About the print version
Le Morte Darthur: Sir Thomas Malory's Book of King Arthur and of his
Noble Knights of the Round Table, Volume 1
Sir Thomas Malory
Edited by: William Caxton
Edited by: Sir Edward Strachey
Edited by: A. W. Pollard Caxton's edition with modern spellings. :
The Macmillan Company New York 1903 Volume one of two
Note: The table of contents is pretty much "raw" OCR. Similarly with
the glossary at the end of the book.
Scanned with OmniPage Professional OCR software donated by Caere Corporation.
Checked against UVa Library copy PR 2043.M3 1903 v.1
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Published: 1903 (1470)
English
Page 1
Book 1
BOOK I
CHAPTER I
How Uther Pendragon sent for the duke of Cornwall and Igraine his wife,
and of their departing suddenly again.
IT befell in the days of Uther Pendragon, when he
was king of all England, and so reigned, that there was a mighty duke in
Cornwall that held war against him long time. And the duke
was called the Duke of Tintagil. And so by means King Uther sent for
this duke, charging him to bring his wife with him, for she was called
a fair lady, and a passing wise, and her name
was called Igraine.
So when the duke and his wife were come unto the king,
by the means of great lords they were accorded both. The king liked and
loved this lady well, and he made them great cheer
out of measure, and desired to have lain by her. But she was a passing
good woman, and would not assent unto the king. And then she told the duke
her husband, and said, I suppose
that we were sent for that I should be dishonoured; wherefore, husband,
I counsel you, that we depart from hence suddenly, that we may ride all
night unto our own castle. And in like
wise as she said so they departed, that neither the king nor none of
his council were ware of their departing. All so soon as King Uther knew
of their departing so suddenly, he was
wonderly wroth. Then he called to him his privy council, and told them
of the sudden departing of the duke and his wife.
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Then they advised the king to send for the duke and his
wife by a great charge; and if he will not come at your summons, then may
ye do your best, then have ye cause to make mighty
war upon him. So that was done, and the messengers had their answers;
and that was this shortly, that neither he nor his wife would not come
at him.
Then was the king wonderly wroth. And then the king sent
him plain word again, and bade him be ready and stuff him and garnish him,
for within forty days he would fetch him out of
the biggest castle that he hath.
When the duke had this warning, anon he went and furnished
and garnished two strong castles of his, of the which the one hight Tintagil,
and the other castle hight Terrabil. So his wife
Dame Igraine he put in the castle of Tintagil, and himself he put in
the castle of Terrabil, the which had many issues and posterns out. Then
in all haste came Uther with a great host, and
laid a siege about the castle of Terrabil. And there he pight many
pavilions, and there was great war made on both parties, and much people
slain. Then for pure anger and for great love
of fair Igraine the king Uther fell sick. So came to the king Uther
Sir Ulfius, a noble knight, and asked the king why he was sick. I shall
tell thee, said the king, I am sick for anger and for
love of fair Igraine, that I may not be whole. Well, my lord, said
Sir Ulfius, I shall seek Merlin, and he shall do you remedy, that your
heart shall be pleased. So Ulfius departed, and by
adventure he met Merlin in a beggar's array, and there Merlin asked
Ulfius whom he sought. And he said he had little ado to tell him. Well,
said Merlin, I know whom thou seekest, for
thou seekest Merlin; therefore seek no farther, for I am he; and if
King Uther will well reward me, and be sworn unto me to fulfil my desire,
that shall be his honour and profit more than
mine; for I shall cause him to have all his desire. All this will I
undertake, said Ulfius, that there shall be nothing reasonable but thou
shalt have thy desire. Well, said Merlin, he shall have
his intent and desire. And therefore, said Merlin, ride on your way,
for I will not be long behind.
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CHAPTER II
How Uther Pendragon
made war on the duke of Cornwall, and how by the mean of Merlin he lay
by the duchess and gat Arthur.
THEN Ulfius was glad, and rode on more than a pace
till that he came to King Uther Pendragon, and told him he had met with
Merlin. Where is he? said the king. Sir, said Ulfius, he
will not dwell long. Therewithal Ulfius was ware where Merlin stood
at the porch of the pavilion's door. And then Merlin was bound to come
to the king. When King Uther saw him, he
said he was welcome. Sir, said Merlin, I know all your heart every
deal; so ye will be sworn unto me as ye be a true king anointed, to fulfil
my desire, ye shall have your desire. Then the
king was sworn upon the Four Evangelists. Sir, said Merlin, this is
my desire: the first night that ye shall lie by Igraine ye shall get a
child on her, and when that is born, that it shall be
delivered to me for to nourish there as I will have it; for it shall
be your worship, and the child's avail, as mickle as the child is worth.
I will well, said the king, as thou wilt have it. Now
make you ready, said Merlin, this night ye shall lie with Igraine in
the castle of Tintagil; and ye shall be like the duke her husband, Ulfius
shall be like Sir Brastias, a knight of the duke's,
and I will be like a knight that hight Sir Jordanus, a knight of the
duke's. But wait ye make not many questions with her nor her men, but say
ye are diseased, and so hie you to bed, and
rise not on the morn till I come to you, for the castle of Tintagil
is but ten miles hence; so this was done as they devised. But the duke
of Tintagil espied how the king rode from the siege of
Terrabil, and therefore that night he issued out of the castle at a
postern for to have distressed the king's host. And so, through his own
issue, the duke himself was slain or ever the king
came at the castle of Tintagil.
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So after the death of the duke, King Uther lay with Igraine
more than three hours after his death, and begat on her that night Arthur,
and on day came Merlin to the king, and bade him
make him ready, and so he kissed the lady Igraine and departed in all
haste. But when the lady heard tell of the duke her husband, and by all
record he was dead or ever King Uther
came to her, then she marvelled who that might be that lay with her
in likeness of her lord; so she mourned privily and held her peace. Then
all the barons by one assent prayed the king of
accord betwixt the lady Igraine and him; the king gave them leave,
for fain would he have been accorded with her. So the king put all the
trust in Ulfius to entreat between them, so by the
entreaty at the last the king and she met together. Now will we do
well, said Ulfius, our king is a lusty knight and wifeless, and my lady
Igraine is a passing fair lady; it were great joy unto
us all, an it might please the king to make her his queen. Unto that
they all well accorded and moved it to the king. And anon, like a lusty
knight, he assented thereto with good will, and so
in all haste they were married in a morning with great mirth and joy.
And King Lot of Lothian and of Orkney then wedded Margawse
that was Gawaine's mother, and King Nentres of the land of Garlot wedded
Elaine. All this was done at the request of
King Uther. And the third sister Morgan le Fay was put to school in
a nunnery, and there she learned so much that she was a great clerk of
necromancy. And after she was wedded to
King Uriens of the land of Gore, that was Sir Ewain's le Blanchemain's
father.
CHAPTER III
Of the birth of King Arthur and of his nurture.
THEN Queen Igraine waxed daily greater and greater, so it befell after within half a year, as King Uther lay by his queen, he asked her, by the faith she owed to him, whose was
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the child within her body; then she sore abashed to give answer. Dismay
you not, said the king, but tell me the truth, and I shall love you the
better, by the faith of my body. Sir, said she, I
shall tell you the truth. The same night that my lord was dead, the
hour of his death, as his knights record, there came into my castle of
Tintagil a man like my lord in speech and in
countenance, and two knights with him in likeness of his two knights
Prastias and Jordanus, and so I went unto bed with him as I ought to do
with my lord, and the same night, as I shall
answer unto God, this child was begotten upon me. That is truth, said
the king, as ye say; for it was I myself that came in the likeness, and
therefore dismay you not, for I am father of the
child; and there he told her all the cause, how it was by Merlin's
counsel. Then the queen made great joy when she knew who was the father
of her child.
Soon came Merlin unto the king, and said, Sir, ye must
purvey you for the nourishing of your child. As thou wilt, said the king,
be it. Well, said Merlin, I know a lord of yours in this
land, that is a passing true man and a faithful, and he shall have
the nourishing of your child, and his name is Sir Ector, and he is a lord
of fair livelihood in many parts in England and
Wales; and this lord, Sir Ector, let him be sent for, for to come and
speak with you, and desire him yourself, as he loveth you, that he will
put his own child to nourishing to another
woman, and that his wife nourish yours. And when the child is born
let it be delivered to me at yonder privy postern unchristened. So like
as Merlin devised it was done. And when Sir
Ector was come he made fiaunce to the king for to nourish the child
like as the king desired; and there the king granted Sir Ector great rewards.
Then when the lady was delivered, the
king commanded two knights and two ladies to take the child, bound
in a cloth of gold, and that ye deliver him to what poor man ye meet at
the postern gate of the castle. So the child
was delivered unto Merlin, and so he bare it forth unto Sir Ector,
and made an holy man to christen him, and named him Arthur; and so Sir
Ector's wife nourished him with her own pap.
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CHAPTER IV
Of the death of King Uther Pendragon.
THEN within two years King Uther fell sick of a great
malady. And in the meanwhile his enemies usurped upon him, and did a great
battle upon his men, and slew many of his people.
Sir, said Merlin, ye may not lie so as ye do, for ye must to the field
though ye ride on an horse-litter: for ye shall never have the better of
your enemies but if your person be there, and then
shall ye have the victory. So it was done as Merlin had devised, and
they carried the king forth in an horse-litter with a great host towards
his enemies. And at St. Albans there met with
the king a great host of the North. And that day Sir Ulfius and Sir
Brastias did great deeds of arms, and King Uther's men overcame the Northern
battle and slew many people, and put
the remnant to flight. And then the king returned unto London, and
made great joy of his victory. And then he fell passing sore sick, so that
three days and three nights he was speechless:
wherefore all the barons made great sorrow, and asked Merlin what counsel
were best. There is none other remedy, said Merlin, but God will have his
will. But look ye all barons be
before King Uther to-morn, and God and I shall make him to speak. So
on the morn all the barons with Merlin came to-fore the king; then Merlin
said aloud unto King Uther, Sir, shall
your son Arthur be king after your days, of this realm with all the
appurtenance? Then Uther Pendragon turned him, and said in hearing of them
all, I give him God's blessing and mine, and
bid him pray for my soul, and righteously and worshipfully that he
claim the crown, upon forfeiture of my blessing; and therewith he yielded
up the ghost, and then was he interred as
longed to a king. Wherefore the queen, fair Igraine, made great sorrow,
and all the barons.
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CHAPTER V
How Arthur was chosen king, and of wonders and marvels of a sword taken
out of a stone by the said Arthur.
THEN stood the realm in great jeopardy long while,
for every lord that was mighty of men made him strong, and many weened
to have been king. Then Merlin went to the Archbishop
of Canterbury, and counselled him for to send for all the lords of
the realm, and all the gentlemen of arms, that they should to London come
by Christmas, upon pain of cursing; and for
this cause, that Jesus, that was born on that night, that he would
of his great mercy show some miracle, as he was come to be king of mankind,
for to show some miracle who should be
rightwise king of this realm. So the Archbishop, by the advice of Merlin,
sent for all the lords and gentlemen of arms that they should come by Christmas
even unto London. And many of
them made them clean of their life, that their prayer might be the
more acceptable unto God. So in the greatest church of London, whether
it were Paul's or not the French book maketh
no mention, all the estates were long or day in the church for to pray.
And when matins and the first mass was done, there was seen in the churchyard,
against the high altar, a great stone
four square, like unto a marble stone; and in midst thereof was like
an anvil of steel a foot on high, and therein stuck a fair sword naked
by the point, and letters there were written in gold
about the sword that said thus: -- Whoso pulleth out this sword of
this stone and anvil, is rightwise king born of all England. Then the people
marvelled, and told it to the Archbishop. I
command, said the Archbishop, that ye keep you within your church and
pray unto God still, that no man touch the sword till the high mass be
all done. So when all masses were done all
the lords went to behold the stone and the sword. And when they saw
the scripture some assayed, such as
Page 8
would have been king. But none might stir the sword nor move it. He
is not here, said the Archbishop, that shall achieve the sword, but doubt
not God will make him known. But this is
my counsel, said the Archbishop, that we let purvey ten knights, men
of good fame, and they to keep this sword. So it was ordained, and then
there was made a cry, that every man
should assay that would, for to win the sword. And upon New Year's
Day the barons let make a jousts and a tournament, that all knights that
would joust or tourney there might play, and
all this was ordained for to keep the lords together and the commons,
for the Archbishop trusted that God would make him known that should win
the sword.
So upon New Year's Day, when the service was done, the
barons rode unto the field, some to joust and some to tourney, and so it
happened that Sir Ector, that had great livelihood
about London, rode unto the jousts, and with him rode Sir Kay his son,
and young Arthur that was his nourished brother; and Sir Kay was made knight
at All Hallowmass afore. So as
they rode to the jousts-ward, Sir Kay lost his sword, for he had left
it at his father's lodging, and so he prayed young Arthur for to ride for
his sword. I will well, said Arthur, and rode fast
after the sword, and when he came home, the lady and all were out to
see the jousting. Then was Arthur wroth, and said to himself, I will ride
to the churchyard, and take the sword with
me that sticketh in the stone, for my brother Sir Kay shall not be
without a sword this day. So when he came to the churchyard, Sir Arthur
alighted and tied his horse to the stile, and so
he went to the tent, and found no knights there, for they were at the
jousting. And so he handled the sword by the handles, and lightly and fiercely
pulled it out of the stone, and took his
horse and rode his way until he came to his brother Sir Kay, and delivered
him the sword. And as soon as Sir Kay saw the sword, he wist well it was
the sword of the stone, and so he
rode to his father Sir Ector, and said: Sir, lo here is the sword of
the stone, wherefore I must be king of this land. When Sir Ector beheld
the sword, he
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returned again and came to the church, and there they alighted all three,
and went into the church. And anon he made Sir Kay swear upon a book how
he came to that sword. Sir, said
Sir Kay, by my brother Arthur, for he brought it to me. How gat ye
this sword? said Sir Ector to Arthur. Sir, I will tell you. When I came
home for my brother's sword, I found nobody at
home to deliver me his sword; and so I thought my brother Sir Kay should
not be swordless, and so I came hither eagerly and pulled it out of the
stone without any pain. Found ye any
knights about this sword? said Sir Ector. Nay, said Arthur. Now, said
Sir Ector to Arthur, I understand ye must be king of this land. Wherefore
I, said Arthur, and for what cause? Sir,
said Ector, for God will have it so; for there should never man have
drawn out this sword, but he that shall be rightwise king of this land.
Now let me see whether ye can put the sword
there as it was, and pull it out again. That is no mastery, said Arthur,
and so he put it in the stone; wherewithal Sir Ector assayed to pull out
the sword and failed.
CHAPTER VI
How King Arthur pulled out the sword divers times.
Now assay, said Sir Ector unto Sir Kay. And anon he pulled
at the sword with all his might; but it would not be. Now shall ye assay,
said Sir Ector to Arthur. I will well, said Arthur,
and pulled it out easily. And therewithal Sir Ector knelt down to the
earth, and Sir Kay. Alas, said Arthur, my own dear father and brother,
why kneel ye to me? Nay, nay, my lord
Arthur, it is not so; I was never your father nor of your blood, but
I wot well ye are of an higher blood than I weened ye were. And then Sir
Ector told him all, how he was betaken him
for to nourish him, and by whose commandment, and by Merlin's deliverance.
Page 10
Then Arthur made great dole when he understood that Sir
Ector was not his father. Sir, said Ector unto Arthur, will ye be my good
and gracious lord when ye are king? Else were I to
blame, said Arthur, for ye are the man in the world that I am most
beholden to, and my good lady and mother your wife, that as well as her
own hath fostered me and kept. And if ever it
be God's will that I be king as ye say, ye shall desire of me what
I may do, and I shall not fail you; God forbid I should fail you Sir, said
Sir Ector, I will ask no more of you, but that ye
will make my son, your foster brother, Sir Kay, seneschal of all your
lands. That shall be done, said Arthur, and more, by the faith of my body,
that never man shall have that office but he,
while he and I live Therewithal they went unto the Archbishop, and
told him how the sword was achieved, and by whom; and on Twelfth-day all
the barons came thither, and to assay to
take the sword, who that would assay. But there afore them all, there
might none take it out but Arthur; wherefore there were many lords wroth,
and said it was great shame unto them all
and the realm, to be overgoverned with a boy of no high blood born.
And so they fell out at that time that it was put off till Candlemas and
then all the barons should meet there again; but
always the ten knights were ordained to watch the sword day and night,
and so they set a pavilion over the stone and the sword, and five always
watched. So at Candlemas many more
great lords came thither for to have won the sword, but there might
none prevail. And right as Arthur did at Christmas, he did at Candlemas,
and pulled out the sword easily, whereof the
barons were sore aggrieved and put it off in delay till the high feast
of Easter. And as Arthur sped before, so did he at Easter; yet there were
some of the great lords had indignation that
Arthur should be king, and put it off in a delay till the feast of
Pentecost.
Then the Archbishop of Canterbury by Merlin's providence let purvey then of the best knights that they might get, and such knights as Uther Pendragon loved best
Page 11
and most trusted in his days. And such knights were put about Arthur
as Sir Baudwin of Britain, Sir Kay, Sir Ulfius, Sir Brastias. All these,
with many other, were always about Arthur,
day and night, till the feast of Pentecost.
CHAPTER VII
How King Arthur was crowned, and how he made officers.
AND at the feast of Pentecost all manner of men assayed
to pull at the sword that would assay; but none might prevail but Arthur,
and pulled it out afore all the lords and commons that
were there, wherefore all the commons cried at once, We will have Arthur
unto our king, we will put him no more in delay, for we all see that it
is God's will that he shall be our king, and
who that holdeth against it, we will slay him. And therewithal they
kneeled at once, both rich and poor, and cried Arthur mercy because they
had delayed him so long, and Arthur forgave
them, and took the sword between both his hands, and offered it upon
the altar where the Archbishop was, and so was he made knight of the best
man that was there. And so anon was
the coronation made. And there was he sworn unto his lords and the
commons for to be a true king, to stand with true justice from thenceforth
the days of this life. Also then he made all
lords that held of the crown to come in, and to do service as they
ought to do. And many complaints were made unto Sir Arthur of great wrongs
that were done since the death of King
Uther, of many lands that were bereaved lords, knights, ladies, and
gentlemen. Wherefore King Arthur made the lands to be given again unto
them that owned them.
When this was done, that the king had stablished all the
countries about London, then he let make Sir Kay seneschal of England;
and Sir Baudwin of Britain was made constable; and
Sir Ulfius was made chamberlain; and Sir Brastias was made warden to
wait upon the north from Trent forwards, for it was that time the most
party
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the king's enemies. But within few years after Arthur won all the north,
Scotland, and all that were under their obeissance. Also Wales, a part
of it, held against Arthur, but he overcame
them all, as he did the remnant, through the noble prowess of himself
and his knights of the Round Table.
CHAPTER VIII
How King Arthur held in Wales, at a Pentecost, a great feast, and what
kings and lords came to his feast.
THEN the king removed into Wales, and let cry a great
feast that it should be holden at Pentecost after the incoronation of him
at the city of Carlion. Unto the feast came King Lot of
Lothian and of Orkney, with five hundred knights with him. Also there
came to the feast King Uriens of Gore with four hundred knights with him.
Also there came to that feast King
Nentres of Garlot, with seven hundred knights with him. Also there
came to the feast the king of Scotland with six hundred knights with him,
and he was but a young man. Also there
came to the feast a king that was called the King with the Hundred
Knights, but he and his men were passing well beseen at all points. Also
there came the king of Carados with five
hundred knights. And King Arthur was glad of their coming, for he weened
that all the kings and knights had come for great love, and to have done
him worship at his feast; wherefore the
king made great joy, and sent the kings and knights great presents.
But the kings would none receive, but rebuked the messengers shamefully,
and said they had no joy to receive no gifts
of a beardless boy that was come of low blood, and sent him word they
would none of his gifts, but that they were come to give him gifts with
hard swords betwixt the neck and the
shoulders: and therefore they came thither, so they told to the messengers
plainly, for it was great shame to all them to see such a boy to have a
rule of so noble a realm as this land was.
With this answer the messengers
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departed and told to King Arthur this answer. Wherefore, by the advice
of his barons, he took him to a strong tower with five hundred good men
with him. And all the kings aforesaid in a
manner laid a siege to-fore him, but King Arthur was well victualed.
And within fifteen days there came Merlin among them into the city of Carlion.
Then all the kings were passing glad of
Merlin, and asked him, For what cause is that boy Arthur made your
king? Sirs, said Merlin, I shall tell you the cause, for he is King Uther
Pendragon's son, born in wedlock, gotten on
Igraine, the duke's wife of Tintagil. Then is he a bastard, they said
all. Nay, said Merlin, after the death of the duke, more than three hours,
was Arthur begotten, and thirteen days after
King Uther wedded Igraine; and therefore I prove him he is no bastard.
And who saith nay, he shall be king and overcome all his enemies; and,
or he die, he shall be long king of all
England, and have under his obeissance Wales, Ireland, and Scotland,
and more realms than I will now rehearse. Some of the kings had marvel
of Merlin's words, and deemed well that it
should be as he said; and some of them laughed him to scorn, as King
Lot; and more other called him a witch. But then were they accorded with
Merlin, that King Arthur should come
out and speak with the kings, and to come safe and to go safe, such
surance there was made. So Merlin went unto King Arthur, and told him how
he had done, and bade him fear not,
but come out boldly and speak with them, and spare them not, but answer
them as their king and chieftain; for ye shall overcome them all, whether
they will or nill.
CHAPTER IX
Of the first war that King Arthur had, and how he won the field.
THEN King Arthur came out of his tower, and had under his gown a jesseraunt of double mail, and there went with
Page 14
him the Archbishop of Canterbury, and Sir Baudwin of Britain, and Sir
Kay, and Sir Brastias: these were the men of most worship that were with
him. And when they were met there was
no meekness, but stout words on both sides; but always King Arthur
answered them, and said he would make them to bow an he lived. Wherefore
they departed with wrath, and King
Arthur bade keep them well, and they bade the king keep him well. So
the king returned him to the tower again and armed him and all his knights.
What will ye do? said Merlin to the
kings; ye were better for to stint, for ye shall not here prevail though
ye were ten times so many. Be we well advised to be afeared of a dream-reader?
said King Lot. With that Merlin
vanished away, and came to King Arthur, and bade him set on them fiercely;
and in the meanwhile there were three hundred good men, of the best that
were with the kings, that went
straight unto King Arthur, and that comforted him greatly. Sir, said
Merlin to Arthur, fight not with the sword that ye had by miracle, till
that ye see ye go unto the worse, then draw it out
and do your best. So forthwithal King Arthur set upon them in their
lodging. And Sir Baudwin, Sir Kay, and Sir Brastias slew on the right hand
and on the left hand that it was marvel; and
always King Arthur on horseback laid on with a sword, and did marvellous
deeds of arms, that many of the kings had great joy of his deeds and hardiness.
Then King Lot brake out on the back side, and the King
with the Hundred Knights, and King Carados, and set on Arthur fiercely
behind him. With that Sir Arthur turned with his
knights, and smote behind and before, and ever Sir Arthur was in the
foremost press till his horse was slain underneath him. And therewith King
Lot smote down King Arthur. With that
his four knights received him and set him on horseback. Then he drew
his sword Excalibur, but it was so bright in his enemies' eyes, that it
gave light like thirty torches. And therewith he
put them a-back, and slew much people. And then the commons of Carlion
arose with clubs and staves
Page 15
and slew many knights; but all the kings held them together with their
knights that were left alive, and so fled and departed. And Merlin came
unto Arthur, and counselled him to follow
them no further.
CHAPTER X
How Merlin counselled King Arthur to send for King Ban and King Bors, and
of their counsel taken for the war.
SO after the feast and journey, King Arthur drew
him unto London, and so by the counsel of Merlin, the king let call his
barons to council, for Merlin had told the king that the six kings
that made war upon him would in all haste be awroke on him and on his
lands. Wherefore the king asked counsel at them all. They could no counsel
give, but said they were big enough.
Ye say well, said Arthur; I thank you for your good courage, but will
ye all that loveth me speak with Merlin? ye know well that he hath done
much for me, and he knoweth many things,
and when he is afore you, I would that ye prayed him heartily of his
best advice. All the barons said they would pray him and desire him. So
Merlin was sent for, and fair desired of all the
barons to give them best counsel. I shall say you, said Merlin, I warn
you all, your enemies are passing strong for you, and they are good men
of arms as be alive, and by this time they
have gotten to them four kings more, and a mighty duke; and unless
that our king have more chivalry with him than he may make within the bounds
of his own realm, an he fight with them
in battle, he shall be overcome and slain. What were best to do in
this cause? said all the barons. I shall tell you, said Merlin, mine advice;
there are two brethren beyond the sea, and they
be kings both, and marvellous good men of their hands; and that one
hight King Ban of Benwick, and that other hight King Bors of
Page 16
Gaul, that is France. And on these two kings warreth a mighty man of
men, the King Claudas, and striveth with them for a castle, and great war
is betwixt them. But this Claudas is so
mighty of goods whereof he getteth good knights, that he putteth these
two kings most part to the worse; wherefore this is my counsel, that our
king and sovereign lord send unto the kings
Ban and Bors by two trusty knights with letters well devised, that
an they will come and see King Arthur and his court, and so help him in
his wars, that he will be sworn unto them to help
them in their wars against King Claudas. Now, what say ye unto this
counsel? said Merlin. This is well counselled, said the king and all the
barons.
Right so in all haste there were ordained to go two knights
on the message unto the two kings. So were there made letters in the pleasant
wise according unto King Arthur's desire.
Ulfius and Brastias were made the messengers, and so rode forth well
horsed and well armed and as the guise was that time, and so passed the
sea and rode toward the city of Benwick.
And there besides were eight knights that espied them, and at a strait
passage they met with Ulfius and Brastias, and would have taken them prisoners;
so they prayed them that they
might pass, for they were messengers unto King Ban and Bors sent from
King Arthur. Therefore, said the eight knights, ye shall die or be prisoners,
for we be knights of King Claudas.
And therewith two of them dressed their spears, and Ulfius and Brastias
dressed their spears, and ran together with great raundon. And Claudas'
knights brake their spears, and theirs
to-held and bare the two knights out of their saddles to the earth,
and so left them lying, and rode their ways. And the other six knights
rode afore to a passage to meet with them again,
and so Ulfius and Brastias smote other two down, and so passed on their
ways. And at the fourth passage there met two for two, and both were laid
unto the earth; so there was none of
the eight knights but he was sore hurt or bruised. And when they come
to Benwick it fortuned there were both kings, Ban and Bors.
Page 17
And when it was told the kings that there were come messengers,
there were sent unto them two knights of worship, the one hight Lionses,
lord of the country of Payarne, and Sir
Phariance a worshipful knight. Anon they asked from whence they came,
and they said from King Arthur, king of England; so they took them in their
arms and made great joy each of
other. But anon, as the two kings wist they were messengers of Arthur's,
there was made no tarrying, but forthwith they spake with the knights,
and welcomed them in the faithfullest wise,
and said they were most welcome unto them before all the kings living;
and therewith they kissed the letters and delivered them. And when Ban
and Bors understood the letters, then they
were more welcome than they were before. And after the haste of the
letters they gave them this answer, that they would fulfil the desire of
King Arthur's writing, and Ulfius and Brastias,
tarry there as long as they would, they should have such cheer as might
be made them in those marches. Then Ulfius and Brastias told the kings
of the adventure at their passages of the
eight knights. Ha! ah! said Ban and Bors, they were my good friends.
I would I had wist of them; they should not have escaped so. So Ulfius
and Brastias had good cheer and great gifts,
as much as they might bear away; and had their answer by mouth and
by writing, that those two kings would come unto Arthur in all the haste
that they might. So the two knights rode on
afore, and passed the sea, and came to their lord, and told him how
they had sped, whereof King Arthur was passing glad. At what time suppose
ye the two kings will be here? Sir, said
they, afore All Hallowmass. Then the king let purvey for a great feast,
and let cry a great jousts. And by All Hallowmass the two kings were come
over the sea with three hundred knights
well arrayed both for the peace and for the war. And King Arthur met
with them ten mile out of London, and there was great joy as could be thought
or made. And on All Hallowmass at
the great feast, sat in the hall the three kings, and Sir Kay seneschal
served in the hall, and Sir Lucas the butler, that
Page 18
was Duke Corneus' son, and Sir Griflet, that was the son of Cardol,
these three knights had the rule of all the service that served the kings.
And anon, as they had washen and risen, all
knights that would joust made them ready; by then they were ready on
horseback there were seven hundred knights. And Arthur, Ban, and Bors,
with the Archbishop of Canterbury, and
Sir Ector, Kay's father, they were in a place covered with cloth of
gold like an hall, with ladies and gentlewomen, for to behold who did best,
and thereon to give judgment.
CHAPTER XI
Of a great tourney made by King Arthur and the two kings Ban and Bors,
and how they went over the sea.
AND King Arthur and the two kings let depart the
seven hundred knights in two parties. And there were three hundred knights
of the realm of Benwick and of Gaul turned on the other
side. Then they dressed their shields, and began to couch their spears
many good knights. So Griflet was the first that met with a knight, one
Ladinas, and they met so eagerly that all men
had wonder; and they so fought that their shields fell to pieces, and
horse and man fell to the earth; and both the French knight and the English
knight lay so long that all men weened they
had been dead. When Lucas the butler saw Griflet so lie, he horsed
him again anon, and they two did marvellous deeds of arms with many bachelors.
Also Sir Kay came out of an
ambushment with five knights with him, and they six smote other six
down. But Sir Kay did that day marvellous deeds of arms, that there was
none did so well as he that day. Then there
came Ladinas and Gracian, two knights of France, and did passing well,
that all men praised them.
