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"To the grace of G.o.d, my girls," he replied.
They brought him to the prison of the commune; Soetkin and Nele sat down upon the threshold. Towards evening, Soetkin bade Nele leave her and go to see if Ulenspiegel was not coming back.
LXIX
Soon the news ran abroad through the villages round about that a man had been cast into prison for heresy and that the inquisitor t.i.telman, the dean of Renaix, nicknamed the Inquisitor Pitiless, would conduct the interrogatories. Ulenspiegel was then living at Koolkerke, in the most private favours of a pretty farmer, an amiable widow that denied him nothing that was hers. There he was very well off, spoiled and caressed until the day when a treacherous rival, the sheriff of the commune, lay in wait for him one morning as he came out of the tavern and would fain have rubbed him down with an oaken towel. But Ulenspiegel, to cool his anger, cast him in a pond whence the sheriff crept out as best he could, green as a toad and steeped full as a sponge.
Ulenspiegel for this high feat, must leave Koolkerke and set off with all speed towards Damme, fearing the sheriff's vengeance.
The evening was falling cool, Ulenspiegel ran swiftly; fain would he have been at home already, in his mind's eye he saw Nele sewing, Soetkin preparing supper, Claes binding f.a.ggots, Schnouffius gnawing on a bone and the stork knocking with her bill on the housewife's front to have some sc.r.a.ps of food.
A pedlar afoot said to him as he pa.s.sed:
"Whither away in such hurry?"
"To Damme, to my own home," replied Ulenspiegel.
The pedlar answered:
"The town is not safe now by reason of the folk of the reformed faith that are being arrested there."
And he went on his way.
Arrived before the inn of the Roode-Schildt, Ulenspiegel went in to drink a gla.s.s of dobbel-cuyt. The baes said to him:
"Are not you the son of Claes?"
"I am," answered Ulenspiegel.
"Make haste, then," said the baes, "for the ill hour has struck for your father."
Ulenspiegel asked what he meant.
The baes replied that he would know all too soon.
And Ulenspiegel continued to run.
As he was at the entrance to Damme, the dogs that were on the doorsteps jumped out at his legs yelping and barking. The goodwives came out at the noise and said to him, all talking at once:
"Whence come you?" "Have you news of your father?" "Where is your mother?" "Is she with him in prison, too?" "Alas! if only they do not burn him!"
Ulenspiegel ran the harder.
He met Nele, who said to him:
"Thyl, do not go to your house: the town governors have put a guard in it on behalf of His Majesty."
Ulenspiegel stopped.
"Nele," said he, "is it true that my father Claes is in prison?"
"Yea," said Nele, "and Soetkin weeps on the threshold."
Then the heart of the prodigal son was swollen with anguish and he said to Nele:
"I am going to see them."
"That is not what you should do," said she, "but you should obey Claes instead, who said to me before he was taken: 'save the carolus, they are behind the chimney-back.' They are what you must save first and foremost, for it is the inheritance of Soetkin, the poor woman."
Ulenspiegel, listening no whit, ran to the gaol. There he saw Soetkin seated on the threshold; she embraced him with tears, and they wept together.
The people a.s.sembling, because of these two, in a crowd in front of the gaol, the constables came and told Ulenspiegel and Soetkin that they were to be off out of that and at the speediest possible.
Mother and son went away to Nele's cottage, next door to their own home, before which they saw one of the lansquenet troopers summoned from Bruges through fear of the troubles that might arise during the trial and during the execution. For the folk of Damme loved Claes greatly.
The trooper was sitting on the pavement, before the door, busy sucking the last drop of brandy out of a flask. Finding nothing more in it, he flung it some paces away, and drawing his dagger, he amused himself in digging up the paving stones.
Soetkin, all tears, entered Katheline's house.
And Katheline shaking her head: "The fire! Make a hole, the soul would fain escape," said she.
LXX
The bell that is called Borgstorm--the storm of the burg--having summoned the judges to the tribunal, they met in the Vierschare, at the stroke of four, about the linden tree of judgment.
Claes was brought before them and saw seated beneath the canopy the bailiff of Damme, and beside him and opposite him the mayor, the aldermen, and the clerk.
The people flocked up at the sound of the bell in great mult.i.tude. Many said:
"The judges are not there to do the works of justice, but of imperial serfdom."
The clerk announced that the tribunal having first met in the Vierschare, around the linden tree, had decided that, considering the denunciations and testimonies before it, there had been good ground for seizing the body of Claes, coal vendor, native of Damme, husband of Soetkin, the daughter of Joostens. They would now, he added, proceed to the hearing of the witnesses.
Hans Barbier, a neighbour of Claes, was the first heard. Having taken the oath, he said: "Upon my soul's salvation, I affirm and a.s.severate that Claes, present before this court, has been known to me for almost seventeen years, that he has always lived honestly and decently, and according to the laws and rules of our holy mother the Church, has never spoken opprobriously of her, nor to my knowledge harboured any heretic, nor hidden Luther's book, nor spoken of the said book, nor done anything that could bring him into suspicion of having transgressed the laws and regulations of the empire. So help me G.o.d and all His saints."
Jan Van Roosebekke was next heard, and said "that during the absence of Soetkin, Claes's wife, he had often thought he heard in the accused man's house the voices of two men, and that often at night, after the curfew, he had seen in a small chamber beneath the roof a light, and two men, one of them was Claes, conversing together. As for saying whether the other man was heretic or no, he could not, having only seen him at a distance. As for what concerns Claes," he added, "I will say, speaking in all truth, that since I have known him, he always kept his Easter regularly, communicated on the princ.i.p.al feast days, went to ma.s.s every Sunday, except that of the Blessed Blood and those following. And I know nothing further but this. So help me G.o.d and all His saints."
Questioned if he had not seen Claes in the tavern of the Blauwe Torre selling indulgences and mocking at purgatory, Jan Van Roosebekke replied that in fact Claes had sold indulgences, but without contempt or mockery, and that he, Jan Van Roosebekke, had bought even as also was fain to do Josse Grypstuiver, the dean of the fishmongers, who was there present among the crowd.
Thereafter the bailiff said he would proclaim the actions and conduct for the which Claes was brought before the court of the Vierschare.