and snowy cloak. Armed men went to and fro in the ways of the City, as if going at the striking of the hour to changes
of post and duty.
‘Nine o’clock we’d call it in the Shire,’ said Pippin aloud to himself. ‘Just the time for a nice breakfast by the open window
in spring sunshine. And how I should like breakfast!Do these people ever have it, or is it over? And when do they have dinner, and where?’
Presently he noticed a man, clad in black and white, coming along the narrow street from the centre of the citadel towards
him. Pippin felt lonely and made up his mind to speak as the man passed; but he had no need. The man came straight up to him.
‘You are Peregrin the Halfling?’ he said. ‘I am told that you have been sworn to the service of the Lord and of the City.
Welcome!’ He held out his hand and Pippin took it.
‘I am named Beregond son of Baranor. I have no duty this morning, and I have been sent to you to teach you the pass-words,
and to tell you some of the many things that no doubt you will wish to know. And for my part, I would learn of you also. For
never before have we seen a halfling in this land and though we have heard rumour of them, little is said of them in any tale
that we know. Moreover you are a friend of Mithrandir. Do you know him well?’
‘Well,’ said Pippin. ‘I have known
of
him all my short life, as you might say; and lately I have travelled far with him. But there is much to read in that book,
and I cannot claim to have seen more than a page or two. Yet perhaps I know him as well as any but a few. Aragorn was the
only one of our Company, I think, who really knew him.’
‘Aragorn?’ said Beregond. ‘Who is he?’
‘Oh,’ stammered Pippin, ‘he was a man who went about with us. I think he is in Rohan now.’
‘You have been in Rohan, I hear. There is much that I would ask you of that land also; for we put much of what little hope
we have in its people. But I am forgetting my errand, which was first to answer what you would ask. What would you know, Master
Peregrin?’
‘Er well,’ said Pippin, ‘if I may venture to say so, rather a burning question in my mind at present is, well, what about
breakfast and all that? I mean, what are the meal-times, if you understand me, and where is the dining-room, if there is one?
And the inns? I looked, but never a one could I see aswe rode up, though I had been borne up by the hope of a draught of ale as soon as we came to the homes of wise and courtly
men.’
Beregond looked at him gravely. ‘An old campaigner, I see,’ he said. ‘They say that men who go warring afield look ever to
the next hope of food and of drink; though I am not a travelled man myself. Then you have not yet eaten today?’
‘Well, yes, to speak in courtesy, yes,’ said Pippin. ‘But no more than a cup of wine and a white cake or two by the kindness
of your lord; but he racked me for it with an hour of questions, and that is hungry work.’
Beregond laughed. ‘At the table small men may do the greater deeds, we say. But you have broken your fast as well as any man
in the Citadel, and with greater honour. This is a fortress and a tower of guard and is now in posture of war. We rise ere
the Sun, and take a morsel in the grey light, and go to our duties at the opening hour. But do not despair!’ He laughed again,
seeing the dismay in Pippin’s face. ‘Those who have had
heavy
duty take somewhat to refresh their strength in the mid-morning. Then there is the nuncheon, at noon or after as duties allow;
and men gather for the daymeal, and such mirth as there still may be, about the hour of sunset.
‘Come! We will walk a little and then go find us some refreshment, and eat and drink on the battlement, and survey the fair
morning.’
‘One moment!’ said Pippin blushing. ‘Greed, or hunger by your courtesy, put it out of my mind. But Gandalf, Mithrandir as
you call him, asked me to see to his horse – Shadowfax, a
Janwillem van de Wetering