Then came there Sir Placidas, a good knight, and met with Sir Kay, and smote him down horse and man, where
Page 19
fore Sir Griflet was wroth, and met with Sir Placidas so hard, that
horse and man fell to the earth. But when the five knights wist that Sir
Kay had a fall, they were wroth out of wit, and
therewith each of them five bare down a knight. When King Arthur and
the two kings saw them begin to wax wroth on both parties, they leapt on
small hackneys, and let cry that all men
should depart unto their lodging. And so they went home and unarmed
them, and so to evensong and supper. And after, the three kings went into
a garden, and gave the prize unto Sir
Kay, and to Lucas the butler, and unto Sir Griflet. And then they went
unto council, and with them Gwenbaus, the brother unto Sir Ban and Bors,
a wise clerk, and thither went Ulfius and
Brastias, and Merlin. And after they had been in council, they went
unto bed. And on the morn they heard mass, and to dinner, and so to their
council, and made many arguments what
were best to do. At the last they were concluded, that Merlin should
go with a token of King Ban, and that was a ring, unto his men and King
Bors'; and Gracian and Placidas should go
again and keep their castles and their countries, as for [dread of
King Claudas] King Ban of Benwick, and King Bors of Gaul had ordained them,
and so passed the sea and came to
Benwick. And when the people saw King Ban's ring, and Gracian and Placidas,
they were glad, and asked how the kings fared, and made great joy of their
welfare and cording, and
according unto the sovereign lords desire, the men of war made them
ready in all haste possible, so that they were fifteen thousand on horse
and foot, and they had great plenty of victual
with them, by Merlin's provision. But Gracian and Placidas were left
to furnish and garnish the castles, for dread of King Claudas. Right so
Merlin passed the sea, well victualled both by
water and by land. And when he came to the sea he sent home the footmen
again, and took no more with him but ten thousand men on horseback, the
most part men of arms, and so
shipped and passed the sea into England, and landed at Dover; and through
the wit of Merlin, he had the host northward, the priviest way that could
be thought,
Page 20
unto the forest of Bedegraine, and there in a valley he lodged them secretly.
Then rode Merlin unto Arthur and the two kings, and told
them how he had sped; whereof they had great marvel, that man on earth
might speed so soon, and go and come. So Merlin
told them ten thousand were in the forest of Bedegraine, well armed
at all points. Then was there no more to say, but to horseback went all
the host as Arthur had afore purveyed. So
with twenty thousand he passed by night and day, but there was made
such an ordinance afore by Merlin, that there should no man of war ride
nor go in no country on this side Trent
water, but if he had a token from King Arthur, where through the king's
enemies durst not ride as they did to-fore to espy.
CHAPTER XII
How eleven kings gathered a great host against King Arthur.
AND SO within a little space the three kings came
unto the castle of Bedegraine, and found there a passing fair fellowship,
and well beseen, whereof they had great joy, and victual
they wanted none. This was the cause of the northern host: that they
were reared for the despite and rebuke the six kings had at Carlion. And
those six kings by their means, gat unto them
five other kings; and thus they began to gather their people.
And now they sware that for weal nor woe, they should not
leave other, till they had destroyed Arthur. And then they made an oath.
The first that began the oath was the Duke of
Cambenet, that he would bring with him five thousand men of arms, the
which were ready on horseback. Then sware King Brandegoris of Stranggore
that he would bring five thousand
men of arms on horseback. Then sware King Clariance of Northumberland
he would bring three thousand men of arms. Then sware the King of the
Page 21
Hundred Knights, that was a passing good man and a young, that he would
bring four thousand men of arms on horseback. Then there swore King Lot,
a passing good knight, and Sir
Gawain's father, that he would bring five thousand men of arms on horseback.
Also there swore King Urience, that was Sir Uwain's father, of the land
of Gore, and he would bring six
thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there swore King Idres of Cornwall,
that he would bring five thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there
swore King Cradelmas to bring
five thousand men on horseback. Also there swore King Agwisance of
Ireland to bring five thousand men of arms on horseback. Also there swore
King Nentres to bring five thousand
men of arms on horseback. Also there swore King Carados to bring five
thousand men of arms on horseback. So their whole host was of clean men
of arms on horseback fifty thousand,
and a-foot ten thousand of good men's bodies. Then were they soon ready,
and mounted upon horse and sent forth their fore-riders, for these eleven
kings in their ways laid a siege unto
the castle of Bedegraine; and so they departed and drew toward Arthur,
and left few to abide at the siege, for the castle of Bedegraine was holden
of King Arthur, and the men that were
therein were Arthur's.
CHAPTER XIII
Of a dream of the King with the Hundred Knights.
So by Merlin's advice there were sent fore-riders
to skim the country, and they met with the fore-riders of the north, and
made them to tell which way the host came, and then they told
it to Arthur, and by King Ban and Bors' council they let burn and destroy
all the country afore them, there they should ride.
The King with the Hundred Knights met a wonder dream two nights afore the battle, that there blew a great
Page 22
wind, and blew down their castles and their towns, and after that came
a water and bare it all away. All that heard of the sweven said it was
a token of great battle. Then by counsel of
Merlin, when they wist which way the eleven kings would ride and lodge
that night, at midnight they set upon them, as they were in their pavilions.
But the scout-watch by their host cried,
Lords! at arms! for here be your enemies at your hand!
CHAPTER XIV
How the eleven kings with their host fought against Arthur and his host,
and many great feats of the war.
THEN King Arthur and King Ban and King Bors, with
their good and trusty knights, set on them so fiercely that they made them
overthrow their pavilions on their heads, but the
eleven kings, by manly prowess of arms, took a fair champaign, but
there was slain that morrowtide ten thousand good men's bodies. And so
they had afore them a strong passage, yet
were they fifty thousand of hardy men. Then it drew toward day. Now
shall ye do by mine advice, said Merlin unto the three kings: I would that
King Ban and King Bors, with their
fellowship of ten thousand men, were put in a wood here beside, in
an ambushment, and keep them privy, and that they be laid or the light
of the day come, and that they stir not till ye
and your knights have fought with them long. And when it is daylight,
dress your battle even afore them and the passage, that they may see all
your host, for then will they be the more
hardy, when they see you but about twenty thousand men, and cause them
to be the gladder to suffer you and your host to come over the passage.
All the three kings and the whole
barons said that Merlin said passingly well, and it was done anon as
Merlin had devised. So on the morn, when either host saw other, the host
of the north was well comforted. Then to
Ulfius
Page 23
and Brastias were delivered three thousand men of arms, and they set on them fiercely in the passage, and slew on the right hand and on the left hand that it was wonder to tell.
When that the eleven kings saw that there was so few a
fellowship did such deeds of arms, they were ashamed and set on them again
fiercely; and there was Sir Ulfius's horse slain
under him, but he did marvellously well on foot. But the Duke Eustace
of Cambenet and King Clariance of Northumberland, were alway grievous on
Ulfius. Then Brastias saw his fellow
fared so withal he smote the duke with a spear, that horse and man
fell down. That saw King Clariance and returned unto Brastias, and either
smote other so that horse and man went to
the earth, and so they lay long astonied, and their horses' knees brast
to the hard bone. Then came Sir Kay the seneschal with six fellows with
him, and did passing well. With that came
the eleven kings, and there was Griflet put to the earth, horse and
man, and Lucas the butler, horse and man, by King Brandegoris, and King
Idres, and King Agwisance. Then waxed the
medley passing hard on both parties. When Sir Kay saw Griflet on foot,
he rode on King Nentres and smote him down, and led his horse unto Sir
Griflet, and horsed him again. Also Sir
Kay with the same spear smote down King Lot, and hurt him passing sore.
That saw the King with the Hundred Knights, and ran unto Sir Kay and smote
him down, and took his horse,
and gave him King Lot, whereof he said gramercy. When Sir Griflet saw
Sir Kay and Lucas the butler on foot, he took a sharp spear, great and
square, and rode to Pinel, a good man of
arms, and smote horse and man down, and then he took his horse, and
gave him unto Sir Kay. Then King Lot saw King Nentres on foot, he ran unto
Melot de la Roche, and smote him
down, horse and man, and gave King Nentres the horse, and horsed him
again. Also the King of the Hundred Knights saw King Idres on foot; then
he ran unto Gwimiart de Bloi, and
smote him down, horse and man, and gave King Idres the horse, and
Page 24
horsed him again; and King Lot smote down Clariance de la Forest Savage,
and gave the horse unto Duke Eustace. And so when they had horsed the kings
again they drew them, all
eleven kings, together, and said they would be revenged of the damage
that they had taken that day. The meanwhile came in Sir Ector with an eager
countenance, and found Ulfius and
Brastias on foot, in great peril of death, that were foul defoiled
under horse-feet.
Then Arthur as a lion, ran unto King Cradelment of North
Wales, and smote him through the left side, that the horse and the king
fell down; and then he took the horse by the rein, and
led him unto Ulfius, and said, Have this horse, mine old friend, for
great need hast thou of horse. Gramercy, said Ulfius. Then Sir Arthur did
so marvellously in arms, that all men had
wonder. When the King with the Hundred Knights saw King Cradelment
on foot, he ran unto Sir Ector, that was well horsed, Sir Kay's father,
and smote horse and man down, and gave
the horse unto the king, and horsed him again. And when King Arthur
saw the king ride on Sir Ector's horse, he was wroth and with his sword
he smote the king on the helm, that a
quarter of the helm and shield fell down, and so the sword carved down
unto the horse's neck, and so the king and the horse fell down to the ground.
Then Sir Kay came unto Sir
Morganore, seneschal with the King of the Hundred Knights, and smote
him down, horse and man, and led the horse unto his father, Sir Ector;
then Sir Ector ran unto a knight, hight
Lardans, and smote horse and man down, and led the horse unto Sir Brastias,
that great need had of an horse, and was greatly defoiled. When Brastias
beheld Lucas the butler, that lay
like a dead man under the horses' feet, and ever Sir Griflet did marvellously
for to rescue him, and there were always fourteen knights on Sir Lucas;
then Brastias smote one of them on
the helm, that it went to the teeth, and he rode to another and smote
him, that the arm flew into the field. Then he went to the third and smote
him on the shoulder, that shoulder and arm
flew in the field.
Page 25
And when Griflet saw rescues, he smote a knight on the temples, that
head and helm went to the earth, and Griflet took the horse of that knight,
and led him unto Sir Lucas, and bade him
mount upon the horse and revenge his hurts. For Brastias had slain
a knight to-fore and horsed Griflet.
CHAPTER XV
Yet of the same battle.
THEN Lucas saw King Agwisance, that late had slain
Moris de la Roche, and Lucas ran to him with a short spear that was great,
that he gave him such a fall, that the horse fell down
to the earth. Also Lucas found there on foot, Bloias de La Flandres,
and Sir Gwinas, two hardy knights, and in that woodness that Lucas was
in, he slew two bachelors and horsed them
again. Then waxed the battle passing hard on both parties, but Arthur
was glad that his knights were horsed again, and then they fought together,
that the noise and sound rang by the
water and the wood. Wherefore King Ban and King Bors made them ready,
and dressed their shields and harness, and they were so courageous that
many knights shook and bevered
for eagerness. All this while Lucas, and Gwinas, and Briant, and Bellias
of Flanders, held strong medley against six kings, that was King Lot, King
Nentres, King Brandegoris, King Idres,
King Uriens, and King Agwisance. So with the help of Sir Kay and of
Sir Griflet they held these six kings hard, that unnethe they had any power
to defend them. But when Sir Arthur saw
the battle would not be ended by no manner, he fared wood as a lion,
and steered his horse here and there, on the right hand, and on the left
hand, that he stinted not till he had slain
twenty knights. Also he wounded King Lot sore on the shoulder, and
made him to leave that ground, for Sir Kay and Griflet did with King Arthur
there great deeds of arms. Then Ulfius,
and Brastias, and Sir Ector
Page 26
encountered against the Duke Eustace, and King Cradelment, and King
Clariance of Northumberland, and King Carados, and against the King with
the Hundred Knights. So these
knights encountered with these kings, that they made them to avoid
the ground. Then King Lot made great dole for his damages and his fellows,
and said unto the ten kings, But if ye will
do as I devise we shall be slain and destroyed; let me have the King
with the Hundred Knights, and King Agwisance, and King Idres, and the Duke
of Cambenet, and we five kings will
have fifteen thousand men of arms with us, and we will go apart while
ye six kings hold medley with twelve thousand; an we see that ye have foughten
with them long, then will we come
on fiercely, and else shall we never match them, said King Lot, but
by this mean. So they departed as they here devised, and six kings made
their party strong against Arthur, and made
great war long.
In the meanwhile brake the ambushment of King Ban and King
Bors, and Lionses and Phariance had the vanguard, and they two knights
met with King Idres and his fellowship, and
there began a great medley of breaking of spears, and smiting of swords,
with slaying of men and horses, and King Idres was near at discomforture.
That saw Agwisance the king, and put Lionses and Phariance
in point of death; for the Duke of Cambenet came on withal with a great
fellowship. So these two knights were in great
danger of their lives that they were fain to return, but always they
rescued themselves and their fellowship marvellously When King Bors saw
those knights put aback, it grieved him sore;
then he came on so fast that his fellowship seemed as black as Inde.
When King Lot had espied King Bors, he knew him well, then he said, O Jesu,
defend us from death and horrible
maims! for I see well we be in great peril of death; for I see yonder
a king, one of the most worshipfullest men and one of the best knights
of the world, is inclined unto his fellowship.
What is he? said the King with the Hundred Knights. It is, said King
Lot, King Bors of Gaul; I marvel how they came into this country without
Page 27
witting of us all. It was by Merlin's advice, said the knight. As for
him, said King Carados, I will encounter with King Bors, an ye will rescue
me when myster is. Go on, said they all, we
will do all that we may. Then King Carados and his host rode on a soft
pace, till that they came as nigh King Bors as bow-draught; then either
battle let their horse run as fast as they
might. And Bleoberis, that was godson unto King Bors, he bare his chief
standard, that was a passing good knight. Now shall we see, said King Bors,
how these northern Britons can
bear the arms: and King Bors encountered with a knight, and smote him
throughout with a spear that he fell dead unto the earth; and after drew
his sword and did marvellous deeds of
arms, that all parties had great wonder thereof; and his knights failed
not, but did their part, and King Carados was smitten to the earth. With
that came the King with the Hundred Knights
and rescued King Carados mightily by force of arms, for he was a passing
good knight of a king, and but a young man.
CHAPTER XVI
Yet more of the same battle.
BY then came into the field King Ban as fierce as a lion,
with bands of green and thereupon gold. Ha! a! said King Lot, we must be
discomfited, for yonder I see the most valiant knight
of the world, and the man of the most renown, for such two brethren
as is King Ban and King Bors are not living, wherefore we must needs void
or die; and but if we avoid manly and
wisely there is but death. When King Ban came into the battle, he came
in so fiercely that the strokes redounded again from the wood and the water;
wherefore King Lot wept for pity
and dole that he saw so many good knights take their end. But through
the great force of King Ban they made both the northern battles that were
departed hurtled together for great
dread;
Page 28
and the three kings and their knights slew on ever, that it was pity
on to behold that multitude of the people that fled. But King Lot, and
King of the Hundred Knights, and King
Morganore gathered the people together passing knightly, and did great
prowess of arms, and held the battle all that day, like hard.
When the King of the Hundred Knights beheld the great damage
that King Ban did, he thrust unto him with his horse, and smote him on
high upon the helm, a great stroke, and astonied
him sore. Then King Ban was wroth with him, and followed on him fiercely;
the other saw that, and cast up his shield, and spurred his horse forward,
but the stroke of King Ban fell down
and carved a cantel off the shield, and the sword slid down by the
hauberk behind his back, and cut through the trapping of steel and the
horse even in two pieces, that the sword felt the
earth. Then the King of the Hundred Knights voided the horse lightly,
and with his sword he broached the horse of King Ban through and through.
With that King Ban voided lightly from
the dead horse, and then King Ban smote at the other so eagerly, and
smote him on the helm that he fell to the earth. Also in that ire he felled
King Morganore, and there was great
slaughter of good knights and much people. By then came into the press
King Arthur, and found King Ban standing among dead men and dead horses,
fighting on foot as a wood lion,
that there came none nigh him, as far as he might reach with his sword,
but he caught a grievous buffet; whereof King Arthur had great pity. And
Arthur was so bloody, that by his shield
there might no man know him, for all was blood and brains on his sword.
And as Arthur looked by him he saw a knight that was passingly well horsed,
and therewith Sir Arthur ran to
him, and smote him on the helm, that his sword went unto his teeth,
and the knight sank down to the earth dead, and anon Arthur took the horse
by the rein, and led him unto King Ban,
and said, Fair brother, have this horse, for he have great myster thereof,
and me repenteth sore of your great damage. It shall be soon revenged,
said King Ban, for I trust in God mine ure
is
Page 29
not such but some of them may sore repent this. I will well, said Arthur, for I see your deeds full actual; nevertheless, I might not come at you at that time.
But when King Ban was mounted on horseback, then there
began new battle, the which was sore and hard, and passing great slaughter.
And so through great force King Arthur, King
Ban, and King Bors made their knights a little to withdraw them. But
alway the eleven kings with their chivalry never turned back; and so withdrew
them to a little wood, and so over a
little river, and there they rested them, for on the night they might
have no rest on the field. And then the eleven kings and knights put them
on a heap all together, as men adread and out of
all comfort. But there was no man might pass them, they held them so
hard together both behind and before, that King Arthur had marvel of their
deeds of arms, and was passing wroth.
Ah, Sir Arthur, said King Ban and King Bors, blame them not, for they
do as good men ought to do. For by my faith, said King Ban, they are the
best fighting men, and knights of most
prowess, that ever I saw or heard speak of, and those eleven kings
are men of great worship; and if they were longing unto you there were
no king under the heaven had such eleven
knights, and of such worship. I may not love them, said Arthur, they
would destroy me. That wot we well, said King Ban and King Bors, for they
are your mortal enemies, and that hath
been proved aforehand; and this day they have done their part, and
that is great pity of their wilfulness.
Then all the eleven kings drew them together, and then
said King Lot, Lords, ye must other ways than ye do, or else the great
loss is behind; ye may see what people we have lost, and
what good men we lose, because we wait always on these foot-men, and
ever in saving of one of the foot-men we lose ten horsemen for him; therefore
this is mine advice, let us put our
foot-men from us, for it is near night, for the noble Arthur will not
tarry on the footmen, for they may save themselves, the wood is near hand.
And when we horsemen be together, look
every each of you kings let make such ordinance that none break upon
Page 30
pain of death. And who that seeth any man dress him to flee, lightly
that he be slain, for it is better that we slay a coward, than through
a coward all we to be slain. How say ye? said King
Lot, answer me all ye kings. It is well said, quoth King Nentres; so
said the King of the Hundred Knights; the same said the King Carados, and
King Uriens; so did King Idres and King
Brandegoris; and so did King Cradelment, and the Duke of Cambenet;
the same said King Clariance and King Agwisance, and sware they would never
fail other, neither for life nor for
death. And whoso that fled, but did as they did, should be slain. Then
they amended their harness, and righted their shields, and took new spears
and set them on their thighs, and stood
still as it had been a plump of wood.
CHAPTER XVII
Yet more of the same battle, and how it was ended by Merlin.
WHEN Sir Arthur and King Ban and Bors beheld them and all
their knights, they praised them much for their noble cheer of chivalry,
for the hardiest fighters that ever they heard or
saw. With that, there dressed them a forty noble knights, and said
unto the three kings, they would break their battle; these were their names:
Lionses, Phariance, Ulfius, Brastias, Ector,
Kay, Lucas the butler, Griflet le Fise de Dieu, Mariet de la Roche,
Guinas de Bloi, Briant de la Forest Savage, Bellaus, Morians of the Castle
[of] Maidens, Flannedrius of the Castle of
Ladies, Annecians that was King Bors' godson, a noble knight, Ladinas
de la Rouse, Emerause, Caulas, Graciens le Castlein, one Blois de la Case,
and Sir Colgrevaunce de Gorre; all
these knights rode on afore with spears on their thighs, and spurred
their horses mightily as the horses might run. And the eleven kings with
part of their knights rushed with their horses as
fast as they might with their spears, and there they did on both parties
marvellous deeds of
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arms. So came into the thick of the press, Arthur, Ban, and Bors, and
slew down right on both hands, that their horses went in blood up to the
fetlocks. But ever the eleven kings and their
host was ever in the visage of Arthur. Wherefore Ban and Bors had great
marvel, con-sidering the great slaughter that there was, but at the last
they were driven aback over a little river.
With that came Merlin on a great black horse, and said unto Arthur,
Thou hast never done! Hast thou not done enough? of three score thousand
this day hast thou left alive but fifteen
thousand, and it is time to say Ho! For God is wroth with thee, that
thou wilt never have done; for yonder eleven kings at this time will not
be overthrown, but an thou tarry on them any
longer, thy fortune will turn and they shall increase. And therefore
withdraw you unto your lodging, and rest you as soon as ye may, and reward
your good knights with gold and with
silver, for they have well deserved it; there may no riches be too
dear for them, for of so few men as ye have, there were never men did more
of prowess than they have done today, for
ye have matched this day with the best fighters of the world. That
is truth, said King Ban and Bors. Also said Merlin, withdraw you where
ye list, for this three year I dare undertake they
shall not dere you; and by then ye shall hear new tidings. And then
Merlin said unto Arthur, These eleven kings have more on hand than they
are ware of, for the Saracens are landed in
their countries, more than forty thousand, that burn and slay, and
have laid siege at the castle Wandesborow, and make great destruction;
therefore dread you not this three year. Also,
sir, all the goods that be gotten at this battle, let it be searched,
and when ye have it in your hands, let it be given freely unto these two
kings, Ban and Bors, that they may reward their
knights withal; and that shall cause strangers to be of better will
to do you service at need. Also you be able to reward your own knights
of your own goods whensomever it liketh you. It
is well said, quoth Arthur, and as thou hast devised, so shall it be
done. When it was delivered to Ban and Bors, they gave the
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goods as freely to their knights as freely as it was given to them.
Then Merlin took his leave of Arthur and of the two kings, for to go and
see his master Bleise, that dwelt in
Northumberland; and so he departed and came to his master, that was
passing glad of his coming; and there he told how Arthur and the two kings
had sped at the great battle, and how it
was ended, and told the names of every king and knight of worship that
was there. And so Bleise wrote the battle word by word, as Merlin told
him, how it began, and by whom, and in
likewise how it was ended, and who had the worse. All the battles that
were done in Arthur's days Merlin did his master Bleise do write; also
he did do write all the battles that every
worthy knight did of Arthur's court.
After this Merlin departed from his master and came to
King Arthur, that was in the castle of Bedegraine, that was one of the
castles that stand in the forest of Sherwood. And Merlin
was so disguised that King Arthur knew him not, for he was all befurred
in black sheep-skins, and a great pair of boots, and a bow and arrows,
in a russet gown, and brought wild geese
in his hand, and it was on the morn after Candlemas day; but King Arthur
knew him not. Sir, said Merlin unto the king, will ye give me a gift? Wherefore,
said King Arthur, should I give
thee a gift, churl? Sir, said Merlin, ye were better to give me a gift
that is not in your hand than to lose great riches, for here in the same
place where the great battle was, is great treasure
hid in the earth. Who told thee so, churl? said Arthur. Merlin told
me so, said he. Then Ulfius and Brastias knew him well enough, and smiled.
Sir, said these two knights, it is Merlin that
so speaketh unto you. Then King Arthur was greatly abashed, and had
marvel of Merlin, and so had King Ban and King Bors, and so they had great
disport at him. So in the meanwhile
there came a damosel that was an earl's daughter: his name was Sanam,
and her name was Lionors, a passing fair damosel; and so she came thither
for to do homage, as other lords did
after the great battle. And King Arthur set his love greatly upon her,
and so did she upon him, and the king
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had ado with her, and gat on her a child: his name was Borre, that was
after a good knight, and of the Table Round. Then there came word that
the King Rience of North Wales made
great war on King Leodegrance of Cameliard, for the which thing Arthur
was wroth, for he loved him well, and hated King Rience, for he was alway
against him. So by ordinance of the
three kings that were sent home unto Benwick, all they would depart
for dread of King Claudas; and Phariance, and Antemes, and Gratian, and
Lionses [of] Payarne, with the leaders of
those that should keep the kings' lands.
CHAPTER XVIII
How King Arthur, King Ban, and King Bors rescued King Leodegrance, and
other incidents.
AND then King Arthur, and King Ban, and King Bors departed
with their fellowship, a twenty thousand, and came within six days into
the country of Cameliard, and there rescued
King Leodegrance, and slew there much people of King Rience, unto the
number of ten thousand men, and put him to flight. And then had these three
kings great cheer of King
Leodegrance, that thanked them of their great goodness, that they would
revenge him of his enemies; and there had Arthur the first sight of Guenever,
the king's daughter of Cameliard,
and ever after he loved her. After they were wedded, as it telleth
in the book. So, briefly to make an end, they took their leave to go into
their own countries, for King Claudas did great
destruction on their lands. Then said Arthur, I will go with you. Nay,
said the kings, ye shall not at this time, for ye have much to do yet in
these lands, therefore we will depart, and with
the great goods that we have gotten in these lands by your gifts, we
shall wage good knights and withstand the King Claudas' malice, for by
the grace of God, an we have need we will
send to you for your
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succour; and if ye have need, send for us, and we will not tarry, by
the faith of our bodies. It shall not, said Merlin, need that these two
kings come again in the way of war, but I know
well King Arthur may not be long from you, for within a year or two
ye shall have great need, and then shall he revenge you on your enemies,
as ye have done on his. For these eleven
kings shall die all in a day, by the great might and prowess of arms
of two valiant knights (as it telleth after); their names be Balin le Savage,
and Balan, his brother, that be marvellous
good knights as be any living.
Now turn we to the eleven kings that returned unto a city
that hight Sorhaute, the which city was within King Uriens', and there
they refreshed them as well as they might, and made
leeches search their wounds, and sorrowed greatly for the death of
their people. With that there came a messenger and told how there was come
into their lands people that were lawless
as well as Saracens, a forty thousand, and have burnt and slain all
the people that they may come by, without mercy, and have laid siege on
the castle of Wandesborow. Alas, said the
eleven kings, here is sorrow upon sorrow, and if we had not warred
against Arthur as we have done, he would soon revenge us. As for King Leodegrance,
he loveth Arthur better than
us, and as for King Rience, he hath enough to do with Leodegrance,
for he hath laid siege unto him. So they consented together to keep all
the marches of Cornwall, of Wales, and of the
North. So first, they put King Idres in the City of Nauntes in Britain,
with four thousand men of arms, to watch both the water and the land. Also
they put in the city of Windesan, King
Nentres of Garlot, with four thousand knights to watch both on water
and on land. Also they had of other men of war more than eight thousand,
for to fortify all the fortresses in the
marches of Cornwall. Also they put more knights in all the marches
of Wales and Scotland, with many good men of arms, and so they kept them
together the space of three year, and
ever allied them with mighty kings and dukes and lords. And to them
fell King Rience of North Wales, the which
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and Nero that was a mighty man of men. And all this while they furnished
them and garnished them of good men of arms, and victual, and of all manner
of habiliment that pretendeth to the
war, to avenge them for the battle of Bedegraine, as it telleth in
the book of adventures following.
CHAPTER XIX
How King Arthur rode to Carlion, and of his dream, and how he saw the questing
beast.
THEN after the departing of King Ban and of King Bors,
King Arthur rode into Carlion. And thither came to him, King Lot's wife,
of Orkney, in manner of a message, but she was sent
thither to espy the court of King Arthur; and she came richly beseen,
with her four sons, Gawaine, Gaheris, Agravine, and Gareth, with many other
knights and ladies. For she was a
passing fair lady, therefore the king cast great love unto her, and
desired to lie by her; so they were agreed, and he begat upon her Mordred,
and she was his sister, on his mother's side,
Igraine. So there she rested her a month, and at the last departed.
Then the king dreamed a marvellous dream whereof he was sore adread. But
all this time King Arthur knew not that
King Lot's wife was his sister. Thus was the dream of Arthur: Him thought
there was come into this land griffins and serpents, and him thought they
burnt and slew all the people in the
land, and then him thought he fought with them, and they did him passing
great harm, and wounded him full sore, but at the last he slew them. When
the king awaked, he was passing
heavy of his dream, and so to put it out of thoughts, he made him ready
with many knights to ride a-hunting. As soon as he was in the forest the
king saw a great hart afore him. This hart
will I chase, said King Arthur, and so he spurred the horse, and rode
after long, and so by fine force oft he
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was like to have smitten the hart; whereas the king had chased the hart so long, that his horse lost his breath, and fell down dead. Then a yeoman fetched the king another horse.
So the king saw the hart enbushed, and his horse dead,
he set him down by a fountain, and there he fell in great thoughts. And
as he sat so, him thought he heard a noise of hounds, to
the sum of thirty. And with that the king saw coming toward him the
strangest beast that ever he saw or heard of; so the beast went to the
well and drank, and the noise was in the beast's
belly like unto the questing of thirty couple hounds; but all the while
the beast drank there was no noise in the beast's belly: and there.with
the beast departed with a great noise, whereof
the king had great marvel. And so he was in a great thought, and therewith
he fell asleep. Right so there came a knight afoot unto Arthur and said,
Knight full of thought and sleepy, tell me
if thou sawest a strange beast pass this way. Such one saw I, said
King Arthur, that is past two mile; what would ye with the beast? said
Arthur. Sir, I have followed that beast long time,
and killed mine horse, so would God I had another to follow my quest.
Right so came one with the king's horse, and when the knight saw the horse,
he prayed the king to give him the
horse: for I have followed this quest this twelvemonth, and either
I shall achieve him, or bleed of the best blood of my body. Pellinore,
that time king, followed the Questing Beast, and
after his death Sir Palamides followed it.
CHAPTER XX
How King Pellinore took Arthur's horse and followed the Questing Beast,
and how Merlin met with Arthur.
SIR knight, said the king, leave that quest, and suffer me to have it, and I will follow it another twelvemonth. Ah, fool, said the knight unto Arthur, it is in vain thy desire,
Page 37
for it shall never be achieved but by me, or my next kin. Therewith
he started unto the king's horse and mounted into the saddle, and said,
Gramercy, this horse is my own. Well, said the
king, thou mayst take my horse by force, but an I might prove thee
whether thou were better on horseback or I. -- Well, said the knight, seek
me here when thou wilt, and here nigh this
well thou shalt find me, and so passed on his way. Then the king sat
in a study, and bade his men fetch his horse as fast as ever they might.
Right so came by him Merlin like a child of
fourteen year of age, and saluted the king, and asked him why he was
so pensive. I may well be pensive, said the king, for I have seen the marvellest
sight that ever I saw. That know I
well, said Merlin, as well as thyself, and of all thy thoughts, but
thou art but a fool to take thought, for it will not amend thee. Also I
know what thou art, and who was thy father, and of
whom thou wert begotten; King Uther Pendragon was thy father, and begat
thee on Igraine. That is false, said King Arthur, how shouldest thou know
it, for thou art not so old of years to
know my father? Yes, said Merlin, I know it better than ye or any man
living. I will not believe thee, said Arthur, and was wroth with the child.
So departed Merlin, and came again in the
likeness of an old man of fourscore year of age, whereof the king was
right glad, for he seemed to be right wise.
Then said the old man, Why are ye so sad? I may well be
heavy, said Arthur, for many things. Also here was a child, and told me
many things that meseemeth he should not know, for
he was not of age to know my father. Yes, said the old man, the child
told you truth, and more would he have told you an ye would have suffered
him. But ye have done a thing late that
God is displeased with you, for ye have lain by your sister, and on
her ye have gotten a child that shall destroy you and all the knights of
your realm. What are ye, said Arthur, that tell me
these tidings? I am Merlin, and I was he in the child's likeness. Ah,
said King Arthur, ye are a marvellous man, but I marvel much of thy words
that I must die in battle. Marvel not, said
Merlin, for it is
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God's will your body to be punished for your foul deeds; but I may well
be sorry, said Merlin, for I shall die a shameful death, to be put in the
earth quick, and ye shall die a worshipful
death. And as they talked this, came one with the king's horse, and
so the king mounted on his horse, and Merlin on another, and so rode unto
Carlion. And anon the king asked Ector
and Ulfius how he was begotten, and they told him Uther Pendragon was
his father and Queen Igraine his mother. Then he said to Merlin, I will
that my mother be sent for that I may
speak with her; and if she say so herself then will I believe it. In
all haste, the queen was sent for, and she came and brought with her Morgan
le Fay, her daughter, that was as fair a lady
as any might be, and the king welcomed Igraine in the best manner.
CHAPTER XXI
How Ulfius impeached Queen Igraine, Arthur's mother, of treason;
and how a knight came and desired to have the death of his master revenged.
RIGHT SO came Ulfius, and said openly, that the king and
all might hear that were feasted that day, Ye are the falsest lady of the
world, and the most traitress unto the king's person.
Beware, said Arthur, what thou sayest; thou speakest a great word.
I am well ware, said Ulfius, what I speak, and here is my glove to prove
it upon any man that will say the contrary,
that this Queen Igraine is causer of your great damage, and of your
great war. For, an she would have uttered it in the life of King Uther
Pendragon, of the birth of you, and how ye were
begotten ye had never had the mortal wars that ye have had; for the
most part of your barons of your realm knew never whose son ye were, nor
of whom ye were begotten; and she that
bare you of her body should have made it known openly in excusing of
her worship and yours, and in like
Page 39
wise to all the realm, wherefore I prove her false to God and to you and to all your realm, and who will say the contrary I will prove it on his body.
Then spake Igraine and said, I am a woman and I may not
fight, but rather than I should be dishonoured, there would some good man
take my quarrel. More, she said, Merlin knoweth
well, and ye Sir Ulfius, how King Uther came to me in the Castle of
Tintagil in the likeness of my lord, that was dead three hours to-fore,
and thereby gat a child that night upon me. And
after the thirteenth day King Uther wedded me, and by his commandment
when the child was born it was delivered unto Merlin and nourished by him,
and so I saw the child never after,
nor wot not what is his name, for I knew him never yet. And there,
Ulfius said to the queen, Merlin is more to blame than ye. Well I wot,
said the queen, I bare a child by my lord King
Uther, but I wot not where he is become. Then Merlin took the king
by the hand, saying, This is your mother. And therewith Sir Ector bare
witness how he nourished him by Uther's
commandment. And therewith King Arthur took his mother, Queen Igraine,
in his arms and kissed her, and either wept upon other. And then the king
let make a feast that lasted eight
days.
Then on a day there came in the court a squire on horseback,
leading a knight before him wounded to the death, and told him how there
was a knight in the forest had reared up a
pavilion by a well, and hath slain my master, a good knight, his name
was Miles; wherefore I beseech you that my master may be buried, and that
some knight may revenge my master's
death. Then the noise was great of that knight's death in the court,
and every man said his advice. Then came Griflet that was but a squire,
and he was but young, of the age of the king
Arthur, so he besought the king for all his service that he had done
him to give the order of knighthood.
Page 40
CHAPTER XXII
How Griflet was made knight, and jousted with a knight
THOU art full young and tender of age, said Arthur, for
to take so high an order on thee. Sir, said Griflet, I beseech you make
me knight. Sir, said Merlin, it were great pity to lose
Griflet, for he will be a passing good man when he is of age, abiding
with you the term of his life. And if he adventure his body with yonder
knight at the fountain, it is in great peril if ever
he come again, for he is one of the best knights of the world, and
the strongest man of arms. Well, said Arthur. So at the desire of Griflet
the king made him knight. Now, said Arthur unto
Sir Griflet, sith I have made you knight thou must give me a gift.
What ye will, said Griflet. Thou shalt promise me by the faith of thy body,
when thou hast jousted with the knight at the
fountain, whether it fall ye be on foot or on horseback, that right
so ye shall come again unto me without making any more debate. I will promise
you, said Griflet, as you desire. Then
took Griflet his horse in great haste, and dressed his shield and took
a spear in his hand, and so he rode a great wallop till he came to the
fountain, and thereby he saw a rich pavilion, and
thereby under a cloth stood a fair horse well saddled and bridled,
and on a tree a shield of divers colours and a great spear. Then Griflet
smote on the shield with the butt of his spear, that
the shield fell down to the ground. With that the knight came out of
the pavilion, and said, Fair knight, why smote ye down my shield? For I
will joust with you, said Griflet. It is better ye
do not, said the knight, for ye are but young, and late made knight,
and your might is nothing to mine. As for that, said Griflet, I will joust
with you. That is me loath, said the knight, but
sith I must needs, I will dress me thereto. Of whence be ye? said the
knight. Sir, I am of Arthur's court. So the two knights ran
Page 41
together that Griflet's spear all to-shivered; and there-withal he smote
Griflet through the shield and the left side, and brake the spear that
the truncheon stuck in his body, that horse and
knight fell down.
CHAPTER XXIII
How twelve knights came from Rome and asked truage for this land of Arthur,
and how Arthur fought with a knight.
WHEN the knight saw him lie so on the ground, he alighted,
and was passing heavy, for he weened he had slain him, and then he unlaced
his helm and gat him wind, and so with the
truncheon he set him on his horse, and so betook him to God, and said
he had a mighty heart, and if he might live he would prove a passing good
knight. And so Sir Griflet rode to the
court, where great dole was made for him. But through good leeches
he was healed and saved. Right so came into the court twelve knights, and
were aged men, and they came from the
Emperor of Rome, and they asked of Arthur truage for this realm, other
else the emperor would destroy him and his land. Well, said King Arthur,
ye are messengers, therefore ye may
say what ye will, other else ye should die therefore. But this is mine
answer: I owe the emperor no truage, nor none will I hold him, but on a
fair field I shall give him my truage that shall be
with a sharp spear, or else with a sharp sword, and that shall not
be long, by my father's soul, Uther Pendragon. And therewith the messengers
departed passingly wroth, and King Arthur
as wroth, for in evil time came they then; for the king was passingly
wroth for the hurt of Sir Griflet. And so he commanded a privy man of his
chamber that or it be day his best horse and
armour, with all that longeth unto his person, be without the city
or to-morrow day. Right so or to-morrow day he met with his man and his
horse, and so mounted up and
Page 42
dressed his shield and took his spear, and bade his chamberlain tarry
there till he came again. And so Arthur rode a soft pace till it was day,
and then was he ware of three churls chasing
Merlin, and would have slain him. Then the king rode unto them, and
bade them: Flee, churls! then were they afeard when they saw a knight,
and fled. O Merlin, said Arthur, here hadst
thou been slain for all thy crafts had I not been. Nay, said Merlin,
not so, for I could save myself an I would; and thou art more near thy
death than I am, for thou goest to the deathward,
an God be not thy friend.
So as they went thus talking they came to the fountain,
and the rich pavilion there by it. Then King Arthur was ware where sat
a knight armed in a chair. Sir knight, said Arthur, for what
cause abidest thou here, that there may no knight ride this way but
if he joust with thee? said the king. I rede thee leave that custom, said
Arthur. This custom, said the knight, have I used
and will use maugre who saith nay, and who is grieved with my custom
let him amend it that will. I will amend it, said Arthur. I shall defend
thee, said the knight. Anon he took his horse
and dressed his shield and took a spear, and they met so hard either
in other's shields, that all to-shivered their spears. Therewith anon Arthur
pulled out his sword. Nay, not so, said the
knight; it is fairer, said the knight, that we twain run more together
with sharp spears. I will well, said Arthur, an I had any more spears.
I have enow, said the knight; so there came a
squire and brought two good spears, and Arthur chose one and he another;
so they spurred their horses and came together with all their mights, that
either brake their spears to their
hands. Then Arthur set hand on his sword. Nay, said the knight, ye
shall do better, ye are a passing good jouster as ever I met withal, and
once for the love of the high order of
knighthood let us joust once again. I assent me, said Arthur. Anon
there were brought two great spears, and every knight gat a spear, and
therewith they ran together that Arthur's spear
all to-shivered. But the other knight hit him so hard in midst of the
Page 43
shield, that horse and man fell to the earth, and therewith Arthur was
eager, and pulled out his sword, and said, I will assay thee, sir knight,
on foot, for I have lost the honour on
horseback. I will be on horseback, said the knight. Then was Arthur
wroth, and dressed his shield toward him with his sword drawn. When the
knight saw that, he alighted, for him
thought no worship to have a knight at such avail, he to be on horseback
and he on foot, and so he alighted and dressed his shield unto Arthur.
And there began a strong battle with many
great strokes, and so hewed with their swords that the cantels flew
in the fields, and much blood they bled both, that all the place there
as they fought was overbled with blood, and thus
they fought long and rested them, and then they went to the battle
again, and so hurtled together like two rams that either fell to the earth.
So at the last they smote together that both their
swords met even together. But the sword of the knight smote King Arthur's
sword in two pieces, wherefore he was heavy. Then said the knight unto
Arthur, Thou art in my daunger
whether me list to save thee or slay thee, and but thou yield thee
as overcome and recreant, thou shalt die. As for death, said King Arthur,
welcome be it when it cometh, but to yield me
unto thee as recreant I had liefer die than to be so shamed. And therewithal
the king leapt unto Pellinore, and took him by the middle and threw him
down, and raced off his helm. When
the knight felt that he was adread, for he was a passing big man of
might, and anon he brought Arthur under him, and raced off his helm and
would have smitten off his head.
CHAPTER XXIV
How Merlin saved Arthur's life, and threw an enchantment on King Pellinore
and made him to sleep.
THEREWITHAL came Merlin and said, Knight, hold thy hand, for an thou slay that knight thou puttest this realm
Page 44
in the greatest damage that ever was realm: for this knight is a man
of more worship than thou wotest of. Why, who is he? said the knight. It
is King Arthur. Then would he have slain him
for dread of his wrath, and heaved up his sword, and therewith Merlin
cast an enchantment to the knight, that he fell to the earth in a great
sleep. Then Merlin took up King Arthur, and
rode forth on the knight's horse. Alas! said Arthur, what hast thou
done, Merlin? hast thou slain this good knight by thy crafts? There liveth
not so worshipful a knight as he was; I had
liefer than the stint of my land a year that he were alive. Care ye
not, said Merlin, for he is wholer than ye; for he is but asleep, and will
awake within three hours. I told you, said Merlin,
what a knight he was; here had ye been slain had I not been. Also there
liveth not a bigger knight than he is one, and he shall hereafter do you
right good service; and his name is Pellinore,
and he shall have two sons that shall be passing good men; save one
they shall have no fellow of prowess and of good living, and their names
shall be Percivale of Wales and Lamerake of
Wales, and he shall tell you the name of your own son, begotten of
your sister, that shall be the destruction of all this realm.
CHAPTER XXV
How Arthur by the mean of Merlin gat Excalibur his sword of the Lady of
the Lake.
RIGHT SO the king and he departed, and went unto an hermit
that was a good man and a great leech. So the hermit searched all his wounds
and gave him good salves; so the king was
there three days, and then were his wounds well amended that he might
ride and go, and so departed. And as they rode, Arthur said, I have no
sword. No force, said Merlin, hereby is a
sword that shall be yours, an I may. So they rode till they came to
a lake, the which
Page 45
was a fair water and broad, and in the midst of the lake Arthur was
ware of an arm clothed in white samite, that held a fair sword in that
hand. Lo! said Merlin, yonder is that sword that I
spake of. With that they saw a damosel going upon the lake. What damosel
is that? said Arthur. That is the Lady of the Lake, said Merlin; and within
that lake is a rock, and therein is as
fair a place as any on earth, and richly beseen; and this damosel will
come to you anon, and then speak ye fair to her that she will give you
that sword. Anon withal came the damosel unto
Arthur, and saluted him, and he her again. Damosel, said Arthur, what
sword is that, that yonder the arm holdeth above the water? I would it
were mine, for I have no sword. Sir Arthur,
king, said the damosel, that sword is mine, and if ye will give me
a gift when I ask it you, ye shall have it. By my faith, said Arthur, I
will give you what gift ye will ask. Well! said the
damosel, go ye into yonder barge, and row yourself to the sword, and
take it and the scabbard with you, and I will ask my gift when I see my
time. So Sir Arthur and Merlin alighted and
tied their horses to two trees, and so they went into the ship, and
when they came to the sword that the hand held, Sir Arthur took it up by
the handles, and took it with him, and the arm
and the hand went under the water. And so [they] came unto the land
and rode forth, and then Sir Arthur saw a rich pavilion. What signifieth
yonder pavilion? It is the knight's pavilion,
said Merlin, that ye fought with last, Sir Pellinore; but he is out,
he is not there. He hath ado with a knight of yours that hight Egglame,
and they have foughten together, but at the last
Egglame fled, and else he had been dead, and he hath chased him even
to Carlion, and we shall meet with him anon in the highway. That is well
said, said Arthur, now have I a sword,
now will I wage battle with him, and be avenged on him. Sir, you shall
not so, said Merlin, for the knight is weary of fighting and chasing, so
that ye shall have no worship to have ado with
him; also he will not be lightly matched of one knight living, and
therefore it is my counsel, let him pass, for he shall do you good service
in short time, and his sons after
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his days. Also ye shall see that day in short space, you shall be right glad to give him your sister to wed. When I see him, I will do as ye advise, said Arthur.
Then Sir Arthur looked on the sword, and liked it passing
well. Whether liketh you better, said Merlin, the sword or the scabbard?
Me liketh better the sword, said Arthur. Ye are
more unwise, said Merlin, for the scabbard is worth ten of the swords,
for whiles ye have the scabbard upon you, ye shall never lose no blood,
be ye never so sore wounded; therefore
keep well the scabbard always with you. So they rode unto Carlion,
and by the way they met with Sir Pellinore; but Merlin had done such a
craft, that Pellinore saw not Arthur, and he
passed by without any words. I marvel, said Arthur, that the knight
would not speak. Sir, said Merlin, he saw you not, for an he had seen you,
ye had not lightly departed. So they came
unto Carlion, whereof his knights were passing glad. And when they
heard of his adventures, they marvelled that he would jeopard his person
so, alone. But all men of worship said it was
merry to be under such a chieftain, that would put his person in adventure
as other poor knights did.
CHAPTER XXVI
How tidings
came to Arthur that King Rience had overcome eleven kings, and how he desired
Arthur's beard to trim his mantle.
THIS meanwhile came a messenger from King Rience of North
Wales, and king he was of all Ireland, and of many isles. And this was
his message, greeting well King Arthur in this
manner wise, saying that King Rience had discomfited and overcome eleven
kings, and everych of them did him homage, and that was this, they gave
him their beards clean flayed off, as
much as there was; wherefore the messenger came for King Arthur's beard.
For King Rience had purfled a mantle with kings' beards, and there
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lacked one place of the mantle; wherefore he sent for his beard, or
else he would enter into his lands, and burn and slay, and never leave
till he have the head and the beard. Well, said
Arthur, thou hast said thy message, the which is the most villainous
and lewdest message that ever man heard sent unto a king; also thou mayest
see my beard is full young yet to make a
purfle of it. But tell thou thy king this: I owe him none homage, nor
none of mine elders; but or it be long to, he shall do me homage on both
his knees, or else he shall lose his head, by the
faith of my body, for this is the most shamefulest message that ever
I heard speak of. I have espied thy king met never yet with worshipful
man, but tell him, I will have his head without he
do me homage. Then the messenger departed.
Now is there any here, said Arthur, that knoweth King Rience?
Then answered a knight that hight Naram, Sir, I know the king well; he
is a passing good man of his body, as few be
living, and a passing proud man, and Sir, doubt ye not he will make
war on you with a mighty puissance. Well, said Arthur, I shall ordain for
him in short time.
CHAPTER XXVII
How all the children were sent for that were born on May-day, and how Mordred
was saved.
THEN King Arthur let send for all the children born on
May-day, begotten of lords and born of ladies; for Merlin told King Arthur
that he that should destroy him should be born on
May-day, wherefore he sent for them all, upon pain of death; and so
there were found many lords' sons, and all were sent unto the king, and
so was Mordred sent by King Lot's wife,
and all were put in a ship to the sea, and some were four weeks old,
and some less. And so by fortune the ship drave unto a castle, and was
all to-riven, and destroyed the most part,
save that Mordred was cast up, and a good man found him, and nourished
him till he
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was fourteen year old, and then he brought him to the court, as it rehearseth
afterward, toward the end of the Death of Arthur. So many lords and barons
of this realm were displeased,
for their children were so lost, and many put the wite on Merlin more
than on Arthur; so what for dread and for love, they held their peace.
But when the messenger came to King Rience,
then was he wood out of measure, and purveyed him for a great host,
as it rehearseth after in the book of Balin le Savage, that followeth next
after, how by adventure Balin gat the sword.
Explicit liber primus. Incipit liber secundus
Book 2
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BOOK II
CHAPTER I
Of a damosel which came girt with a sword for to find a man of such virtue
to draw it out of the scabbard.
AFTER the death of Uther Pendragon reigned Arthur
his son, the which had great war in his days for to get all England into
his hand. For there were many kings within the realm of
England, and in Wales, Scotland, and Cornwall. So it befell on a time
when King Arthur was at London, there came a knight and told the king tidings
how that the King Rience of North
Wales had reared a great number of people, and were entered into the
land, and burnt and slew the king's true liege people. If this be true,
said Arthur, it were great shame unto mine
estate but that he were mightily withstood. It is truth, said the knight,
for I saw the host myself. Well, said the king, let make a cry, that all
the lords, knights, and gentlemen of arms, should
draw unto a castle called Camelot in those days, and there the king
would let make a council-general and a great jousts.
So when the king was come thither with all his baronage,
and lodged as they seemed best, there was come a damosel the which was
sent on message from the great lady Lile of
Avelion. And when she came before King Arthur, she told from whom she
came, and how she was sent on message unto him for these causes. Then she
let her mantle fall that was richly
furred; and then was she girt with a noble sword whereof the king had
marvel, and
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said, Damosel, for what cause are ye girt with that sword? it beseemeth
you not. Now shall I tell you, said the damosel; this sword that I am girt
withal doth me great sorrow and
cumbrance, for I may not be delivered of this sword but by a knight,
but he must be a passing good man of his hands and of his deeds, and without
villainy or treachery, and without
treason. And if I may find such a knight that hath all these virtues,
he may draw out this sword out of the sheath, for I have been at King Rience's
it was told me there were passing good
knights, and he and all his knights have assayed it and none can speed.
This is a great marvel, said Arthur, if this be sooth; I will myself assay
to draw out the sword, not presuming upon
myself that I am the best knight, but that I will begin to draw at
your sword in giving example to all the barons that they shall assay everych
one after other when I have assayed it. Then
Arthur took the sword by the sheath and by the girdle and pulled at
it eagerly, but the sword would not out.
Sir, said the damosel, you need not to pull half so hard,
for he that shall pull it out shall do it with little might. Ye say well,
said Arthur; now assay ye all my barons; but beware ye be not
defiled with shame, treachery, nor guile. Then it will not avail, said
the damosel, for he must be a clean knight without villainy, and of a gentle
strain of father side and mother side. Most of
all the barons of the Round Table that were there at that time assayed
all by row, but there might none speed; wherefore the damosel made great
sorrow out of measure, and said, Alas! I
weened in this court had been the best knights without treachery or
treason. By my faith, said Arthur, here are good knights, as I deem, as
any be in the world, but their grace is not to
help you, wherefore I am displeased.
CHAPTER II
How Balin, arrayed like a poor knight, pulled out the sword, which afterward
was the cause of his death.
THEN fell it so that time there was a poor knight with
King Arthur, that had been prisoner with him half a year and more for slaying
of a knight, the which was cousin unto King Arthur.
The name of this knight was called Balin, and by good means of the
barons he was delivered out of prison, for he was a good man named of his
body, and he was born in
Northumberland. And so he went privily into the court, and saw this
adventure, whereof it raised his heart, and he would assay it as other
knights did, but for he was poor and poorly
arrayed he put him not far in press. But in his heart he was fully
assured to do as well, if his grace happed him, as any knight that there
was. And as the damosel took her leave of Arthur
and of all the barons, so departing, this knight Balin called unto
her, and said, Damosel, I pray you of your courtesy, suffer me as well
to assay as these lords; though that I be so poorly
clothed, in my heart meseemeth I am fully assured as some of these
others, and meseemeth in my heart to speed right well. The damosel beheld
the poor knight, and saw he was a likely
man, but for his poor arrayment she thought he should be of no worship
without villainy or treachery. And then she said unto the knight, Sir,
it needeth not to put me to more pain or
labour, for it seemeth not you to speed there as other have failed.
Ah! fair damosel, said Balin, worthiness, and good tatches, and good deeds,
are not only in arrayment, but manhood
and worship is hid within man's person, and many a worshipful knight
is not known unto all people, and therefore worship and hardiness is not
in arrayment. By God, said the damosel, ye
say sooth; therefore ye shall assay to do what ye may. Then Balin took
the sword by the girdle
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and sheath, and drew it out easily; and when he looked on the sword
it pleased him much. Then had the king and all the barons great marvel
that Balin had done that adventure, and many
knights had great despite of Balin. Certes, said the damosel, this
is a passing good knight, and the best that ever I found, and most of worship
without treason, treachery, or villainy, and
many marvels shall he do. Now, gentle and courteous knight, give me
the sword again. Nay, said Balin, for this sword will I keep, but it be
taken from me with force. Well, said the
damosel, ye are not wise to keep the sword from me, for ye shall slay
with the sword the best friend that ye have, and the man that ye most love
in the world, and the sword shall be your
destruction. I shall take the adventure, said Balin, that God will
ordain me, but the sword ye shall not have at this time, by the faith of
my body. Ye shall repent it within short time, said the
damosel, for I would have the sword more for your avail than for mine,
for I am passing heavy for your sake; for ye will not believe that sword
shall be your destruction, and that is great
pity. With that the damosel departed, making great sorrow.
Anon after, Balin sent for his horse and armour, and so
would depart from the court, and took his leave of King Arthur. Nay, said
the king, I suppose ye will not depart so lightly from
this fellowship, I suppose ye are displeased that I have shewed you
unkindness; blame me the less, for I was misinformed against you, but I
weened ye had not been such a knight as ye
are, of worship and prowess, and if ye will abide in this court among
my fellowship, I shall so advance you as ye shall be pleased. God thank
your highness, said Balin, your bounty and
highness may no man praise half to the value; but at this time I must
needs depart, beseeching you alway of your good grace. Truly, said the
king, I am right wroth for your departing; I
pray you, fair knight, that ye tarry not long, and ye shall be right
welcome to me, and to my barons, and I shall amend all miss that I have
done against you; God thank your great lordship,
said Balin, and therewith made him ready to depart. Then the most
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part of the knights of the Round Table said that Balin did not this
adventure all only by might, but by witchcraft.
CHAPTER III
How the Lady of the Lake demanded the knight's head that had won the sword,
or the maiden's head.
THE meanwhile, that this knight was making him ready to
depart, there came into the court a lady that hight the Lady of the Lake.
And she came on horseback, richly beseen, and
saluted King Arthur, and there asked him a gift that he promised her
when she gave him the sword. That is sooth, said Arthur, a gift I promised
you, but I have forgotten the name of my
sword that ye gave me. The name of it, said the lady, is Excalibur,
that is as much to say as Cut-steel. Ye say well, said the king; ask what
ye will and ye shall have it, an it lie in my power
to give it. Well, said the lady, I ask the head of the knight that
hath won the sword, or else the damosel's head that brought it; I take
no force though I have both their heads, for he slew
my brother, a good knight and a true, and that gentlewoman was causer
of my father's death. Truly, said King Arthur, I may not grant neither
of their heads with my worship, therefore
ask what ye will else, and I shall fulfil your desire. I will ask none
other thing, said the lady. When Balin was ready to depart, he saw the
Lady of the Lake, that by her means had slain
Balin's mother, and he had sought her three years; and when it was
told him that she asked his head of King Arthur, he went to her straight
and said, Evil be you found; ye would have my
head, and therefore ye shall lose yours, and with his sword lightly
he smote off her head before King Arthur. Alas, for shame! said Arthur,
why have ye done so? ye have shamed me and
all my court, for this was a lady that I was beholden to, and hither
she came under my safe-conduct; I shall never forgive you that
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trespass. Sir, said Balin, me forthinketh of your displeasure, for this
same lady was the untruest lady living, and by enchantment and sorcery
she hath been the destroyer of many good
knights, and she was causer that my mother was burnt, through her falsehood
and treachery. What cause soever ye had, said Arthur, ye should have forborne
her in my presence;
therefore, think not the contrary, ye shall repent it, for such another
despite had I never in my court; therefore withdraw you out of my court
in all haste ye may.
Then Balin took up the head of the lady, and bare it with
him to his hostelry, and there he met with his squire, that was sorry he
had displeased King Arthur and so they rode forth out of
the town. Now, said Balin, we must depart, take thou this head and
bear it to my friends, and tell them how I have sped, and tell my friends
in Northumberland that my most foe is dead.
Also tell them how I am out of prison, and what adventure befell me
at the getting of this sword. Alas! said the squire, ye are greatly to
blame for to displease King Arthur. As for that,
said Balin, I will hie me, in all the haste that I may, to meet with
King Rience and destroy him, either else to die therefore; and if it may
hap me to win him, then will King Arthur be my
good and gracious lord. Where shall I meet with you? said the squire.
In King Arthur's court, said Balin. So his squire and he departed at that
time. Then King Arthur and all the court
made great dole and had shame of the death of the Lady of the Lake.
Then the king buried her richly.
CHAPTER IV
How Merlin told the adventure of this damosel.
AT that time there was a knight, the which was the king's son of Ireland, and his name was Lanceor, the which was an orgulous knight, and counted himself one of the best
Page 55
of the court; and he had great despite at Balin for the achieving of
the sword, that any should be accounted more hardy, or more of prowess;
and he asked King Arthur if he would give
him leave to ride after Balin and to revenge the despite that he had
done. Do your best, said Arthur, I am right wroth with Balin; I would he
were quit of the despite that he hath done to
me and to my court. Then this Lanceor went to his hostelry to make
him ready. In the meanwhile came Merlin unto the court of King Arthur,
and there was told him the adventure of the
sword, and the death of the Lady of the Lake. Now shall I say you,
said Merlin; this same damosel that here standeth, that brought the sword
unto your court, I shall tell you the cause of
her coming: she was the falsest damosel that liveth. Say not so, said
they. She hath a brother, a passing good knight of prowess and a full true
man; and this damosel loved another knight
that held her to paramour, and this good knight her brother met with
the knight that held her to paramour, and slew him by force of his hands.
When this false damosel understood this,
she went to the Lady Lile of Avelion, and besought her of help, to
be avenged on her own brother.
CHAPTER V
How Balin was pursued by Sir Lanceor, knight of Ireland, and how he jousted
and slew him.
AND so this Lady Lile of Avelion took her this sword that
she brought with her, and told there should no man pull it out of the sheath
but if he be one of the best knights of this realm,
and he should be hard and full of prowess, and with that sword he should
slay her brother. This was the cause that the damosel came into this court.
I know it as well as ye. Would God
she had not come into this court, but she came never in fellowship
of worship to do good, but always great harm; and that
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knight that hath achieved the sword shall be destroyed by that sword,
for the which will be great damage, for there liveth not a knight of more
prowess than he is, and he shall do unto
you, my Lord Arthur, great honour and kindness; and it is great pity
he shall not endure but a while, for of his strength and hardiness I know
not his match living.
