The Bad Old Woman in Black by Lord Dunsany|Free Ebook

 
novelbucket.blogspot.comThe Bad Old Woman in Black

The bad old woman in black ran down the street of the ox-butchers.

  Windows at once were opened high up in those crazy

gables; heads were thrust out: it was she.  Then there arose

the counsel of anxious voices, calling sideways from window

to window or across to opposite houses.  Why was she there

with her sequins and bugles and old black gown?  Why had she

left her dreaded house?  On what fell errand she hasted?

   They watched her lean, lithe figure, and the wind in that

old black dress, and soon she was gone from the cobbled

street and under the town's high gateway.  She turned at

once to her right and was hid from the view of the houses.

Then they all ran down to their doors, and small groups

formed on the pavement; there they took counsel together,

the eldest speaking first.  Of what they had seen they said

nothing, for there was no doubt it was she; it was of the

future they spoke, and the future only.

   In what notorious thing would her errand end?  What gains

had tempted her out from her fearful home?  What brilliant

but sinful scheme had her genius planned?  Above all, what

future evil did this portend?  Thus at first, it was only questioned.  And then the old grey-beards spoke, each one to

a little group; they had seen her out before, had known her

when she was younger and had noted the evil things that had

followed her goings: the small groups listened well to their

low and earnest voices.  No one asked questions now or

guessed at her infamous errand, but listened only to the

wise old men who knew the things that had been, and who told

the younger men of the dooms that had come before.

   Nobody knew how many times she had left her dreaded

house; but the oldest recounted all the times that they

knew, and the way she had gone each time, and the doom that

had followed her going, and two could remember the

the earthquake that there was in the street of the shearers.

   So were there many tales of the times that were, told on

the pavement near the old green doors by the edge of the

cobbled street, and the experience that the aged men had

bought with their white hairs might be had cheap by the

young.  But from all their experience only this was clear,

that never twice in their lives had she done the same

infamous thing, and that the same calamity twice had never

followed her goings.  Therefore it seemed that means were

doubtful and few for finding out what thing was about to

befall, and an ominous feeling of the gloom came down on the

street of the ox-butchers.  And in the gloom grew fears of

the very worst.  This comfort they only had when they put

their fear into words -- that the doom that followed her

goings had never yet been anticipated.  One feared that with

the magic she meant to move the moon, and he would have dammed

the high tide on the neighboring coast, knowing that as the

moon attracted the sea must attract the moon, and

hoping by his device to humble her spells.  Another would

have fetched iron bars and clamped them across the street,

remembering the earthquake there was in the street of the

shearers.  Another would have honored his household gods,

the little cat-faced idols seated above his hearth, gods to

whom magic was no unusual thing, and, having paid their fees

and honored them well, would have put the whole case before

them.  His scheme found favor with many, and yet at last

was rejected, for others ran indoors and brought out their

gods too, to be honored, till there was a herd of gods all

seated there on the pavement; yet would they have honored

them and put their case before them but that a fat man ran

up last of all, carefully holding under a reverent arm his

own two hound-faced gods, though he knew well -- as indeed,

all men must -- that they were notoriously at war with the

little cat-faced idols.  And although the animosities

natural to the faith had all been lulled by the crisis, yet a

the look of anger had come into the cat-like faces that no one

dared disregard, and all perceived that if they stayed a

moment longer there would be flaming around them the

jealousy of the gods; so each man hastily took his idols

home, leaving the fat man insisting that his hound-faced

gods should be honored.

   Then there were schemes again and voices raised in

debate and many new dangers feared and new plans made.

   But in the end, they made no defense against danger, for

they knew not what it would be, but wrote upon parchment as

a warning, and so that all might know: "*The bad old

woman in black ran down the street of the ox-butchers.*"


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