What did Bear tell Crispin about Lord Furnival?

In chapter 22 of Crispin: The Cross of Lead, Bear ties Crispin to a tree while he goes off in search of food. Unsurprisingly, Crispin is not too pleased about this. However, Bear has his reasons. He is sure that the young lad will just get in the way. Alternatively, he might run off. After what seems like an eternity, Bear comes back carrying a large, fat rabbit. Crispin, though still reeling from his ordeal, sits down with Bear to eat some rabbit around their little fire.
The conversation soon starts to flow. Bear regales Crispin with tales of his many adventures and escapades. He tells the young boy about his days as a soldier fighting in Gascony and Brittany. Crispin casually remarks that he has never seen his master, Lord Furnival, as he has been away fighting in France for such a long time.
Bear tells Crispin that he fought alongside Lord Furnival in France, but he does not have time for him at all. Apparently, His Lordship was not much good as a soldier, although he did gain a reputation for cruelty and looting. Bear says that Furnival took hostages, and those who could not be ransomed were doomed. He was an arrogant man to boot, and what he lacked in fighting skills he more than made up for in bragging, drinking, and killing.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

How does Bilbo show leadership and courage in The Hobbit?

In “Goodbye to All That,” Joan Didion writes that the “lesson” of her story is that “it is distinctly possible to remain too long at the fair.” What does she mean? How does the final section of the essay portray how she came to this understanding, her feelings about it, and the consequences of it?

Why does the poet say "all the men and women merely players"?