So the knight of Ireland armed him at all points, and dressed
his shield on his shoulder, and mounted upon horseback, and took his spear
in his hand, and rode after a great pace, as
much as his horse might go; and within a little space on a mountain
he had a sight of Balin, and with a loud voice he cried, Abide, knight,
for ye shall abide whether ye will or nill, and the
shield that is to-fore you shall not help. When Balin heard the noise,
he turned his horse fiercely, and said, Fair knight, what will ye with
me, will ye joust with me? Yea, said the Irish
knight, therefore come I after you. Peradventure, said Balin, it had
been better to have holden you at home, for many a man weeneth to put his
enemy to a rebuke, and oft it falleth to
himself. Of what court be ye sent from? said Balin. I am come from
the court of King Arthur, said the knight of Ireland, that come hither
for to revenge the despite ye did this day to King
Arthur and to his court. Well, said Balin, I see well I must have ado
with you, that me forthinketh for to grieve King Arthur, or any of his
court; and your quarrel is full simple, said Balin,
unto me, for the lady that is dead, did me great damage, and else would
I have been loath as any knight that liveth for to slay a lady. Make you
ready, said the knight Lanceor, and dress
you unto me, for that one shall abide in the field. Then they took
their spears, and came together as much as their horses might drive, and
the Irish knight smote Balin on the shield, that all
went shivers off his spear, and Balin hit him through the shield, and
the hauberk perished, and so pierced through his body and the horse's croup,
and anon turned his horse fiercely, and
drew out his sword, and wist not that he had slain him; and then he
saw him lie as a dead corpse.
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CHAPTER VI
How a damosel, which was love to Lanceor, slew herself for love, and how
Balin met with his brother Balan.
THEN he looked by him, and was ware of a damosel that came
riding full fast as the horse might ride, on a fair palfrey. And when she
espied that Lanceor was slain, she made sorrow
out of measure, and said, O Balin, two bodies thou hast slain and one
heart, and two hearts in one body, and two souls thou hast lost. And therewith
she took the sword from her love
that lay dead, and fell to the ground in a swoon. And when she arose
she made great dole out of measure, the which sorrow grieved Balin passingly
sore, and he went unto her for to have
taken the sword out of her hand, but she held it so fast he might not
take it out of her hand unless he should have hurt her, and suddenly she
set the pommel to the ground, and rove herself
through the body. When Balin espied her deeds, he was passing heavy
in his heart, and ashamed that so fair a damosel had destroyed herself
for the love of his death. Alas, said Balin, me
repenteth sore the death of this knight, for the love of this damosel,
for there was much true love betwixt them both, and for sorrow might not
longer behold him, but turned his horse and
looked toward a great forest, and there he was ware, by the arms, of
his brother Balan. And when they were met they put off their helms and
kissed together, and wept for joy and pity.
Then Balan said, I little weened to have met with you at this sudden
adventure; I am right glad of your deliverance out of your dolorous prisonment,
for a man told me, in the castle of
Four Stones, that ye were delivered, and that man had seen you in the
court of King Arthur, and therefore I came hither into this country, for
here I supposed to find you. Anon the knight
Balin told his brother of his adventure of the sword, and of the death
of the Lady of the Lake, and how King Arthur was
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displeased with him. Wherefore he sent this knight after me, that lieth
here dead, and the death of this damosel grieveth me sore. So doth it me,
said Balan, but ye must take the adventure
that God will ordain you. Truly, said Balin, I am right heavy that
my Lord Arthur is displeased with me, for he is the most worshipful knight
that reigneth now on earth, and his love will I
get or else will I put my life in adventure. For the King Rience lieth
at a siege at the Castle Terrabil, and thither will we draw in all haste,
to prove our worship and prowess upon him. I will
well, said Balan, that we do, and we will help each other as brethren
ought to do.
CHAPTER VII
How a dwarf reproved
Balin for the death of Lanceor, and how King Mark of Cornwall found them,
and made a tomb over them.
Now go we hence, said Balin, and well be we met. The meanwhile
as they talked, there came a dwarf from the city of Camelot on horseback,
as much as he might; and found the dead
bodies, wherefore he made great dole, and pulled out his hair for sorrow,
and said, Which of you knights have done this deed? Whereby askest thou
it? said Balan. For I would wit it,
said the dwarf. It was I, said Balin, that slew this knight in my defence,
for hither he came to chase me, and either I must slay him or he me; and
this damosel slew herself for his love,
which repenteth me, and for her sake I shall owe all women the better
love. Alas, said the dwarf, thou hast done great damage unto thyself, for
this knight that is here dead was one of the
most valiantest men that lived, and trust well, Balin, the kin of this
knight will chase you through the world till they have slain you. As for
that, said Balin, I fear not greatly, but I am right
heavy that I have displeased my lord King Arthur, for the death of
this knight. So
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as they talked together, there came a king of Cornwall riding, the which
hight King Mark. And when he saw these two bodies dead, and understood
how they were dead, by the two
knights above said, then made the king great sorrow for the true love
that was betwixt them, and said, I will not depart till I have on this
earth made a tomb, and there he pight his
pavilions and sought through all the country to find a tomb, and in
a church they found one was fair and rich, and then the king let put them
both in the earth, and put the tomb upon them,
and wrote the names of them both on the tomb. How here lieth Lanceor
the king's son of Ireland, that at his own request was slain by the hands
of Balin; and how his lady, Colombe, and
paramour, slew herself with her love's sword for dole and sorrow.
CHAPTER VIII
How Merlin prophesied that two the best knights of the world should fight
there, which were Sir Lancelot and Sir Tristram.
THE meanwhile as this was a-doing, in came Merlin to King
Mark, and seeing all his doing, said, Here shall be in this same place
the greatest battle betwixt two knights that was or ever
shall be, and the truest lovers, and yet none of them shall slay other.
And there Merlin wrote their names upon the tomb with letters of gold that
should fight in that place, whose names
were Launcelot de Lake, and Tristram. Thou art a marvellous man, said
King Mark unto Merlin, that speakest of such marvels, thou art a boistous
man and an unlikely to tell of such
deeds. What is thy name? said King Mark. At this time, said Merlin,
I will not tell, but at that time when Sir Tristram is taken with his sovereign
lady, then ye shall hear and know my
name, and at that time ye shall hear tidings that shall not please
you. Then said Merlin to Balin, Thou
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hast done thyself great hurt, because that thou savest not this lady
that slew herself, that might have saved her an thou wouldest. By the faith
of my body, said Balin, I might not save her,
for she slew herself suddenly. Me repenteth, said Merlin; because of
the death of that lady thou shalt strike a stroke most dolorous that ever
man struck, except the stroke of our Lord,
for thou shalt hurt the truest knight and the man of most worship that
now liveth, and through that stroke three kingdoms shall be in great poverty,
misery and wretchedness twelve years,
and the knight shall not be whole of that wound for many years. Then
Merlin took his leave of Balin. And Balin said, If I wist it were sooth
that ye say I should do such a perilous deed as
that, I would slay myself to make thee a liar. Therewith Merlin vanished
away suddenly. And then Balan and his brother took their leave of King
Mark. First, said the king, tell me your
name. Sir, said Balan, ye may see he beareth two swords, thereby ye
may call him the Knight with the Two Swords. And so departed King Mark
unto Camelot to King Arthur, and Balin
took the way toward King Rience; and as they rode together they met
with Merlin disguised, but they knew him not. Whither ride you? said Merlin.
We have little to do, said the two
knights, to tell thee. But what is thy name? said Balin. At this time,
said Merlin, I will not tell it thee. It is evil seen, said the knights,
that thou art a true man that thou wilt not tell thy name.
As for that, said Merlin, be it as it be may, I can tell you wherefore
ye ride this way, for to meet King Rience; but it will not avail you without
ye have my counsel. Ah! said Balin, ye are
Merlin; we will be ruled by your counsel. Come on, said Merlin, ye
shall have great worship, and look that ye do knightly, for ye shall have
great need. As for that, said Balin, dread you
not, we will do what we may.
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CHAPTER IX
How Balin and his brother, by the counsel of Merlin, took King Rience and
brought him to King Arthur.
THEN Merlin lodged them in a wood among leaves beside the
highway, and took off the bridles of their horses and put them to grass
and laid them down to rest them till it was nigh
midnight. Then Merlin bade them rise, and make them ready, for the
king was nigh them, that was stolen away from his host with a three score
horses of his best knights, and twenty of
them rode to-fore to warn the Lady de Vance that the king was coming;
for that night King Rience should have lain with her. Which is the king?
said Balin. Abide, said Merlin, here in a
strait way ye shall meet with him; and therewith he showed Balin and
his brother where he rode.
Anon Balin and his brother met with the king, and smote
him down, and wounded him fiercely, and laid him to the ground; and there
they slew on the right hand and the left hand, and
slew more than forty of his men, and the remnant fled. Then went they
again to King Rience and would have slain him had he not yielded him unto
their grace. Then said he thus: Knights
full of prowess, slay me not, for by my life ye may win, and by my
death ye shall win nothing. Then said these two knights, Ye say sooth and
truth, and so laid him on a horse-litter. With
that Merlin was vanished, and came to King Arthur aforehand, and told
him how his most enemy was taken and discomfited. By whom? said King Arthur.
By two knights, said Merlin,
that would please your lordship, and to-morrow ye shall know what knights
they are. Anon after came the Knight with the Two Swords and Balan his
brother, and brought with them
King Rience of North Wales, and there delivered him to the porters,
and charged them with him; and so they two returned again in the dawning
of the day. King Arthur
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came then to King Rience, and said, Sir king, ye are welcome: by what
adventure come ye hither? Sir, said King Rience, I came hither by an hard
adventure. Who won you? said King
Arthur. Sir, said the king, the Knight with the Two Swords and his
brother, which are two marvellous knights of prowess. I know them not,
said Arthur, but much I am beholden to them.
Ah, said Merlin, I shall tell you: it is Balin that achieved the sword,
and his brother Balan, a good knight, there liveth not a better of prowess
and of worthiness, and it shall be the greatest
dole of him that ever I knew of knight, for he shall not long endure.
Alas, said King Arthur, that is great pity; for I am much beholden unto
him, and I have ill deserved it unto him for his
kindness. Nay, said Merlin, he shall do much more for you, and that
shall ye know in haste. But, sir, are ye purveyed, said Merlin, for to-morn
the host of Nero, King Rience's brother,
will set on you or noon with a great host, and therefore make you ready,
for I will depart from you.
CHAPTER X
How King Arthur had a battle against Nero and King Lot of Orkney,
and how King Lot was deceived by Merlin, and how twelve kings were slain.
THEN King Arthur made ready his host in ten battles and
Nero was ready in the field afore the Castle Terrabil with a great host,
and he had ten battles, with many more people than
Arthur had. Then Nero had the vanguard with the most part of his people,
and Merlin came to King Lot of the Isle of Orkney, and held him with a
tale of prophecy, till Nero and his
people were destroyed. And there Sir Kay the seneschal did passingly
well, that the days of his life the worship went never from him; and Sir
Hervis de Revel did marvellous deeds with
King Arthur, and King Arthur slew that day twenty knights
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and maimed forty. At that time came in the Knight with the Two Swords
and his brother Balan, but they two did so marvellously that the king and
all the knights marvelled of them, and all
they that beheld them said they were sent from heaven as angels, or
devils from hell; and King Arthur said himself they were the best knights
that ever he saw, for they gave such strokes
that all men had wonder of them.
In the meanwhile came one to King Lot, and told him while
he tarried there Nero was destroyed and slain with all his people. Alas,
said King Lot, I am ashamed, for by my default
there is many a worshipful man slain, for an we had been together there
had been none host under the heaven that had been able for to have matched
with us; this faiter with his prophecy
hath mocked me. All that did Merlin, for he knew well that an King
Lot had been with his body there at the first battle, King Arthur had been
slain, and all his people destroyed; and well
Merlin knew that one of the kings should be dead that day, and loath
was Merlin that any of them both should be slain; but of the twain, he
had liefer King Lot had been slain than King
Arthur. Now what is best to do? said King Lot of Orkney; whether is
me better to treat with King Arthur or to fight, for the greater part of
our people are slain and destroyed? Sir, said a
knight, set on Arthur for they are weary and forfoughten and we be
fresh. As for me, said King Lot, I would every knight would do his part
as I would do mine. And then they advanced
banners and smote together and all to-shivered their spears; and Arthur's
knights, with the help of the Knight with the Two Swords and his brother
Balan put King Lot and his host to the
worse. But always King Lot held him in the foremost front, and did
marvellous deeds of arms, for all his host was borne up by his hands, for
he abode all knights. Alas he might not
endure, the which was great pity, that so worthy a knight as he was
one should be overmatched, that of late time afore had been a knight of
King Arthur's, and wedded the sister of King
Arthur; and for King Arthur lay by King Lot's
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wife, the which was Arthur's sister, and gat on her Mordred, therefore
King Lot held against Arthur. So there was a knight that was called the
Knight with the Strange Beast, and at that
time his right name was called Pellinore, the which was a good man
of prowess, and he smote a mighty stroke at King Lot as he fought with
all his enemies, and he failed of his stroke, and
smote the horse's neck, that he fell to the ground with King Lot. And
therewith anon Pellinore smote him a great stroke through the helm and
head unto the brows. And then all the host of
Orkney fled for the death of King Lot, and there were slain many mothers'
sons. But King Pellinore bare the wite of the death of King Lot, wherefore
Sir Gawaine revenged the death of
his father the tenth year after he was made knight, and slew King Pellinore
with his own hands. Also there were slain at that battle twelve kings on
the side of King Lot with Nero, and all
were buried in the Church of Saint Stephen's in Camelot, and the remnant
of knights and of others were buried in a great rock.
CHAPTER XI
Of the interment of twelve kings, and of the prophecy of Merlin, and how
Balin should give the dolorous stroke.
SO at the interment came King Lot's wife Margawse with
her four sons, Gawaine, Agravaine, Gaheris, and Gareth. Also there came
thither King Uriens, Sir Ewaine's father, and
Morgan le Fay his wife that was King Arthur's sister. All these came
to the interment. But of all these twelve kings King Arthur let make the
tomb of King Lot passing richly, and made his
tomb by his own; and then Arthur let make twelve images of latten and
copper, and over-gilt it with gold, in the sign of twelve kings, and each
one of them held a taper of wax that burnt
day and night; and King Arthur was made in sign of a figure standing
above them with a sword drawn in his hand, and
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all the twelve figures had countenance like unto men that were overcome.
All this made Merlin by his subtle craft, and there he told the king, When
I am dead these tapers shall burn no
longer, and soon after the adventures of the Sangreal shall come among
you and be achieved. Also he told Arthur how Balin the worshipful knight
shall give the dolorous stroke, whereof
shall fall great vengeance. Oh, where is Balin and Balan and Pellinore?
said King Arthur. As for Pellinore, said Merlin, he will meet with you
soon; and as for Balin he will not be long from
you; but the other brother will depart, ye shall see him no more. By
my faith, said Arthur, they are two marvellous knights, and namely Balin
passeth of prowess of any knight that ever I
found, for much beholden am I unto him; would God he would abide with
me. Sir, said Merlin, look ye keep well the scabbard of Excalibur, for
ye shall lose no blood while ye have the
scabbard upon you, though ye have as many wounds upon you as ye may
have. So after, for great trust, Arthur betook the scabbard to Morgan le
Fay his sister, and she loved another
knight better than her husband King Uriens or King Arthur, and she
would have had Arthur her brother slain, and therefore she let make another
scabbard like it by enchantment, and
gave the scabbard Excalibur to her love; and the knight's name was
called Accolon, that after had near slain King Arthur. After this Merlin
told unto King Arthur of the prophecy that
there should be a great battle beside Salisbury, and Mordred his own
son should be against him. Also he told him that Basdemegus was his cousin,
and germain unto King Uriens.
CHAPTER XII
How a
sorrowful knight came before Arthur, and how Balin fetched him, and how
that knight was slain by a knight invisible.
WITHIN a day or two King Arthur was somewhat sick, and he let pitch his pavilion in a meadow, and there he
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laid him down on a pallet to sleep, but he might have no rest. Right
so he heard a great noise of an horse, and therewith the king looked out
at the porch of the pavilion, and saw a knight
coming even by him, making great dole. Abide, fair sir, said Arthur,
and tell me wherefore thou makest this sorrow. Ye may little amend me,
said the knight, and so passed forth to the
castle of Meliot. Anon after there came Balin, and when he saw King
Arthur he alighted off his horse, and came to the King on foot, and saluted
him. By my head, said Arthur, ye be
welcome. Sir, right now came riding this way a knight making great
mourn, for what cause I cannot tell; wherefore I would desire of you of
your courtesy and of your. gentleness to fetch
again that knight either by force or else by his good will. I will
do more for your lordship than that, said Balin; and so he rode more than
a pace, and found the knight with a damosel in a
forest, and said, Sir knight, ye must come with me unto King Arthur,
for to tell him of your sorrow. That will I not, said the knight, for it
will scathe me greatly, and do you none avail. Sir,
said Balin, I pray you make you ready, for ye must go with me, or else
I must fight with you and bring you by force, and that were me loath to
do. Will ye be my warrant, said the knight,
an I go with you? Yea, said Balin, or else I will die therefore. And
so he made him ready to go with Balin, and left the damosel still. And
as they were even afore King Arthur's pavilion,
there came one invisible, and smote this knight that went with Balin
throughout the body with a spear. Alas, said the knight, I am slain under
your conduct with a knight called Garlon;
therefore take my horse that is better than yours, and ride to the
damosel, and follow the quest that I was in as she will lead you, and revenge
my death when ye may. That shall I do, said
Balin, and that I make vow unto knighthood; and so he departed from
this knight with great sorrow. So King Arthur let bury this knight richly,
and made a mention on his tomb, how there
was slain Herlews le Berbeus, and by whom the treachery was done, the
knight Garlon. But ever the
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damosel bare the truncheon of the spear with her that Sir Herlews was
slain withal.
CHAPTER XIII
How Balin and
the damosel met with a knight which was in likewise slain, and how the
damosel bled for the custom of a castle.
So Balin and the damosel rode into a forest, and there
met with a knight that had been a-hunting, and that knight asked Balin
for what cause he made so great sorrow. Me list not to tell
you, said Balin. Now, said the knight, an I were armed as ye be I would
fight with you. That should little need, said Balin, I am not afeard to
tell you, and told him all the cause how it was.
Ah, said the knight, is this all? here I ensure you by the faith of
my body never to depart from you while my life lasteth. And so they went
to the hostelry and armed them, and so rode
forth with Balin. And as they came by an hermitage even by a churchyard,
there came the knight Garlon invisible, and smote this knight, Perin de
Mountbeliard, through the body with a
spear. Alas, said the knight, I am slain by this traitor knight that
rideth invisible. Alas, said Balin, it is not the first despite he hath
done me; and there the hermit and Balin buried the knight
under a rich stone and a tomb royal. And on the morn they found letters
of gold written, how Sir Gawaine shall revenge his father's death, King
Lot, on the King Pellinore. Anon after this
Balin and the damosel rode till they came to a castle, and there Balin
alighted, and he and the damosel went to go into the castle, and anon as
Balin came within the castle's gate the
portcullis fell down at his back, and there fell many men about the
damosel, and would have slain her. When Balin saw that, he was sore aggrieved,
for he might not help the damosel.
Then he went up into the tower, and leapt over walls into the ditch,
and hurt him not;
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and anon he pulled out his sword and would have foughten with them.
And they all said nay, they would not fight with him, for they did nothing
but the old custom of the castle; and told
him how their lady was sick, and had lain many years, and she might
not be whole but if she had a dish of silver full of blood of a clean maid
and a king's daughter; and therefore the
custom of this castle is, there shall no damosel pass this way but
she shall bleed of her blood in a silver dish full. Well, said Balin, she
shall bleed as much as she may bleed, but I will not
lose the life of her whiles my life lasteth. And so Balin made her
to bleed by her good will, but her blood helped not the lady. And so he
and she rested there all night, and had there right
good cheer, and on the morn they passed on their ways. And as it telleth
after in the Sangreal, that Sir Percivale's sister helped that lady with
her blood, whereof she was dead.
CHAPTER XIV
How Balin met with that knight named
Garlon at a feast, and there he slew him, to have his blood to heal therewith
the son of his host.
THEN they rode three or four days and never met with adventure,
and by hap they were lodged with a gentle man that was a rich man and well
at ease. And as they sat at their supper
Balin overheard one complain grievously by him in a chair. What is
this noise? said Balin. Forsooth, said his host, I will tell you. I was
but late at a jousting, and there I jousted with a
knight that is brother unto King Pellam, and twice smote I him down,
and then he promised to quit me on my best friend; and so he wounded my
son, that cannot be whole till I have of
that knight's blood, and he rideth alway invisible; but I know not
his name. Ah! said Balin, I know that knight, his name is Garlon, he hath
slain two knights of mine in the same manner,
therefore I had liefer meet with that knight
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than all the gold in this realm, for the despite he hath done me. Well,
said his host, I shall tell you, King Pellam of Listeneise hath made do
cry in all this country a great feast that shall be
within these twenty days, and no knight may come there but if he bring
his wife with him, or his paramour; and that knight, your enemy and mine,
ye shall see that day. Then I behote you,
said Balin, part of his blood to heal your son withal. We will be forward
to-morn, said his host. So on the morn they rode all three toward Pellam,
and they had fifteen days' journey or
they came thither; and that same day began the great feast. And so
they alighted and stabled their horses, and went into the castle; but Balin's
host might not be let in because he had no
lady. Then Balin was well received and brought unto a chamber and unarmed
him; and there were brought him robes to his pleasure, and would have had
Balin leave his sword behind
him. Nay, said Balin, that do I not, for it is the custom of my country
a knight always to keep his weapon with him, and that custom will I keep,
or else I will depart as I came. Then they
gave him leave to wear his sword, and so he went unto the castle, and
was set among knights of worship, and his lady afore him.
Soon Balin asked a knight, Is there not a knight in this
court whose name is Garlon? Yonder he goeth, said a knight, he with the
black face; he is the marvellest knight that is now living,
for he destroyeth many good knights, for he goeth invisible. Ah well,
said Balin, is that he? Then Balin advised him long: If I slay him here
I shall not escape, and if I leave him now,
peradventure I shall never meet with him again at such a steven, and
much harm he will do an he live. Therewith this Garlon espied that this
Balin beheld him, and then he came and smote
Balin on the face with the back of his hand, and said, Knight, why
beholdest me so? for shame therefore, eat thy meat and do that thou came
for. Thou sayest sooth, said Balin, this is not
the first despite that thou hast done me, and therefore I will do what
I came for, and rose up fiercely and clave his head to the shoulders.
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Give me the truncheon, said Balin to his lady, wherewith he slew your
knight. Anon she gave it him, for alway she bare the truncheon with her.
And therewith Balin smote him through the
body, and said openly, With that truncheon thou hast slain a good knight,
and now it sticketh in thy body. And then Balin called unto him his host,
saying, Now may ye fetch blood enough
to heal your son withal.
CHAPTER XV
How Balin fought with
King Pellam, and how his sword brake, and how he gat a spear wherewith
he smote the dolorous stroke.
ANON all the knights arose from the table for to set on
Balin, and King Pellam himself arose up fiercely, and said, Knight, hast
thou slain my brother? thou shalt die therefore or thou
depart. Well, said Balin, do it yourself. Yes, said King Pellam, there
shall no man have ado with thee but myself, for the love of my brother.
Then King Pellam caught in his hand a grim
weapon and smote eagerly at Balin; but Balin put the sword betwixt
his head and the stroke, and therewith his sword burst in sunder. And when
Balin was weaponless he ran into a
chamber for to seek some weapon, and so from chamber to chamber, and
no weapon he could find, and always King Pellam after him. And at the last
he entered into a chamber that was
marvellously well dight and richly, and a bed arrayed with cloth of
gold, the richest that might be thought, and one lying therein, and thereby
stood a table of clean gold with four pillars of
silver that bare up the table, and upon the table stood a marvellous
spear strangely wrought. And when Balin saw that spear, he gat it in his
hand and turned him to King Pellam, and
smote him passingly sore with that spear, that King Pellam fell down
in a swoon, and therewith the castle roof and walls brake and fell to the
earth, and Balin fell down so that he might
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not stir foot nor hand. And so the most part of the castle, that was
fallen down through that dolorous stroke, lay upon Pellam and Balin three
days.
CHAPTER XVI
How Balin was delivered by Merlin, and saved a knight that would have slain
himself for love.
THEN Merlin came thither and took up Balin, and gat him
a good horse, for his was dead, and bade him ride out of that country.
I would have my damosel, said Balin. Lo, said Merlin,
where she lieth dead. And King Pellam lay so, many years sore wounded,
and might never be whole till Galahad the haut prince healed him in the
quest of the Sangreal, for in that place
was part of the blood of our Lord Jesus Christ, that Joseph of Arimathea
brought into this land, and there himself lay in that rich bed. And that
was the same spear that Longius smote our
Lord to the heart; and King Pellam was nigh of Joseph's kin, and that
was the most worshipful man that lived in those days, and great pity it
was of his hurt, for through that stroke, turned
to great dole, tray and tene. Then departed Balin from Merlin, and
said, In this world we meet never no more. So he rode forth through the
fair countries and cities, and found the people
dead, slain on every side. And all that were alive cried, O Balin,
thou hast caused great damage in these countries; for the dolorous stroke
thou gavest unto King Pellam three countries
are destroyed, and doubt not but the vengeance will fall on thee at
the last. When Balin was past those countries he was passing fain.
So he rode eight days or he met with adventure. And at
the last he came into a fair forest in a valley, and was ware of a tower,
and there beside he saw a great horse of war, tied to a
tree, and there beside sat a fair knight on the ground and made great
mourning, and he was a likely
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man, and a well made. Balin said, God save you, why be ye so heavy?
tell me and I will amend it, an I may, to my power. Sir knight, said he
again, thou dost me great grief, for I was in
merry thoughts, and now thou puttest me to more pain. Balin went a
little from him, and looked on his horse; then heard Balin him say thus:
Ah, fair lady, why have ye broken my promise,
for thou promisest me to meet me here by noon, and I may curse thee
that ever ye gave me this sword, for with this sword I slay myself, and
pulled it out. And therewith Balin stert unto
him and took him by the hand. Let go my hand, said the knight, or else
I shall slay thee. That shall not need, said Balin, for I shall promise
you my help to get you your lady, an ye will tell
me where she is. What is your name? said the knight. My name is Balin
le Savage. Ah, sir, I know you well enough, ye are the Knight with the
Two Swords, and the man of most
prowess of your hands living. What is your name? said Balin. My name
is Garnish of the Mount, a poor man's son, but by my prowess and hardiness
a duke hath made me knight, and
gave me lands; his name is Duke Hermel, and his daughter is she that
I love, and she me as I deemed. How far is she hence? said Balin. But six
mile, said the knight. Now ride we hence,
said these two knights. So they rode more than a pace, till that they
came to a fair castle well walled and ditched. I will into the castle,
said Balin, and look if she be there. So he went in
and searched from chamber to chamber, and found her bed, but she was
not there. Then Balin looked into a fair little garden, and under a laurel
tree he saw her lie upon a quilt of green
samite and a knight in her arms, fast halsing either other, and under
their heads grass and herbs. When Balin saw her lie so with the foulest
knight that ever he saw, and she a fair lady, then
Balin went through all the chambers again, and told the knight how
he found her as she had slept fast, and so brought him in the place there
she lay fast sleeping.
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CHAPTER XVII
How that knight slew his love and a knight lying by her, and
after, how he slew himself with his own sword, and how Balin rode toward
a castle
where he lost his life.
AND when Garnish beheld her so lying, for pure sorrow his
mouth and nose burst out a-bleeding, and with his sword he smote off both
their heads, and then he made sorrow out of
measure, and said, O Balin, much sorrow hast thou brought unto me,
for hadst thou not shewed me that sight I should have passed my sorrow.
Forsooth, said Balin, I did it to this intent
that it should better thy courage, and that ye might see and know her
falsehood, and to cause you to leave love of such a lady; God knoweth I
did none other but as I would ye did to me.
Alas, said Garnish, now is my sorrow double that I may not endure,
now have I slain that I most loved in all my life; and therewith suddenly
he rove himself on his own sword unto the
hilts. When Balin saw that, he dressed him thenceward, lest folk would
say he had slain them; and so he rode forth, and within three days he came
by a cross, and thereon were letters of
gold written, that said, It is not for no knight alone to ride toward
this castle. Then saw he an old hoar gentleman coming toward him, that
said, Balin le Savage, thou passest thy bounds to
come this way, therefore turn again and it will avail thee. And he
vanished away anon; and so he heard an horn blow as it had been the death
of a beast. That blast, said Balin, is blown for
me, for I am the prize and yet am I not dead. Anon withal he saw an
hundred ladies and many knights, that welcomed him with fair semblant,
and made him passing good cheer unto his
sight, and led him into the castle, and there was dancing and minstrelsy
and all manner of joy. Then the chief lady of the castle said, Knight with
the Two Swords, ye must have ado and
joust with a
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knight hereby that keepeth an island, for there may no man pass this
way but he must joust or he pass. That is an unhappy custom, said Balin,
that a knight may not pass this way but if he
joust. Ye shall not have ado but with one knight, said the lady.
Well, said Balin, since I shall thereto I am ready, but
travelling men are oft weary and their horses too, but though my horse
be weary my heart is not weary, I would be fain there my
death should be. Sir, said a knight to Balin, methinketh your shield
is not good, I will lend you a bigger. Thereof I pray you. And so he took
the shield that was unknown and left his own,
and so rode unto the island, and put him and his horse in a great boat;
and when he came on the other side he met with a damosel, and she said,
O knight Balin, why have ye left your
own shield? alas ye have put yourself in great danger, for by your
shield ye should have been known; it is great pity of you as ever was of
knight, for of thy prowess and hardiness thou
hast no fellow living. Me repenteth, said Balin, that ever I came within
this country, but I may not turn now again for shame, and what adventure
shall fall to me, be it life or death, I will
take the adventure that shall come to me. And then he looked on his
armour, and understood he was well armed, and therewith blessed him and
mounted upon his horse.
