Long Will
Everyman, I will go with thee, and be thy guide, In thy most need to go by thy side.
This is No. 328 of Everyman's Library. A list of authors and their works in this series will be found at the end of this volume. The publishers will be pleased to send freely to all applicants a separate, annotated list of the Library.
J. M. DENT & SONS LIMITED 10-13 BEDFORD STREET LONDON W.C.2
E. P. DUTTON & CO. INC. 286-302 FOURTH AVENUE NEW YORK
EVERYMAN'S LIBRARY
EDITED BY ERNEST RHYS
FICTION
All rights reserved Made in Great Britain at The Temple Press Letchworth and decorated by Eric Ravilious for J. M. Dent & Sons Ltd. Aldine House Bedford St. London First Published in this Edition 1908 Reprinted 1911, 1917, 1919, 1923, 1926 1929, 1933
This story forms a very tempting by-way into the old English life and the contemporary literature which gave us Chaucer's Canterbury Tales and Langland's Vision of Piers Plowman . It deals with those poets and with many figures of the fourteenth century whose names still ring like proverbs in the twentieth—Wat Tyler and Jack Straw, John Wycliff, John of Gaunt, and Richard II. —and it summons them to real life in that antique looking-glass of history which is romance. It begins in its prologue very near the evil day of the Black Death, when the fourteenth century had about half run its course; and in its epilogue it brings us to the year when the two poets died, barely surviving the century they had expressed in its gaiety and its great trouble, as no other century has ever been interpreted. To read the story without wishing to read Chaucer and Piers Plowman is impossible, and if a book may be judged by its art in provoking a new interest in other and older books, then this is one of an uncommon quality. First published in 1903, it has already won a critical audience, and it goes out now in a second edition to appeal to a still wider public here and in America.
April 1908.
To ..........
Florence Converse
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LONG WILL
EDITOR'S NOTE
Contents
PROLOGUE
The Lark and the Cuckoo
The Hills
Kingdoms Not of This World
The Malcontents
The Miracle
The Rose of Love
They That Mourn
A Vow
A Disciple
Food for Thought
A Progress to Westminster
An Embassage
The King's Secret
Plot and Counterplot
Midsummer Eve
Sanctuary
The Man O' Words
The Pilgrimage
In the Cloisters
In Malvern Chase
A Boon
The Adventure in Devon
The Adventure in Cheshire
The Adventure in Yorkshire
The Believers
The Adventure in Kent
The Poets Sing to Richard
The Rising
The Beginning
Blackheath
In the City
In the Tower
Mile End
Free Men
Reaction
The Friday Night
Smithfield
The Old Fetters
The Prisoner
Y-Robed in Russet
EPILOGUE
Transcriber's Notes: