What boy or girl has not heard the story of
King Robert Brace and the spider? I will tell you another story of the same
brave and famous king. He had fought a battle with his enemies, the English.
His little army had been beaten and scattered. Many of his best friends had
been killed or captured. The king himself was obliged to hide in the wild woods
while his foes hunted for him with hounds.
For many days he wandered through rough and
dangerous places. He waded rivers and climbed mountains. Sometimes two or three
faithful friends were with him. Sometimes he was alone. Sometimes his enemies
were very close upon him.
Late one evening he came to a little
farmhouse in a lonely valley. He walked in without knocking. A woman was
sitting alone by the fire.
"May a poor traveler find rest and
shelter here for the night?" he asked. The woman answered, "All
travelers are welcome for the sake of one; and you are welcome"
"Who is that one?" asked the
king.
"That is Robert the Bruce," said
the woman. "He is the rightful lord of this country. He is now being
hunted with hounds, but I hope soon to see him king over all Scotland."
"Since you love him so well,"
said the king, "I will tell you something. I am Robert the Bruce."
"You!" cried the woman in great
surprise. "Are you the Bruce, and are you all alone?"
"My men have been scattered,"
said the king, "and therefore there is no one with me."
"That is not right," said the
brave woman. "I have two sons who are gallant and trusty. They shall go
with you and serve you."
So she called her two sons. They were tall
and strong young men, and they gladly promised to go with the king and help
him.
The king sat down by the fire, and the
woman hurried to get things ready for supper. The two young men got down their
bows and arrows, and all were busy making plans for the next day.
Suddenly a great noise was heard outside.
They listened. They heard the tramping of horses and the voices of a number of
men.
"The English! the English!" said
the young men.
"Be brave, and defend your king with
your lives," said their mother.
Then some one outside called loudly,
"Have you seen King Robert the
Bruce pass this way?"
"That is my brother Edward's
voice," said the king. "These are friends, not enemies."
The door was thrown open and he saw a
hundred brave men, all ready to give him aid. He forgot his hunger; he forgot
his weariness. He began to ask about his enemies who had been hunting him.
"I saw two hundred of them in the
village below us," said one of his officers. "They are resting there
for the night and have no fear of danger from us. If you have a mind to make
haste, we may surprise them."
"Then let us mount and ride,"
said the king.
The next minute they were off. They rushed
suddenly into the village.
They routed the king's enemies and
scattered them.
And Robert the Bruce was never again
obliged to hide in the woods or to run from savage hounds. Soon he became the
real king and ruler of all Scotland,
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