In South Morgraunt stands Holy Thorn, more properly the Abbey of Saint

Giles of Holy Thorn, a broad and fair foundation, one of the two set

up in the forest by the Countess Isabel, Dowager of March and

Bellesme, Countess of Hauterive and Lady of Morgraunt in her own

right. Where the Wan river makes a great loop, running east for three

miles, and west again for as many before it drives its final surge

towards the Southern Sea, there stands Holy Thorn, Church and Convent,

watching over the red roofs of Malbank hamlet huddled together across

the flood. Here are green water-meadows and good corn-lands, the abbey

demesne; here also are the strips of tillage which the tenants hold;

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here the sluices which head up the river for the Abbey mills, make

thunderous music all day long. Over this cleared space and over some

leagues of the virgin forest, the Abbot of Saint Thorn has sac and

soc, tholl and theam, catch-a-thief-in, catch-a-thief-out, as well as

other sovereign prerogatives, all of which he owes to the regret and

remorse of the Countess Isabel over the death of her first husband and

only lover, Fulk de Bréauté. Further north, in Mid-Morgraunt, is

Gracedieu, her other foundation--equally endowed, but holding white

nuns instead of white monks.

Now it so happened that as Prosper le Gai entered the purlieus of

Morgraunt, the Countess Isabel sat in the Abbey parlour of Saint

Thorn, knitting her fine brows over a business of the Abbot's, no less

than the granting of a new charter of pit and gallows, pillory and

tumbril to him and his house over the villeins of Malbank, and the

whole fee and soke. The death of these unfortunates, or the manner of

it, was of little moment; but the Countess, having much power, was

jealous how she lent it. She sat now, therefore, in the Abbot's great

chair, and before her stood the Abbot himself, holding in his hands

the charter fairly written out on parchment, with the twisted silk of

three colours ready to receive her seal. It was exactly this which she

was not very ready to give, for though she knew nothing of his

villeins, she knew much of the Abbot, and was of many minds concerning

him. There was yet time; their colloquy was in secret; but now she

tapped with her foot upon the stool, and the Abbot watched her

narrowly. He was a tall and personable man, famous for his smile,

stout and smooth, his skin soft as a woman's, his robe, his ring, his

cross and mere slippers all in accord.

At length, says he, "Madam, for the love of the Saints, but chiefly

for Mary's love; to the glory of God and of Saint Giles of Holy Thorn;

to the ease of his monks and the honour of the Church, I beseech your

Ladyship this small boon."




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