The Wood Beyond the World
Transcribed from the 1913 Longmans, Green, and Co. edition by David Price, email ccx074@pglaf.org
BY WILLIAM MORRIS
pocket edition
LONGMANS, GREEN AND CO. 39 paternoster row, london new york, bombay, and calcutta 1913
Awhile ago there was a young man dwelling in a great and goodly city by the sea which had to name Langton on Holm. He was but of five and twenty winters, a fair-faced man, yellow-haired, tall and strong; rather wiser than foolisher than young men are mostly wont; a valiant youth, and a kind; not of many words but courteous of speech; no roisterer, nought masterful, but peaceable and knowing how to forbear: in a fray a perilous foe, and a trusty war-fellow. His father, with whom he was dwelling when this tale begins, was a great merchant, richer than a baron of the land, a head-man of the greatest of the Lineages of Langton, and a captain of the Porte; he was of the Lineage of the Goldings, therefore was he called Bartholomew Golden, and his son Golden Walter.
Now ye may well deem that such a youngling as this was looked upon by all as a lucky man without a lack; but there was this flaw in his lot, whereas he had fallen into the toils of love of a woman exceeding fair, and had taken her to wife, she nought unwilling as it seemed. But when they had been wedded some six months he found by manifest tokens, that his fairness was not so much to her but that she must seek to the foulness of one worser than he in all ways; wherefore his rest departed from him, whereas he hated her for her untruth and her hatred of him; yet would the sound of her voice, as she came and went in the house, make his heart beat; and the sight of her stirred desire within him, so that he longed for her to be sweet and kind with him, and deemed that, might it be so, he should forget all the evil gone by. But it was not so; for ever when she saw him, her face changed, and her hatred of him became manifest, and howsoever she were sweet with others, with him she was hard and sour.
William Morris
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THE WOOD BEYOND THE WORLD
CHAPTER I: OF GOLDEN WALTER AND HIS FATHER
CHAPTER II: GOLDEN WALTER TAKES SHIP TO SAIL THE SEAS
CHAPTER V: NOW THEY COME TO A NEW LAND
CHAPTER VI: THE OLD MAN TELLS WALTER OF HIMSELF. WALTER SEES A SHARD IN THE CLIFF-WALL
CHAPTER VII: WALTER COMES TO THE SHARD IN THE ROCK-WALL
CHAPTER VIII: WALTER WENDS THE WASTE
CHAPTER XI: WALTER HAPPENETH ON THE MISTRESS
CHAPTER XIII: NOW IS THE HUNT UP
CHAPTER XIV: THE HUNTING OF THE HART
CHAPTER XV: THE SLAYING OF THE QUARRY
CHAPTER XVI: OF THE KING’S SON AND THE MAID
CHAPTER XVII: OF THE HOUSE AND THE PLEASANCE IN THE WOOD
CHAPTER XVIII: THE MAID GIVES WALTER TRYST
CHAPTER XX: WALTER IS BIDDEN TO ANOTHER TRYST
CHAPTER XXII: OF THE DWARF AND THE PARDON
CHAPTER XXIII: OF THE PEACEFUL ENDING OF THAT WILD DAY
CHAPTER XXIV: THE MAID TELLS OF WHAT HAD BEFALLEN HER
CHAPTER XXV: OF THE TRIUMPHANT SUMMER ARRAY OF THE MAID
CHAPTER XXVI: THEY COME TO THE FOLK OF THE BEARS
CHAPTER XXVII: MORNING AMONGST THE BEARS
CHAPTER XXVIII: OF THE NEW GOD OF THE BEARS
CHAPTER XXX: NOW THEY MEET AGAIN
CHAPTER XXXI: THEY COME UPON NEW FOLK
CHAPTER XXXIV: NOW COMETH THE MAID TO THE KING
CHAPTER XXXV: OF THE KING OF STARK-WALL AND HIS QUEEN