CHAPTER XVIII
How Balin met with his brother Balan, and how each of them slew other unknown,
till they were wounded to death.
THEN afore him he saw come riding out of a castle a knight,
and his horse trapped all red, and himself in the same colour. When this
knight in the red beheld Balin, him thought it should
be his brother Balin by cause of his two
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swords, but by cause he knew not his shield he deemed it was not he.
And so they aventryd their spears and came marvellously fast together,
and they smote each other in the shields, but
their spears and their course were so big that it bare down horse and
man, that they lay both in a swoon. But Balin was bruised sore with the
fall of his horse, for he was weary of travel.
And Balan was the first that rose on foot and drew his sword, and went
toward Balin, and he arose and went against him; but Balan smote Balin
first, and he put up his shield and smote
him through the shield and tamed his helm. Then Balin smote him again
with that unhappy sword, and well-nigh had felled his brother Balan, and
so they fought there together till their
breaths failed. Then Balin looked up to the castle and saw the towers
stand full of ladies. So they went unto battle again, and wounded everych
other dolefully, and then they breathed
ofttimes, and so went unto battle that all the place there as they
fought was blood red. And at that time there was none of them both but
they had either smitten other seven great wounds,
so that the least of them might have been the death of the mightiest
giant in this world.
Then they went to battle again so marvellously that doubt
it was to hear of that battle for the great blood-shedding, and their hauberks
unnailed that naked they were on every side. At
last Balan the younger brother withdrew him a little and laid him down.
Then said Balin le Savage, What knight art thou? for or now I found never
no knight that matched me. My name is,
said he, Balan, brother unto the good knight, Balin. Alas, said Balin,
that ever I should see this day, and therewith he fell backward in a swoon.
Then Balan yede on all four feet and
hands, and put off the helm off his brother, and might not know him
by the visage it was so ful hewn and bled; but when he awoke he said, O
Balan, my brother, thou hast slain me and I
thee, wherefore all the wide world shall speak of us both. Alas, said
Balan, that ever I saw this day, that through mishap I might not know you,
for I espied well your
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two swords, but by cause ye had another shield I deemed ye had been
another knight. Alas, said Balin, all that made an unhappy knight in the
castle, for he caused me to leave my own
shield to our both's destruction, and if I might live I would destroy
that castle for ill customs. That were well done, said Balan, for I had
never grace to depart from them since that I came
hither, for here it happed me to slay a knight that kept this island,
and since might I never depart, and no more should ye, brother, an ye might
have slain me as ye have, and escaped
yourself with the life.
Right so came the lady of the tower with four knights and
six ladies and six yeomen unto them, and there she heard how they made
their moan either to other, and said, We came both
out of one tomb, that is to say one mother's belly, and so shall we
lie both in one pit. So Balan prayed the lady of her gentleness, for his
true service, that she would bury them both in that
same place there the battle was done. And she granted them, with weeping,
it should be done richly in the best manner. Now, will ye send for a priest,
that we may receive our sacrament,
and receive the blessed body of our Lord Jesus Christ? Yea, said the
lady, it shall be done; and so she sent for a priest and gave them their
rights. Now, said Balin, when we are buried in
one tomb, and the mention made over us how two brethren slew each other,
there will never good knight, nor good man, see our tomb but they will
pray for our souls. And so all the
ladies and gentlewomen wept for pity. Then anon Balan died, but Balin
died not till the midnight after, and so were they buried both, and the
lady let make a mention of Balan how he was
there slain by his brother's hands, but she knew not Balin's name.
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CHAPTER XIX
How Merlin buried them both in one tomb, and of Balin's sword.
IN the morn came Merlin and let write Balin's name on the
tomb with letters of gold, that Here lieth Balin le Savage that was the
Knight with the Two Swords, and he that smote the
Dolorous Stroke. Also Merlin let make there a bed, that there should
never man lie therein but he went out of his wit, yet Launcelot de Lake
fordid that bed through his noblesse. And
anon after Balin was dead, Merlin took his sword, and took off the
pommel and set on another pommel. So Merlin bade a knight that stood afore
him handle that sword, and he assayed,
and he might not handle it. Then Merlin laughed. Why laugh ye? said
the knight. This is the cause, said Merlin: there shall never man handle
this sword but the best knight of the world, and
that shall be Sir Launcelot or else Galahad his son, and Launcelot
with this sword shall slay the man that in the world he loved best, that
shall be Sir Gawaine. All this he let write in the
pommel of the sword. Then Merlin let make a bridge of iron and of steel
into that island, and it was but half a foot broad, and there shall never
man pass that bridge, nor have hardiness to
go over, but if he were a passing good man and a good knight without
treachery or villainy. Also the scabbard of Balin's sword Merlin left it
on this side the island, that Galahad should
find it. Also Merlin let make by his subtilty that Balin's sword was
put in a marble stone standing upright as great as a mill stone, and the
stone hoved always above the water and did
many years, and so by adventure it swam down the stream to the City
of Camelot, that is in English Winchester. And that same day Galahad the
haut prince came with King Arthur, and
so Galahad brought with him the scabbard and achieved the sword that
was there in the marble stone
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hoving upon the water. And on Whitsunday he achieved the sword as it is rehearsed in the book of Sangreal.
Soon after this was done Merlin came to King Arthur and
told him of the dolorous stroke that Balin gave to King Pellam, and how
Balin and Balan fought together the marvellest battle
that ever was heard of, and how they were buried both in one tomb.
Alas, said King Arthur, this is the greatest pity that ever I heard tell
of two knights, for in the world I know not such
two knights. Thus endeth the tale of Balin and of Balan, two brethren
born in Northumberland, good knights.
Sequitur iii liber.
Book 3
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BOOK III
CHAPTER I
How King Arthur took a wife, and wedded Guenever, daughter
to Leodegrance, King of the Land of Cameliard, with whom he had the Round
Table.
IN the beginning of Arthur, after he was chosen king
by adventure and by grace; for the most part of the barons knew not that
he was Uther Pendragon's son, but as Merlin made it
openly known. But yet many kings and lords held great war against him
for that cause, but well Arthur overcame them all, for the most part the
days of his life he was ruled much by the
counsel of Merlin. So it fell on a time King Arthur said unto Merlin,
My barons will let me have no rest, but needs I must take a wife, and I
will none take but by thy counsel and by thine
advice. It is well done, said Merlin, that ye take a wife, for a man
of your bounty and noblesse should not be without a wife. Now is there
any that ye love more than another? Yea, said
King Arthur, I love Guenever the king's daughter, Leodegrance of the
land of Cameliard, the which holdeth in his house the Table Round that
ye told he had of my father Uther. And this
damosel is the most valiant and fairest lady that I know living, or
yet that ever I could find. Sir, said Merlin, as of her beauty and fairness
she is one of the fairest alive, but, an ye loved her
not so well as ye do, I should find you a damosel of beauty and of
goodness that should like you and please you, an your heart were not set;
but there as a man's heart is set, he
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will be loath to return. That is truth, said King Arthur. But Merlin
warned the king covertly that Guenever was not wholesome for him to take
to wife, for he warned him that Launcelot
should love her, and she him again; and so he turned his tale to the
adventures of Sangreal.
Then Merlin desired of the king for to have men with him
that should enquire of Guenever, and so the king granted him, and Merlin
went forth unto King Leodegrance of Cameliard, and
told him of the desires of the king that he would have unto his wife
Guenever his daughter. That is to me, said King Leodegrance, the best tidings
that ever I heard, that so worthy a king
of prowess and noblesse will wed my daughter. And as for my lands,
I will give him, wist I it might please him, but he hath lands enow, him
needeth none; but I shall send him a gift shall
please him much more, for I shall give him the Table Round, the which
Uther Pendragon gave me, and when it is full complete, there is an hundred
knights and fifty. And as for an hundred
good knights I have myself, but I faute fifty, for so many have been
slain in my days. And so Leodegrance delivered his daughter Guenever unto
Merlin, and the Table Round with the
hundred knights, and so they rode freshly, with great royalty, what
by water and what by land, till that they came nigh unto London.
CHAPTER II
How the Knights of the Round Table were ordained and their sieges blessed
by the Bishop of Canterbury.
WHEN King Arthur heard of the coming of Guenever and the
hundred knights with the Table Round, then King Arthur made great joy for
her coming, and that rich present, and said
openly, This fair lady is passing welcome unto me, for I have loved
her long, and therefore there is nothing so lief to me. And these knights
with the Round Table please me more than right
great riches. And in all
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haste the king let ordain for the marriage and the coronation in the
most honourable wise that could be devised. Now, Merlin, said King Arthur,
go thou and espy me in all this land fifty
knights which be of most prowess and worship. Within short time Merlin
had found such knights that should fulfil twenty and eight knights, but
no more he could find. Then the Bishop of
Canterbury was fetched, and he blessed the sieges with great royalty
and devotion, and there set the eight and twenty knights in their sieges.
And when this was done Merlin said, Fair
sirs, ye must all arise and come to King Arthur for to do him homage;
he will have the better will to maintain you. And so they arose and did
their homage, and when they were gone
Merlin found in every sieges letters of gold that told the knights'
names that had sitten therein. But two sieges were void. And so anon came
young Gawaine and asked the king a gift. Ask,
said the king, and I shall grant it you. Sir, I ask that ye will make
me knight that same day ye shall wed fair Guenever. I will do it with a
good will, said King Arthur, and do unto you all the
worship that I may, for I must by reason ye are my nephew, my sister's
son.
CHAPTER III
How a poor man riding upon a lean mare desired King Arthur to make his
son knight.
FORTHWITHAL there came a poor man into the court, and brought
with him a fair young man of eighteen years of age riding upon a lean mare;
and the poor man asked all men that
he met, Where shall I find King Arthur? Yonder he is, said the knights,
wilt thou anything with him? Yea, said the poor man, therefore I came hither.
Anon as he came before the king, he
saluted him and said: O King Arthur, the flower of all knights and
kings, I beseech Jesu save thee. Sir, it was told me that at this time
of your marriage ye would give any man the gift that
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he would ask, out except that were unreasonable. That is truth, said
the king, such cries I let make, and that will I hold, so it apair not
my realm nor mine estate. Ye say well and
graciously, said the poor man; Sir, I ask nothing else but that ye
will make my son here a knight. It is a great thing thou askest of me,
said the king. What is thy name? said the king to the
poor man. Sir, my name is Aries the cowherd. Whether cometh this of
thee or of thy son? said the king. Nay, sir, said Aries, this desire cometh
of my son and not of me, for I shall tell
you I have thirteen sons, and all they will fall to what labour I put
them, and will be right glad to do labour, but this child will not labour
for me, for anything that my wife or I may do, but
always he will be shooting or casting darts, and glad for to see battles
and to behold knights, and always day and night he desireth of me to be
made a knight. What is thy name? said the
king unto the young man. Sir, my name is Tor. The king beheld him fast,
and saw he was passingly well-visaged and passingly well made of his years.
Well, said King Arthur unto Aries
the cowherd, fetch all thy sons afore me that I may see them. And so
the poor man did, and all were shaped much like the poor man. But Tor was
not like none of them all in shape nor in
countenance, for he was much more than any of them. Now, said King
Arthur unto the cow herd, where is the sword he shall be made knight withal?
It is here, said Tor. Take it out of
the sheath, said the king, and require me to make you a knight.
Then Tor alighted off his mare and pulled out his sword,
kneeling, and requiring the king that he would make him knight, and that
he might be a knight of the Table Round. As for a
knight I will make you, and therewith smote him in the neck with the
sword, saying, Be ye a good knight, and so I pray to God so ye may be,
and if ye be of prowess and of worthiness
ye shall be a knight of the Table Round. Now Merlin, said Arthur, say
whether this Tor shall be a good knight or no. Yea, sir, he ought to be
a good knight, for he is come of as good a
man as any is alive, and of kings' blood. How
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so, sir? said the king. I shall tell you, said Merlin: This poor man,
Aries the cowherd, is not his father; he is nothing sib to him, for King
Pellinore is his father. I suppose nay, said the
cowherd. Fetch thy wife afore me, said Merlin, and she shall not say
nay. Anon the wife was fetched, which was a fair housewife, and there she
answered Merlin full womanly, and there
she told the king and Merlin that when she was a maid, and went to
milk kine, there met with her a stern knight, and half by force he had
my maidenhead, and at that time he begat my son
Tor, and he took away from me my greyhound that I had that time with
me, and said that he would keep the greyhound for my love. Ah, said the
cowherd, I weened not this, but I may
believe it well, for he had never no tatches of me. Sir, said Tor unto
Merlin, dishonour not my mother. Sir, said Merlin, it is more for your
worship than hurt, for your father is a good man
and a king, and he may right well advance you and your mother, for
ye were begotten or ever she was wedded. That is truth, said the wife.
It is the less grief unto me, said the cowherd.
CHAPTER IV
How Sir Tor was known for son of King Pellinore, and how Gawaine was made
knight.
SO on the morn King Pellinore came to the court of King
Arthur, which had great joy of him, and told him of Tor, how he was his
son, and how he had made him knight at the request
of the cowherd. When Pellinore beheld Tor, he pleased him much. So
the king made Gawaine knight, but Tor was the first he made at the feast.
What is the cause, said King Arthur, that
there be two places void in the sieges? Sir, said Merlin, there shall
no man sit in those places but they that shall be of most worship. But
in the Siege Perilous there shall no man sit therein
but one, and if there be any so hardy to
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do it he shall be destroyed, and he that shall sit there shall have
no fellow. And therewith Merlin took King Pellinore by the hand, and in
the one hand next the two sieges and the Siege
Perilous he said, in open audience, This is your place and best ye
are worthy to sit therein of any that is here. Thereat sat Sir Gawaine
in great envy and told Gaheris his brother, yonder
knight is put to great worship, the which grieveth me sore, for he
slew our father King Lot, therefore I will slay him, said Gawaine, with
a sword that was sent me that is passing trenchant.
Ye shall not so, said Gaheris, at this time, for at this time I am
but a squire, and when I am made knight I will be avenged on him, and therefore,
brother, it is best ye suffer till another time,
that we may have him out of the court, for an we did so we should trouble
this high feast. I will well, said Gawaine, as ye will.
CHAPTER V
How at feast of the wedding of King Arthur to Guenever, a white
hart came into the hall, and thirty couple hounds, and how a brachet pinched
the
hart which was taken away.
THEN was the high feast made ready, and the king was wedded
at Camelot unto Dame Guenever in the church of Saint Stephen's, with great
solemnity. And as every man was set
after his degree, Merlin went to all the knights of the Round Table,
and bade them sit still, that none of them remove. For ye shall see a strange
and a marvellous adventure. Right so as
they sat there came running in a white hart into the hall, and a white
brachet next him, and thirty couple of black running hounds came after
with a great cry, and the hart went about the
Table Round as he went by other boards. The white brachet bit him by
the buttock and pulled out a piece, wherethrough the hart leapt a great
leap and overthrew a knight that sat at the
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board side; and therewith the knight arose and took up the brachet,
and so went forth out of the hall, and took his horse and rode his way
with the brachet. Right so anon came in a lady
on a white palfrey, and cried aloud to King Arthur, Sir, suffer me
not to have this despite, for the brachet was mine that the knight led
away. I may not do therewith, said the king.
With this there came a knight riding all armed on a great
horse, and took the lady away with him with force, and ever she cried and
made great dole. When she was gone the king was
glad, for she made such a noise. Nay, said Merlin, ye may not leave
these adventures so lightly; for these adventures must be brought again
or else it would be disworship to you and to
your feast. I will, said the king, that all be done by your advice.
Then, said Merlin, let call Sir Gawaine, for he must bring again the white
hart. Also, sir, ye must let call Sir Tor, for he must
bring again the brachet and the knight, or else slay him. Also let
call King Pellinore, for he must bring again the lady and the knight, or
else slay him. And these three knights shall do
marvellous adventures or they come again. Then were they called all
three as it rehearseth afore, and each of them took his charge, and armed
them surely. But Sir Gawaine had the first
request, and therefore we will begin at him.
CHAPTER VI
How Sir Gawaine rode for to fetch again the hart, and how two brethren
fought each against other for the hart.
SIR GAWAINE rode more than a pace, and Gaheris his brother
that rode with him instead of a squire to do him service. So as they rode
they saw two knights fight on horseback
passing sore, so Sir Gawaine and his brother rode betwixt them, and
asked them for what cause they fought so. The one knight answered and said,
We fight
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for a simple matter, for we two be two brethren born and begotten of
one man and of one woman. Alas, said Sir Gawaine, why do ye so? Sir, said
the elder, there came a white hart this
way this day, and many hounds chased him, and a white brachet was alway
next him, and we understood it was adventure made for the high feast of
King Arthur, and therefore I would
have gone after to have won me worship; and here my younger brother
said he would go after the hart, for he was better knight than I: and for
this cause we fell at debate, and so we
thought to prove which of us both was better knight. This is a simple
cause, said Sir Gawaine; uncouth men ye should debate withal, and not brother
with brother; therefore but if you will
do by my counsel I will have ado with you, that is ye shall yield you
unto me, and that ye go unto King Arthur and yield you unto his grace.
Sir knight, said the two brethren, we are
forfoughten and much blood have we lost through our wilfulness, and
therefore we would be loath to have ado with you. Then do as I will have
you, said Sir Gawaine. We will agree to
fulfil your will; but by whom shall we say that we be thither sent?
Ye may say, By the knight that followeth the quest of the hart that was
white. Now what is your name? said Gawaine.
Sorlouse of the Forest, said the elder. And my name is, said the younger,
Brian of the Forest. And so they departed and went to the king's court,
and Sir Gawaine on his quest.
And as Gawaine followed the hart by the cry of the hounds,
even afore him there was a great river, and the hart swam over; and as
Sir Gawaine would follow after, there stood a knight
over the other side, and said, Sir knight, come not over after this
hart but if thou wilt joust with me. I will not fail as for that, said
Sir Gawaine, to follow the quest that I am in, and so made
his horse to swim over the water. And anon they gat their spears and
ran together full hard; but Sir Gawaine smote him off his horse, and then
he turned his horse and bade him yield him.
Nay, said the knight, not so, though thou have the better of me on
horseback. I pray thee, valiant
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knight, alight afoot, and match we together with swords. What is your
name? said Sir Gawaine. Allardin of the Isles, said the other. Then either
dressed their shields and smote together,
but Sir Gawaine smote him so hard through the helm that it went to
the brains, and the knight fell down dead. Ah! said Gaheris, that was a
mighty stroke of a young knight.
CHAPTER VII
How the hart was chased into a castle and there slain, and how Sir Gawaine
slew a lady.
THEN Gawaine and Gaheris rode more than a pace after the
white hart, and let slip at the hart three couple of greyhounds, and so
they chased the hart into a castle, and in the chief
place of the castle they slew the hart; Sir Gawaine and Gaheris followed
after. Right so there came a knight out of a chamber with a sword drawn
in his hand and slew two of the
greyhounds, even in the sight of Sir Gawaine, and the remnant he chased
them with his sword out of the castle. And when he came again, he said,
O my white hart, me repenteth that thou
art dead, for my sovereign lady gave thee to me, and evil have I kept
thee, and thy death shall be dear bought an I live. And anon he went into
his chamber and armed him, and came out
fiercely, and there met he with Sir Gawaine. Why have ye slain my hounds?
said Sir Gawaine, for they did but their kind, and liefer I had ye had
wroken your anger upon me than upon a
dumb beast. Thou sayest truth, said the knight, I have avenged me on
thy hounds, and so I will on thee or thou go. Then Sir Gawaine alighted
afoot and dressed his shield, and struck
together mightily, and clave their shields, and stoned their helms,
and brake their hauberks that the blood ran down to their feet.
At the last Sir Gawaine smote the knight so hard that
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he fell to the earth, and then he cried mercy, and yielded him, and
besought him as he was a knight and gentleman, to save his life. Thou shalt
die, said Sir Gawaine, for slaying of my
hounds. I will make amends, said the knight, unto my power. Sir Gawaine
would no mercy have, but unlaced his helm to have stricken off his head.
Right so came his lady out of a
chamber and fell over him, and so he smote off her head by misadventure.
Alas, said Gaheris, that is foully and shamefully done, that shame shall
never from you; also ye should give
mercy unto them that ask mercy, for a knight without mercy is without
worship. Sir Gawaine was so stonied of the death of this fair lady that
he wist not what he did, and said unto the
knight, Arise, I will give thee mercy. Nay, nay, said the knight, I
take no force of mercy now, for thou hast slain my love and my lady that
I loved best of all earthly things. Me sore
repenteth it, said Sir Gawaine, for I thought to strike unto thee;
but now thou shalt go unto King Arthur and tell him of thine adventures,
and how thou art overcome by the knight that
went in the quest of the white hart. I take no force, said the knight,
whether I live or I die; but so for dread of death he swore to go unto
King Arthur, and he made him to bear one
greyhound before him on his horse, and another behind him. What is
your name? said Sir Gawaine, or we depart. My name is, said the knight,
Ablamar of the Marsh. So he departed
toward Camelot.
CHAPTER VIII
How four knights fought
against Gawaine and Gaheris, and how they were overcome, and their lives
saved at request of four ladies.
AND Sir Gawaine went into the castle, and made him ready to lie there all night, and would have unarmed him. What will ye do, said Gaheris, will ye unarm you in this
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country? Ye may think ye have many enemies here. They had not sooner
said that word but there came four knights well armed, and assailed Sir
Gawaine hard, and said unto him, Thou
new-made knight, thou hast shamed thy knighthood, for a knight without
mercy is dishonoured. Also thou hast slain a fair lady to thy great shame
to the world's end, and doubt thou not
thou shalt have great need of mercy or thou depart from us. And therewith
one of them smote Sir Gawaine a great stroke that nigh he fell to the earth,
and Gaheris smote him again sore,
and so they were on the one side and on the other, that Sir Gawaine
and Gaheris were in jeopardy of their lives; and one with a bow, an archer,
smote Sir Gawaine through the arm that it
grieved him wonderly sore. And as they should have been slain, there
came four fair ladies, and besought the knights of grace for Sir Gawaine;
and goodly at request of the ladies they
gave Sir Gawaine and Gaheris their lives, and made them to yield them
as prisoners. Then Gawaine and Gaheris made great dole. Alas! said Sir
Gawaine, mine arm grieveth me sore, I
am like to be maimed; and so made his complaint piteously.
Early on the morrow there came to Sir Gawaine one of the
four ladies that had heard all his complaint, and said, Sir knight, what
cheer? Not good, said he. It is your own default, said
the lady, for ye have done a passing foul deed in the slaying of the
lady, the which will be great villainy unto you. But be ye not of King
Arthur's kin? said the lady. Yes truly, said Sir
Gawaine. What is your name? said the lady, ye must tell it me or ye
pass. My name is Gawaine, the King Lot of Orkney's son, and my mother is
King Arthur's sister. Ah! then are ye
nephew unto King Arthur, said the lady, and I shall so speak for you
that ye shall have conduct to go to King Arthur for his love. And so she
departed and told the four knights how their
prisoner was King Arthur's nephew, and his name is Sir Gawaine, King
Lot's son of Orkney. And they gave him the hart's head because it was in
his quest. Then anon they delivered Sir
Gawaine under this promise, that he should bear the dead lady with
him in
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this manner; the head of her was hanged about his neck, and the whole
body of her lay before him on his horse's mane. Right so rode he forth
unto Camelot. And anon as he was come,
Merlin desired of King Arthur that Sir Gawaine should be sworn to tell
of all his adventures, and how he slew the lady, and how he would give
no mercy unto the knight, wherethrough the
lady was slain. Then the king and the queen were greatly displeased
with Sir Gawaine for the slaying of the lady. And there by ordinance of
the queen there was set a quest of ladies on
Sir Gawaine, and they judged him for ever while he lived to be with
all ladies, and to fight for their quarrels; and that ever he should be
courteous, and never to refuse mercy to him that
asketh mercy. Thus was Gawaine sworn upon the Four Evangelists that
he should never be against lady nor gentlewoman, but if he fought for a
lady and his adversary fought for another.
And thus endeth the adventure of Sir Gawaine that he did at the marriage
of King Arthur. Amen.
CHAPTER IX
How Sir Tor rode after the knight with the brachet, and of his adventure
by the way.
WHEN Sir Tor was ready, he mounted upon his horseback,
and rode after the knight with the brachet. So as he rode he met with a
dwarf
suddenly that smote his horse on the head
with a staff, that he went backward his spear length. Why dost thou
so? said Sir Tor. For thou shalt not pass this way, but if thou joust with
yonder knights of the pavilions. Then was Tor
ware where two pavilions were, and great spears stood out, and two
shields hung on trees by the pavilions. I may not tarry, said Sir Tor,
for I am in a quest that I must needs follow.
Thou shalt not pass, said the dwarf, and therewithal he blew his horn.
Then there came one armed on horseback, and dressed his shield,
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and came fast toward Tor, and he dressed him against him, and so ran
together that Tor bare him from his horse. And anon the knight yielded
him to his mercy. But, sir, I have a fellow in
yonder pavilion that will have ado with you anon. He shall be welcome,
said Sir Tor. Then was he ware of another knight coming with great raundon,
and each of them dressed to other,
that marvel it was to see; but the knight smote Sir Tor a great stroke
in midst of the shield that his spear all to-shivered. And Sir Tor smote
him through the shield below of the shield that it
went through the cost of the knight, but the stroke slew him not. And
therewith Sir Tor alighted and smote him on the helm a great stroke, and
therewith the knight yielded him and
besought him of mercy. I will well, said Sir Tor, but thou and thy
fellow must go unto King Arthur, and yield you prisoners unto him. By whom
shall we say are we thither sent? Ye shall
say by the knight that went in the quest of the knight that went with
the brachet. Now, what be your two names? said Sir Tor. My name is, said
the one, Sir Felot of Langduk; and my
name is, said the other, Sir Petipase of Winchelsea. Now go ye forth,
said Sir Tor, and God speed you and me. Then came the dwarf and said unto
Sir Tor, I pray you give me a gift. I
will well, said Sir Tor, ask. I ask no more, said the dwarf, but that
ye will suffer me to do you service, for I will serve no more recreant
knights. Take an horse, said Sir Tor, and ride on
with me. I wot ye ride after the knight with the white brachet, and
I shall bring you where he is, said the dwarf. And so they rode throughout
a forest, and at the last they were ware of two
pavilions, even by a priory, with two shields, and the one shield was
enewed with white, and the other shield was red.
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CHAPTER X
How Sir Tor found the brachet with a lady, and how a knight assailed him
for the said brachet.
THEREWITH Sir Tor alighted and took the dwarf his glaive,
and so he came to the white pavilion, and saw three damosels lie in it,
on one pallet, sleeping, and so he went to the other
pavilion, and found a lady lying sleeping therein, but there was the
white brachet that bayed at her fast, and therewith the lady yede out of
the pavilion and all her damosels. But anon as
Sir Tor espied the white brachet, he took her by force and took her
to the dwarf. What, will ye so, said the lady, take my brachet from me?
Yea, said Sir Tor, this brachet have I sought
from King Arthur's court hither. Well, said the lady, knight, ye shall
not go far with her, but that ye shall be met and grieved. I shall abide
what adventure that cometh by the grace of God,
and so mounted upon his horse, and passed on his way toward Camelot;
but it was so near night he might not pass but little further. Know ye
any lodging? said Tor. I know none, said the
dwarf, but here beside is an hermitage, and there ye must take lodging
as ye find. And within a while they came to the hermitage and took lodging;
and was there grass, oats and bread for
their horses; soon it was sped, and full hard was their supper; but
there they rested them all night till on the morn, and heard a mass devoutly,
and took their leave of the hermit, and Sir
Tor prayed the hermit to pray for him. He said he would, and betook
him to God. And so mounted upon horseback and rode towards Camelot a long
while.
With that they heard a knight call loud that came after
them, and he said, Knight, abide and yield my brachet that thou took from
my lady. Sir Tor returned again, and beheld him how
he was a seemly knight and well horsed, and well armed at all points;
then Sir Tor dressed his shield, and took his spear in his hands, and the
other came fiercely upon him, and smote
both horse and man to the
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earth. Anon they arose lightly and drew their swords as eagerly as lions,
and put their shields afore them, and smote through the shields, that the
cantels fell off both parties. Also they
tamed their helms that the hot blood ran out, and the thick mails of
their hauberks they carved and rove in sunder that the hot blood ran to
the earth, and both they had many wounds and
were passing weary. But Sir Tor espied that the other knight fainted,
and then he sued fast upon him, and doubled his strokes, and gart him go
to the earth on the one side. Then Sir Tor
bade him yield him. That will I not, said Abelleus, while my life lasteth
and the soul is within my body, unless that thou wilt give me the brachet.
That will I not do, said Sir Tor, for it was
my quest to bring again thy brachet, thee, or both.
CHAPTER XI
How Sir Tor overcame the knight, and how he lost his head at the request
of a lady.
WITH that came a damosel riding on a palfrey as fast as
she might drive, and cried with a loud voice unto Sir Tor. What will ye
with me? said Sir Tor. I beseech thee, said the damosel,
for King Arthur's love, give me a gift; I require thee, gentle knight,
as thou art a gentleman. Now, said Tor, ask a gift and I will give it you.
