OF LAUNCELOT, GUENEVER, AND KING
ARTHUR
HOW
LAUNCELOT FELL TO HIS OLD LOVE AGAIN, BUT WITHDREW HIM FROM GUENEVER
TO ESCHEW SLANDER, AND HOW THE QUEEN COMMANDED HIM TO AVOID THE
COURT.
So
after the quest of the Sangreal was fulfilled, and all knights that
were left alive were come again unto the Table Round, as the book of
the Sangreal maketh mention, then was there great joy in the court;
and in especial King Arthur and Queen Guenever made great joy of the
remnant that were come home, and passing glad was the king and the
queen of Sir Launcelot and of Sir Bors, for they had been passing
long away in the quest of the Sangreal.
Then,
as the book saith, Sir Launcelot began to resort unto Queen Guenever
again, and forgat the promise and the perfection that he made in the
quest, and so they loved together more hotter than they did
to-forehand, that many in the court spake of it, and in especial Sir
Agravaine, Sir Gawaine's brother, for he was ever open-mouthed.
So
befell that Sir Launcelot had many resorts of ladies and damosels
that daily resorted unto him, that besought him to be their champion,
and in all such matters of right Sir Launcelot applied him daily to
do for the pleasure of Our Lord, Jesu Christ. And ever as much as he
might he withdrew him from the company and fellowship of Queen
Guenever, for to eschew the slander and noise; wherefore the queen
waxed wroth with Sir Launcelot. And upon a day she called Sir
Launcelot unto her chamber, and said thus: Sir Launcelot, I see and
feel daily that thy love beginneth to slake, for thou hast no
joy to be in my presence, but ever thou art of this court, and
quarrels and matters thou hast nowadays for ladies and gentlewomen
more than ever thou wert wont to have aforehand.
Ah
madam, said Launcelot, in this ye must hold me excused for divers
causes; one is, I was but late in the quest of the Sangreal; and I
thank God of his great mercy, and never of my desert, that I saw in
that my quest as much as ever saw any sinful man, and so was it told
me. And if I had not had my privy thoughts to return to your love
again as I do, I had seen as great mysteries as ever saw my son
Galahad, outher Percivale, or Sir Bors; and therefore, madam, I was
but late in that quest. Wit ye well, madam, it may not be yet lightly
forgotten the high service in whom I did my diligent labour. Also,
madam, wit ye well that there be many men speak of our love in this
court, and have you and me greatly in await, as Sir Agravaine and Sir
Mordred; and madam, wit ye well I dread them more for your sake
than for any fear I have of them myself, for I may happen to escape
and rid myself in a great need, where ye must abide all that will be
said unto you. And then if that ye fall in any distress through
wilful folly, then is there none Other remedy or help but by me and
my blood. And wit ye well, madam, the boldness of you and me will
bring us to great shame and slander; and that were me loath, to see
you dishonoured. And that is the cause I take upon me more for to do
for damosels and maidens than ever I did to-fore, that men should
understand my joy and my delight is my pleasure to have ado for
damosels and maidens.
All
this while the queen stood still and let Sir Launcelot say what he
would. And when he had all said she brast out a-weeping, and so she
sobbed and wept a great while. And when she might speak she said:
Launcelot, now I well understand that thou art a false recreant
knight and lovest and holdest other ladies, and by me thou hast
disdain and scorn. For wit thou well, she said, now I understand thy
falsehood, and therefore shall I never love thee no more. And never
be thou so hardy to come in my sight; and right here I discharge thee
this court, that thou never come within it; and I forfend thee my
fellowship, and upon pain of thy head that thou see me no more. Right
so Sir Launcelot departed with great heaviness, that unnethe he might
sustain himself for great dole-making.
Then
he called Sir Bors, Sir Ector de Maris, and Sir Lionel, and told them
how the queen had forfended him the court, and so he was in will to
depart into his own country. Fair sir, said Sir Bors de Ganis, ye
shall not depart out of this land by mine advice. Ye must remember in
what honour ye are renowned, and called the noblest knight of the
world; and many great matters ye have in hand. And women in their
hastiness will do ofttimes that sore repenteth them; and therefore by
mine advice ye shall take your horse, and ride to the good hermit
here beside Windsor, that sometime was a good knight, his name is Sir
Brasias, and there shall ye abide till I send you word of better
tidings.
And
then the noble knight, Sir Launcelot, departed with right heavy cheer
suddenly, that none earthly creature wist of him, nor where he was
become, but Sir Bors. So when Sir Launcelot was departed, the queen
outward made no manner of sorrow in showing, to none of his blood,
nor to none other. But wit ye well, inwardly, as the book saith, she
took great thought, but she bare it out with a proud countenance as
though she felt nothing nor danger.
HOW AT A DINNER THAT THE QUEEN MADE
THERE WAS A KNIGHT ENPOISONED, WHICH SIR MADOR LAID ON THE QUEEN,
AND APPEACHED HER FOR IT AND HOW SIR BORS TOOK ON HIM TO FIGHT FOR
THE QUEEN UPON CONDITION.
And
then the queen let make a privy dinner in London unto the knights of
the Round Table. And all was for to show outward that she had as
great joy in all other knights of the Table Round as she had in Sir
Launcelot. All only at that dinner she had Sir Gawaine and his
brethren, that is for to say Sir Agravaine, Sir Gaheris, Sir Gareth,
and Sir Mordred. Also there was Sir Bors de Ganis, Sir Blamore de
Ganis, Sir Bleoberis de Ganis, Sir Galihud, Sir Galihodin, Sir Ector
de Maris, Sir Lionel, Sir Palomides, Sir Safere his brother, Sir La
Cote Male Taile, Sir Persant, Sir Ironside, Sir Brandiles, Sir Kay le
Seneschal, Sir Mador de la Porte, Sir Patrise, a knight of Ireland,
Aliduk, Sir Astamore, and Sir. Pinel le Savage, the which was cousin
to Sir Lamorak de Galis, the good knight that Sir Gawaine and his
brethren slew by treason. And so these four-and-twenty knights should
dine with the queen in a privy place by themself, and there was made
a great feast of all manner of dainties.
But
Sir Gawaine had a custom that he used daily at dinner and at supper,
that he loved well all manner of fruit, and in especial apples and
pears. And therefore whosomever dined or feasted Sir Gawaine would
commonly purvey for good fruit for him, and so did the queen for to
please Sir Gawaine; she let purvey for him all manner of fruit, for
Sir Gawaine was a passing hot knight of nature. And this Pinel hated
Sir Gawaine because of his kinsman Sir Lamorak de Galis; and
therefore for pure envy and hate Sir Pinel enpoisoned certain apples
for to enpoison Sir Gawaine. And so this was well unto the end of the
meat; and so it befell by misfortune a good knight named Patrise,
cousin unto Sir Mador de la Porte, to take a poisoned apple. And when
he had eaten it he swelled so till he brast, and there Sir Patrise
fell down suddenly dead among them.
Then
every knight leapt from the board ashamed, and araged for wrath,,
nigh out of their wits. For they wist not what to say; considering
Queen Guenever made the feast and dinner, they all had suspicion unto
her. My lady, the queen, said Gawaine, wit ye well, madam, that this
dinner was made for me, for all folks that know my condition
understand that I love well fruit, and now I see well. I had near
been slain; therefore, madam, I dread me lest ye will be shamed. Then
the queen stood still and was sore abashed, that she nist not what to
say. This shall not so be ended, said Sir Mador de la Porte, for here
have I lost a full noble knight of my blood; and therefore upon this
shame and despite I will be revenged to the utterance. And there
openly Sir Mador appealed the queen of the death of his cousin, Sir
Patrise. Then stood they all still, that none would speak a word
against him, for they all had great suspicion unto the queen because
she let make that dinner. And the queen was so abashed that she could
none other ways do, but wept so heartily that she fell in a swoon.
With this noise and cry came to them King Arthur, and when he wist of
that trouble he was a passing heavy man.
And
ever Sir Mador stood still afore the king, and ever he appealed the
queen of treason; for the custom was such that time that all manner
of shameful death was called treason. Fair lords, said King Arthur,
me repenteth of this trouble, but the case is so I may not have ado
in this matter, for I must be a rightful judge; and that repenteth me
that I may not do battle for my wife, for as I deem this deed came
never by her. And therefore I suppose she shall not be all distained,
but that some good knight shall put his body in jeopardy for my queen
rather than she shall be brent in a wrong quarrel. And therefore, Sir
Mador, be not so hasty, for it may happen she shall not be all
friendless; and therefore desire thou thy day of battle, and she
shall purvey her of some good knight that shall answer you, or else
it were to me great shame, and to all my court.
My
gracious lord, said Sir Mador, ye must hold me excused, for
though ye be our king in that degree, ye are but a knight as we are,
and ye are sworn unto knighthood as well as we; and therefore I
beseech you that ye be not displeased, for there is none of the
four-and-twenty knights that were bidden to this dinner but all they
have great suspicion unto the queen. What say ye all, my lords?
said Sir Mador. Then they answered by and by that they could not
excuse the queen, forwhy she made the dinner, and either it must come
by her or by her servants. Alas, said the queen, I made this dinner
for a good intent, and never for none evil, so Almighty God help me
in my right, as I was never purposed to do such evil deeds, and that
I report me unto God.
My
lord, the king, said Sir Mador, I require you as ye be a righteous
king give me a day that I may have justice. Well, said the king, I
give the day this day fifteen days that thou be ready armed on
horseback in the meadow beside Westminster. And if it so fall that
there be any knight to encounter with you, there mayst thou do the
best, and God speed the right. And if it so fall that there be no
knight at that day, then must my queen be burnt, and there she shall
be ready to have her judgment. I am answered, said Sir Mador. And
every knight went where it liked them.
So
when the king and the queen were together the king asked the queen
how this case befell. The queen answered: So God me help, I wot not
how or in what manner. Where is Sir Launcelot? said King Arthur; an
he were here he would not grudge to do battle for you. Sir, said the
queen, I wot not where he is, but his brother and his kinsmen deem
that he be not within this realm. That me repenteth, said King
Arthur, for an he were here he would soon stint this strife. Then I
will counsel you, said the king, send unto Sir Bors, that he will do
battle for you for Sir Launcelot's sake, and upon my life he will not
refuse you. For well I see, said the king, that none of these
four-and-twenty knights that were with you at your dinner where Sir
Patrise was slain, will do battle for you, nor none of them will say
well of you, and that shall be a great slander for you in this court.
Alas, said the queen, and I may not do withal; but now I miss Sir
Launcelot, for an he were here he would put me soon to my heart's
ease. What aileth you, said the king, ye cannot keep Sir Launcelot
upon your side? For wit ye well, said the king, who that hath Sir
Launcelot upon his party hath the most man of worship in the world
upon his side. Now go your way, said the king unto the queen, and
require Sir Bors to do battle for you for Sir Launcelot's sake.
So
the queen departed from the king, and sent for Sir Bors into her
chamber. And when he was come she besought him of succour.
Madam, said he, what would ye that I did? for I may not with my
worship have ado in this matter, because I was at the same dinner,
for dread that any of those knights would have me in suspicion. Also,
madam, said Sir Bors, now miss ye Sir Launcelot, for he would not
have failed you, neither in right nor in wrong, as ye have well
proved when ye have been in danger; and now ye have driven him out of
this country, by whom ye and all we were daily worshipped; therefore,
madam, I marvel how ye dare for shame require me to do any thing for
you, in so much ye have chased him out of your country by whom we
were borne up and honoured. Alas, fair knight, said the queen, I put
me wholly in your grace, and all that is done amiss I will amend as
ye will counsel me. And therewith she kneeled down upon both her
knees, and besought Sir Bors to have mercy upon her: outher I
shall have a shameful death, and thereto I never offended.
Right
so came King Arthur, and found the queen kneeling afore Sir
Bors; then Sir Bors pulled her up, and said: Madam, ye do me great
dishonour. Ah, gentle knight, said the king, have mercy upon my
queen, courteous knight, for I am now in certain she is untruly
defamed. And therefore, courteous knight, said the king, promise her
to do battle for her: I require you for the love of Sir Launcelot. My
lord, said Sir Bors, ye require me the greatest thing that any man
may require me; and wit ye well if I grant to do battle for the queen
I shall wrath many of my fellowship of the Table Round. But as for
that, said Bors, I will grant my lord that for my lord Sir
Launcelot's sake, and for your sake I will at that day be the queen's
champion, unless that there come by adventure a better knight than I
am to do battle for her. Will ye promise me this, said the king, by
your faith? Yea sir, said Sir Bors, of that I will not fail you, nor
her both, but if there come a better knight than I am, and then shall
he have the battle. Then was the king and the queen passing glad, and
so departed, and thanked him heartily.
So
then Sir Bors departed secretly upon a day, and rode unto Sir
Launcelot, there as he was with the hermit, Sir Brasias, and told him
of all their adventure. Ah Jesu, said Sir Launcelot, this is come
happily as I would have it, and therefore I pray you make you ready
to do battle, but look that ye tarry till ye see me come, as long as
ye may. For I am sure Mador is an hot knight when he is enchafed, for
the more ye suffer him the hastier will he be to battle. Sir, said
Bors, let me deal with him; doubt ye not ye shall have all your will.
Then departed Sir Bors from him and came to the court again. Then was
it noised in all the court that Sir Bors should do battle for the
queen; wherefore many knights were displeased with him, that he would
take upon him to do battle in the queen's quarrel; for there were but
few knights in all the court but they deemed the queen was in the
wrong, and that she had done that treason.
HOW AT THE DAY SIR BORS MADE HIM
READY FOR TO FIGHT FOR THE QUEEN, BUT SIR LAUNCELOT DISCHARGED HIM,
AND OVERCAME SIR MADOR, AND HOW THE TRUTH WAS KNOWN BY THE DAMOSEL OF
THE LAKE.
The
day came on fast that the battle should be, and the king and the
queen and all manner of knights that were there at that time drew
them unto the meadow beside Westminster. And so when the king was
come with the queen and many knights of the Round Table, then the
queen was put there in the Constable's ward, and a great fire made
about an iron stake, that an Sir Mador de la Porte had the better,
she should be burnt: such custom was used in those days, that neither
for favour, neither for love nor affinity, there should be none other
but righteous judgment, as well upon a king as upon a knight, and as
well upon a queen as upon another poor lady.
So
in this meanwhile came in Sir Mador de la Porte, and took his oath
afore the king, that the queen did this treason until his cousin Sir
Patrise, and unto his oath he would prove it with his body, hand for
hand, who that would say the contrary. Right so came in Sir Bors de
Ganis, and said: That as for Queen Guenever she is in the right, and
that will I make good with my hands that she is not culpable of this
treason that is put upon her. Then make thee ready, said Sir Mador,
and we shall prove whether thou be in the right or I. Sir Mador, said
Sir Bors, wit thou well I know you for a good knight. Not for then I
shall not fear you so greatly, but I trust to God I shall be able to
withstand your malice. But thus much have I promised my lord Arthur
and my lady the queen, that I shall do battle for her in this case to
the uttermost, unless that there come a better knight than I am and
discharge me. Is that all? said Sir Mador, either come thou off and
do battle with me, or else say nay. Take your horse, said Sir Bors,
and as I suppose, ye shall not tarry long but ye shall be answered.
Then
either departed to their tents and made them ready to horseback as
they thought best. And anon Sir Mador came into the field with his
shield on his shoulder and his spear in his hand; and so rode about
the place crying unto Arthur: Bid your champion come forth an he
dare. Then was Sir Bors ashamed and took his horse and came to the
lists' end. And then was he ware where came from a wood there fast by
a knight all armed, upon a white horse, with a strange shield of
strange arms; and he came riding all that he might run, and so ,he
came to Sir Bors, and said thus: Fair knight, I pray you be not
displeased, for here must a better knight than ye are have this
battle: therefore I pray you withdraw you. For wit ye well I have had
this day a right great journey, and this battle ought to be mine, and
so I promised you when I spake with you last, and with all my heart I
thank you of your good will. Then Sir Bors rode unto King Arthur and
told him how there was a knight come that would have the battle for
to fight for the queen. What knight is he? said the king. I wot not,
said Sir Bors, but such covenant he made with me to be here this day.
Now my lord, said Sir Bors, here am I discharged.
Then
the king called to that knight, and asked him if he would fight for
the queen. Then he answered to the king: Therefore came I hither, and
therefore, sir king, he said, tarry me no longer, for I may not
tarry. For anon as I have finished this battle I must depart hence,
for I have ado many matters elsewhere. For wit you well, said that
knight, this is dishonour to you all knights of the Round Table, to
see and know so noble a lady and so courteous a queen as Queen
Guenever is, thus to be rebuked and shamed amongst you. Then they all
marvelled what knight that might be that so took the battle upon him.
For there was not one that knew him, but if it were Sir Bors.
Then
said Sir Mador de la Porte unto the king: Now let me wit with whom I
shall have ado withal. And then they rode to the lists' end, and
there they couched their spears, and ran together with all their
might, and Sir Mador's spear brake all to pieces, but the other's
spear held, and bare Sir Mador's horse and all backward to the earth
a great fall. But mightily and suddenly he avoided his horse and put
his shield afore him, and then drew his sword, and bade the other
knight alight and do battle with him on foot. Then that knight
descended from his horse lightly like a valiant man, and put his
shield afore him and drew his sword; and so they came eagerly unto
battle, and either gave other many great strokes. But at the last
this knight smote Sir Mador grovelling upon the earth, and the knight
stepped near him to have pulled Sir Mador flatling upon the ground;
and therewith suddenly Sir Mador arose, and in his rising he smote
that knight through the thick of the thighs that the blood ran out
fiercely. And when he felt himself so wounded, and saw his blood, he
let him arise upon his feet. And then he gave him such a buffet upon
the helm that he fell to the earth flatling, and therewith he strode
to him to have pulled off his helm off his head. And then Sir Mador
prayed that knight to save his life, and so he yielded him as
overcome, and released the queen of his quarrel. I will not grant
thee thy life, said that knight, only that thou freely release the
queen for ever, and that no mention be made upon Sir Patrise's tomb
that ever Queen Guenever consented to that treason. All this shall be
done, said Sir Mador, I clearly discharge my quarrel for ever.
Then
the knights inners of the lists took up Sir Mador, and led him to his
tent, and the other knight went straight to the stair-foot where sat
King Arthur; and by that time was the queen come to the king, and
either kissed other heartily. And when the king saw that knight, he
stooped down to him, and thanked him, and in likewise did the queen;
and the king prayed him to put off his helmet, and to repose him, and
to take a sop of wine. And then he put off his helm to drink, and
then every knight knew him that it was Sir Launcelot du Lake. Anon as
the king wist that, he took the queen in his hand, and yode unto Sir
Launcelot, and said: Sir, grand merci of your great travail that ye
have had this day for me and for my queen. My lord, said Sir
Launcelot, wit ye well I ought of right ever to be in your quarrel,
and in my lady the queen's quarrel, to do battle; for ye are the man
that gave me the high order of knighthood, and that day my lady,
your queen, did me great worship, and else I had been shamed;
for that same day ye made me knight, through my hastiness I lost my
sword, and my lady, your queen, found it, and lapped it in her train,
and gave me my sword when I had need thereto, and else had I been
shamed among all knights; and therefore, my lord Arthur, I promised
her at that day ever to be her knight in right or in wrong. Grand
merci, said the king, for this journey; and wit ye well, said the
king, I shall acquit your goodness.
And
ever the queen beheld Sir Launcelot, and wept so tenderly that she
sank almost to the ground for sorrow that he had done to her so great
goodness, where she shewed him great unkindness. Then the knights of
his blood drew unto him, and there either of them made great joy of
other. And so came all the knights of the Table Round that were there
at that time, and welcomed him. And then Sir Mador was had to
leech-craft, and Sir Launcelot was healed of his wound. And then
there was made great joy and mirths in that court.
And
so it befell that the damosel of the lake, her name was Nimue, the
which wedded the good knight Sir Pelleas, when she heard how the
queen was an-angered for the death of Sir Patrise, then she told it
openly that she was never guilty; and there she disclosed by whom it
was done, and named him, Sir Pinel; and for what cause he did it; and
so the queen was excused, and the knight Pinel fled into his country.
And then Sir Mador sued daily and long, to have the queen's good
grace; and so by the means of Sir Launcelot he caused him to stand in
the queen's good grace, and all was forgiven.
HOW KING ARTHUR LET CRY A TOURNAMENT
AT CAMELOT OR WINCHESTER, AND HOW SIR LAUNCELOT, RIDING THITHER,
LODGED AT ASTOLAT, AND RECEIVED A SLEEVE TO WEAR ON HIS HELM AT
REQUEST OF A MAID.
Thus
it passed on till our Lady Day, Assumption. Within a fifteen days of
that feast the king let cry a great jousts and a tournament that
should be at that day at Camelot, that is Winchester; and the king
let cry that he and the King of Scots would joust against all that
would come against them. And when this cry was made, thither came
many knights. So there came thither the King of Northgalis, and King
Anguish of Ireland, and the King with the Hundred Knights, and
Galahad, the haut prince, and the King of Northumberland, and many
other noble dukes and earls of divers countries. So King Arthur made
him ready to depart to these jousts, and would have had the queen
with him; but at that time she would not, she said, for she was sick
and might not ride at that time. And many deemed the queen would not
be there because of Sir Launcelot du Lake; for Sir Launcelot would
not ride with the king, for he said that he was not whole of the
wound the which Sir Mador had given him. Wherefore the king was heavy
and passing wroth. And so he departed toward Winchester with his
fellowship; and so by the way the king lodged in a town called
Astolat, that is now in English called Guildford, and there the king
lay in the castle.
So
when the king was departed the queen called Sir Launcelot to her, and
said thus: Sir Launcelot, ye are greatly to blame thus to hold you
behind my lord; what, trow ye, what will your enemies and mine say
and deem? nought else but, See how Sir Launcelot holdeth him ever
behind the king, and so doth the queen, for that they would be
together. And thus will they say, said the queen to Sir Launcelot,
have ye no doubt thereof.
Madam,
said Sir Launcelot, I allow your wit; it is of late come since ye
were wise. And therefore, madam, at this time I will be ruled by your
counsel, and this night I will take my rest, and to-morrow by time I
will take my way toward Winchester. But wit you well, said Sir
Launcelot to the queen, that at that jousts I will be against the
king, and against all his fellowship. Ye may there do as ye list,
said the queen, but by my counsel ye shall not be against your king
and your fellowship. For therein be full many hard knights of your
blood, as ye wot well enough, it needeth not to rehearse them. Madam,
said Sir Launcelot, I pray you that ye be not displeased with me, for
I will take the adventure that God will send me.
And
so upon the morn early Sir Launcelot heard mass and brake his fast,
and so took his leave of the queen and departed. And then he rode so
much until he came to Astolat, that is Guildford; and there it happed
him in the eventide he came to an old baron's place that hight Sir
Bernard of Astolat. And as Sir Launcelot entered into his
lodging, King Arthur espied him as he did walk in a garden beside the
castle, how he took his lodging, and knew him full well. It is well,
said King Arthur unto the knights that were with him in that garden
beside the castle, I have now espied one knight that will play his
play at the jousts to the which we be gone toward; I undertake he
will do marvels. Who is that, we pray you tell us? said many knights
that were there at that time. Ye shall not wit for me, said the king,
as at this time. And so the king smiled, and went to his lodging.
So
when Sir Launcelot was in his lodging, and unarmed him in his
chamber, the old baron came to him making his reverence, and welcomed
him in the best manner; but the old knight knew not Sir Launcelot.
Fair sir, said Sir Launcelot to his host, I would pray you to
lend me a shield that were not openly known, for mine is well known.
Sir, said his host, ye shall have your desire, for meseemeth ye be
one of the likeliest knights of the world, and therefore I shall shew
you friendship. Sir, wit you well I have two sons that were but late
made knights, and the eldest hight Sir Tirre, and he was hurt that
same day he was made knight, that he may not ride, and his shield ye
shall have; for that is not known I dare say but here, and in no
place else. And my youngest son hight Lavaine, and if it please you,
he shall ride with you unto that jousts, and he is of his age strong
and wight; for much my heart giveth unto you that ye should be a
noble knight, therefore I pray you, tell me your name, said Sir
Bernard. As for that, said Sir Launcelot, ye must hold me excused as
at this time, and if God give me grace to speed well at the jousts I
shall come again and tell you. But I pray you, said Sir Launcelot, in
any wise let me have your son, Sir Lavaine, with me, and that I may
have his brother's shield. All this shall be done, said Sir Bernard.
This
old baron had a daughter that was called that time the Fair Maiden of
Astolat. And ever she beheld Sir Launcelot wonderfully, and her
name was Elaine le Blank. So thus as she came to and fro she was so
hot in her love that she besought Sir Launcelot to wear upon him at
the jousts a token of hers. Fair damosel, said Sir Launcelot, an if I
grant you that, ye may say I do more for your love than ever I did
for lady or damosel. Then he remembered him he would go to the jousts
disguised. And because he had never before that time borne no manner
of token of no damosel, then he bethought him that he would bare
one of her, that none of his blood thereby might know him, and then
he said: Fair maiden, I will grant you to wear a token of yours upon
mine helmet, and therefore what it is, shew it me. Sir, she said, it
is a red sleeve of mine, of scarlet, well embroidered with great
pearls: and so she brought it him. So Sir Launcelot received it, and
said: Never did I erst so much for no damosel. And then Sir Launcelot
betook the fair maiden his shield in keeping, and prayed her to keep
that until that he came again; and so that night he had merry rest
and great cheer, for ever the damosel Elaine was about Sir Launcelot
all the while she might be suffered.
OF THE TOURNEY AT WINCHESTER, AND HOW
SIR LAUNCELOT WAS SORE WOUNDED.
So
upon a day, on the morn, King Arthur and all his knights departed,
for the king had tarried there three days to abide his noble knights.
And so when the king was ridden, Sir Launcelot and Sir Lavaine made
them ready to ride, and either of them had white shields, and the red
sleeve Sir Launcelot let carry with him. And so they took their leave
at Sir Bernard, the old baron, and at his daughter, the Fair Maiden
of Astolat. And then they rode so long till that they came to
Camelot, that time called Winchester; and there was great press of
kings, dukes, earls, and barons, and many noble knights. But there
Sir Launcelot was lodged privily by the means of Sir Lavaine with a
rich burgess, that no man in that town was ware what they were. And
so they reposed them there till our Lady Day, Assumption, as the
great feast should be. So then trumpets blew unto the field, and King
Arthur was set on high upon a scaffold to behold who did best. But,
as the French book saith, King Arthur would not suffer Sir Gawaine to
go from him; for never had Sir Gawaine the better, an Sir Launcelot
were in the field; and many times was Sir Gawaine rebuked when
Launcelot came into any jousts disguised.
Then
Sir Launcelot and Sir Lavaine came in at the thickest of the
press, and there Sir Launcelot smote down Sir Brandiles, Sir
Sagramore, Sir Dodinas, Sir Kay, Sir Griflet, and all this he did
with one spear; and Sir Lavaine smote down Sir Lucan de Butler and
Sir Bedevere. And then Sir Launcelot gat another spear, and there he
smote down Sir Agravaine, Sir Gaheris, and Sir Mordred, and Sir
Meliot de Logris; and Sir Lavaine smote Ozanna le Cure Hardy. And
then Sir Launcelot drew his sword, and there he smote on the right
hand and on the left hand, and by great force he unhorsed Sir Safere,
Sir Epinogris, and Sir Galleron; and then the knights of the Table
Round withdrew them aback, after they had gotten their horses as well
as they might. What knight is yonder, said Sir Gawaine, that doth so
marvellous deeds of arms in that field? I wot well what he is, said
King Arthur, but as at this time I will not name him. Sir, said Sir
Gawaine, I would say it were Sir Launcelot by his riding and his
buffets that I see him deal, but ever meseemeth it should not be he,
for that he beareth the red sleeve upon his head; for I wist him
never bear token at no jousts, of lady nor gentlewoman. Let him be,
said King Arthur, he will be better known, and do more, or ever he
depart.
Then
the party that was against King Arthur were well comforted, and then
they held them together that beforehand were sore rebuked. Then
Sir Bors, Sir Ector de Maris, and Sir Lionel called unto them the
knights of their blood, as Sir Blamore de Ganis, Sir Bleoberis, Sir
Aliduke, Sir Galihud, Sir Galihodin, Sir Bellangere le Beuse. So
these nine knights of Sir Launcelot's kin thrust in mightily, for
they were all noble knights; and they, of great hate and despite that
they had unto him, thought to rebuke that noble knight Sir Launcelot,
and Sir Lavaine, for they knew them not; and so they came hurling
together, and smote down many knights of Northgalis and of
Northumberland. And when Sir Launcelot saw them fare so, he gat a
spear in his hand; and there encountered with him all at once Sir
Bors, Sir Ector, and Sir Lionel, and all they three smote him at once
with their spears. And with force of themselves they smote Sir
Launcelot's horse to the earth; and by misfortune Sir Bors smote Sir
Launcelot through the shield into the side, and the spear brake, and
the head left still in his side.
When
Sir Lavaine saw his master lie on the ground, he ran to the King of
Scots and smote him to the earth; and by great force he took his
horse, and brought him to Sir Launcelot, and maugre of them all
he made him to mount upon that horse. And then Launcelot gat a spear
in his hand, and there he smote Sir Bors, horse and man, to the
earth. In the same wise he served Sir Ector and Sir Lionel; and Sir
Lavaine smote down Sir Blamore de Ganis. And there Sir Launcelot with
his sword smote down and pulled down, as the French book maketh
mention, mo than thirty knights, and the most part were of the Table
Round; and Sir Lavaine did full well that day, for he smote down ten
knights of the Table Round.
Mercy,
said Sir Gawaine to Arthur, I marvel what knight that he is with the
red sleeve. Sir, said King Arthur, he will be known or he depart. And
then the king blew unto lodging, and the prize was given by heralds
unto the knight with the white shield that bare the red sleeve. Then
came the King with the Hundred Knights, the King of Northgalis, and
the King of Northumberland, and Sir Galahad, the haut prince, and
said unto Sir Launcelot: Fair knight, God bless thee, for much have
ye done this day for us, therefore we pray you that ye will come with
us that ye may receive the honour and the prize as ye have
worshipfully deserved it. My fair lords, said Sir Launcelot, wit you
well if I have deserved thanks I have sore bought it, and that
me repenteth, for I am like never to escape with my life; therefore,
fair lords, I pray you that ye will suffer me to depart where me
liketh, for I am sore hurt. I take none force of none honour, for I
had liefer to repose me than to be lord of all the world. And
therewithal he groaned piteously, and rode a great wallop away-ward
from them until he came under a wood's side.
And
when he saw that he was from the field nigh a mile, that he was sure
he might not be seen, then he said with an high voice: O gentle
knight, Sir Lavaine, help me that this truncheon were out of my side,
for it sticketh so sore that it nigh slayeth me. O mine own lord,
said Sir Lavaine, I would fain do that might please you, but I dread
me sore an I pull out the truncheon that ye shall be in peril of
death. I charge you, said Sir Launcelot, as ye love me, draw it out.
And therewithal he descended from his horse, and right so did Sir
Lavaine; and forthwithal Sir Lavaine drew the truncheon out of
his side, and he gave a great shriek and a marvellous grisly
groan, and the blood brast out nigh a pint at once, that at the last
he sank down, and so swooned pale and deadly. Alas, said Sir Lavaine,
what shall I do? And then he turned Sir Launcelot into the wind, but
so he lay there nigh half an hour as he had been dead.
And
so at the last Sir Launcelot cast up his eyes, and said: O Lavaine,
help me that I were on my horse, for here is fast by within this two
mile a gentle hermit that sometime was a full noble knight and a
great lord of possessions. And for great goodness he hath taken him
to wilful poverty, and forsaken many lands, and his name is Sir
Baudwin of Brittany, and he is a full noble surgeon and a good leech.
Now let see, help me up that I were there; for ever my heart giveth
me that I shall never die of my cousin-germain's hands. And then with
great pain Sir Lavaine halp him upon his horse. And then they rode a
great wallop together, and ever Sir Launcelot bled that it ran down
to the earth; and so by fortune they came to that hermitage, the
which was under a wood, and a great cliff on the other side, and a
fair water running under it. And then Sir Lavaine beat on the gate
with the butt of his spear, and cried fast: Let in for Jesu's sake.
And
there came a fair child to them, and asked them what they would. Fair
son, said Sir Lavaine, go and pray thy lord, the hermit, for God's
sake to let in here a knight that is full sore wounded; and this day,
tell thy lord, I saw him do more deeds of arms than ever I heard say
that any man did. So the child went in lightly, and then he brought
the hermit, the which was a passing good man. When Sir Lavaine saw
him he prayed him for God's sake of succour. What knight is he? said
the hermit. Is he of the house of King Arthur, or not? I wot not,
said Sir Lavaine, what is he, nor what is his name, but well I wot I
saw him do marvellously this day as of deeds of arms. On whose
party was he? said the hermit. Sir, said Sir Lavaine, he was this day
against King Arthur, and there he won the prize of all the knights of
the Round Table. I have seen the day, said the hermit, I would have
loved him the worse because he was against my lord, King Arthur, for
sometime I was One of the fellowship of the Round Table, but I thank
God now I am otherwise disposed. But where is he? let me see him.
Then Sir Lavaine brought the hermit to him.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT WAS BROUGHT TO AN
HERMIT FOR TO BE HEALED, AND HOW IT BECAME KNOWN THAT IT WAS HE THAT
BARE THE RED SLEEVE, AND OF THE ANGER OF THE QUEEN.
And
when the hermit beheld him, as he sat leaning upon his saddle-bow
ever bleeding piteously, and ever the knight-hermit thought that
he should know him, but he could not bring him to knowledge because
he was so pale for bleeding. What knight are ye, said the hermit, and
where were ye born? My fair lord, said Sir Launcelot, I am a stranger
and a knight adventurous, that laboureth throughout many realms
for to win worship. Then the hermit advised him better, and saw by a
wound on his cheek that he was Sir Launcelot. Alas, said the hermit,
mine own lord why hide you your name from me? Forsooth I ought to
know you of right, for ye are the most noblest knight of the world,
for well I know you for Sir Launcelot. Sir, said he, sith ye know me,
help me an ye may, for God's sake, for I would be out of this pain at
once, either to death or to life. Have ye no doubt, said the hermit,
ye shall live and fare right well. And so the hermit called to him
two of his servants, and so he and his servants bare him into the
hermitage, and lightly unarmed him, and laid him in his bed. And then
anon the hermit staunched his blood, and made him to drink good wine,
so that Sir Launcelot was well refreshed and knew himself; for in
those days it was not the guise of hermits as is nowadays, for there
were none hermits in those days but that they had been men of worship
and of prowess; and those hermits held great household, and refreshed
people that were in distress.
Now
turn we unto King Arthur, and leave we Sir Launcelot in the
hermitage. So when the kings were come together On both parties, and
the great feast should be holden, King Arthur asked the King of
Northgalis and their fellowship, where was that knight that bare the
red sleeve: Bring him afore me that he may have his laud, and honour,
and the prize, as it is right. Then spake Sir Galahad, the haut
prince, and the King with the Hundred Knights: We suppose that
knight is mischieved, and that he is never like to see you nor none
of us all, and that is the greatest pity that ever we wist of any
knight. Alas, said Arthur, how may this be? is he so hurt? What is
his name? said King Arthur. Truly, said they all, we know not his
name, nor from whence he came, nor whither he would. Alas, said the
king, these be to me the worst tidings that came to me this seven
year, for I would not for all the lands I wield to know and wit it
were so that that noble knight were slain. Know ye him? said they
all. As for that, said Arthur, whether I know him or know him not, ye
shall not know for me what man he is, but Almighty Jesu send me good
tidings of him. And so said they all. By my head, said Sir Gawaine,
if it so be that the good knight be so sore hurt, it is great damage
and pity to all this land, for he is one of the noblest knights that
ever I saw in a field handle a spear or a sword; and if he may be
found I shall find him, for I am sure he is not far from this town.
Right
so Sir Gawaine took a squire with him upon hackneys, and rode
all about Camelot within six or seven mile, but so he came again and
could hear no word of him. Then within two days King Arthur and all
the fellowship returned unto London again. And so as they rode by the
way it happed Sir Gawaine at Astolat to lodge with Sir Bernard
thereas was Sir Launcelot lodged. And so as Sir Gawaine was in his
chamber to repose him, Sir Bernard, the old baron, came unto him, and
his daughter Elaine, to cheer him and to ask him what tidings, and
who did best at that tournament of Winchester. So God me help, said
Sir Gawaine, there were two knights that bare two white shields, but
the one of them bare a red sleeve upon his head, and certainly he was
one of the best knights that ever I saw joust in field. For I dare
say, said Sir Gawaine, that one knight with the red sleeve smote down
forty knights of the Table Round, and his fellow did right well and
worshipfully. Now blessed be God, said the Fair Maiden of Astolat,
that that knight sped so well, for he is the man in the world that I
first loved, and truly he shall be last that ever I shall love. Now,
fair maid, said Sir Gawaine, is that good knight your love?
Certainly sir, said she, wit ye well he is my love. Then know ye
his name? said Sir Gawaine. Nay truly, said the damosel, I know not
his name nor from whence he cometh, but to say that I love him, I
promise you and God that I love him. How had ye knowledge of him
first? said Sir Gawaine.
Then
she told him as ye have heard to-fore, and how her father betook him
her brother to do him service, and how her father lent him her
brother's, Sir Tirre's, shield: And here with me he left his own
shield. For what cause did he so? said Sir Gawaine. For this cause,
said the damosel, for his shield was too well known among many noble
knights. Ah, fair damosel, said Sir Gawaine, please it you let me
have a sight of that shield. Sir, said she, it is in my chamber,
covered with a case, and if ye will come with me ye shall see it. Not
so, said Sir Bernard to his daughter, let send for it.
So
when the shield was, come, Sir Gawaine took off the case, and when he
beheld that shield he knew anon that it was Sir Launcelot's shield,
and his own arms. Ah Jesu mercy, said Sir Gawaine, now is my heart
more heavier than ever it was to-fore. Why? said Elaine. For I have
great cause, said Sir Gawaine. Is that knight that oweth this shield
your love? Yea truly, said she, my love he is; God would I were his
love. So God me speed, said Sir Gawaine, fair damosel ye have
right, for an he be your love ye love the most honourable knight of
the world, and the man of most worship. But I dread me, said Sir
Gawaine, that ye shall never see him in this world, and that is great
pity that ever was of earthly knight. Alas, said she, how may this
be, is he slain? I say not so, said Sir Gawaine, but wit ye well he
is grievously wounded, by all manner of signs, and by men's sight
more likelier to be dead than to be alive; and wit ye well he is the
noble knight, Sir Launcelot, for by this shield I know him.
Alas, said the Fair Maiden of Astolat, how may this be, and what was
his hurt? Truly, said Sir Gawaine, the man in the world that loved
him best hurt him so; and I dare say, said Sir Gawaine, an that
knight that hurt him knew the very certainty that he had hurt Sir
Launcelot, it would be the most sorrow that ever came to his heart.
Now
fair father, said then Elaine, I require you give me leave to ride
and to seek him, or else I wot well I shall go out of my mind, for I
shall never stint till that I find him and my brother, Sir Lavaine.
Do as it liketh you, said her father, for me sore repenteth of the
hurt of that noble knight. Right so the maid made her ready, and
before Sir Gawaine, making great dole.
Then
on the morn Sir Gawaine came to King Arthur, and told him how he had
found Sir Launcelot's shield in the keeping of the Fair Maiden of
Astolat. So the king and all came to London, and there Sir Gawaine
openly disclosed to all the court that it was Sir Launcelot that
jousted best
And
when Sir Bors heard that, wit ye well he was an heavy man, and so
were all his kinsmen. But when Queen Guenever wist that Sir Launcelot
bare the red sleeve of the Fair Maiden of Astolat she was nigh out of
her mind for wrath. And then she sent for Sir Bors de Ganis in all
the haste that might be. So when Sir Bors was come to-fore the queen,
then she said: Ah, Sir Bors, have ye heard say how falsely Sir
Launcelot hath betrayed me? Alas madam, said Sir Bors, I am afeard he
hath betrayed himself and us all. No force, said the queen, though he
be destroyed, for he is a false traitor-knight. Madam, said Sir Bors,
I pray you say ye not so, for wit you well I may not hear such
language of him. Why, Sir Bors, said she, should I not call him
traitor when he bare the red sleeve upon his head at Winchester, at
the great jousts? Madam, said Sir Bors, that sleeve-bearing repenteth
me sore, but I dare say he did it to none evil intent, but for this
cause he bare the red sleeve that none of his blood should know him.
For ere then we, nor none of us all, never knew that ever he bare
token or sign of maid, lady, ne gentlewoman. Fie on him, said the
queen, for I heard Sir Gawaine say before my lord Arthur that it were
marvel to tell the great love that is between the Fair Maiden of
Astolat and him. Madam, said Sir Bors, I may not warn Sir Gawaine to
say what it pleased him; but I dare say, as for my lord, Sir
Launcelot, that he loveth no. lady, gentlewoman, nor maid, but all he
loveth in like much. And therefore madam, said Sir Bors, ye may say
what ye will, but wit ye well I will haste me to seek him, and find
him wheresomever he be, and God send me good tidings of him. And so
leave we them there, and speak we of Sir Launcelot that lay in
great peril.
HOW THE MAIDEN ELAINE DID ATTENDANCE
UNTO SIR LAUNCELOT, AND OF HER LAMENTATION THAT HE SHOULD DEPART, AND
HOW SHE DIED FOR HIS LOVE, AND HOW HER BODY WAS BROUGHT TO THE COURT
AND OF HER BURYING.
So
as fair Elaine came to Winchester she sought there all about, and by
fortune Sir Lavaine was ridden to play him, to enchafe his horse. And
anon as Elaine saw him she knew him, and then she cried aloud unto
him. And when he heard her anon he came to her, and then she asked
her brother how did my lord, Sir Launcelot. Who told you, sister,
that my lord's name was Sir Launcelot? Then she told him how Sir
Gawaine by his shield knew him. So they rode together till that they
came to the hermitage, and anon she alighted.
So
Sir Lavaine brought her in to Sir Launcelot; and when she saw him lie
so sick and pale in his bed she might not speak, but suddenly she
fell to the earth down suddenly in a swoon, and there she lay a great
while. And when she was relieved, she shrieked and said: My lord, Sir
Launcelot, alas why be ye in this plight? and then she swooned
again. And then Sir Launcelot prayed Sir Lavaine to take her up: And
bring her to me. And when she came to herself Sir Launcelot
kissed her, and said: Fair maiden, why fare ye thus? ye put me to
pain; wherefore make ye no more such cheer, for an ye be come to
comfort me ye be right welcome; and of this little hurt that I have I
shall be right hastily whole by the grace of God. But I marvel, said
Sir Launcelot, who told you my name? Then the fair maiden told him
all how Sir Gawaine was lodged with her father: And there by your
shield he discovered your name. Alas, said Sir Launcelot, that me
repenteth that my name is known, for I am sure it will turn unto
anger. And then Sir Launcelot compassed in his mind that Sir Gawaine
would tell Queen Guenever how he bare the red sleeve, and for whom;
that he wist well would turn into great anger.
So
this maiden Elaine never went from Sir Launcelot, but watched him day
and night, and did such attendance to him, that the French book saith
there was never woman did more kindlier for man than she. And so Sir
Launcelot was big and strong again.
How King Arthur and Queen Guenevere went to see the barge that borethe corpse of Elaine the Fair Maiden of Astolat.
So
then they made them ready to depart from the hermit. And so upon a
morn they took their horses and Elaine le Blank with them; and when
they came to Astolat there were they well lodged, and had great cheer
of Sir Bernard, the old baron, and of Sir Tirre, his son. And so upon
the morn when Sir Launcelot should depart, fair Elaine brought her
father with her, and Sir Lavaine, and Sir Tirre, and thus she said:
My
lord, Sir Launcelot, now I see ye will depart; now fair knight and
courteous knight, have mercy upon me, and suffer me not to die for
thy love. What would ye that I did? said Sir Launcelot. I would have
you to my husband, said Elaine. Fair damosel, I thank you, said Sir
Launcelot, but truly, said he, I cast me never to be wedded man.
Then, fair knight, said she, will ye be my lover? Jesu defend me,
said Sir Launcelot, for then I rewarded your father and your brother
full evil for their great goodness. Alas, said she, then must I die
for your love. Ye shall not so, said Sir Launcelot, for wit ye well,
fair maiden, I might have been married an I had would, but I never
applied me to be married yet; but because, fair damosel, that ye love
me as ye say ye do, I will for your good will and kindness show you
some goodness, and that is this, that wheresomever ye will beset your
heart upon some good knight that will wed you, I shall give you
together a thousand pound yearly to you and to your heirs; thus much
will I give you, fair madam, for your kindness, and always while I
live to be your own knight. of all this, said the maiden, I will
none, for but if ye will wed me, or else be my lover at the least,
wit you well, Sir Launcelot, my good days are done. Fair damosel,
said Sir Launcelot, of these two things ye must pardon me.
Then
she shrieked shrilly, and fell down in a swoon; and then women bare
her into her chamber, and there she made overmuch sorrow; and then
Sir Launcelot would depart, and there he asked Sir Lavaine what he
would do.
What
should I do, said Sir Lavaine, but follow you, but if ye drive me
from you, or command me to go from you. Then came Sir Bernard to Sir
Launcelot and said to him: I cannot see but that my daughter Elaine
will die for your sake. Father, said Sir Lavaine, she doth as I do,
for sithen I first saw my lord Sir Launcelot, I could never depart
from him, nor nought I will an I may follow him.
Then
Sir Launcelot took his leave, and so they departed, and
came unto Winchester. And when Arthur wist that Sir Launcelot was
come whole and sound the king made great joy of him, and so did Sir
Gawaine and all the knights of the Round Table except Sir Agravaine
and Sir Mordred. Also Queen Guenever was wood wroth with Sir
Launcelot, and would by no means speak with him, but estranged
herself from him; and Sir Launcelot made all the means that he
might for to speak with the queen, but it would not be.
Now
speak we of the Fair Maiden of Astolat that made such sorrow day and
night that she never slept, ate, nor drank, and ever she made her
complaint unto Sir Launcelot. So when she had thus endured a ten
days, that she feebled so that she must needs pass out of this world,
then she shrived her clean, and received her Creator. And ever she
complained still upon Sir Launcelot. Then her ghostly father
bade her leave such thoughts. Then she said, why should I leave such
thoughts? An I not an earthly woman? And all the while, the breath is
in my body I may complain me, for my belief is I do none offence
though I love an earthly man; and I take God to my record I loved
never none but Sir Launcelot du Lake, nor never shall, and a clean
maiden I am for him and for all other; and sithen it is the
sufferance of God that I shall die for the love of so noble a knight,
I beseech the High Father of Heaven to have mercy upon my soul, and
that mine innumerable pains that I suffered may be allegiance of part
of my sins. For sweet Lord Jesu, said the fair maiden, I take thee to
record, on thee I was never great offencer against thy laws; but that
I loved this noble knight, Sir Launcelot, out of measure, and of
myself, good Lord, I might not withstand the fervent love wherefore I
have my death.
And
then she called her father, Sir Bernard, and her brother, Sir Tirre,
and heartily she prayed her father that her brother might write a
letter like as she did indite it: and so her father granted her. And
when the letter was written word by word like as she devised, then
she prayed her father that she might be watched until she were dead.
And while my body is hot let this letter be put in my right hand, and
my hand bound fast with the letter until that I be cold; and let me
be put in a fair bed with all the richest clothes that I have about
me, and so let my bed and all my richest clothes be laid with me in a
chariot unto the next place where Thames is; and there let me be put
within a barget, and but one man with me, such as ye trust to steer
me thither, and that my barget be covered with black samite over and
over: thus father I beseech you let it be done. So her father granted
it her faithfully, all things should be done like as she had devised.
Then her father and her brother made great dole, for when this was
done anon she died. And so the corpse and the bed were borne the next
way unto Thames, and there a man, and the corpse, and all, were put
into Thames; and so the man steered the barget unto Westminster, and
there he rowed a great while to and fro ere any espied it.
So
by fortune King Arthur and the Queen Guenever were speaking together
at a window, and so as they looked into Thames they espied this black
barget, and had marvel what it meant. Then the king called Sir Kay,
and showed it him. Sir, said Sir Kay, wit you well there is some new
tidings. Go thither, said the king to Sir Kay, and take with you Sir
Brandiles and Agravaine, and bring me ready word what is there. Then
these knights departed and came to the barget and went in; and there
they found the fairest corpse lying in a rich bed, and a poor man
sitting in the barget's end, and no word would he speak. So these
knights returned unto the king again, and told him what they found.
That fair corpse will I see, said the king. And so then the king took
the queen by the hand, and went thither.
Then
the king made the barget to be holden fast, and then the king and the
queen entered with certain knights with them; and there he saw the
fairest woman lie in a rich bed, covered unto her middle with many
rich clothes, and all was of cloth of gold, and she lay as though she
had smiled. Then the queen espied a letter in her right hand, and
told it to the king. Then the king took it and said: Now am I sure
this letter will tell what she was, and why she is come hither. So
then the king and the queen went out of the barget, and so commanded
a certain man to wait upon the barget.
And
so when the king was come within his chamber, he called many knights
about him, and said that he would wit openly what was written within
that letter. Then the king brake it, and made a clerk to read it, and
this was the intent of the letter. Most noble knight, Sir Launcelot,
now hath death made us two at debate for your love. I was your lover,
that men called the Fair Maiden of Astolat; therefore unto all ladies
I make my moan; yet pray for my soul and bury me at least, and offer
ye my mass-penny: this is my last request. And a clean maiden I died,
I take God to witness: pray for my soul, Sir Launcelot, as thou art
peerless. This was all the substance in the letter. And when it
was read, the king, the queen, and all the knights wept for pity of
the doleful complaints. Then was Sir Launcelot sent for; and when he
was come King Arthur made the letter to be read to him.
And
when Sir Launcelot heard it word by word, he said: My lord Arthur,
wit ye well I am right heavy of the death of this fair damosel: God
knoweth I was never causer of her death by my willing, and that will
I report me to her own brother: here he is, Sir Lavaine. I will not
say nay, said Sir Launcelot, but that she was both fair and good, and
much I was beholden unto her, but she loved me out of measure. Ye
might have shewed her, said the queen, some bounty and gentleness
that might have preserved her life. Madam, said Sir Launcelot, she
would none other ways be answered but that she would be my wife, or
else my love; and of these two. I would not grant her, but I
proffered her, for her good love that she shewed me, a thousand pound
yearly to her, and to her heirs, and to wed any manner knight that
she could find best to love in her heart. For madam, said Sir
Launcelot, I love not to be constrained to love; for love must arise
of the heart, and not by no constraint. That is truth, said the king
and many knights: love is free in himself, and never will be bounden,
for where he is bounden he looseth himself.
Then
said the king unto Sir Launcelot: It will be your worship that ye
oversee that she be interred worshipfully. Sir, said Sir Launcelot,
that shall be done as I can best devise. And so many knights
went thither to behold that fair maiden. And so upon the morn she was
interred richly, and Sir Launcelot offered her mass-penny; and all
the knights of the Table Round that were there at that time offered
with Sir Launcelot. And then the poor man went again with the barget.
Then the queen sent for Sir Launcelot, and prayed him of mercy, for
why that she had been wroth with him causeless. This is not the first
time, said Sir Launcelot, that ye have been displeased with me
causeless; but, madam, ever I must suffer you, but what sorrow I
endure I take no force. So thus passed on all that winter, with all
manner of hunting and hawking; and jousts and tourneys were many
betwixt many great lords, and ever in all places Sir Lavaine gat
great worship.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT WENT TO REPOSE HIM
AT A HERMITAGE, AND HOW HE WAS HURT OF A GENTLEWOMAN, AND OF A GREAT
TOURNEY ORDAINED BY KING ARTHUR. Thus it passed on till Christmas,
and then every day there was jousts made for a diamond, who that
jousted best should have a diamond. But Sir Launcelot would not joust
but if it were at a great jousts cried. But Sir Lavaine jousted there
all that Christmas passingly well, and best was praised, for there
were but few that did so well. 'Wherefore all manner of knights
deemed that Sir Lavaine should be made knight of the Table Round at
the next feast of Pentecost. So at-after Christmas King Arthur let
call unto him many knights, and there they advised together to make a
party and a great tournament and jousts, beside Westminster upon
Candlemas Day.
Then
Queen Guenever sent for Sir Launcelot, and said thus: I warn you that
ye ride no more in no jousts nor tournaments but that your
kinsmen may know you. And at these jousts that shall be ye shall have
of me a sleeve of gold; and I pray you for my sake enforce yourself
there, that men may speak of you worship; but I charge you as ye will
have my love, that ye warn your kinsmen that ye will bear that day
the sleeve of gold upon your helmet. Madam, said Sir Launcelot, it
shall be done. And so either made great joy of other. And when Sir
Launcelot saw his time he. told Sir Bors that he would depart, and
have no more with him but Sir Lavaine, unto the good hermit that
dwelt in that forest of Windsor; his name was Sir Brasias; and there
he thought to repose him, and take all the rest that he might,
because he would be fresh at that day of jousts.
So
Sir Launcelot and Sir Lavaine departed, that no creature wist where
he was become, but the noble men of his blood. And when he was come
to the hermitage, wit ye well he had good cheer. And so daily Sir
Launcelot would go to a well fast by the hermitage, and there he
would lie down, and see the well spring and burble, and sometime he
slept there. So at that time there was a lady dwelt in that forest,
and she was a great huntress, and daily she used to hunt, and ever
she bare her bow with her; and no men went never with her, but always
women, and they were shooters, and could well kill a deer, both at
the stalk and at the trest; and they daily bare bows and arrows,
horns and wood-knives, and many good does they had, both for the
string and for a bate. So it happed this lady the huntress had
abated her dog for the bow at a barren hind, and so this barren hind
took the flight over hedges and woods. And ever this lady and part of
her women costed the hind, and checked it by the noise of the hounds,
to have met with the hind at some water; and so it happed, the hind
came to the well whereas Sir Launcelot was sleeping and slumbering.
And so when the hind came to the well, for heat she went to soil, and
there she lay a great while; and the dogs came after, and umbecast
about, for they had lost the very perfect feute of the hind. Right so
came that lady the huntress, that knew by the dog that she had,
that the hind was at the soil in that well; and there she came
stiffly and found the hind, and she put a broad arrow in her bow, and
shot at the hind, and over-shot the hind; and so by misfortune the
arrow smote Sir Launcelot in the thick of the thigh, over the barbs.
When Sir Launcelot felt himself so hurt, he hurled up woodly, and saw
the lady that had smitten him. And when he saw she was a woman, he
said thus: Lady or damosel, what that thou be, in an evil time bear
ye a bow; the devil made you a shooter.
Now
mercy, fair sir, said the lady, I am a gentlewoman that useth here in
this forest hunting, and God knoweth I saw ye not; but as here was a
barren hind at the soil in this well, and I weened to have done well,
but my hand swerved. Alas, said Sir Launcelot, ye have mischieved me.
And so the lady departed, and Sir Launcelot, as he might, pulled out
the arrow, and so he went weakly to the hermitage ever more bleeding
as he went. And when Sir Lavaine and the hermit espied that Sir
Launcelot was hurt, wit you well they were passing heavy. Then with
great pain the hermit gat out the arrow's head out of Sir Launcelot's
thigh, and much of his blood he shed; and the wound was passing sore,
and unhappily smitten; for it was in such a place that he might not
sit in no saddle. Now so heaven me help, said Sir Launcelot, I shall
be in the field upon Candlemas Day at the jousts, whatsomever fall of
it. So all that might be gotten to heal Sir Launcelot was had.
So
when the day was come Sir Launcelot let devise that he was arrayed,
and Sir Lavaine, and their horses, as though they had been Saracens.
Then they blew to the field; and there the King of Northgalis
encountered with the King of Scots, and there the King of Scots had a
fall; and the King of Ireland smote down King Uriens; and the King of
Northumberland smote down King Howel of Brittany; and Sir
Galahad, the haut prince, smote down Chaleins of Clarance. And then
King Arthur was wood wroth, and ran to the King with the Hundred
Knights, and there King Arthur smote him down; and after with that
same spear King Arthur smote down three other knights.
All
this doing saw Sir Launcelot, and then he came into the field with
Sir Lavaine as it had been thunder. And then anon Sir Bors and the
knights of his blood espied Sir Launcelot, and said to them all: I
warn you beware of him with the sleeve of gold upon his head, for he
is himself Sir Launcelot du Lake; and for great goodness Sir Bors
warned Sir Gareth. I am well apaid, said Sir Gareth, that I may know
him. But who is he, said they all, that rideth with him in the same
array? That is the good and gentle knight Sir Lavaine, said Sir Bors.
So Sir Launcelot encountered with Sir Gawaine, and there by force Sir
Launcelot smote down Sir Gawaine and his horse to the earth, and so
he smote down Sir Agravaine and Sir Gaheris, and also he smote down
Sir Mordred, and all this was with one spear. Then Sir Lavaine met
with Sir Palomides, and either met other so hard and so fiercely that
both their horses fell to the earth. And then were they horsed again,
.and then met Sir Launcelot with Sir Palomides, and there Sir
Palomides had a fall; and so Sir Launcelot or ever he stint, as fast
as he might get spears, he smote down thirty knights, and the most
part of them were knights of the Table Round; and ever the knights of
his blood withdrew them, and made them ado in other places where Sir
Launcelot came not.
And
then King Arthur was wroth when he saw Sir Launcelot do such
deeds; and then the king called unto him Sir Gawaine, Sir Mordred,
Sir Kay, Sir Griflet, Sir Lucan the Butler, Sir Bedevere, Sir
Palomides, Sir Safere, his brother; and so the king with these nine
knights made them ready to set upon Sir Launcelot, and upon Sir
Lavaine. All this espied Sir Bors and Sir Gareth. Now I dread me
sore, said Sir Bors, that my lord, Sir Launcelot, will be hard
matched. By my head, said Sir Gareth, I will ride unto my lord Sir
Launcelot, for to help him, fall of him what fall may, for he is
the same man that made me knight. Ye shall not so, said Sir Bors, by
my counsel, unless that ye were disguised. Ye shall see me disguised,
said Sir Gareth; and therewithal he espied a Welsh knight where he
was to repose him, and he was sore hurt afore by Sir Gawaine, and to
him Sir Gareth rode, and prayed him of his knighthood to lend him his
shield for his. I will well, said the Welsh knight. And when Sir
Gareth had his shield, the book saith it was green, with a maiden
that seemed in it.
Then
Sir Gareth came driving to Sir Launcelot all that he might and said:
Knight, keep thyself, for yonder cometh King Arthur with nine noble
knights with him to put you to a rebuke, and so I am come to bear you
fellowship for old love ye have shewed me. Gramercy, said Sir
Launcelot. Sir, said Sir Gareth, encounter ye with Sir Gawaine, and I
shall encounter with Sir Palomides; and let Sir Lavaine match with
the noble King Arthur. And when we have delivered them, let us three
hold us sadly together. Then came King Arthur with his nine knights
with him, and Sir Launcelot encountered with Sir Gawaine, and gave
him such a buffet that the arson of his saddle brast, and Sir Gawaine
fell to the earth. Then Sir Gareth encountered with the good knight
Sir Palomides, and he gave him such a buffet that both his horse and
he dashed to the earth. Then encountered King Arthur with Sir
Lavaine, and there either of them smote other to the earth, horse and
all, that they lay a great while. Then Sir Launcelot smote down Sir
Agravaine, and Sir Gaheris, and Sir Mordred; and Sir Gareth smote
down Sir Kay, and Sir Safere, and Sir Griflet. And then Sir Lavaine
was horsed again, and he smote down Sir Lucan the Butler and Sir
Bedevere; and then there began great throng of good knights.
So
this tournament and this jousts dured long, till it was near night,
for the knights of the Round Table relieved ever unto King Arthur;
for the king was wroth out of measure that he and his knights might
not prevail that day. Then Sir Gawaine said to the king: I marvel
where all this day be Sir Bors de Ganis and his fellowship of Sir
Launcelot's blood, I marvel all this day they be not about you: it is
for some cause said Sir Gawaine. By my head, said Sir Kay, Sir Bors
is yonder all this day upon the right hand of this field, and there
he and his blood do more worshipfully than we do. It may well be,
said Sir Gawaine, but I dread me ever of guile; for on pain of my
life, said Sir Gawaine, this knight with the red sleeve of gold is
himself Sir Launcelot, I see well by his riding and by his great
strokes; and the other knight in the same colours is the good young
knight, Sir Lavaine. Also that knight with the green shield is my
brother, Sir Gareth, and yet he hath disguised himself, for no man
shall never make him be against Sir Launcelot, because he made him
knight. By my head, said Arthur, nephew, I believe you; therefore
tell me now what is your best counsel. Sir, said Sir Gawaine, ye
shall have my counsel: let blow unto lodging, for an he be Sir
Launcelot du Lake, and my brother, Sir Gareth, with him, with the
help of that good young knight, Sir Lavaine, trust me truly it will
be no boot to strive with them but if we should fall ten or twelve
upon one knight, and that were no worship, but shame. Ye say truth,
said the king; and for to say sooth, said the king, it were shame to
us so many as we be to set upon them any more; for wit ye well, said
King Arthur, they be three good knights, and namely that knight with
the sleeve of gold.
So
then they blew into lodging; but forthwithal King Arthur let send
unto the four kings, and to the mighty duke, and prayed them that the
knight with the sleeve of gold depart not from them, but that the
king may speak with him. Then forthwithal King Arthur alighted and
unarmed him, and took a little hackney and rode after Sir Launcelot,
for ever he had a spy upon him. And so he found him among the four
kings and the duke; and there the king prayed them all unto supper,
and they said they would with good will. And when they were unarmed
then King Arthur knew Sir Launcelot, Sir Lavaine, and Sir Gareth. Ah,
Sir Launcelot, said King Arthur, this day ye have heated me and my
knights.
So
they went unto Arthur's lodging all together, and there was a great
feast and great revel, and the prize was given unto Sir Launcelot;
and by heralds they named him that he had smitten down fifty knights,
and Sir Gareth five-and-thirty, and Sir Lavaine four-and-twenty
knights. Then Arthur blamed Sir Gareth because he left his fellowship
and held with Sir Launcelot. My lord, said Sir Gareth, he made me a
knight, and when I saw him so hard bestead, methought it was my
worship to help him, for I saw him do so much, and so many noble
knights against him; and when I understood that he was Sir Launcelot
du Lake, I shamed to see so many knights against him alone. Truly,
said King Arthur unto Sir Gareth, ye say well, and worshipfully have
ye done and to yourself great worship; and all the days of my life,
said King Arthur unto Sir Gareth, wit you well I shall love you, and
trust you the more better. For ever, said Arthur, it is a worshipful
knight's deed to help another worshipful knight when he seeth him in
a great danger; for ever a worshipful man will be loath to see a
worshipful man shamed; and he that is of no worship, and fareth with
cowardice, never shall he show gentleness, nor no manner of goodness
where he seeth a man in any danger, for then ever will a coward show
no mercy; and always a good man will do ever to another man as he
would be done to himself. So then there were great feasts unto kings
and dukes, and revel, game, and play, and all manner of noblesse was
used; and he that was courteous, true, and faithful, to his friend
was that time cherished.
OF THE MONTH OF MAY AND OF TRUE
LOVERS, AND HOW QUEEN GUENEVER RODE A-MAYING WITH CERTAIN KNIGHTS OF
THE ROUND TABLE, AND CLAD ALL IN GREEN, AND HOW SIR MELIAGRANCE TOOK
THE QUEEN AND HER KNIGHTS.
And
thus it passed on from Candlemas until after Easter, that the month
of May was come, when every lusty heart beginneth to blossom, and to
bring forth fruit; for like as herbs and trees bring forth fruit and
flourish in May, in like wise every lusty heart, that is in any
manner a lover, springeth and flourisheth in lusty deeds. For it
giveth unto all lovers courage, that lusty month of May, in something
to constrain him to some manner of thing more in that month than in
any other month, for divers causes. For then all herbs and trees
renew a man and woman, and likewise lovers call again to their mind
old gentleness and old service, and many kind deeds that were
forgotten by negligence. For like as winter rasure doth alway arase
and deface green summer, so fareth it by unstable love in man and
woman. For in many persons there is no stability; for we may see all
day, for a little blast of winter's rasure, anon we shall deface and
lay apart true love for little or nought, that cost much thing; this
is no wisdom nor stability, but it is feebleness of nature and great
disworship, whosomever useth this. Therefore, like as May month
flowereth and flourisheth in many gardens, so in like wise let every
man of worship flourish his heart in this world, first unto God, and
next unto the joy of them that he promised his faith unto; for there
was never worshipful man or worshipful woman, but they loved one
better than another; and worship in arms may never be foiled, but
first reserve the honour to God, and secondly the quarrel must come
of thy lady: and such love I call virtuous love.
How Queen Guenever rode a-maying into the woods andfields beside Westminster.
But
nowadays men can not love seven night but they must have all their
desires: that love may not endure by reason; for where they be soon
accorded and hasty heat, soon it cooleth. Right so fareth love
nowadays, soon hot soon cold: this is no stability. But the old love
was not so; men and women could love together seven years, and no
wanton lusts were between them, and then was love truth and
faithfulness: and lo, in like wise was used love in King Arthur's
days. Wherefore I liken love nowadays unto summer and winter;
for like as the one is hot and the other cold, so fareth love
nowadays. Therefore all ye that be lovers call unto your remembrance
the month of May, like as did Queen Guenever, for whom I make here a
little mention, that while she lived she was a true lover, and
therefore she had a good end.
So
it befell in the month of May, Queen Guenever called unto her knights
of the Table Round, and she gave them warning that early upon the
morrow she would ride a-Maying into woods and fields beside
Westminster. And I warn you that there be none of you but that he be
well horsed, and that ye all be clothed in green, outher in silk
outher in cloth; and I shall bring with me ten ladies, and every
knight shall have a lady behind him, and every knight shall have a
squire and two yeomen; and I will that ye all be well horsed. So they
made them ready in the freshest manner. And these were the names of
the knights: Sir Kay le Seneschal, Sir Agravaine, Sir Brandiles, Sir
Sagramore le Desirous, Sir Dodinas le Savage, Sir Ozanna le Cure
Hardy, Sir Ladinas of the Forest Savage, Sir Persant of Inde, Sir
Ironside, that was called the Knight of the Red Launds, and Sir
Pelleas, the lover; and these ten knights made them ready in the
freshest manner to ride with the queen. And so upon the morn they
took their horses with the queen, and rode a-Maying in woods and
meadows as it pleased them, in great joy and delights; for the queen
had cast to have been again with King Arthur at the furthest by ten
of the clock, and so was that time her purpose.
Then
there was a knight that hight Meliagrance, and he was son unto King
Bagdemagus, and this knight had at that time a castle of the gift of
King Arthur within seven mile of Westminster. And this knight, Sir
Meliagrance, loved passing well Queen Guenever, and so had he
done long and many years. And the book saith he had lain in await for
to steal away the queen, but evermore he forbare for because of Sir
Launcelot; for in no wise he would meddle with the queen an Sir
Launcelot were in her company, or else an he were near-hand her. And
that time was such a custom the queen rode never without a great
fellowship of men of arms about her, and they were many good knights,
and the most part were young men that would have worship; and they
were called the Queen's Knights, and never in no battle, tournament,
nor jousts, they bare none of them no manner of knowledging of
their own arms, but plain white shields, and thereby they were called
the Queen's Knights. And then when it happed any of them to be of
great worship by his noble deeds, then at the next Feast of
Pentecost, if there were any slain or dead, as there was none year
that there failed but some were dead, then was there chosen in his
stead that was dead the most men of worship, that were called the
Queen's Knights. And thus they came up all first, ere they were
renowned men of worship, both Sir Launcelot and all the remnant of
them.
But
this knight, Sir Meliagrance, had espied the queen well and her
purpose, and how Sir Launcelot was not with her, and how she had no
men of arms with her but the ten noble knights all arrayed in green
for Maying. Then he purveyed him a twenty men of arms and an hundred
archers for to destroy the queen and her knights, for he thought that
time was best season to take the queen.
So
as the queen had mayed and all her knights, all were bedashed with
herbs, mosses and flowers, in the best manner and freshest. Right so
came out of a wood Sir Meliagrance with an eight score men well
harnessed, as they should fight in a battle of arrest, and bade the
queen and her knights abide, for maugre their heads they should
abide. Traitor knight, said Queen Guenever, what cast thou for to do?
Wilt thou shame thyself? Bethink thee how thou art a king's son, and
knight of the Table Round, and thou to be about to dishonour the
noble king that made thee knight; thou shamest all knighthood and
thyself; and me, I let thee wit, shalt thou never shame, for I had
liefer cut mine own throat in twain rather than thou shouldest
dishonour me. As for all this language, said Sir Meliagrance, be it
as it be may, for wit you well, madam, I have loved you many a year,
and never or now could I get you at such an advantage as I do now,
and therefore I will take you as I find you.
Then
spake all the ten noble knights at once and said: Sir Meliagrance,
wit thou well ye are about to jeopard your worship to dishonour, and
also ye cast to jeopard our persons howbeit we be unarmed. Ye have us
at a great avail, for it seemeth by you that ye have laid watch upon
us; but rather than ye should put the queen to a shame and us all, we
had as lief to depart from our lives, for an if we other ways did, we
were shamed for ever. Then said Sir Meliagrance: Dress you as
well ye can, and keep the queen. Then the ten knights of the Table
Round drew their swords, and the other let run at them with their
spears, and the ten knights manly abode them, and smote away their
spears that no spear did them none harm. Then they lashed together
with swords, and anon Sir Kay, Sir Sagramore, Sir Agravaine, Sir
Dodinas, Sir Ladinas, and Sir Ozanna were smitten to the earth with
grimly wounds. Then Sir Brandiles, and Sir Persant, Sir Ironside, Sir
Pelleas fought long, and they were sore wounded; for these ten
knights, or ever they were laid to the ground, slew forty men of the
boldest and the best of them.
So
when the queen saw her knights thus dolefully wounded, and needs must
be slain at the last, then for pity and sorrow she cried Sir
Meliagrance: Slay not my noble knights, and I will go with thee upon
this covenant, that thou save them, and suffer them not to be more
hurt, with this, that they be led with me wheresomever thou leadest
me, for I will rather slay myself than I will go with thee, unless
that these my noble knights may be in my presence. Madam, said
Meliagrance, for your sake they shall be led with you into mine
own castle, with that ye will be ruled and ride with me. Then the
queen prayed the four knights to leave their fighting, and she and
they would not depart. Madam, said Sir Pelleas, we will do as ye do,
for as for me I take no force of my life nor death. For as the French
book saith, Sir Pelleas gave such buffets there that none armour
might hold him.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT HAD WORD HOW THE
QUEEN WAS TAKEN, AND HOW SIR MELIAGRANCE LAID A BUSHMENT FOR
LAUNCELOT, SO THAT HIS HORSE WAS SLAIN, AND HE RODE IN A CART TO SAVE
THE QUEEN. Then by the queen's commandment they left battle, and
dressed the wounded knights on horseback, some sitting, some
overthwart their horses, that it was pity to behold them. And then
Sir Meliagrance charged the queen and all her knights that none of
all her fellowship should depart from her; for full sore he dread Sir
Launcelot du Lake, lest he should have any knowledging. All this
espied the queen, and privily she called unto her a child of her
chamber that was swiftly horsed, to whom she said: Go thou, when thou
seest thy time, and bear this ring unto Sir Launcelot du Lake, and
pray him as he loveth me that he will see me and rescue me, if ever
he will have joy of me; and spare not thy horse, said the queen,
neither for water, neither for land. So the child espied his time,
and lightly he took his horse with the spurs, and departed as fast as
he might. And when Sir Meliagrance saw him so flee, he understood
that it was by the queen's commandment for to warn Sir Launcelot.
Then they that were best horsed chased him and shot at him, but from
them all the child went suddenly. And then Sir Meliagrance said
to the queen: Madam, ye are about to betray me, but I shall ordain
for Sir Launcelot that he shall not come lightly at you. And then he
rode with her, and they all, to his castle, in all the haste that
they might. And by the way Sir Meliagrance laid in an embushment the
best archers that he might get in his country, to the number of
thirty, to await upon Sir Launcelot, charging them that if they saw
such a manner of knight come by the way upon a white horse, that in
any wise they slay his horse, but in no manner of wise have not ado
with him bodily, for he is over-hardy to be overcome.
So
this was done, and they were come to his castle, but in no wise the
queen would never let none of the ten knights and her ladies out of
her sight, but always they were in her presence; for the book saith,
Sir Meliagrance durst make no masteries, for dread of Sir Launcelot,
insomuch he deemed that he had warning. So when the child was
departed from the fellowship of Sir Meliagrance, within a while he
came to Westminster, and anon he found Sir Launcelot. And when he had
told his message, and delivered him the queen's ring: Alas, said Sir
Launcelot, now I am shamed for ever, unless that I may rescue that
noble lady from dishonour. Then eagerly he asked his armour; and ever
the child told Sir Launcelot how the ten knights fought marvellously,
and how Sir Pelleas, and Sir Ironside, and Sir Brandiles, and Sir
Persant of Inde, fought strongly, but namely Sir Pelleas, there
might none withstand him; and how they all fought till at the last
they were laid to the earth; and then the queen made appointment for
to save their lives, and go with Sir Meliagrance.
Alas,
said Sir Launcelot, that most noble lady, that she should be so
destroyed; I had liefer, said Sir Launcelot, than all France, that I
had been there well armed. So when Sir Launcelot was armed and upon
his horse, he prayed the child of the queen's chamber to warn Sir
Lavaine how suddenly he was departed, and for what cause. And pray
him as he loveth me, that he will hie him after me, and that he stint
not until he come to the castle where Sir Meliagrance abideth, or
dwelleth; for there, said Sir Launcelot, he shall hear of me an I am
a man living, and rescue the queen and the ten knights the which he
traitorously hath taken, and that shall I prove upon his head, and
all them that hold with him.
Then
Sir Launcelot rode as fast as he might, and the book saith he took
the water at Westminster Bridge, and made his horse to swim over
Thames unto Lambeth. And then within a while he came to the same
place thereas the ten noble knights fought with Sir Meliagrance. And
then Sir Launcelot followed the track until that he came to a wood,
and there was a strait way, and there the thirty archers bade Sir
Launcelot turn again, and follow no longer that track. What
commandment have ye thereto, said Sir Launcelot, to cause me
that am a knight of the Round Table to leave my right way? This way
shalt thou leave, other-else thou shalt go it on thy foot, for wit
thou well thy horse shall be slain. That is little mastery, said Sir
Launcelot, to slay mine horse; but as for myself, when my horse is
slain, I give right nought for you, not an ye were five hundred more.
So then they shot Sir Launcelot's horse, and smote him with many
arrows; and then Sir Launcelot avoided his horse, and went on foot;
but there were so many ditches and hedges betwixt them and him that
he might not meddle with none of them. Alas for shame, said
Launcelot, that ever one knight should betray another knight; but it
is an old saw, A good man is never in danger but when he is in the
danger of a coward. Then Sir Launcelot went a while, and then he was
foul cumbered of his' armour, his shield, and his spear, and all that
longed unto him. Wit ye well he was full sore annoyed, and full loath
he was for to leave anything that longed unto him, for he dread sore
the treason of Sir Meliagrance.
Then
by fortune there came by him a chariot that came thither for to fetch
wood. Say me, carter, said Sir Launcelot, what shall I give thee
to suffer me to leap into thy chariot, and that thou bring me unto a
castle within this two mile? Thou shalt not come within my chariot,
said the carter, for I am sent for to fetch wood for my lord, Sir
Meliagrance. With him would I speak. Thou shalt not go with me, said
the carter. Then Sir Launcelot leapt to him, and gave him such a
buffet that he fell to the earth stark dead. Then the other carter,
his fellow, was afeard, and weened to have gone the same way; and
then he cried: Fair lord, save my life, and I shall bring you where
ye will. Then I charge thee, said Sir Launcelot, that thou drive me
and this chariot even unto Sir Meliagrance's gate. Leap up into the
chariot, said the carter, and ye shall be there anon. So the carter
drove on a great wallop, and Sir Launcelot's horse followed the
chariot, with more than a forty arrows broad and rough in him.
And
more than an hour and an half Dame Guenever was awaiting in a bay
window with her ladies, and espied an armed knight standing in a
chariot. See, madam, said a lady, where rideth in a chariot a goodly
armed knight; I suppose he rideth unto hanging. Where? said the
queen. Then she espied by his shield that he was there himself, Sir
Launcelot du Lake. And then she was ware where came his horse ever
after that chariot, with the forty arrows in him. Alas, said the
queen, now I see well and prove, that well is him that hath a trusty
friend. Ha, ha, most noble knight, said Queen Guenever, I see well
thou art hard bestead when thou ridest in a chariot. Then she rebuked
that lady that likened Sir Launcelot to ride in a chariot to hanging.
It
was foul mouthed, said the queen, and evil likened, so for to liken
the most noble knight of the world unto such a shameful death. O Jesu
defend him and keep him, said the queen, from all mischievous end. By
this was Sir Launcelot come to the gates of that castle, and there he
descended down, and cried, that all the castle rang of it: Where art
thou, false traitor, Sir Meliagrance, and knight of the Table Round?
now come forth here, thou traitor knight, thou and thy fellowship
with thee; for here I am, Sir Launcelot du Lake, that shall fight
with you. And therewithal he bare the gate wide open upon the porter,
and smote him under his ear with his gauntlet, that his neck brast
a-sunder.
HOW SIR MELIAGRANCE REQUIRED
FORGIVENESS OF THE QUEEN, AND HOW SHE APPEASED SIR LAUNCELOT, AND HOW
SIR LAUNCELOT CAME IN THE NIGHT TO THE QUEEN, AND HOW SIR MELIAGRANCE
APPEACHED HER OF TREASON.
When
Sir Meliagrance heard that Sir Launcelot was there he ran unto Queen
Guenever, and fell upon his knee, and said: Mercy, madam, now I
put me wholly into your grace. What aileth you now? said Queen
Guenever; forsooth I might well wit some good knight would revenge
me, though my lord Arthur wist not of this your work. Madam, said Sir
Meliagrance, all this that is amiss on my part shall be amended right
as yourself will devise, and wholly I put me in your grace. What
would ye that I did? said the queen. I would no more, said
Meliagrance, but that ye would take all in your own hands, and
that ye will rule my lord Sir Launcelot; and such cheer as may be
made him in this poor castle ye and he shall have until to-morn, and
then may ye and all they return unto Westminster; and my body and all
that I have I shall put in your rule. Ye say well, said the queen,
and better is peace than ever war, and the less noise the more is my
worship.
Then
the queen and her ladies went down unto the knight, Sir Launcelot,
that stood wroth out of measure in the inner court, to abide battle;
and ever he bade: Thou traitor knight come forth. Then the queen came
to him and said: Sir Launcelot, why be ye so moved? Ha, madam, said
Sir Launcelot, why ask ye me that question? Meseemeth, said Sir
Launcelot, ye ought to be more wroth than I am, for ye have the hurt
and the dishonour, for wit ye well, madam, my hurt is but little for
the killing of a mare's son, but the despite grieveth me much more
than all my hurt. Truly, said the queen, ye say truth; but heartily I
thank you, said the queen, but ye must come in with me peaceably, for
all thing is put in my hand, and all that is evil shall be for the
best, for the knight full sore repenteth him of the misadventure that
is befallen him. Madam, said Sir Launcelot, sith it is so that ye
been accorded with him, as for me I may not be again it, howbeit Sir
Meliagrance hath done full shamefully to me, and cowardly. Ah madam,
said Sir Launcelot, an I had wist ye would have been so soon accorded
with him, I would not have made such haste unto you. Why say ye so,
said the queen, do ye forthink yourself of your good deeds? Wit you
well, said the queen, I accorded never unto him for favour nor love
that I had unto him, but for to lay down every shameful noise. Madam,
said Sir Launcelot, ye understand full well I was never willing nor
glad of shameful slander nor noise; and there is neither king, queen,
nor knight, that beareth the life, except my lord King Arthur, and
you, madam, should let me, but I should make Sir Meliagrance's heart
full cold or ever I departed from hence. That wot I well, said the
queen, but what will ye more? Ye shall have all thing ruled as ye
list to have it. Madam, said Sir Launcelot, so ye be pleased I care
not, as for my part ye shall soon please.
Right
so the queen took Sir Launcelot by the bare hand, for he had put off
his gauntlet, and so she went with him till her chamber; and then she
commanded him to be unarmed. And then Sir Launcelot asked where were
the ten knights that were wounded sore; so she showed them unto Sir
Launcelot, and there they made great joy of the coming of him,
and Sir Launcelot made great dole of their hurts, and bewailed them
greatly. And there Sir Launcelot told them how cowardly and traitorly
Meliagrance set archers to slay his horse, and how he was fain to put
himself in a chariot. Thus they complained everych to other; and full
fain they would have been revenged, but they peaced themselves
because of the queen. Then, as the French book saith, Sir Launcelot
was called many a day after le Chevaler du Chariot, and did many
deeds, and great adventures he had. And so leave we of this tale le
Chevaler du Chariot, and turn we to this tale.
So
Sir Launcelot had great cheer with the queen, and then Sir Launcelot
made a promise with the queen that the same night Sir Launcelot
should come to a window outward toward a garden; and that window was
y-barred with iron, and there Sir Launcelot promised to meet her when
all folks were asleep. So then came Sir Lavaine driving to the gates,
crying: Where is my lord, Sir Launcelot du Lake? Then was he sent
for, and when Sir Lavaine saw Sir Launcelot, he said: My lord, I
found well how ye were hard bestead, for I have found your horse that
was slain with arrows. As for that, said Sir Launcelot, I pray
you, Sir Lavaine, speak ye of other matters, and let ye this pass,
and we shall right it another time when we best may.
Then
the knights that were hurt were searched, and soft salves were laid
to their wounds; and so it passed on till supper time, and all the
cheer that might be made them there was done unto the queen and all
her knights. Then when season was, they went unto their chambers, but
in no wise the queen would not suffer the wounded knights to be from
her, but that they were laid within draughts by her chamber, upon
beds and pillows, that she herself might see to them, that they
wanted nothing.
So
when Sir Launcelot was in his chamber that was assigned unto him, he
called unto him Sir Lavaine, and told him that night he must go speak
with his lady, Dame Guenever. Sir, said Sir Lavaine, let me go with
you an it please you, for I dread me sore of the treason of Sir
Meliagrance. Nay, said Sir Launcelot, I thank you, but I will have
nobody with me. Then Sir Launcelot took his sword in his hand, and
privily went to a place where he had espied a ladder to-forehand, and
that he took under his arm, and bare it through the garden, and set
it up to the window, and there anon the queen was ready to meet him.
And then they made either to other their complaints of many
divers things, and then Sir Launcelot wished that he might have come
in to her. Wit ye well, said the queen, I would as fain as ye, that
ye might come in to me. Would ye, madam, said Sir Launcelot, with
your heart that I were with you? Yea, truly, said the queen. Now
shall I prove my might, said Sir Launcelot, for your love; and then
he set his hands upon the bars of iron, and he pulled at them with
such a might that he brast them clean out of the stone walls, and
therewithal one of the bars of iron cut the brawn of his hand
throughout to the bone; and then he leapt into the chamber to the
queen. Make ye no noise, said the queen, for my wounded knights lie
here fast by me. And when he saw his time that he might tarry no
longer he took his leave and departed at the window, and put it
together as well as he might again, and so departed unto his own
chamber; and there he told Sir Lavaine how he was hurt. Then Sir
Lavaine dressed his hand and staunched it, and put upon it a glove,
that it should not be espied; and so the queen lay long in her bed
until it was nine of the clock.
Then
Sir Meliagrance went to the queen's chamber, and found her ladies
there ready clothed. What aileth you, madam, said Sir Meliagrance,
that ye sleep thus long? And right therewithal he opened the curtain
for to behold her; and then was he ware of the blood of Sir Launcelot
's hurt hand. When Sir Meliagrance espied that blood, then he deemed
in himself that she was false to the king, and that it was the blood
of some of the wounded knights. Ah, madam, said Sir Meliagrance, now
I have found you a false traitress unto my lord Arthur; for now I
prove well it was not for nought that ye laid these wounded knights
within the bounds of your chamber; therefore I will call you of
treason before my lord, King Arthur. And now I have proved you,
madam, with a shameful deed; and that they be all false, or some of
them, I will make good, for a wounded knight hath been here. That is
false, said the queen, and that I will report me unto them all. Then
when the ten knights heard Sir Meliagrance's words, they spake all in
one voice and said to Sir Meliagrance: Thou sayest falsely, and
wrongfully puttest upon us such a deed, and that we will make good
any of us; choose which thou list of us when we are whole of our
wounds. Ye shall not, said Sir Meliagrance, away with your proud
language, for here ye may all see, that a wounded knight hath been
here. Then were they all ashamed when they saw that blood; and wit
you well Sir Meliagrance was passing glad that he had the queen at
such an advantage, for he deemed by that to hide his treason. So with
this rumour came in Sir Launcelot, and found them all at a great
array.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT ANSWERED FOR THE
QUEEN, TO WAGE BATTLE AGAINST SIR MELIAGRANCE; AND HOW SIR LAUNCELOT
WAS TAKEN IN A TRAP, BUT WAS DELIVERED OF A LADY, AND HOW HE FOUGHT
WITH SIR MELIAGRANCE, HALF UNARMED, AND SLEW HIM.
What
array is this? said Sir Launcelot. Then Sir Meliagrance told him what
he had found, and showed him the blood, And well I am sure, said Sir
Meliagrance, here hath been one of her wounded knights, and therefore
I will prove with my hands that she is a traitress unto my lord
Arthur. Beware what ye do, said Launcelot, for an ye say so, an ye
will prove it, it will be taken at your hands.
My
lord, Sir Launcelot, said Sir Meliagrance, I rede you beware what ye
do; for though ye are never so good a knight, as ye wot well ye are
renowned the best knight of the world, yet should ye be advised to do
battle in a wrong quarrel, for God will have a stroke in every
battle. As for that, said Sir Launcelot, God is to be dread; but as
to that I say nay plainly, that this night none of these ten wounded
knights was here with my lady Queen Guenever, and that will I
prove-with my hands, that ye say untruly in that now. Hold, said Sir
Meliagrance, here is my glove that she is traitress unto my lord,
King Arthur, and that this night one of the wounded knights was here.
And I receive your glove, said Sir Launcelot. And so they were sealed
with their signets, and delivered unto the ten knights. At what
day shall we do battle together? said Sir Launcelot. This day eight
days, said Sir Meliagrance, in the field beside Westminster. I am
agreed, said Sir Launcelot. But now, said Sir Meliagrance,
sithen it is so that we must fight together, I pray you, as ye be a
noble knight, await me with no treason, nor none villainy the
meanwhile, nor none for you. So God me help, said Sir Launcelot, ye
shall right well wit I was never of no such conditions, for I report
me to all knights that ever have known me, I fared never with no
treason, nor I loved never the fellowship of no man that fared with
treason. Then let us go to dinner, said Meliagrance, and after dinner
ye and the queen and ye may ride all to Westminster. I will well,
said Sir Launcelot.
Then
Sir Meliagrance said to Sir Launcelot: Pleaseth it you to see the
eftures of this castle? With a good will, said Sir Launcelot. And
then they went together from chamber to chamber, for Sir Launcelot
dread no perils; for ever a man of worship and of prowess dreadeth
least always perils, for they ween every man be as they be; but ever
he that fareth with treason putteth oft a man in great danger. So it
befell upon Sir Launcelot that no peril dread, as he went with Sir
Meliagrance he trod on a trap and the board rolled, and there Sir
Launcelot fell down more than ten fathom into a cave full of straw;
and then Sir Meliagrance departed and made no fare, as that he
nist where he was.
And
when Sir Launcelot was thus missed they marvelled where he was
become; and then the queen and many of them deemed that he was
departed as he was wont to do, suddenly. For Sir Meliagrance made
suddenly to put away aside Sir Lavaine's horse, that they might all
understand that Sir Launcelot was departed suddenly. So it
passed on till after dinner; and then Sir Lavaine would not stint
until that he ordained litters for the wounded knights, that they
might be laid in them; and so with the queen and them all, both
ladies and gentlewomen and other, went unto Westminster; and there
the knights told King Arthur how Meliagrance had appealed the queen
of high treason, and how Sir Launcelot had received the glove of him:
And this day eight days they shall do battle afore you. By my head,
said King Arthur, I am afeard Sir Meliagrance hath taken upon
him a great charge; but where is Sir Launcelot? said the king. Sir,
said they all, we wot not where he is, but we deem he is ridden to
some adventures, as he is ofttimes wont to do, for he hath Sir
Lavaine's horse. Let him be, said the king, he will be founden, but
if he be trapped with some treason.
So
leave we Sir Launcelot lying within that cave in great pain; and
every day there came a lady and brought him his meat and his drink,
and wooed him to love her; and ever the noble knight, Sir Launcelot,
said her nay. Sir Launcelot, said she, ye are not wise, for ye may
never out of this prison, but if ye have my help; and also your lady,
Queen Guenever, shall be brent in your default, unless that ye be
there at the day of battle. God defend, said Sir Launcelot, that she
should be brent in my default; and if it be so, said Sir Launcelot,
that I may not be there, it shall be well understanded, both at the
king and at the queen, and with all men of worship, that I am
dead, sick, or in prison. For all men that know me will say for me
that I am in some evil case an I be not there that day; and well I
wot there is some good knight either of my blood, or some other that
loveth me, that will take my quarrel in hand; and therefore, said Sir
Launcelot, wit ye well ye shall not fear me; and if there were no
more women in all this land but ye, I would not say you otherwise.
Then art thou shamed, said the lady, and destroyed for ever. As for
world's shame, Jesu defend me; and as for my distress, it is welcome
whatsoever it be that God sendeth me.
So
she came to him the same day that the battle should be, and said: Sir
Launcelot, methinketh ye are too hardhearted, but wouldst thou
but kiss me once I should deliver thee, and thine armour, and the
best horse that is within Sir Meliagrance's stable. As for to kiss
you, said Sir Launcelot, I may do that and lose no worship; and wit
ye well an I understood there were any disworship for to kiss you I
would not do it. Then he kissed her, and then she gat him, and
brought him to his armour. And when he was armed, she brought him to
a stable, where stood twelve good coursers, and bade him choose the
best. Then Sir Launcelot looked upon a white courser the which liked
him best; and anon he commanded the keepers fast to saddle him with
the best saddle of war that there was; and so it was done as he bade.
Then gat he his spear in his hand, and his sword by his side, and
commended the lady unto God, and said: Lady, for this good deed I
shall do you service if ever it be in my power.
Now
leave we Sir Launcelot wallop all that he might, and speak we of
Queen Guenever that was brought to a fire to be brent; for Sir
Meliagrance was sure, him thought, that Sir Launcelot should not be
at that battle; therefore he ever cried upon King Arthur to do him
justice, or else bring forth Sir Launcelot du Lake. Then was the king
and all the court full sore abashed and shamed that the queen should
be brent in the default of Sir Launcelot. My lord Arthur, said Sir
Lavaine, ye may understand that it is not well with my lord Sir
Launcelot, for an he were alive, so he be not sick or in prison, wit
ye well he would be here; for never heard ye that ever he failed his
part for whom he should do battle for. And therefore, said Sir
Lavaine, my lord, King Arthur, I beseech you give me license to do
battle here this day for my lord and master, and for to save my lady,
the queen. Gramercy, gentle Sir Lavaine, said King Arthur, for I
dare say all that Sir Meliagrance putteth upon my lady the queen is
wrong, for I have spoken with all the ten wounded knights, and there
is not one of them, an he were whole and able to do battle, but he
would prove upon Sir Meliagrance's body that it is false that he
putteth upon my queen. So shall I, said Sir Lavaine, in the defence
of my lord, Sir Launcelot, an ye will give me leave. Now I give you
leave, said King Arthur, and do your best, for I dare well say there
is some treason done to Sir Launcelot.
Then
was Sir Lavaine armed and horsed, and suddenly at the lists' end he
rode to perform this battle; and right as the heralds should cry:
Lesses les aler, right so came in Sir Launcelot driving with all the
force of his horse. And then Arthur cried: Ho! and Abide Then was Sir
Launcelot called on horseback to-fore King Arthur, and there he
told openly to-fore the king and all, how Sir Meliagrance had served
him first and last. And when the king, and the queen, and all the
lords, knew of the treason of Sir Meliagrance they were all ashamed
on his behalf. Then was Queen Guenever sent for, and set by the king
in great trust of her champion. And then there was no more else to
say, but Sir Launcelot and Sir Meliagrance dressed them unto battle,
and took their spears; and so they came together as thunder, and
there Sir Launcelot bare him down quite over his horse's croup. And
then Sir Launcelot alighted and dressed his shield on his shoulder,
with his sword in his hand, and Sir Meliagrance in the same wise
dressed him unto him, and there they smote many great strokes
together; and at the last Sir Launcelot smote him such a buffet upon
the helmet that he fell on the one side to the earth. And then he
cried upon him aloud: Most noble knight, Sir Launcelot du Lake, save
my life, for I yield me unto you, and I require you, as ye be a
knight and fellow of the Table Round, slay me not, for I yield me as
overcome; and whether I shall live or die I put me in the king's
hands and yours.
Then
Sir Launcelot wist not what to do, for he had had liefer than all the
good of the world he might have been revenged upon Sir Meliagrance;
and Sir Launcelot looked up to the Queen Guenever, if he might espy
by any sign or countenance what she would have done. And then the
queen wagged her head upon Sir Launcelot, as though she would say:
Slay him. Full well knew Sir Launcelot by the wagging of her head
that she would have him dead; then Sir Launcelot bade him rise for
shame and perform that battle to the utterance. Nay, said Sir
Meliagrance, I will never arise until ye take me as yolden and
recreant.
I
shall proffer you large proffers, said Sir Launcelot, that is for to
say, I shall unarm my head and my left quarter of my body, all, that
may be unarmed, and let bind my left hand behind me, so that it shall
not help me, and right so I shall do battle with you. Then Sir
Meliagrance started up upon his legs, and said on high: My lord
Arthur, take heed to this proffer, for I will take it, and let him be
disarmed and bounden according to his proffer. What say ye, said King
Arthur unto Sir Launcelot, will ye abide by your proffer
Yea,
my lord, said Sir Launcelot, I will never go from that I have once
said.
Then
the knights parters of the field disarmed Sir Launcelot, first
his head, and sithen his left arm, and his left side, and they bound
his left arm behind his back, without shield or anything, and then
they were put together. Wit you well there was many a lady and knight
marvelled that Sir Launcelot would jeopardy himself in such
wise. Then Sir Meliagrance came with his sword all on high, and
Sir Launcelot showed him openly his bare head and the bare left side;
and when he weened to have smitten him upon the bare head, then
lightly he avoided the left leg and the left side, and put his right
hand and his sword to that stroke, and so put it on side with great
sleight; and then with great force Sir Launcelot smote him on
the helmet such a buffet that the stroke carved the head in two
parts. Then there was no more to do, but he was drawn out of the
field. And at the great instance of the knights of the Table
Round, the king suffered him to be interred, and the mention made
upon him, who slew him, and for what cause he was slain; and then the
king and the queen made more of Sir Launcelot du Lake, and more he
was cherished, than ever he was aforehand.
HOW SIR URRE CAME INTO ARTHUR'S COURT
FOR TO BE HEALED OF HIS WOUNDS BY THE BEST KNIGHT OF THE WORLD, AND
HOW HE WAS HEALED BY SIR LAUNCELOT.
Then
as the French book maketh mention, there was a good knight in the
land of Hungary, his name was Sir Urre, and he was an adventurous
knight, and in all places where he might hear of any deeds of worship
there would he be. So it happened in Spain there was an earl's son,
his name was Alphegus, and at a great tournament in Spain this Sir
Urre, knight of Hungary, and Sir Alphegus of Spain encountered
together for very envy; and so either undertook other to the
utterance. And by fortune Sir Urre slew Sir Alphegus, the earl's son
of Spain; but this knight that was slain had given Sir Urre, or ever
he was slain, seven great wounds, three on the head, and four on his
body and upon his left hand. And this Sir Alphegus had a mother, the
which was a great sorceress; and she, for the despite of her son's
death, wrought by her subtle crafts that Sir Urre should never be
whole, but ever his wounds should one time fester and another time
bleed, so that he should never be whole until the best knight of the
world had searched his wounds; and thus she made her avaunt,
wherethrough it was known that Sir Urre should never be whole.
Then
his mother let make an horse litter, and put him therein under two
palfreys; and then she took Sir Urre's sister with him, a full fair
damosel, whose name was Felelolie; and then she took a page with him
to keep their horses, and so they led Sir Urre through many
countries. For as the French book saith, she led him so seven year
through all lands christened, and never she could find no knight that
might ease her son. So she came into Scotland and into the lands of
England, and by fortune she came nigh the feast of Pentecost
until King Arthur's court, that at that time was holden at Carlisle.
And when she came there, then she made it openly to be known how that
she was come into that land for to heal her son.
Then
King Arthur let call that lady, and asked her the cause why she
brought that hurt knight into that land. My most noble king, said
that lady, wit you well I brought him hither for to be healed of his
wounds, that of all this seven year he might not be whole. And then
she told the king where he was wounded, and of whom; and how his
mother had made known in her pride how she had wrought that by
enchantment, so that he should never be whole until the best knight
of the world had searched his wounds. And so I have passed through
all the lands christened to have him healed, except this land. And if
I fail to heal him here in this land, I will never take more pain
upon me, and that is pity, for he was a good knight, and of great
nobleness. What is his name? said Arthur. My good and gracious lord,
she said, his name is Sir Urre of the Mount. In good time, said the
king, and sith ye are come into this land, ye are right welcome; and
wit you well here shall your son be healed, an ever any Christian man
may heal him. And for to give all other men of worship courage, I
myself will assay to handle your son, and so shall all the kings,
dukes, and earls that be here present with me at this time; thereto
will I command them, and well I wot they shall obey and do after my
commandment. And wit you well, said King Arthur unto Urre's sister, I
shall begin to handle him, and search unto my power, not presuming
upon me that I am so worthy to heal your son by my deeds, but I will
courage other men of worship to do as I will do. And then the king
commanded all the kings, dukes, and earls, and all noble knights of
the Round Table that were there that time present, to come into the
meadow of Carlisle. And so at that time there were but an hundred and
ten of the Round Table, for forty knights were that time away. All
these hundred knights and ten searched Sir Urre's wounds by the
commandment of King Arthur.
Mercy,
said King Arthur, where is Sir Launcelot du Lake that he is not here
at this time? Thus, as they stood and spake of many things, there was
espied Sir Launcelot that came riding toward them, and told the king.
Peace, said the king, let no manner thing be said until he be come to
us. So when Sir Launcelot espied King Arthur, he descended from
his horse and came to the king, and saluted him and them all. Anon as
the maid, Sir Urre's sister, saw Sir Launcelot, she ran to her
brother thereas he lay in his litter, and said: Brother, here is come
a knight that my heart giveth greatly unto. Fair sister, said Sir
Urre, so doth my heart light against him, and certainly I hope now to
be healed, for my heart giveth unto him more than to all these that
have searched me.
Then
said Arthur unto Sir Launcelot: Ye must do as we have done; and told
Sir Launcelot what they had done, and showed him them all, that had
searched him. Jesu defend me, said Sir Launcelot, when so many kings
and knights have assayed and failed, that I should presume upon me to
enchieve that all ye, my lords, might not enchieve. Ye shall not
choose, said King Arthur, for I will command you for to do as we all
have done. My most renowned lord, said Sir Launcelot, ye know well I
dare not nor may not disobey your commandment, but an I might or
durst, wit you well I would not take upon me to touch that wounded
knight in that intent that I should pass all other knights; Jesu
defend me from that shame. Ye take it wrong, said King Arthur, ye
shall not do it for no presumption, but for to bear us fellowship,
insomuch ye be a fellow of the Table Round; and wit you well, said
King Arthur, an ye prevail not and heal him, I dare say there is no
knight in this land may heal him, and therefore I pray you, do as we
have done.
And
then all the kings and knights for the most part prayed Sir Launcelot
to search him; and then the wounded knight, Sir Urre, set him up
weakly, and prayed Sir Launcelot heartily, saying: Courteous
knight, I require thee for God's sake heal my wounds, for methinketh
ever sithen ye came here my wounds grieve me not. Ah, my fair lord,
said Sir Launcelot, Jesu would that I might help you; I shame me sore
that I should be thus rebuked, for never was I able in worthiness to
do so high a thing. Then Sir Launcelot kneeled down by the wounded
knight saying: My lord Arthur, I must do your commandment, the which
is sore against my heart. And then he held up his hands, and looked
into the east, saying secretly unto himself: Thou blessed Father,
Son, and Holy Ghost, I beseech thee of thy mercy, that my simple
worship and honesty be saved, and thou blessed Trinity, thou mayst
give power to heal this sick knight by thy great virtue and grace of
thee, but, Good Lord, never of myself. And then Sir Launcelot prayed
Sir Urre to let him see his head; and then devoutly kneeling he
ransacked the three wounds, that they bled a little, and forthwith
all the wounds fair healed, and seemed as they had been whole a seven
year. And in likewise he searched his body of other three wounds, and
they healed in likewise; and then the last of all he searched that
which was in his hand, and anon it healed fair.
Then
King Arthur and all the kings and knights kneeled down and gave
thankings and lovings unto God and to His Blessed Mother. And ever
Sir Launcelot wept as he had been a child that had been beaten. Then
King Arthur let array priests and clerks in the most devoutest
manner, to bring in Sir Urre within Carlisle, with singing and loving
to God. And when this was done, the king let clothe him in the
richest manner that could be thought; and then were there but few
better made knights in all the court, for he was passingly well made
and bigly; and Arthur asked Sir Urre how he felt himself. My good
lord, he said, I felt myself never so lusty. Will ye joust and do
deeds of arms? said King Arthur. Sir, said Urre, and I had all that
longed unto jousts I would be soon ready.
Then
Arthur made a party of hundred knights to be against an hundred
knights. And so upon the morn they jousted for a diamond, but there
jousted none of the dangerous knights; and so for to shorten this
tale, Sir Urre and Sir Lavaine jousted best that day, for there was
none of them but he overthrew and pulled, down thirty knights; and
then by the assent of all the kings and lords, Sir Urre and Sir
Lavaine were made knights of the Table Round. And Sir Lavaine cast
his love unto Dame Felelolie, Sir Urre's sister, and then they were
wedded together with great joy, and King Arthur gave to everych of
them a barony of lands. And this Sir Urre would never go from Sir
Launcelot, but he and Sir Lavaine awaited evermore upon him; and they
were in all the court accounted for good knights, and full desirous
in arms; and many noble deeds they did, for they would have no rest,
but ever sought adventures.
HOW SIR AGRAVAINE AND SIR MORDRED WERE
BUSY UPON SIR GAWAINE FOR TO DISCLOSE THE LOVE BETWEEN SIR LAUNCELOT
AND QUEEN GUENEVER.
In
May when every lusty heart flourisheth and bourgeoneth for as the
season is lusty to behold and comfortable, so man and woman
rejoice and gladden of summer coming with his fresh flowers: for
winter with his rough winds and blasts causeth a lusty man and woman
to cower, and sit fast by the fire so in this season, as in the
month of May, befell a great anger and unhap that stinted not till
the flower of chivalry of all the world was destroyed and slain; and
all was long upon two unhappy knights, the which were named Agravaine
and Sir Mordred, that were brethren unto Sir Gawaine. For this Sir
Agravaine and Sir Mordred had ever a privy hate unto the queen Dame
Guenever and to Sir Launcelot, and daily and nightly they ever
watched upon Sir Launcelot.
So
it mishapped, Sir Gawaine and all his brethren were in King Arthur's
chamber; and then Sir Agravaine said thus openly, and not in no
counsel, that many knights might hear it: I marvel that we all be not
ashamed both to see and to know how Sir Launcelot goeth with the
queen, and all we know it so; and it is shamefully suffered of us
all, that we all should suffer so noble a king as King Arthur is so
to be shamed.
Then
spake Sir Gawaine, and said: Brother Sir Agravaine, I pray you and
charge you move no such matters no more afore me; for wit you well,
said Sir Gawaine, I will not be of your counsel. So God me help, said
Sir Gaheris and Sir Gareth, we will not be knowing, brother
Agravaine, of your deeds. Then will I, said Sir Mordred. I lieve well
that, said Sir Gawaine, for ever unto all unhappiness, brother Sir
Mordred, thereto will ye grant; and I would that ye left all this,
and made you not so busy, for I know, said Sir Gawaine, what will
fall of it. Fall of it what fall may, said Sir Agravaine, I will
disclose it to the king. Not by my counsel, said Sir Gawaine, for an
there rise war and wrack betwixt Sir Launcelot and us, wit you well
brother, there will many kings and great lords hold with Sir
Launcelot. Also, brother Sir Agravaine, said Sir Gawaine, ye must
remember how ofttimes Sir Launcelot hath rescued the king and
the queen; and the best of us all had been full cold at the
heart-root had not Sir Launcelot been better than we, and that hath
he proved himself full oft. And as for my part, said Sir Gawaine, I
will never be against Sir Launcelot for one day's deed, when he
rescued me from King Carados of the Dolorous Tower, and slew him, and
saved my life. Also, brother Sir Agravaine and Sir Mordred, in like
wise Sir Launcelot rescued you both, and threescore and two,
from Sir Turquine. Methinketh brother, such kind deeds and kindness
should be remembered. Do as ye list, said Sir Agravaine, for I will
hide it no longer. With these words came to them King Arthur. Now,
brother, stint your noise, said Sir Gawaine. We will not, said
Sir Agravaine and Sir Mordred. Will ye so? said Sir Gawaine; then God
speed you, for I will not hear your tales ne be of your counsel. No
more will I, said Sir Gareth and Sir Gaheris, for we will never say
evil by that man; for because, said Sir Gareth, Sir Launcelot made me
knight, by no manner owe I to say ill of him. And therewithal they
three departed, making great dole. Alas, said Sir Gawaine and Sir
Gareth, now is this realm wholly mischieved, and the noble fellowship
of the Round Table shall be disparpled: so they departed.
And
then Sir Arthur asked them what noise they made. My lord, said
Agravaine, I shall tell you that I may keep no longer. Here is I, and
my brother Sir Mordred, brake unto my brothers Sir Gawaine, Sir
Gaheris, and to Sir Gareth, how this we know all, that Sir Launcelot
holdeth your queen, and hath done long; and we be your sister's sons,
and we may suffer it no longer, and all we wot that ye should be
above Sir Launcelot; and ye are the king that made him knight, and
therefore we will prove it, that he is a traitor to your person.
If
it be so, said Sir Arthur, wit you well he is none other, but I would
be loath to begin such a thing but I might have proofs upon it; for
Sir Launcelot is an hardy knight, and all ye know he is the best
knight among us all; and but if he be taken with the deed, he will
fight with him that bringeth up the noise, and I know no knight that
is able to match him. Therefore an it be sooth as ye say, I would he
were taken with the deed. For as the French book saith, the king was
full loath thereto, that any noise should be upon Sir Launcelot and
his queen; for the king had a deeming, but he would not hear of it,
for Sir Launcelot had done so much for him and the queen so many
times, that wit ye well the king loved him passingly well. My lord,
said Sir Agravaine, ye shall ride to-morn a-hunting, and doubt ye not
Sir Launcelot will not go with you. Then when it draweth toward
night, ye may send the queen word that ye will lie out all that
night, and so may ye send for your cooks, and then upon pain of death
we shall take him that 'night with the queen, and outher we shall
bring him to you dead or quick. I will well, said the king; then I
counsel you, said the king, take with you sure fellowship. Sir, said
Agravaine, my brother, Sir Mordred, and I, will take with us twelve
knights of the Round Table. Beware, said King Arthur, for I warn you
ye shall find him wight. Let us deal, said Sir Agravaine and Sir
Mordred.
So
on the morn King Arthur rode a-hunting, and sent word to the queen
that he would be out all that night. Then Sir Agravaine and Sir
Mordred gat to them twelve knights, and hid themself in a chamber in
the Castle of Carlisle, and these were their names: Sir Colgrevance,
Sir Mador de la Porte, Sir Gingaline, Sir Meliot de Logris, Sir
Petipase of Winchelsea, Sir Galleron of Galway, Sir Melion of the
Mountain, Sir Astamore, Sir Gromore Somir Joure, Sir Curselaine,
Sir Florence, Sir Lovel. So these twelve knights were with Sir
Mordred and Sir Agravaine, and all they were of Scotland, outher of
Sir Gawaine's kin, either well-willers to his brethren.
So
when the night came, Sir Launcelot told Sir Bors how he would go that
night and speak with the queen. Sir, said Sir Bors, ye shall not go
this night by my counsel. Why? said Sir Launcelot. Sir, said Sir
Bors, I dread me ever of Sir Agravaine, that waiteth you daily to do
you shame and us all; and never gave my heart against no going, that
ever ye went to the queen, so much as now; for I mistrust that the
king is out this night from the queen because peradventure he
hath lain some watch for you and the queen, and therefore I dread me
sore of treason. Have ye no dread, said Sir Launcelot, for I shall go
and come again, and make no tarrying. Sir, said Sir Bors, that me
repenteth, for I dread me sore that your going out this night shall
wrath us all. Fair nephew, said Sir Launcelot, I marvel much why ye
say thus, sithen the queen hath sent for me; and wit ye well I will
not be so much a coward, but she shall understand I will see her
good grace. God speed you well, said Sir Bors, and send you sound and
safe again.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT WAS ESPIED IN THE
QUEEN'S CHAMBER, AND HOW SIR AGRAVAINE AND SIR MORDRED CAME WITH
TWELVE KNIGHTS TO SLAY HIM.
So
Sir Launcelot departed, and took his sword under his arm, and so in
his mantle that noble knight put himself in great jeopardy; and so he
passed till he came to the queen's chamber. And then, as the French
book saith, there came Sir Agravaine and Sir Mordred, with twelve
knights with them of the Round Table, and they said with crying
voice: Traitor-knight, Sir Launcelot du Lake, now art thou taken. And
thus they cried with a loud voice, that all the court might hear it;
and they all fourteen were armed at all points as they should fight
in a battle. Alas, said Queen Guenever, now are we mischieved both.
Madam, said Sir Launcelot, is there here any armour within your
chamber, that I might cover my poor body withal? An if there be any
give it me, and I shall soon stint their malice, by the grace of God.
Truly, said the queen, I have none armour, shield, sword, nor spear;
wherefore I dread me sore our long love is come to a mischievous
end, for I hear by their noise there be many noble knights, and well
I wot they be surely armed; against them ye may make no resistance.
Wherefore ye are likely to be slain, and then shall I be brent. For
an ye might escape them, said the queen, I would not doubt but that
ye would rescue me in what danger that ever I stood in. Alas, said
Sir Launcelot, in all my life thus was I never bestead, that I should
be thus shamefully slain for lack of mine armour.
But
ever in one Sir Agravaine and Sir Mordred cried: Traitor-knight, come
out of the queen's chamber, for wit thou well thou art so beset that
thou shalt not escape. O Jesu mercy, said Sir Launcelot, this
shameful cry and noise I may not suffer, for better were death at
once than thus to endure this pain. Then he took the queen in his
arms, and kissed her, and said: Most noble Christian queen, I beseech
you as ye have been ever my special good lady, and I at all times
your true poor knight unto my power, and as I never failed you in
right nor in wrong sithen the first day King Arthur made me knight,
that ye will pray for my soul if that I here be slain; for well I am
assured that Sir Bors, my nephew, and all the remnant of my kin, with
Sir Lavaine and Sir Urre, that they will not fail you to rescue you
from the fire; and therefore, mine own lady, recomfort yourself,
whatsomever come of me, that ye go with Sir Bors, my nephew, and Sir
Urre, and they all will do you all the pleasure that they can or may,
that ye shall live like a queen upon my lands. Nay, Launcelot, said
the queen, wit thou well I will never live after thy days, but an
thou be slain I will take my death as meekly for Jesu Christ's sake
as ever did any Christian queen. Well, madam, said Launcelot, sith it
is so that the day is come that our love must depart, wit you well I
shall sell my life as dear as I may; and a thousandfold, said Sir
Launcelot, I am more heavier for you than for myself. And now I had
liefer than to be lord of all Christendom, that I had sure
armour upon me, that men might speak of my deeds or ever I were
slain. Truly, said the queen, I would an it might please God that
they would take me and slay me, and suffer you to escape. That shall
never be, said Sir Launcelot, God defend me from such a shame, but
Jesu be Thou my shield and mine armour!
And
therewith Sir Launcelot wrapped his mantle about his arm well and
surely; and by then they had gotten a great form out of the hall, and
therewithal they rashed at the door. Fair lords, said Sir Launcelot,
leave your noise and your rashing, and I shall set open this door,
and then may ye do with me what it liketh you. Come off then, said
they all, and do it, for it availeth thee not to strive against us
all; and therefore let us into this chamber, and we shall save thy
life until thou come to King Arthur. Then Launcelot unbarred the
door, and with his left hand he held it open a little, so that but
one man might come in at once; and so there came striding a good
knight, a much man and large, and his name was Colgrevance of Gore,
and he with a sword struck at Sir Launcelot mightily; and he put
aside the stroke, and gave him such a buffet upon the helmet, that he
fell grovelling dead within the chamber door. And then Sir Launcelot
with great might drew that dead knight within the chamber door; and
Sir Launcelot with help of the queen and her ladies was lightly armed
in Sir Colgrevance's armour.
And
ever stood Sir Agravaine and Sir Mordred crying: Traitor-knight, come
out of the queen's chamber. Leave your noise, said Sir Launcelot unto
Sir Agravaine, for wit you well, Sir Agravaine, ye shall not prison
me this night; and therefore an ye do by my counsel, go ye all from
this chamber door, and make not such crying and such manner of
slander as ye do; for I promise you by my knighthood, an ye will
depart and make no more noise, I shall as to-morn appear afore you
all before the king, and then let it be seen which of you all, outher
else ye all, that will accuse me of treason; and there I shall answer
you as a knight should, that hither I came to the queen for no manner
of mal engin, and that will I prove and make it good upon you with my
hands. Fie on thee, traitor, said Sir Agravaine and Sir Mordred, we
will have thee maugre thy head, and slay thee if we list; for we let
thee wit we have the choice of King Arthur, to save thee or to slay
thee. Ah sirs, said Sir Launcelot, is there none other grace with
you? then keep yourselves.
So
then Sir Launcelot set all open the chamber door, and mightily and
knightly he strode in amongst them; and anon at the first buffet he
slew Sir Agravaine. And twelve of his fellows, within a little while
after, he laid them cold to the earth, for there was none of the
twelve that might stand Sir Launcelot one buffet. Also Sir Launcelot
wounded Sir Mordred, and he fled with all his might. And then Sir
Launcelot returned again unto the queen, and said: Madam, now wit you
well all our true love is brought to an end, for now will King Arthur
ever be my foe; and therefore, madam, an it like you that I may have
you with me, I shall save you from all manner adventures dangerous.
That is not best, said the queen; meseemeth now ye have done so much
harm, it will be best ye hold you still with this. And if ye see that
as to-morn they will put me unto the death, then may ye rescue me as
ye think best. I will well, said Sir Launcelot, for have ye no doubt,
while I am living I shall rescue you. And then he kissed her, and
either gave other a ring; and so there he left the queen, and went
until his lodging.
OF THE COUNSEL AND ADVICE THAT WAS
TAKEN BY SIR LAUNCELOT AND HIS FRIENDS FOR TO SAVE THE QUEEN.
When
Sir Bors saw Sir Launcelot he was never so glad of his home-coming as
he was then. Mercy, said Sir Launcelot, why be ye all armed: what
meaneth this? Sir, said Sir Bors, after ye were departed from us, we
all that be of your blood and your well-willers were so dretched that
some of us leapt out of our beds naked, and some in their dreams
caught naked swords in their hands; therefore, said Sir Bors, we deem
there is some great strife at hand; and then we all deemed that ye
were betrapped with some treason, and therefore we made us thus
ready, what need that ever ye were in.
My
fair nephew, said Sir Launcelot unto Sir Bors, now shall ye wit all,
that this night I was more harder bestead than ever I was in my life,
and yet I escaped. And so he told them all how and in what manner, as
ye have heard to-fore. And therefore, my fellows, said Sir Launcelot,
I pray you all that ye will be of good heart in what need somever I
stand, for now is war come to us all. Sir, said Bors, all is welcome
that God sendeth us, and we have had much weal with you and much
worship, and therefore we will take the woe with you as we have taken
the weal. And therefore, they said all (there were many good
knights), look ye take no discomfort, for there is no bands of
knights under heaven but we shall be able to grieve them as much as
they may us. And therefore discomfort not yourself by no manner, and
we shall gather together that we love, and that loveth us, and what
that ye will have done shall be done. And therefore, Sir Launcelot,
said they, we will take the woe with the weal. Gramercy, said Sir
Launcelot, of your good comfort, for in my great distress, my fair
nephew, ye comfort me greatly, and much I am beholding unto you. But
this, my fair nephew, I would that ye did in all haste that ye may,
or it be forth-days, that ye will look in their lodging that be
lodged here nigh about the king, which will hold with me, and which
will not, for now I would know which were my friends from my foes.
Sir, said Sir Bors, I shall do my pain, and or it be seven of the
clock I shall wit of such as ye have said before, who will hold with
you.
Then
Sir Bors called unto him Sir Lionel, Sir Ector de Maris, Sir Blamore
de Ganis, Sir Bleoberis de Ganis, Sir Gahalantine, Sir Galihodin, Sir
Galihud, Sir Menadeuke, Sir Villiers the Valiant, Sir Hebes le
Renoumes, Sir Lavaine, Sir Urre of Hungary, Sir Nerounes, Sir
Plenorius. These two knights Sir Launcelot made, and the one he won
upon a bridge, and therefore they would never be against him. And
Harry le Fise du Lake, and Sir Selises of the Dolorous Tower, and Sir
Melias de Lile, and Sir Bellangere le Beuse, that was Sir Alisander's
son Le Orphelin, because his mother Alice le Beale Pellerin was kin
unto Sir Launcelot, he held with him. So there came Sir Palomides and
Sir Safere, his brother, to hold with Sir Launcelot, and Sir Clegis
of Sadok, and Sir Dinas, Sir Clarius of Cleremont. So these
two-and-twenty knights drew them together, and by then they were
armed on horseback, and promised Sir Launcelot to do what he would.
Then there fell to them, what of North Wales and of Cornwall, for Sir
Lamorak's sake and for Sir Tristram's sake, to the number of a
fourscore knights.
My
lords, said Sir Launcelot, wit you well, I have been ever since I
came into this country well willed unto my lord, King Arthur, and
unto my lady, Queen Guenever, unto my power; and this night because
my lady the queen sent for me to speak with her, I suppose it was
made by treason, howbeit I dare largely excuse her person,
notwithstanding I was there by a forecast near slain, but as
Jesu provided me I escaped all their malice and treason. And then
that noble knight Sir Launcelot told them all how he was hard bestead
in the queen's chamber, and how and in what manner he escaped from
them. And therefore, said Sir Launcelot, wit you well, my fair lords,
I am sure there is but war unto me and mine. And for because I have
slain this night these knights, I wot well as is Sir Agravaine Sir
Gawaine's brother, and at the least twelve of his fellows, for this
cause now I am sure of mortal war, for these knights were sent and
ordained by King Arthur to betray me. And therefore the king will in
his heat and malice judge the queen to the fire, and that may I not
suffer, that she should be brent for my sake; for an I may be heard
and suffered and so taken, I will fight for the queen, that she is a
true lady unto her lord; but the king in his heat, I dread me, will
not take me as I ought to be taken.
My
lord, Sir Launcelot, said Sir Bors, by mine advice ye shall take the
woe with the weal, and take it in patience, and thank God of it. And
sithen it is fallen as it is, I counsel you keep yourself, for an ye
will yourself, there is no fellowship of knights christened that
shall do you wrong. Also I will counsel you my lord, Sir Launcelot,
than an my lady, Queen Guenever, be in distress, insomuch as she is
in pain for your sake, that ye knightly rescue her; an ye did
otherwise, all the world will speak of you shame to the world's end.
