The novel is narrated from three
different people’s perspectives, all with a clearly different voice. Will Quate
is a serf who is bound to work the land of a nobleman, and he is betrothed to
local beauty, Ness, but he sees a better future in proving himself an archer
and buying his freedom through his service. The Lady Bernadine is the daughter
of the aforementioned nobleman and betrothed to his friend in a deal done
between them which favours the old men and not their promised daughters. Seduced
by romantic notions inspired by a French novel, Le Roman de La Rose, she believes herself in love with a young
knight, Laurence Haket who happens to be the owner of the troop of archers.
Lastly, Thomas Pitkerro is a proctor or clerical administrator from Avignon on
secondment to Malmesbury Abbey, who just wants to go home. He provides a record
of the journey and acts as a substitute priest to the travellers.
The bowmen are earthy and brutal:
with the exception of Quate, who has joined them later, they are rough men who
kill, kidnap and rape. There are stories of fights and people being put in the
stocks; there are set pieces of violent battles and startling frank sex scenes.
Lady Bernadine thinks she is in love with Laurence Haket, but he has failed in
her ideas of courtly love and has got a country woman, Ness, pregnant. While she
steals away from her father, she disguises herself as Madlen, who is pretending
to be Lady Bernadine, but Madlen is actually Hab – a rough young serf, pretending
to be his sister, Madlen, wearing a dress he stole from Bernadine. Will Quate has
agreed to marry Ness, but he falls for Madlen, while knowing she is an
incarnation of Hab. It’s a mixed up muddled up shook up world indeed; one could
almost call that a Shakespearean plot.
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