were almost large enough to fly, and every morning they woke Marian with their chirping. 
       "In my father's castle," said Marian, "they are beginning to think of May Day." 
       "Do you miss May Day?" asked Robin Hood. "Shall we go to Nottingham town and see the celebrations there?" 
       "Nay, then," said Marian, "let us have our own May-day games, Robin. Much shall sing for us; George-a-Green shall whistle; Little John shall dance ; some of the young men must wrestle ; and you and I shall be crowned King and Queen of the May." 
       "That is a good plan," Robin said. 
       They were sitting under Robin's favorite oak. Marian was embroidering a green jacket for him, and he had been reading to her from a beautifully illuminated manuscript. Just as he was about to continue, Friar Tuck came hurrying across the clearing, his rosy face beaming with excitement, his plump cheeks shaking at each step. 
      ''Hark you, Robin!" he said; "I have heard that the queen and her ladies, her pages, her guards, and some of the courtiers are to reach Nottingham to-morrow." 
       "Say you so, indeed?" cried Robin. 
      "I suppose they will lodge with the sheriff," said Marian, "for none other has so large a house. I warrant his lady will be vastly excited."
       "But this is not all," went on Friar Tuck. "The sheriff is anxious that there shall be a splendid May-day celebration for Her Majesty. The great square of Nottingham is not sylvan enough, it seems. Despite the possible danger from us, he says, he intends to hold the games and dancing in the clearing by the yew trees." 
       "The sheriff knows there is no danger from us," Robin said. "I am a loyal subject who will always protect my Queen, though I am an outlaw." 
       "He probably supposes you are as base as himself," remarked Friar Tuck; "but he thinks that with his soldiers and because of the queen, the royal party will be safe." 
       "Oh!" cried Marian, clapping her hands. "Robin, let us hide in the thick woods about the clearing and watch their games!" 
       "And give up our own?" he asked. 
       "No, no; have both!" she said. "Let us see theirs first, and then have our own. As ours will be much better, they should be last." "You are very loyal to our own, Marian," Robin Hood said, smiling. "It shall be as you wish." 
       When Robin Hood's bowmen heard that the queen with part of her court was coming to Nottingham, they were much interested. At various times during the next day or two, some of them went in disguise to Nottingham to see what they might of the royal party. 
       They could scarcely recognize the place. A great triumphal arch had been built at the entrance of the town over the road along which the queen was to pass. It was entirely covered with green boughs, and across the top was the word, "Welcome," made of white roses. There was another arch, in front of the sheriff's house, painted blue and gold. From the windows of the other houses hung flags and banners — scarlet and purple and crimson. Even the very poor people had managed to decorate in some way. Those who could not afford a banner of cloth had woven mats of rushes to hang from their windows, and had placed green boughs over the doorways. 
       The clearing by the yew trees was full of busy workmen engaged in making a pavilion of green wood and boughs. In the center was placed the sheriff's own carved chair, over which was draped a robe of ermine. Robin and Marian peeped at it from behind the trees. 
       "Would you rather be a real queen than Queen of the May?" Robin asked Marian. 
       "I prefer to be Queen of the Greenwood, as I am," she replied. 
       Early on the first of May the queen was awakened by the sound of singing outside the sheriff's house. The people of Nottingham were giving her a May-day greeting. After she had dressed and breakfasted, her white palfrey was brought to the door. It had scarlet trappings, and a bridle decorated with emeralds and jingling with golden bells. The queen wore a pale green robe in honor of the day. After her favorite page, Richard Partington, had helped her to mount, he walked at her horse's head. Then two score horsemen in coats of mail galloped to the front, while just behind the queen rode half a dozen ladies-in-waiting on brown and black palfreys led by handsome pages. Next came a score of knights beautifully dressed in green; then twenty more horsemen, and, after them, the Lord Sheriff.
       All these set off down the road, followed by the bowmen, dancers, and wrestlers who were to provide the entertainment for the queen, and two stout boys carrying the Maypole. 
       This Maypole was a tall, slim, tapering tree trunk, all trimmed about with green leaves and spring flowers, and with a dozen long green ribbons hanging from the top of it almost to the ground. 
       The people of the town followed the procession as far as they dared, but as they were not invited to see the entertainment they did not enter the greenwood. When the party had reached the clearing by the yew trees the sheriff assisted the queen to dismount and led her to the chair of state.
       Meantime, Robin Hood, Marian, and the bow- men had gathered a few paces distant in the woods. They watched the ladies and courtiers group themselves about the queen, while the guards stood a little farther back. 
       "Do you see the bowmen, master?" asked Little John. "They are clad just like ourselves, in Lincoln green." 
      ''The sheriff has a good memory," said Robin Hood. 
       "I fear that being clad like us will not give them our skill," remarked Little John. 
      ''Hush," said Robin; "the sports now begin." 
       The Maypole was set up several yards from the pavilion. Then half a dozen men and maidens came forward, and curtsied to the queen; and, each taking one of the long green ribbons, they began to dance. Backward and forward they stepped, the ribbons in their hands, a fiddler making a rude kind of music to which they all kept time. 
       When the dance was over, the queen applauded, but Marian smiled. She knew that her bowmen could dance more gracefully than that. Then stakes were set up at one end of the clearing, and some young men threw quoits. This game did not interest the queen particularly, for she was too far away to see when the quoits encircled the stakes. After that, other young men wrestled, and again Marian smiled as she thought how much more skillful the men of the greenwood were. Last of all, the twenty men in green stepped forward.
       "These, Your Majesty," said the sheriff, "are the best bowmen in the country, bar none." At that Robin shrugged his shoulders. "In faith, that is hard to bear!" he said. 
       ' ' Nay, then, Lord Sheriff, ' ' said the queen. ' ' I did not know you had the best archers in England."  
      "Your Majesty shall judge," replied the sheriff.
       A row of targets was set up at one end of the clearing, and the twenty archers stepped forward and raised their bows. They had been practicing diligently and they shot well, most of them coming within the bull's eye. 
       "Well done!" cried the queen. "But the sport has been very short. Have you anything more to show me, my Lord Sheriff?" 
       "I had thought that more would tire Your Majesty," replied the sheriff. 
       "Nay, then, I would gladly see more," said the queen; "but since there is no more, I thank you heartily for the pleasure you have given me and my court."
       At this moment Robin Hood stepped forward. He was clad in his usual Lincoln green, and wore, in honor of the day, a long mantle embroidered in gold. He fell on one knee before the queen.
       ''Whom have we here?" said she. 
       ''Your Majesty, a most loyal subject," he replied, "who craves leave to show you some May-day sport." 
       "Gladly," said the queen. 
       Robin Hood waved his hand, and his hundred bowmen marched two and two out of the woods and took their places, bows raised, before the targets at the end of the clearing. 
       The queen's men looked at one another uneasily, and felt for their weapons.
       "Fear nothing!" cried Robin Hood loudly.
       "We are loyal men."
       Then Marian, all in white, rode forward on her white palfrey. She dismounted at the pavilion and bowed low to the queen. 
       "Come you here, my pretty child," said the queen, "and sit on the footstool at my feet."
       While Marian obeyed, a band of dancers came from the woods, Little John at their head, carrying a Maypole. It was far more beautiful than the sheriff's pole, for it was covered with the rarest of wild flowers and little delicate ferns. The long ribbons which hung from it were deco- rated with shining gold coins. 
       The dancers stepped before the queen and did a morris dance, weaving backward and forward, leaning and turning as lightly as if the green grass had been a waxed floor. As they danced, they sang this song: 