Insomuch as ye were taken with her, whether ye did right or wrong, it
is now your part to hold with the queen, that she be not slain and
put to a mischievous death; for an she so die the shame shall be
yours. Jesu defend me from shame, said Sir Launcelot, and keep and
save my lady the queen from villainy and shameful death, and that she
never be destroyed in my default; wherefore my fair lords, my kin,
and my friends, said Sir Launcelot, what will ye do? Then they said
all: We will do as ye will do. I put this to you, said Sir Launcelot,
that if my lord Arthur by evil counsel will to-mom in his heat put my
lady the queen to the fire there to be brent, now I pray you counsel
me what is best to do. Then they said all at once with one voice:
Sir, us thinketh best that ye knightly rescue the queen; insomuch as
she shall be brent it is for your sake, and it is to suppose, and ye
might be handled, ye should have the same death, or a more
shamefuller death. And sir, we say all, that ye have many times
rescued her from death for other men's quarrels, us seemeth it is
more your worship that ye rescue the queen from this peril, insomuch
she hath it for your sake.
Then
Sir Launcelot stood still, and said: My fair lords, wit you well I
would be loath to do that thing that should dishonour you or my
blood, and wit you well I would be loath that my lady, the queen,
should die a shameful death; but an it be so that ye will counsel me
to rescue her, I must do much harm ere I rescue her; and peradventure
I shall there destroy some of my best friends, that should much
repent me; and peradventure there be some, an they could well bring
it about, or disobey my lord King Arthur, they would soon come to me,
the which I were loath to hurt. And if so be that I rescue her, where
shall I keep her? That shall be the least care of us all, said Sir
Bors. How did the noble knight Sir Tristram, by your good will? kept
not he with him La Beale Isoud near three year in Joyous Gard? and
that same place is your own; and in like wise may ye do an ye list,
and take the queen lightly away, if it so be the king will judge her
to be brent; and in Joyous Gard ye may keep her long enough until the
heat of the king be past. And then shall ye bring again the queen to
the king with great worship; and then peradventure ye shall have
thank for her bringing home, and love and thank where other shall
have maugre.
That
is hard to do, said Sir Launcelot, for by Sir Tristram I may have a
warning; for when by means of treaties, Sir Tristram brought again La
Beale Isoud unto King Mark from Joyous Gard, look what befell on the
end, how shame-. fully that false traitor King Mark slew him as he
sat harping afore his lady La Beale Isoud, with a grounden glaive he
thrust him in behind to the heart. It grieveth me, said Sir
Launcelot, to speak of his death, for all the world may not find such
a knight. All this is truth, said Sir Bors, but there is one thing
shall courage you and us all, ye know well King Arthur and King Mark
were never like of conditions, for there was never yet man could
prove King Arthur untrue of his promise.
So
to make short tale, they were all consented that for better or for
worse, if so were that the queen were on that morn brought to the
fire, shortly they all would rescue her.
And
so by the advice of Sir Launcelot, they put them all in an embushment
in a wood, as nigh Carlisle as they might, and there they abode
still, to wit what the king would do.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT AND HIS KINSMEN
RESCUED THE QUEEN FROM THE FIRE, AND HOW HE SLEW MANY KNIGHTS, AND OF
THE SORROW OF KING ARTHUR.
Now
turn we again unto Sir Mordred, that when he was escaped from the
noble knight, Sir Launcelot, he anon gat his horse and mounted upon
him, and rode unto King Arthur, sore wounded and smitten, and all
forbled; and there he told the king all how it was, and how they were
all slain save himself all only. Jesu mercy, how may this be? said
the king; took ye him in the queen's chamber? Yea, so God me help,
said Sir Mordred, there we found him unarmed, and there he slew
Colgrevance, and armed him in his armour; and all this he told the
king from the beginning to the ending. Jesu mercy, said the king, he
is a marvellous knight of prowess. Alas, me sore repenteth, said
the king, that ever Sir Launcelot should be against me. Now I am sure
the noble fellowship of the Round Table is broken for ever, for with
him will many a noble knight hold; and now it is fallen so, said the
king, that I may not with my worship, but the queen must suffer the
death. So then there was made great ordinance in this heat, that the
queen must be judged to the death. And the law was such in those days
that whatsomever they were, of what estate or degree, if they were
found guilty of treason; there should be none other remedy but death;
and outher the men or the taking with the deed should be causer of
their hasty judgment. And right so was it ordained for Queen
Guenever, because Sir Mordred was escaped sore wounded, and the death
of thirteen knights of the Round Table. These proofs and experiences
caused King Arthur to command the queen to the fire there to be
brent.
Then
spake Sir Gawaine, and said: My lord Arthur, I would counsel you not
to be over-hasty, but that ye would put it in respite, this judgment
of my lady the queen, for many causes. One it is; though it were so
that Sir Launcelot were found in the queen's chamber, yet it might be
so that he came thither for none evil; for ye know my lord, said Sir
Gawaine, that the queen is much beholden unto Sir Launcelot, more
than unto any other knight, for ofttimes he hath saved her life, and
done battle for her when all the court refused the queen; and
peradventure she sent for him for goodness and for none evil, to
reward him for his good deeds that he had done to her in times past.
And peradventure my lady, the queen, sent for him to that intent that
Sir Launcelot should come to her good grace privily and secretly,
weening to her that it was best so to do, in eschewing and dreading
of slander; for ofttimes we do many things that we ween it be for the
best, and yet peradventure it turneth to the worst. For I dare say,
said Sir Gawaine, my lady, your queen, is to you both good and true;
and as for Sir Launcelot, said Sir Gawaine, I dare say he will make
it good upon any knight living that will put upon himself villainy or
shame, and in like wise he will make good for my lady, Dame Guenever.
That
I believe well, said King Arthur, but I will not that way with Sir
Launcelot, for he trusteth so much upon his hands and his might that
he doubteth no man; and therefore for my queen he shall never fight
more, for she shall have the law. And if I may get Sir Launcelot, wit
you well he shall have a shameful death. Jesu defend, said Sir
Gawaine, that I may never see it. Why say ye so? said King Arthur;
forsooth ye have no cause to love Sir Launcelot, for this night
last past he slew your brother, Sir Agravaine, a full good
knight, and almost he had slain your other brother, Sir Mordred, and
also there he slew thirteen noble knights; and also, Sir Gawaine,
remember ye he slew two sons of yours, Sir Florence and Sir Lovel. My
lord, said Sir Gawaine, of all this I have knowledge, of whose deaths
I repent me sore; but insomuch I gave them warning, and told my
brethren and my sons aforehand what would fall in the end, insomuch
they would not do by my counsel, I will not meddle me thereof, nor
revenge me nothing of their deaths; for I told them it was no bote to
strive with Sir Launcelot. Howbeit I am sorry of the death of my
brethren and of my sons, for they are the causers of their own death;
for oft-times I warned my brother Sir Agravaine, and I told him the
perils the which be now fallen.
Then
said the noble King Arthur to Sir Gawaine: Dear nephew, I pray you
make you ready in your best armour, with your brethren, Sir Gaheris
and Sir Gareth, to bring my queen to the fire, there to have her
judgment and receive the death. Nay, my most noble lord, said Sir
Gawaine, that will I never do; for wit you well I will never be in
that place where so noble a queen as is my lady, Dame Guenever, shall
take a shameful end. For wit you well, said Sir Gawaine, my heart
will never serve me to see her die; and it shall never be said that
ever I was of your counsel of her death.
Then
said the king to Sir Gawaine: Suffer your brothers Sir Gaheris and
Sir Gareth to be there. My lord, said Sir Gawaine, wit you well they
will be loath to be there present, because of many adventures the
which be like there to fall, but they are young and full unable to
say you nay. Then spake Sir Gaheris, and the good knight Sir Gareth,
unto Sir Arthur: Sir, ye may well command us to be there, but wit you
well it shall be sore against our will; but an we be there by your
strait commandment ye shall plainly hold us there excused: we will be
there in peaceable wise, and bear none harness of war upon us. In the
name of God, said the king, then make you ready, for she shall soon
have her judgment anon. Alas, said Sir Gawaine, that ever I should
endure to see this woful day. So Sir Gawaine turned him and wept
heartily, and so he went into his chamber; and then the queen was led
forth without Carlisle, and there she was despoiled into her smock.
And so then her ghostly father was brought to her, to be shriven of
her misdeeds. Then was there weeping, and wailing, and wringing of
hands, of many lords and ladies, but there were but few in
comparison that would bear any armour for to strength the death
of the queen.
Then
was there one that Sir Launcelot had sent unto that place for to espy
what time the queen should go unto her death; and anon as he saw the
queen despoiled into her smock, and so shriven, then he gave Sir
Launcelot warning. Then was there but spurring and plucking up
of horses, and right so they came to the fire. And who that stood
against them, there were they slain; there might none withstand Sir
Launcelot, so all that bare arms and withstood them, there were they
slain, full many a noble knight. For there was slain Sir Belliance le
Orgulous, Sir Segwarides, Sir Griflet, Sir Brandiles, Sir Aglovale,
Sir Tor; Sir Gamer, Sir Gillimer, Sir Reynolds' three brethren; Sir
Damas, Sir Priamus, Sir Kay the Stranger, Sir Driant, Sir Lambegus,
Sir Herminde; Sir Pertilope, Sir Perimones, two brethren that were
called the Green Knight and the Red Knight. And so in this rashing
and hurling, as Sir Launcelot thrang here and there, it mishapped him
to slay Gaheris and Sir Gareth, the noble knight, for they were
unarmed and unware. For as the French book saith, Sir Launcelot smote
Sir Gareth and Sir Gaheris upon the brain-pans, where-through they
were slain in the field; howbeit in very truth Sir Launcelot saw
them not, and so were they found dead among the thickest of the
press.
Then
when Sir Launcelot had thus done, and slain and put to flight all
that would withstand him, then he rode straight unto Dame Guenever,
and made a kirtle and a gown to be cast upon her; and then he made
her to be set behind him, and prayed her to be of good cheer. Wit you
well the queen was glad that she was escaped from the death; and then
she thanked God and Sir Launcelot. And so he rode his way with the
queen, as the French book saith, unto Joyous Gard, and there he
kept her as a noble knight should do; and many great lords and some
kings sent Sir Launcelot many good knights, and many noble knights
drew unto Sir Launcelot. When this was known openly, that King Arthur
and Sir Launcelot were at debate, many knights were glad of their
debate, and many were full heavy of their debate.
HOW KING ARTHUR AT THE REQUEST OF SIR
GAWAINE CONCLUDED TO MAKE WAR AGAINST SIR LAUNCELOT, AND LAID SIEGE
TO HIS CASTLE CALLED JOYOUS GARD.
So
turn we again unto King Arthur, that when it was told him how and in
what manner of wise the queen was taken away from the fire, and when
he heard of the death of his noble knights, and in especial of Sir
Gaheris and Sir Gareth's death, then the king swooned for pure
sorrow. And when he awoke of his swoon, then he said: Alas, that ever
I bare crown upon my head for now have I lost the fairest fellowship
of noble knights that ever Christian king held together. Alas, my
good knights be slain away from me: now within these two days I have
lost forty knights, and also the noble fellowship of Sir Launcelot
and his blood, for now I may never hold them together no more with my
worship. Alas that ever this war began. Now fair fellows, said the
king; I charge you that no man tell Sir Gawaine of the death of his
two brethren; for I am sure, said the king, when Sir Gawaine heareth
tell that Sir Gareth is dead he will go nigh out of his mind. Mercy
Jesu, said the king, why slew he Sir Gareth and Sir Gaheris, for I
dare say as for Sir Gareth he loved Sir Launcelot above all men
earthly. That is truth, said some knights, but they were slain in the
hurtling as Sir Launcelot thrang in the thick of the press; and as
they were unarmed he smote them and wist not whom that he smote, and
so unhappily they were slain. The death of them, said Arthur, will
cause the greatest mortal war that ever was; I am sure, wist Sir
Gawaine that Sir Gareth were slain, I should never have rest of him
till I had destroyed Sir Launcelot's kin and himself both, or else he
to destroy me. And therefore, said the king, wit you well my heart
was never so heavy as it is now, and much more I am sorrier for my
good knights' loss than for the loss of my fair queen; for queens I
might have enow, but such a fellowship of good knights shall never be
together in no company. And now I dare say, said King Arthur, there
was never Christian king held such a fellowship together; and alas
that ever Sir Launcelot and I should be at debate. Ah Agravaine,
Agravaine, said the king, Jesu forgive it thy soul, for thine evil
will, that thou, and thy brother Sir Mordred, hadst unto Sir
Launcelot, hath caused all this sorrow: and ever among these
complaints the king wept and swooned.
Then
there came one unto Sir Gawaine, and told him how the queen was led
away with Sir Launcelot, and nigh a twenty-four knights slain. O Jesu
defend my brethren, said Sir Gawaine, for full well wist I that Sir
Launcelot would rescue her, outher else he would die in that field;
and to say the truth he had not been a man of worship had he not
rescued the queen that day, insomuch she should have been brent for
his sake. And as in that, said Sir Gawaine, he hath done but
knightly, and as I would have done myself an I had stood in like
case. But where are my brethren? said Sir Gawaine, I marvel I hear
not of them. Truly, said that man, Sir Gareth and Sir Gaheris be
slain. Jesu defend, said Sir Gawaine, for all the world I would
not that they were slain, and in especial my good brother, Sir
Gareth. Sir, said the man, he is slain, and that is great pity. Who
slew him? said Sir Gawaine. Sir, said the man, Launcelot slew them
both. That may I not believe, said Sir Gawaine, that ever he slew my
brother, Sir Gareth; for I dare say my brother Gareth loved him
better than me, and all his brethren, and the king both. Also I dare
say, an Sir Launcelot had desired my brother, Sir Gareth, with him he
would have been with him against the king and us all, and therefore I
may never believe that Sir Launcelot slew my brother. Sir, said this
man, it is noised that he slew him.
Alas,
said Sir Gawaine, now is my joy gone. And then he fell down and
swooned, and long he lay there as he had been dead. And then, when he
arose of his swoon, he cried out sorrowfully, and said: Alas And
right so Sir Gawaine ran to the king, crying and weeping: O King
Arthur, mine uncle, my good brother Sir Gareth is slain, and so is my
brother Sir Gaheris, the which were two noble knights. Then the king
wept, and he both; and so they fell a-swooning. And when they were
revived then spake Sir Gawaine: Sir, I will go see my brother, Sir
Gareth. Ye may not see him, said the king, for I caused him to be
interred, and Sir Gaheris both; for I well understood that ye would
make over-much sorrow, and the sight of Sir Gareth should have caused
your double sorrow. Alas, my lord, said Sir Gawaine, how slew he my
brother, Sir Gareth? Mine own good lord I pray you tell me. Truly,
said the king, I shall tell you how it is told me, Sir Launcelot slew
him and Sir Gaheris both. Alas, said Sir Gawaine, they bare none arms
against him, neither of them both. I wot not how it was, said the
king, but as it is said, Sir Launcelot slew them both in the thickest
of the press and knew them not; and therefore let us shape a remedy
for to revenge their deaths.
My
king, my lord, and mine uncle, said Sir Gawaine, wit you well now I
shall make you a promise that I shall hold by my knighthood, that
from this day I shall never fail Sir Launcelot, until the one of us
have slain the other. And therefore I require you, my lord and king,
dress you to the war, for wit you well I will be revenged upon Sir
Launcelot; and therefore, as ye will have my service and my
love, now haste you thereto, and assay your friends. For I promise
unto God, said Sir Gawaine, for the death of my brother, Sir Gareth,
I shall seek Sir Launcelot throughout seven kings' realms, but I
shall slay him or else he shall slay me. Ye shall not need to seek
him so far, said the king, for as I hear say, Sir Launcelot will
abide me and you in the Joyous Gard; and much people draweth unto
him, as I hear say. That may I believe, said Sir Gawaine; but my
lord, he said, assay your friends, and I will assay mine. It shall be
done, said the king, and as I suppose I shall be big enough to draw
him out of the biggest tower of his castle.
So
then the king sent letters and waits throughout all England, both in
the length and the breadth, for to assummon all his knights. Thereof
heard Sir Launcelot, and purveyed him of many good knights, for with
him held many knights, and some for his own sake, and some for the
queen's sake. Then came King Arthur with Sir Gawaine with an huge
host, and laid a siege all about Joyous Gard, both at the town and at
the castle, and there they made strong war on both parties. But in no
wise Sir Launcelot would ride out, nor go out of his castle, of long
time; neither he would none of his good knights to issue out, neither
none of the town nor of the castle, until fifteen weeks were past.
Then
it befell upon a day in harvest time, Sir Launcelot looked over the
walls, and spake on high unto King Arthur and Sir Gawaine: My lords
both, wit ye well all is in vain that ye make at this siege, for here
win ye no worship but maugre and dishonour; for an it list me to come
myself out and my good knights, I should full soon make an end of
this war. Come forth, said Arthur unto Launcelot, an thou durst, and
I promise thee I shall meet thee in midst of the field. God defend
me, said Sir Launcelot, that ever I should encounter with the most
noble king that made me knight. Fie upon thy fair language, said the
king, for wit you well and trust it, I am thy mortal foe, and ever
will to my death day; for thou hast slain my good knights, and full
noble men of my blood, that I shall never recover again. Also thou
hast dishonoured my queen, and holden her many winters, and sithen
like a traitor taken her from me by force.
My
most noble lord and king, said Sir Launcelot, ye may say what ye
will, for ye wot well with yourself will I not strive; but thereas ye
say I have slain your good knights, I wot well that I have done so,
and that me sore repenteth; but I was, enforced to do battle with
them in saving of my life, or else I must have suffered them to have
slain me. And as for my lady, Queen Guenever, except your person of
your highness, and my lord Sir Gawaine, there is no knight under
heaven that dare make it good upon me, that ever I was a traitor unto
your person. And where it please you to say that I have holden my
lady your queen many winters, unto that I shall ever make a large
answer, and prove it upon any knight that beareth the life, except
your person and Sir Gawaine, that my lady, Queen Guenever, is a true
lady unto your person as any is living unto her lord, and that will I
make good with my hands. Howbeit it hath like her good grace to have
me in chierté, and to cherish me more than any other knight; and
unto my power I again have deserved her love, for ofttimes, my lord,
ye have consented that she should be brent and destroyed, in your
heat, and then it fortuned me to do battle for her, and ere I
departed from her adversary they confessed their untruth, and she
full worshipfully excused. And at such times, my lord Arthur, said
Sir Launcelot, ye loved me, and thanked me when I saved your queen
from the fire; and then ye promised me for ever to be my good lord;
and now methinketh ye reward me full ill for my good service. And my
good lord, meseemeth I had lost a great part of my worship in my
knighthood an I had suffered my lady, your queen, to have been brent,
and insomuch she should have been brent for my sake. For sithen I
have done battles for your queen in other quarrels than in mine own,
meseemeth now I had more right to do battle for her in right quarrel.
And therefore my good and gracious lord, said Sir Launcelot, take
your queen unto your good grace, for she is both fair, true, and
good.
Fie
on thee, false recreant knight, said Sir Gawaine; I let thee wit my
lord, mine uncle, King Arthur, shall have his queen and thee, maugre
thy visage, and slay you both whether it please him. It may well be,
said Sir Launcelot, but wit you well, my lord Sir Gawaine, an me list
to come out of this castle ye should win me and the queen more harder
than ever ye won a strong battle. Fie on thy proud words, said Sir
Gawaine; as for my lady, the queen, I will never say of her shame.
But thou, false and recreant knight, said Sir Gawaine, what cause
hadst thou to slay my good brother Sir Gareth, that loved thee more
than all my kin? Alas, thou madest him knight thine own hands; why
slew thou him that loved thee so well? For to excuse me, said Sir
Launcelot, it helpeth me not, but by the faith that I owe to the high
order of knighthood, I should with as good will have slain my nephew,
Sir Bors de Ganis, at that time. But alas that ever I was so unhappy,
said Launcelot, that I had not seen Sir Gareth and Sir Gaheris.
Thou
liest, recreant knight, said Sir Gawaine, thou slewest him in despite
of me; and therefore, wit thou well I shall make war to thee, and all
the while that I may live. And then Sir Gawaine made many men to blow
upon Sir Launcelot; and all at once they called him false recreant
knight.
Then
when Sir Bors de Ganis, Sir Ector de Maris, and Sir Lionel heard this
outcry, they called to them Sir Palomides, Sir Safere's brother,
and Sir Lavaine, with many more of their blood, and all they went
unto Sir Launcelot, and said thus: My lord Sir Launcelot, wit ye well
we have great scorn of the great rebukes that we heard Gawaine say to
you; wherefore we pray you, and charge you as ye will have our
service, keep us no longer within these walls; for wit you well
plainly, we will ride into the field and do battle with them; for ye
fare as a man that were afeard, and for all your fair speech it will
not avail you. For wit you well Sir Gawaine will not suffer you to be
accorded with King Arthur, and therefore fight for your life and your
right, an ye dare.
Then
either party made them ready on the morn for to do battle, and great
purveyance was made on both sides; and Sir Gawaine let purvey many
knights for to wait upon Sir Launcelot, for to overset him and to
slay him. And on the morn at underne Sir Arthur was ready in the
field with three great hosts. And then Sir Launcelot's fellowship
came out at three gates, in a full good array; and Sir Lionel came in
the foremost battle, and Sir Launcelot came in the middle, and Sir
Bors came out at the third gate. Thus they came in order and rule, as
full noble knights; and always Sir Launcelot charged all his knights
in any wise to save King Arthur and Sir Gawaine.
Then
came forth Sir Gawaine from the king's host, and he came before and
proffered to joust. And Sir Lionel was a fierce knight, and lightly
he encountered with Sir Gawaine; and there Sir Gawaine smote Sir
Lionel throughout the body, that he dashed to the earth like as
he had been dead; and then Sir Ector de Maris and other more bare him
into the castle. Then there began a great stour, and much people was
slain; and ever King Arthur was nigh about Sir Launcelot to have
slain him, and Sir Launcelot suffered him, and would not strike
again. So Sir Bors encountered with King Arthur, and there with a
spear Sir Bors smote him down; and so he alighted and drew his sword,
and said to Sir Launcelot: Shall I make an end of this war? and that
he meant to have slain King Arthur. Not so hardy, said Sir Launcelot,
upon pain of thy head, that thou touch him no more, for I will never
see that most noble king that made me knight neither slain ne shamed.
And therewithal Sir Launcelot alighted off his horse and took up the
king and horsed him again, and said thus: My lord Arthur, for God's
love stint this strife, for ye get here no worship, an I would do
mine utterance; but always I forbear you, and ye nor none of yours
forbeareth me. My lord, remember what I have done in many places, and
now I am evil rewarded.
Then
when King Arthur was on horseback, he looked upon Sir Launcelot, and
then the tears brast out of his eyen, thinking on the great courtesy
that was in Sir Launcelot more than in any other man; and therewith
the king rode his way, and might no longer behold him, and said:
Alas, that ever this war began. And then either parties of the
battles withdrew them to repose them, and buried the dead, and to the
wounded men they laid soft salves; and thus they endured that night
till on the morn. And on the morn by underne they made them ready to
do battle. And then Sir Bors led the forward.
So
upon the morn there came Sir Gawaine as brim as any boar, with a
great spear in his hand. And when Sir Bors saw him he thought to
revenge his brother Sir Lionel of the despite that Sir Gawaine did
him the other day. And so they, that knew either other, feutred their
spears, and with all their mights of their horses and themselves,
they met together so felonously that either bare other through, and
so they fell both to the earth; and then the battles joined, and
there was much slaughter on both parties.
So
when Sir Gawaine was hurt, they on King Arthur's party were not so
orgulous as they were toforehand to do battle. of this war was noised
through all Christendom, and at the last it was noised afore the
Pope; and he considering the great goodness of King Arthur, and of
Sir Launcelot, that was called the most noblest knights of the world,
wherefore the Pope called unto him a noble clerk that at that time
was there present the French book saith, it was the Bishop of
Rochester and the Pope gave him bulls under lead unto King Arthur
of England, charging him upon pain of interdicting of all
England, that he take his queen Dame Guenever unto him again, and
accord with Sir Launcelot.
HOW THE POPE SENT DOWN HIS BULLS TO
MAKE PEACE, AND HOW SIR LAUNCELOT BROUGHT THE QUEEN TO KING ARTHUR.
So
when this Bishop was come to Carlisle he shewed the king these bulls.