Gramercy, said the damosel; now I ask the
head of the false knight Abelleus, for he is the most outrageous knight
that liveth, and the greatest murderer. I am loath, said Sir Tor, of that
gift I have given you; let him make amends in
that he hath trespassed unto you. Now, said the damosel, he may not,
for he slew mine own brother before mine own eyes, that was a better knight
than he, an he had had grace; and I
kneeled half an hour afore him in the mire for to save my brother's
life, that had done him no damage, but fought with him by adventure of
arms, and so for all that I could do he struck off
his head; wherefore I require thee,
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as thou art a true knight, to give me my gift, or else I shall shame
thee in all the court of King Arthur; for he is the falsest knight living,
and a great destroyer of good knights. Then when
Abelleus heard this, he was more afeard, and yielded him and asked
mercy. I may not now, said Sir Tor, but if I should be found false of my
promise; for while I would have taken you to
mercy ye would none ask, but if ye had the brachet again, that was
my quest. And therewith he took off his helm, and he arose and fled, and
Sir Tor after him, and smote off his head
quite.
Now sir, said the damosel, it is near night; I pray you
come and lodge with me here at my place, it is here fast by. I will well,
said Sir Tor, for his horse and he had fared evil since they
departed from Camelot, and so he rode with her, and had passing good
cheer with her; and she had a passing fair old knight to her husband that
made him passing good cheer, and well
eased both his horse and him. And on the morn he heard his mass, and
brake his fast, and took his leave of the knight and of the lady, that
besought him to tell them his name. Truly, he
said, my name is Sir Tor that was late made knight, and this was the
first quest of arms that ever I did, to bring again that this knight Abelleus
took away from King Arthur's court. O fair
knight, said the lady and her husband, an ye come here in our marches,
come and see our poor lodging, and it shall be always at your commandment.
So Sir Tor departed and came to
Camelot on the third day by noon, and the king and the queen and all
the court was passing fain of his coming, and made great joy that he was
come again; for he went from the court
with little succour, but as King Pellinore his father gave him an old
courser, and King Arthur gave him armour and a sword, and else had he none
other succour, but rode so forth himself
alone. And then the king and the queen by Merlin's advice made him
to swear to tell of his adventures, and so he told and made proofs of his
deeds as it is afore rehearsed, wherefore the
king and the queen made great joy. Nay, nay, said Merlin, these be
but japes to that he shall do; for he shall prove a noble knight of prowess,
as good as any is living,
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and gentle and courteous, and of good tatches, and passing true of his
promise, and never shall outrage. Wherethrough Merlin's words King Arthur
gave him an earldom of lands that fell
unto him. And here endeth the quest of Sir Tor, King Pellinore's son.
CHAPTER XII
How King Pellinore rode after the lady and the knight that led
her away, and how a lady desired help of him, and how he fought with two
knights
for that lady, of whom he slew the one at the first stroke.
THEN King Pellinore armed him and mounted upon his horse,
and rode more than a pace after the lady that the knight led away. And
as he rode in a forest, he saw in a valley a
damosel sit by a well, and a wounded knight in her arms, and Pellinore
saluted her. And when she was ware of him, she cried overloud, Help me,
knight; for Christ's sake, King Pellinore.
And he would not tarry, he was so eager in his quest, and ever she
cried an hundred times after help. When she saw he would not abide, she
prayed unto God to send him as much need
of help as she had, and that he might feel it or he died. So, as the
book telleth, the knight there died that there was wounded, wherefore the
lady for pure sorrow slew herself with his
sword. As King Pellinore rode in that valley he met with a poor man,
a labourer. Sawest thou not, said Pellinore, a knight riding and leading
away a lady? Yea, said the man, I saw that
knight, and the lady that made great dole; and yonder beneath in a
valley there shall ye see two pavilions, and one of the knights of the
pavilions challenged that lady of that knight, and
said she was his cousin near, wherefore he should lead her no farther.
And so they waged battle in that quarrel, the one said he would have her
by force, and the other said he would have
the rule of her, by cause he was her kinsman, and would lead her to
her kin. For this quarrel he left them fighting. And if
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ye will ride a pace ye shall find them fighting, and the lady was beleft with the two squires in the pavilions. God thank thee, said King Pellinore.
Then he rode a wallop till he had a sight of the two pavilions,
and the two knights fighting. Anon he rode unto the pavilions, and saw
the lady that was his quest, and said, Fair lady, ye
must go with me unto the court of King Arthur. Sir knight, said the
two squires that were with her, yonder are two knights that fight for this
lady, go thither and depart them, and be agreed
with them, and then may ye have her at your pleasure. Ye say well,
said King Pellinore. And anon he rode betwixt them, and departed them,
and asked them the causes why that they
fought? Sir knight, said the one, I shall tell you, this lady is my
kinswoman nigh, mine aunt's daughter, and when I heard her complain that
she was with him maugre her head, I waged
battle to fight with him. Sir knight, said the other, whose name was
Hontzlake of Wentland, and this lady I gat by my prowess of arms this day
at Arthur's court. That is untruly said, said
King Pellinore, for ye came in suddenly there as we were at the high
feast, and took away this lady or any man might make him ready; and therefore
it was my quest to bring her again and
you both, or else the one of us to abide in the field; therefore the
lady shall go with me, or I will die for it, for I have promised it King
Arthur. And therefore fight ye no more, for none of
you shall have no part of her at this time; and if ye list to fight
for her, fight with me, and I will defend her. Well, said the knights,
make you ready, and we shall assail you with all our
power. And as King Pellinore would have put his horse from them, Sir
Hontzlake rove his horse through with a sword, and said: Now art thou on
foot as well as we are. When King
Pellinore espied that his horse was slain, lightly he leapt from his
horse and pulled out his sword, and put his shield afore him, and said,
Knight, keep well thy head, for thou shalt have a
buffet for the slaying of my horse. So King Pellinore gave him such
a stroke upon the helm that he clave the head down to the chin, that he
fell to the earth dead.
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CHAPTER XIII
How King Pellinore gat the lady and brought her to Camelot to the court
of King Arthur.
AND then he turned him to the other knight, that was sore
wounded. But when he saw the other's buffet, he would not fight, but kneeled
down and said, Take my cousin the lady with
you at your request, and I require you, as ye be a true knight, put
her to no shame nor villainy. What, said King Pellinore, will ye not fight
for her? No, sir, said the knight, I will not fight
with such a knight of prowess as ye be. Well, said Pellinore, ye say
well; I promise you she shall have no villainy by me, as I am true knight;
but now me lacketh an horse, said Pellinore,
but I will have Hontzlake's horse. Ye shall not need, said the knight,
for I shall give you such an horse as shall please you, so that you will
lodge with me, for it is near night. I will well, said
King Pellinore, abide with you all night. And there he had with him
right good cheer, and fared of the best with passing good wine, and had
merry rest that night. And on the morn he
heard a mass and dined; and then was brought him a fair bay courser,
and King Pellinore's saddle set upon him. Now, what shall I call you? said
the knight, inasmuch as ye have my
cousin at your desire of your quest. Sir, I shall tell you, my name
is King Pellinore of the Isles and knight of the Table Round. Now I am
glad, said the knight, that such a noble man shall
have the rule of my cousin. Now, what is your name? said Pellinore,
I pray you tell me. Sir, my name is Sir Meliot of Logurs, and this lady
my cousin hight Nimue, and the knight that was
in the other pavilion is my sworn brother, a passing good knight, and
his name is Brian of the Isles, and he is full loath to do wrong, and full
loath to fight with any man, but if he be sore
sought on, so that for shame he may not leave it. It is marvel, said
Pellinore, that he will not
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have ado with me. Sir, he will not have ado with no man but if it be
at his request. Bring him to the court, said Pellinore, one of these days.
Sir, we will come together. And ye shall be
welcome, said Pellinore, to the court of King Arthur, and greatly allowed
for your coming. And so he departed with the lady, and brought her to Camelot.
So as they rode in a valley it was full of stones, and
there the lady's horse stumbled and threw her down, that her arm was sore
bruised and near she swooned for pain. Alas! sir, said
the lady, mine arm is out of lithe, wherethrough I must needs rest
me. Ye shall well, said King Pellinore. And so he alighted under a fair
tree where was fair grass, and he put his horse
thereto, and so laid him under the tree and slept till it was nigh
night. And when he awoke he would have ridden. Sir, said the lady, it is
so dark that ye may as well ride backward as
forward. So they abode still and made there their lodging. Then Sir
Pellinore put off his armour; then a little afore midnight they heard the
trotting of an horse. Be ye still, said King
Pellinore, for we shall hear of some adventure.
CHAPTER XIV
How on the way he heard two knights, as he lay by night in a valley, and
of their adventures.
AND therewith he armed him. So right even afore him there
met two knights, the one came froward Camelot, and the other from the north,
and either saluted other. What tidings at
Camelot? said the one. By my head, said the other, there have I been
and espied the court of King Arthur, and there is such a fellowship they
may never be broken, and well-nigh all the
world holdeth with Arthur, for there is the flower of chivalry. Now
for this cause I am riding into the north, to tell our chieftains of the
fellowship that is withholden with King Arthur.
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As for that, said the other knight, I have brought a remedy with me,
that is the greatest poison that ever ye heard speak of, and to Camelot
will I with it, for we have a friend right nigh
King Arthur, and well cherished, that shall poison King Arthur; for
so he hath promised our chieftains, and received great gifts for to do
it. Beware, said the other knight, of Merlin, for he
knoweth all things by the devil's craft. Therefore will I not let it,
said the knight. And so they departed asunder. Anon after Pellinore made
him ready, and his lady, [and] rode toward
Camelot; and as they came by the well there as the wounded knight was
and the lady, there he found the knight, and the lady eaten with lions
or wild beasts, all save the head, wherefore
he made great sorrow, and wept passing sore, and said, Alas! her life
might I have saved; but I was so fierce in my quest, therefore I would
not abide. Wherefore make ye such dole?
said the lady. I wot not, said Pellinore, but my heart mourneth sore
of the death of her, for she was a passing fair lady and a young. Now,
will ye do by mine advice? said the lady, take
this knight and let him be buried in an hermitage, and then take the
lady's head and bear it with you unto Arthur. So King Pellinore took this
dead knight on his shoulders, and brought him
to the hermitage, and charged the hermit with the corpse, that service
should be done for the soul; and take his harness for your pain. It shall
be done, said the hermit, as I will answer unto
God.
CHAPTER XV
How when he was come to Camelot he was sworn upon a book to tell the truth
of his quest.
AND therewith they departed, and came there as the head of the lady lay with a fair yellow hair that grieved King Pellinore passingly sore when he looked on it, for
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much he cast his heart on the visage. And so by noon they came to Camelot;
and the king and the queen were passing fain of his coming to the court.
And there he was made to swear
upon the Four Evangelists, to tell the truth of his quest from the
one to the other. Ah! Sir Pellinore, said Queen Guenever, ye were greatly
to blame that ye saved not this lady's life.
Madam, said Pellinore, ye were greatly to blame an ye would not save
your own life an ye might, but, save your pleasure, I was so furious in
my quest that I would not abide, and that
repenteth me, and shall the days of my life. Truly, said Merlin, ye
ought sore to repent it, for that lady was your own daughter begotten on
the lady of the Rule, and that knight that was
dead was her love, and should have wedded her, and he was a right good
knight of a young man, and would have proved a good man, and to this court
was he coming, and his name was
Sir Miles of the Launds, and a knight came behind him and slew him
with a spear, and his name is Loraine le Savage, a false knight and a coward;
and she for great sorrow and dole slew
herself with his sword, and her name was Eleine. And because ye would
not abide and help her, ye shall see your best friend fail you when ye
be in the greatest distress that ever ye were
or shall be. And that penance God hath ordained you for that deed,
that he that ye shall most trust to of any man alive, he shall leave you
there ye shall be slain. Me forthinketh, said King
Pellinore, that this shall me betide, but God may fordo well destiny.
Thus, when the quest was done of the white hart, the which
followed Sir Gawaine; and the quest of the brachet, followed of Sir Tor,
Pellinore's son; and the quest of the lady that the
knight took away, the which King Pellinore at that time followed; then
the king stablished all his knights, and them that were of lands not rich
he gave them lands, and charged them never
to do outrageousity nor murder, and always to flee treason; also, by
no means to be cruel, but to give mercy unto him that asketh mercy, upon
pain of forfeiture of their worship and
lordship of King Arthur for evermore; and always to do
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ladies, damosels, and gentlewomen succour, upon pain of death. Also,
that no man take no battles in a wrongful quarrel for no law, nor for no
world's goods. Unto this were all the
knights sworn of the Table Round, both old and young. And every year
were they sworn at the high feast of Pentecost.
Explicit the Wedding of King Arthur. Sequitur quartus liber.
Book 4
Page 102
BOOK IV
CHAPTER I
How Merlin was assotted and doted on one of the ladies of the lake, and how he was shut in a rock under a stone and there died.
SO after these quests of Sir Gawaine, Sir Tor, and
King Pellinore, it fell so that Merlin fell in a dotage on the damosel
that King Pellinore brought to court, and she was one of the
damosels of the lake, that hight Nimue. But Merlin would let her have
no rest, but always he would be with her. And ever she made Merlin good
cheer till she had learned of him all
manner thing that she desired; and he was assotted upon her, that he
might not be from her. So on a time he told King Arthur that he should
not dure long, but for all his crafts he should
be put in the earth quick. And so he told the king many things that
should befall, but always he warned the king to keep well his sword and
the scabbard, for he told him how the sword
and the scabbard should be stolen by a woman from him that he most
trusted. Also he told King Arthur that he should miss him, -- Yet had ye
liefer than all your lands to have me again.
Ah, said the king, since ye know of your adventure, purvey for it,
and put away by your crafts that misadventure. Nay, said Merlin, it will
not be; so he departed from the king. And within
a while the Damosel of the Lake departed, and Merlin went with her
evermore wheresomever she went. And ofttimes Merlin would have had her
privily away by his subtle crafts; then
she made him to swear that he
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should never do none enchantment upon her if he would have his will.
And so he sware; so she and Merlin went over the sea unto the land of Benwick,
whereas King Ban was king that
had great war against King Claudas, and there Merlin spake with King
Ban's wife, a fair lady and a good, and her name was Elaine, and there
he saw young Launcelot. There the queen
made great sorrow for the mortal war that King Claudas made on her
lord and on her lands. Take none heaviness, said Merlin, for this same
child within this twenty year shall revenge you
on King Claudas, that all Christendom shall speak of it; and this same
child shall be the most man of worship of the world, and his first name
is Galahad, that know I well, said Merlin, and
since ye have confirmed him Launcelot. That is truth, said the queen,
his first name was Galahad. O Merlin, said the queen, shall I live to see
my son such a man of prowess? Yea, lady,
on my peril ye shall see it, and live many winters after.
And so, soon after, the lady and Merlin departed, and by
the way Merlin showed her many wonders, and came into Cornwall. And always
Merlin lay about the lady to have her
maidenhood, and she was ever passing weary of him, and fain would have
been delivered of him, for she was afeard of him because he was a devil's
son, and she could not beskift him by
no mean. And so on a time it happed that Merlin showed to her in a
rock whereas was a great wonder, and wrought by enchantment, that went
under a great stone. So by her subtle
working she made Merlin to go under that stone to let her wit of the
marvels there; but she wrought so there for him that he came never out
for all the craft he could do. And so she
departed and left Merlin.
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CHAPTER II
How five kings came into this land to war against King Arthur, and what
counsel Arthur had against them.
AND as King Arthur rode to Camelot, and held there a great
feast with mirth and joy, so soon after he returned unto Cardoile, and
there came unto Arthur new tidings that the king of
Denmark, and the king of Ireland that was his brother, and the king
of the Vale, and the king of Soleise, and the king of the Isle of Longtains,
all these five kings with a great host were
entered into the land of King Arthur, and burnt and slew clean afore
them, both cities and castles, that it was pity to hear. Alas, said Arthur,
yet had I never rest one month since I was
crowned king of this land. Now shall I never rest till I meet with
those kings in a fair field, that I make mine avow; for my true liege people
shall not be destroyed in my default, go with me
who will, and abide who that will. Then the king let write unto King
Pellinore, and prayed him in all haste to make him ready with such people
as he might lightliest rear and hie him after in
all haste. All the barons were privily wroth that the king would depart
so suddenly; but the king by no mean would abide, but made writing unto
them that were not there, and bade them
hie after him, such as were not at that time in the court. Then the
king came to Queen Guenever, and said, Lady, make you ready, for ye shall
go with me, for I may not long miss you; ye
shall cause me to be the more hardy, what adventure so befall me; I
will not wit my lady to be in no jeopardy. Sir, said she, I am at your
commandment, and shall be ready what time so
ye be ready. So on the morn the king and the queen departed with such
fellowship as they had, and came into the north, into a forest beside Humber,
and there lodged them. When the
word and tiding came unto the five kings above said, that Arthur was
beside Humber in a forest, there was a knight, brother unto one of the
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five kings, that gave them this counsel: Ye know well that Sir Arthur
hath the flower of chivalry of the world with him, as it is proved by the
great battle he did with the eleven kings; and
therefore hie unto him night and day till that we be nigh him, for
the longer he tarrieth the bigger he is, and we ever the weaker; and he
is so courageous of himself that he is come to the
field with little people, and therefore let us set upon him or day
and we shall slay down; of his knights there shall none escape.
CHAPTER III
How King Arthur had ado with them and overthrew them, and slew the five
kings and made the remnant to flee.
UNTO this counsel these five kings assented, and so they
passed forth with their host through North Wales, and came upon Arthur
by night, and set upon his host as the king and his
knights were in their pavilions. King Arthur was unarmed, and had laid
him to rest with his Queen Guenever. Sir, said Sir Kay, it is not good
we be unarmed. We shall have no need, said
Sir Gawaine and Sir Griflet, that lay in a little pavilion by the king.
With that they heard a great noise, and many cried, Treason, treason! Alas,
said King Arthur, we be betrayed! Unto
arms, fellows, then he cried. So they were armed anon at all points.
Then came there a wounded knight unto the king, and said, Sir, save yourself
and my lady the queen, for our host is
destroyed, and much people of ours slain. So anon the king and the
queen and the three knights took their horses, and rode toward Humber to
pass over it, and the water was so rough
that they were afraid to pass over. Now may ye choose, said King Arthur,
whether ye will abide and take the adventure on this side, for an ye be
taken they will slay you. It were me
liefer, said the queen, to die in the water than to fall in your enemies'
hands and there be slain.
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And as they stood so talking, Sir Kay saw the five kings
coming on horseback by themselves alone, with their spears in their hands
even toward them. Lo, said Sir Kay, yonder be the
five kings; let us go to them and match them. That were folly, said
Sir Gawaine, for we are but three and they be five. That is truth, said
Sir Griflet. No force, said Sir Kay, I will undertake
for two of them, and then may ye three undertake for the other three.
And therewithal, Sir Kay let his horse run as fast as he might, and struck
one of them through the shield and the body
a fathom, that the king fell to the earth stark dead. That saw Sir
Gawaine, and ran unto another king so hard that he smote him through the
body. And therewithal King Arthur ran to
another, and smote him through the body with a spear, that he fell
to the earth dead Then Sir Griflet ran unto the fourth king, and gave him
such a fall that his neck brake. Anon Sir Kay
ran unto the fifth king, and smote him so hard on the helm that the
stroke clave the helm and the head to the earth. That was well stricken,
said King Arthur, and worshipfully hast thou
holden thy promise, therefore I shall honour thee while that I live.
And therewithal they set the queen in a barge into Humber; but always Queen
Guenever praised Sir Kay for his deeds,
and said, What lady that ye love, and she love you not again she were
greatly to blame; and among ladies, said the queen, I shall bear your noble
fame, for ye spake a great word, and
fulfilled it worshipfully. And therewith the queen departed.
Then the king and the three knights rode into the forest,
for there they supposed to hear of them that were escaped; and there he
found the most part of his people, and told them all
how the five kings were dead. And therefore let us hold us together
till it be day, and when their host have espied that their chieftains be
slain, they will make such dole that they shall no
more help themselves. And right so as the king said, so it was; for
when they found the five kings dead, they made such dole that they fell
from their horses. Therewithal came King Arthur
but with a few people, and slew on the left hand and on the
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right hand, that well-nigh there escaped no man, but all were slain
to the number thirty thousand. And when the battle was all ended, the king
kneeled down and thanked God meekly.
And then he sent for the queen, and soon she was come, and she made
great joy of the overcoming of that battle.
CHAPTER IV
How the battle was finished or he came, and how King Arthur founded an
abbey where the battle was.
THEREWITHAL came one to King Arthur, and told him that
King Pellinore was within three mile with a great host; and he said, Go
unto him, and let him understand how we have
sped. So within a while King Pellinore came with a great host, and
saluted the people and the king, and there was great joy made on every
side. Then the king let search how much
people of his party there was slain; and there were found but little
past two hundred men slain and eight knights of the Table Round in their
pavilions. Then the king let rear and devise in
the same place whereat the battle was done a fair abbey, and endowed
it with great livelihood, and let it call the Abbey of La Beale Adventure.
But when some of them came into their
countries, whereof the five kings were kings, and told them how they
were slain, there was made great dole. And all King Arthur's enemies, as
the King of North Wales, and the kings of
the North, [when they] wist of the battle, they were passing heavy.
And so the king returned unto Camelot in haste.
And when he was come to Camelot he called King Pellinore
unto him, and said, Ye understand well that we have lost eight knights
of the best of the Table Round, and by your advice
we will choose eight again of the best we may find in this court. Sir,
said Pellinore, I shall counsel you after my conceit the best: there are
in your court full noble knights both of old and
young; and
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therefore by mine advice ye shall choose half of the old and half of
the young. Which be the old? said King Arthur. Sir, said King Pellinore,
meseemeth that King Uriens that hath wedded
your sister Morgan le Fay, and the King of the Lake, and Sir Hervise
de Revel, a noble knight, and Sir Galagars, the fourth. This is well devised,
said King Arthur, and right so shall it be.
Now, which are the four young knights? said Arthur. Sir, said Pellinore,
the first is Sir Gawaine, your nephew, that is as good a knight of his
time as any is in this land; and the second as
meseemeth best is Sir Griflet le Fise de Dieu, that is a good knight
and full desirous in arms, and who may see him live he shall prove a good
knight; and the third as meseemeth is well to
be one of the knights of the Round Table, Sir Kay the Seneschal, for
many times he hath done full worshipfully, and now at your last battle
he did full honourably for to undertake to slay
two kings. By my head, said Arthur, he is best worth to be a knight
of the Round Table of any that ye have rehearsed, an he had done no more
prowess in his life days.
CHAPTER V
How Sir Tor was made knight of the Round Table, and how Bagdemagus was
displeased.
NOW, said King Pellinore, I shall put to you two knights,
and ye shall choose which is most worthy, that is Sir Bagdemagus, and Sir
Tor, my son. But because Sir Tor is my son I may
not praise him, but else, an he were not my son, I durst say that of
his age there is not in this land a better knight than he is, nor of better
conditions and loath to do any wrong, and loath to
take any wrong. By my head, said Arthur, he is a passing good knight
as any ye spake of this day, that wot I well, said the king; for I have
seen him proved, but he saith little and he doth
much more, for I know none in all this court an he were
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as well born on his mother's side as he is on your side, that is like
him of prowess and of might: and therefore I will have him at this time,
and leave Sir Bagdemagus till another time. So
when they were so chosen by the assent of all the barons, so were there
found in their sieges every knights' names that here are rehearsed, and
so were they set in their sieges; whereof
Sir Bagdemagus was wonderly wroth, that Sir Tor was advanced afore
him, and therefore suddenly he departed from the court, and took his squire
with him, and rode long in a forest till
they came to a cross, and there alighted and said his prayers devoutly.
The meanwhile his squire found written upon the cross, that Bagdemagus
should never return unto the court again,
till he had won a knight's body of the Round Table, body for body.
So, sir, said the squire, here I find writing of you, therefore I rede
you return again to the court. That shall I never, said
Bagdemagus, till men speak of me great worship, and that I be worthy
to be a knight of the Round Table. And so he rode forth, and there by the
way he found a branch of an holy herb
that was the sign of the Sangreal, and no knight found such tokens
but he were a good liver.
So, as Sir Bagdemagus rode to see many adventures, it happed
him to come to the rock whereas the Lady of the Lake had put Merlin under
the stone, and there he heard him make
great dole; whereof Sir Bagdemagus would have holpen him, and went
unto the great stone, and it was so heavy that an hundred men might not
lift it up. When Merlin wist he was there,
he bade leave his labour, for all was in vain, for he might never be
holpen but by her that put him there. And so Bagdemagus departed and did
many adventures, and proved after a full
good knight, and came again to the court and was made knight of the
Round Table. So on the morn there fell new tidings and other adventures.
Page 110
CHAPTER VI
How King Arthur, King Uriens, and Sir Accolon of Gaul, chased an hart,
and of their marvellous adventures.
THEN it befell that Arthur and many of his knights rode
a-hunting into a great forest, and it happed King Arthur, King Uriens,
and Sir Accolon of Gaul, followed a great hart, for they
three were well horsed, and so they chased so fast that within a while
they three were then ten mile from their fellowship. And at the last they
chased so sore that they slew their horses
underneath them. Then were they all three on foot, and ever they saw
the hart afore them passing weary and enbushed. What will we do? said King
Arthur, we are hard bestead. Let us
go on foot, said King Uriens, till we may meet with some lodging. Then
were they ware of the hart that lay on a great water bank, and a brachet
biting on his throat, and more other
hounds came after. Then King Arthur blew the prise and dight the hart.
Then the king looked about the world, and saw afore him
in a great water a little ship, all apparelled with silk down to the water,
and the ship came right unto them and landed on the
sands. Then Arthur went to the bank and looked in, and saw none earthly
creature therein. Sirs, said the king, come thence, and let us see what
is in this ship. So they went in all three,
and found it richly behanged with cloth of silk. By then it was dark
night, and there suddenly were about them an hundred torches set upon all
the sides of the ship boards, and it gave
great light; and therewithal there came out twelve fair damosels and
saluted King Arthur on their knees, and called him by his name, and said
he was right welcome, and such cheer as
they had he should have of the best. The king thanked them fair. Therewithal
they led the king and his two fellows into a fair chamber, and there was
a cloth laid, richly beseen of all that
longed unto a table, and there
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were they served of all wines and meats that they could think; of that
the king had great marvel, for he fared never better in his life as for
one supper. And so when they had supped at
their leisure, King Arthur was led into a chamber, a richer beseen
chamber saw he never none, and so was King Uriens served, and led into
such another chamber, and Sir Accolon was
led into the third chamber passing richly and well beseen; and so they
were laid in their beds easily. And anon they fell asleep, and slept marvellously
sore all the night. And on the morrow
King Uriens was in Camelot abed in his wife's arms, Morgan le Fay.
And when he awoke he had great marvel, how he came there, for on the even
afore he was two days' journey from
Camelot. And when King Arthur awoke he found himself in a dark prison,
hearing about him many complaints of woful knights.
CHAPTER VII
How Arthur took upon him to fight to be delivered out of prison, and also
for to deliver twenty knights that were in prison.
WHAT are ye that so complain? said King Arthur. We be here
twenty knights, prisoners, said they, and some of us have lain here seven
year, and some more and some less. For what
cause? said Arthur. We shall tell you, said the knights; this lord
of this castle, his name is Sir Damas, and he is the falsest knight that
liveth, and full of treason, and a very coward as any
liveth, and he hath a younger brother, a good knight of prowess, his
name is Sir Ontzlake; and this traitor Damas, the elder brother will give
him no part of his livelihood, but as Sir
Ontzlake keepeth thorough prowess of his hands, and so he keepeth from
him a full fair manor and a rich, and therein Sir Ontzlake dwelleth worshipfully,
and is well beloved of all people.
And this Sir Damas, our master is as evil beloved,
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for he is without mercy, and he is a coward, and great war hath been
betwixt them both, but Ontzlake hath ever the better, and ever he proffereth
Sir Damas to fight for the livelihood,
body for body, but he will not do; other-else to find a knight to fight
for him. Unto that Sir Damas had granted to find a knight, but he is so
evil beloved and hated, that there is never a
knight will fight for him. And when Damas saw this, that there was
never a knight would fight for him, he hath daily lain await with many
knights with him, and taken all the knights in this
country to see and espy their adventures, he hath taken them by force
and brought them to his prison. And so he took us separately as we rode
on our adventures, and many good
knights have died in this prison for hunger, to the number of eighteen
knights; and if any of us all that here is, or hath been, would have foughten
with his brother Ontzlake, he would have
delivered us, but for because this Damas is so false and so full of
treason we would never fight for him to die for it. And we be so lean for
hunger that unnethe we may stand on our feet.
God deliver you, for his mercy, said Arthur.
Anon, therewithal there came a damosel unto Arthur, and
asked him, What cheer? I cannot say, said he. Sir, said she, an ye will
fight for my lord, ye shall be delivered out of prison,
and else ye escape never the life. Now, said Arthur, that is hard,
yet had I liefer to fight with a knight than to die in prison; with this,
said Arthur, I may be delivered and all these prisoners,
I will do the battle. Yes, said the damosel. I am ready, said Arthur,
an I had horse and armour. Ye shall lack none, said the damosel. Meseemeth,
damosel, I should have seen you in the
court of Arthur. Nay said the damosel, I came never there, I am the
lord's daughter of this castle. Yet was she false, for she was one of the
damosels of Morgan le Fay.
Anon she went unto Sir Damas, and told him how he would
do battle for him, and so he sent for Arthur. And when he came he was well
coloured, and well made of his limbs, that all
knights that saw him said it were pity that such a knight should die
in prison. So Sir Damas and he
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were agreed that he should fight for him upon this covenant, that all
other knights should be delivered; and unto that was Sir Damas sworn unto
Arthur, and also to do the battle to the
uttermost. And with that all the twenty knights were brought out of
the dark prison into the hall, and delivered, and so they all abode to
see the battle.
CHAPTER VIII
How Accolon found himself by a well, and he took upon him to do battle
against Arthur.
