full quantity, without any food 
to eat it with. Even in such a case as this, if a starving man ventured to 
sell salt for a loaf of bread, he was subject to severe punishment. Now, 
Marie's brothers were just ten and nine years old; and the hardships of 
the family had been increased since these poor boys became the cause 
of their father having to buy their portion of salt. Just able before to get 
on, the family were, by this additional tax, brought down to a state of 
want; and Marie begged her father not to say a word about giving her a 
single penny, to help her marriage with Charles; for she saw well that 
he would never be able to do it. Her poor father could not contradict 
her. 
As he could do nothing for her, he did not like to oppose the plan which 
the young people were found at length to have talked over. Charles 
knew that, in cases of great poverty, huts had been built in a wood, or
caves scooped out in the side of the chalk-hills, where people lived who 
could not hire, or buy, or build a house. He told Marie that he would 
build a hut in the wood, and that he would then marry, and live or 
starve together, since there was no use in waiting longer, seeing, as they 
did, that their prospect never could improve. The lord of the chateau 
would not object, he was sure; as the lords always got out of their 
peasantry much more service than would pay for the stakes and twigs 
of a hut in the wood. Marie was easily persuaded, though her mother 
wept at the idea of the cold of winter, and the damps of spring, and the 
ague of autumn, that she knew caused terrible suffering to the poor, 
who lived in the woods and caves. The good woman tried to console 
herself with taking great care of a pair of fowls, which were to be her 
wedding present to her daughter. 
So here was Charles, this day at work in the wood, with Marie's 
brothers to help him. One well-wisher had lent him an axe, and another 
a mallet; and he cut and drove stakes, while Robin and Marc collected 
twigs from the brushwood, moss from the roots of trees, and rushes 
from the margin of the ponds. They had chosen such a spot as they 
thought Marie would like; for she would not be persuaded to come and 
choose for herself. She only dropped that the hut ought to stand above 
the fogs of the ponds; and she left the rest to Charles. Charles had 
found a little green recess among the trees, on a slightly rising ground; 
Robin and Marc declared for it at once, when he showed them how he 
could cut away the brushwood, so as to leave a pathway to the pond, 
and a pretty view of it when it gleamed in the sun, as it did this 
afternoon. The boys clapped their hands: and Charles, feeling a glow at 
his heart, as if Marie and he were going to be happy at last, began to 
sing, as he drove his corner-stakes. 
"You will have a pleasant life of it here in the woods," said Robin, 
bringing as large a load of rushes as his two arms would hold. "I should 
like to live here, as you are going to do. You have only to look into that 
pond for three minutes to see more fine fish than you will want for a 
month after." 
"The fish will do us no good," said Charles. "If a fishbone is found
within a furlong of where I live (here where nobody else lives), off I am 
marched straight to jail. And the Count's bailiff has surprisingly sharp 
eyes." 
"I would bury the fishbones in the night-time," observed Marc, coming 
up with a faggot of twigs; "but I would have the fish, if I wanted them, 
for all the bailiff." 
"If you go to yonder jail," said Charles, "and ask the folk how they 
came there, some of them will tell you it was trying to get fish, when 
they were hungry, for all the bailiff. Or, if not fish, something else from 
the woods and warrens--a rabbit, perhaps, or a couple of doves." 
"I hope the bailiff won't put me into jail for my rabbits," said Marc, "for 
I have not eaten them. I have a pretty litter of rabbits for Marie; and 
you will help me to make a hutch for them, behind the house. I should 
say hereabouts." 
"Do you know no better than that?" said Charles. "Your father could 
have told you in a minute, if you had asked him, that it is    
    
		
	
	
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