And when the king understood these bulls he nist what to do: full
fain he would have been accorded with Sir Launcelot, but Sir Gawaine
would not suffer him; but as for to have the queen, thereto he
agreed. And then the Bishop had of the king his great seal, and his
assurance as he was a true anointed king that Sir Launcelot should
come safe, and go safe, and that the queen should not be spoken unto
of the king, nor of none other, for no thing done afore time past;
and of all these appointments the Bishop brought with him sure
assurance and writing, to shew Sir Launcelot.
So
when the Bishop was come to Joyous Gard, there he shewed Sir
Launcelot how the Pope had written to Arthur and unto him, and there
he told him the perils if he withheld the queen from the king. It was
never in my thought, said Launcelot, to withhold the queen from my
lord Arthur; but, insomuch she should have been dead for my sake,
meseemeth it was my part to save her life, and put her from that
danger, till better recover might come. And now I thank God, said Sir
Launcelot, that the Pope hath made her peace; for God knoweth, said
Sir Launcelot, I will be a thousandfold more gladder to bring her
again, than ever I was of her taking away; with this, I may be sure
to come safe and go safe, and that the queen shall have her liberty
as she had before; and never for no thing that hath been surmised
afore this time, she never from this day stand in no peril.
So
the Bishop departed and came to the king at Carlisle, and told him
all how Sir Launcelot answered him; and then the tears brast out of
the king's eyen. Then Sir Launcelot purveyed him an hundred knights,
and all were clothed in green velvet, and their horses trapped to
their heels; and every knight held a branch of olive in his hand, in
tokening of peace. And the queen had four-and-twenty gentlewomen
following her in the same wise; and Sir Launcelot had twelve coursers
following him, and on every courser sat a young gentleman, and all
they were arrayed in green velvet, with sarps of gold about their
quarters, and the horse trapped in the same wise down to the heels,
with many ouches, y-set with stones and pearls in gold, to the number
of a thousand. And she and Sir Launcelot were clothed in white cloth
of gold tissue; and right so as ye have heard, as the French book
maketh mention, he rode with the queen from Joyous Gard to Carlisle.
And so Sir Launcelot rode throughout Carlisle, and so in the castle,
that all men might behold; and wit you well there was many a weeping
eye. And then Sir Launcelot himself alighted and avoided his horse,
and took the queen, and so led her where King Arthur was in his seat:
and Sir Gawaine sat afore him, and many other great lords. So when
Sir Launcelot saw the king and Sir Gawaine, then he led the queen by
the arm, and then he kneeled down, and the queen both. Wit you well
then was there many bold knights there with King Arthur that wept as
tenderly as though they had seen all their kin afore them. So the
king sat still, and said no word. And when Sir Launcelot saw his
countenance, he arose and pulled up the queen with him, and thus he
spake full knightly.
My
most redoubted king, ye shall understand, by the Pope's commandment
and yours, I have brought to you my lady the queen, as right
requireth; and if there be any knight, of whatsomever degree that he
be, except your person, that will say, or dare say, but that she is
true and clean to you, I here myself, Sir Launcelot du Lake, will
make it good upon his body, that she is a true lady unto you; but
liars ye have listened, and that hath caused debate betwixt you and
me. For time hath been, my lord Arthur, that ye have been greatly
pleased with me when I did battle for my lady, your queen; and full
well ye know, my most noble king, that she hath been put to great
wrong ere this time; and sithen it pleased you at many times that I
should fight for her, meseemeth, my good lord, I had more cause to
rescue her from the fire, insomuch she should have been brent for my
sake. For they that told you those tales were liars, and so it fell
upon them; for by likelihood had not the might of God been with me, I
might never have endured fourteen knights, and they armed and afore
purposed, and I unarmed and not purposed. And as Jesu be my help,
said Sir Launcelot, I slew never Sir Gareth nor Sir Gaheris by
my will; but alas that ever they were unarmed that unhappy day. But
thus much I shall offer me, said Sir Launcelot, if it may please the
king's good grace, and you, my lord Sir Gawaine, I shall first begin
at Sandwich, and there I shall go in my shirt, barefoot; and at every
ten miles' end I will found and gar make an house of religion, of
what order that ye will assign me, with an whole convent, to sing and
read, day and night, in especial for Sir Gareth's sake and Sir
Gaheris. And this shall I perform from Sandwich unto Carlisle; and
every house shall have sufficient livelihood. And this shall I
perform while I have any livelihood in Christendom; and there is none
of all these religious places, but they shall be performed,
furnished and garnished in all things as an holy place ought to be, I
promise you faithfully. And this, Sir Gawaine, methinketh were more
fairer, holier, and more better to their souls, than ye, my most
noble king, and you, Sir Gawaine, to war upon me, for thereby shall
ye get none avail.
Then
all knights and ladies that were there wept as they were mad, and the
tears fell on King Arthur's cheeks. Sir Launcelot, said Sir Gawaine,
I have right well heard thy speech, and thy great proffers, but wit
thou well, let the king do as it pleaseth him, I will never forgive
my brothers' death, and in especial the death of my brother, Sir
Gareth. And if mine uncle, King Arthur, will accord with thee, he
shall lose my service; for wit thou well thou art both false to the
king and to me. Sir, said Launcelot, he beareth not the life that may
make that good; and if ye, Sir Gawaine, will charge me with so high a
thing, ye must pardon me, for then needs must I answer you. Nay, said
Sir Gawaine, we are past that at this time, and that caused the Pope,
for he hath charged mine uncle, the king, that he shall take his
queen again, and to accord with thee, Sir Launcelot, as for this
season, and therefore thou shalt go safe as thou camest. But in this
land thou shalt not abide past fifteen days, such summons I give
thee: so the king and we were consented and accorded ere thou camest.
And else, said Sir Gawaine, wit thou well thou shouldst not have come
here, but if it were maugre thy head. And if it were not for the
Pope's commandment, said Sir Gawaine, I should do battle with mine
own body against thy body, and prove it upon thee, that thou hast
been both false unto mine uncle King Arthur, and to me both; and that
shall I prove upon thy body, when thou art departed from hence,
wheresomever I find thee.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT DEPARTED FROM THE
KING AND FROM JOYOUS GARD OVER SEAWARD, AND HOW KING ARTHUR AND SIR
GAWAINE WITH A GREAT HOST MADE WAR ON SIR LAUNCELOT.
Then
Sir Launcelot sighed, and therewith the tears fell on his cheeks, and
then he said thus: Alas, most noble Christian realm, whom I have
loved above all other realms, and in thee I have gotten a great part
of my worship, and now I shall depart in this wise. Make thou no more
language, said Sir Gawaine, but deliver the queen from thee, and pike
thee lightly out of this court. Well, said Sir Launcelot, an I had
wist of this short coming, I would have advised me twice or that I
had come hither; for an the queen had been so dear to me as ye noise
her, I durst have kept her from a fellowship of the best knights
under heaven.
And
then Sir Launcelot said unto Guenever, in hearing of the king and
them all: Madam, now I must depart from you and this noble fellowship
for ever; and sithen it is so, I beseech you to pray for me, and say
me well; and if ye be hard bestead by any false tongues, lightly, my
lady, let send me word, and if any knight's hands may deliver you by
battle, I shall deliver you. And therewithal Sir Launcelot kissed the
queen; and then he said all openly: Now let see what he be in this
place that dare say the queen is not true unto my lord Arthur, let
see who will speak an he dare speak. And therewith he brought the
queen to the king, and then Sir Launcelot took his leave and
departed; and there was neither king, duke, nor earl, baron nor
knight, lady nor gentlewoman, but all they wept as people out of
their mind, except Sir Gawaine. And when the noble Sir Launcelot took
his horse to ride out of Carlisle, there was sobbing and weeping
for pure dole of his departing; and so he took his way unto Joyous
Gard. And then ever after he called it the Dolorous Gard. And thus
departed Sir Launcelot from the court for ever.
And
so when he came to Joyous Gard he called his fellowship unto
him, and asked them what they would do. Then they answered all wholly
together with one voice, they would as he would do. My fair fellows,
said Sir Launcelot, I must depart out of this most noble realm, and
now I shall depart it grieveth me sore, for I shall depart with no
worship; for a banished man departed never out of no realm with
worship, and that is my heaviness, for ever I fear after my days that
men shall chronicle upon me that I was banished out of this land; and
else, my fair lords, be ye sure, an I had not dread shame, my lady,
Queen Guenever, and I should never have departed.
Then
spake many noble knights, as Sir Palomides, Sir Safere his brother,
and Sir Bellangere le Beuse, and Sir Urre, with Sir Lavaine, with
many others: Sir, an ye be so disposed to abide in this land we will
never fail you; and if ye list not to abide in this land there is
none of the good knights that here be will fail you.
Truly,
said Sir Launcelot, I thank you all of your good saying. So they were
accorded to go with Sir Launcelot to his lands; and to make short
tale, they trussed, and paid all that would ask them; and wholly an
hundred knights departed with Sir Launcelot at once, and made their
avows they would never leave him for weal nor for woe.
And
so they shipped at Cardiff, and sailed unto Benwick: some men call it
Bayonne, and some men call it Beaume, where the wine of Beaume is.
And then Sir Launcelot stuffed and furnished and garnished all his
noble towns and castles.
Then
King Arthur and Sir Gawaine made a great host ready, to the number of
threescore thousand; and all thing was made ready for their shipping
to pass over the sea, and so they shipped at Cardiff. And there King
Arthur made Sir Mordred chief ruler of all England, and also he put
Queen Guenever under his governance; because Sir Mordred was King
Arthur's son, he gave him the rule of his land and of his wife; and
so the king passed the sea and landed upon Sir Launcelot's lands, and
there he brent and wasted, through the vengeance of Sir Gawaine, all
that they might overrun.
And
upon the morn early, in the dawning of the day, as Sir Launcelot's
knights looked out, they saw the city of Benwick besieged round
about; and fast they began to set up ladders, and then they defied
them out of the town, and beat them from the walls wightly. Then came
forth Sir Gawaine well armed upon a stiff steed, and he came before
the chief gate, with his spear in his hand, crying: Sir Launcelot,
where art thou? is there none of you proud knights dare break a spear
with me? Then Sir Bors made him ready, and came forth out of the
town, and there Sir Gawaine encountered with Sir Bors. And at
that time he smote Sir Bors down from his horse, and almost he had
slain him; and so Sir Bors was rescued and borne into the town. Then
came forth Sir Lionel, brother to Sir Bors, and thought to revenge
him; and either feutred their spears, and ran together; and there
they met spitefully, but Sir Gawaine had such grace that he smote Sir
Lionel down, and wounded him there passing sore; and then Sir Lionel
was rescued and borne into the town. And thus Sir Gawaine came every
day, and he failed not but that he smote down one knight or other.
So
thus they endured half a year, and much slaughter was of people on
both parties. Then it befell upon a day, Sir Gawaine came afore the
gates armed at all pieces on a noble horse, with a great spear in his
hand; and then he cried with a loud voice: Where art thou now, thou
false traitor, Sir Launcelot? Why hidest thou thyself within holes
and walls like a coward? Look out now, thou false traitor knight, and
here I shall revenge upon thy body the death of my three brethren.
Then
Sir Launcelot bade saddle his strongest horse, and bade let fetch his
arms, and bring all unto the gate of the tower; and then Sir
Launcelot spake on high unto King Arthur, and said: My lord Arthur,
and noble king that made me knight, wit you well I am right heavy for
your sake, that ye thus sue upon me; and always I forbear you, for an
I would have been vengeable, I might have met you in midst of the
field, and there to have made your boldest knights full tame. And now
I have forborne half a year, and suffered you and Sir Gawaine to do
what ye would do; and now may I endure it no longer, for now must I
needs defend myself, insomuch Sir Gawaine hath appealed me of
treason; the which is greatly against my will that ever I should
fight against any of your blood, but now I may not forsake it ;I am
driven thereto as a beast to bay.
Then
Sir Gawaine and Sir Launcelot departed a great way asunder, and then
they came together with all their horses' might as they might run,
and either smote other in midst of their shields; but the knights
were so strong, and their spears so big, that their horses might not
endure their buffets, and so their horses fell to the earth; and then
they avoided their horses, and dressed their shields afore them. Then
they stood together and gave many sad strokes on divers places of
their bodies, that the blood brast out on many sides and places..
Then had Sir Gawaine such a grace and gift that an holy man had given
to him, that every day in the year, from underne till high noon, his
might increased those three hours as much as thrice his strength, and
that caused Sir Gawaine to win great honour. And for his sake King
Arthur made an ordinance, that all manner of battles for any quarrels
that should be done afore King Arthur should begin at underne; and
all was done for Sir Gawaine's love, that by likelihood, if Sir
Gawaine were on the one part, he should have the better in battle
while his strength endureth three hours; but there were but few
knights that time living that knew this advantage that Sir Gawaine
had, but King Arthur all only.
Thus
Sir Launcelot fought with Sir Gawaine, and when Sir Launcelot felt
his might evermore increase, Sir Launcelot wondered and dread him
sore to be shamed. For as the French book saith, Sir Launcelot
weened, when he felt Sir Gawaine double his strength, that he had
been a fiend and none earthly man; wherefore Sir Launcelot traced and
traversed, and covered himself with his shield, and kept his might
and his braid during three hours; and that while Sir Gawaine gave him
many sad brunts, and many sad strokes, that all the knights that
beheld Sir Launcelot marvelled how that he might endure him; but full
little understood they that travail that Sir Launcelot had for to
endure him. And then when it was past noon Sir Gawaine had no more
but his own might. When Sir Launcelot felt him so come down, then he
stretched him up and stood near Sir Gawaine, and said thus: My lord
Sir Gawaine, now I feel ye have done; now my lord Sir Gawaine, I must
do my part, for many great and grievous strokes I have endured you
this day with great pain.
Then
Sir Launcelot doubled his strokes and gave Sir Gawaine such a buffet
on the helmet that he fell down on his side, and Sir Launcelot
withdrew him from him. Why withdrawest thou thee? said Sir Gawaine;
now turn again, false traitor knight, and slay me, for an thou leave
me thus, when I am whole I shall do battle with thee again. I shall
endure you, Sir, by God's grace, but wit thou well, Sir Gawaine, I
will never smite a felled knight.
And
then he turned him and went his way toward the city. And Sir Gawaine
evermore calling him traitor knight, and said: Wit thou well Sir
Launcelot, when I am whole I shall do battle with thee again, for I
shall never leave thee till that one of us be slain. Thus as this
siege endured, and as Sir Gawaine lay sick near a month, and when he
was well recovered and ready within three days to do battle again
with Sir Launcelot, right so came tidings unto Arthur from England
that made King Arthur and all his host to remove.
HOW SIR MORDRED TOOK ON HIM TO BE KING
OF ENGLAND, AND HOW KING ARTHUR RETURNED TO DOVER, AND OF THE BATTLE
THERE, AND HOW SIR GAWAINE WAS SLAIN.
As
Sir Mordred was ruler of all England, he did do make letters as
though that they came from beyond the sea, and the letters specified
that King Arthur was slain in battle with Sir Launcelot. Wherefore
Sir Mordred made a parliament, and called the lords together, and
there he made them to choose him king; and so was he crowned at
Canterbury, and held a feast there fifteen days; and afterward
he drew him unto Winchester, and there he took the Queen Guenever,
and said plainly that he would wed her which was his uncle's wife and
his father's wife. And so he made ready for the feast, and a day
prefixed that they should be wedded; wherefore Queen Guenever was
passing heavy. But she durst not discover her heart, but spake fair,
and agreed to Sir Mordred's will. Then she desired of Sir Mordred for
to go to London, to buy all manner of things that longed unto the
wedding. And because of her fair speech Sir Mordred trusted her well
enough, and gave her leave to go. And so when she came to London she
took the Tower of London, and suddenly in all haste possible she
stuffed it with all manner of victual, and well garnished it with
men, and so kept it.
Then
when Sir Mordred wist and understood how he was beguiled, he was
passing wroth out of measure. And a short tale for to make, he went
and laid a mighty siege about the Tower of London, and made many
great assaults thereat, and threw many great engines unto them, and
shot great guns. But all might not prevail Sir Mordred, for Queen
Guenever, for fair speech nor for foul, would never trust to come in
his hands again.
Then
came the Bishop of Canterbury, the which was a noble clerk and an
holy man, and thus he said to Sir Mordred: Sir, what will ye do? will
ye first displease God and sithen shame yourself, and all knighthood?
Sir, said the noble clerk, leave this opinion or else I shall curse
you with book and bell and candle. Do thou thy worst, said Sir
Mordred, wit thou well I shall defy thee. So the Bishop departed and
did the cursing in the most orgulist wise that might be done. And
then Sir Mordred sought the Bishop of Canterbury, for to have slain
him. Then the Bishop fled, and took part of his goods with him, and
went nigh unto Glastonbury; and there he was as priest hermit in a
chapel, and lived in poverty and in holy prayers, for well he
understood that mischievous war was at hand.
Then
came word to Sir Mordred that King Arthur had araised the siege for
Sir Launcelot, and he was coming homeward with a great host, to be
avenged upon Sir Mordred; wherefore Sir Mordred made write writs to
all the barony of this land, and much people drew to him. For then
was the common voice among them that with Arthur was none other life
but war and strife, and with Sir Mordred was great joy and bliss.
Thus was Sir Arthur depraved, and evil said of. Lo ye all Englishmen,
see ye not what a mischief here was! for he that was the most king
and knight of the world, and most loved the fellowship of noble
knights, and by him they were all upholden, now might not these
Englishmen hold them content with him. Lo thus was the old custom and
usage of this land; and also men say that we of this land have not
yet lost nor forgotten that custom and usage. Alas, this is a
great default of us Englishmen, for there may no thing please us no
term. And so fared the people at that time. And so Sir Mordred drew
with a great host to Dover, for there he heard say that Sir Arthur
would arrive.
And
so as Sir Mordred was at Dover with his host, there came King Arthur
with a great navy of ships, and galleys, and carracks. And there was
Sir Mordred ready awaiting upon his landing, to let his own father to
land upon the land that he was king over. Then there was launching of
great boats and small, and full of noble men of arms; and there was
much slaughter of gentle knights, and many a full bold baron was laid
full low, on both parties. But King Arthur was so courageous that
there might no manner of knights let him to land, and his knights
fiercely followed him; and so they landed maugre Sir Mordred and all
his power, and put Sir Mordred aback, that he fled and all his
people.
So
when this battle was done, King Arthur let bury his people that were
dead. And then was noble Sir Gawaine found in a great boat, lying
more than half dead. When Sir Arthur wist that Sir Gawaine was laid
so low, he went unto him; and there the king made sorrow out of
measure, and took Sir Gawaine in his arms, and thrice he there
swooned. And then when he awaked, he said: Alas, Sir Gawaine, my
sister's son, here now thou liest, the man in the world that I loved
most; and now is my joy gone, for in Sir Launcelot and you I most had
my joy, and mine affiance, and now have I lost my joy of you both;
wherefore all mine earthly joy is gone from me. Mine uncle King
Arthur, said Sir Gawaine, wit you well my death-day is come, and all
is through mine own hastiness and wilfulness; for I am smitten upon
the old wound the which Sir Launcelot gave me, on the which I feel
well I must die; and had Sir Launcelot been with you as he was, this
unhappy war had never begun; and of all this am I causer, for Sir
Launcelot and his blood, through their prowess, held all your
cankered enemies in subjection and daunger.
And
then Sir Gawaine prayed the king for to send for Sir Launcelot, and
to cherish him above all other knights.
And
so at the hour of noon Sir Gawaine yielded up the spirit; and then
the king let inter him in a chapel within Dover Castle; and there yet
all men may see the skull of him, and the same wound is seen that Sir
Launcelot gave him in battle. Then was it told the king that Sir
Mordred had pitched a new field upon Barham Down. And upon the morn
the king rode thither to him, and there was a great battle betwixt
them, and much people was slain on both parties; but at the last Sir
Arthur's party stood best, and Sir Mordred and his party fled unto
Canterbury.
HOW SIR GAWAINE'S GHOST APPEARED TO
KING ARTHUR, AND WARNED HIM NOT TO FIGHT ON THE DAY ASSIGNED, AND HOW
BY MISADVENTURE OF AN ADDER A BATTLE BEGAN, WHERE MORDRED WAS SLAIN
AND ARTHUR HURT TO THE DEATH.
Then
much people drew unto King Arthur. And then King Arthur drew him with
his host down by the seaside, westward toward Salisbury; and there
was a day assigned betwixt King Arthur and Sir Mordred, that they
should meet upon a down beside Salisbury, and not far from the
seaside; and this day was assigned on a Monday after Trinity Sunday,
whereof King Arthur was passing glad, that he might be avenged upon
Sir Mordred.
So
upon Trinity Sunday at night, King Arthur dreamed that Sir Gawaine
had warned him that if he fought on the morn he should be slain. Then
the king commanded Sir Lucan the Butler, and his brother Sir
Bedivere, with two bishops with them, and charged them in any wise,
an they might, Take a treaty for a month day with Sir Mordred, and
spare not, proffer him lands and goods as much as ye think best. So
then they departed, and came to Sir Mordred, where he had a grim host
of an hundred thousand men: And there they entreated Sir Mordred long
time; and at the last Sir Mordred was agreed for to have Cornwall and
Kent, by Arthur's days: after, all England, after the days of King
Arthur.
Then
were they condescended that King Arthur and Sir Mordred should meet
betwixt both their hosts, and everych of them should bring fourteen
persons; and they came with this word unto Arthur. Then said he: I am
glad that this is done: and so he went into the field. And when
Arthur should depart, he warned all his host that an they see any
sword drawn: Look ye come on fiercely, and slay that traitor, Sir
Mordred, for I in no wise trust him. In like wise Sir Mordred warned
his host. And so they met as their appointment was, and so they were
agreed and accorded thoroughly; and wine was fetched, and they drank.
Right soon came an adder out of a little heath bush, and it stung a
knight on the foot. And when the knight felt him stung, he looked
down and saw the adder, and then he drew his sword to slay the adder,
and thought of none other harm. And when the host on both parties saw
that sword drawn, then they blew beams, trumpets, and horns, and
shouted grimly. And so both hosts dressed them together. And thus
they fought all the long day, and never stinted till the noble
knights were laid to the cold earth; and ever they fought still till
it was near night, and by that time was there an hundred thousand
laid dead upon the down. Then was Arthur wood wroth out of measure,
when he saw his people so slain from him.
Then
the king looked about him, and then was he ware, of all his host and
of all his good knights, were left no more alive but two knights;
that was Sir Lucan the Butler, and his brother Sir Bedivere, and they
were full sore wounded. Jesu mercy, said the king, where are all my
noble knights become? Then was King Arthur ware where Sir Mordred
leaned upon his sword among a great heap of dead men. Now give me my
spear, said Arthur unto Sir Lucan, for yonder I have espied the
traitor that all this woe hath wrought. Sir, let him be, said Sir
Lucan, for he is unhappy; and if ye pass this unhappy day, ye shall
be right well revenged upon him. Good lord, remember ye of your
night's dream, and what the spirit of Sir Gawaine told you this
night; yet God of his great goodness hath preserved you hitherto.
Therefore, for God's sake, my lord, leave off by this, for blessed be
God ye have won the field, for here we be three alive, and with Sir
Mordred is none alive; and if ye leave off now this wicked day of
destiny is past. Tide me death, betide me life, saith the king, now I
see him yonder alone he shall never escape mine hands, for at a
better avail shall I never have him. God speed you well, said Sir
Bedivere.
Then
the king gat his spear in both his hands, and ran toward Sir Mordred,
crying: Traitor, now is thy deathday come. And when Sir Mordred heard
Sir Arthur, he ran until him with his sword drawn in his hand. And
there King Arthur smote Sir Mordred under the shield, with a foin of
his spear, throughout the body, more than a fathom. And when Sir
Mordred felt that he had his death wound he thrust himself with the
might that he had up to the bur of King Arthur's spear. And right so
he smote his father Arthur, with his sword holden in both his hands,
on the side of the head, that the sword pierced the helmet and the
brain-pan, and therewithal Sir Mordred fell stark dead to the earth;
and the noble Arthur fell in a swoon to the earth, and there he
swooned ofttimes. And Sir Lucan the Butler and Sir Bedivere ofttimes
heaved him up. And so weakly they led him betwixt them both, to a
little chapel not far from the seaside. And when the king was
there he thought him well eased.
