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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Saint Cuthbert, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. O is of Oswold

from First Wolf...

‘Keep still, wriggly little eel,’ I whispered angrily. ‘If the men see us, we’ll both be beaten.’
 This quietened him, for he knew about beatings, and I settled to watch the members of the folk moot with a feeling of great bitterness in my heart.  I was old enough to attend the meetings, to join their war talk, but there was no place for me.  With my useless leg, they would never send me into the forest to kill my first wolf.  They would never think of me as a man.
Many nights I dreamed I was searching for the wolf, only to wake sweating, shouting, and filled with sick fear.  The creatures often hunted in packs, it would be dangerous work, but I longed for my chance to prove my worth.  Boys of my age had slain the wolf; they sat by right at the meeting place and pitied me. Their pity did not upset me much, for it was kindly meant, but some like Oswold, uncle Heolstor’s son, threw stones at me and shouted insults that made me burn with anger.
At my birth, my kinsfolk saw my useless leg and voted to leave me on the hillside for the wild beasts to eat, but Father would not let them tear me from my mother’s arms.  He followed the teachings of the good Saint Cuthbert, knowing it wrong to kill a helpless child, and I was thinking it was a blessing to have such a father, when a sudden shout made me jump. 
‘Godwin, what use is your folk moot?’  It was Heolstor, his face like thunder. Spitting angry words, he threatened my father with the ash spear. ‘There’s no king’s man to attend the meeting,’ he shouted, ‘there’s no one with the right to hold the spear, to judge what should be done!’
My father growled, wrenching the spear from his brother’s hand.  An anxious cry went up, for only the king’s high reeve held the ash spear to decide right from wrong.  Then clenching the spear in his fist, as tough as the hammers he used to beat the glowing iron on his anvil, my father gave so threatening a look that the men placed their weapons on the ground, squatting in the sand to listen to him speak.

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2. First Wolf - Friday Book Excerpt

Chapter Two - Escape to the Forest

The men crowded round the old man, snatching at the straws in his hand.  It was hard to see what was happening.  Then a gasp went up, the men fell silent, and I knew a man was chosen.
   Those standing around the elder moved away and settled on the ground, and I went cold with fear, for my father was alone beside the cross with a wisp of straw between his large fingers and thumb.
   ‘I would rather fight beside you to the death than ride to Bamburgh,’ my father said, his voice loud and clear, ‘but you see I cannot, for I hold the short straw.  I know you will defend the settlement with your lives, but there is little time before Uhtred returns.  First the women and children must be sent to safety in the forest.’
   ‘There’s no safety in the forest,’ the carpenter sneered.  ‘The wolves and bears–’
   ‘Bears?  There are no bears left in the forest as well you know, carpenter.  Better for the women and children to take a chance with wolves than face Uhtred’s mercenaries,’ my father exclaimed.
   ‘Godwin, it’s not for you to decide these things.  You will be safe in Bamburgh,’ the carpenter mocked.  ‘Let those who must stand at the gates decide what is right!  I say we choose Heolstor for tythingman.  He has the ash spear, let him decide.’ 
   The men shouted so loudly it was impossible to hear what they said until the weaver, red-faced with anger, jumped to his feet and tore the ash spear from Heolstor’s hand.
   ‘Godwin is right!’ he yelled, poking Heolstor’s belly with the tip of the weapon.  ‘Uhtred will be at our gates and we are fools, fighting over who shall be tythingman when our families are in great danger!’  Then throwing the spear to the ground, he picked up his double-edged axe, ran across the yard, and called to his wife to collect food and clothing and run with the children to the forest.
   This seemed to decide things for the others, and one by one, they gathered up their weapons and followed him, though some were arguing still.  My father strode towards our house, and I lurched forward on my good leg, pulling Rinan after me.  
   ‘Let go, let go!’ he shouted and tried to punch me, and I was spinning him round by his cloak when Father heard us, called angrily for us to stop our fighting, and waited until we caught up with him.

6 Comments on First Wolf - Friday Book Excerpt, last added: 9/15/2013
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