NOW turn we unto Accolon of Gaul, that when he awoke he
found himself by a deep well-side, within half a foot, in great peril of
death. And there came out of that fountain a pipe of
silver, and out of that pipe ran water all on high in a stone of marble.
When Sir Accolon saw this, he blessed him and said, Jesus save my lord
King Arthur, and King Uriens, for these
damosels in this ship have betrayed us, they were devils and no women;
and if I may escape this misadventure, I shall destroy all where I may
find these false damosels that use
enchantments. Right with that there came a dwarf with a great mouth
and a flat nose, and saluted Sir Accolon, and said how he came from Queen
Morgan le Fay, and she greeteth you
well, and biddeth you be of strong heart, for ye shall fight to morrow
with a knight at the hour of prime, and therefore she hath sent you here
Excalibur, Arthur's sword, and the scabbard,
and she biddeth you as ye love her, that ye do the battle to the uttermost,
without any mercy, like as ye had promised her when ye spake together in
privity; and what damosel that
bringeth her the knight's head, which ye shall fight withal, she will
make her a queen. Now I understand you well, said Accolon, I shall hold
that I have promised her now I have the
sword: when saw ye my lady Queen Morgan le Fay? Right late, said the
dwarf. Then Accolon took him in his arms and said, Recommend
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me unto my lady queen, and tell her all shall be done that I have promised
her, and else I will die for it. Now I suppose, said Accolon, she hath
made all these crafts and enchantments for
this battle. Ye may well believe it, said the dwarf. Right so there
came a knight and a lady with six squires, and saluted Accolon, and prayed
him for to arise, and come and rest him at his
manor. And so Accolon mounted upon a void horse, and went with the
knight unto a fair manor by a priory, and there he had passing good cheer.
Then Sir Damas sent unto his brother Sir Ontzlake, and
bade make him ready by to-morn at the hour of prime, and to be in the field
to fight with a good knight, for he had found a good
knight that was ready to do battle at all points. When this word came
unto Sir Ontzlake he was passing heavy, for he was wounded a little to-fore
through both his thighs with a spear, and
made great dole; but as he was wounded, he would have taken the battle
on hand. So it happed at that time, by the means of Morgan le Fay, Accolon
was with Sir Ontzlake lodged; and
when he heard of that battle, and how Ontzlake was wounded, he said
that he would fight for him. Because Morgan le Fay had sent him Excalibur
and the sheath for to fight with the
knight on the morn: this was the cause Sir Accolon took the battle
on hand. Then Sir Ontzlake was passing glad, and thanked Sir Accolon with
all his heart that he would do so much for
him. And therewithal Sir Ontzlake sent word unto his brother Sir Damas,
that he had a knight that for him should be ready in the field by the hour
of prime.
So on the morn Sir Arthur was armed and well horsed, and
asked Sir Damas, When shall we to the field? Sir, said Sir Damas, ye shall
hear mass. And so Arthur heard a mass, and
when mass was done there came a squire on a great horse, and asked
Sir Damas if his knight were ready, for our knight is ready in the field.
Then Sir Arthur mounted upon horseback,
and there were all the knights and commons of that country; and so
by all advices there were chosen twelve good men of the country for to
wait upon the two knights. And right as Arthur
was on horse
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back there came a damosel from Morgan le Fay, and brought unto Sir Arthur
a sword like unto Excalibur, and the scabbard, and said unto Arthur, Morgan
le Fay sendeth here your
sword for great love. And he thanked her, and weened it had been so,
but she was false, for the sword and the scabbard was counterfeit, and
brittle, and false.
CHAPTER IX
Of the battle between King Arthur and Accolon.
AND then they dressed them on both parties of the field,
and let their horses run so fast that either smote other in the midst of
the shield with their spear-heads, that both horse and man
went to the earth; and then they started up both, and pulled out their
swords. The meanwhile that they were thus at the battle, came the Damosel
of the Lake into the field, that put Merlin
under the stone; and she came thither for love of King Arthur, for
she knew how Morgan le Fay had so ordained that King Arthur should have
been slain that day, and therefore she came
to save his life. And so they went eagerly to the battle, and gave
many great strokes, but always Arthur's sword bit not like Accolon's sword;
but for the most part, every stroke that
Accolon gave he wounded sore Arthur, that it was marvel he stood, and
always his blood fell from him fast.
When Arthur beheld the ground so sore be-bled he was dismayed,
and then he deemed treason that his sword was changed; for his sword bit
not steel as it was wont to do, therefore
he dreaded him sore to be dead, for ever him seemed that the sword
in Accolon's hand was Excalibur, for at every stroke that Accolon struck
he drew blood on Arthur. Now, knight,
said Accolon unto Arthur, keep thee well from me; but Arthur answered
not again, and gave him such a buffet on the helm that it made him to stoop,
nigh falling down to the earth. Then
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Sir Accolon withdrew him a little, and came on with Excalibur on high,
and smote Sir Arthur such a buffet that he fell nigh to the earth. Then
were they wroth both, and gave each other
many sore strokes, but always Sir Arthur lost so much blood that it
was marvel he stood on his feet, but he was so full of knighthood that
knightly he endured the pain. And Sir Accolon
lost not a deal of blood, therefore he waxed passing light, and Sir
Arthur was passing feeble, and weened verily to have died; but for all
that he made countenance as though he might
endure, and held Accolon as short as he might. But Accolon was so bold
because of Excalibur that he waxed passing hardy. But all men that beheld
him said they saw never knight fight
so well as Arthur did considering the blood that he bled. So was all
the people sorry for him, but the two brethren would not accord. Then always
they fought together as fierce knights,
and Sir Arthur withdrew him a little for to rest him, and Sir Accolon
called him to battle and said, It is no time for me to suffer thee to rest.
And therewith he came fiercely upon Arthur,
and Sir Arthur was wroth for the blood that he had lost, and smote
Accolon on high upon the helm, so mightily, that he made him nigh to fall
to the earth; and therewith Arthur's sword
brast at the cross, and fell in the grass among the blood, and the
pommel and the sure handles he held in his hands. When Sir Arthur saw that,
he was in great fear to die, but always he
held up his shield and lost no ground, nor bated no cheer.
CHAPTER X
How King Arthur's sword that he fought with brake,
and how he recovered of Accolon his own sword Excalibur, and overcame his
enemy.
THEN Sir Accolon began with words of treason, and said, Knight, thou art overcome, and mayst not endure, and
Page 117
also thou art weaponless, and thou hast lost much of thy blood, and
I am full loath to slay thee, therefore yield thee to me as recreant. Nay,
said Sir Arthur, I may not so, for I have
promised to do the battle to the uttermost by the faith of my body,
while me lasteth the life, and therefore I had liefer to die with honour
than to live with shame; and if it were possible for
me to die an hundred times, I had liefer to die so oft than yield me
to thee; for though I lack weapon, I shall lack no worship, and if thou
slay me weaponless that shall be thy shame. Well,
said Accolon, as for the shame I will not spare, now keep thee from
me, for thou art but a dead man. And therewith Accolon gave him such a
stroke that he fell nigh to the earth, and
would have had Arthur to have cried him mercy. But Sir Arthur pressed
unto Accolon with his shield, and gave him with the pommel in his hand
such a buffet that he went three strides
aback.
When the Damosel of the Lake beheld Arthur, how full of
prowess his body was, and the false treason that was wrought for him to
have had him slain, she had great pity that so good a
knight and such a man of worship should so be destroyed. And at the
next stroke Sir Accolon struck him such a stroke that by the damosel's
enchantment the sword Excalibur fell out of
Accolon's hand to the earth. And therewithal Sir Arthur lightly leapt
to it, and gat it in his hand, and forthwithal he knew that it was his
sword Excalibur, and said, Thou hast been from me
all too long, and much damage hast thou done me; and therewith he espied
the scabbard hanging by his side, and suddenly he sterte to him and pulled
the scabbard from him, and threw it
from him as far as he might throw it. O knight, said Arthur, this day
hast thou done me great damage with this sword; now are ye come unto your
death, for I shall not warrant you but ye
shall as well be rewarded with this sword, or ever we depart, as thou
hast rewarded me; for much pain have ye made me to endure, and much blood
have I lost. And therewith Sir Arthur
rushed on him with all his might and pulled him to the earth, and then
rushed off
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his helm, and gave him such a buffet on the head that the blood came
out at his ears, his nose, and his mouth. Now will I slay thee, said Arthur.
Slay me ye may well, said Accolon, an it
please you, for ye are the best knight that ever I found, and I see
well that God is with you. But for I promised to do this battle, said Accolon,
to the uttermost, and never to be recreant
while I lived, therefore shall I never yield me with my mouth, but
God do with my body what he will. Then Sir Arthur remembered him, and thought
he should have seen this knight. Now
tell me, said Arthur, or I will slay thee, of what country art thou,
and of what court? Sir Knight, said Sir Accolon, I am of the court of King
Arthur, and my name is Accolon of Gaul. Then
was Arthur more dismayed than he was beforehand; for then he remembered
him of his sister Morgan le Fay, and of the enchantment of the ship. O
sir knight, said he, I pray you tell me
who gave you this sword, and by whom ye had it.
CHAPTER XI
How Accolon confessed the treason of Morgan le Fay, King Arthur's sister,
and how she would have done slay him.
THEN Sir Accolon bethought him, and said, Woe worth this
sword, for by it have I got my death. It may well be, said the king. Now,
sir, said Accolon, I will tell you; this sword hath
been in my keeping the most part of this twelvemonth; and Morgan le
Fay, King Uriens' wife, sent it me yesterday by a dwarf, to this intent,
that I should slay King Arthur, her brother.
For ye shall understand King Arthur is the man in the world that she
most hateth, because he is most of worship and of prowess of any of her
blood; also she loveth me out of measure as
paramour, and I her again; and if she might bring about to slay Arthur
by her crafts, she would slay her husband King Uriens lightly, and then
had she me devised
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to be king in this land, and so to reign, and she to be my queen; but
that is now done, said Accolon, for I am sure of my death. Well, said Sir
Arthur, I feel by you ye would have been
king in this land. It had been great damage to have destroyed your
lord, said Arthur. It is truth, said Accolon, but now I have told you truth,
wherefore I pray you tell me of whence ye
are, and of what court? O Accolon, said King Arthur, now I let thee
wit that I am King Arthur, to whom thou hast done great damage. When Accolon
heard that he cried aloud, Fair,
sweet lord, have mercy on me, for I knew not you. O Sir Accolon, said
King Arthur, mercy shalt thou have, because I feel by thy words at this
time thou knewest not my person; but I
understand well by thy words that thou hast agreed to the death of
my person, and therefore thou art a traitor; but I wite thee the less,
for my sister Morgan le Fay by her false crafts
made thee to agree and consent to her false lusts, but I shall be sore
avenged upon her an I live, that all Christendom shall speak of it; God
knoweth I have honoured her and worshipped
her more than all my kin, and more have I trusted her than mine own
wife and all my kin after.
Then Sir Arthur called the keepers of the field, and said,
Sirs, come hither, for here are we two knights that have fought unto a
great damage unto us both, and like each one of us to
have slain other, if it had happed so; and had any of us known other,
here had been no battle, nor stroke stricken. Then all aloud cried Accolon
unto all the knights and men that were then
there gathered together, and said to them in this manner, O lords,
this noble knight that I have fought withal, the which me sore repenteth,
is the most man of prowess, of manhood, and of
worship in the world, for it is himself King Arthur, our alther liege
lord, and with mishap and with misadventure have I done this battle with
the king and lord that I am holden withal.
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CHAPTER XII
How Arthur accorded the two brethren, and delivered the twenty knights,
and how Sir Accolon died.
THEN all the people fell down on their knees and cried
King Arthur mercy. Mercy shall ye have, said Arthur: here may ye see what
adventures befall ofttime of errant knights, how that
I have fought with a knight of mine own unto my great damage and his
both. But, sirs, because I am sore hurt, and he both, and I had great need
of a little rest, ye shall understand the
opinion betwixt you two brethren: As to thee, Sir Damas, for whom I
have been champion and won the field of this knight, yet will I judge because
ye, Sir Damas, are called an orgulous
knight, and full of villainy, and not worth of prowess your deeds,
therefore I will that ye give unto your brother all the whole manor with
the appurtenance, under this form, that Sir
Ontzlake hold the manor of you, and yearly to give you a palfrey to
ride upon, for that will become you better to ride on than upon a courser.
Also I charge thee, Sir Damas, upon pain of
death, that thou never distress no knights errant that ride on their
adventure. And also that thou restore these twenty knights that thou hast
long kept prisoners, of all their harness, that they
be content for; and if any of them come to my court and complain of
thee, by my head thou shalt die therefore. Also, Sir Ontzlake, as to you,
because ye are named a good knight, and
full of prowess, and true and gentle in all your deeds, this shall
be your charge I will give you, that in all goodly haste ye come unto me
and my court, and ye shall be a knight of mine, and
if your deeds be thereafter I shall so prefer you, by the grace of
God, that ye shall in short time be in ease for to live as worshipfully
as your brother Sir Damas. God thank your largeness
of your goodness and of your bounty, I shall be from henceforward at
all times at your commandment; for, sir, said Sir Ontzlake,
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as God would, as I was hurt but late with an adventurous knight through
both my thighs, that grieved me sore, and else had I done this battle with
you. God would, said Arthur, it had
been so, for then had not I been hurt as I am. I shall tell you the
cause why: for I had not been hurt as I am, had it not been mine own sword,
that was stolen from me by treason; and this
battle was ordained aforehand to have slain me, and so it was brought
to the purpose by false treason, and by false enchantment. Alas, said Sir
Ontzlake, that is great pity that ever so
noble a man as ye are of your deeds and prowess, that any man or woman
might find in their hearts to work any treason against you. I shall reward
them, said Arthur, in short time, by the
grace of God. Now, tell me, said Arthur, how far am I from Camelot?
Sir, ye are two days' journey therefrom. I would fain be at some place
of worship, said Sir Arthur, that I might rest
me. Sir, said Sir Ontzlake, hereby is a rich abbey of your elders'
foundation, of nuns, but three miles hence. So the king took his leave
of all the people, and mounted upon horseback, and
Sir Accolon with him. And when they were come to the abbey, he let
fetch leeches and search his wounds and Accolon's both; but Sir Accolon
died within four days, for he had bled so
much blood that he might not live, but King Arthur was well recovered.
So when Accolon was dead he let send him on an horse-bier with six knights
unto Camelot, and said: Bear him to
my sister Morgan le Fay, and say that I send her him to a present,
and tell her I have my sword Excalibur and the scabbard; so they departed
with the body.
CHAPTER XIII
How Morgan would have slain Sir Uriens her husband, and how Sir Uwaine
her son saved him.
THE meanwhile Morgan le Fay had weened King Arthur had been dead. So on a day she espied King Uriens lay
Page 122
in his bed sleeping. Then she called unto her a maiden of her counsel,
and said, Go fetch me my lord's sword, for I saw never better time to slay
him than now. O madam, said the
damosel, an ye slay my lord ye can never escape. Care not you, said
Morgan le Fay, for now I see my time in the which it is best to do it,
and therefore hie thee fast and fetch me the
sword. Then the damosel departed, and found Sir Uwaine sleeping upon
a bed in another chamber, so she went unto Sir Uwaine, and awaked him,
and bade him, Arise, and wait on my
lady your mother, for she will slay the king your father sleeping in
his bed, for I go to fetch his sword. Well, said Sir Uwaine, go on your
way, and let me deal. Anon the damosel brought
Morgan the sword with quaking hands, and she lightly took the sword,
and pulled it out, and went boldly unto the bed's side, and awaited how
and where she might slay him best. And as
she lifted up the sword to smite, Sir Uwaine leapt unto his mother,
and caught her by the hand, and said, Ah, fiend, what wilt thou do? An
thou wert not my mother, with this sword I
should smite off thy head. Ah, said Sir Uwaine, men saith that Merlin
was begotten of a devil, but I may say an earthly devil bare me. O fair
son, Uwaine, have mercy upon me, I was
tempted with a devil, wherefore I cry thee mercy; I will never more
do so; and save my worship and discover me not. On this covenant, said
Sir Uwaine, I will forgive it you, so ye will
never be about to do such deeds. Nay, son, said she, and that I make
you assurance.
CHAPTER XIV
How Queen Morgan le Fay made great sorrow for the death of Accolon, and
how she stole away the scabbard from Arthur.
THEN came tidings unto Morgan le Fay that Accolon was dead, and his body brought unto the church, and how
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King Arthur had his sword again. But when Queen Morgan wist that Accolon
was dead, she was so sorrowful that near her heart to-brast. But because
she would not it were known,
outward she kept her countenance, and made no semblant of sorrow. But
well she wist an she abode till her brother Arthur came thither, there
should no gold go for her life.
Then she went unto Queen Guenever, and asked her leave
to ride into the country. Ye may abide, said Queen Guenever, till your
brother the king come home. I may not, said Morgan
le Fay, for I have such hasty tidings, that I may not tarry. Well,
said Guenever, ye may depart when ye will. So early on the morn, or it
was day, she took her horse and rode all that day
and most part of the night, and on the morn by noon she came to the
same abbey of nuns whereas lay King Arthur; and she knowing he was there,
she asked where he was. And they
answered how he had laid him in his bed to sleep, for he had had but
little rest these three nights. Well, said she, I charge you that none
of you awake him till I do, and then she alighted
off her horse, and thought for to steal away Excalibur his sword, and
so she went straight unto his chamber, and no man durst disobey her commandment,
and there she found Arthur
asleep in his bed, and Excalibur in his right hand naked. When she
saw that she was passing heavy that she might not come by the sword without
she had awaked him, and then she wist
well she had been dead. Then she took the scabbard and went her way
on horseback. When the king awoke and missed his scabbard, he was wroth,
and he asked who had been there,
and they said his sister, Queen Morgan had been there, and had put
the scabbard under her mantle and was gone. Alas, said Arthur, falsely
ye have watched me. Sir, said they all, we
durst not disobey your sister's commandment. Ah, said the king, let
fetch the best horse may be found, and bid Sir Ontzlake arm him in all
haste, and take another good horse and ride
with me. So anon the king and Ontzlake were well armed, and rode after
this lady, and so they came by a cross and found a cowherd, and they asked
the
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poor man if there came any lady riding that way. Sir, said this poor
man, right late came a lady riding with a forty horses, and to yonder forest
she rode. Then they spurred their horses,
and followed fast, and within a while Arthur had a sight of Morgan
le Fay; then he chased as fast as he might. When she espied him following
her, she rode a greater pace through the
forest till she came to a plain, and when she saw she might not escape,
she rode unto a lake thereby, and said, Whatsoever come of me, my brother
shall not have this scabbard. And then
she let throw the scabbard in the deepest of the water so it sank,
for it was heavy of gold and precious stones.
Then she rode into a valley where many great stones were,
and when she saw she must be overtaken, she shaped herself, horse and man,
by enchantment unto a great marble stone.
Anon withal came Sir Arthur and Sir Ontzlake whereas the king might
know his sister and her men, and one knight from another. Ah, said the
king, here may ye see the vengeance of
God, and now am I sorry that this misadventure is befallen. And then
he looked for the scabbard, but it would not be found, so he returned to
the abbey where he came from. So when
Arthur was gone she turned all into the likeliness as she and they
were before, and said, Sirs, now may we go where we will.
CHAPTER XV
How Morgan le Fay saved a knight that should have been drowned, and how
King Arthur returned home again.
THEN said Morgan, Saw ye Arthur, my brother? Yea, said
her knights, right well, and that ye should have found an we might have
stirred from one stead, for by his armyvestal
countenance he would have caused us to have fled. I believe you, said
Morgan. Anon after as she rode she met a knight leading another knight
on his horse before him, bound hand and
foot, blindfold, to have
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drowned him in a fountain. When she saw this knight so bound, she asked
him, What will ye do with that knight? Lady, said he, I will drown him.
For what cause? she asked. For I found
him with my wife, and she shall have the same death anon. That were
pity, said Morgan le Fay. Now, what say ye, knight, is it truth that he
saith of you? she said to the knight that should
be drowned. Nay truly, madam, he saith not right on me. Of whence be
ye, said Morgan le Fay, and of what country? I am of the court of King
Arthur, and my name is Manassen, cousin
unto Accolon of Gaul. Ye say well, said she, and for the love of him
ye shall be delivered, and ye shall have your adversary in the same case
ye be in. So Manassen was loosed and the
other knight bound. And anon Manassen unarmed him, and armed himself
in his harness, and so mounted on horseback, and the knight afore him,
and so threw him into the fountain and
drowned him. And then he rode unto Morgan again, and asked if she would
anything unto King Arthur. Tell him that I rescued thee, not for the love
of him but for the love of Accolon,
and tell him I fear him not while I can make me and them that be with
me in likeness of stones; and let him wit I can do much more when I see
my time. And so she departed into the
country of Gore, and there was she richly received, and made her castles
and towns passing strong, for always she dreaded much King Arthur.
When the king had well rested him at the abbey, he rode
unto Camelot, and found his queen and his barons right glad of his coming.
And when they heard of his strange adventures as is
afore rehearsed, then all had marvel of the falsehood of Morgan le
Fay; many knights wished her burnt. Then came Manassen to court and told
the king of his adventure. Well, said the
king, she is a kind sister; I shall so be avenged on her an I live,
that all Christendom shall speak of it. So on the morn there came a damosel
from Morgan to the king, and she brought with
her the richest mantle that ever was seen in that court, for it was
set as full of precious stones as one might stand by another, and there
were the richest stones
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that ever the king saw. And the damosel said, Your sister sendeth you
this mantle, and desireth that ye should take this gift of her; and in
what thing she hath offended you, she will amend
it at your own pleasure. When the king beheld this mantle it pleased
him much, but he said but little.
CHAPTER XVI
How the Damosel of the Lake saved King Arthur from mantle that should have
burnt him.
WITH that came the Damosel of the Lake unto the king, and
said, Sir, I must speak with you in privity. Say on, said the king, what
ye will. Sir, said the damosel, put not on you this
mantle till ye have seen more, and in no wise let it not come on you,
nor on no knight of yours, till ye command the bringer thereof to put it
upon her. Well, said King Arthur, it shall be
done as ye counsel me. And then he said unto the damosel that came
from his sister, Damosel, this mantle that ye have brought me, I will see
it upon you. Sir, she said, It will not beseem
me to wear a king's garment. By my head, said Arthur, ye shall wear
it or it come on my back, or any man's that here is. And so the king made
it to be put upon her, and forth withal she
fell down dead, and never more spake word after and burnt to coals.
Then was the king wonderly wroth, more than he was to-forehand, and said
unto King Uriens, My sister, your wife,
is alway about to betray me, and well I wot either ye, or my nephew,
your son, is of counsel with her to have me destroyed; but as for you,
said the king to King Uriens, I deem not
greatly that ye be of her counsel, for Accolon confessed to me by his
own mouth, that she would have destroyed you as well as me, therefore I
hold you excused; but as for your son, Sir
Uwaine, I hold him suspect, therefore I charge you put him out of my
court. So Sir Uwaine was discharged. And when Sir Gawaine wist that, he
made him ready to
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go with him; and said, Whoso banisheth my cousin-germain shall banish
me. So they two departed, and rode into a great forest, and so they came
to an abbey of monks, and there were
well lodged. But when the king wist that Sir Gawaine was departed from
the court, there was made great sorrow among all the estates. Now, said
Gaheris, Gawaine's brother, we have
lost two good knights for the love of one. So on the morn they heard
their masses in the abbey, and so they rode forth till that they came to
a great forest. Then was Sir Gawaine ware in a
valley by a turret [of] twelve fair damosels, and two knights armed
on great horses, and the damosels went to and fro by a tree. And then was
Sir Gawaine ware how there hung a white
shield on that tree, and ever as the damosels came by it they spit
upon it, and some threw mire upon the shield.
CHAPTER XVII
How Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine met with twelve fair damosels, and how they
complained on Sir Marhaus.
THEN Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine went and saluted them,
and asked why they did that despite to the shield. Sir, said the damosels,
we shall tell you. There is a knight in this country
that owneth this white shield, and he is a passing good man of his
hands, but he hateth all ladies and gentlewomen, and therefore we do all
this despite to the shield. I shall say you, said Sir
Gawaine, it beseemeth evil a good knight to despise all ladies and
gentlewomen, and peradventure though he hate you he hath some certain cause,
and peradventure he loveth in some
other places ladies and gentlewomen, and to be loved again, an he be
such a man of prowess as ye speak of. Now, what is his name? Sir, said
they, his name is Marhaus, the king's son
of Ireland. I know him well, said Sir Uwaine, he is a passing good
knight as any is alive, for I saw him once proved at a jousts where many
knights were gathered, and
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that time there might no man withstand him. Ah! said Sir Gawaine, damosels,
methinketh ye are to blame, for it is to suppose, he that hung that shield
there, he will not be long therefrom,
and then may those knights match him on horseback, and that is more
your worship than thus; for I will abide no longer to see a knight's shield
dishonoured. And therewith Sir Uwaine
and Gawaine departed a little from them, and then were they ware where
Sir Marhaus came riding on a great horse straight toward them. And when
the twelve damosels saw Sir
Marhaus they fled into the turret as they were wild, so that some of
them fell by the way. Then the one of the knights of the tower dressed
his shield, and said on high, Sir Marhaus,
defend thee. And so they ran together that the knight brake his spear
on Marhaus, and Marhaus smote him so hard that he brake his neck and the
horse's back. That saw the other knight
of the turret, and dressed him toward Marhaus, and they met so eagerly
together that the knight of the turret was soon smitten down, horse and
man, stark dead.
CHAPTER XVIII
How Sir Marhaus jousted with Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine, and overthrew
them both.
AND then Sir Marhaus rode unto his shield, and saw how
it was defouled, and said, Of this despite I am a part avenged, but for
her love that gave me this white shield I shall wear
thee, and hang mine where thou wast; and so he hanged it about his
neck. Then he rode straight unto Sir Gawaine and to Sir Uwaine, and asked
them what they did there? They
answered him that they came from King Arthur's court to see adventures.
Well, said Sir Marhaus, here am I ready, an adventurous knight that will
fulfil any adventure that ye will desire;
and so departed from them, to fetch his range. Let him go, said
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Sir Uwaine unto Sir Gawaine, for he is a passing good knight as any
is living; I would not by my will that any of us were matched with him.
Nay, said Sir Gawaine, not so, it were shame
to us were he not assayed, were he never so good a knight. Well, said
Sir Uwaine, I will assay him afore you, for I am more weaker than ye, and
if he smite me down then may ye
revenge me. So these two knights came together with great raundon,
that Sir Uwaine smote Sir Marhaus that his spear brast in pieces on the
shield, and Sir Marhaus smote him so sore
that horse and man he bare to the earth, and hurt Sir Uwaine on the
left side.
Then Sir Marhaus turned his horse and rode toward Gawaine
with his spear, and when Sir Gawaine saw that he dressed his shield, and
they aventred their spears, and they came
together with all the might of their horses, that either knight smote
other so hard in midst of their shields, but Sir Gawaine's spear brake,
but Sir Marhaus' spear held; and therewith Sir
Gawaine and his horse rushed down to the earth. And lightly Sir Gawaine
rose on his feet, and pulled out his sword, and dressed him toward Sir
Marhaus on foot, and Sir Marhaus saw
that, and pulled out his sword and began to come to Sir Gawaine on
horseback. Sir knight, said Sir Gawaine, alight on foot, or else I will
slay thy horse. Gramercy, said Sir Marhaus, of
your gentleness ye teach me courtesy, for it is not for one knight
to be on foot, and the other on horseback. And therewith Sir Marhaus set
his spear against a tree and alighted and tied
his horse to a tree, and dressed his shield, and either came unto other
eagerly, and smote together with their swords that their shields flew in
cantels, and they bruised their helms and their
hauberks, and wounded either other. But Sir Gawaine from it passed
nine of the clock waxed ever stronger and stronger, for then it came to
the hour of noon, and thrice his might was
increased. All this espied Sir Marhaus and had great wonder how his
might increased, and so they wounded other passing sore. And then when
it was past noon, and when it drew
toward evensong, Sir Gawaine's strength feebled, and waxed passing
faint that unnethes he might dure any
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longer, and Sir Marhaus was then bigger and bigger. Sir knight, said
Sir Marhaus, I have well felt that ye are a passing good knight and a marvellous
man of might as ever I felt any, while
it lasteth, and our quarrels are not great, and therefore it were pity
to do you hurt, for I feel ye are passing feeble. Ah, said Sir Gawaine,
gentle knight, ye say the word that I should say.
And therewith they took off their helms, and either kissed other, and
there they swore together either to love other as brethren. And Sir Marhaus
prayed Sir Gawaine to lodge with him
that night. And so they took their horses, and rode toward Sir Marhaus'
house. And as they rode by the way, Sir knight, said Sir Gawaine, I have
marvel that so valiant a man as ye be
love no ladies nor damosels. Sir, said Sir Marhaus, they name me wrongfully
those that give me that name, but well I wot it be the damosels of the
turret that so name me, and other such
as they be. Now shall I tell you for what cause I hate them: for they
be sorceresses and enchanters many of them, and be a knight never so good
of his body and full of prowess as man
may be, they will make him a stark coward to have the better of him,
and this is the principal cause that I hate them; and to all good ladies
and gentlewomen I owe my service as a knight
ought to do.
