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The Life and Death of Richard 
Yea-and-Nay 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Life and Death of Richard 
Yea-and-Nay 
by Maurice Hewlett This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at 
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Title: The Life and Death of Richard Yea-and-Nay 
Author: Maurice Hewlett 
Release Date: January 26, 2005 [EBook #14813] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK RICHARD 
YEA-AND-NAY *** 
 
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[Illustration: Ornate lettering/text The MM Co.] 
 
THE LIFE AND DEATH OF RICHARD YEA-AND-NAY 
BY MAURICE HEWLETT 
AUTHOR OF "THE FOREST LOVERS," "LITTLE NOVELS OF 
ITALY," ETC. 
Sì che a bene sperar mi era cagione Di quella fera alla gaietta pelle. 
_Inf._ i. 41. 
NEW YORK THE MACMILLAN COMPANY LONDON; 
MACMILLAN & CO., LTD. 1901 
Set up and electrotyped October, 1900. Reprinted November, 
December, twice, 1900; January, February, twice, 1901 
Norwood Press J.B. Cushing & Co.--Berwick & Smith Norwood Mass. 
U.S.A. 
TO HIS FRIEND EDMUND GOSSE (ALWAYS BENEVOLENT TO 
HIS INVENTION) 
THIS CHRONICLE OF ANJOU AND A NOBLE LADY IS 
DEDICATED BY M.H. 
 
CONTENTS 
BOOK I--THE BOOK OF YEA 
EXORDIUM PAGE 
The Abbot Milo urbi el orbi, concerning the Nature of the Leopard 3
CHAPTER I 
Of Count Richard, and the Fires by Night 5 
CHAPTER II 
How the Fair Jehane bestowed herself 18 
CHAPTER III 
In what Harbour they found the Old Lion 29 
CHAPTER IV 
How Jehane stroked what Alois had made Fierce 41 
CHAPTER V 
How Bertran de Born and Count Richard strove in a Tenzon 56 
CHAPTER VI 
Fruits of the Tenzon: the Back of Saint-Pol, and the Front of Montferrat 
69 
CHAPTER VII 
Of the Crackling of Thorns under Pots 84 
CHAPTER VIII 
How they held Richard off from his Father's Throat 93 
CHAPTER IX 
Wild Work in the Church of Gisors 102
CHAPTER X 
Night-work by the Dark Tower 111 
CHAPTER XI 
Of Prophecy; and Jehane in the Perilous Bed 123 
CHAPTER XII 
How they bayed the Old Lion 134 
CHAPTER XIII 
How they met at Fontevrault 145 
CHAPTER XIV 
Of what King Richard said to the Bowing Rood; and what Jehane to 
King Richard 156 
CHAPTER XV 
Last Tenzon of Bertran de Born 168 
CHAPTER XVI 
Conversation in England of Jehane the Fair 179 
CHAPTER XVII 
Frozen Heart and Red Heart: Cahors 193 
* * * * * 
BOOK II--THE BOOK OF NAY
CHAPTER I 
The Chapter called Mate-Grifon 209 
CHAPTER II 
Of what Jehane looked for, and what Berengère had 220 
CHAPTER III 
Who Fought at Acre 235 
CHAPTER IV 
Concerning the Tower of Flies, Saint-Pol, and the Marquess of 
Montferrat 248 
CHAPTER V 
The Chapter of Forbidding: how De Gurdun looked, and King Richard 
hid his Face 262 
CHAPTER VI 
The Chapter called Clytemnestra 282 
CHAPTER VII 
The Chapter of the Sacrifice on Lebanon; also called Cassandra 293 
CHAPTER VIII 
Of the Going-up and Going-down of the Marquess 302 
CHAPTER IX 
How King Richard reaped what Jehane had sowed, and the Soldan was
Gleaner 311 
CHAPTER X 
The Chapter called Bonds 327 
CHAPTER XI 
The Chapter called A Latere 338 
CHAPTER XII 
The Chapter of Strife in the Dark 350 
CHAPTER XIII 
Of the Love of Women 362 
CHAPTER XIV 
How the Leopard was loosed 369 
CHAPTER XV 
Oeconomic Reflections of the Old Man of Musse 380 
CHAPTER XVI 
The Chapter called Chaluz 386 
CHAPTER XVII 
The Keening 396 
EPILOGUE OF THE ABBOT MILO 408
BOOK I 
THE BOOK OF YEA 
 
EXORDIUM 
THE ABBOT MILO URBI ET ORBI, CONCERNING THE NATURE 
OF THE LEOPARD 
I like this good man's account of leopards, and find it more pertinent to 
my matter than you might think. Milo was a Carthusian monk, abbot of 
the cloister of Saint Mary-of-the-Pine by Poictiers; it was his 
distinction to be the life-long friend of a man whose friendships were 
few: certainly it may be said of him that he knew as much of leopards 
as any one of his time and nation, and that his knowledge was better 
grounded. 
'Your leopard,' he writes, 'is alleged in the books to be offspring of the 
Lioness and the Pard; and his name, if the Realists have any truth on 
their side, establishes the fact. But I think he should be called Leolupé, 
which is to say, got by lion out of bitch-wolf, since two essences burn 
in him as well as two sorts. This is the nature of the leopard: it is a 
spotted beast, having two souls, a bright soul and a dark soul.    
    
		
	
	
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