 Trip and go, heave and ho, 
 Up and down, to and fro;
 From the town to the grove, 
 Two and two let us rove. 

 A-Maying, a-playing, 
 Love hath no gainsaying. 
 So trip and go, trip and go, 
 Merrily trip and go. 

       "Wonderful dancing!" cried the queen. "Again!" 
       After the dance had been repeated, six wrestlers took their places and showed their skill. Next six tumblers performed most difficult feats of tumbling and leaping. Lastly, after the queen had applauded, Robin Hood called his archers. 
       "Your Majesty," he said, bowing low to the queen, "my Lord Sheriff has shown you what his archers can do. Give me leave to present mine."
       "Let the men shoot," said the queen. "Archery is my favorite sport, as it is the king's." 
       Robin Hood whistled. At the signal, the archers came forward, and ranged themselves in front of the pavilion. He whistled again, and they got into position and lifted their bows. At the third whistle, they sped their gray-goose shafts, and at once the bull's-eye was full. Again Robin whistled, and this time each archer split an arrow. 
       Then Robin took his bow, and stepping a little to one side, shot diagonally, sending an arrow through three of those quivering in the bull's-eye. 
       The queen rose and extended her hand. "My good subject, this is unbelievable," she said. 
       "Accept this gold ring as a token of my favor." 
       Robin took off his embroidered mantle. 
       ''Your Majesty," he said, "if you will accept this mantle in return." 
       The queen took it, and then handed him the ring, "Accept this gold ring as a token of my favor." 

"Accept this gold ring as a token of my favor"

        Meantime, the sheriff was looking uneasily at Robin. He did not know whether or not he dared tell the queen who Robin was. 
       "And now, my good subject," said the queen, "tell me your name, that I may speak of you and your wonderful shooting to my lord, the king." 
       "Your Majesty," he said, "have I your good leave to depart unscathed, I and all my men, and with your good favor, whoever I am?" 
       "Assuredly, since you are my true subject," she replied. 
       "Then, Your Majesty, I stand here, Robin Hood, outlaw of Sherwood Forest." 
       At that the courtiers and men-at-arms put their hands on their weapons. One or two took a step forward. The ladies clung together in fear. The queen grew pale; then she turned to her followers and said; "Silence, all! Make no movement. Do not harm this man." 
       "Humph!" whispered Little John. " Tis more like that we could harm them." 
       "Your Majesty," said one lord, "do you not know that there is a price on this man's head- the king has commanded - 
       "Sir," cried the queen, "you forget yourself! While the king is at war, as he is now, I am king. I command that this man, to whom I have given my word, shall go free." 
       Robin Hood took Marian's hand, and led her to her palfrey. He beckoned his men to withdraw into the wood. Then he turned to the queen. 
       "Your Majesty," he said, "do you wish now to take back your ring?"
       "Nay," said the queen, "a gift is a gift, and you are a true subject. Yet come not near my court again, Robin Hood. I may not always have the power to protect you. And now farewell."
       Robin Hood bent and kissed her hand, then turning his back on all that silent company took his way to his own green kingdom. He spoke not at all, but the others were merry, especially George-a-Green, who whistled and danced, and Much, the miller's son, who sang this song: 

 Joan, to the Maypole along let us on, 
 The time is swift and will be gone;
 There go the lasses, away to the green,
 Where their beauties may be seen.

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