As the book rehearseth in French, there were many knights
that overmatched Sir Gawaine, for all the thrice might that he had: Sir
Launcelot de Lake, Sir Tristram, Sir Bors de Ganis,
Sir Percivale, Sir Pelleas, and Sir Marhaus, these six knights had
the better of Sir Gawaine. Then within a little while they came to Sir
Marhaus' place, which was in a little priory, and
there they alighted, and ladies and damosels unarmed them, and hastily
looked to their hurts, for they were all three hurt. And so they had all
three good lodging with Sir Marhaus, and
good cheer; for when he wist that they were King Arthur's sister's
sons he made them all the cheer that lay in his power, and so they sojourned
there a sennight, and were well eased of
their wounds, and at the last departed. Now, said Sir Marhaus, we will
not depart so lightly, for I will
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bring you through the forest; and rode day by day well a seven days
or they found any adventure. At the last they came into a great forest,
that was named the country and forest of
Arroy, and the country of strange adventures. In this country, said
Sir Marhaus, came never knight since it was christened but he found strange
adventures; and so they rode, and came
into a deep valley full of stones, and thereby they saw a fair stream
of water; above thereby was the head of the stream a fair fountain, and
three damosels sitting thereby. And then they
rode to them, and either saluted other, and the eldest had a garland
of gold about her head, and she was three score winter of age or more,
and her hair was white under the garland. The
second damosel was of thirty winter of age, with a circlet of gold
about her head. The third damosel was but fifteen year of age, and a garland
of flowers about her head. When these
knights had so beheld them, they asked them the cause why they sat
at that fountain? We be here, said the damosels, for this cause: if we
may see any errant knights, to teach them unto
strange adventures; and ye be three knights that seek adventures, and
we be three damosels, and therefore each one of you must choose one of
us; and when ye have done so we will
lead you unto three highways, and there each of you shall choose a
way and his damosel with him. And this day twelvemonth ye must meet here
again, and God send you your lives, and
thereto ye must plight your troth. This is well said, said Sir Marhaus.
CHAPTER XIX[*1]
Note: [*1] Misnumbered xx. by Caxton. How Sir Marhaus, Sir Gawaine, and Sir Uwaine met three damosels, and each of them took one.
NOW shall everych of us choose a damosel. I shall tell you, said Sir Uwaine, I am the youngest and most weakest of you both, therefore I will have the eldest damosel, for
Page 132
she hath seen much, and can best help me when I have need, for I have
most need of help of you both. Now, said Sir Marhaus, I will have the damosel
of thirty winter age, for she falleth
best to me. Well, said Sir Gawaine, I thank you, for ye have left me
the youngest and the fairest, and she is most liefest to me. Then every
damosel took her knight by the reins of his
bridle, and brought him to the three ways, and there was their oath
made to meet at the fountain that day twelvemonth an they were living,
and so they kissed and departed, and each
knight set his lady behind him. And Sir Uwaine took the way that lay
west, and Sir Marhaus took the way that lay south, and Sir Gawaine took
the way that lay north. Now will we begin
at Sir Gawaine, that held that way till that he came unto a fair manor,
where dwelled an old knight and a good householder, and there Sir Gawaine
asked the knight if he knew any
adventures in that country. I shall show you some to-morn, said the
old knight, and that marvellous. So, on the morn they rode into the forest
of adventures to a laund, and thereby they
found a cross, and as they stood and hoved there came by them the fairest
knight and the seemliest man that ever they saw, making the greatest dole
that ever man made. And then he
was ware of Sir Gawaine, and saluted him, and prayed God to send him
much worship. As to that, said Sir Gawaine, gramercy; also I pray to God
that he send you honour and worship.
Ah, said the knight, I may lay that aside, for sorrow and shame cometh
to me after worship.
CHAPTER XX
How a knight and a dwarf strove for a lady.
AND therewith he passed unto the one side of the laund;
and on the other side saw Sir Gawaine ten knights that hoved still and
made them ready with their shields and spears against
that one knight that came by Sir Gawaine.
Then this one knight aventred a great spear, and one
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of the ten knights encountered with him, but this woful knight smote
him so hard that he fell over his horse's tail. So this same dolorous knight
served them all, that at the leastway he smote
down horse and man, and all he did with one spear; and so when they
were all ten on foot, they went to that one knight, and he stood stone
still, and suffered them to pull him down off
his horse, and bound him hand and foot, and tied him under the horse's
belly, and so led him with them. O Jesu! said Sir Gawaine, this is a doleful
sight, to see the yonder knight so to be
entreated, and it seemeth by the knight that he suffereth them to bind
him so, for he maketh no resistance. No, said his host, that is truth,
for an he would they all were too weak so to do
him. Sir, said the damosel unto Sir Gawaine, meseemeth it were your
worship to help that dolorous knight, for methinketh he is one of the best
knights that ever I saw. I would do for him,
said Sir Gawaine, but it seemeth he will have no help. Then, said the
damosel, methinketh ye have no lust to help him.
Thus as they talked they saw a knight on the other side
of the laund all armed save the head. And on the other side there came
a dwarf on horseback all armed save the head, with a
great mouth and a short nose; and when the dwarf came nigh he said,
Where is the lady should meet us here? and therewithal she came forth out
of the wood. And then they began to
strive for the lady; for the knight said he would have her, and the
dwarf said he would have her. Will we do well? said the dwarf; yonder is
a knight at the cross, let us put it both upon
him, and as he deemeth so shall it be. I will well, said the knight,
and so they went all three unto Sir Gawaine and told him wherefore they
strove. Well, sirs, said he, will ye put the matter
in my hand? Yea, they said both. Now damosel, said Sir Gawaine, ye
shall stand betwixt them both, and whether ye list better to go to, he
shall have you. And when she was set between
them both, she left the knight and went to the dwarf, and the dwarf
took her and went his way singing, and the knight went his way with great
mourning.
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Then came there two knights all armed, and cried on high,
Sir Gawaine! knight of King Arthur's, make thee ready in all haste and
joust with me. So they ran together, that either fell
down, and then on foot they drew their swords, and did full actually.
The meanwhile the other knight went to the damosel, and asked her why she
abode with that knight, and if ye would
abide with me, I will be your faithful knight. And with you will I
be, said the damosel, for with Sir Gawaine I may not find in mine heart
to be with him; for now here was one knight
discomfited ten knights, and at the last he was cowardly led away;
and therefore let us two go whilst they fight. And Sir Gawaine fought with
that other knight long, but at the last they
accorded both. And then the knight prayed Sir Gawaine to lodge with
him that night. So as Sir Gawaine went with this knight he asked him, What
knight is he in this country that smote
down the ten knights? For when he had done so manfully he suffered
them to bind him hand and foot, and so led him away. Ah, said the knight,
that is the best knight I trow in the world,
and the most man of prowess, and he hath been served so as he was even
more than ten times, and his name hight Sir Pelleas, and he loveth a great
lady in this country and her name is
Ettard. And so when he loved her there was cried in this country a
great jousts three days, and all the knights of this country were there
and gentlewomen, and who that proved him the
best knight should have a passing good sword and a circlet of gold,
and the circlet the knight should give it to the fairest lady that was
at the jousts. And this knight Sir Pelleas was the best
knight that was there, and there were five hundred knights, but there
was never man that ever Sir Pelleas met withal but he struck him down,
or else from his horse; and every day of three
days he struck down twenty knights, therefore they gave him the prize,
and forthwithal he went thereas the Lady Ettard was, and gave her the circlet,
and said openly she was the fairest
lady that there was, and that would he prove upon any knight that would
say nay.
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CHAPTER XXI
How King Pelleas suffered himself to be taken prisoner because he would
have a sight of his lady, and how Sir Gawaine promised him to get to him
the love of his lady.
AND so he chose her for his sovereign lady, and never to
love other but her, but she was so proud that she had scorn of him, and
said that she would never love him though he would
die for her. Wherefore all ladies and gentlewomen had scorn of her
that she was so proud, for there were fairer than she, and there was none
that was there but an Sir Pelleas would have
proffered them love, they would have loved him for his noble prowess.
And so this knight promised the Lady Ettard to follow her into this country,
and never to leave her till she loved
him. And thus he is here the most part nigh her, and lodged by a priory,
and every week she sendeth knights to fight with him. And when he hath
put them to the worse, then will he suffer
them wilfully to take him prisoner, because he would have a sight of
this lady. And always she doth him great despite, for sometime she maketh
her knights to tie him to his horse's tail, and
some to bind him under the horse's belly; thus in the most shamefullest
ways that she can think he is brought to her. And all she doth it for to
cause him to leave this country, and to leave
his loving; but all this cannot make him to leave, for an he would
have fought on foot he might have had the better of the ten knights as
well on foot as on horseback. Alas, said Sir
Gawaine, it is great pity of him; and after this night I will seek
him to-morrow, in this forest, to do him all the help I can. So on the
morn Sir Gawaine took his leave of his host Sir
Carados, and rode into the forest; and at the last he met with Sir
Pelleas, making great moan out of measure, so each of them saluted other,
and asked him why he made such sorrow.
And as it is above rehearsed,
Page 136
Sir Pelleas told Sir Gawaine: But always I suffer her knights to fare
so with me as ye saw yesterday, in trust at the last to win her love, for
she knoweth well all her knights should not
lightly win me, an me list to fight with them to the uttermost. Wherefore
an I loved her not so sore, I had liefer die an hundred times, an I might
die so oft, rather than I would suffer that
despite; but I trust she will have pity upon me at the last, for love
causeth many a good knight to suffer to have his entent, but alas I am
unfortunate. And therewith he made so great dole
and sorrow that unnethe he might hold him on horseback.
Now, said Sir Gawaine, leave your mourning and I shall
promise you by the faith of my body to do all that lieth in my power to
get you the love of your lady, and thereto I will plight you
my troth. Ah, said Sir Pelleas, of what court are ye? tell me, I pray
you, my good friend. And then Sir Gawaine said, I am of the court of King
Arthur, and his sister's son, and King Lot of
Orkney was my father, and my name is Sir Gawaine. And then he said,
My name is Sir Pelleas, born in the Isles, and of many isles I am lord,
and never have I loved lady nor damosel till
now in an unhappy time; and, sir knight, since ye are so nigh cousin
unto King Arthur, and a king's son, therefore betray me not but help me,
for I may never come by her but by some
good knight, for she is in a strong castle here, fast by within this
four mile, and over all this country she is lady of. And so I may never
come to her presence, but as I suffer her knights to
take me, and but if I did so that I might have a sight of her, I had
been dead long or this time; and yet fair word had I never of her, but
when I am brought to-fore her she rebuketh me in
the foulest manner. And then they take my horse and harness and put
me out of the gates, and she will not suffer me to eat nor drink; and always
I offer me to be her prisoner, but that she
will not suffer me, for I would desire no more, what pains so ever
I had, so that I might have a sight of her daily. Well, said Sir Gawaine,
all this shall I amend an ye will do as I shall
devise: I will have your horse and
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your armour, and so will I ride unto her castle and tell her that I
have slain you, and so shall I come within her to cause her to cherish
me, and then shall I do my true part that ye shall not
fail to have the love of her.
CHAPTER XXII
How Sir Gawaine came to the Lady Ettard, and how Sir Pelleas found them
sleeping.
AND therewith Sir Gawaine plight his troth unto Sir Pelleas
to be true and faithful unto him; so each one plight their troth to other,
and so they changed horses and harness, and Sir
Gawaine departed, and came to the castle whereas stood the pavilions
of this lady without the gate. And as soon as Ettard had espied Sir Gawaine
she fled in toward the castle. Sir
Gawaine spake on high, and bade her abide, for he was not Sir Pelleas;
I am another knight that have slain Sir Pelleas. Do off your helm, said
the Lady Ettard, that I may see your visage.
And so when she saw that it was not Sir Pelleas, she bade him alight
and led him unto her castle, and asked him faithfully whether he had slain
Sir Pelleas. And he said her yea, and told
her his name was Sir Gawaine of the court of King Arthur, and his sister's
son. Truly, said she, that is great pity, for he was a passing good knight
of his body, but of all men alive I hated
him most, for I could never be quit of him; and for ye have slain him
I shall be your woman, and to do anything that might please you. So she
made Sir Gawaine good cheer. Then Sir
Gawaine said that he loved a lady and by no means she would love him.
She is to blame, said Ettard, an she will not love you, for ye that be
so well born a man, and such a man of
prowess, there is no lady in the world too good for you. Will ye, said
Sir Gawaine, promise me to do all that ye may, by the faith of your body,
to get me the love of my lady? Yea, sir,
said she, and that I promise you by the
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faith of my body. Now, said Sir Gawaine, it is yourself that I love
so well, therefore I pray you hold your promise. I may not choose, said
the Lady Ettard, but if I should be forsworn; and
so she granted him to fulfil all his desire.
So it was then in the month of May that she and Sir Gawaine
went out of the castle and supped in a pavilion, and there was made a bed,
and there Sir Gawaine and the Lady Ettard
went to bed together, and in another pavilion she laid her damosels,
and in the third pavilion she laid part of her knights, for then she had
no dread of Sir Pelleas. And there Sir Gawaine
lay with her in that pavilion two days and two nights. And on the third
day, in the morning early, Sir Pelleas armed him, for he had never slept
since Sir Gawaine departed from him; for Sir
Gawaine had promised him by the faith of his body, to come to him unto
his pavilion by that priory within the space of a day and a night.
Then Sir Pelleas mounted upon horseback, and came to the
pavilions that stood without the castle, and found in the first pavilion
three knights in three beds, and three squires lying at
their feet. Then went he to the second pavilion and found four gentlewomen
lying in four beds. And then he yede to the third pavilion and found Sir
Gawaine lying in bed with his Lady
Ettard, and either clipping other in arms, and when he saw that his
heart well-nigh brast for sorrow, and said: Alas! that ever a knight should
be found so false; and then he took his horse
and might not abide no longer for pure sorrow. And when he had ridden
nigh half a mile he turned again and thought to slay them both; and when
he saw them both so lie sleeping fast,
unnethe he might hold him on horseback for sorrow, and said thus to
himself, Though this knight be never so false, I will never slay him sleeping,
for I will never destroy the high order of
knighthood; and therewith he departed again. And or he had ridden half
a mile he returned again, and thought then to slay them both, making the
greatest sorrow that ever man made. And
when he came to the pavilions, he tied his
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horse unto a tree, and pulled out his sword naked in his hand, and went
to them thereas they lay, and yet he thought it were shame to slay them
sleeping, and laid the naked sword
overthwart both their throats, and so took his horse and rode his way.
And when Sir Pelleas came to his pavilions he told his
knights and his squires how he had sped, and said thus to them, For your
true and good service ye have done me I shall give you
all my goods, for I will go unto my bed and never arise until I am
dead. And when that I am dead I charge you that ye take the heart out of
my body and bear it her betwixt two silver
dishes, and tell her how I saw her lie with the false knight Sir Gawaine.
Right so Sir Pelleas unarmed himself, and went unto his bed making marvellous
dole and sorrow.
When Sir Gawaine and Ettard awoke of their sleep, and found
the naked sword overthwart their throats, then she knew well it was Sir
Pelleas' sword. Alas! said she to Sir Gawaine,
ye have betrayed me and Sir Pelleas both, for ye told me ye had slain
him, and now I know well it is not so, he is alive. And if Sir Pelleas
had been as uncourteous to you as ye have been
to him ye had been a dead knight; but ye have deceived me and betrayed
me falsely, that all ladies and damosels may beware by you and me. And
therewith Sir Gawaine made him
ready, and went into the forest. So it happed then that the Damosel
of the Lake, Nimue, met with a knight of Sir Pelleas, that went on his
foot in the forest making great dole, and she
asked him the cause. And so the woful knight told her how his master
and lord was betrayed through a knight and lady, and how he will never
arise out of his bed till he be dead. Bring
me to him, said she anon, and I will warrant his life he shall not
die for love, and she that hath caused him so to love, she shall be in
as evil plight as he is or it be long to, for it is no joy of
such a proud lady that will have no mercy of such a valiant knight.
Anon that knight brought her unto him, and when she saw him lie in his
bed, she thought she saw never so likely a
knight; and therewith she threw an enchantment upon
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him, and he fell asleep. And therewhile she rode unto the Lady Ettard,
and charged no man to awake him till she came again. So within two hours
she brought the Lady Ettard thither, and
both ladies found him asleep: Lo, said the Damosel of the Lake, ye
ought to be ashamed for to murder such a knight. And therewith she threw
such an enchantment upon her that she
loved him sore, that well-nigh she was out of her mind. O Lord Jesu,
said the Lady Ettard, how is it befallen unto me that I love now him that
I have most hated of any man alive? That is
the righteous judgment of God, said the damosel. And then anon Sir
Pelleas awaked and looked upon Ettard; and when he saw her he knew her,
and then he hated her more than any
woman alive, and said: Away, traitress, come never in my sight. And
when she heard him say so, she wept and made great sorrow out of measure.
CHAPTER XXIII
How Sir Pelleas loved no more Ettard by means of the Damosel of the Lake,
whom he loved ever after.
SIR KNIGHT PELLEAS, said the Damosel of the Lake, take
your horse and come forth with me out of this country, and ye shall love
a lady that shall love you. I will well, said Sir
Pelleas, for this Lady Ettard hath done me great despite and shame,
and there he told her the beginning and ending, and how he had purposed
never to have arisen till that he had been
dead. And now such grace God hath sent me, that I hate her as much
as ever I loved her, thanked be our Lord Jesus! Thank me, said the Damosel
of the Lake. Anon Sir Pelleas armed
him, and took his horse, and commanded his men to bring after his pavilions
and his stuff where the Damosel of the Lake would assign. So the Lady Ettard
died for sorrow, and the
Damosel of the Lake rejoiced Sir Pelleas, and loved together during
their life days.
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CHAPTER XXIV
How Sir Marhaus rode with the damosel, and how he came to the Duke of the
South Marches.
NOW turn we unto Sir Marhaus, that rode with the damosel
of thirty winter of age, southward. And so they came into a deep forest,
and by fortune they were nighted, and rode long in
a deep way, and at the last they came unto a courtelage, and there
they asked harbour. But the man of the courtelage would not lodge them
for no treatise that they could treat, but thus
much the good man said, An ye will take the adventure of your lodging,
I shall bring you where ye shall be lodged. What adventure is that that
I shall have for my lodging? said Sir
Marhaus. Ye shall wit when ye come there, said the good man. Sir, what
adventure so it be, bring me thither I pray thee, said Sir Marhaus; for
I am weary, my damosel, and my horse.
So the good man went and opened the gate, and within an hour he brought
him unto a fair castle, and then the poor man called the porter, and anon
he was let into the castle, and so he
told the lord how he brought him a knight errant and a damosel that
would be lodged with him. Let him in, said the lord, it may happen he shall
repent that they took their lodging here.
So Sir Marhaus was let in with torchlight, and there was
a goodly sight of young men that welcomed him. And then his horse was led
into the stable, and he and the damosel were
brought into the hall, and there stood a mighty duke and many goodly
men about him. Then this lord asked him what he hight, and from whence
he came, and with whom he dwelt. Sir, he
said, I am a knight of King Arthur's and knight of the Table Round,
and my name is Sir Marhaus, and born I am in Ireland. And then said the
duke to him, That me sore repenteth: the
cause is this, for I love not thy lord nor none of thy
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fellows of the Table Round; and therefore ease thyself this night as
well as thou mayest, for as to-morn I and my six sons shall match with
you. Is there no remedy but that I must have ado
with you and your six sons at once? said Sir Marhaus. No, said the
duke, for this cause I made mine avow, for Sir Gawaine slew my seven sons
in a recounter, therefore I made mine
avow, there should never knight of King Arthur's court lodge with me,
or come thereas I might have ado with him, but that I would have a revenging
of my sons' death. What is your
name? said Sir Marhaus; I require you tell me, an it please you. Wit
thou well I am the Duke of South Marches. Ah, said Sir Marhaus, I have
heard say that ye have been long time a
great foe unto my lord Arthur and to his knights. That shall ye feel
to-morn, said the duke. Shall I have ado with you? said Sir Marhaus. Yea,
said the duke, thereof shalt thou not choose,
and therefore take you to your chamber, and ye shall have all that
to you longeth. So Sir Marhaus departed and was led to a chamber, and his
damosel was led unto her chamber. And
on the morn the duke sent unto Sir Marhaus and bade make him ready.
And so Sir Marhaus arose and armed him, and then there was a mass sung
afore him, and brake his fast, and so
mounted on horseback in the court of the castle where they should do
the battle. So there was the duke all ready on horseback, clean armed,
and his six sons by him, and everych had a
spear in his hand, and so they encountered, whereas the duke and his
two sons brake their spears upon him, but Sir Marhaus held up his spear
and touched none of them.
CHAPTER XXV
How Sir Marhaus fought with the duke and his four sons and made them to
yield them.
THEN came the four sons by couple, and two of them brake their spears, and so did the other two. And all
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this while Sir Marhaus touched them not. Then Sir Marhaus ran to the
duke, and smote him with his spear that horse and man fell to the earth,
and so he served his sons; and then Sir
Marhaus alighted down and bade the duke yield him or else he would
slay him. And then some of his sons recovered, and would have set upon
Sir Marhaus; then Sir Marhaus said to the
duke, Cease thy sons, or else I will do the uttermost to you all. Then
the duke saw he might not escape the death, he cried to his sons, and charged
them to yield them to Sir Marhaus;
and they kneeled all down and put the pommels of their swords to the
knight, and so he received them. And then they helped up their father,
and so by their cominal assent promised to
Sir Marhaus never to be foes unto King Arthur, and thereupon at Whitsuntide
after to come, he and his sons, and put them in the king's grace.
Then Sir Marhaus departed, and within two days his damosel
brought him whereas was a great tournament that the Lady de Vawse had cried.
And who that did best should have a rich
circlet of gold worth a thousand besants. And there Sir Marhaus did
so nobly that he was renowned, and had sometime down forty knights, and
so the circlet of gold was rewarded him.
Then he departed from them with great worship; and so within seven
nights his damosel brought him to an earl's place, his name was the Earl
Fergus, that after was Sir Tristram's knight;
and this earl was but a young man, and late come into his lands, and
there was a giant fast by him that hight Taulurd, and he had another brother
in Cornwall that hight Taulas, that Sir
Tristram slew when he was out of his mind. So this earl made his complaint
unto Sir Marhaus, that there was a giant by him that destroyed all his
lands, and how he durst nowhere ride
nor go for him. Sir, said the knight, whether useth he to fight on
horseback or on foot? Nay, said the earl, there may no horse bear him.
Well, said Sir Marhaus, then will I fight with him
on foot; so on the morn Sir Marhaus prayed the earl that one of his
men might bring him whereas the giant was; and so he was, for he saw
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him sit under a tree of holly, and many clubs of iron and gisarms about
him. So this knight dressed him to the giant, putting his shield afore
him, and the giant took an iron club in his hand,
and at the first stroke he clave Sir Marhaus' shield in two pieces.
And there he was in great peril, for the giant was a wily fighter, but
at last Sir Marhaus smote off his right arm above the
elbow.
Then the giant fled and the knight after him, and so he
drove him into a water, but the giant was so high that he might not wade
after him. And then Sir Marhaus made the Earl Fergus'
man to fetch him stones, and with those stones the knight gave the
giant many sore knocks, till at the last he made him fall down into the
water, and so was he there dead. Then Sir
Marhaus went unto the giant's castle, and there he delivered twenty-four
ladies and twelve knights out of the giant's prison, and there he had great
riches without number, so that the days
of his life he was never poor man. Then he returned to the Earl Fergus,
the which thanked him greatly, and would have given him half his lands,
but he would none take. So Sir Marhaus
dwelled with the earl nigh half a year, for he was sore bruised with
the giant, and at the last he took his leave. And as he rode by the way,
he met with Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine, and
so by adventure he met with four knights of Arthur's court, the first
was Sir Sagramore le Desirous, Sir Osanna, Sir Dodinas le Savage, and Sir
Felot of Listinoise; and there Sir Marhaus
with one spear smote down these four knights, and hurt them sore. So
he departed to meet at his day aforeset.
CHAPTER XXVI
How Sir Uwaine rode with the damosel of sixty year of age, and how he gat
the prize at tourneying.
NOW turn we unto Sir Uwaine, that rode westward with his damosel of three score winter of age, and she brought
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him thereas was a tournament nigh the march of Wales. And at that tournament
Sir Uwaine smote down thirty knights, therefore was given him the prize,
and that was a gerfalcon, and a
white steed trapped with cloth of gold. So then Sir Uwaine did many
strange adventures by the means of the old damosel, and so she brought
him to a lady that was called the Lady of the
Rock, the which was much courteous. So there were in the country two
knights that were brethren, and they were called two perilous knights,
the one knight hight Sir Edward of the Red
Castle, and the other Sir Hue of the Red Castle; and these two brethren
had disherited the Lady of the Rock of a barony of lands by their extortion.
And as this knight was lodged with
this lady she made her complaint to him of these two knights.
Madam, said Sir Uwaine, they are to blame, for they do
against the high order of knighthood, and the oath that they made; and
if it like you I will speak with them, because I am a
knight of King Arthur's, and I will entreat them with fairness; and
if they will not, I shall do battle with them, and in the defence of your
right. Gramercy said the lady, and thereas I may not
acquit you, God shall. So on the morn the two knights were sent for,
that they should come thither to speak with the Lady of the Rock, and wit
ye well they failed not, for they came with
an hundred horse. But when this lady saw them in this manner so big,
she would not suffer Sir Uwaine to go out to them upon no surety nor for
no fair language, but she made him speak
with them over a tower, but finally these two brethren would not be
entreated, and answered that they would keep that they had. Well, said
Sir Uwaine, then will I fight with one of you,
and prove that ye do this lady wrong. That will we not, said they,
for an we do battle, we two will fight with one knight at once, and therefore
if ye will fight so, we will be ready at what
hour ye will assign. And if ye win us in battle the lady shall have
her lands again. Ye say well, said Sir Uwaine, therefore make you ready
so that ye be here to-morn in the defence of the
lady's right.
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CHAPTER XXVII
How Sir Uwaine fought with two knights and overcame them.
SO was there sikerness made on both parties that no treason
should be wrought on neither party; so then the knights departed and made
them ready, and that night Sir Uwaine had
great cheer. And on the morn he arose early and heard mass, and brake
his fast, and so he rode unto the plain without the gates, where hoved
the two brethren abiding him. So they rode
together passing sore, that Sir Edward and Sir Hue brake their spears
upon Sir Uwaine. And Sir Uwaine smote Sir Edward that he fell over his
horse and yet his spear brast not. And
then he spurred his horse and came upon Sir Hue and overthrew him,
but they soon recovered and dressed their shields and drew their swords
and bade Sir Uwaine alight and do his
battle to the uttermost. Then Sir Uwaine devoided his horse suddenly,
and put his shield afore him and drew his sword, and so they dressed together,
and either gave other such strokes,
and there these two brethren wounded Sir Uwaine passing grievously
that the Lady of the Rock weened he should have died. And thus they fought
together five hours as men raged out
of reason. And at the last Sir Uwaine smote Sir Edward upon the helm
such a stroke that his sword carved unto his canel bone, and then Sir Hue
abated his courage, but Sir Uwaine
pressed fast to have slain him. That saw Sir Hue: he kneeled down and
yielded him to Sir Uwaine. And he of his gentleness received his sword,
and took him by the hand, and went into
the castle together. Then the Lady of the Rock was passing glad, and
the other brother made great sorrow for his brother's death. Then the lady
was restored of all her lands, and Sir Hue
was commanded to be at the court of King Arthur at the next feast of
Pentecost. So Sir Uwaine dwelt with the lady nigh half a year, for it was
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long or he might be whole of his great hurts. And so when it drew nigh
the term-day that Sir Gawaine, Sir Marhaus, and Sir Uwaine should meet
at the cross-way, then every knight drew
him thither to hold his promise that they had made; and Sir Marhaus
and Sir Uwaine brought their damosels with them, but Sir Gawaine had lost
his damosel, as it is afore rehearsed.
CHAPTER XXVIII
How at the year's end all three knights with their three damosels met at
the fountain.
RIGHT so at the twelvemonths' end they met all three knights
at the fountain and their damosels, but the damosel that Sir Gawaine had
could say but little worship of him so they
departed from the damosels and rode through a great forest, and there
they met with a messenger that came from King Arthur, that had sought them
well-nigh a twelvemonth throughout
all England, Wales, and Scotland, and charged if ever he might find
Sir Gawaine and Sir Uwaine to bring them to the court again. And then were
they all glad, and so prayed they Sir
Marhaus to ride with them to the king's court. And so within twelve
days they came to Camelot, and the king was passing glad of their coming,
and so was all the court. Then the king
made them to swear upon a book to tell him all their adventures that
had befallen them that twelvemonth, and so they did. And there was Sir
Marhaus well known, for there were knights
that he had matched aforetime, and he was named one of the best knights
living.
Against the feast of Pentecost came the Damosel of the
Lake and brought with her Sir Pelleas; and at that high feast there was
great jousting of knights, and of all knights that were at
that jousts, Sir Pelleas had the prize, and Sir Marhaus was named the
next; but Sir Pelleas was so strong there might but few knights sit him
a buffet with a
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spear. And at that next feast Sir Pelleas and Sir Marhaus were made
knights of the Table Round, for there were two sieges void, for two knights
were slain that twelvemonth, and great
joy had King Arthur of Sir Pelleas and of Sir Marhaus. But Pelleas
loved never after Sir Gawaine, but as he spared him for the love of King
Arthur; but ofttimes at jousts and tournaments
Sir Pelleas quit Sir Gawaine, for so it rehearseth in the book of French.
So Sir Tristram many days after fought with Sir Marhaus in an island, and
there they did a great battle, but at the
last Sir Tristram slew him, so Sir Tristram was wounded that unnethe
he might recover, and lay at a nunnery half a year. And Sir Pelleas was
a worshipful knight, and was one of the four
that achieved the Sangreal, and the Damosel of the Lake made by her
means that never he had ado with Sir Launcelot de Lake, for where Sir Launcelot
was at any jousts or any
tournament, she would not suffer him be there that day, but if it were
on the side of Sir Launcelot.
Explicit liber quartus. Incipit liber quintus.