How Mordred was slain by Arthur, and how by him Arthur was hurt to the death.
Then
Sir Lucan saw by the moonlight, how that pillers and robbers were
come into the field, and who that were not dead all out, there they
slew them for their harness and their riches. When Sir Lucan
understood this work, he came to the king as soon as he might, and
told him all what he had heard and seen. Therefore by my rede, said
Sir Lucan, it is best that we bring you to some town. I would it were
so, said the king. But I may not stand, mine head works so. Ah Sir
Launcelot, said King Arthur, this day have I sore missed thee: alas,
that ever I was against thee, for now have I my death, whereof Sir
Gawaine me warned in my dream.
HOW KING ARTHUR COMMANDED TO CAST HIS
SWORD EXCALIBUR INTO THE WATER, AND HOW HE WAS DELIVERED TO LADIES IN
A BARGE, AND AS TO THE DEATH OF KING ARTHUR, AND HOW QUEEN GUENEVER
MADE HER A NUN.
Then
Sir Lucan took up the king the one part, and Sir Bedivere the other
part, and in the lifting Sir Lucan fell in a swoon, and therewith the
noble knight's heart brast. Alas, said the king, this is . to me a
full heavy sight, to see this noble duke so die for my sake, for he
would have holpen me, that had more need of help than I. Alas, he
would not complain him, his heart was so set to help me: now Jesu
have mercy upon his soul I Then Sir Bedivere wept for the death of
his brother. Leave this mourning and weeping, said the king, for all
this will not avail me; for wit thou well an I might live myself, the
death of Sir Lucan would grieve me evermore; but my time hieth fast,
said the king. Therefore, said Arthur unto Sir Bedivere, take thou
Excalibur, my good sword, and go with it to yonder water side, and
when thou comest there I charge thee throw my sword in that water,
and come again and tell me what thou there seest.
So
Sir Bedivere departed, and by the way he beheld that noble sword,
that the pommel and the haft was all of precious stones; and then he
said to himself: If I throw this rich sword in the water, thereof
shall never come good, but harm and loss. And then Sir Bedivere hid
Excalibur under a tree. And so, as soon as he might, he came again
unto the king, and said he had been at the water, and had thrown the
sword in the water. What saw thou there? said the king. Sir, he said,
I saw nothing but waves and winds. That is untruly said of thee, said
the king, therefore go thou lightly again, and do my commandment; as
thou art to me lief and dear, spare not, but throw it in. Then Sir
Bedivere returned again, and took the sword in his hand; and then him
thought sin and shame to throw away that noble sword, and so eft he
hid the sword, and returned again, and told to the king that he had
been at the water, and done his commandment. What saw thou there?
said the king. Sir, he said, I saw nothing but the waters wap and
waves wan. Ah, traitor untrue, said King Arthur, now hast thou
betrayed me twice. Who would have weened that thou, that hast been to
me so lief and dear, and thou art named a noble knight, would betray
me for the richness of the sword? But now go again lightly, for thy
long tarrying putteth me in great jeopardy of my life, for I have
taken cold. And but if thou do now as I bid thee, if ever I may see
thee, I shall slay thee with mine own hands; for thou wouldst for my
rich sword see me dead.
Then
Sir Bedivere departed, and went to the sword, and lightly took it up,
and went to the water side; and there he bound the girdle about the
hilts, and then he threw the sword as far into the water as he might;
and there came an arm and an hand above the water and met it, and
caught it, and so shook it thrice and brandished, and then vanished
away the hand with the sword in the water. So Sir Bedivere came again
to the king, and told him what he saw. Alas, said the king, help me
hence, for I dread me I have tarried over long. Then Sir Bedivere
took the king upon his back, and so went with him to that water side.
And when they were at the water side, even fast by the bank hoved a
little barge with many fair ladies in it, and among them all was a
queen, and all they had black hoods, and all they wept and shrieked
when they saw King Arthur. Now put me into the barge, said the king.
And so he did softly; and there received him three queens with great
mourning; and so they set them down, and in one of their laps King
Arthur laid his head. And then that queen said: Ah, dear brother, why
have ye tarried so long from me? alas, this wound on your head hath
caught over-much cold. And so then they rowed from the land, and Sir
Bedivere beheld all those ladies go from him. Then Sir Bedivere
cried: Ah my lord Arthur, what shall become of me, now ye go from me
and leave me here alone among mine enemies? Comfort thyself, said the
king, and do as well as thou mayst, for in me is no trust for to
trust in; for I will into the vale of Avilion to heal me of my
grievous wound: and if thou hear never more of me, pray for my soul.
But ever the queens and ladies wept and shrieked, that it was pity to
hear. And as soon as Sir Bedivere had lost the sight of the barge, he
wept and wailed, and so took the forest; and so he went all that
night, and in the morning he was ware betwixt two holts hoar, of a
chapel and an hermitage.
Then
was Sir Bedivere glad, and thither he went; and when he came into the
chapel, he saw where lay an hermit grovelling on all four, there fast
by a tomb was new graven. When the hermit saw Sir Bedivere he knew
him well, for he was but little to-fore Bishop of Canterbury, that
Sir Mordred banished. Sir, said Bedivere, what man is there interred
that ye pray so fast for? Fair son, said the hermit, I wot not
verily, but by deeming. But this night, at midnight, here came a
number of ladies, and brought hither a dead corpse, and prayed me to
bury him; and here they offered an hundred tapers, and they gave me
an hundred besants. Alas, said Sir Bedivere, that was my lord King
Arthur, that here lieth buried in this chapel. Then Sir Bedivere
swooned; and when he awoke he prayed the hermit he might abide with
him still there, to live with fasting and prayers. For from hence
will I never go, said Sir Bedivere, by my will, but all the days of
my life here to pray for my lord Arthur. So there bode Sir Bedivere
with the hermit that was to-fore Bishop of Canterbury, and there Sir
Bedivere put upon him poor clothes, and served the hermit full lowly
in fasting and in prayers.
Thus
of Arthur I find never more written in books that be authorised, nor
more of the very certainty of his death heard I never read, but thus
was he led away in a ship wherein were three queens; that one was
King Arthur's sister, Queen Morgan le Fay; the other was the Queen of
North-galis; the third was the Queen of the Waste Lands. Also there
was Nimue, the chief lady of the lake, that had done much for King
Arthur. More of the death of King Arthur could I never find, but that
ladies brought him to his burials; and such one was buried there,
that the hermit bare witness that sometime was Bishop of Canterbury,
but yet the hermit knew not in certain that he was verily the body of
King Arthur: for this tale Sir Bedivere, knight of the Table Round,
made it to be written.
Yet
some men say in many parts of England that King Arthur is not dead,
but had by the will of our Lord Jesu into another place; and men say
that he shall come again, and he shall win the holy cross. I will not
say it shall be so, but rather I will say: here in this world he
changed his life. But many men say that there is written upon his
tomb this verse: hic facet Arthurus, Ker quondam, Kerque futurus.
Thus leave I here Sir Bedivere with the hermit, that dwelled that
time in a chapel beside Glastonbury, and there was his
hermitage. And so they lived in their prayers, and fastings, and
great abstinence. And when Queen Guenever understood that King Arthur
was slain, and all the noble knights, Sir Mordred and all the
remnant, then the queen stole away, and five ladies with her, and so
she went to Almesbury; and there she let make herself a nun, and ware
white clothes and black, and great penance she took, as ever did
sinful lady in this land, and never creature could make her merry;
but lived in fasting, prayers, and alms-deeds, that all manner of
people marvelled how virtuously she was changed.
HOW WHEN SIR LAUNCELOT HEARD OF THE
DEATH OF KING ARTHUR, HE CAME TO ENGLAND, AND FOUND QUEEN GUENEVER AT
ALMESBURY, AND HOW SIR LAUNCELOT TOOK THE HABIT ON HIM AS A HERMIT.
Now
leave we Queen Guenever in Almesbury, a nun in white clothes and
black, and there she was Abbess and ruler as reason would; and turn
we from her, and speak we of Sir Launcelot du Lake, that when he
heard in his country that Sir Mordred was crowned king in England,
and made war against King Arthur, his own father, and would let him
to land in his own land; also how that Sir Mordred had laid siege
about the Tower of London, because the queen would not wed him; then
was he wroth out of measure, and said to his kinsmen: Alas, that
double traitor Sir Mordred, now me repenteth that ever he escaped my
hands, for much shame hath he done unto my lord Arthur. Alas, said
Sir Launcelot, that ever I should live to hear that most noble king
that made me knight thus to be overset with his subject in his own
realm.
Then
they made them ready in all the haste that might be, with ships and
galleys, for Sir Launcelot and his host to pass into England. And so
he passed over the sea till he came to Dover, and there he landed
with seven kings, and the number was hideous to behold. Then Sir
Launcelot enquired of men of Dover where was King Arthur become. Then
the people told him how that he was slain, and Sir Mordred and an
hundred thousand died on a day; and how Sir Mordred gave King Arthur
there the first battle at his landing, and there was good Sir Gawaine
slain; and on the morn Sir Mordred fought with the king upon Barham
Down, and there the king put Sir Mordred to the worse. Alas, said Sir
Launcelot, this is the heaviest tidings that ever came to me. Now,
fair sirs, said Sir Launcelot, shew me the tomb of Sir Gawaine. And
then certain people of the town brought him into the castle of Dover,
and shewed him the tomb. Then Sir Launcelot kneeled down and wept,
and prayed heartily for his soul. And that night he made a dole, and
all they that would come had as much flesh, fish, wine and ale, and
every man and woman had twelve pence, come who would. Thus with his
own hand dealt he this money, in a mourning gown; and ever he wept,
and prayed them to pray for the soul of Sir Gawaine.
And
on the morn all the priests and clerks that might be gotten in the
country were there, and sang mass of Requiem; and there offered first
Sir Launcelot, and he offered an hundred pound; and then the seven
kings offered forty pound apiece; and also there was a thousand
knights, and each of them offered a pound; and the offering dured
from morn till night, and Sir Launcelot lay two nights on his tomb in
prayers and weeping.
Then
on the third day Sir Launcelot called the kings, dukes, earls,
barons, and knights, and said thus: My fair lords, I thank you all of
your coming into this country with me, but we came too late, and that
shall repent me while I live, but against death may no man rebel. But
sithen it is so, said Sir Launcelot, I will myself ride and seek my
lady, Queen Guenever, for as I hear say she hath had great pain and
much disease; and I heard say that she is fled into the west.
Therefore ye all shall abide me here, and but if I come again within
fifteen days, then take your ships and your fellowship, and depart
into your country, for I will do as I say to you.
So
he departed and rode westerly, and there he sought a seven or eight
days; and at the last he came to a nunnery, and .then was Queen
Guenever ware of Sir Launcelot as he walked in the cloister. And when
she saw him there she swooned thrice, that all the ladies and
gentlewomen had work enough to hold the queen up. So when she might
speak, she called ladies and gentlewomen to her, and said: Ye marvel,
fair ladies, why I make this fare. Truly, she said, it is for the
sight of yonder knight that yonder standeth; wherefore I pray you all
call him to me.
When
Sir Launcelot was brought to her, then she said to all the ladies:
Through this man and me hath all this war been wrought, and the death
of the most noblest knights of the world; for through our love that
we have loved together is my most noble lord slain. Therefore,
Sir Launcelot, wit thou well I am set in such a plight to get my
soul-heal; and yet I trust through God's grace after my death to have
a sight of the blessed face of Christ, and at domesday to sit on his
right side, for as sinful as ever I was are saints in heaven.
Therefore, Sir Launcelot, I require thee and beseech thee
heartily, for all the love that ever was betwixt us, that thou never
see me more in the visage; for as well as I have loved thee, mine
heart will not serve me to see thee, for through thee and me is the
flower of kings and knights destroyed; therefore, Sir Launcelot, go
to thy realm, and there take thee a wife, and live with her with joy
and bliss; and I pray thee heartily, pray for me to our Lord that I
may amend my misliving. Now, sweet madam, said Sir Launcelot, would
ye that I should now return again unto my country, and there to wed a
lady? Nay, madam, wit you well that shall I never do, for I shall
never be so false to you of that I have promised; but the same
destiny that ye have taken you to, I will take me unto, for to please
Jesu, and ever for you I cast me specially to pray. For sithen ye
have taken you to perfection, I must needs take me to perfection, of
right. For I take record of God, in you I have had mine earthly joy;
and if I had found you now so disposed, I had cast me to have had you
into mine own realm.
But
sithen I find you thus disposed, I ensure you faithfully, I will
ever take me to penance, and pray while my life lasteth, if I may
find any hermit, either gray or white, that will receive me.
Wherefore, madam, I pray you kiss me and never no more. Nay, said the
queen, that shall I never do, but abstain you from such works. And
they departed. But there was never so hard an hearted man but he
would have wept to see the dolour that they made; for there was
lamentation as they had been stung with spears; and many times they
swooned, and the ladies bare the queen to her chamber.
And
Sir Launcelot awoke, and went and took his horse, and rode all that
day and all night in a forest, weeping. And at the last he was ware
of an hermitage and a chapel stood betwixt two cliffs; and then he
heard a little bell ring to mass, and thither he rode and alighted,
and tied his horse to the gate, and heard mass. And he that sang mass
was the Bishop of Canterbury. Both the Bishop and Sir Bedivere knew
Sir Launcelot, and they spake together after mass. But when Sir
Bedivere had told his tale all whole, Sir Launcelot's heart almost
brast for sorrow, and Sir Launcelot threw his arms abroad, and
said: Alas, who may trust this world! And then he kneeled down on his
knee, and prayed the Bishop to shrive him and assoil him. And then he
besought the Bishop that he might be his brother. Then the
Bishop said: I will gladly; and there he put an habit upon Sir
Launcelot, and there he served God day and night with prayers and
fastings.
Thus
the great host abode at Dover. And then Sir Lionel took fifteen lords
with him, and rode to London to seek Sir Launcelot; and there Sir
Lionel was slain and many of his lords. Then Sir Bors de Ganis made
the great host for to go home again; and Sir Bors, Sir Ector de
Maris, Sir Blamore, Sir Bleoberis, with more other of Sir Launcelot's
kin, took on them to ride all England overthwart and end-long, to
seek Sir Launcelot. So Sir Bors by fortune rode so long till he came
to the same chapel where Sir Launcelot was; and so Sir Bors heard a
little bell knell, that rang to mass; and there he alighted and heard
mass. And when mass was done, the Bishop, Sir Launcelot, and Sir
Bedivere, came to Sir Bors. And when Sir Bors saw Sir Launcelot in
that manner clothing, then he prayed the Bishop that he might be in
the same suit. And so there was an habit put upon him, and there he
lived in prayers and fasting. And within half a year, there was come
Sir Galihud, Sir Galihodin, Sir Blamore, Sir Bleoberis, Sir Villiars,
Sir Clarras, and Sir Gahalantine. So all these seven noble knights
there abode still. And when they saw Sir Launcelot had taken him to
such perfection, they had no lust to depart, but took such an habit
as he had.
Thus
they endured in great penance six year; and then Sir Launcelot took
the habit of priesthood of the Bishop, and a twelvemonth he sang
mass. And there was none of these other knights but they read in
books, and holp for to sing mass, and rang bells, and did bodily all
manner of service. And so their horses went where they would, for
they took no regard of no worldly riches. For when they saw Sir
Launcelot endure such penance, in prayers, and fastings, they took no
force what pain they endured, for to see the noblest knight of the
world take such abstinence that he waxed full lean.
And
thus upon a night, there came a vision to Sir Launcelot, and
charged him, in remission of his sins, to haste him unto Almesbury:
And by then thou come there, thou shalt find Queen Guenever dead. And
therefore take thy fellows with thee, and purvey them of an horse
bier, and fetch thou the corpse of her, and bury her by her husband,
the noble King Arthur. So this avision came to Sir Launcelot thrice
in one night.
HOW SIR LAUNCELOT WENT WITH HIS EIGHT
FELLOWS TO ALMESBURY, AND FOUND THERE QUEEN GUENEVER DEAD, WHOM THEY
BROUGHT TO GLASTONBURY, AND HOW SIR LAUNCELOT SICKENED AND DIED, AND
WAS BORNE TO JOYOUS GARD FOR TO BE BURIED, AND HOW CONSTANTINE
REIGNED NEXT AFTER ARTHUR, AND OF THE END OF THIS BOOK.
Then
Sir Launcelot rose up or day, and told the hermit. It were well done,
said the hermit, that ye made you ready, and that you disobey not the
avision. Then Sir Launcelot took his eight fellows with him, and on
foot they yede from Glastonbury to Almesbury, the which is little
more than thirty mile. And thither they came within two days, for
they were weak and feeble to go. And when Sir Launcelot was come to
Almesbury within the nunnery, Queen Guenever died but half an hour
afore. And the ladies told Sir Launcelot that Queen Guenever told
them all or she passed, that Sir Launcelot had been priest near a
twelvemonth, And hither he cometh as fast as he may to fetch my
corpse; and beside my lord, King Arthur, he shall bury me. Wherefore,
the queen said in hearing of them all, I beseech Almighty God that I
may never have power to see Sir Launcelot with my worldly eyen; and
thus, said all the ladies, was ever her prayer these two days, till
she was dead. Then Sir Launcelot saw her visage, but he wept not
greatly, but sighed. And so he did all the observance of the service
himself, both the dirige, and on the morn he sang mass. And there was
ordained an horse bier, with an hundred torches ever brenning about
the corpse of the queen, and ever Sir Launcelot with his eight
fellows went about the horse bier, singing and reading many an holy
orison, and frankincense upon the corpse incensed. Thus Sir Launcelot
and his eight fellows went on foot from Almesbury unto Glastonbury.
And
when they were come to the chapel and the hermitage, there she
had a dirige, with great devotion. And on the morn the hermit that
sometime was Bishop of Canterbury sang the mass of Requiem with great
devotion. And Sir Launcelot was the first that offered, and then also
his eight fellows. And then she was wrapped in cered cloth of Raines,
from the top to the toe, in thirtyfold; and after she was put in a
web of lead, and then in a coffin of marble. And when she was put in
the earth Sir Launcelot swooned, and lay long still, while the hermit
came and awaked him, and said: Ye be to blame, for ye displease God
with such manner of sorrow-making. Truly, said Sir Launcelot, I trust
I do not displease God, for He knoweth mine intent. For my
sorrow was not, nor is not, for any rejoicing of sin, but my sorrow
may never have end. For when I remember of her beauty, and of her
noblesse, that was both with her king and with her, so when I saw his
corpse and her corpse so lie together, truly mine heart would not
serve to sustain my careful body. Also when I remember me how by my
default, mine orgule and my pride, that they were both laid full low,
that were peerless that ever was living of Christian people, wit you
well, said Sir Launcelot, this remembered, of their kindness and mine
unkindness, sank so to mine heart, that I might not sustain
myself. So the French book maketh mention.
Then
Sir Launcelot never after ate but little meat, ne drank, till he was
dead. For then he sickened more and more, and dried, and dwined away.
For evermore, day and night, he prayed, but sometime he slumbered a
broken sleep; ever he was lying grovelling on the tomb of King Arthur
and Queen Guenever. So within six weeks after, Sir Launcelot fell
sick, and lay in his bed; and then he sent for the Bishop that there
was hermit, and all his true fellows. Then Sir Launcelot said with
dreary voice: Sir Bishop, I pray you give to me all my rights that
longeth to a Christian man. It shall not need you, said the hermit
and all his fellows, it is but heaviness of your blood, ye shall be
well mended by the grace of God to-morn. My fair lords, said Sir
Launcelot, wit you well my careful body will into the earth, I have
warning more than now I will say; therefore give me my rights. So
when he was houseled and anealed, and had all that a Christian man
ought to have, he prayed the Bishop that his fellows might bear his
body to Joyous Gard. Some men say it was Alnwick, and some men say it
was Bamborough. Howbeit, said Sir Launcelot, me repenteth sore, but I
made mine avow sometime, that in Joyous Gard I would be buried. And
because of breaking of mine avow, I pray you all, lead me thither.
Then there was weeping and wringing of hands among his fellows.
So
at a season of the night they all went to their beds, for they all
lay in one chamber. And so after midnight, against day, the Bishop
that then was hermit, as he lay in his bed asleep, he fell upon a
great laughter. And therewith all the fellowship awoke, and came
to the Bishop, and asked him what he ailed. Ah Jesu mercy, said the
Bishop, why did ye awake me? I was never in all my life so merry and
so well at ease. Wherefore? said Sir Bors. Truly, said the Bishop,
here was Sir Launcelot with me with mo angels than ever I saw men in
one day. And I saw the angels heave up Sir Launcelot unto heaven, and
the gates of heaven opened against him. It is but dretching of
dreams, said Sir Bors, for I doubt not Sir Launcelot aileth nothing
but good. It may well be, said the Bishop; go ye to his bed, and then
shall ye prove the sooth. So when Sir Bors and his fellows came to
his bed they found him stark dead, and he lay as he had smiled, and
the sweetest savour about him that ever they felt.
Then
was there weeping and wringing of hands, and the greatest dole they
made that ever made men. And on the morn the Bishop did his mass of
Requiem; and after, the Bishop and all the nine knights put Sir
Launcelot in the same horse bier that Queen Guenever was laid in
to-fore that she was buried. And so the Bishop and they all together
went with the body of Sir Launcelot daily, till they came to Joyous
Gard; and ever they had an hundred torches brenning about him. And so
within fifteen days they came to Joyous Gard. And there they laid his
corpse in the body of the quire, and sang and read many psalters and
prayers over him and about him. And ever his visage was laid open and
naked, that all folks might behold him. For such was the custom in
those days, that all men of worship should so lie with open visage
till that they were buried. And right thus as they were at their
service, there came Sir Ector de Maris, that had seven years sought
all England, Scotland, and Wales, seeking his brother, Sir Launcelot.
And
when Sir Ector heard such noise and light in the quire of Joyous
Gard, he alighted and put his horse from him, and came into the
quire, and there he saw men sing and weep. And all they knew Sir
Ector, but he knew not them. Then went Sir Bors unto Sir Ector, and
told him how there lay his brother, Sir Launcelot, dead; and then Sir
Ector threw his shield, sword, and helm from him. And when he beheld
Sir Launcelot's visage, he fell down in a swoon. And when he waked it
were hard any tongue to tell the doleful complaints' that he made for
his brother. Ah Launcelot, he said, thou were head of all Christian
knights, and now I dare say, said Sir Ector, thou Sir Launcelot,
there thou liest, that thou were never matched of earthly knight's
hand. And thou were the courteoust knight that ever bare shield. And
thou were the truest friend to thy lover that ever bestrad horse. And
thou were the truest lover of a sinful man that ever loved woman. And
thou were the kindest man that ever struck with sword. And thou were
the goodliest person that ever came among press of knights. And thou
was the meekest man and the gentlest that ever ate in hall among
ladies. And thou were the sternest knight to thy mortal foe that ever
put spear in the rest. Then there was weeping and dolour out of
measure.
Thus
they kept Sir Launcelot's corpse aloft fifteen days, and then they
buried it with great devotion. And then at leisure they went all with
the Bishop of Canterbury to his hermitage, and there they were
together more than a month. Then Sir Constantine, that was Sir
Cador's son of Cornwall, was chosen king of England. And he was a
full noble knight, and worshipfully he ruled this realm. And then
this King Constantine sent for the Bishop of Canterbury, for he heard
say where he was. And so he was restored unto his Bishopric, and left
that hermitage. And Sir Bedivere was there ever still hermit to his
life's end, but Sir Bors, Sir Ector, Sir Blamore, and Sir Bleoberis,
went into the Holy Land thereas Jesu Christ was quick and dead. For
the book saith, so Sir Launcelot commanded them for to do, or ever he
passed out of this world. And these four knights did many battles
upon the miscreants or Turks. And there they died upon a Good Friday
for God's sake.
Here
is the end of the book of King Arthur, and of his noble knights of
the Round Table, that when they there whole together there was ever
an hundred and fifty. And here is the end of the death of Arthur. I
pray you all, gentlemen and gentlewomen that readeth this book of
Arthur and his knights, from the begin- ning to the ending, pray for me
while I am alive, that God send me good deliverance, and when I am
dead, I pray you all pray for my soul. for this book was ended the
ninth year of the reign of King Edward the fourth, by Sir Thomas
Maleore, knight, as Jesu help him for his great might, as he is the
servant of Jesu both day and night.
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